Archive

Lullatone - Rarities compilation


lullatone

I'm really enjoying these rarity comps, but unfortunately I don't have enough, um, rarities to keep doing these. Here's the majority of Lullatone's rare tracks, excluding a few you can get from their Bandcamp. I've obtained almost all their songs but I'm still missing a few--so if anyone's got a hold of the split with Child's View or Childisc Vol. 7, hit me up please.

Included tracks
"So Happy"
"Bushman's Samba"
"Wander Music"
"Wooden Toy Trumpet"
"My Favorite Fork & Knife" (w/ Aki Tsuyuko)
"Untitled"
"Resound" (Music for Apartments)
"Music for Apartments"
"ice water"
"whispering rhythmically"
"Dead Telephone" (remix of a Cars & Trains song)

LULLABY, LULLABY @ Mediafire

Various artists - If the Shoe Fits


itsf
Vinyl rip of a 1983 Warner compilation. Freshly ripped and tagged so I'm not sure it sounds, to be honest. GOOD JOB ON THE QUALITY CONTROL, ALEX. That being said there's a few staples of 80s college rock here, including Echo & the Bunnymen, Aztec Camera, Gang of Four, and Laurie Anderson. Of especial quality is Anderson's mini-epic "Sharkey's Day". I think William S. Burroughs makes a cameo appearance on that shit. Or maybe it was another track from Anderson's album? I could care less, though. I mean, I've never even read anything by Burroughs. I've no taste for Beat writers. Do I need to give a shit about Burroughs? PYNCHON 4 LIFE.

What was this post about again?


Tracklisting

Tim Scott - Swear (Edit).
T-Bone Burnett - Fatally Beautiful
Juluka - Scatterlings of Africa
Gang of Four - Is It Love
Echo & The Bunnymen - Never Stop
Aztec Camera - Walk Out to Winter (Re-Recorded Version)
Laurie Anderson - Sharkey's Day
Aztec Camera - Oblivious
Gang of Four - A Man With a Good Car
Tim Scott - The Rules I Broke
T-Bone Burnett - The Murder Weapon
Juluka - Two Humans on the Run

TRY THIS SHOE ON in size V0 Mp3 @ Mediafire

of Montreal - Rarities compilation


kevin barnes
Photo by Susie Martinez

Here's a mix I threw together of some rare(ish) of Montreal tracks, in varying bitrates and from varying sources (some of them from the fantastic folks over at the E6 Townhall). Notable inclusions are the deliciously lewd "Georgie's Lament" and the hard-to-find "Hitler" song. Enjoy!


Included tracks

-"False Accusations"
-"The Self-Centered Stepmother..." (Two versions)
-"Microuniversity"
-"Make Out, Fall Out, Make Up" (Love is All cover)
-"Will You Let Me Into Your Dreams"
-"1st Time High (of Chicago Acoustic Version)
-"Sex Karma" (Live on Jimmy Fallon)
-"Coquet Coquette" (Live on Jimmy Fallon)
-"Wet Butcher's Fist"
-"Lysergic Bliss" (Daytrotter version) [BUY]
-"Suffer for Fashion" (Daytrotter version)
-"Bananas, Rice, Applesauce, Toast"
-"Feminine Effects" (Live)
-"Computer Blue" (Prince cover)
-"Family Nouveau" (two versions)
-"Pussy Freak"
-"We Were Born the Mutants..." (Sony EP version)
-"Hitler, Being Punished for Obvious Reasons..."

GET IT @ Mediafire

EDIT:
Oops, forgot "Georgie's Lament", arguably the best track here. Get it.

Squid Can: Now with vinyl (and harpsichord, bitches)


My cheap (but efficient) USB turntable came in today and it is GREAT. I've already ripped a few records to FLAC, and even though it won't give you the full quality of a $1,000 setup, who gives a shit? Anyone who says they can hear the difference between gold cartridges and my cute little setup has been facehugging elitist crotch for far too long. Also, I have bad hearing. So to be honest I probably can't even tell the difference between a 128k Mp3 and a FLAC. Yet I rip everything to FLAC. Yet I just made sport of audiophiles in this same paragraph.

...wat

So, in hopes of justifying my existence, I'll now be posting rare (or at least uncommon) vinyl rips here when I get the chance. It'll be just like an eBay auction, without the ***L@@K*** or A+++++++. EVEN THOUGH THIS IS TOTALLY AN A++++++ IDEA.

The first record I'll be presenting to you people is a lovely set of harpsichord pieces by Sylvia Marlowe, appropriately titled Harpsichord Greatest Hits. In a true show of musical plebianism, I was first introduced to the harpsichord by Tori Amo’s Boys for Pele. Since then I’ve had a mild—though uneducated—affair with the harpsichord. Its sound harbours such an angry elegance—polite yet pugilistic. The harpsichord is like an upset, genteel woman—it strikes with quiet force, all the while maintaining an air of the polite, the restrained.

Right? Yeah. So here’s the album, folks, in V0 Mp3. Email me or drop a note in the comments if you want the FLAC rip.

Download from Mediafire

P.S. This album is mentioned in an article about some famous harpsichordist, L~O~L

P.S.S New theme, guyz. How's it look?

*Special Offer*


false priest

I didn't get the t-shirt package. FMLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL. And why can't I download the stickers.

[[mp3]] of Montreal - Wet Butcher's Fist (via You Ain't No Picasso)

No but seriously, that t-shirt package is pretty sweet. Wow, did I just post something here? Dat's odd.

Junior Ornithology

Published in

On this,
the eighteenth day,
I await (but really rather dread)
the departure of the familiar,
the removal of things most relative
to my spine.
Here is the point of incidence,
where I will attempt to transcend myself,
to go beyond the lines that shape my skinny body,
my weak body, my frail, self-destructive,
all-too-human vessel.
I have few vices, aside from the currency
of fantasy, the currency of objects.
Thus
conditions for flight seem ample,
though the clouds are awful cynics.
Here is the point where my childhood
obsession with the mysticism of birds
becomes more than junior ornithology.
The sparrow, the bird of paradise,
the macaw, the toucan, the finch,
the jay, the phoenix—these feathered things
are the refuge of metaphor, yet; still—
has anything ever been so loaded like a gun,
as a bird in flight?

O, Anthony and Louis,
Tony and Lee—I can only
look at photographs of you now.
I am undecided on the hereafter,
but if there is any speck of justice
or grace or beauty amongst the cosmos—
then you will know that everyday,
from the base of my spine,
from the soles of my feet,
to the heaviness of my chest,
to the lightness of my head—
I will try and transcend ‘me’.
I will do it in hope.
I will do it out of love,
for you both.
And Papa—
you are my spine.

June—30—2010

Yo

Published in

Wow, I haven't posted anything here in forever. I'm starved for sleep right now and I'm all out of witty commentary, so here's some amazing music for y'all to listen to.

JUNE MIXTAPE (this thing is huge; there's a lot of FLACs so be patient)

(Includes selections from Cynthia Dall, Diamond Rings, Hrvatski, Janelle Monae, Kylie Minogue, MBV, Nobuo Uematsu, of Montreal, Saycet, Slowdive, Sonic Youth, Windy & Carl, and Zeena Parkins)

P.S. I post pretty frequently on my tumblr, and occasionally still on my Flickr, so those places are best to see what I'm up to currently. And possibly maybe I'll be uploading full, hard-to-find albums soon, so stick around. I guess.

SIGH.

A thought on film photography

Published in

Pentax
(Reposted from my Tumblr, y'all)

Thursday is my last day of high school and, coincidentally enough, the 20th is also the day an old Pentax (not unlike the one above) drops to $49 at the consignment shop. I’m almost certain that I’m going to buy it because I’ve wanted a manual camera for a while now. And unlike the droves of hipsters who just pose with old cameras, I really want to learn how to use it. I’ve always thought that anyone who could take a good photo with a manual camera was, in a way, more capable than the average, modern photographer. I used to loathe film-minded douches who would talk about digital spoiling the art and so forth but I sort of understand where they’re coming from now. Digital photography can remove so much of the fun, the challenge, the artistry of the medium. My Nikon D40 broke last week and in the interim my N75 has replaced it. In a way I like the N75 more than the D40. It’s a relatively ‘new’ film camera (2000-ish), but it’s taught me the importance of every shot, the importance of condensing the biggest ‘punch’ possible into one image. For a young man on the edge of his future, I think this lesson of reducing matters to their most substantial, essential attributes could not be any more appropriate.

poems

Published in

The Same Moon and Stars

With regards to Windy & Carl

I have died countless times
yet unlike Lazarus
yet unlike Sylvia
I have risen with each fresh death,
burning, my lonesome fire,
—a phoenix, on a pyre of its own ash.

And each time I ascend
towards the same moon, and the same stars
my thoughts are never without this—
Mama, Papa, and Baby Joe,
Nellie, Morgan, Gregory, Rebecca, Doris,
Christopher, Nadia, Mia, Caleb, Horace.

I am always thinking about tomorrow.
No moments pass, where the Cassandra
lofted in the attic of my head
does not peer down that howling alley,
that whitewashed path, that thing of mine,
that thing of mine,
the things I have yet to claim.

I have always been afraid of dogs
barking at my heels,
of papers flying out car windows,
of falling asleep and missing
the world burn down.
How will I know where you are?
How will I see you?
How will I sleep without my worries?
I tried to write an autobiography once
but I am always writing it.

There is only one distance between us,
immeasurable,
and that is the same moon and stars.
I will burn a thousand times more,
at my own hand, my own fingers,
my own head will cut me down.

But in-between resurrections,
insurrections, revolutions,
crises and cataclysms,
of all sorts, all kinds,
of all things gasping to be heard,
I will always connect the shortest distance
between all of us—

I will look up at the same moon and stars
that you are looking at,
and you will say to me,
and I will say to you,
“Goodnight, I love you.”

The same moon,
the same stars.
We will build our own constellation.

April 30th 2010

Tumblr up in here

Published in

Kirk Hinrich likes mt Tumblr

I won't be posting much on Flickr anymore, so I got a Tumblr for my photos instead.

WHAT TIME IS IT? HIPSTER TIME.

Monthly Mixtape: April Up in Yo Shit

Published in

Picture_7

Yet ANOTHER series of mixtapes. Each month, I'll deliver a delicious set of tracks to soundtrack your month. Or something. I don't know. These are the songs I've been enjoying these past few weeks. Have fun (and enjoy the sunny weather!)

1 - Plone - Farmyard
2 - Sonic Youth - Bull In The Heather
3 - Madonna - Secret (Junior's Luscious Single Mix)
4 - Iggy Pop - China Girl
5 - Waldeck - Memories
6 - Patty Griffin - Chief
7 - Madonna - Gone Gone Gone
8 - The Morning Benders - Cold War
9 - Hum - The Pod
10 - Masta Killa - Old Man
11 - Owen Pallett - This Lamb Sells Condos
12 - Vanessa Daou - Liquid Fire
13 - Nagisa Ni Te - Strength of the Waves
14 - Choir of Benedictine Nuns at the Abbey of Regina Laudis - Signum magnum
15 - Joaquín Sabina - Paisanaje
16 - Sonic Youth - Androgynous Mind
17 - Cibelle - Mad Man Song (feat. Spleen)
18 - Mash'ta - black masked
19 - Patty Griffin - No Bad News
20 - Windy & Carl - my love

DOWNLOAD SOME SHIT FOR YO APRIL

Burn Stuff: Volume 1


burn stuff

No effort was put into this mixtape. Mediamonkey made it for me. I zipped the files, though. C'mon. Give me some credit. I am surprised at how many good songs are on here though--"Soon" and "I May Know the Word" = ♥ ♥

The Knife- Neverland
Madonna - Secret Garden
Zeena Parkins - Hairless
My Bloody Valentine- Soon
Tori Amos - Raining Blood
The Knife - One Hit
Vanessa Williams - I'll Be The One
Lucinda Williams - Learning How To Live
LFO - We Are Back
Boards Of Canada - Ataronchronon
Lucinda Williams - Broken Butterflies
Doris Day - Sugarbush
Kate Bush - The Wedding List
Björk - Harm of Will
Sondre Lerche - Love You
Natalie Merchant - I May Know The Word

GET IT AT MEGAUPLOAD, RIGHT NOW PLS

Mixtape: Bicycle Pack

Published in

bike path

Just got a new bicycle yesterday. Excited to ride it, but I need a basket for the front so that I can throw in some cheap speakers and my iPod or something. Eh. I'll figure it out.

When I do embark on that 'maiden voyage', here's the playlist I intend to take with me--fifteen songs of varying styles and moods, but similar attitudes of adventure. Okay, so I pretty much just put together songs with bike-related words. But does it flow? Why, only like a paved road.

Errrp, did I really just write that? (15 trks, tracklisting, PLS+ M3u included, most songs V0)

Goldfrapp - Rocket
Bright Eyes - Road To Joy
Beth Orton - Anywhere
The Lickets - Rama 4 Road
The Ruby Suns - Adventure Tour
Joni Mitchell - In France They Kiss On Main Street
Riow Arai - Break Roads
Animal Collective - Sweet Road
Fever Ray - Keep The Streets Empty For Me
Boards Of Canada - Left Side Drive
Abra Moore - Strangest Places
Portishead - Roads
Emmylou Harris - Wheels (with Jonathan Edwards)
Lullatone - riding a bicylce over a big hill at night
Bonnie Raitt - Streetlights


C'MON WHEELS, TAKE ME HOME TODAY

JamieJams: Late @ Night


night

Second in the series, but posted...third? Yeah okay. A collection of 17 laid-back, dreamy, and downright sultry tracks (17 Mp3s, M3u/Pls+tracklist included).

Massive Attack - Karmacoma
Cocteau Twins - Bluebeard
Aphex Twin - Lichen
Panda Bear - Comfy In Nautica
Morcheeba - Part of the Process
Portishead - It Could Be Sweet
LFO - We Are Back
capella antiqua München Choralschola - Veni, Sancte Spiritu
Björk - Unison
Cynthia Dall - Holland
Boards Of Canada - '84 Pontiac Dream
No Age - Everybody's Down
The Knife - Got 2 Let U
Zeena Parkins - Freak
The Spinners - Ain't No Price on Happiness
Lullatone - Resound
Bonnie Raitt - Sleep's Dark And Silent Gate

DOWNLOAD DAT SHIT RIGHT NAO

JamieJams: The Original


jamiejams

FIRST IN THE SERIES (even though I'm clearly posting it second). Selections from Neko Case, The Tough Alliance, DJ Shadow, and a smattering of cool bros and gals. 16 tracks (16 Mp3s, M3u/Pls+tracklist included). Tracklist in the Zip is screwed up by the way (below tracklisting is correct, though).

Colour - Conversations
Neko Case - Things That Scare Me
Broadcast - Michael A Grammar
My Bloody Valentine - Blown a Wish
Grizzly Bear - Two Weeks
The Knife - Heartbeats
Frida Hyvönen - The Modern
Talking Heads - Wild Wild Life
The Tough Alliance - Neo Violence
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - Heavy Metal
Hell Interface - Midas Touch (Midnight Star Remix)
DJ Shadow - Monosylabik
Boards Of Canada - Turquoise Hexagon Sun
Mouse On Mars - X-flies
Abra Moore - Happiness
Have A Nice Life - Holy Fucking Shit: 40,000


Get it NOW NOW NOW

JamieJams: Springtime


spring
I've been making these for my friend. This one flows reallly well, so listen in order. More to come later this week. 17 tracks (16 Mp3 + 1 flac, M3u/Pls+tracklist included)

Tracklisting
Lullatone-Good Morning Melody
Grizzly Bear - Cheerleader
Lisa Donnelly - Laugh
Boards Of Canada - Dawn Chorus
Joanna Newsom - Kingfisher
Lady GaGa - Telephone
Lesley Gore - Sometimes I Wish I Were A Boy
Beth Orton - Daybreaker
J Dilla - Mash
Liz Phair - Dance Of The Seven Veils
Kate Bush - Houdini
Isan - Ship
Joanna Newsom - The Book Of Right-On
Midaircondo - Coffeeshop
Múm - Slow Bicycle
Björk - Domestica
Shrift - To The Floor


Get it

Free ambient, yo


herzog
Whew. I have not posted in 4EVA. My old laptop died about a month ago (RIP), and I've been building an Mp3 empire since. In my quest for the best (derp), I've found some lovely netlabel ambient records since.

Herzog's First Summer and the Running Dream (Resting Bell, 2009), is a blissful, crackly, half-hour work. A cohesive, stylish collection, this album is perfect for an afternoon nap. If you'd prefer an afternoon shit-your-pants, pick up Sylvie Walder and entia non's Bewilderment (Resting Bell, 2009). It's darkened shit (not Swans-dark, mind you), but sufficiently airy to be called 'lovely'.

You may also want to check out Herzog's earlier releases over at Archive.org. And in terms of paid-for ambient, Loscil's Endless Falls has been in heavy rotation in my CD player at night. You can get it at Amazon for just $6.

Reviews of Jessica Bailiff, Swans (!?!?!), and new releases later this week. Maybe. Finally, don't expect to see any new photos in the Flickr sidebar as I'm taking a break from the site for a while. Fuck online popularity (I mean, Christ, look at this ghost town of a site).

Wow, I'm dumb


the knife

In my previous post I subtly complained about the lack of a new Knife album. Well, you see, life has been going great for me as of late, and I've been happy everyday for the past week. I thought this week was pretty good. Then karma was like, "Hey, stop bitching, here" and gave me a NEW KNIFE ALBUM. FUCK YEAHHHHHHH.

Whew. Entitled Tomorrow, In a Year, the new album is the soundtrack to an 'electro-opera' The Knife has been performing. It's based on some Charles Darwin shit and the album sounds like Zeena Parkins mating with Autechre in a tropical wood. Godammnit if that makes any sense, but you should pick up this album if you like 'crazy drone music'. It's an interesting experiment.

And thanks, life. Everything is better with a slice of The Knife.

...what

buyGet the album at Lala

This ain't your mama's Fever Ray


Oh. Hmm. Yep.

Well, next best thing to a new Knife album, I guess.

Music Tuesday


Owen Pallett

Got the new Owen Pallett album in the mail yesterday. He's eschewed the Final Fantasy persona to please some Japanese people or something. Impressions: Gay man is good with violin. Gay man returns with violin and a concept album based on an ultraviolent farmer. Album grows slow on you, but surely, it grows. Gay puns all around. Everyone's happy. Buy it.

Anywho, new releases arriving soon that may interest you (and I, er, need a list for myself):
Massive Attack
Jaga Jazzist (Jan 25)
Sade (Feb 9)
Four Tet
Beach House
Hot Chip
Yeasayer
Xiu Xiu
Liars (March)
Goldfrapp (not 'till March)
Flying Lotus (April)

Creative


Creative

I’m in one of those creative moods. One of those moods that comes every couple months. Not where I simply feel like taking a photograph or writing a story, but one of those states in which I feel like doing both those things—along with critiquing everything I own, scripting a comic book, making a video, cutting up new noise music. Everything creative that I enjoy doing I feel like doing. Do you know what I mean? I hope you do. And I hope this feeling stays intact.

My new ‘creative thing’ is the capsule review. I don’t think I invented it. I’m sure I didn’t. I’m just not sure if ‘capsule review’ is the proper name for a short, succinct review that abandons the gristle for the heartiest of truth and lulz. Whatever it’s called (if anything), you’ll be seeing it often here on Squid Can from now on. Album reviews, DVD reviews, TV reviews, and—especially—comic book reviews will now be in capsule format unless I really feel like diving into the virtues of some work. I’ve come to realize that with the amount of media I digest—music, television, short fiction, graphic novels—there is no way I can ever feel ‘complete’ towards consuming them without some sort of judgment, some critique. It helps me make sense of it all, it helps me to make connections, and it helps my writing skills. I suppose that, after all the years of half-assing essays in religion class, I’ve finally realized the importance of reflection. Reflection can make a mindless consumer a responsible one. Writing is reflection. Art’s reflection. A whole lot of thinking shit is reflection shit. This shit right here? Reflection. Mind blown.

I’ve set up a few new banners (80s gals, natch), and I’m looking to make some other improvements towards the site. I’ve also come to realize that this site looks like Sodom and Gomorrah in Internet Explorer. So, IF YOU’RE USING IE RIGHT NOW—use Firefox instead. I like this theme and I’d rather not change it. To see the old theme, you could always sign up for an account and select the old theme. But that’s a pain in the ass. Finally, I’m working on a capsule review page entirely for the Uncanny X-Men. I have so much time on my hands. Why not use it for something mildly useless instead of completely useless?

Well, I’m off to bed. And when I wake up, it’ll start again—consumption, reflection, creation, repetition. Beautiful stuff, no?

The Whole World While You Are Asleep: Albums I Enjoyed in 2009


The year 2009 was, for me (as I’m sure it was for many people) a mixed bag. I’ve always found New Years Eve a fine time for reflection—or getting wasted, if you’re so inclined—and this year is no different. I don’t want to fixate on the fact that a new decade is arriving, and I’d rather just look at it through a lighthearted lens. In seriousness, though, the position that I’m finding myself in now is infinitely better than the position I left 2008 in.

As always, music plays pretty heavily into my life and my memories—and while I discovered some old classics this year (Boards of Canada and The Dreaming, thank fucking god), there were several albums released this year that really wowed me. Don’t take this as a “best of” list—it isn’t meant to be universal by any means. These are the new albums that affected me personally in 2009—though they would make fine traveling companions for just about anyone in this new decade. Happy New Year.

NOTE: I might be missing a few albums. If that’s the case I’ll update the list later. And, hey, there's INTERACTIVE TOOLTIPS on the images. Definitely advanced stuff for 2010.

Grizzly Bear – Veckatimest

Yeah, it’s hipster bullshit. But that’s okay. On the third album by the Brooklyn plaid-aficionados, the gleefully ambient melodies from Yellow House have been surrendered to a cleaner, more accessible aesthetic. A good thing? Perhaps not entirely, but it’s difficult to argue with the choicer results, such as “Foreground”. Points for Grizzly Bear’s impeccable timing, however—the chilled, plaintive atmosphere of Veckatimest arrived at an advantageous moment, providing a perfect segue into summer. [Mp3] [CD]

Laura A and the Bad Grades - Lightnin' Bolt

It's a mighty shame, but it seems that a truly compelling release from a largely unknown artist has been ignored. Not that this sort of thing doesn't happen often in the music world--Christ, a look at Amie Street and one can't help the feeling that it seems a graveyard for great unknowns--but the offense against Laura A and her delinquent pals is clearly criminal here. With command reminiscent of Neko Case, Laura A achieves much the same mien as her more popular counterpart--only with less instruments, less fury, and a general feeling of coziness. Unfortunately, this EP is only five songs--another mighty shame given the command demonstrated on songs such as the title track. Not to be a douche, but--where's the full album? [Mp3]

HEALTH – Get Color

Depressing noise rock—with structure. Compared to the relatively helter-skelter feeling of their debut, HEALTH returned in the autumn with an album of uniform chaos. Nestled inside blistering melodies were disjointed vocals and ballistic experimentalism—a gloriously messy show. [Mp3] [CD]

Arthur and Martha – Navigation

The lasting power of this record I find a bit suspect—to be honest, I don’t think I’ve touched it since August. Even if I’m not entirely sold on the lifespan of this English debut, I remember quite well what forged the initial attraction: fuzzy and nostalgic electropop with heavy British flavour. Tear-jerking? Not quite, but it certainly has the capacity to rend emotion when the time is right. [Mp3] [CD]

Converge – Axe to Fall

Whereas Arthur and Martha can make the heart supple wax, Axe to Fall can melt
your entire fucking body into gelatin. Having seen several of the songs played live, I can confirm that Converge remains on the top of the metalcore/chaotic hardcore/whatever-the-fuck-it-is scrap heap—not that we would expect anything less from Jacob Bannon and friends. [Mp3] [CD]

Midaircondo – Curtain Call

Though I think I’ve explained enough the magnificence of this record, it has to be stated again: the ambient, jazzy duo have consistently proven their worth in the crowded arena of knob twiddlers and sample mashers. What’s next? [Mp3] [CD]

Lullatone – Songs that Spin in Circles

As blessedly cool as Midaircondo are, their album does not quite match Lullatone’s 2009 achievement. The latest album from the husband and wife pair—an album designed to be looped so as to put children to sleep—swaps some of the bittersweet electronics that guided their early releases for a more organic atmosphere. Make no mistake, the twinkly electric wonder of Lullatone’s music is ever-present; it’s just in a smaller amount. No need to get anxious about it—Songs that Spin in Circles is an effusively natural and reassuring piece of music. Some of the circuit-board wizardry may be lost, but the innocence and tranquility are intact—and they contribute to what is one of Lullatone’s best efforts yet. [Mp3] [CD]

Neko Case – Middle Cyclone

Hands down, hands up, hands fucking sideways—I don’t care where your hands are, or if you’re handless or, whatever. This is the best album of 2009. I was introduced to Case via—believe it or not—Spinner’s daily Mp3. The promo photo—one of Case wearing skimpy-looking dress wear while pulling at licorice with her teeth—had at first convinced me that Case was nothing more than another throwaway female vocalist. How fucking shamed I was upon hearing the entire record.

The days immediately preceding Middle Cyclone’s release were spent in Pennsylvania, at the home of my Dad’s best friend. My Dad had been hospitalized while on vacation, and I spent a few nights in a medium-sized Monaca, PA, apartment. Without going into further detail, let me say that it was not a cheery time in my life (aside from the stunning hospitality and generosity of my Dad’s friends).

I don’t want to imply that Case was some otherworldly, hunky-dorifying ray of light that dropped into my life—she wasn’t. But Middle Cyclone was released in what was arguably one of the most harrowing months of my life, and yet it continued to stay with me—through walks on the bike path in spring, summer afternoons, and, ultimately, at a refreshing concert given by Ms. Case in November.

One of my Christmas gifts? Why, Middle Cyclone. I had already paid for an Mp3 version, but I needed this album on disc. Why? This isn’t an album to just have sitting around on your computer. This in album to take with you—on car rides, to friend’s homes, wherever you find yourself. Middle Cyclone is an album that reaffirmed something I had been unwilling to admit to myself—when miserable, we tend to use any control we have to make ourselves even more miserable. Middle Cyclone reminds us that we each have the power, the control, to whip misery into something far more malleable, far more insightful—unrestrained, fulfilling hope. [Mp3] [CD]


Honorable Mentions (in no order)

Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band – Self-titled
True hipsters would probably make fun of me for liking this. Eh. The Seattle-based outfit caught my attention with their unusually fun departures from ‘indie rock’ tropes—a promising band.

Regina Spektor – Far
Fond memories of searching for the Salvation Army thrift store, in comfortably undemanding summer heat, to this album.

Matt & Kim – Grand
Drums, strange manboy vocals, and summery fun--an album far from the damp sack of shit I've likely just described it as.

J Dilla – Jay Stay Paid
The final chapter in Jay Dee saga? Maybe—a fitting tribute to the late Detroit producer regardless.

Lady GaGa – The Fame Monster
Yeah. I know. It’s terribly, awfully, horrendously disposable in the end but for the five days that you do enjoy it: you, too, will succumb to GaGa’s derivative, sloppy, unoriginal bullshit. Or maybe you won’t. I bet this paragraph isn't even here tomorrow.

Holly Williams – Here With Me
I wrote a review of this one back in July—my opinion hasn’t changed; this is still an album of rough-and-tough grace.

Andrea Bocelli – My Christmas
Nothing intense here. Rather, Bocelli’s grand take on the Christmas tradition is surprisingly laid-back and fun.

Annie Lennox – "Shining Light" [Single]
Just found this song the other day. Released on Lennox’s greatest hits collection. An elegantly soulful remake of Ash’s Britpoppy original.

Christmas Calendar: Day 8 (Better Together)



"Kiteracer 2" by Boards Of Canada + "Pleen 1930s" by Chris Clark

The first track here, "Kiteracer 2" comes from BoC's unreleased Old Tunes Vol. 2. A very mellow track, it resists any common description. The poetic approach is much more apt, so imagine this: you are driving across a bridge. The sun is setting; you are heading towards it. You know of all the troubles that you have out behind you; of all the troubles that still plague you. You are unsure of the troubles ahead. Regardless of this fear, you continue driving, moving forward, compelled not only by necessity but by the beauty in tragedy.

"Pleen 1930s" is, as the title suggests, pure nostalgia. There is an immediate, ambiguous airiness that permeates the song before a very simple, very glittering, piano melody enters. Things seem to move in slow motion. Despite its contrast to more fatal release of "Kiteracer 2", both songs manage to provide a wonderfully bittersweet happiness--a happiness that, while reminding us of life's beauty, simultaneously reminds us of its deepest regrets.

Merry Christmas, happy Hanukkah et al., and good night.

Download "Kiteracer 2" and "Pleen 1930s" (Mediafire, 192 Mp3)

Gentlemen...

Published in

Sonic

Or gentry, whatever, since this blog is supposed to be feminist or something.

Anywho, we have something important to discuss, folks. Squid Can is nearing its TWO-YEAR ANNIVERSARY. Tomorrow will be the two-year mark since the first review posted here (it was of Homogenic, naturally). What does this mean? Well, not much, really. As you may have noticed (or not), Squid Can has a new theme. Yes, after two years of the same ole' style, I've moved onto a new look---one with a beautifully rotating header (refresh the page for moar k3wl images, bro). Well, a few things got shuffled in the transition from point A to point B, but don't worry (not that you were). Things will be corrected soon.

Aside from the newly fandangled graphical tomfoolery, I've decided to revisit the best posts of Squid Can in a five-part retrospective entitled: The Old Man and the Squid: Why I Do Keep Writing this Shit.

You will laugh. You will cry. You will rage. You will read an entirely new review of Homogenic tomorrow. And you will enjoy.


Or not, I really can't say. Eh eh. Nothing else. Hint.

Christmas Calendar: Day 7


Album

Well, I was going to post some Cocteau Twins for y'all, and I was going to state that their glacial shoegazing is the perfect soundtrack for trimming a tree or eating holiday Oreos or some shit. I then remembered that all the available pictures of the Cocteau Twins are beyond Squid Can's acceptable level of fugly (hence Gertrude Stein's notable absence from this site). Thus the reason for providing the following track from an artist that not only flew under everyone's radar but was probably more hidden than Santa is to NORAD.

Okay, enough dumb jokes. Olivia McClurkin--who I just learned (as in I just googled her name and discovered this) died around this time last year--was a gospel vocalist. Her 2008 album, The Healing Song, is certainly just that: a gospel album. But since people invent dumb genre names frequently (nu rave hurrrr durrrr), I've decided to tag this album with the following genre (one of high invention, clearly): trip-gospel. BECUZ IT'S LIKE GOSPEL AND DA TRIPPIDY HOPPITY, DO YA GET IT?

Well, here's a free sample for you to download (256vbr, Mediafire), and you can buy Ms. McClurkin's album for mere pocket change (seriously) at Amie Street. Enjoy!

Christmas Calendar: Day 6


PJ Harvey

Two years ago I was a huge PJ Harvey fan. Not a memorabilia-collecting sort of huge, but a sizable chunk of my listening was spent on the lovely Polly Jean. I don't find myself listening to the old gal these days as much as I used to--too much ambient and noise rock to digest, natch--but Harvey's music is still a mighty fine example of what 90s alternative could do: rend norms, bridge gaps, and cultivate cults.

Download two PJ Harvey tracks (192 & 256k Mp3, Mediafire)

Christmas Calendar: Day 5


Q Lazzarus
The song "Goodbye Horses" is most readily remembered as the track that accompanied Buffalo Bill's gender-bending dance scene in The Silence of the Lambs. The singer of this gem, Q Lazzarus, is best remembered as not being remembered. But this should not be the case. Q Lazzarus--a woman with one hell of a husky voice--produced so little output (at most, three songs, not including remixes) that she was hastily forgotten by the general public, barring the occasional Buffalo Bill parody. So here I give you "Goodbye Horses", not in hopes of inciting copyright watchdogs (not that I've given a shit about the other hundreds of Mp3s I've posted), but in the hopes that you will enjoy it.

Go ahead. Try to listen to this song just once. And when you fail at that, come join in me the camp that loves this woman's oddly endearing music.

Download
(256vbr, Mediafire)

Christmas Calendar: Day 4


Animal Collective

WARNING: Extreme hipster douchebaggery is in this post.

There are times when I look at my 300+ scrobbles of Animal Collective and feel great shame, saying to myself, "How? How did I become such a mindless indie kid asshole?" But then I listen to songs like "Reverend Green" and I think I understand the increasing relevance of Animal Collective.

Doubtlessly, they are a band made by the internet. Without thousands upon thousands of twenty-something hipsters plugging into Stereogum and Pitchfork each day, verbally fapping over Panda Bear's latest t-shirt, there would be no Animal Collective. Yet thanks to the internet--the Holy Grail of the postmodern age--Animal Collective has exploited a niche for its mildly experimental approach to 'rock music,' whatever that means anymore.

Rolling Stone seems to hold some sort of grudge against Animal Collective. It's understandable, given that Stone is as far from being culturally relevant as Dane Cook is from actual comedy (oooo, burn'd). Counterculture is no longer 'counter' to anything. It's mainstream. Animal Collective takes gleeful residence in that fact.

Generation Y (moar like generation postmodern douchebag, amirite?) takes great pleasure in the shallowest of cultural depths--Jersey Shore, Lady GaGa, Will Ferrell. To put it crudely, Generation Y loves shit. Animal Collective is to shit what Led Zeppelin was to counterculture. Their songs are anthems of shit as Zeppelin's songs were anthems of rebellion. Hipsters and semi-hipsters find this to be just about the greatest thing ever, for Animal Collective reveals what Generation Y knows but is unwilling to admit--that, taken as a whole, we are a generation of shit-connoisseurs. And we would have it no other way.

DL Download "Winter Wonderland" (Mediafire, 320 Mp3)

Christmas Calendar: Day 3


Bjork

God, I'm so sick of not posting here. It's fucking Christmas. This is prime blogging season (derp). Here are some (sorta) rare remixes from that wacky alternative pop singer Bahzhork (that's how you pronounce her name, right?).

Oh, and the review challenge is extended to January 31st now. Um. Yeah.

And, hey, new menu buttons! And Christmasy icons. Swell. Maybe you can update the site once in a while, Alex. You know, when you're not being a douche.

DL B.J. York Remixes on Mediafire

P.S. Got accepted to Emerson. Celebrate.

Christmas Calendar: Day 2


Foes
Maybe I'll start posting new, interesting content when I get un-sick and I makeup my work before break. Ah, you don't care. I'm just some guy who gives you sample songs in lossless. New reviews tomorrow (fingers crossed; not trying to troll your hopes).

Download "The Smallest Weird Number" by Boards Of Canada (Mediafire, ALAC)