Categories
Playlists

Ringing in Spring: March Edition

It’s March now, and with that comes the second installment of “Ringing in Spring”: a three part playlist composed of 45 songs, 15 released each month of Spring (except I started in February and am ending in April). This was largely inspired by my “It’s Fall Y’all” series I did in the fall of 2021.

I decided March’s vibes were loud, folky and bright, juxtaposing the indie-rock vibes that February’s installment had to offer.  Think of this as prancing through a meadow with no cares, surrounded by wildlife and sipping on your drink of choice.

Without further ado, here are March’s songs for “Ringing in Spring”:

  • “Come On! Feel the Illinoise! Part I: The World’s Columbian Exposition, Part II: Carl Sandburg Visits Me in a Dream” – Sufjan Stevens
  • “Time Escaping” – Big Thief
  • “I Love You, Honeybear” – Father John Misty
  • “SPORTS MEN” – Haruomi Hosono
  • “Tusk” – Fleetwood Mac
  • “LONELY WEEKEND” – NNAMDÏ
  • “Be Sweet” – Japanese Breakfast
  • “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God)” – Kate Bush
  • “hypnotized” – Tune-Yards
  • “Watching Strangers Smile” – Parquet Courts
  • “Those to Come” – The Shins
  • “Beautiful Mother” – Dirty Projectors, Björk
  • “Answer Me, My Love” – Swamp Dogg
  • “Topaz” – The B-52’s
  • “Spring” – Angel Olsen

As always you can stream this playlist on Spotify.

Happy March,

Caitlin

Categories
Miscellaneous

“Take Off Your Shirt!”: Rethinking Boundaries of Concert Attendees

When I go to concerts, I always end up next to really annoying people. At first, I thought it was just me having bad luck or that I like artists that tend to have younger fanbases. While both of these things might have a role in it, I think a lot of it is a lot of people having absolutely no respect for musicians/ artists/ celebrities as people. When I attended the Mitski show at the Ritz Raleigh, the people standing next to me were hellbent on being comedians, although it just came off as extremely disrespectful. 

Mitski, a carefully private and composed person, who has expressed many times that her fans don’t know her, has tried to draw clear boundaries between her as a person and as a performer (in both her art and in interviews). And yet, as she gracefully performed every choreographed movement in animated and exaggerated forms, the people next to me laughed, yelled and willfully misinterpreted the artistic moves she was making.  During certain songs, Mitski would collapse to her knees, lie on the ground, or otherwise make herself completely vulnerable; in response my concert neighbors would yell things like “Get up Mitski!” or “What is she doing right now?!” These two people were blatantly ignoring all of the vulnerability she was offering and cringing at it, mentally closing themselves off from what she had to offer them. 

When going to shows, I feel it’s important to recognize the artist’s comfortability with the audience, and truly contemplate whether your actions draw some sort of false familiarity between you and the performer(s). Last September when I attended the Phoebe Bridgers show, again there were people completely unaware of how disrespectful they were being, and Bridgers is a lot more comfortable with that kind of stuff. From signs that read “Hey mommy!” to hooting and hollering during “Punisher,” a song notably about deceased Elliott Smith, most people there seemed to think that somehow they were entitled to friendship with her. Think about how utterly dehumanizing it must be to want to share art about some of the most intimate parts of yourself, and to be made a laughing stock. 

I understand why and how it happens; people relate to the music that an artist makes and feel like the artist knows and understands them. In turn, this leads to people thinking that because they feel understood, they must also understand the artist. While in some cases this could true, for Mitski it ultimately isn’t. It’s embarrassing to witness. 

Phoebe Bridgers is not your “bestie,” she doesn’t know you. Just enjoy the music, dance with your friends, take pictures and let loose.

– Caitlin

Categories
New Album Review

A Beginner’s Mind Album Review

About A Beginner’s Mind

Released in September of 2021, A Beginner’s Mind is a collaborative effort from Sufjan Stevens and up-and-coming singer-songwriter Angelo De Augustine. Each song has a distinct film inspiration, as listed at the end. These are unusual movies to to write a dreamy-folksy-indie-pop album about. Most titles are either commonly criticized, sequels, or simply left out of today’s pop culture scene. Many of the songs take on the point of view of misunderstood characters of movies. Notably, “Pillars of the Soul” and “You Give Death a Bad Name.” This is a unique take on an album that I have never seen done before. The songs aren’t gimmicky or obviously based on such films; instead, they feature tasteful nods. 

Criticism

In an article for Pitchfork, Nadine Smith explores the particularly “problematic” territory of the song “Cimmerian Shade” through the lens of a trans woman. The song is supposed to be from the point of Buffalo Bill, a character that has been weaponized against the trans community. Notably, she calls out the use of the word “autogynephilia” in the song, an outdated term that “dismisses transness as a sexual fetish isntead of a valid identity” (Smith, Pitchfork). Buffalo Bill is a character that represents institutional oppression for trans folks, so more caution may have been needed with word choice from Sufjan and Angelo. “Cimmerian Shade” was my favorite song off of this album, and I had no idea of its origin until reading Smith’s article. I’ve learned how valuable reading other perspectives is.

My Thoughts

Angelo and Sufjan’s beautiful album creates a sense of longing, and feels as if it should be the backing for Greek mythology indie movie. With elements of their own music, A Beginner’s Mind is more vocal heavy, with angelically layered voices. Angelo and Sufjan put out amazing work individually, and this album is some of my favorite work of theirs. I really look forward to any future collaborations between these two.

Check out Nadine Smith’s beautifully written review for Pitchfork here.

  • “Reach Out” inspired by Wings of Desire
  • “Lady Macbeth in Chains” inspired by All About Eve
  • “Back to Oz” inspired by Return to Oz
  • “The Pillar of Souls” inspired by Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth
  • “You Give Death a Bad Name” inspired by Night of the Living Dead
  • “Beginner’s Mind” inspired by Point Break
  • “Olympus” inspired by Clash of the Titans
  • “Murder and Crime” inspired by Mad Max
  • “(This Is) The Thing” inspired by The Thing
  • “It’s Your Own Body and Mind” inspired by She’s Gotta Have It
  • “Lost in the World” inspired by The Last Wave
  • “Fictional California” inspired by Bring It On Again
  • “Cimmerian Shade” inspired by The Silence of the Lambs
  • “Lacrimae” inspired by Lacrimae Rerum
Categories
Concert Review

Mitski Concert Review (2/18/22) at The Ritz

It’s 6:30 p.m.; my roommate (who is also my best friend) and I arrive at The Ritz inappropriately dressed for the 40 degree weather and the sun is no longer in the sky to spread its warmth on us. Shivering violently in the cold, we  play games to pass the time, trying to tune out the droning of the somewhat-obnoxious 16 year olds behind us in line that had just been dropped off by their parents. At 7:05, the line starts moving and we’re ushered closer and closer to indoors. Finally, we make it inside, and decide to head up to the balcony to get a better view. I can see my old roommate (another best friend of mine) in the front row, her neon pink hair contrasting against the blobs of blonde and brown surrounding her.

CHAI, a Japanese rock band, opens and their energy is electric. The quartet of women sings, dances, and sets the energy for the night.

After the purchase of a five dollar can of water, some patient waiting and more games to pass the time, the lights finally dim. Mitski’s band walks out before her, and then I see her. She is draped in a beautiful ankle-length white gown. She stays mostly still for the first song, “Love Me More,” and I cannot see her behind the pillar directly in my line of vision. After the second song she performs, “Should’ve Been Me” she asks in a saccharine sweet demeanor for the audience to turn the flash on their cameras off, and professes how grateful she is to be here. 

Her set list is 23 songs long, and she doesn’t deviate from it. The set list only includes six songs from “Laurel Hell” and the rest is comprised of her revisiting her older work. Her choreography is timed down to the second, she prances across the stage, running and dancing, making herself look vulnerable to the audience, but never seeming to look anyone directly in the eye.

My favorite Mitski song is “I Will” off of “Bury Me At Makeout Creek.” My aforementioned old roommate introduced it to me our freshman year. We had decided to room together our freshman year at NC State because we found out we were both Mitski fans, but in reality, I only knew one song… “Nobody.” She showed me “I Will” and told me it was one of her favorite songs ever.

Directly after “Nobody,” the tenth song of the night, Mitski begins singing “I Will.” I focus my attention on my freshman year roommate in the front row, watching as she sees Mitski perform this right in front of her. I don’t cry at concerts, I get weird about crying in front of other people. I sob. “Everything you feel is good / If you would only let you.”

Mitski only engages in stage talk twice more, once before her fake-exit pre-encore, saying the standard “thank you so much” and once more after the encore, “Two Slow Dancers”. There’s a prop-door on stage she exits through, but since I’m on the balcony I can see her slip behind the stage’s velvet grey curtains. The post-show song is “Calling Occupants Of Interplanetary Craft (The Recognized Anthem Of World Contact Day)” by The Carpenters.

I leave The Ritz feeling fulfilled and grateful that I got to see Mitski live. She is a stunning vocal performer, a talented artist and a wonderful lyricist.

Categories
Weekly Charts

Daytime Charts 2/22

#ArtistAlbumLabel
1REPTALIENSMultiverseCaptured Tracks
2FLYING LOTUSYasukeWarp
3ILLISMFamily Over EverythingThe CRWN
4LAVA LA RUE“For You” [Single]Marathon Artists
5MITSKILaurel HellDead Oceans
6NATIVESON91Come Back Down [EP]Spear Head
7SAMM HENSHAWUntidy SoulDorm Seven/AWAL
8SOFTCULTYear Of The Snake [EP]Easy Life
9TOM MISCH AND YUSSEF DAYESWhat Kinda MusicBlue Note
10WAVEFORMLast RoomRun For Cover
11CLOAKROOMDissolution WaveRelapse
12DYME-A-DUZIN AND MONEY MONTAGETRAINING. [EP]Below System
13EVIDENCEUnlearning Vol. 1Rhymesayers
14HAVIAH MIGHTYStock ExchangeSelf-Released
15JOESEFDoes It Make You Feel Good? [EP]Bold Cut
16LITTLE SIMZSometimes I Might Be IntrovertAGE 101
17MILAN RINGI’m Feeling HopefulAstral People/PIAS
18TYLER THE CREATORCALL ME IF YOU GET LOSTColumbia
19YARD ACTThe OverloadZen F.C.
203AMSOUNDIt Gets Dark SometimesSelf-Released
21AEON STATIONObservatorySub Pop
22AMINETwopointfiveCLBN
23ANUSHKAYemayaTru Thoughts
24ARCAkiCK iiiiXL
25ARLO PARKS“Softly” [Single]Transgressive/PIAS
26BROKEN SOCIAL SCENEOld Dead Young: B-Sides & RaritiesArts & Crafts
27CAKES DA KILLA, PROPER VILLAINSMuvaland Vol. 2 [EP]Warner
28DAWN RICHARDSecond LineMerge
29DENZEL CURRY“The Game” [Single]Loma Vista
30ELIJAH ROSARIOGenuine Truths1496748

Daytime Adds

#ArtistAlbumLabel
1SOFTCULTYear Of The Snake [EP]Easy Life
2GULLY BOYSFavorite Son [EP]Get Better
3DEATH HAGSBig Grey SunSelf-Released
4ANIMAL COLLECTIVETime SkiffsDomino
5DEE HOLT“Nobody Like You” [Single]Nettwerk
6MARISSA BURWELLBittersweetGrind Central
7DUCKS LTDModern FictionCarpark
8WINNETKA BOWLING LEAGUEPulp [EP]RCA
9AUDIOBOOKS“Tryna Tryna Take Control” [Single]Heavenly/PIAS
10BLUE J“Borderline” [Single]Nettwerk
Categories
Weekly Charts

Underground Charts 2/22

#ArtistAlbumLabel
1LITTLE SIMZSometimes I Might Be IntrovertAGE 101
2SAMM HENSHAWUntidy SoulDorm Seven/AWAL
3VINCE STAPLES AND MUSTARD“MAGIC” [Single]Blacksmith/Motown
4FLYING LOTUSYasukeWarp
5FREDDIE GIBBS AND MADLIBBandanaKeep Cool/RCA
6ILLISMFamily Over EverythingThe CRWN
7JPEGMAFIALP!EQT
8PLANET GIZA“When The Moving Stops” [Single]Self-Released
9CAKES DA KILLA, PROPER VILLAINSMuvaland Vol. 2 [EP]Warner
10DYME-A-DUZIN AND MONEY MONTAGETRAINING. [EP]Below System

Underground Adds

#ArtistAlbumLabel
1SAMM HENSHAWUntidy SoulDorm Seven/AWAL
2MOONCHILDStarfruitTru Thoughts
3ZELOOPERZVan Goghs Left EarBruiser Brigade
4VINCE STAPLES“MAGIC (feat. Mustard)” [Single]UMG
Categories
Weekly Charts

Chainsaw Charts 2/22

#ArtistAlbumLabel
1CURTA’N WALLCrocodile Moat​!​!​!​!​!​!​!Grime Stone
2TRIP TO AUSTRIAVARIOUS ARTISTSSelf-Released
3THE (JOHN) CANDY28 Samples LaterRad Dudes, Inc.
4PENSEES NOCTURNESDOUCE FANGELes Acteurs de l’ombre Productions
5DRUNEDruneSelf-Released
6GREEN LUNGBlack HarvestSvart
7CARCASSTorn ArteriesNuclear Blast
8MASTIFFLeave Me The Ashes Of The EarthEntertainment One
9RIVERS OF NIHILThe WorkMetal Blade
10SPIRIT BOXEternal BluePale Chord
Categories
Weekly Charts

Afterhours Charts 2/22

#ArtistAlbumLabel
1JULESDelta Ajax [EP]Happy Life
2COFFINTEXTS8700 [EP]Club Qu
3FJAAKSYS03 [EP]Self-Released
4ROSS FROM FRIENDSTreadBrainfeeder
5ERIKA DE CASIERSensational4AD/Beggars Group
6CFCFMemorylandSelf-Released
7DJ SEINFELDMirrorsNinja Tune
8PIXEL GRIPArenaFeeltrip
9KEDR LIVANSKIYLiminal Soul2MR
10LOGIC1000In The Sweetness Of You [EP]Therapy/Because
Categories
Miscellaneous Playlists

Fight Scene Soundtracks of “The Umbrella Academy”

With a new Instagram post celebrating the 3-year anniversary of season 1’s release, “The Umbrella Academy” fans are getting excited for season 3. Unfortunately, there’s still very little information from the showrunners themselves, but that can’t stop fans—myself included—from speculating on the release date. Recently, I’ve been rewatching the show to ease my anticipation, and the rewatch has reminded me just how incredible the soundtrack is. One of my favorite parts of the soundtrack is the unexpected yet strangely fitting songs in the fight scenes. So, I’m here to share some of my favorite fight scene sounds of “The Umbrella Academy.”

“Istanbul (Not Constantinople)” by They Might Be Giants (S1 E1)

This being the first big fight scene of the show, I wasn’t sure what to expect when I went into it. I knew that I was dealing with a 58-year-old-man in a child’s body who had powers of teleportation, and I knew that I was dealing with trained assassins attacking a donut shop. What I didn’t know was that “Istanbul (Not Constantinople)” would be playing in the background, and that it would quickly become one of my favorite fight scenes in any piece of media.

“Sinnerman” by Nina Simone (S1 E3)

This is the first time you see the family of superheroes fight together, and it is quite an incredible display. This song adds just the right amount of weirdness, highlighting the dysfunction between the siblings.

“Sunshine, Lollipops, and Rainbows” by Lesley Gore (S1 E9)

When I hear this song, the first thing I think of definitely isn’t two highly trained, time-traveling assassins fighting each other. But that’s exactly what I got. I love it.

“My Way” by Frank Sinatra (S2 E1)

With caution not to spoil anything, I can say that this scene is the most epic display of the siblings’ powers and ability to act as a team. Who other than Frank Sinatra could play in the background of such an important moment?

“Polk Salad Annie” by Tony Joe White (S2 E7)

This song plays in perhaps the most gruesome scene of the entire show; it definitely doesn’t fit the murder spree vibe. Honestly, I wouldn’t be surprised if the showrunners included it to ease some of the brutality of the scene, but no matter their reasons for including it, it works.

These songs make up only a few of the incredible song choices in “The Umbrella Academy,” both in fight scenes and in the rest of the show. If you’ve seen “The Umbrella Academy” before, I hope you enjoyed reminiscing over some of these iconic fight scenes, and if you haven’t, I hope this list has convinced you to give it a shot. Either way, happy viewing.

Categories
New Album Review

Uhhh…… Kim Petras? Are You Okay?

In my last article covering Kim Petras in September, I made the comment that I hoped to hear something riskier and less polished from her. In what is not the first instance of my articles on the websites acting as a monkey’s paw, she’s released a new ep titled “Slut Pop” that, well… it’s definitely less polished.

I’m the editor here and even I’m confused as to whether I can post the lyrics to any song on this album here, so here’s my attempt at a NCSU appropriate version of some lyrics, just so you get a feel for this ep’s tone:

“Treat me like a [redacted]
Little [redacted], I love to [redacted] I wanna go harder
I wanna [redacted] faster
I wanna [redacted]
I wanna [redacted] it, [redacted] it, bite it, get [redacted] it
Come on, touch my body”

Yeah the whole “Slutpop” theme is not just an aesthetic choice for the album cover, this whole ep is a concept album of “trashy, but make it self-aware.” The model for this style of music, especially in the concept of dance and electropop, is clearly Ke$ha, which brings us to the other notable feature of this album, it’s produced by Dr. Luke, a man most famous these days for alleged abuse against his signees, Ke$ha in particular.

This association would probably overwhelm the ep’s reception even if it was Kim Petras’ best work, but either fortunately or unfortunately depending on your perspective, this is far from her best music. The album seems almost like unintentional parody of Dr. Luke’s M.O. in the 2000’s: taking a generally likeable and intelligent female singer and decking her out in enough misogynistic tropes to make her persona insufferable, except when he did it to Ke$ha, the music was actually good.

As to why Petras decided to make an entire ep with Dr. Luke, I can’t begin to tell you. Her career was doing well before his involvement, and considering her main single at the moment is the bright and cheery “Coconuts” it seems unlikely that this is a drastic image change. The ep’s relative commercial failure is a saving grace as well, while #freeKesha has made some waves in response to this album, it’s so far been too small a blip to meaningfully hurt Petras’ reputation. All I can say is I hope this whole debacle will end Dr. Luke collaborations for good, at least then we will have gained something from the album.