Categories
New Album Review

Pop Music Breaks New Ground with wishlane’s “nobody’s listening”

nobody’s listening” is the second full-length album by Chattanoogan native wishlane. The album was released on February 29, 2024. The 21-year-old has been making and releasing music for over four years now. Most of wishlane’s work has been through Webcage, the mega-group established over the hyperpop revolution in 2020.

“nobody’s listening” combines emo-pop and glitch pop, as well as a palette of electronica to make one of the tightest pop albums of the last decade. It’s clear from even the first few seconds of this album that wishlane has an incredible comprehension of sound design and can make his huge musical ideas come to life.

One of my favorite things about this album is the specific synths that wishlane uses. The sounds of the synths all heavily resemble highly amplified electric guitars. This not only allows the production to strike a fire inside of anyone who listens, but it also makes the production feel a lot more malleable as compared to just using guitars. “27 degrees,” for example, is the lead single and the first song after the introduction track. Instantly, the crunchy synths pull you into this inescapable riff that feels out of control. The guitar-styled synths work so well here, almost feeling like more of a rock song at times.

Another thing that I love about this album is the infinite creativity wishlane provides in his instrumental process. Throughout the album, there are many appearances of acoustic guitar, whistling electronics, reverberating piano and my favorite: rhythmic clapping. Despite not having any specific musical reasons, I feel like the clapping makes the LP. The acoustic guitar, however, seems to be the most prevalent of these instruments, serving as sort of a launching pad for all of the synths to just blast off from. The guitar adds a sort of dry unsettling flavor to the album, making it feel very atmospheric.

Using the acoustic guitar to jumpstart these winding passages throughout his songs, wishlane slowly revolves riffs and ideas around one another, then smashes them all together in a cathartic release of energy. wishlane is very skilled at continuing to keep your attention and always introducing new ideas. The songs in this album range from under two minutes to eleven minutes, and the longer pop songs feel just as punchy as the shorter ones. This is difficult to pull off, especially if you are making pop music.

wishlane’s vocals are nothing to snark at, either. He carries such an angsty, deep, emotional timbre with him, very derivative of recent emo-rap artist brakence. wishlane’s singing voice just brings so much weight to the tone of the album, flowing with the pitch of the synths and electronics perfectly. Songs like “string theory” really showcase his range, going from spoken word to a lower pitch to a higher pitch to screaming so seamlessly.

Conclusion

On “nobody’s listening,” wishlane has developed a perfect formula for pop music, creating some of the most emotionally intense bangers of the 2020s. I highly recommend checking this album out; you will get something out of it no matter what.

Categories
Weekly Charts

Chainsaw Charts 7/16/24

Chainsaw Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1SPECTRAL VOICESparagmos [EP]Dark Decent
2ABHORIADepthsProsthetic
3ALCESTLes Chants De L’AuroreNuclear Blast
4KNOCKED LOOSEYou Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed ToPure Noise
5ULCERATECutting The Throat Of GodDebemur Morti
6WRISTMEETRAZORDegenerationProsthetic
7ANTICHRIST SIEGE MACHINEVengeance Of Eternal FireProfound Lore
8CONIFEREL’Impot du Sang [EP]Phantom Lure
9FINAL RESTING PLACEPrelude To Extinction [EP]DAZE
10GREYHAVENStereo Grief [EP]Solid State

Chainsaw Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1KVADRATThe Horrible Dissonance Of OblivionNuclear Winter
2HIGH ON FIRECometh The StormMNRK
3HAMMOKLook How Long Lasting Everything Is Moving Forward for OnceThirty Something
4WORMEDOmegonSeason Of Mist
5BLIND GIRLSAn Exit ExistsPersistent Vision
Categories
Weekly Charts

Underground Charts 7/16/24

Underground Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1KOKOKOBUTUTransgressive/PIAS
2LUPE FIASCOSamurai1st And 15th Too/Thirty Tigers
3HIATUS KAIYOTELove Heart Cheat CodeBrainfeeder
4YELLOW HOUSEPsalms Of Yellow HouseForeign Family Collective
5SAD NIGHT DYNAMITE“Sugabby” b/w “Godfather” [Single]Pigeon Teeth/AWAL
6ONEDA“Superwoman” b/w “Set It Off” [Single]Heavenly/PIAS
7LUCI“Morning Wine” [Single]Don’t Sleep/PIAS
8TRACY DE SA“Brown And Proud” [Single]Ovastand
9MONTAO“For the Love of Hip-Hop” [Single]Self-Released
10DAN-E-OVigilanteUrbnet

Underground Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1ELLA THOMPSON“Let There Be Nothing” [Single]Hopestreet
2BATHE“Avalon” [Single]MNRK
3FEE THE EVOLUTIONIST“Memory Lane” feat. Edo G & Ruby Shabazz [Single]Fenetic
4PROJEXXSweat [Remixes]Warner
5LINCOLN“Coastin” [Single]Self-Released
6PREVIOUS INDUSTRIESService MerchandiseMerge
Categories
Weekly Charts

Jazz Charts 7/16/24

Jazz Chart

#ArtistRecordLabel
1JONATHAN POWELLMambo Jazz PartyCircle 9
2PREFUSE 73New Strategies For Modern Crime Vol. 1 & 2Lex
3SPANISH HARLEM ORCHESTRASwing ForeverOvation
4GERALD CANNONLive At Dizzy’s Club: The Music Of Elvin & McCoyWoodneck
5SHELLY BERGAlegriaArtistShare
6AROOJ AFTABNight ReignVerve
7GEOFFREY KEEZERGeoffrey Keezer Live at BirdlandMarKeez
8APIFERAKeep The Outside OpenStones Throw
9MICHAEL EATONThe PhenomenalMother Brain
10JONATHAN BARBERIn MotionVision Ahead

Jazz Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1JONATHAN POWELLMambo Jazz PartyCircle 9
2PREFUSE 73New Strategies For Modern Crime Vol. 1 & 2Lex
3SPANISH HARLEM ORCHESTRASwing ForeverOvation
4GEOFFREY KEEZERGeoffrey Keezer Live at BirdlandMarKeez
5APIFERAKeep The Outside OpenStones Throw
6SERGIO PEREIRABOSSA+Tiger Turn
7STEVE TURRESanyasSmoke Sessions
8BRYONY JARMAN-PINTOBelow DawnTru Thoughts
9MICHAEL EATONThe PhenomenalMother Brain
Categories
Weekly Charts

Afterhours Charts 7/16/24

Afterhours Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1PERREOTEK VOL.4VARIOUS ARTISTSANGELS GUN CLUB
2DIANA STARSHINEfairy pop (remixes)Self-Released
3METAMATICSHidden Zara SpookIntellitronic Bubble
4DISCORD DATAFILE VOL.3 – THE PRIDE ONEVARIOUS ARTISTSdiscorddatafile
5SAMURIELLo Que TienesSelf-Released
6E_DEATH AND KMADOSanctuarySelf-Released
7JASPER TYGNERThings To Come [EP]Technicolour
8JESSXOGround To DustDEATHBYSHEEP
9ABADDONLiarGeometric Lullaby
10GIRL ULTRAblush [EP]Big Dada

Afterhours Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1PERREOTEK VOL.4VARIOUS ARTISTSANGELS GUN CLUB
2METAMATICSHidden Zara SpookIntellitronic Bubble
3DISCORD DATAFILE VOL.3 – THE PRIDE ONEVARIOUS ARTISTSdiscorddatafile
4DIANA STARSHINEfairy pop (remixes)Self-Released
5JASPER TYGNERThings To Come [EP]Technicolour
6JESSXOGround To DustDEATHBYSHEEP
7SAMURIELLo Que TienesSelf-Released
8E_DEATH AND KMADOSanctuarySelf-Released
9SBTRKTBack On [EP]Save Yourself
10GIRL ULTRAblush [EP]Big Dada
Categories
Weekly Charts

Top Charts 7/16/24

Top Charts

#ArtistRecordLabel
1MANNEQUIN PUSSYI Got HeavenEpitaph
2OMNISouvenirSub Pop
3SPRINTSBlack Box Sessions [EP]City Slang
4ADRIANNE LENKERBright Future4AD
5ERICK THE ARCHITECTI’ve Never Been Here BeforeIDOL
6MEAN JEANSBlastedFat Wreck Chords
7MEI SEMONESKabutomushi [EP]Bayonet
8SOFTCULTHeaven [EP]Easy Life
9YUNGATITAShoelace & A KnotSelf-Released
10DANNY BROWNQuarantaWarp
11GLITTERERRationaleAnti-
12HANA VURomanticismGhostly International/Secretly Group
13SASAMI“Honeycrash” [Single]Domino
14SLEATER-KINNEYLittle RopeLoma Vista/Concord
15SWEET PILLStarchild [EP]Hopeless
16ARLO PARKSMy Soft Machine (Deluxe)Transgressive/PIAS
17BLONDSHELL“Docket” feat. Bully [Single]Partisan
18BRISTLERCascades At Play [EP]Mint 400
19CHUCK STRANGERSA Forsaken Lover’s PleaLex
20DARKSOFTGrayscaleSpirit Goth
21HIATUS KAIYOTELove Heart Cheat CodeBrainfeeder
22KENNY MASON9 (Nine)RCA
23KURUPIMano [EP]Hit The North
24KYLE MARTUCCILate Night ThaiTooch
25MILAN RINGMangosAstral People/PIAS
26OFFICE DOGSpielNew West/Flying Nun
27POWERWASHEREveryone LaughsStrange View
28PSYMON SPINEHead Body ConnectorNorthern Spy
29RITCHIETriple Digits [112]AWAL
30SEAFOOD SAMStanding On Giant Shouldersdrink sum wtr

Top Adds

#ArtistRecordLabel
1MJ LENDERMAN“She’s Leaving You” [Single]Anti-
2PRETTY SICKStreetwise [EP]Dirty Hit
3MERCURYTogether We Are One, You And I [EP]Big Loud Rock
4DREADED LARAMIE, THEPrincess FeedbackSmartpunk
5MAGDALENA BAY“Image” [Single]Mom+Pop
6TANUKICHAN“NPC” [Single]Carpark
7KAYCIE SATTERFIELDRosieEarth Libraries
8ARMLOCKSeashell Angel Lucky CharmRun For Cover
9BOUDICCA’S BASS SERVICE“Hiding” [Single]Self-Released
Categories
Classic Album Review

Shadow of the Erd Tree’s Best OSTs

FromSoft has finally dropped the long-awaited DLC for Elden Ring. And in classic FromSoft fashion, they’ve casually imbued it with some of the most riveting OSTs of the century.

Quick disclaimer: I’m not a gamer. I’ve tried playing Elden Ring (at my younger brother’s behest) and was laughably horrible, dying immediately any time I encountered one of the hundreds of blood-hungry NPCs that roamed the map.

However, I do love good music, and Shadow of the Erdtree delivers. Here are the (in my expert opinion) best five tracks from the DLC.

“The Twin Moon Knight”

In terms of sheer emotional impact, “The Twin Moon Knight” is comparable to the iconic “Slave Knight Gael” from Dark Souls III.

Undoubtedly a far more complex composition, “The Twin Moon Knight” requires multiple rounds of listening for proper appreciation. Each time I replayed the track, I was struck by a new detail — a backdrop of plaintive vocals, a muted strain of ethereal strings, a subtle callback to Rennala’s theme, etc. — and the song’s tangle of sounds began to solidify into a frankly insane composition.

Where “Slave Knight Gael” is initially slow-moving, laboriously working up to its climax — much like Gael by the end of the game — “The Twin Moon Knight” is quick-to-strike and unrelenting from the first second, popping off immediately with woodwinds, percussion, vocals and heartwrenching strings.

It’s poetry. It’s opera. It’s devastating, and I can’t not go back for more.

By the end of the song, you’ve been utterly sliced to ribbons by ebullient arrangements of overlaid strings and stomped into the dust by a thudding percussive finale. It’s a song of many arcs, richly loaded with atmosphere and lore.

“Divine Beast Dancing Lion”

The Dancing Lion is one of the most grotesque creatures I’ve ever laid my eyes upon. Its corpse-green eyes and pearly white mouth of teeth, paired with its bruised and filthy human limbs, drive me absolutely crazy with revulsion.

It’s only the best kind of ironic that such a uniquely repulsive creature would possess one of the coolest OSTs in the franchise.

Composer Shoi Miyazawa expertly matches the OST’s sound to the beast’s whirling chaos, with susurations of stony male vocals and buzzing strings creating the illusion of churning air. When the Lion reaches its second phase, the atmosphere grows thunderous and the strings reach a frantic, lilting speed.

Arguably one of the most unique tracks from the DLC, “Divine Beast Dancing Lion” is frenetic and unforgettable.

“The Lord of Frenzied Flame”

While “The Twin Moon Knight” and “Divine Beast Dancing Lion” were exemplary for their complex, high-energy compositions, “The Lord of Frenzied Flame” is good because it’s plainly horrific.

From the first note, “The Lord of Frenzied Flame” drips foreboding. A percussive thud barely audible beneath a string and woodwind arrangement gives the impression of footfalls, of a horrible and formidable foe lurching ever-closer.

Also composed by Shoi Miyazawa, this track captures the fight’s — as stated by YouTube commenter TuomasH– “you have to kill this guy before he leaves the room and ends the world” kind of vibe.

Others compare the sound to the Bloodborne soundtrack — dark, dyspeptic and laden with unease. Pure drama from beginning to end.

“The Promised Consort”

This, according to my brother, is the single best track of the franchise. And I think he’s got a good argument going. To put it simply, the song is epic, the perfect backdrop for a long-awaited battle featuring legendary characters.

Twin swells — uproarious symphony for Radahn and delicate strings for Miquella — punctuate the track’s first phase before dissolving into something downright heavenly. Diegetically, the energy is intense, everything culminating in an unforgettable finale.

Categories
New Album Review

New EP Review: “Fizzy Drink/Lathe” by Outback and sv1

I love music. I love when two obscure artists with different styles collaborate. I love this EP, which is only two songs (which to me is single territory, but whatever.) I know that most reviews are for albums instead of something this short, but I don’t care. It’s good.

Both artists do strange, ethereal atmospheres, but the execution is very different. Outback leans more into the EDM sphere, most often breaks-adjacent, while sv1 does glitch with more than occasional trap influence. So: what do these songs actually sound like?

Categories
Concert Preview Miscellaneous

LOLLA-land: the immaculate birth and rebirth of Lollapalooza as told by MTV

I am a firm believer that 95% of festivals are no longer cool.

The market is oversaturated, the bar for small bands is too low and the commodification and democratization of stardom has made big bands seem blasé.

Plainly stated, music doesn’t feel important any more.

I’m not seeing many, if any, baby bands that feel like they’re going to set the world on fire – and I am certainly not seeing many big artists that will go down in the annals of history.

And festivals feel the same.

Coachella is a ‘wannabe influencer’ petri dish, Reading & Leeds have pop acts gracing their stages and Glastonbury is now Coachella with more mud.

And worst of all, there’s Lollapalooza…

What was once a haven for everything alternative has become yet another destination, Coachella-lite festival.

But it wasn’t always that way – once, it was a bright, shining beacon of transgression in a sea of country-club, khaki approved pop.

MTV Time Machine

Streaming on Paramount+, “LOLLA: The story of Lollapalooza” charts the rise, fall, and rebirth of Lollapalooza from Perry Farrell’s Glastonbury inspired dream to the multi-million dollar Chicago festival.

It’s a long and bumpy ride that stretches from equipment frying heatwaves that enraged a baby-faced Trent Reznor to stuffed shirt meetings to introduce collaboration with the Austin City Limits team.

But narratively aside, the footage of yesterday’s Lolla was what I fell in love with.

From Body Count to Ben Folds Five, the early days and death knells of Lollapalooza were diligently captured by MTV camera crews and Fans alike.

I grew up hearing my dad’s Lolla-land adventures from the 90s, a former festival devotee, and I so badly wanted to step foot in that sea.

And while time travel certainly isn’t an option, it was an option to sit down and watch this with him – courtesy commentary provided.

We’ve all seen the videos of Eddie Vedder monkey bar-ing it across the stage, but it’s different to see that video with live feedback from your old man who was there.

So, not only did I get my trip in the way back machine, I got to know a little bit more about my dad during his 20-something-ne’er-do-well heyday.

Speaking of Dads…

Jane’s Addiction comes to Red Hat:

2024 Tour Poster for Jane’s Addiction supported by Love and Rockets, from Live Nation

Do you have a reformed alternative parent?

Does said parent need a kick in the ass to remember they’re still alive?

Do you have the music taste of a middle-aged man?

If so, I have wonderful news for you:

In what I can only describe as an alt-rock wet dream, Jane’s Addiction’s original line up of Perry Ferrell, Dave Navarro, Eric Avery and Stephen Perkins are returning to the stage supported by Love and Rockets.

So, if you’re looking to kill time on a Tuesday Night with your Ma and/or Pops, watching them revert back to whatever college delinquents they were, this is the show for you.

Besides, what’s more rock-n-roll than ignoring the looming 9-5 Wednesday morning wake-up call to go to a show?

Live a little, Live loud – Bodhi.

Categories
Classic Album Review

Kravitz and Cree: “Street Faërie”

If any album can convince you to get a belly button piercing, it’s going to be this one.

Most of us know Cree Summer as the raspy-voiced woman behind our childhood cartoons as “Numbah Five” from “Codename: Kids Next Door,” or Susie Meyerson from “Rugrats” amongst many others.

My Gen X-ers know Summer as the ever-spunky Freddie on “A Different World.”

However, my favorite incarnation is the scratchy and soulful singer of the here-and-then-gone 1999 album “Street Faërie.”

Summer’s lyrics walk the line between fresh and cynical, intimate and erotic, poetic and plainspoken in a way that feels almost reminiscent of Erykah Badu’s work.

She effortlessly weaves that earth-mother-barefoot-beauty with a decidedly tough, no-nonsense sensibility.

“Street Faërie” was produced by Lenny Kravitz, whose fingerprints are sonically all over the album.

From lush arrangements to backing vocals, he added tangible shape and color to Summer’s vision.

Forget Don Henley and Stevie Nicks; Kravitz and Summer create auditory leather and lace together.

Her vocals are equal parts delicate and forceful, uniquely free of her signature spoken rasp, whereas his guitar has that tell-tale driven ’90s crunch laced with powerfully ’70s swagger.

While the album reeks of what I can only imagine is Lenny Kravit’s spicy cologne, it feels like a disservice to dismiss it as his pet project as some reviewers have.

As far as content goes, it’s all Summer – from “Curious White Boy” to “Naheo,” she pulls from her reality to find the beauty in mundanity.

Her songs run the gamut from interracial dating to period sex, each one handled with a deeply personal intimacy that brings the listener deeper into a wonderland entirely of her making.

Despite what the title may suggest, the whimsical “Street Faërie” keeps both feet firmly planted in reality.

– Bodhi