Thursday, January 14, 2010

Flaming Lips and Yo La Tengo Year End Reviews






I was asked to write year end reviews for two of favorite records of last year, The Flaming Lips Embryonic and Yo La Tengo's Popular Songs. You can find them here, as well as below.

Flaming Lips- Embryonic

Embryonic resets the clock for the Flaming Lips. After a decade of functioning as a studio three-piece and turning out highly orchestrated albums with Wayne’s voice and lyrics firmly in the foreground, the band has gone back to being a band again. It would be easy to imagine that a back-to-basics approach would result in an album that sounded like it could be the follow-up to 1993’sTransmissions From The Satellite Heart, but this is the Flaming Lips. They’re anything but predictable, although they probably needed to remind themselves of that after the relatively tame At War With The Mystics.

Constructing songs primarily upon a tapestry of drum and bass patterns, Embryonic is also their first so-called double album, even though it fits on a single disc and doesn’t run much longer than some of their previous records. Like the Rolling Stones’ Exile On Main Street, the record goes for a sustained mood over individual songs. Which is not to say there aren’t some gems on here. Embryonic takes you on an organic journey through a range of styles including free jazz and psychedelia, and because the vocals are pushed to the back, the themes of power and astrology only emerge over time. But on a sprawling record like this, uncovering the rewards is what it’s all about. –Todd Norem



Yo La Tengo- Popular Songs

There’s something to the title of Yo La Tengo’s 2009 album that really rings true. Popular Songs – it sounds like another joke from the same band that brought us 2005’s I’m Not Afraid Of You And I Will Beat Your Ass. Sure, we’ve never seen Yo La Tengo in the top 10 and probably never will. But Popular Songs is Yo La Tengo’s most accessible album in years. Longtime fans enjoyed their Condo Fucks detour into garage rock covers from earlier this year, but by genre-hopping from R&B to psychedelia to guitar-drenched epics, they’re created a better record here. “Periodically Double Or Triple,” “If It’s True,” and “Avalon Or Something Similar” may not have the catchiest titles, but the music is some of the most infectious the band has created. And just when you think they really have created a batch of single-ready material, they reward you with three epic songs to close the disc. But what really matters is that Yo La Tengo have recorded another record which lives up to the promise of I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One and And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out. By referencing their past while creating an adventurous new musical landscape, the record rewards longtime fans while providing a great entry point for wannabe converts as well. –Todd Norem



February Album Writing Month 2010




Happy New Year everyone. I haven't posted much here lately, but I hope to get back into it. Please leave comments when you can. It helps big time.

February Album Writing Month is just around the corner. For those of you scratching your head, here's a little background. Since 2004 there's been a community of people who each try to write an albums worth of material (defined as 14 songs on the site) during the shortest month of the year. It started out with just a handful of people and has grown to a couple thousand worldwide.

So if you've written a song, or always thought about it, visit fawm.org. It doesn't start until February 1st, so there's still time to sign up.

This will be my 5th year doing it. I finished the challenge and wrote all 14 songs in 2005, 2008 and 2009.