Rabu, 29 Juni 2016

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Blood Orange: Freetown Sound

Blood Orange: Freetown Sound

In July 2015, at the height of the Black Lives Matter movement, British singer/composer Dev Hynes released "Do You See My Skin Through the Flames?", an 11-minute assessment of race and self-worth at a time of intense struggle between blacks and law enforcement. "This is not from my forthcoming album," Hynes asserted, "just some things on my mind." The cover art depicted an elegant black figure—his back straight, his fingers clutched deep into his own flesh. The image showed strength; on the song, Hynes unpacked the yin and yang of everyday life as a black person: "I'm proud of my name, I'm proud of my dad, I'm proud of my family, but it's very strange to have to carry that… we all carry that, every black person carries that." To live black is to live conflicted. There's the urge to live freely and be accepted, even if the world at large is still uncomfortable with people of color. We feel an innate sense to protect our own kind and hold each other close. We are prisoners of perception; our culture pillaged, our style and vernacular mocked and imitated, only to be told we're not good enough to be equal. 

Freetown Sound, Hynes' third album as Blood Orange, arrives days after Baltimore police officer Caesar Goodson Jr., who drove the van in which 25-year-old Freddie Gray was fatally injured, was found not guilty on all charges against him. That same day, a grand jury in Collin County, Texas, decided there wasn't enough evidence to indict former McKinney police officer Eric Casebolt for slamming a black teenage girl to the ground at a pool party. June 25th would've been Tamir Rice's 14th birthday, but he—a black preteen—was shot by a Cleveland police officer who thought Rice pulled a handgun from his waistband. Earlier this month, 49 people died in what's being called the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history, after a gunman walked into a gay Orlando nightclub and opened fire. And just last week, the United Kingdom—where Hynes is from—voted to leave the European Union, sparking chants of racism from liberals.

Freetown feels shaded by all these events, even if public outcry over racial injustice has dissipated slightly over the last year. Hynes offers a broad view of black culture, using vocal clips and spoken-word poetry to craft a multifaceted narrative of historically underserved people. "Black can get you over, black can sit you down," says a sampled voice toward the end of "With Him," from Marlon Riggs' 1994 documentary, Black is...Black Ain't. On "Love Ya," we hear author Ta-Nehisi Coates outline a very real conflict facing most minorities: figuring out what to wear—and how to wear it—as to not intimidate others. "How was I gonna wear my pants?" he recalled. "What shoes was I gonna wear? Who was I gonna walk with to school?" Most people take these things for granted, but as a minority, your fashion sense can be seen as a threat. "Hands Up" references the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin in Florida, where George Zimmerman—a neighborhood watch volunteer—shot the unarmed teenager and claimed self-defense. "Keep your hood off when you're walking…" Hynes warns. "Sure enough, they're gonna take your body." Throughout Freetown, he speaks directly to those who look like him—the overlooked and under-appreciated, the persecuted and misunderstood—consoling his community while highlighting our collective grace. "Chance" treads the same ground as D'Angelo's "The Charade," using self-hurt to dissect racial inequality. "All I ever wanted was a chance for myself," Hynes moans through a voice steeped in sadness.  

Formerly known as Lightspeed Champion, Hynes used to play in punk-rock band Test Icicles before moving on to create folk/pop hybrids. 2011's Coastal Grooves—Hynes' first album as Blood Orange—combined new wave and electro-soul, even if the results just barely scratched the surface of what we hear from him now. Freetown is more expansive than 2013's stellar Cupid Deluxe, but it moves quicker, packing funk and '80s R&B into a coherent set. Between his nuanced baritone and creative approach, the album resembles a Saul Williams release, as something overtly political and complex while pulling in many different genres. Songs like "DesirĂ©e" and "Best to You" are especially nostalgic, employing festive soul grooves and tropical dance. "Juicy 1-4," "But You," and "Thank You" take tonal cues from Michael Jackson, mimicking the optimistic glow of ballads like "Human Nature" and "Man in the Mirror." In a good way, Hynes is able to pull from these musicians while crafting an aesthetic that's uniquely his. He takes on a director's role at times, stepping aside vocally and allowing his features to shine. Hynes mostly sings with and writes for women, which adds another layer of dignity to his art. Nelly Furtado takes the lead on "Hadron Collider" and Blondie frontwoman Deborah Harry sounds perfectly at home on "E.V.P.," a rubbery funk instrumental seemingly plucked from that band's discography.  

The album title pays homage to Freetown, Sierra Leone, the country's capital city and hometown to Hynes' father. The recording feels communal despite its political themes, whether he's sampling particular African dialect, or giving poet Ashlee Haze space on "By Ourselves" to salute femininity. On these and other songs, the words are searing and soothing, almost always at the same time. My in-laws—also from Freetown—speak reverently of the villages and family and friends who still live there. They reminisce about the beach and the sense of togetherness they felt. They acknowledge the extreme poverty and the 2014 Ebola outbreak, but say it's still a land of true beauty, holding a deep spiritual connection you have to feel for yourself. You sense that warmth throughout Freetown Sound, even if the music doesn't pull directly from the sounds of the area.

Freetown scans as a capital-B Black record, hitting the same social chords as Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp a Butterfly, D'Angelo's Black Messiah, and Kamasi Washington's The Epic. Like those albums, Freetown resonates with everyone sagging under the weight of systemic oppression. "My album is for everyone told they're not black enough, too black, too queer, not queer the right way … it's a clapback," Hynes told Entertainment Weekly in a recent interview. Freetown represents the innermost workings of a man wading through his own insecurities, holding his flaws and weaknesses up to the light for everyone to see. He's trying to make sense of himself, his race and sexuality, while taking a hard look at what this world has become. The future isn't so hopeless, but we won't make it if we don't forge the path together.





June 30, 2016 at 12:00PM
via Best New Albums - Pitchfork http://ift.tt/2941imx

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Jumat, 24 Juni 2016

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Kamis, 23 Juni 2016

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- G.L.O.S.S.: Trans Day of Revenge

G.L.O.S.S.: Trans Day of Revenge

Hardcore punk can often seem incapable of nuance; Minor Threat songs, as much as they communicated one person's choices, were elevated to the dogma of the straight edge movement by their audience. But hardcore is a shapeshifting genre, full of inversions and melted  dichotomies. And even as it can act as a conduit for regressive political expression, it can also serve as a metaphor for queer possibility.

Enter G.L.O.S.S., a hardcore band from Olympia, Washington. Their name, an acronym for "Girls Living Outside Society's Shit," determines the shape of their music, which resembles Boston hardcore if rerouted through the perspectives and experiences of trans women. (Lead singer Sadie and guitarist Jake are originally from Boston.) Trans Day of Revenge is their second EP; it's all of seven minutes long, following a demo of about equal length released last year. Revenge, released the day after the mass shooting in the Orlando club Pulse, conveys a violent and severe world, one in which the only reasonable and intelligent responses are anger and aggression. 

The EP opens with a swirl of feedback, over which Sadie screams, "When peace is just another word for death, it's our turn to give violence a chance!" The song describes police brutality and the degree to which this brutality flows from the superstructures that determine who survives in America. "Killer cops aren't crooked.../they do as they're told," she sings. "Black lives don't matter in the eyes of the law." Hardcore as a form can often condense language to its most bladed form; Sadie's lyrics depict queer experience in sharp fractions. "Singing in G.L.O.S.S. is kind of like getting to be a superhero," Sadie told BitchMedia last year, "like weaponizing a lifetime of anguish and alienation." "We scream/just to make sense of things," she sings in "We Live." "Studs and leather/survivors' wings." Her words are precise and rapid-fire but they're also embedded with sensitive detail that give them the occasional rhythm of poetry.

In the title track she compresses historical and modern indignation into a single verse: "Remember those/Dead and gone/but don't let the media set us up for harm/HRC, selfish fucks/Yuppie gays threw us under the bus." In a few seconds, a library shelf's worth of ideas are touched on: Queer erasure, the particular way in which media tends to flatten the specificities of queer life, the way that even within the queer community, transgender people are treated as inexplicable, illegitimate, politically inconvenient. This is the fragile calculus of hardcore that G.L.O.S.S. maintains, embedding politically complex ideas in emotionally unambiguous music without it flattening into a wave of rhetoric.  

G.L.O.S.S.'s music also functions as great hardcore; the songs dazzle for the asymmetry and velocity of their guitar riffs, some of which land so heavily that they resemble columns toppling. The riffs in "Fight" move with such a molecular insecurity it feels as if the song could at any point melt down into shapelessness. G.L.O.S.S.'s songs tend to feel both old and new, the past and the present occurring simultaneously, layered on top of each other so they produce an interesting dissonance located somewhere between noise and precision.

At its best, hardcore is personal; it tends to erase the spatial distinctions between performer and audience, until there is a primordial flow of bodies, ideas, and energy. Growing up, the experience of my own queerness was often unreal and abstract, which combined into a kind of confusion and anger in myself. Trans Day of Revenge takes the anger and confusion one feels in the depths of the margins, and translates them, literalizes them, from a burning abstraction into something almost tangible. "Queerness is essentially about the rejection of a here and now and an insistence on the potentiality or concrete possibility for another world," José Esteban Muñoz wrote in Cruising Utopia. "We're fucking future girls/living outside society's shit!" Sadie screamed on the first song on their demo. G.L.O.S.S. advance the possibilities inherent in queerness, even as they depict and reject the present horrors that queerness endures. It is music that is, above all, about survival and survivors. They project a future, both in the genre of hardcore and in the genre of reality.





June 24, 2016 at 12:00PM
via Best New Albums - Pitchfork http://ift.tt/28R0mVp

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Selasa, 21 Juni 2016

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Mitski: Puberty 2

Mitski: Puberty 2

Depression and fits of anxiety have inspired plenty of great music, but there is something else taking shape in Mitski Miyawaki's tense fourth album, Puberty 2: a detailed chronicling of the day-to-day interior struggle to be happy. The 25-year-old Brooklyn singer-songwriter is engaged in a larger struggle to pin down what, exactly, happiness is—at least for now, at that point in life when true adulthood starts to meet reality. Sometimes Mitski looks for contentedness in simple routine, like jogging or wearing a clean, white button-down. These small acts of control help stave off the larger dread, like not knowing how to pay rent or crawling out of her skin with wanderlust, feelings she addresses with incandescent punk rage on "My Body's Made of Crushed Little Stars."

Other times, Mitski wonders if lovers might ease some of this anxiety, mostly finding that they just add to it. She begins Puberty 2 with a clever song-length metaphor about the fleeting nature of happiness, likening it to the boy who comes over with cookies, comes in her, and leaves while she's in the bathroom. On "A Loving Feeling," she laments a lust that leaves her feeling lonely, via men who "only love [her] when they're all alone." Songs like this and "Once More to See You" are as much homages to '60s girl-group romance as they are send-ups of the submission and loneliness underlying many of the original hits. But placed in the present, these songs seem to tap into the frustration of love at a time when there are myriad ways to be with someone, many of them willfully undefined.

Puberty 2 is grounded in Mitski's distorted guitar, and at times feels like it's in direct conversation with the very notion of the indie rock canon. This makes the album sound simultaneously familiar and challenging, never more so than on lead single "Your Best American Girl," where she taps directly into what made people love early Weezer and other '90s bands favoring a catchy/fuzzy dichotomy. What a satisfying twist, this half-Japanese transplant taking the specific sounds that once served to lust over her very existence and using them to not only reclaim her identity, but also to ache after heartbreak. At first the chorus goes, "Your mother wouldn't approve of how my mother raised me/But I do, I think I do," but by the song's conclusion, Mitski has grown more certain, shifting crucially to, "But I do, I finally do."

Though its appeal is immediate, a song like "Your Best American Girl" is not knocked off quickly—there are layers and layers of sound here, generated by just Mitski and her producer Patrick Hyland. She has a knack for mixing dynamics and errant noises like some people mix patterns in their wardrobe: It shouldn't make sense, but it does. Consider the album's climax, "Crack Baby," where a chintzy-on-purpose beat meets eerily precise vocal phrasing recalling Annie Clark, falsetto "ooohs," smoldering waves of spaghetti western guitar, and a full minute of wind rustling on a cliffside. As Mitski likens her yearning for now-distant memories of happiness to the pull of inadvertent addiction, she sets the scene with a curious lyrical juxtaposition between man-made bleakness and natural beauty: "Down empty streets sniffing glue, me and you/Blank open eyes watch the moon flower bloom."

This is the experience of listening to Mitski: When you look closely, everything is a little trickier than it had once seemed. Puberty 2 plumbs second-wave emo in the storytelling, wistful dream-pop to blunt the pain, slow-simmering electronics, brusquely strummed folk-punk, bits of surf guitar, and plenty of '60s pop hooks; none of them show up just once, though, so they all end up feeling incorporated into the album's overall sound. Her editing eye is impeccable, which it needs to be when mixing this many patterns. 

There is, of course, a very simple rule for pattern-mixing: there must be unity in the color palette. Mitski's very Mitski-ness is what holds Puberty 2 together. This quality is not relegated simply to her wry and articulate lyrics, staggering and sharp as many of them are. I can't imagine mistaking a Mitski song for another's, and it's in large part because of her voice, which stretches through different modes—deadpan disenfranchisement, smooth R&B, dream-pop croon, gasping-for-breath pleas, wall of harmonies (with herself). Yet she fully harnesses every voice on the album, guiding us through emotional terrain only she knows by heart. 

Mitski honed this versatility on three previous LPs of distinct material, from the unsettling and arch piano fare of her 2012 debut Lush to 2014's scrappy Bury Me at Makeout Creek, her breakthrough and first "rock" album. On Puberty 2, every note she's played comes together. It's a resounding personal statement and the clearest sign that while she might be an "indie rock" artist, she currently stands apart from—and above—much of the genre. She tackles bigger themes, gambles with higher musical stakes, and digs deeper into herself.  

Ultimately, Puberty 2 is for anyone who knows the power struggle between what we feel and what we want to feel. Mitski plays it like she's losing this game for much of the album, but she knows better than to leave us so low. By the stunning dĂ©nouement "A Burning Hill," she calls a truce with herself: "I'm tired of wanting more, I think I'm finally worn." "I'll love some littler things," she sighs, knowing that for someone so complicated, it's probably impossible. 

 





June 22, 2016 at 12:00PM
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Jumat, 17 Juni 2016

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