Posts Tagged ‘Constantines’


28.12.2009

Obits: I Blame You

posted by Will

in Music Reviews

obits

Oh, Hot Snakes, I miss you. Why did you have to set the bar so high? The two men that made Hot Snakes so awesome (and Drive Like Jehu as well) have of course gone their different ways and formed separate bands. John Reis formed The Night Marchers and Rick Froberg has now christened Obits. As much as Reis’ Night Marchers felt like a let down it’s hard not to feel slightly the same way about Froberg’s first project. The two projects mirror each other in the fact that they sound like what you might expect but for whatever reason the songs just aren’t quite there yet.

On I Blame You it is when Obits depart from Froberg’s patented sound that things really catch your attention. “Light Sweet Crude” breathes rustic atmospheres comparable to the great Constantines. “Run” is an awesome song that combines an almost new wave flare to Froberg’s patented guitar garage rock attack. Quite a few of these tracks showcase Froberg’s most accessible song writing yet. Unfortunately the album is uneven and runs a bit too long which tends to kill the band’s momentum just when it starts. Let’s hope on their sophomore record the band doesn’t take the foot off the pedal so much.

Label: Sub Pop

Obits “Pine On”

Obits “Two-Headed Coin”

www.myspace.com/obitsband

20.12.2008

SAL Reader Year End List

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

#1

Dillinger Four “C I V I L W A R” – 8 votes

#2

Bridge And Tunnel “East/West” – 6 votes
Constantines “Kensington Heights” – 6 votes

#3

Death Cab For Cutie “Narrow Stairs” – 5 votes
Fleet Foxes “Self-Titled” – 5 votes
The Gaslight Anthem “The ‘59 Sound” – 5 votes

#4

Able Baker Fox “Voices” – 4 votes
Algernon Cadwallader “Some Kind Of Cadwallader” – 4 votes
Polar Bear Club “Sometimes Things Just Disappear” – 4 votes
Torche “Meanderthal” – 4 votes

#5

Beach House “Devotion” – 3 votes
Cheap Girls “Find Me A Drink Home” – 3 votes
Drive-By Truckers “Brighter Than Creation’s Dark” – 3 votes
Foals “Antidotes” – 3 votes
Fucked Up “The Chemistry of Common Life” – 3 votes
Good Luck “Into Lake Griffy” – 3 votes
Scream Hello “Everything is Always Still Happening” – 3 votes

19.12.2008

Matt C’s Top Ten

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

Matt Caron – History – Winter Park / Orlando, FL

1 – Constantines – Kensington Heights
2 – Nakatomi Plaza – SXSW Demos
3 – Crystal Castles – Crystal Castles
4 – Gang Gang Dance – Saint Dymphna
5 – Torche – Meanderthal
6 – Q-Tip – The Renaissance
7 – Foals – Antidotes
8 – Muse – HAARP
9 – These Arms are Snakes – Tail Swallower and Dove
10 – Metallica – Death Magnetic

17.12.2008

Jon’s Top Ten

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

Jon Loudon – Jena Berlin / Restorations – Philadelphia, PA

Parts & Labor – Receivers
Constantines – Kensington Heights
Mock Orange – Captain Love
The War On Drugs – Wagonwheel Blues
Scream Hello – Everything Is Always Still Happening
Trap Them – Seizures In Barren Praise
Algernon Cadwallader – Some Kind of Cadwallader
Torche – Meanderthal
Able Baker Fox – Voices
Why? – Alopecia

11.12.2008

Chase’s Top Ten

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

Chase Turberville – Fairhope, AL

10. the helio sequence – keep your eyes ahead
09. girl talk – feed the animals
08. bon iver – for emma, forever ago
07. the walkmen – you & me
06. tv on the radio – dear science
05. dr. dog – fate
04. drive-by truckers – brighter than creation’s dark
03. blitzen trapper – furr
02. constantines – kensington heights
01. fleet foxes – fleet foxes

09.12.2008

Ian’s Top Ten

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

Ian Graham – Cheap Girls – Lansing, Michigan

1. Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks – “Real Emotional Trash”
2. Constantines – “Kensington Heights”
3. Able Baker Fox – “Voices”
4. Dead Meadow – “Old Growth”
5. The Hold Steady – “Stay Positive”
6. Ninja Gun – “Restless Rubes”
7. Old 97s – “Blame It On Gravity”
8. Lemuria – “Get Better”
9. Good Luck – “Into Lake Griffy”
10. Oasis – “Dig Out Your Soul”

05.12.2008

Brian’s Top Ten

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

Brian McKinney – QCLA/1-Up/Chocolate Lab – Los Angeles, CA

1. Dead Confederate – Wrecking Ball
2. Foals – Antidotes
3. Of Montreal – Skeletal Lamping
4. Writer – Blood Drops (EP)
5. Chad VanGaalen – Soft Airplane
6. Wolf Parade – At Mount Zoomer
7. Evangelicals – The Evening Descends
8. Constantines – Kensington Heights
9. Murder By Death – Red of Tooth and Claw
10. ANYTHING EXCEPT VAMPIRE WEEKEND

01.12.2008

Collin’s Top Ten

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

Collin – Valdez, Alaska

1. Riddle of Steel – 1985
2. Sidekicks – Sam (7″)
3. Dillinger Four – C I V I L W A R
4. Constantines – Kensington Heights
5. The Gifted Children – Always Stay Sweet
6. Static Radio NJ – An Evening of Bad Decisions
7. Verse En Coma – Rialto
8. Cheap Girls – Find Me A Drink Home
9. Paint It Black – New Lexicon
10. Bridge & Tunnel – East/West

17.10.2008

The State Lottery: Cities We’re Not From LP

posted by Will

in Best New Music, Music Reviews, Vinyl Corner

[Best New Music]

Cities We’re Not From is the debut album from The State Lottery. The band is based out of Detroit and Queens with members of The Gibbons, Dynamite Arrows and Get Bent. As the opening chords of the title track ring out to start the record, you can feel something special in the air. Cities We’re Not From has a lot to do with growing up, growing older, moving around and subsequently moving on.

The title track explores moving from city to city only to realize we can not run from what inherently makes us unhappy. We live in cities we’re not from/Make our beds in neighborhoods that we barely belong/Searching for some sort of community/And it seems alright, but I can’t deny that I’m still so lonely. “Kindgarten Class” is simple in its outright questioning of America’s pursuit of war: We’ve declared endless war armed with the infantile concept of good vs. bad. “Night Of The Johnstown Flood” is straightforward and biting in its lyrical approach. And the America enshrined in my parents’ hearts and minds is a language I don’t speak, no it means nothing to me. It is an unfortunate sentiment of many in our generation whether we want to admit it or not. Cities We’re Not From explores so much of the (American) human condition but at its heart, the album is a restless search and desperate hope to find and build a community for survival.

Cities We’re Not From sounds like such a natural progression from guys who have spent their lives in punk bands. This is punk rock but done so with sense of maturity and humility for all who have passed before. Cities We’re Not From is angry and political, yet eternally hopeful; powerful and aggressive, yet keenly melodic. The instrumental additions of keys, horns and harmonica add a fresh dynamic to the traditional punk band setting. With Cities We’re Not From, The State Lottery have delivered one of best albums of the year. These eight songs are a moving testament to the heart and soul of punk rock. Sing these tired songs. You’re gonna miss ‘em when they’re gone. Indeed.

Buy the vinyl from Salinas! You can download the record for free here.

Genre: Punk/Rock

RIYL: The Lawrence Arms, Constantines, American Steel

Label: Salinas

Cities We’re Not From

01%20Cities%20We%27re%20Not%20From.mp3

Kindergarten Class

04%20Kindergarten%20Class.mp3

www.myspace.com/statelottery

25.06.2008

Constantines: Kensington Heights

posted by Courtney

in Music Reviews

It has been almost three years since Toronto’s art/folk/punk rocker’s The Constantines compelled Indie audiences to collectively pump there hands in celebration of a new album. With all of this wait fan’s must be wondering, “Was it worth it”? The answer is … kind of.

The Constantines forth lp Kensington Heights makes its trip to the US by way of the Arts and Crafts record label. Most Indie fans know this label through Canadian all-star pop group Broken Social Scene and since The Constantines’ old label Three Gut shut down, Arts and Crafts has picked up the logistics.

Kensington Heights makes its first strike with the furious but restrained “Hard Feelings”. Long time listeners will probably be a little disappointed here as this is the weakest intro to a Constantines album to date. Fear not loyal fans, the album has much stronger moments. Particularly toward the middle of the album listeners are treated with the slow and sweet song “Time Can Be Overcome”. The song rocks from side, pushed by band leader Bryan Webb’s soulful vocals. Immediately afterward, The Constantines crash down with the 7/4 downbeat driven “Brother Run Them Down”. Staying consistent in its power rock theme, the song invokes a feeling of triumph in simplicity. Fans of The Constantines older material might enjoy “Million Star Hotel”. The song has a large open chorus with the guitars and organs sharing melodic duties with bass and crash cymbals hammering downbeats into the bands collective space. The Constantines return to more blues influence, a la Shine A Light, in “Million Star Hotel”. The song feels tired and frustrated, on purpose, with disconnected rhythms and straining vocals. It is perhaps one of the more memorable rock moments of the album. The album concludes with noisy gospel “Do What You Can Do”. The song moves the audience with its simple praises reinforced with heavily distorted guitars.

For fans of The Constantines this album may be a disappointment. The band has traded the rough choruses spelling out “o-v-e-r-d-o-s-e” to a focus on a single male lead. The new folk direction isn’t as powerful or as moving as the soul-punk (yes I said it) of its predecessors. Fans should pick this one up however. It is good enough to be a Constantines album. Newer fans might want to start with the self titled however.

Genre: Punk/Indie/Folk

RIYL: Colour Revolt, Fugazi, Bruce Springstee, Neil Young

Label: Arts and Crafts

Shower Of Stones

04%20Shower%20Of%20Stones.mp3

www.myspace.com/constantines