Posts Tagged ‘The Black Angels’


IODAcast 50

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

By: Michael Madavi and Jillian Putnam-Smith

IODAcast Icon50 IODAcast 50

To start off 2009 we are celebrating IODAcast’s 50th episode!  We’ve put together a retrospective- highlighting a number of our favorite artists from the hundreds of amazing independent musicians we’ve dug up and featured over the past few years.

IODAcast 50 features: The Black Angels, Tinariwen, Frightened Rabbit, Broken Social Scene, Burial, Pigeon John, School of Seven Bells and Beirut.

Listen to the entire podcast over at IODAcast.com or look us up on iTunes!

Read about the featured artists and download the featured tracks below:

129690 72 IODAcast 50The Black Angels
download icon IODAcast 50 “Bloodhounds On My Trail” (mp3)
from “Passover”

(Blue Scholars / Light in the Attic)

icon landing page IODAcast 50 More On This Album IODAcast 50

The Black Angels are a psychedelic rock band from Austin, Texas, formed in May 2004. Their name derives from the Velvet Underground song “The Black Angel’s Death Song”. Having played at Lollapalooza, SXSW, and All Tomorrow’s Parties, the group has gained much critical praise for their dark, psych-rock. Resurrecting the dark, drone style of the 60′s and blending it with southern rock, The Angels have an authentic sound that’s rarely heard today.
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169891 72 IODAcast 50Tinariwen
download icon IODAcast 50 “Cler Achel” (mp3)
from “Aman Iman: Water Is Life”

(World Village)
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Securing praise from Thom Yorke, Santana, Robert Plant, Bono, Coldplay, Tinariwen are guitar-poets from the southern Sahara desert. They are icons of freedom and resistance among their own people, the nomadic Touareg of the Sahara. The group was founded at the end of the 1970s, during a period of great suffering in the desert, due to the catastrophic droughts of the early 1970s that decimated the animal herds and almost destroyed the Touareg’s ancient nomadic way of life. Tinariwen began to write songs describing the pain of exile, the longing for lost homes and families, the struggle for political and cultural freedom, and the rigors of everyday life in the desert. Transposing the traditional melodies of the Touareg on the electric guitar then mixing them with blues, rock, pop, Berber and Arabic influences, Tinariwen created a modern desert rock sound. In the early 1980s, the were  lured into rebel training camps in Libya by Colonel Gadaffi, becoming the official mouthpiece of the Touareg rebellion in northern Mali and Niger, which all the founding members of the group took part in. Now with three successful albums released, including the latest Aman Iman, numerous tours of Europe, USA and the Far East, appearances at the most prestigious festivals and a BBC Award for World Music, Tinariwen have emerged as a prolific and truly special musical group. IODAcast 50
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206446 72 IODAcast 50Frightened Rabbit
download icon IODAcast 50 “The Modern Leper” (mp3)
from “The Midnight Organ Fight”

(Fat Cat Records)
icon landing page IODAcast 50 More On This Album

 IODAcast 50

Haunted indie-folk with moments of real urgency and a Pixie-esque dynamic range that can take you from hushed to majestic and back again in seconds flat. And they’re from Scotland, so the accent is a nice touch. Rabbit took the blogosphere by storm on the strength of 2006′s Sing the Greys then kicked it up a notch in April with The Midnight Organ Fight, hailed by Nicholas Harmer of Death Cab for Cutie as his favorite album of 2008.

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158000 72 IODAcast 50Broken Social Scene
download icon IODAcast 50 “Hotel” (mp3)
from “Broken Social Scene”

(Arts & Crafts)
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Broken Social Scene are an award winning Canadian indie rock band, a music collective currently including nineteen members, formed in 1999 by Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning. All of its members currently play in various other groups and solo projects, mainly based around the city of Toronto and the Arts and Crafts Label. It is characterized by a very large number of sounds, grand orchestrations featuring guitars, horns, woodwinds, and violins, unusual song structures, and an experimental and sometimes chaotic production style from David Newfeld. Their 2003 and 2006 albums released under the BSS name have both won the Juno Award for Best Alternative Album. The group is comprised of members from Stars, Feist, Metric, Valley of the Giants, The Weakerthans, Apostle of Hustle, and and Do Make Say Think.

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200616 72 IODAcast 50Burial
download icon IODAcast 50 “Ghost Hardware” (mp3)
from “Untrue”

(Hyperdub)
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The mysterious and talented Burial is an English dubstep producer. His eponymous debut album was released in 2006 to critical acclaim. The Wire magazine named it their album of the year, along with achieving fifth place in the Mixmag 2006 Album of the Year list, and eighteenth in the best of the year list of The Observer music monthly supplement. His follow-up, Untrue, was released in 2007 and was a nominee for a coveted 2008 Mercury Music Prize. Keeping his identity out of the spotlight (it was speculated he might be Aphex Twin or Fat Boy Slim), little is known about Burial except (in his own words) he is, “a low key person [who] just wants to make some tunes, nothing else.”
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141696 72 IODAcast 50Pigeon John
download icon IODAcast 50 “Freaks! Freaks!” (mp3)
from “Pigeon John & The Summertime Pool Party”

(Quannum Projects)
icon landing page IODAcast 50 More On This Album

 IODAcast 50

Pigeon John is a Los Angeles area rapper who has recorded four studio albums as a solo artist, as well as several others as a member of the groups like L.A. Symphony and Brainwash Projects. He has collaborated with many of Hip-Hop’s greatest names including Blackalicious and Lyrics Born, and has been featured in publications including Entertainment Weekly, VIBE, SPIN Magazine and LA Weekly. In 2006, after signing to Quannum, Pigeon John released his fourth solo album, And the Summertime Pool Party to much critical praise.
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233836 72 IODAcast 50School of Seven Bells
download icon IODAcast 50 “Half Asleep” (mp3)
from “Alpinisms”

(Ghostly International)
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Composed of Benjamin Curtis (The Secret Machines) with sisters Alejandra and Claudia Deheza (On-Air Library!), The School of Seven Bells was formed in 2004 while the members were on tour together. The group takes its name from a mythical South American pickpocket academy that may or may not have existed in the ’80s. School of Seven Bells’ music is full of tensions-Curtis’ gentle guitars wrap around jagged beats; silky vocals hide behind grumpy, alien synthesizers-but the resulting songs are effortlessly cohesive, and insidiously catchy.
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137696 72 IODAcast 50Beirut
download icon IODAcast 50 “Postcards From Italy” (mp3)
from “Gulag Orkestar”

(Ba Da Bing!)
icon landing page IODAcast 50 More On This Album

Beirut was initially the solo musical project of 22-year-old Santa Fe native Zach Condon, which later evolved into a band led by Condon. Their 2006 debut album, Gulag Orkestar, combines elements of Eastern European music and folk with Western pop. Beirut’s second album, The Flying Club Cup, was recorded largely at a makeshift studio in Albuquerque and completed at Arcade Fire’s studio in Quebec. The music on the album has a French influence due to Condon’s interest in French chanson during its recording. Condon plays the trumpet and the ukulele as his main instruments, having been unable to play guitar because of a wrist injury that prevented his hand from reaching fully around the neck of a guitar. In 2008, Condon canceled Beirut’s planned European Tour and took time off to re-evaluate his music and the direction of the band, much to many fan’s bewilderment and sorrow. Beirut has triumphantly returned in 2009 with the release of a double-ep March of the Zapotec, based on Condon’s recent trip to Oaxaca, Mexico, and Holland, under the name of his former musical project, Realpeople.

Review: Doug Randle- Songs for the New Industrial State

Monday, January 12th, 2009

featured release big Review: Doug Randle  Songs for the New Industrial State
By:Michael Madavi

240284 72 Review: Doug Randle  Songs for the New Industrial StateArtist: Doug Randle
Title: Songs for the New Industrial State
Label: Light in the Attic
Release Date: 1.13.09
UPC: 844185095198
Territories: World ex-France, Australia

Once in a blue moon we are lucky enough to stumble upon a forgotten treasure: an old sports car sitting for decades in some barn, a guitar your dad only played once in the 60′s, or a great album that everyone somehow managed to miss the first time around. Doug Randle’s Songs for the New Industrial State is just such a treasure. Originally released for purchase in 1971, long time composer and multi-instrumentalist Randle created a fantastic and challenging sunshine pop album for a new era he saw dawning in the world around him. Randle’s album is a revolt from the monotony of the work week; he refuses to be just another suit getting up every day to do the same thing as yesterday. The album was picked up by Seattle-based Light in the Attic records (Rodriguez, The Black Angels), who have quite a knack for finding overlooked masterpieces from the past and reissuing them.

Randle’s music fits in perfectly with the most heralded recordings from the late 60′s and early 70′s, working in the same musical vein as the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds with its intricate production, harmonies, and pop sensibilities, but with an arguably more matured and veteran musicianship that highlights Randle’s compositional background and a touch of 70′s soul. While much of his contemporaries’ music dealt with more microcosmic issues, Randle attempts to react to the newly established megacorporations and emerging technologies of the 70′s, inspired by the insightful commentary of John Kenneth Galbraith’s 1967 book, The New Industrial State. Randle begins his album with “Isn’t it a Pity” by noting the situation and context in which he operates, observing pretty girls and pretty boys are too shy to interact, but warning of the change on the horizon. One of the album’s most ironic and memorable moments is arguably “Coloured Plastics.” Randle sings, “Coloured plastics, stronger than steel, why do they always break when I need them? Colored plastics, brighter than a thousand suns, why do their colors always fade away?” The psychedelic pop tune draws from Simon and Garfunkel’s “Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, and Thyme,” claiming that the message of the 1966 song has been downplayed and almost forgotten since the herbs are now unimportant when compared to the colored plastic containers they sit in. It is lyrics just like this that qualify Randle’s music: he has mastered the stylings and compositional forms of past songs, then applied them to supply a soundtrack to the abandonment of those very values due to the changing industrial world around him. Some may take the album to be dark, but its music is like no other: a combination of Randle’s ironic and striking lyricism with his unarguable ability to compose. Randle seems unaffected by fashionable trends in the changing music industry but aware of the best parts of what came before him, creating a collection of songs assembled from musical elements from numerous genres and instruments. Anyone seeking a fantastic psychedelic recording, an album from stereo’s golden years, a taste of sunshine pop, or a unique soundtrack for the protest of a changing world will find Songs for the New Industrial Age invaluable.  Just as the track, “Warm in the Sunshine” states, “The Earth will turn, turn, turn full circle,” and with the remaster of Doug Randle’s fantastic album, the world has graciously turned enough for us to experience this masterpiece once again. This time we should be careful not to make the same mistake by overlooking such an original and unique gem again.

PromoTrack after the jump…

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IODA Marketing Team’s Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

What a year 2008 has been! As all of the Best Of lists have been flying around the music world, each member of the IODA U.S. marketing team took a stab at narrowing down their favorite albums of the year to only five! We cheated a little and let reissues released in 2008 count!

Burial was the king of IODA’s best of lists last year, but in 2008, not one release made it on to more than one marketing team member’s list (although there was overlap when you include the client relations team).

From the rave throwback release by Zomby, the lost gem of a reissue from Rodriguez, the avant classical of Max Richter to the karmically balanced hip-hop of MC Yogi, IODA was all over the place with their top picks. It just goes to show the wide variety of top notch independent releases that hit the digital shelves in 2008.

237618 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Adam Rabinovitz

•Rodriguez- “Cold Fact” [Light in the Attic]

•Steinski- “What Does it All Mean?” [Illegal Art]

•Max Richter- “24 Postcards in Full Coulour” [Fat Cat Records]

•School of Seven Bells- “Alpinisms” [Ghostly International]

•Y La Bamba- “Alida St.” [GypsyPop]




213109 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Greg Beshers

•Hymns- “Travel in Herds”
[Blackland Records/ High Wire Music]

•Delta Spirit- “Ode to Sunshine” [Rounder]

•location location- “Snow Covered
Morning EP” [Dogjaw Music]

•Curumin- “JapanPopShow” [Quannum]

•Larry Norman- “Only Visiting This Planet” [Solid Rock]




226453 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Oz Okter

•James Blackshaw- “Litany of Echoes” [Tompkins Square]

•Akimbo- “Jersey Shores”[Neurot]

•Disfear- “Live the Storm” [Relapse]

•Grails- “Take Refuge in Clean Living” [Important Records]

•Saviours- “Into Abaddon” [Kemado]




234699 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Craig O’Neill

•Evil Nine- “They Live!” [Marine Parade]

•Gecko Turner- “Manipulado” [Lovemonk]

•Spam Allstars- “Introducing Spam Allstars”[Introducing]

•Benja, Bo Marley, Disrupt- “Bo Marley vs.Disrupt” [Jahtari]

•V/A- “Objektivity Volume 1” [Objektivity]




245977 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Matt Wright

•Zomby- “Where Were You in ‘92?”[Werk Discs]

•Mrs Jynx- “Standoffish Cat” [Planet Mu]

•The Chap- “Mega Breakfast”[Ghostly International]

•Dykeritz- “Rearrangerologystics” [Lucky Madison]

•Starfucker- “Starfucker” [Badman Recording Co.]




212077 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Jillian Putnam-Smith

•Son Lux- “At War With Walls and Mazes” [anticon]

•The Black Angels- “Directions to See a Ghost” [Light in the Attic]

•Hauschka- “Ferndorf” [Fat Cat Records]

•J. Tillman- “Vacilando Territory Blues”[Western Vinyl]

•Three Trapped Tigers- “Three Trapped Tigers EP” [Blood and Biscuits]




236434 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Alyssa Fredericks

•Herman Dune- “Next Year In Zion”
[Everloving]

•MC Yogi- “Elephant Power” [White Swan]

•V/A- “People Take Warning!: Murder Ballads & Disaster Songs 1913-1938” [Tompkins Square]

•dan le sac Vs. Scroobius Pip- “Angles” [Strange Famous]

•The Carter Family- “The Carter Family” [Sphere Records- Nashville]




218345 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Erik Nava

•Siah & Yeshua dapoED- “The Visualz
Anthology” [Head Bop Music]

•Michna- “Magic Monday”
[Ghostly International]

•Restiform Bodies- “TV Loves You Back” [anticon]

•Tobacco- “Fucked Up Friends” [anticon]

•KMD- “Bl_ck B_st_rds” [Metal Face Records]




245977 72 IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008

Justin Johnson (Client Relations Representative/ Podcast Producer)

•Zomby- “Where Were You in ’92″ [Werk Discs]

•Rodriguez- “Cold Fact” [Light in the Attic]

•Prince Jammy vs. King Tubby- “His Majesty’s Dub’ [Original]

•School of Seven Bells- “Alpinisms’ [Ghostly International]

•DJ Nomad NYC- “Lights Out (Remixes)” [Cable Recordings]




KingKhan IODA Marketing Teams Picks for Best Albums of 2008Lizy Reierson (Client Relations Representative)

•King Khan and the Shrines- “The Supreme Genius of King Khan and The Shrines” [Outside Music/Vice]

•Rodriguez- “Cold Fact” [Light in the Attic]

•Grails- “Take Refuge in Clean Living” [Important]

•Terakraft- “Akh Issudar” [World Village]

•Various Artists- “The History of Northwest Rock, Vol 2 – The Garage Years” [Jerden]