Monday, December 29, 2008

Best Music Videos We Scene & Heard in 2008

Remember the days when video killed the radio star? Well 2008 was the year that Real World killed the video star. The last place to catch music videos on MTV was TRL, which, oops got canceled this year. And then earlier this month, the music video grave was further cemented (lol! i love the headline of the link's story) over when MTV announced that it would adding even MORE reality television programming to it's already unwatchable listings. Time's is tough!

However, music videos are fighting to live long and prosper via YouTube and quite a few slick ones turned up this year. (MTV, you are the weakest link...goodbye!) So here's some of the best music videos from 2008. But first, let's bow our heads in remembrance for MTV and all the great years of music television it gave us, because that MTV is long since dead (tho, I am a regular frequenter and enjoyer of MTV.com and it's blogs for entertainment blabble). Fire up some popcorn, sit back, and enjoy.

Radiohead - House of Cards
Last year, Radiohead released a record called "In Rainbows" without rules or a record label. This year, they made a music video without using video cameras for one of the most haunting, tormented love songs from that album. I love this band.

Weezer - Pork & Beans

A music video for the YouTubers? One of 2008's more brilliant shimmers of light.

Arcade Fire - Black Mirror
These guys & gals gave up on MTV a good while ago (oddly enough, I didn't discover this band until I caught a video of their's on MTV2 a few years back when I was in college), and did something totally nuts for their Black Mirror video. They made it a hypnotic and interactive flash website where you are in charge of how the song sounds while the video plays. Your move, Radiohead.

Vampire Weekend - A-Punk

This is another one of those fun single shot camera timing-trick flicks that are always, ALWAYS a blast to watch. Especially with the Vamps spinning around, moving like robots, changing their bright wardrobes over and over, and all kinds of other fun little tricks. Dig when the guy on the keys spins around in the fake snow round the one minute mark! Electrifying!

M83 - Kim & Jessie

Sure, I was obviously won over by that steamy, sultry half minute mark. But it helps that the rest of the video is ridiculously playful, and the song itself is one of the greatest things 2008 is responsible for.

All American Rejects - Gives You Hell
I grew tired of the 'Jects 3 minutes into what I thought was their 5 minutes of fame (I gotta hand it to them for still ticking on after all this time), and this song hasn't changed my opinion. BUT! This video rules! I can't wait for summer to roll around again so that I can get up on the lawn tractor and rock out like that. Simply brilliant.

Miniature Tigers - Cannibal Queen

This is like the Vampire Weekend video, but with a cinematic story going on too! In which a dude cuts off his limbs to make a lover out of scratch who then cheats on him with a guy who looks like Jesse Ventura that she meets on the internet. Lost? Who cares? It's sick! And speaking of sick, dig the Jesse Ventura dude shredding up the barb-wire on that guitar solo! Nasty! And what's a miniature tiger anyway? A kitten???

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

A Mixtape For Obama

Yesterday's election has significance for you--no matter what type of American you are. If you are old enough to have lived through civil rights--or had parents who lived through the Civil War--you see firsthand the cultural significance of what's happened here. But us, the younger and more naive (we had it sooo easy, right? The internet and didn't have to walk uphill to school) generation, we see this as the first person in politics to stand up and make us believe in our country. In the end, maybe he'll make a few messes like Bush, but for now, he's brought us together--not pried us apart.

And so for that, we're giving you some free music to celebrate freedom. These are songs in celebration of what's happened here. If any of the following songs run for president some day, I'll vote for 'em.

Mixtape For Obama
(click on song title link for MP3)

1. Ben Sollee - A Change Is Gonna Come (Sam Cooke cover)
-Last night Obama totally and appropriately quoted this. No better song for the moment.
Buy / Myspace

2. U2 - Pride (In The Name of Love)
-This one's for Martin Luther King Jr. , who is no doubt smiling where he is right now. And as for U2, this was the song that marked a change for them.
Buy / Myspace

3. Arcade Fire - Keep The Car Running
-This song from early 2007 is a call for the sort of thing that happened yesterday.
Buy / Myspace

4. The Beatles - I've Got A Feeling
-The band that celebrated this type of thing best deserves a spot, right? I think Lennon would be proud.
Buy / Myspace

5. Howard Huntsberry - Your Love Keeps Lifting Me (Higher & Higher)
-This Jackie Wilson cover comes from Ghostbusters 2--that being the movie where the Statue of Liberty marches through New York City to thwart the evil domination plot of a demon ghost. Relevant? You decide.
Buy

6. Eva Cassidy - People Get Ready (Curtis Mayfield & The Impressions cover)
-A beautiful cover of one of my all time favorite songs, and now it has context. All aboard the Obama train!
Buy / Myspace

7. Oasis - Keep The Dream Alive
-They might be from Britain, but they write great music for this sort of event.
Buy / Myspace

8. Kelly Clarkson with Jeff Beck - Up To The Mountain (Patty Griffin cover)
-I swear, I have just one Kelly Clarkson song in my iTunes...and this is it. Beck's guitar and her voice are so excellent together. As you can see with this Patty Griffin cover, lots of great music has been written about the dream of Martin Luther King, and now Obama is bringing these songs to life.
Myspace

9. Bruce Springsteen & The Sessions Band - We Shall Overcome
-After all the support Bruce voiced for Barack, it'd be sacrilege to not include him on this mix.
Buy / Myspace

10. Kevin Michael - We All Want The Same Thing (feat Lupe Fiasco)
-This young neo soul hip hopper from Philly has a bright future. And this song is about everything that's just happened.
Buy / Myspace

11. Robbie Robb - In Time
-I posted this song when The Phils won the World Series too. It's the perfect song for a hopeful future, for celebrating, for believing. And yes, it IS from the Bill & Ted Soundtrack.
Buy

Got any favorite America songs yourself? Share 'em in the comments.


About Scene & Heard's Mixtape For Obama
Sure, you can argue for or against the messy messes made during W. Bush's 8 year residency of the White House--the wars, the economy, the policies, gas prices, foreign relations, America's financial future, yadda yadda yadda.

Here at Scene & Heard HQ, we're too occupied with pictures of Natalie Portman and the new Kings of Leon album to really get bogged down with that.

But now that the age of Obama has dawned, I realized W. is why I had become so complacent in politics and faith in my country. John Mayer's "Waiting on the World To Change" sums that idea up better, but whether you believe W's work in the White House was good or bad, you must see the canyon he created between young America and old America. Idealistic and realistic. Proud and scared. Bottom and top. White and black. We were the un-united States of America for so long now--and I think a movie like The Dark Knight illustrates that rather poetically (and comic-bookly, if there's such a word).

And that's why Obama is special--because he got us paying attention again (like Harvey Dent in The Dark Knight!). Not because of what he says he will do or can do. But because he got us to put down the beer pong for a moment to hear what he had to say on the television. He got us out to the polls--in remarkable numbers. He inspired us to think about the America that we learned about in elementary school--the Lincolns, the Jeffersons, the Roosevelts, the Kennedys--and to believe that that America can still exist.

He saw that rift and said--let's bridge it.

But more importantly, he's illustrated that any building in democracy and America begins with us, the people--not a president.

That is what I want in a leader. I don't care if he's pro-life or pro-choice. I don't care if he's Republican or Democrat. I don't care if he's experienced or unexperienced. Black or white. None of that crossed my mind when I voted yesterday. I just want to be inspired to be better. I want to hear someone ring liberty's bell, even if it's cracked down the side.

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Monday, December 31, 2007

Mixtape: Best Songs of 2007


Free mix of Scene & Heard's favorite songs of 2007. (zip file of 19 mp3s)

It's tough to say where music is at right now. There isn't really one landmark scene that has velcroed itself to this decade's generation. Instead, the musical landscape has settled into this big boiling crock pot of everything that was once big and exciting, with some minor hits here and there, but nothing sweeping the world up into an all-engulfing frenzy storm of noise and excitement. Think about it. When was the last time you got truly excited about a song you just heard?

The closest mainstream has gotten is the slick electronic pop/hip hop storm fanned by stars like Timbaland, Justin Timberlake, and Kanye--but all they're really doing is creating aural collages of rock, funk, punk, soul, r&b and hip hop; or pop with more ingredients and spice. Nowhere is there a song from some young unknown with a rallying cry to round up a generation of young souls looking for that voice that speaks directly to them. Most people making music today are just trying to 'be cool' or look cool. What we need are some new loud songs that make some real noise. Ones that crunch, bang, smash, and clobber everything your parents value. Songs that don't attempt to "be" cool, but just ARE cool.

Compiled here is a mix of some of Scene & Heard's favorite songs released in 2007. This is what Scene & Heard sounded like all year long. They aren't exactly the sort of songs I've been talking about here, but they're all steps in the right direction. They're all songs that share this same hunger and fire, from across all genres. From pop to hip hop to rock to gentler acoustic ditties. These are songs that want to shatter the world of music into billions of tiny little pieces, even if they didn't do it this year.

I've uploaded all 19 songs as a whole zip file for your convenience. Enjoy. Share your thoughts in the comments. (all songs are used here for promotional purposes. If you like what you hear, please support the artist, and buy their stuff. If you represent the band or label these songs come from and wish to see them removed, please email me and they will be removed from the mix immediately.)

1. LCD Soundsystem - All My Friends
Hands down, anthem of the year, if not the decade. It's like the "Stairway To Heaven" of 21st century dance funk.

2. Against Me! - New Wave
What sort of fiery underground punk band signs to a major label and flips off anyone crying "sellout" with lyrics like "We can be the bands we want to hear"? Green Day and The Clash come to mind. This song is 2007's rallying cry for something new.

3. Modest Mouse - Dashboard
Somehow, Isaac Brock enlisted ex Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr for the new Mouse album. What resulted was a fiery and bombastic album with excellent songs like this one about everything going down the flusher, but things will be okay because we still got our music.

4. Spoon - Underdog
There is no one writing catchier pop music in the indie music scene than Spoon. And this brassed up swinger is proof why.

5. Arcade Fire - Keep The Car Running
This anthemic song will ignite you. This could have fit on U2's Joshua Tree and may have even stolen the show. This group could become one of the most important bands of the rest of the decade.

6. The Fratellis - Chelsea Dagger
This is one of those songs that gets everyone shouting along in unison, waving big glass mugs of beer around when sitting at the bar with their mates. But even if you're sober, it makes you feel drunk.

7. Mark Ronson with Amy Winehouse - Valerie
Vintage soul made a little comeback this here ala tabloid trainwreck Amy Winehouse. But her best cut came from Mark Ronson's record of covers by reworking The Zutons' rocking anthem into a brassy funkfest of awesome.

8. Brand New - (Fork And Knife)
This was released in the form of digital single this year and is one of my favorite tracks to come from their "Devil and God..." sessions last year, but you can see why it was left off the album; Too beautiful a song to be on such a dark album.

9. Minus The Bear - White Mystery
With their latest album, "Planet Of Ice" The Bear did more than write songs about being cold and lonely. They actually make you FEEL cold, and a little lonely. Some of the most beautifully haunting songwriting of the year, right here.

10. Cassino - Old Year
This album was completely self-released, and is truly one of the year's hidden gems. And songs like this upbeat one are proof why.

11. Dustin Kensrue - Please Come Home
Who knew the wolf-like howler of Thrice had some Johnny Cash in him? There may be no other song in existance that lyrically illustrates the ultimate definition of love.

12. The Redwalls - Game of Love
This song gave me the same feeling "Hey Jude" gave me when I first heard it. I shouldn't have to say anything else about it.

13. SloMo - How Do We Win The War?
One of the year's most memorable songs came from one of Philly's most dynamic groups, led by slide-guitarist wizard, Slo-Mo and rapper Mic Wrecka. Wrecka usually handles vocals, but Slo-Mo took over on this one for this yearning gem of a song.

14. Kanye West - Everything I Am
While there are lots of great fun songs to pick from Kanye's catalog, this slower laid back jam is as honest and definitive as they come. It's a tribute song, to everything he isn't, because that's what made him what he is. When a performer can say that, and make a beautiful song out of it, that's when he's gone from performer, to artist.

15. Aesop Rock - None Shall Pass
But don't worry, I didn't forget about hip hop. Shows hip hop can still be wholesome, awesome, and frightening. As opposed to lame, substanceless, and a complete mockery of all hip hop was when it first blew up.

16. Radiohead - Reckoner
It was good to hear Radiohead throw in some of the most propulsive rock songs they've written in years on the headline-making "In Rainbows." But it was this gorgeous little diamond that stole the show. Who else could write a song that makes you ache, and stand in sheer amazement at it's lush perplexity and beauty.

17. Meredith Bragg - New York
I heard an earlier version of this song on a compilation 2 years ago, and I began an immediate Bragg fan. It finally found a home on his solo record this year, and it's just as perfect now as it was then.

18. Bright Eyes - I Must Belong Somewhere
I began this year wanting to be anywhere but here. So then, I went to Europe for a month. Then I came home and made plans to move to Florida. And before moving, I drove my brother out to Colorado and spent the 2 following weeks on the road, living in hotel rooms and my car. Then things fell through with Florida and I ended up back here, at home. It was an amazing journey of a summer, but it taught me that everybody and everything belong somewhere. I think I fit pretty nicely around here. So here is where I'm staying. For now, anyway. And this song helped me along the way.

19. Wilco - What Light
Bummed? This song will change that.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Albums Of The Year

For a few years now, there has been this misguided notion that music is dieing. But don't confuse the business part of "the music business" with the music, because music is alive and well and getting along just fine. There may be no more smash blockbuster albums flying off shelves the way N*Sync and Beatles records used to, but think about how many kids have iPods and how much music they got packed in those little things. For a world that has so much going on at once nowadays, think about how prevalent music continues to be. The songs are still out there, my friends.

The art of the ALBUM, however, isn't doing quite as well. Songs have become the new albums. The power to choose songs only has come along with the listener's newfound power and control over what they listen to. So the albums I'm about to highlight aren't the ones that were packed with the most hit singles or most delectable tunes. These are full, bullet-proof albums that were perfect in songwriting, song order, packaging, and zeitgeist timing. These aren't albums that I found and liked, but albums that searched me out, swallowed me, and spit me out as a different dude than I was before I heard these songs or held their artwork in my hands.

Ladies and gentlemen, the five finest albums 2007 gave us;

5. Meredith Bragg - Silver Sonya
Headphone record of the year. Mr. Bragg ditched his band, The Terminals, for this one-off solo record, and it resulted in one of most dynamic, yet simple performances all year. Sonically, it's the reincarnation of Elliott Smith; sad, hopeful, blissful, scathing, heavy and gentle, all at once. Sync up tracks like "New York" or "Twin Arrows" and you won't be sure if you should be sad, or ecstatic for the rest of your life to unfold. If the future holds more records like this from Bragg, however, consider me ecstatic.
website
purchase

4. LCD Soundsystem - Sound of Silver
One of the year's funkiest dance records to get down to with your bad self. Oddly enough, it's also one of the solidest records of the 21st century. James Murphy packs it all into this 8-song set. From the best song you'll hear all year (the anthemic "All My Friends") to massive blasts of shiny groove ("Someone Great" and "Time To Get Away") to punky hip-shakers ("Watch The Tapes") to goofy piano ballads ("New York I Love You But You're Bringing Me Down").
Listen
Purchase

3. Against Me - New Wave
This explosive record is this decade's equivalent to Nirvana's "Nevermind" and Green Day's "Dookie," or even The Clash's self-titled debut. The formula is the same; an angsty group of dudes become ignited by a generation gone bored, crank their amps up, tune their guitars to snarl, and let the mud hit the fan. It's not a cry for attention, but for connection, which so many young breaking artists screw up. When fluid records like this come along and work this genuinely well, it's rare. And with the state we're all in right now, this was the album 2007 needed. Thanks Against Me for stepping up.
Listen
Purchase

2. Arcade Fire - Neon Bible
The underground indie music scene has coughed up a massive band with a massive sound that could easily become the biggest band in the world. This 2nd-full length of theirs is a strongly cohesive set of songs that serves as a solid 'state of the union,' stirring up a heavy sense of disillusionment with everything from music to patriotism to religion. Take U2's Joshua Tree and splice it's dominant genes with Bruce Springsteen's finest recordings and this fantastic album would be the result. It gets a little murky at times, but explosive songs like "Keep The Car Running" and "Windowsill" will keep you spinning over and over again, finding new things in every song with every listen.
Listen
Purchase

1. Radiohead - In Rainbows
One of the unfortunate things about being Radiohead is that BEING Radiohead overshadows the fantastic records Radiohead put out. They're like the Bob Dylan of alt-rock. And this is probably more true this year than ever before. They got everyone abuzz about what they're doing WITH their music when they put this album on their website for people to download at the price of their choosing, which many opted to do for free predictably. Fortunately, the music itself holds it's own quite well against all this 'changing the system' talk. In fact, it's the most perfect record of their career, running the stylistic gamut of adrenaline-laced alt rock ("Bodysnatchers" and "Jigsaw Falling Into Place"), soft soothing jazzed-up numbers ("House of Cards"), and achingly gorgeous songwriting ("Reckoner" and "Videotape"). Yet, every edge of every song fits perfectly together with every brushstroke of the artwork and every detail of production, painting the band's masterpiece of the decade, if not of their career. If you didn't download it when you had your chance, it will be commercially available on Jan 1... so record of the year for 2008 as well? Let's see what 2008 has in store, but I wouldn't be surprised.
Listen
Purchase

Honorable Mention: The Shins - Wincing The Night Away, Kanye West - Graduation, Bright Eyes - Cassadagga, Minus The Bear - Planet of Ice, Cassino - Sounds of Salvation, The Fratellis - Costello Music
Come back tomorrow for TOP FILMS OF THE YEAR. I'll be joined by my panel of Mercury staff film enthusiasts.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Top 5 Tuesday's: Best Music Videos of 2007

The year is ending, so we're taking stock, starting with the year's finest music videos. And while pouring through video after video last night thinking about this, I wasn't looking for the TRL sorta junk heap. Not like you would see a whole music video if you turned TRL on these days anyway, but you catch the drift. Reality TV killed the music video star. But YouTube has given a little bit of a stage back to the art of the video, so this year was full of some great ones.

The following are fine pieces of film mixed with some excellent tunage, but are selected solely for the video treatment and the way it works with the song, not for 'hawt' singers or how good the song may or may not have been.

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Scene & Heard's favorite musical videos of 2007. Please, enjoy and feel free to toss your 2 cents into the hat. 2 girls, 1 cup did not make the cut..

5. LCD Soundsystem - "All My Friends"
Naturally, the best song of the year should have one of the best videos of the year. And any song that can hold your attention for 7 minutes, 42 seconds with a single-take shot for a performance video deserves such accolades. The slow climactic build of the video is epic. Not to mention, James Murphy looks like something out of Tron. Wicked! Sadly, neither the song nor the video really crossed over into the mainstream.




4. Rjd2 - "Work It Out"
Remember that Fatboy Slim video with Christopher Walken? Well this isn't as good as that, but it's close, with some dude dancing all over the city on crutches with more suave and mojo than any of those "Dancing With The Stars" hacks. Don't try these moves at home. Not to mention, RJD2 is a hip-hop hometown fav in Philly. Dig on that.




3. Feist - "1,2,3,4"
You probably recently caught this on iPod Nano commercials, but forget that. I even want you to forget that the song is undeniably charming. The awesomeness of the video overshadows everything else about it. It's probably the single greatest one-take choreographed video ever! From the cleverly moving camera to the moves, it's perfect. Try not to smile. Dare ya!



2. Arcade Fire - "Neon Bible" (elevator performance)
This is not an official video for the title track off of the Arcade Fire's masterpiece album released early this year. But this performance of the entire band crammed into an elevator shows why they're one of the more clever and most important bands making noise today. Seriously, who would have thought tearing paper made for fine percussion? I want to step into an elevator like this at some point..



1. Mute Math - "Typical"
This seems to be the year of awesome one take videos. But this one even defies the laws of physics. The band learned, practiced, and performed the song BACKWARDS for this video. This is the coolest thing you'll see all year. Even better than 2 girls 1 cup..


Labels: , , , , ,