NEW RELEASE OF THE WEEK: RYAN ADAMS ‘ ASHES & FIRE’

BUT THE CD HERE

Historically, Ryan Adams has released, via labels or for download, every idea he’s put down on tape. The dude barely has a filter. Some consider him prolifically gifted, others annoyingly egotistical, but then when he waits a couple of years to drop something new, the anticipation is that much greater. Ashes & Fire is as close as it gets to the brilliance of his first post-Whiskeytown offering, Heartbreaker. It’s a subdued affair, rarely breaking much more than an acoustic guitar– and light-piano sweat, except on the honky-tonk jangle of the title track. But Adams’s songwriting has long been his strong suit, and his lyrics here are more than enough to carry the weight. A song like “Dirty Rain” — with its “Waiting outside while you find your keys/Like bags of trash in the blackening snow/City of neon and toes that freeze” — paints such a vivid scene, it’s like getting lost in a sonic picture book. Even the sappiest lines (“I will shelter you with my love and forgiveness”) are saved by an unwavering earnestness and, given Adams’s melancholy recording history, dispense a positively restrained sense of hope. The Phoenix 

NEW DVD/BLU-RAY: EDDIE VEDDER AND HIS UKELELE LIVE IN CONCERT!

BUY THE DVD HERE

Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder’s solo album Ukulele Songs has arrived along with the live-concert DVD Water on the Road. The singer has also announced summer tour dates in support of the album.

Ukulele Songs was released on Pearl Jam’s Monkeywrench Records and features a collection of original songs and covers performed by Vedder on ukulele.

Water on the Road was directed by Brendan Canty of Fugazi and Christoph Green and features performances from Vedder’s August 16 and 17, 2008 solo tour engagements at Washington, D.C.’s Warner Theatre.

The DVD features a live performance of “You’re True” from Ukulele Songs as well as a mix of Pearl Jam songs, covers and cuts from Vedder’s critically acclaimed, award-winning solo record Into The Wild.

OTHER NEW DVD/BLU-RAY RELEASES:

David Byrne Ride Rise Roar DVD and Blu-ray
Death Cab for Cutie Live at the Mount Baker Theatre DVD
MusiCares Tribute to Neil Young DVD and Blu-ray
Primal Scream Screamadelica Live DVD

NEW RELEASE OF THE WEEK: MY MORNING JACKET’S CIRCUITAL $9.99

BUY THE CD HERE ($9.99 RIGHT PRICE)
BUY THE VINYL HERE

“Power, do you know how it works?” So asks Jim James, alt-rock’s wisest mountain poet, amid the stormy gothic-blues build of “Victory Dance.” If there’s any band in the universe that knows the meaning of power, it’s Kentucky’s My Morning Jacket, a five-piece that thrives, more than anything, on the thunder of five hairy men playing instruments together in a room. But Circuital, the band’s sixth full-length, is generally excellent for everything except gusto.

Recorded in a church gymnasium in the band’s native Louisville, done mostly in full-group takes with minimal overdubs, Circuital was hyped in early interviews as a return to their raw, reverby Southern-rock roots — the kind of shit they perfected on early gems like At Dawn and critical breakthrough It Still Moves. But My Morning Jacket are in a different headspace here, using the tight, muscular production offered by Tucker Martine as a springboard for their most atmospheric work to date.

Sure, it wouldn’t be a My Morning Jacket album without a few barnburners — the title track is one of their most epic achievements, a Radiohead-style guitar arpeggio morphing into country-inflected barroom strumming and extended soloing. But a more typical offering is the precise, flowery pop of “Out of My System,” which soars on Carl Broemel’s pedal steel ache and Bo Koster’s sublime synth bleeps. Their last studio work, 2008’s Evil Urges, was a barrage of disconnected eclecticism — the warped disco-metal of “Highly Suspicious” and sweet acoustic reverie “Librarian” still feel like strange album-mates. Circuital is nearly as wide-ranging, marrying the oddball ’70s soul of “Holdin’ on to Black Metal” with tear-streaked piano waltzes (“Movin’ Away”), emotive psychedelia (“You Wanna Freak Out”), and acoustic bliss (the show-stopping “Wonderful”). But this time out, the puzzle pieces actually fit together. Carry on, ye bearded gods. – Boston Phoenix

$9.99 RIGHT PRICE CD AVAILABLE AT THE RX: EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY’S ‘TAKE CARE TAKE CARE TAKE CARE!’

$9.99 RIGHT PRICE CD AVAILABLE HERE

It is tempting, when speaking about the music of Explosions In The Sky, to get diverted into biographical details. Details not of the band, but of the listener, of moments made more vivid by the accompanying soundtrack of this most emotional of instrumental ‘post-rock’ groups. Programming oneself and one’s CD player to wake up to the slow crescendo of “First Breath After Coma,” for example, or plugging in the earphones and wandering the streets of the city to a soundtrack of Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Live Forever. Hurtling through the world by automated transport to the loud-slow, fast-slow dynamics of All Of A Sudden I Miss Everyone. Indeed, it’s revealing how many net-reviewers of the band’s albums seem drawn to this temptation, describing personal experiences connected to the music or imagining scenarios that it could accompany.

What this means is that listeners’ subjective responses to EITS’s music are more often reflected upon than the band’s particular socio-musical context. As intriguing as it might be to connect the band’s roots in Austin, Texas to that town’s association with progressive country music (to explore, for example, different ways of marrying blatant emotionalism with generic innovation), the work of EITS always seems to dislodge itself from any particular place, to float free on the soundscapes of memory and imagination. Rather than reflecting place, it offers to take us to new places. If there is reflection, it is the reflection of the acoustic mirror, a misremembered sonic subjectivity fueled by fantasy.

Reflecting on the relationship between music, automation, and sonic immersion in his book on 1990s popular music, the British music journalist Ben Thompson described the “paradoxical realization that life never feels more real than when it feels like a film,” the way that, enclosed in the sonic balm of the Walkman (now iPod/iPhone), one can imagine oneself out of the most dreary settings, where “even the man sitting opposite eating a Pot Noodle with his hands looks like a movie extra.” Thompson was writing about electronic music (Orbital, Underworld, The Future Sound of London), tying his observations to those of fellow writer Kodwo Eshun and his “sonic fiction” account of Black Atlantic Futurism. But, as generically removed as they might be from such considerations, as anchored as they appear to be in a Luddite pose of guitar/bass/drums electric rock, as potentially mired as their detractors say they are in the unimaginative drudgery and obvious emotionalism of the quiet-loud post-rock template, Explosions In The Sky are nothing if not sonic fictioneers and reality-enhancers of the highest order.

Take Care, Take Care, Take Care, the band’s fifth ‘proper’ album (and first since 2007’s All Of A Sudden…) makes a mockery of claims that the band are mere peddlers of music that has been done better before, either by others or themselves. Suggestions that the band basically deal in the same sonic material served up by, say, Mogwai or Godspeed You! Black Emperor are both lazy and misleading. Sure, there are elements that connect these (and many more) groups, relationships that can be usefully mapped out, but they all have their own distinctive voices. “Voice” is the right word to use here because it is largely the absence of voice (i.e., of “songs” or “lyrics”) that prompts the comparisons in the first place. But to say that one instrumental rock-informed group drawn to lengthy mood pieces is the equivalent of another is like saying that one jazz group is like another, or that composers of classical music are somehow all the same.

Which is a rather wordy and over-defensive way of saying that this music needs time and space to breathe, to get to know, to encounter the subtleties nestled within the more obvious programmatic post-rock moves. To spend time with this album is to discover moments of graceful repose, calm beauty, and mature restraint. There is still an invitation to dream, to set sail upon the swells and retreats of those chiming guitars, that dark undertow of bass and drums. And this is still music to take with you as you go out into the world, as you navigate its streets, plains, and highways, fly above it, shuttle beneath it, walk through it gazing in wonder and disappointment. It is music to take out into the real world, to add as a soundtrack to everyday ramblings.

To be a flâneur in the company of this music is to invite all manner of additional reflections, realizations, and imaginings to the synaesthetic experience of the stroll. And, like the wanderer’s world, the music resets its contextual parameters on each listen, each trip. Some critics have dismissed EITS’s music for its apparent forgettability. While such claims are probably rooted in an anxiety on the part of the listener rather than a deficiency of the music, it is worth wondering whether they also have something to do with this resetting of contexts, this potential of music to remake itself and its surroundings.

Some brief details of the trip, unfixable as it is, scenes grabbed from the whirring world outside the window. “Last Known Surroundings” glides in on a combination of drawn-out, fed-back guitar and delicate, noodled guitar, insistent, explicit drums building the whole thing up to a plateau that determines the rest of the piece: a cruising altitude and speed that calls to mind the motorik pulse of classic Neu and Kraftwerk. This sensation is aided by an almost Oneohtrix- or Emeralds-like arpeggiation leading into “Human Qualities.” That synthsation is quickly drowned out by a familiar EITS-faithful guitar figure that leads us through nearly seven minutes of sublime lull before the album’s first real noise onslaught. Okay, so perhaps we’ve been somewhere pretty much like this before, but the action is unfurled masterfully and the denouement is breathtaking. As metteurs-en-scène, Explosions In the Sky show themselves to be at the top of their game here.

The textures explored on “Be Comfortable, Creature” are among the most interesting on the album, showing a more sustained exploration of previously latent tendencies. The drones and layering used on this number invite comparison to Rhys Chatham’s compositions for guitars and to the Chatham-inspired instrumental work of Band of Susans. It’s a mesmeric, beautifully layered composition, one that shows EITS to be wo in directions quite distinct from many of their contemporaries.

There are echoes of earlier work on the album, most notably perhaps in “Postcard From 1952,” with its “First Breath”-like heartbeat drum, its high register guitar, the inevitably with which its sonic tributaries flow into the main river. Again, though, it’s beautifully done and provides many reasons to rejoice and none to complain. Album closer “Let Me Back In” moves on from weird, backmasked vocals to a fairly established EITS-style piece, which only serves as a blissful reminder at how good the group are at soundtracking your life. Things happen around you in unusual ways when you’re listening to this music, acquiring a hyper-reality that is intoxicating, as if what was implicitly filmic and fascinating and wonderful in your immediate environment is made manifest by being underlined sonically, sensually.

Explosions In The Sky continue to tap into this special vector of imagination, emotion, and possibility, making everything that much more vivid. Their music traces out those brief constellations of hope that give meaning to the void. It’s like Freud said: life’s supposed to be transient, like the seasons. You’re supposed to forget it, to lose it, so you can be awed when it comes around again. –TMT

FOO FIGHTER’S ‘WASTING LIGHT’ AVAILABLE(4/12) FOR THE $9.99 RIGHT PRICE AT THE RX! PLUS A PIECE OF THE ORIGINAL MASTER AUDIO TAPE!

Foo Fighters’ new album Wasting Light comes out tomorrow, and we’ll have it for the $9.99 Right Price for the first week. Also, the first run of the CD will include a free piece of the album’s original master audio tape. That’s something iTunes can’t boast.