People Who See Sound
PJ Harvey - White Chalk
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5

- Todd Zachritz
Modeselektor
- Happy Birthday
(BPitch
Control)
3
Electronic music has an image problem. When it's
referred to as “techno,” all sorts of stereotypes and biases arise, even among
the purveyors of said musics. Berlin-based duo Modeselektor throw it all to the
wind with Happy Birthday, dabbling
into a variety of electronic sub-genres, from crunky club sounds to
Kraftwerkian electro-blips, to mysterious minimalist/glitch soundtracks that
could double as alternate Blade Runner
themes. Amongst individual cuts, “The White Flash” is an especially memorable cut
that features Radiohead's enigmatic front man Thom Yorke. This lonely, icy
tech-scape sounds quite in line with his own solo material. Appearances by
French rappers TTC, Floridian electro-grindcorist Otto Von Schirach, and
numerous others all fit in seamlessly beside the duo's cold and steely
synth-structures. You get it all in these 75 minutes - thumpin' rhythms,
meditative ambience, and experimental soundscapes. Pretty well a comprehensive
scope of modern electronic music. Quite listenable, and a solid piece of work
here.
- Todd Zachritz
Stace
(Rankoutsider Records)
5
The Salt King was a real person, a man whose
unscrupulous, illegal and barbaric legacy lives on in the infamous Old Slave
House – an 1830s-era mansion perched on a hill in the wildly inappropriately
named Equality, Illinois.
Here,
Stace
If
this review seems a little weird, that it’s a history lesson, or a personal
essay on a topic the public at large might find boring, you may be right. The
thing is, the Salt King – Crenshaw – was my direct ancestor. Six or seven
great-grandfathers ago or something like that. And I’ve heard the stories Stace
The
tracks on this record illustrate Crenshaw’s unbelievable career: Kidnapping
escaped slaves from the banks of the Ohio River, forcing them into labor in his
salt mines until they were broken, housing them in cramped cubicles, beating
them to within an inch of their lives, and then selling them back to slave
owners down south. All for pure profit, and from a legally free state. This
horrible business enterprise made Crenshaw one of the richest men in
None
of this story would matter here if the music and lyrics on Salt Sex Slaves weren’t
worthwhile, intelligent and, to use a hackneyed word, deep. Even setting aside
the documentary nature of
- Dylan Gibbs
Mono - The Sky Remains The Same As Ever
(Temporary
Residence)
5
It's been established among the initiated that
- Todd Zachritz
Streetlight
Manifesto - Somewhere In The Between
(Victory)
1
Icky pop-ska from New Joysey, this slick and really
mild 10-song release overextends its' welcome sometime during the first song. I
hear a bunch of dudes playing instruments, but where's the music? Imagine
Fallout Boy if they covered The Mighty Mighty Bosstones for 45 minutes and
you'll be pretty close to this unlikeable load of lame poseur pabulum.
- Rob Wickett
In Flight
Radio - The Sound Inside
(Last
Broadcast Records)
2
These
- Rob Wickett
Bullet For
My Valentine - Scream Aim Fire
(Jive/Zomba)
2
Ooh, it all begins with some weary and dated speed
metal riffage. The vocals kick in and, what? Is this Metallica? With a little
Motorhead thrown in? With some NWOBHM (New Wave Of British Heavy Metal)
inspirations? And there's some death-metallic “brutal” grunting, too. Man, and
that's just the first song! By the third song, “Hearts Burst Into Fire” the
band has morphed into a kind of emo-pop outfit...really odd and radio-friendly.
Then it's back to the classic metal core. Schizo, and really pretty good in
spots, but then it all goes nice and FM-radio-style, and I lose interest.
Sorry, bros, that just ain't cool. - Rob
Wickett
Kasey
Anderson - The Reckoning
(Terra Soul)
4
With a gritty, gravelly voice, Mr. Anderson's latest
opens with the title track – a dark, narrative song that's reminiscent of Steve
Earle, with a dash of Tom Waits and maybe some Mark Lanegan, all good and fine
company. But subsequent songs are more traditionally alt.country stuff, with
much lighter and melodic material. The juxtaposing of the two is a little
off-putting. More successful is the fine “Don't Look Back,” which synthesizes
both of these styles quite nicely. “You Don't Live Here Anymore” is a haunting
ballad with a well-placed guitar feedback drone and more plaintive vocal style,
and “Red Shadows” is another excellent world-wise everyman tale that's stylish,
memorable, and well-written. Despite a few minor setbacks, “The Reckoning” is a
fine album of darkly-tinged
- Rob Wickett
Back to February 2008 Features

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