Category Archive Music I Like

ByGD

Music I Like – Contemporary Classical

I have listened to a lot of classical music in the last couple decades, but mostly as accompaniment to another art form like ballet or opera. Ólafur Arnalds was my introduction to the music sometimes known as neoclassical. Since that discovery, I’ve found a lot of contemporary classical music that I like.

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Ólafur Arnalds

The man who started it all. Ólafur was my introduction to contemporary classical music. My entry point was the indie-like, accessible For Now I Am Winter with vocals from Agent Fresco’s Arnór Dan. From there I went on to listen to his more classically styled compositions – and to explore other artists in the genre. After a hand injury, Ólafur focused on his electronic project Kiasmos for several years. But 2018’s re:member returns to form.

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Nils Frahm

I’ve already written about how I went to the electronic music festival Decibel Fest to see Ólafur Arnalds on a split bill with some guy named Nils Frahm, and how Frahm blew my mind and changed my ideas about what music could be. His latest album, All Melody, is a bit more traditional, as the title indicates. But Spaces is still one of my all time favorite albums.

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Valgeir Sigurðsson

Valgeir is better known as producer, but I loved his album Architecture of Loss. Even now, most of his work is still behind the scenes and in collaboration with other Bedroom Community artists. But most recently, he has released another solo album, Little Moscow, that is every bit as meditative and even more melodic.

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Caroline Shaw

A newer discovery (and recent release) is the album Orange by Caroline Shaw and the Attacca Quartet. It doesn’t do anything weird or experimental. It’s just a beautiful, engaging work for strings exploring the “the ways we find wonder in endless encounters with the same object” – like an orange, or a suite for four strings.

{Aside: If you haven’t read the excellent manga Orange by Ichigo Takano, I highly recommend it. Even though it presents the problematic idea that friends can rescue someone from mental illness without professional medical help, it is a truly beautiful story about the impact on loved ones left behind. I read it in one sitting and ugly cried through the last third.}

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Liam Byrne

Many of Bedroom Community’s releases are over my head, but I try to keep track of what they’re up to because when they hit the spot it is sweet. Liam Byrne‘s Concrete is just what I’ve been waiting to hear from them. The album combines contemporary and centuries-old compositions, but the aesthetic is so consistent I dare you to guess which are which. It’s all beautiful.

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John Luther Adams

At least where I live, in Seattle, John Luther Adams made classical music cool again when the second of his three environmentalist compositions created for the Seattle Symphony under now-departing conductor Ludovic Morlot won a Pulitzer in 2014. He may technically be from New York, but John Luther Adams is kind of a Seattle hero. The final installation in the series, Become Desert, is as spacious and lovely as the others.

ByGD

Music I Like – Throat Singing

It’s funny. I don’t really think of throat singing as something I like. But whenever I stumble on a musician who does it, I find myself intrigued, and often it turns out to be music I like.

Genghis Blues

I suspect that my interest in throat singing started when I saw the movie Genghis Blues at the Seattle International Film Festival. In that movie San Francisco bluesman and composer Paul Peña makes a musical pilgrimage to Tuva. For a long time after that, I thought Tuva was the only place where the technique was used. I’m sure there’s a soundtrack out there somewhere.

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Tanya Tagaq

My next experience with throat singing was when music writer Kim Kelly started to champion the music of Canadian First Nations artist Tanya Tagaq. (Actually, I had heard her earlier on Bjork’s album Medúlla, but didn’t know what I was hearing.) Her latest album is the brilliantly named Toothsayer.

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Silla + Rise

I wrote about them recently in a post on indigenous artists.

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Nytt Land

I wrote about these guys before. Inspired by the traditional music of the indigenous peoples of Siberia, Old Icelandic epics, and the atmosphere of classic Norwegian black metal, Nytt Land is multiple flavors of my catnip. They make their own traditional instruments and you guessed, they also include throat singing. Check out their latest full album, Odal.

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Alvin Curran

Canti Illuminati by Alvin Curran is a modern classical work that incorporates throat singing. It lacks the immediacy of more traditional presentations but it’s interesting as a recontextualization of ancient techniques.

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Nine Treasures

Nine Treasures is so good. To be honest, I don’t really hear the throat singing on Wisdom Eyes. But it’s tagged “mongolian throat singing” and I’ll take any excuse to talk about this band. Blues, heavy metal, Mongolian folk melodies and instrumentation. You can’t go wrong with this.

ByGD

Music I Like – May Metal Releases

Most weeks my music list includes some metal. But there were a couple weeks in May that I discovered so much metal I liked, it made sense to collect the bands in one post.

Krypts

Maybe food metaphors aren’t the most appropriate for an album called Cadaver Circulation but Krypts is all kinds of crunchy and chewy tastiness. Plus, that album cover is pretty, like the romantic landscape paintings my daughter fell in love with in Norway. Even if it is a picture of bones decaying in the forest. (And doesn’t that image recast the album title to something more ecological and less gruesome?)

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Aseethe

The hardcore-ish screams are not my usual taste, but in Throes they only serve to make the subsequent growls like falling rock in a subterranean cavern and chugging riffs even more satisfying than they already would have been. Aseethe build a very pleasing tension with their combination of things both grating and soothing.

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Isoctrilihum

I don’t appreciate a tongue-twister band names, but I will forgive Isoctrilihum because The Telluric Ashes of the Ö Vrth Immemorial Gods (and I am somehow susceptible to the overwrought album title, ever since Fiona Apple’s When the Pawn…) is so good. When I was in India, I used to go to the beach and wade out to where the waves were breaking. I’d stand in the hip-high water and let the waves crash over me. Sometimes they pummeled me as they passed; sometimes picked me up in a dead man’s float; and sometimes knocked me end over end until I landed on my butt higher up the beach. That’s what this album feels like.

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Pound

I broke a personal rule when I wrote about the unGoogleable Pound before. At the time, only one song had been released, and I prefer to write about whole albums. But when a band fulfills the promise of its name so perfectly, exceptions must be made. Now the entire album named .. (yes, that’s dot dot) is up on Bandcamp. Give it a listen, and if you survive it, you’ll love it.

ByGD

Music I Like – Live Performances

Last weekend was intense. On Friday night I saw the final program of Pacific Northwest Ballet’s season, Themes & Variations. On Saturday night I saw the Barboza lineup of Northwest Terrorfest. I intend to write about the ballet and the festival in more detail later, so I won’t say too much here, but naturally, I heard a lot of music I like.

Barret Anspach

There is alwasy good music at the ballet, but one piece in particular really grabbed me last Friday. Barret Anspach is a local-to-me composer. The double violin concerto VVLD was inspired by Vivaldi and written for the ballet Signature. I could not find an embed of the music, but it is worth clicking through to hear it on his webpage. http://barretanspach.com/#/music/vvld

And if you really can’t be bothered, here’s some of his older work.

Shrine of the Serpent

I saw five great bands at NW Terrorfest on Saturday, but of course I had my favorites. As often happens with me, I was most interested (and then impressed) by the opening band. Shrine of the Serpent from Portland were crushingly heavy. I recently read an article about Henry VIII and their set reminded me of his habit of executing people by “pressing.” But unlike most ridiculously heavy bands, Shrine of the Serpent have loads of melody.

Immortal Bird

I love the name Immortal Bird, which reminds me of Thao Nguyen’s feminist rage in “Meticulous Bird.” But the music is much different. This Chicago trio is more like the prize box at the dentist. Yeah, you had to let someone drill holes in your mouth bones, but look at all the fun goodies you can pick from!

If that sounds like a backhanded compliment to you, just ask yourself if you’ve ever seen a kid who wasn’t stoked to dig through the dentist’s prize box? (Plus, if you bought tickets to NW Terrorfest, you probably kind of like the sound of the dentist’s drill.)

Pelican

No, I did not see Pelican live last weekend, but since when have I ever been able to stick to a theme for an entire Music I Like post? The first time I ever heard Pelican, I realized there had been a seabird-shaped hole in my life up to that point. So when I found out this weekend that they are releasing a new album, Nighttime Stories, next week, you can bet I listened to the available tracks and loved them. I’ll probably like them again in next week’s post.

ByGD

Music I Liked – Indigenous Artists

Technically speaking, I have indigenous ancestors. But several generations of whiteness separates me and any Native cultural heritage. So I am always curious when I hear about artists who do have that background. And when I find them, they almost always make music I like.

Silla + Rise

Tanya Tagaq is the most famous Canadian throat singing crossover, but she is quick to clarify that she had to develop her own style because she was isolated from other singers when she was in college. The trio in Silla + Rise maybe are a bit more traditional in that they pair off. But throat singers Cynthia Pitsiulak (Kimmirut, NU) and Charlotte Qamaniq (Iglulik, NU), and DJ, producer, and dancer Rise Ashen are still innovating. Their Debut pairs traditional throat singing with dance beats.

Jeremy Dutcher

Another First Nations artist, Jeremy Dutcher is also a trained operatic tenor. In Wolastoqiyik Lintuwakonawa he gives an operatic interpretation of his tribe’s water-themed songs that were recorded on wax cylinders and had been sitting in a museum collection for over 100 years.

Digawolf

I wrote about Digawolf before. Still cool.

Khu.eex’

I have also written about Khu.eex’ before. I remain intrigued and perplexed by their hybrid style.

Black Belt Eagle Scout

Indigenous and indie are natural companions, as Black Belt Eagle Scout demonstrates beautifully. I’ve already shared my love of this local-to-me artist who scratches the same itch as Thao Nguyen.

Snotty Nose Rez Kids

Growing up in Arizona, heavy metal and hip-hop were natural enemies, and I saw lots of Indians at heavy metal concerts. But that was a false dichotomy, and now I know hip hop resonates on the rez, too. I first heard the connection in the Snoop-like vocals of Khu.eex’. Now there’s Snotty Nose Rez Kids, a Haisla duo whose album Trapline references the ongoing land rights struggle in British Columbia.

At first I thought there was a little too much Macklemore in their in flows. But I also heard Childish Gambino and lots of other tasty ingredients there. Then I heard

Shifting perception and raising a fist

Don’t forget you was raised with your face in a tit

“Son of a Matriarch” featuring The Sorority

and now Snotty Nose Rez Kids can do no wrong in my book. Plus now I have to check out The Sorority.