Category Archive Music I Like

ByGD

Music I Like for the Artwork

I admit it: I’m one of those people who buys wine for the label. Not the prestige of the label – for the artwork. I have a sommelier friend who assures me that it’s an entirely valid method of wine selection. If a winery has made the effort to create an exquisite label, they probably put their all into the wine, too. I think the same holds true for album covers. Of course, the contents won’t always measure up to the expectations raised by the visuals. But here are a few albums where I came for the cover and stayed for the music.

All Hell

Haha, as usual, I lead with the band that puts the lie to my intro. I heard one song from All Hell and liked it. Then when I went searching for the rest of the album, The Witch’s Grail, I discovered this exquisite artwork.

I’ve been reading a lot of Webtoons lately, and if someone wrote a story using this artwork, I would fastpass it in a heartbeat.

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Shook Twins

I could have included Shook Twins in my post on Doe Bay bands, since they are on the 2019 lineup for that festival. I could have included them in a post on local music, since they’re from Portland. And I should start an Americana post, since so much of the indie music I listen to has a strong Americana influence. Shook Twins would be at home there, too. They were one of my favorite acts at Doe Bay this year, which deserves a post, as well.

But with cover art like they’ve got on What We Do, I had to put them here. Their music is oh so good, but even if it wasn’t, I’d have to love them for that gorgeous image.

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Abyssal

Not to be mistaken for the Norwegian band Abyssic, the British death metal band Abyssal is equally well-named. They would be a worthy addition to a post on next-level death metal, but would you look at that album cover?

As an actual grown-up, I usually listen to death metal despite, rather than because of the artwork. In fact, tasteless artwork – especially the kind that involves women’s dead bodies – helps me filter the flood of heavy metal music. But sometimes the art is as sophisticated as the music. This cover for A Beacon in the Husk is as subterranean as the sound, its slightly steampunk aesthetic simultaneously evoking the halls of Mordor and the futuristic world of Neal Stephenson’s Anathem.

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Grogus

Rich, somber color scheme. Images that seem narrative of a high fantasy epic, with biers under mound burials, evil wizards, doomed knights, and anachronistic, ancient Druid magics. My tattoo scripted in vapor trails or tree roots. Celtic patterns inseparable from black metal fonts. I could stare at this cover art for as long as I could listen to Grogus‘ grimy, crunchy sludge on Four Kings.

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Arctic Sleep

Arctic Sleep describe themselves as progressive, atmospheric doom. But I only read the description after the saturated, almost electric colors of this art nouveau, Maxfield Parrish on acid image pulled me in.

Prog doesn’t always work for me, but Kindred Spirits has just the balance of crunch and harmony that absolutely does.

ByGD

Music I Like to Work To

Since I work with words, I have to avoid a lot of music that I like during my workday. Lyrical indie music can be a distraction – I end up singing along. Hip-hop is even harder – I catch myself transcribing the rhymes. Often heavy metal works, since you can’t make out the words most of the time. Sometimes I need to avoid the human voice entirely, but so much instrumental music is soporific. The perfect working music is wordless but has enough structure and momentum to keep you focused and energetic. Here is some music that I’ve found I like to work to.

Dense & Translippers

The Bandcamp Daily described Entitas by Dense & Translippers as danceable ambient. But to me it is the soundtrack to an intense writing montage. It’s the perfect theme music for a day on deadline.

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Earth

When I really can’t make the words flow, I bring out the big guns – Earth. A recent Bandcamp article pointed out the unique qualities of each album, but they are all inexorable and heavy as a mudslide, creating a momentum that pushes through any writer’s block. That said, my go-to has always been The Bees Made Honey in the Lion’s Skull . Their newest release, Full Upon Her Burning Lips promises to be equally satisfying.

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From the Petrified Forest

The EP Marzipan by From the Petrified Forest almost doesn’t belong on this list. Yes, it’s instrumental and too heavy to tune out completely, and yes it’s engaging. But this Portland band is almost too engaging, even without vocals. I catch myself stopping to listen when I should be working.

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Russian Circles

Interesting instrumental music perfectly describes Russian Circles, but their latest album Blood Year almost doesn’t belong on this list. It’s just too interesting and engaging. Even without words, I catch myself stopping work to listen to it. Maybe with a few more listens it will settle into the comfort of the background. But I might have to go back to older albums when I work.

ByGD

Music I Like – Asian Metal

Out of 7.5 billion people in the world, 4.5 billion of them live in Asia. Heavy metal may seem like a white man’s game, but you can bet that out of 4.5 billion people, some of them are going to be pretty metal. Here are some of the ones I like.

Zuriaake

This isn’t the first time I’ve mentioned Zuriaake here, and it’s probably not going to be the last. To be honest, I’m not even sure 狼王 (For the Motherwolf) is by this band from the city where I met my daughter (Jinan). Released in May, the album appears on their page, but lists YN GIZARM as the author. Whoever it is, I love it. Chinese folkened black metal rules. {But if you know the true story, please share it with me because I like to get nerdy about the details.}

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Chthonic

Dude, you can’t even talk about Asian metal without talking about Chthonic. I mean they’ve got a politician and a polymath bass player in their lineup; they address overlooked history in their albums, and they’ve even made a full-length movie (which I’m still trying to track down) with a Randy Blythe cameo. Not to mention that their music is really good. Bu-Tik was my entry point to the band and still holds a special place in my heart. But let’s give something newer a listen, too, shall we?

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Jambinai

South Korea’s Jambinai uses archaic folk instruments to make post-rock and black metal.

ONDA takes cues from the Olympian ideal of “higher, faster, stronger,” doing everything that Jambinai do, only more so—the towering peaks of “Event Horizon” replicate the sense of overwhelming awe of peering out on some wide-reaching expanse, while the lengthy stretches of near-silence during 13-minute “In the Woods” sound like they’re being transmitted from the earth’s core. On the brutal war cry of “Sawtooth,” Jambinai evoke memories of Sepultura’s Roots: another groundbreaking, controversial co-mingling of progressive metal and folk traditions. To that end, ONDA is roots music, committed to including an array of voices—like the traditional wailing that graced their earlier work, and the ones that appear on “Square Wave” and the title track (“At the end of your darkness, pain will turn into the shining stars and it’s going to come to you”). All of this suggests that Ill-woo’s issue isn’t with meditation per se, but rather a false equivalency between transcendence and calm: like the most extreme forms of spirituality, ONDA seeks to sublimate catharsis from suffering.

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Death Kult Over Black Congregation

I got an alert from Bandcamp about this album and mistook it for a band. I was nearly done listening to the whole thing when I thought, “These guys are really eclectic, but some of their tracks are awesome.” Only then did I read the Bandcamp page closely enough to realize that Death Kult Over Black Congregation was a compilation of Chinese extreme metal bands. When I have time to listen to it again, I’ll make a closer note of which tracks, and therefore which bands, I like best. But for now, I encourage you to do the same.

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Zuriaake

Told you I wouldn’t stop talking about Zuriaake. While this post sat in my drafts folder, Zuriaake released Resentment in The Ancient Courtyard, 18 minutes of music in two tracks. I usually only mention full albums here, but I love everything Zuriaake does and they don’t often post new music.

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Sigh

Like Chthonic, Sigh is one of the first artists people think of when conversation turns to metal from Asia. This Japanese band puts the lie to Japanese stereotypes of conformity, politeness, and normalcy. From one album to the next, you’re never quite sure what you’ll get from Sigh. It might be something proggy or blackened or pure chaos. All you can count on is that it will be inventive, and it will probably be ugly. I don’t think there’s such a thing as a “representative” Sigh album, but I’m including their 2009 album Scenes From Hell here because it’s available on Bandcamp.

ByGD

Music I Like From Japan

I like a lot of things from Japan. I could go on and on about the elements from Japanese traditional and pop culture that I enjoy. But this is a post about music I like. Music like Minyo Crusaders, Blue Hearts, Number Girl, Uchu Nekoko, and Miyavi.

Minyo Crusaders

This Tokyo group preserves minyo, hyper-local folk songs, through hybridization with world beats. Personally, I’m a fan of the percussive beats and call-and-response of straight tradition in Japanese folk music. Two of my favorite live music experiences were seeing Taiko at Benaroya Hall and attending a Japanese folk music performance at Meany Hall in college. But Minyo Crusaders certainly provide an interesting take.

example from the bandcamp kawaii post

Blue Hearts

In their day in Japan, the Blue Hearts were considered punk, but they sound like a poppy garage band to me. I don’t have quite the nostalgia for them that many of my Japanese contemporaries have, because I only learned about them years later. Their biggest hit, “Linda Linda Linda” became the title of an absolutely charming movie about high school girls forming a cover band for their school festival. I tracked down the Blue Hearts’ CD and . . . I might have memorized the Japanese lyrics to “Linda.”

And I can’t resist sharing the climax of the movie.

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Number Girl

I’d never heard of Number Girl until I read about them in an interview with punk band Otoboke Beaver (whom I’ve previously mentioned). They’re not on Bandcamp, but I dug around and found a couple videos. It turns out, they’re the kind of shambolic rock that made up most of my low-cover-charge Friday nights in college. They are also from Fukuoka, where I lived and worked the summer after grad school.

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Uchu Nekoko 宇宙ネコ子

Like Gorillaz before them, dreamy shoegaze duo Uchu Nekoko appear only as cartoon characters. It’s not even clear if the kawaii characters captured in the pale colors and soft lines of their shoujo-style videos are meant to be the band. Relax and enjoy.

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MIYAVI

I was researching a touring Broadway show for a work assignment and MIYAVI was on the venue calendar. The artist photo showed a cool-looking Japanese guy with a guitar, so down the rabbit-hole I ran. MIYAVI is the stage name for Takamasa Ishihara. Although he got his start in visual kei, he’s known for his guitar playing. So I had a listen of his latest album No Sleep Till Tokyo. Overall it was not really my thing, but I really liked his guitar playing. Sometimes the dub-steppy bits sort of sounded like they might be guitar instead of electronics, which would be a cool concept.

Strangely, I couldn’t stop listening, even as I kept thinking to myself, “This is not my thing.” I went back an album, to Samurai Sessions, Vol. 3: Worlds Collide (the title is a conceit – there are no Vols. 1 & 2 that I can find). It still sounded more like something my kids would like than my music. But this one had more of the traditional guitar sound I lurve, and more lyrics in Japanese, which I find interesting. It also includes a song in support of refugees, featuring Afghani rappi Sonita, which pretty much cemented his place among Japanese musicians I like.

ByGD

Music I LIke On The 2019 Doe Bay Lineup

Last weekend I was at TimberFest, but I’m writing about that experience elsewhere. In the meantime, let me talk about Doe Bay Fest, which is coming up in a couple weeks. Doe Bay Fest is a very special music festival. Just like Eistnaflug, it feels like a family reunion. I try to go as often as I can. Last year I missed it for Pickathon, and while I don’t regret that experience one bit, I also missed the Doe Bay experience. This year I got Doe Bay tickets for Christmas, and the 21-band lineup includes a lot of music I like.

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Annie Ford

Doe Bay always involves a lot of music discovery, and the first time I heard of Annie Ford was when I read this year’s lineup announcement. I notice the Bandcamp page is listed as Annie Ford Band, while Doe Bay says Annie Ford – that might mean a solo set. But I hope not because I really love the swinging full band sound on At Night.

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Beverly Crusher

Okay, their last two releases, including Scared, were only singles and they haven’t released a full album since 2016. But they’re totally new to me, and even if it’s a set of mostly older music, this riffy rock’n’roll is perfect for a summer afternoon on Orcas Island.

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The Burned

I never heard of the Kurt Baumann solo project The Burned before they released the Doe Bay lineup. But they’ve been on near-constant rotation. He’s got a voice that could give early The National a run for their money; tells stories like Nick Cave; plays guitar like nobody’s business. Even my country-averse husband can’t get enough of The Burned. This is our top musical prospect for Doe Bay this year.

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Treepeople

When I was younger, I side-eyed all the middle aged baby boomers forking out big bucks to see the reunion tours of the bands that were cool in their youth. But now that I’m in my forties, I’m looking forward to seeing Treepeople at Doe Bay. This Built to Spill precursor wasn’t much on my radar back in the day, but it turns out the nineties still sound good.

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Versing

I always have a hard time describing bands like Versing. It’s like the scene in Spinal Tap where the band try to describe themselves and basically come up with “generic rock band.” But even if I can’t find interesting words about good old rock and roll, listening to it is never boring. And just like human voices, no two rock bands are every actually the same. I look forward to hearing this one live.