Tuesday, 20 May 2008

Narrow Stairs - Death Cab for Cutie



Ok. I stand corrected. And I am also one week late with this review.

Simply put, this album is breath-takingly brilliant - only if you take enough time to allow it to be so. (Not so simply put then).

With Narrow Stairs, Death Cab for Cutie give you the impression that they've decided to throw all their toys out of the pram. Dummy as well. There's a lot of noise on this. Good noise, mind you. After the brilliant literary expose of their previous work (see "Transatlanticism" and "Plans" especially for the Death Cab newbies), Ben Gibbard suddenly seems pain-stakingly obvious on this record.

Not that it's a bad thing. This is unlike any Death Cab album you've encountered. So different, in fact, that I dared to not favour it at the beginning. Narrow Stairs is dark, gloomy and mostly bad-tempered. And ill-mannered. It feels like a clump of static banging you from pillar to post - and then some.

The first single, "I Will Possess Your Heart", all 8-and-a-half minutes of it, insidiously worms its way into your head (heart?). For the opening 4 odd minutes, bass, distortion and drums drone on before Ben Gibbard's ice-thin voice cuts through, telling you that despite the long sortie, "you gotta spend more time" with him. Typical stalker-like. Excellent.

The album's opening song, "Bixby Canyon Bridge", is riddled with Jack Kerouac connotations. It details the tale of how Gibbard goes to the cabin where Jack Kerouac wrote Big Sur, hoping to find inspiration and coming up short. His angry riposte to his failing is to admit, rather forlornly, that the dream is lost and to return home, tail between legs. The irony here is excellent, and the combination of the lyrical brilliance and sonic attack on show here makes it one of the stand-out songs of the album.

Perhaps the album's most beautiful piece comes in the form of "Grapevine Fires", where for just one fleeting moment, Gibbard is back to his story-telling best. Written about the California fires last year, the song is lyrically akin to "Passenger Seat" in that the listener somehow finds himself right next to singer as he paints the canvas with his vivid array of watercolour.

Detailing the entire album would just be too much of a feat. Needless to say, there are several fillers, but then again, asking any Death Cab fan to come out with a name of Top 5 DCFC songs is somewhat like calculating permutations for the national lottery. The album does end on a wonderful note in "The Ice is Getting Thinner", as the listener is left wondering: "What next?"

"Styrofoam Plates", "Steadier Footing", "Crooked Teeth", "Death of an Interior Decorator" and "Tiny Vessels". My very own list of Top 5 Death Cab for Cutie songs now needs to find space for some of the gems found on this album.



c

Saturday, 10 May 2008

Can't Love, Can't Hurt - Augustana



For a band seemingly known for their one and only good song - the done and re-done "Boston" (originally off 2003's "Midwest Skies and Sleepless Mondays" and rehashed in 2006's "All The Stars And Boulevards"), Augustana must be silently hoping that their new album "Can't Love, Can't Hurt" provides some respite.

The truth is, Augustana have probably been unfairly dealt a bad hand with "Boston" receiving such wide publicity, because the rest of their stuff off both their previous records is actually pretty good.

Folkish, poppish, melodious and extremely heartfelt - Augustana are one of those "safe" piano bands who seem to have gotten the balance just right. Lead single "Sweet and Low" has that wonderful sing-a-long vibe to it that you'll probably give in to while driving. Ditto the catchy "I Still Ain't Over You" and "Meet You There".

There are plenty of nice moments from this album, making it thoroughly listenable. One of the album's stellar moment comes when Dan Layus' glass-like, trembling voice holds the final note to "Fire" when he belts out: Desire taking me so much higher / and leaving me home. Both band and listener are stuck in that little warp where mortal frailty and lustful desire are encapsulated in a brief 15 second burst.

I came online hoping to write a review for Death Cab for Cutie's "Narrow Stairs" and/or Gavin DeGraw's self titled album, and instead felt so compelled to write something about this wonderful band from San Diego.

"Can't Love, Can't Hurt" is nowhere as edgy and gritty as "All The Stars And Boulevards", but instead seems more mature and brings into play more sincere, warm and somber undertones. It is probably best listened to enjoying a cup of hot chocolate next to a warm fireplace (ahh the pitfalls of living in Singapore), and actually grows on you the more spins you give it.

Rating: 8.5/10

If you liked this, you should listen to: The New York Fund

For those living under a rock for the last few years, here's Boston:

Tuesday, 6 May 2008

There Is No 301...

...and I'm still waiting for Narrow Stairs...



c

Monday, 5 May 2008

Essential Listening 201

PROCRASTINATION IS ME!!! An idea of how bored I am + how unwilling I am to set an exam paper manifests itself in the list below...having gone through the essential 20 albums, here is the list for essential 20 songs!!!

1. The Nurse Who Loved Me - Failure
2. Tuna In The Brine - Silverchair
3. Strawberry Fields Forever - The Beatles
4. Good Vibrations - Brian Wilson
5. Miracle Mile - Pompeii
6. Gravity - John Mayer
7. Bohemian Rhapsody - Queen
8. Let Down - Radiohead
9. Tiny Vessels - Death Cab for Cutie
10. All Apologies - Nirvana
11. Leslie Anne Levine - The Decemberists
12. The Way You Look Tonight - Frank Sinatra
13. Lilac Wine - Jeff Buckley (how this missed the Essential 20 albums I have NO IDEA!)
14. Tin Pan Alley - Stevie Ray Vaughan and Johnny Copeland
15. How I Go - Yellowcard
16. Selective Memory - Eels
17. Your Hand in Mine - Explosions in the Sky
18. Walking After You - Foo Fighters
19. New Routine - Fountains of Wayne
20. 3 Libras - A Perfect Circle

YAY!!!



c

Essential Listening 101

Rather random post here, but on a Monday morning as I sit here listening to Death Cab for Cutie's "I Will Possess Your Heart", I just thought of compiling a top 20 essential listening. If I were stranded on a desert island, these would be the cds I MUST have (in no particular order, limited to 1 per band/artiste):

1. Transatlanticism - Death Cab for Cutie
2. Diorama - Silverchair
3. Smile - Brian Wilson
4. Rubber Soul - The Beatles
5. Daisies of the Galaxy - Eels
(these 5 actually make my top 5 albums of all time)
6. Continuum - John Mayer
7. Loveless - My Bloody Valentine
8. Siamese Dream - The Smashing Pumpkins
9. OK Computer - Radiohead
10. Nevermind - Nirvana
11. Let It Come Down - Spiritualised
12. Gold - Ryan Adams
13. Automatic for the People - REM
14. Welcome Interstate Managers - Fountains of Wayne
15. Chariot - Gavin DeGraw
16. Blue Album - Weezer
17. 1977 - Ash
18. Friday Night Lights OST - Explosions in the Sky + others
19. Any Mozart compilation
20. Any Ennio Morricone compilation

Well that wasn't too difficult was it??? Obviously, because I am fickle, these answers might very well change next week...or tomorrow...or maybe now...

Anyways for the die-hard DCFC fans who can't wait for the new album, here's a little teaser:




That's all for now :)



c