Tag music

Album Awesome – Muse’s The Resistance

It’s rare that I buy an album. Even more rare that I spin the album all the way through more than a few times before cherry picking my favorite tracks. What’s most rare though, is when I repeatedly listen to an album over & over again so soon after buying it. Yet that’s what’s happened with Muse’s The Resistance, a slice of rock magnificence. Echoing touches of Queen, electronica, classical piano, and grunge, Muse has evolved yet again, taking what they learned from their previous effort, Black Holes and Revelations, and bumping things up yet another notch.

Album art for Muse's The Resistance

The album kicks off with “Uprising”, a pulsing dance/rock tune driven by an overdriven/distorted octave bass figure. Handclaps are used to great effect, with unison distorted guitar/falsetto vocals punctuating each statement of the verse. The whole song is, according to Matt Bellamy (the group’s lead vocalist/guitarist/pianist), “…expresses a general mistrust of bankers, global corporations and politicians.”

Things move on from there to the love anthem “Resistance”, which is glued together by a floating piano figure, and again, pushed along by the bass, but this time a driving sixteenth-note figure in the verse, which is then passed on to the hi-hats in the pre-chorus. Really a cool way to hand off the rhythmic duties, and the chorus breaks it up nicely by dropping into an eighth-note groove. The Matt Bellamy’s liner notes from the iTunes LP state that the song is based on the love story from George Orwell’s 1984, but more generally is “…also about any love which crosses boundaries such as religion or strong political beliefs and the subsequent recognition of the unimportance and divisiveness of such beliefs.”

Undisclosed Desires”, the next track, is an abrupt shift in groove for the group, with a very dance/R&B feel to it, with the pizzicato strings & broken up drum beat. The whole song has a cool texture to it, and is fun to listen to.

United States of Eurasia” is musically very fascinating; it’s heavily influenced by Ravel & Tchaikovsky, and also features some obvious “eastern” sounds throughout, utilizing the harmonic minor scale. It segues into “Collateral Damage”, a solo piano piece featuring Chopin’s “Nocturne, Op. 9 No. 2” with sound effects. Bellamy’s liner notes state “The song is from an imaginary musical about a ‘United States of Eurasia’, the search for peace and the accidental creation of a new super power challenging American primacy.”

The whole album seems to bounce back and forth between heavily political tracks followed by love songs. Easily exemplified by the next tune, “Guiding Light”, which is another love song and is definitely straight-up stadium rock.

Unnatural Selection” is probably my second favorite track, starting off with church organ and Matt singing through a filter, then kicking into high gear with a pounding guitar & drum bit before the bass joins up for a unison guitar/bass/drums figure. The song is reminiscent of the group’s earlier song “Hysteria”, although it’s more varied in its rhythmic and harmonic content. The song itself is about the “winner take all” world we live in, and that “if you can’t beat them, join them.”

MK Ultra” is probably the only track I could take or leave. It’s good, but doesn’t quite stand up against the rest of the album. The pre-chorus and chorus are definitely the better parts of the song, but it’s still the weak point of the album.

I Belong to You / Mon cœur s’ouvre à ta voix” is definitely my personal favorite. The groovy piano bit, and the envelope filtered bass track, it’s got a really cool funky groove to it, and the second part of the title refers to the fact that the middle section is from the aria of the same name from Camille Saint-Saens’ opera Samson and Delilah. This is followed by, of all things, a bass clarinet solo. Bellamy describes this as being something they “…wanted to sound like a theme tune from a children’s TV program featuring teddy bears in a garden.” Like I said, the inspirations are varied & sometimes bizarre.

The last three tracks on the album are actually three movements of a larger work called “Exogenesis”. Definitely a reach for the group, I think it shows just how large their vision and scope can be, and I hope to see more like this from the group. Here I’ll just quote Bellamy from the iTunes LP liner notes regarding this work, as I definitely cannot explain it any better:

This is influenced by Rachmaninov, Richard Strauss, Chopin and Pink Floyd. It looks at the concept of ‘panspermia’. It is a story of humanity coming to an end and everyone pinning their hopes on a group of astronauts who go out to explore space and spread humanity to another planet. Part 1 is a jaded acceptance that civilisation will end. Part 2 is a desparate hope that sending the astronauts to find and populate other planets will be successful alongside the recognition that this is the last hope. Finally, part 3 is when the astronauts realise that it is just one big cycle, and recognise that unless humanity can change it will happen all over again.

So yeah, deep subject matter there, but I expect nothing less from Muse. The first movement seems to have the larger of the Floyd influence, with the second movement beginning like a mix of Rachmaninov/Chopin, then diminuendoing into something more Chopin before the rock kicks back in. The last lines of the second movement is quite eloquent:

Tell us, what is your final wish?
Now we know you can never return
Tell us, what is your final wish?
We will tell it to the world

The last movement I read as more than just the realization that we need to change, but the determination that we will change, because we must. It begins very quietly, slowly building into an earnest promise to get it right, before ending with a quiet piano/strings coda.

You can snag it at iTunes or Amazon & help me out.

My new favorite tribute

So the 50th anniversary of Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue was this week. A landmark album, to be sure; it brought modal jazz into the mainstream, and has continued to be an entry point into jazz for every generation that followed its release. There have been quite a few tributes to the music recorded on this album (I’ve certainly played those songs quite a few times myself), but this one is my new favorite. Friends, I present to you:

Kind of Bloop: an 8-bit tribute to Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue.

New Maktub!

One of my favorite bands, Maktub, is releasing a new album, Five,  in June, and they’re previewing the whole thing on the website one song per week leading up until the release. The first track was posted today, & it seriously rocks. Go. Check. Rock: Maktub — Five

Matthew Sorensen, composer extraordinaire

On March 28, 2009, my friend Matt Sorensen premiered his first orchestral work with the Plymouth Philharmonic Orchestra at Plymouth’s Memorial Hall. I had the pleasure of staying the weekend with Matt & his family at the house he grew up in. Our mutual friends from Berklee, Will Mitchell, Joe Koubek, Alison Batignani, & Vlad Ufimtsev were also in attendance, coming from as far as Atlanta!

Besides being a totally awesome reunion weekend for old friends who spent almost every waking moment together at Berklee, it was also really encouraging to Will, Joe, & myself, as we have not yet experienced success as musicians, but as Matt has proved, it’s definitely within reach.

As for the performance itself, the Plymouth Phil is no mere “community orchestra”, but definitely the equal all but the greatest of the world’s orchestras. I noticed especially the tubist was an exceptional performer, & as it turns out, he happens to be one of the best tubists in the world. So, it goes to show you never know where you might find magnificence…

Matt’s piece itself is a really spectacular work, & I highly recommend getting in touch with the Plymouth Phil to see about securing a copy of the recording they made of their performance this past March when it becomes available. The Boston Globe has a great article that describes the evening of music, and Matt’s piece in particular, really well, check it out here: Mathematical theory, music to intersect at Plymouth Philharmonic concert — The Boston Globe.

Work It. Make It. Do It. Makes Us.

Totally awesome: Daft Punk’s Console

Scary Music Merger

Go. Read. Be Afraid: The Media Equation — Big Music vs. Fans and Artists — NYTimes.com

The Ascent of … Banjo?

So, I was just listening to Ben Fold’s “The Ascent of Stan” and realized that during the chorus, there’s a banjo way down in the mix in just the left channel. God I love musical jokes.

Album Awesome – The Roy Hargrove Quintet’s Earfood

[Edit: So it seems that this never posted properly. I’m reposting it again, all fixed up. Enjoy!]

So I decided to go with my idea to write album reviews of albums that, while not necessarily new, are either new to me or just so damn amazing that I just have to share my opinion of them. On the plate for today is The Roy Hargrove Quintet’s latest release, Earfood.

Album art for The Roy Hargrove Quintet's Earfood

Now, as with every release by Hargrove, it’s his trumpet tone & technical skill that really shine here. Let’s take a moment to revel in that tone. Buttery, a bit dark, but not to the point of being muted. Definitely a player who has his own sound, but you can hear a blend of Clifford Brown & Miles in there.

As for the album, it tends to alternate between mid– and uptempo pieces & ballads, which I’ve always found to be a great program for a jazz album. I won’t examine every tune, but “I’m Not So Sure” and “Strasbourg/St. Denis” are two favorites among the uptempo numbers, and “Starmaker” is definitely my favorite amongst the ballads.

So, final opinion is that this is a great outing by a really tight group, one of the best around today in jazz. Hargrove has really nailed it with this one.

You can snag it at iTunes & Amazon & help me out.

Call the Sledgehammer

Amber spotted this on the internets, and, it being one of my favorite songs, especially to play, I just had to reblog it.

(Via Amber’s twitter stream)

And then there were none

Well, it seems I’m now left without any musical groups to participate in. The one person whose group I was performing with, Maria McNeil, has just informed me that she’s going in another direction with the group. Saddened by this, to be sure, but she made it clear it wasn’t anything personal or professional, and that she had enjoyed playing with me over the last few months.

My take? Stylistically she didn’t feel like I was a good fit for her music or her group. Or somebody else really wowed her on bass, perhaps? She didn’t go into that much detail, so I’ll probably never know, but I had a great time playing her music & performing with her & the band. I wish her the best of luck!