Every now and then, we like to make an exception here at Ground Control for great albums which are not exactly current, but are so great we kick ourselves for not having been the ones that brought them to your attention in the first place. In this edition of the Vinyl Vlog, we bring you just that. Out of left field and completely outside of my radar comes the debut album by Ex-Cult (formerly Sex-cult). This garage punk band from...
Selena Gomez "just want to party all night/ in the neon light" ("Slow Down"), and she makes no excuses about it. Oh, wait, yes she does. "Tell them it's my birthday," she sings, "when I party like that" ("Birthday"). Stars Dance is supposedly the album where Gomez grows up. Or, at least, stops being a squeaky clean Disney queen. Which, apparently, means dance all night and, maybe, even have sex. As we have seen, the party all night is pretty...
It is really hard to create music which evokes a previous era without sounding imitative, but Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros pull it off. Listening to their self-titled third album puts you in a time warp back to the late Sixties. Yet only a couple of the songs sound specifically like anything recorded then. It's more a question of attitude – of feel. Lyrics like "Love, love is the mother/ God, god is the human/ You, the generator/ Please!/...
It would be hard to say that the last couple of years haven't been uncertain ones for GWAR. That isn't to say there was any concern that the band wouldn't continue after the untimely passing of guitarist Cory Smoot in 2011 (GWAR's the kind of band which could carry on forever with different members indefinitely, in theory) but, given that the band was really riding on a creative high with the help of Smoot's guitar work on War Party, Beyond...
It's funny how, as time has passed, the public's perception of Elvis Presley has changed. Outside of the singer's most devout supporters (of which there continue to be a staggering number), everyone knows Elvis as the hip-swingin' King of Rock n' Roll first, and then as a fried banana sandwich-eating, pasty, bloated codfish at the end of his life. There's no question that both of those images are historically appropriate, but that they're the only two that the average Joe...
Haya doin'ere, junky? I'm havin' a diff'rent kinda day taday, 'at's fer shoor. I'm sittin'ere, listenin' ta old Elvis Presley reckids – c'n youse buh-lieve it? I'm innat kinda bloated, indulgent mood taday. I's swingin' good though – kinda like a good benzi-buzz. I'm shoor you noticed that my bag o' SWAG is fat right? Well good! Ther's some good good shit innere, an' ya needa check it out. First, yes, I brought back the Over The Rhine EP. It...
While there's no doubt that his voice is loaded with a healthy amount of excitement in conversation, there's no question that the dominant tone in singer Chris Cresswell's voice is one of relieved satisfaction. It wasn't easy, but everything is finally falling in line for The Flatliners as they gear up to release their fourth album, Dead Language on September 17, 2013 . “The last tour we...
I've been a fan of Vampire Weekend for years, which is not the easiest thing to admit because these guys are basically the hipster scapegoats for irrelevance. Is it because they wear new sweaters instead of vintage ones? Is it because boating people think they are edgy? I'm not sure. But, I've always liked this band, and I was glad to find that Modern Vampires in the City, their junior release, still holds up to the band's previous work. Vampire...
While No Age's last album was certainly a guilty pleasure, it just doesn't hold a candle to the quality of their new album, An Object. Sure, the band's third album was good, there's no arguing that, but his time No Age has ascended to a whole new level in their songwriting, arrangement and performance; not one song on An Object is forgettable or easy to skip – this album is just striking all the way through. Both those who were...
If The Stooges proved nothing else during their all-too-brief first run (before Iggy changed his surname to “Pop” and James Williamson joined in on guitar), they proved that “rock n' roll” was not synonymous with “rocket science.” In the multitude of explanations Iggy has made in the decades since then, he has been pretty forthright on the matter, actually; the general idea which drove The Stooges was to mimic a sound which was monolithic, simple and metallic – like a...