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Old 06-15-2009, 12:50 AM   #81 (permalink)
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Great album, my personal favorite. "Gone Away" has gotta be my favorite song off that album... actually come to think of it it's my favorite song by them.
Yeah, it's fantastic. At the show Dexter played a version on piano... It was really beautiful. This isn't from the show I was at, but even his "don't make fun of me" intro is exactly the same. Haha.

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Old 06-15-2009, 06:25 PM   #82 (permalink)
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I don't like The Offspring at all but I still enjoyed the post because it was personal and how your choice affected you at the time and these are the sort of posts I love to read on MB.
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Old 06-17-2009, 02:40 AM   #83 (permalink)
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I don't like The Offspring at all but I still enjoyed the post because it was personal and how your choice affected you at the time and these are the sort of posts I love to read on MB.
Why thank you.
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Old 06-17-2009, 05:00 PM   #84 (permalink)
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"Dance, dance, dance, dance, dance, to the radio..."

Joy Division


Career Overview:
Joy Division are one of those bands that really changed my life. Joy Division were 4 working class lads from the great city of Manchester. Ian Curtis (vocals), Peter Hook (bass), Bernard Sumner (guitar), Stephen Morris (drums). Inspired by the punk movement of the time they took the DIY ethic and no limit attitude and expanded on it. Through their music one can even hear the faint echoes of the city itself in its grey post industrial greatness. Though they only released 2 albums before the suicide of Ian Curtis, the 2 albums (19 tracks total) both album are widely considered to be among the best ever made. The band is one of the few I will always hold dear. The music being very minimalist and simplistic are some of the first songs I ever learned to play on guitar. I even recorded a cover of New Dawn Fades in my guitar class. Ian is in my opinion one of the best lyricist to have ever lived. Poet is a more fitting word, through his words of urban decay and desolation one can find some comfort. I could go on for hours talking about the lyrics alone but I don’t think you’d want to read that much. And chances are good you already know Joy Division are great. But of course what would a good band be without a great producer? Martin Hannet was nothing short of great he is often credited with creating the Joy Division sound, which can be heard if you give their live stuff a listen which is A LOT more aggressive than what is heard on the albums. Though both Ian and Martin are long gone the music they helped create won’t ever be. Both albums are an essential listen to anyone interested in post-punk or good music in general. The rest of the band members would go on to start New Order which like Joy Division pushed post-punk onto the dance floor.





Unkown Pleasures:
When I first heard their debut album the well named Unknown Pleasures it was like nothing I’d ever heard before. I bought the album one bored November evening after. The cover caught my eye, the white mountainous lines on plain black seemed very interesting to me. So I bought it uploaded it into my ipod and put the opening track Disorder on. There are those albums that are so life changing you remember what you were doing when you first heard them. I distinctly remember playing Halo 3 with my ipod with head phones on, and listening very closely. The opening drum beats and bouncing bass line with guitar notes that seemed to reflect off each other were simply amazing along and it still remains to this day one of my favorite opening tracks. Though after the opening track the album changes pace from upbeat dance to dark and brooding but the dance briefly resurfaces on She’s Lost Control but still has a doomed atmosphere to it. A track not on the album Transmission is one of my favorite JD tracks. Its pulsating bass lines and ever danceable drums with Ian’s singing “dance dance dance to the radio” while Sumner’s guitar fills the gaps.
Favorite Tracks:
Disorder
Candidate
Shadowplay
New Dawn Fades
Interzone
Wilderness
She's Lost Control
Insight



Closer:
Their second and last album Closer (a word with a double meaning) was based on more somber sound than its predecessor with more synthesizers. Also unlike Unknown Pleasures which had a sound of impending doom it has a more funeral sound like the worst has past and now is a time to mourn those lost. The album opens with Atrocity Exhibition one of the most nightmarish songs I’ve ever heard, it’s war march drums and screeching buzz saw guitar one can only picture images of a dark and evil world. “This is the way step inside” Ian sings on a song that could be about himself. But most of the songs are obviously based on his failing marriage and increasing depression. And with lines like “Mother I tried please believe me, I’m doing the best that I can. I’m ashamed of the things I've been put through, I’m ashamed of the person I am” Its pretty shocking that no one noticed the dark place Ian was in. Other songs not on the album such as the infamous Love Will Tear Us Apart is dominated by upbeat snyths but still maintain to melancholy the whole songs point forward to New Order. While Atmosphere could be one of the most depressing songs they have done but at the same time manages to be hopeful with heavy funeral drums, and strangely uplifting chimes and Ian singing “Don’t walk away in silence.”
Favorite Tacks:
Atrocity Exhibition
Heart and Soul
Twenty Four Hours
Colony
Passover
Decades
The Eternal
Isolation

There are alot of great Joy Division video's but I will only limit my self to posting essential viewings

Shadowplay


Love Will Tear Us Apart


Transmission
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sweet nothing openly flaunts the fact that he is merely the empty shell of an even more unadmirable member. his loneliness and need for attention bleeds through every letter he types. edit: i would just like to add that i'm ashamed that he's from texas. surely you didn't grow up in texas, did you sweet nothing?

Last edited by sweet_nothing; 06-17-2009 at 10:54 PM.
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Old 06-25-2009, 09:41 PM   #85 (permalink)
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"Another night and I thought Well, well go to another party and hang myself
gently on the shelf"


Blur- Blur

Blur have always been one of my favorite bands their well balance of rich pop with good musicianship never sacrificing one for the other has always lead me to admire them and their ability to constantly change and adapt their sound never leaves a dull moment with them. In 1997 the band were riding on a wave of success and were the leaders of a movement they helped create. Parklife (1994) had cemented them as Britpop heroes and it’s successor The Great Escape (1995) was much in the same vain. Guitarist Graham Coxon was becoming frustrated with their pop sound and wanted something else. At the time Coxon was listening to a lot of American lofi bands particularly Pavement which he cites as an influence for the band’s change in sound. Singer Damon Albarn had become fed up with the press attention of becoming a popstar had brought him and a rivalry with Oasis wasn’t making things easier. “The same people who were chanting along with park life earlier were now calling me a wanker in the street”- Damon Albarn. The band pushed for a new sound and major departure from their previous albums. Where Parklife and the Great Escape were pop albums that celebrated British life their self titled Blur (1997) was much more experimental and loud the way Graham and Damon had wanted. The album in my own personal opinion is arguably their best. The opening track Beetlebum has a very dreamy daze feel to it, which goes along with what it’s supposedly written about, Damon and his girlfriend on heroin. The title itself is a reference to the drug, but before I discovered that I though it had to with Graham’s guitar which making a distinct buzzing sound reminiscent of beetle flying around. The first sounds on the album are Graham hitting dead notes on his Fender Jaguar then whooshing in with buzzing notes while Damon enters singing “Beetlebum, what’ve you done, she’s a gun for what you’ve done, Beetlebum’, with fuzzy detached vocals (which resonant throughout the album) and soon after eventually the rest of the band soon follows before the chorus erupts ‘And when she lets me slip away’. The ending is a simple driven guitar solo with lots of what appears to be radio chatter. Noel Gallagher has cited this as his personal favorite Blur song . The second song aptly named Song 2 and coming in at 2:02 is Blur’s biggest hit in America. ‘People like it because it’s unsophisticated and thuggish, which is what people like basically’- Graham Coxon Not one of my favorite songs at first listen but it has since grown on me with it’s simplicity. I’m sure the Pixies would be proud of this one with it’s quiet loud dynamic and the utterly simple catchy chorus which explodes into overdrive ‘WHOOHOO’. A track I have to bring up which is one of my personal favorite Blur songs is You’re So great. Recorded and written completely by Coxon it’s musically the albums simplest but also it’s most warmly heart felt. It’s also the first track in which Graham sings lead vocals and the only to be written by and only featuring one band member. Just Graham and two guitars (one acoustic and one electric), the song was recorded under a table in the studio because Graham at the time was very shy of his vocal abilities which bring an honesty and earnestness to the song. The song is also very lofi, which means bad audio quality but I think it adds to the song rather than take away. Death of the Party is another fantastic number. A pseudo trip hop beat with heavy bass and scratchy guitar with a spacey vibe the song feels like the song would suggest the Death of the Party. The track is melancholic with Damon singing the chorus “Another night and I thought well well, go to another party and hang myself”. On Your Own brings a drum machine in the mix which adds a hip hop feel to the song along with Graham’s looping guitar effects. Unlike previous Blur albums their isn’t an overall theme the lyrics seemed to be very secondary to the music on this one which is just fine because the music alone is damn fine. I always admire a band that can change their sound and step into unfamiliar ground which is what Blur did with this one. They could of easily released another pop album and had it go to number 1 but instead they chose the other route. Blur overall is a great album of experimentation and worth a listen.






*EDIT
Youtube has made it damn impossible for me to post the music videos to these tracks, sorry.

Favorite Tracks:
Death Of A Party
You're So Great
Beetlebum
Song 2
Sad Country Ballad Man
MOR
On Your Own
Essex Dogs
Movin On

Other Videos You'll Enjoy:



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sweet nothing openly flaunts the fact that he is merely the empty shell of an even more unadmirable member. his loneliness and need for attention bleeds through every letter he types. edit: i would just like to add that i'm ashamed that he's from texas. surely you didn't grow up in texas, did you sweet nothing?

Last edited by sweet_nothing; 06-26-2009 at 10:50 PM.
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Old 06-27-2009, 01:26 AM   #86 (permalink)
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Because the last posts I did were so popular.

"What can you want now you've got it all? The whole scene is obscene
Time will strip it away a year and a day"


The Libertines- Up The Bracket
The Libertines first album Up the Bracket (2002) was my first step into the world of indie rock and modern music. Up to the point I heard it the ‘newest’ band I liked was Nirvana. I remember watching a documentary on British indie and seeing the Libertines perform ‘Boys In The Band‘ on Later….With Jools Holland. They had such an energetic aggressive who gives a fuck sound that reminded me a lot of punk and they looked great too with their leather jackets and tight black jeans. They looked as cool as they sound. Then I saw them play The Boy Looked At Johnny at a live show. On stage the singers/guitar players Pete Doherty and Carl Barat thrashed around on their guitars jumping up and down smashing into each other while drenched in sweat. Drummer Gary Powell pounded away on his away at his drums while bassist John Hassall stood their like a statue providing an anchor to the all the energy. So I went on itunes and gave it a download. They quickly became my favorite band and unlike Joy Division, The Smiths, or Nirvana even they left me feeling good and not depressed which was nice for a change. I defiantly see the Libertines as the start of the post-punk revival for the UK scene and you can defiantly draw a line between them and the Arctic Monkeys. Founding members Pete Doherty and Carl Barat met each other thought Pete’s sister who Carl was friends with. The two quickly became close friends as they shared a common love for writing music and the Smiths. The two formed a band called the Strand “I used to go to Blur’s record company everyday with a demo, and they’d tell me ‘oh we’ll get back to you’ I sorta became the laughing stock of the office. But that band fell apart and me and Pete started a new band and decided it was all or nothing”- Carl Barat. After adding Drummer Gary Powell and bassist John Hassall to the mix the Libertines were created. After constantly playing gigs and sending out demo’s the band and a praise review by the NME the band were singed to indie label Rough Trade records. The band recorded Up the Bracket with legendary Clash guitarist/singer Mick Jones who was able to encapsulate the raw energy of their live shows in the studio recordings. Throughout the record Carl and Pete share vocal duties. Pete’s voice is much more thick accented and he slur’s his words abit but so does Carl who has a much more accessible voice softer voice. Time For Heroes is one of the standout tracks. Like the Clash’s White Riot on their debut album the song was inspired by Pete’s experience in a riot on May Day in London, ‘Did you see the stylish kids in the riot? We were shovelled up like muck, set the night on fire. Wombles bleed truncheons and shields’. And there is also some emphasis on England loss of national identity ’here are fewer more distressing sights, than that, of an Englishman in a baseball cap.’ Pete maybe an overrated lyricist but he does have his moments, and Time For Heroes is pretty much all those moments. The Boy Looked at Johnny is a pub anthem with slurred words and inconsistent babbling it’s not so hard to picture the band singing it along with a small crowd in a smoked and sweat filled pub. The title track is quite possibly my favorite Libertines track. It starts out with what sounds like a death howl from Doherty screaming “Get out of it”. Pretty much a great pop song. Boys in the Band is Carl’s best moment on the album sounding like it was made for an indie dance club with its drums and funky riffs and with Carl singing “I’ve never heard you dance and I’ve never heard you sing so how could it mean a single thing?”. I get along would be his second best which has him saying “I get along singing my song people tell I’m wrong….fuck em’ which could either be scene as a very juvenile statement or very brilliant one. What A Waster another favorite of mine by them in general it’s also probably one of their most profane. With the opening lines “What a waster, what a fucking waster you pissed it all up the wall round the corner where they chased her there’s tears coming out from everywhere. The city's hard, the city's fair, get back inside you've got nothing on No you mind yer bleedin own you two bob cunt” The song is revolves around a girl with an obvious drug problem. Overall the album is a blast form the past made new, it has all the energy form the first wave of punk but made modern which is a good thing. The album always puts me in a good mood because of memories of younger days tied to it.




Favorite Tracks:
Boys In the Band
Time For Heroes
What A Waster
Up the Bracket
Death On the Stairs
The Boy Looked at Johnny

Other good videos:


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America does folk, hardcore and mathrock better and that's 90% of what I give 2 shits on.
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sweet nothing openly flaunts the fact that he is merely the empty shell of an even more unadmirable member. his loneliness and need for attention bleeds through every letter he types. edit: i would just like to add that i'm ashamed that he's from texas. surely you didn't grow up in texas, did you sweet nothing?
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Old 06-27-2009, 05:40 AM   #87 (permalink)
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Like you, Up The Bracket was my favourite album when i was first getting into music and there's a lot of great memories there. It's hip to hate them now but im always going to love them just for getting me into all of the bands they merged together to make their sound.
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Old 06-27-2009, 08:42 PM   #88 (permalink)
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Joy Division are an excellent band. I remember hearing a live version of Dead Souls that blew me away. My favourite track is 'Atmosphere', not to mention the video, which is weird as fuck.
Also I had no idea you liked The Offspring. I like a handful of their tracks, theres a song called 'Self Esteem' where they take the piss out of Nirvana's 'Smells Like Teen Spirit'. On a serious note, the best tracks Ive heard from them are 'Can't Repeat', 'Hit That', 'Original Prankster' & 'Want You Bad'. I havent listened to them in ages so I might give them a wee spin sometime.
Also Graham Coxon's stuff I never thought I would like but 'Sky Is Too High' & 'Happiness In Magazines'- which only cost me about a pound, were 2 albums I really enjoyed.
Anyway this is a good thread man, also I think its a good idea to do it with someone else.

EDIT: Libertines I liked the first 6 tracks off their second album, 'Last Post On The Bugle' is a good song. As for their first album, I dont rate it.
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Old 06-29-2009, 07:25 PM   #89 (permalink)
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Against Me! - Acoustic EP



Jordan's First Choice
Those Anarcho Punks Are Mysterious
Reinventing Axl Rose
We Did It All For Don
Pints of Guiness Make You Strong
Untitled (Armageddon)


"What?! An acoustic ep by Against Me!? Isn't that kind of redundant?" you might ask.
The answer, baby birds, is "NO!" Well... perhaps the answer is "maybe," but fuck it. This is the shit. This is definitely a masterpiece, and by far my favorite thing they've put out. I love folk music, and I also loves obnoxious, energetic vocals. Needless to say when I first listened to the Acoustic EP I felt like as though all was right in the world. It's angsty, it's energetic, it's legit.

There are six tracks, and I could review them all, but I'm feeling tired and/or lazy so I'm just going to talk about my favorites, and hopefully it will convince you to ask for a link (Peter, I'm looking at you.) Jordan's First Choice is a perfect opening track, and is possibly my all-time favorite from the band. (This version is really similar to the version that reappears on their debut, but I like this one better. The other might sound more "raw," but this version has such a fragile feel to it. It's great.)
The next song, Those Anarcho Punks Are Mysterious is ****ing great too. Maybe even better than the first, and coincidentally also one of my favorites. There's a part in the song when the guitar stops and there's only clapping and vocals... it's orgasmic. We rock, because it's us against them/ we found our own reasons to sing/ and it's so much less confusing/ when lines are drawn like that.
Next up, Pints of Guiness Make You Strong. Against Me! have got to be one of the most beautiful and sincere things to come out of folk-punk. I absolutely adore this song. It's so sad, and so great to find something so geniune and good without a trace of contrived "emo." If we're never together/ if i'm never back again/ well i swear to god that i'll love you forever/ Evelyn, i'm not coming home tonight./ In all the years that went by/ she said she'd always love him/ and from the day that he died she never loved again.








This album is a great starting place for someone who might not be the biggest fan of Against Me!. The music's softer, and maybe even more accessible. There's more emphasis on the lyrics, which is great because the they carry a more defined melody. Hit me up for a link, I'll be more than happy to share.
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Old 06-29-2009, 09:52 PM   #90 (permalink)
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Thanks for the support all 2 of you!

“Selling acid was a bad idea, and selling it to a cop was an even worse one”


The Mountain Goats- All Hail West Texas
To show that I’m just as hip as the rest of you let’s start to dive into the more obscure side of my music taste. All Hail West Texas is an concept lofi folk album and the cover states that the album is composed of "fourteen songs about seven people, two houses, a motorcycle, and a locked treatment facility for adolescent boys". John Danielle (pretty much the only person behind The Mountain Goats) fills the album with rich stories, the album it’s self as you’d expect from a folk album its dependent on the lyrics and the music (guitar chord strumming) takes a backseat to this but the album doesn’t suffer from this. Danielle is a very talented story teller the opening track (and my personal favorite) The Best Death Metal Band in Denton tells the story of Cyrus and Jeff who dream of making it big with their Death Metal band (though they never settled on a name for it). The story is great and detailed which is echoed through the album, and I never knew ‘Hail Satan’ could sound so catchy. The second track Fall of the Star High School Running Back is another fav of mine is about former star running back William Stanaforth Donahue who is reduced to selling acid after blowing out his knee at a game but and is later busted by the cops. I’m not really sure how to explain the album without giving away the plot of the songs, because then you wouldn't really have any reason to listen to the album. Audio is lofi i.e. shitty bedroom quality but that makes the songs more humble, some might completely hate it and find it boring but I find it just as entertaining as I would a Bob Dylan record. The songs are worth hearing for the nice short stories, small windows into the lives of the people that occupy west Texas. I recommend it to anyone into folk music anyone else might be interested in Danielle’s story telling while others will be completely turned off by the shitty audio and simple guitar work.




Favorite Tracks:
The Best Ever Death Metal Band in Denton
Balance
Fall of the Star High School Running Back
Jeff Davis County Blues
Color in Your Cheeks
Source Decay
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America does folk, hardcore and mathrock better and that's 90% of what I give 2 shits on.
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sweet nothing openly flaunts the fact that he is merely the empty shell of an even more unadmirable member. his loneliness and need for attention bleeds through every letter he types. edit: i would just like to add that i'm ashamed that he's from texas. surely you didn't grow up in texas, did you sweet nothing?

Last edited by sweet_nothing; 06-29-2009 at 09:59 PM.
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