Showing posts with label bestnewsounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bestnewsounds. Show all posts

Epic Handshakes and a Bear Hug, Wild Honey



EPIC HANDSHAKES AND A BEAR HUG, WILD HONEY
Lazy Recordings, Spain
Rating: 83
By Carlos Reyes

If you’re able to look away from such a beautiful artwork, let point out that this album has been standing around me for a while. The psychology behind it makes this album hard to analyze and harder to give a rating. After numerous spins and many days of going in and out of it, most of my concerns with the album have evolved into virtues. Like Bigott or Antoine Reverb, Wild Honey’s decision to sing only in English doesn’t translate as a problem at the time of retrieving emotion or making their themes come across fluently. Epic Handshakes and a Bear Hug is the debut and proclamation of Wild Honey, a great new act charged with good-to-great songs and boosted by its wall-of-sound timbered spirit.

It’s important to emphasize the need for repeating spins if possible on a prolonged time; it’s really the only way to fully appreciate the album’s simplicity and how at the end everything sums up to “a big parade.” This is the overall endearing project of Guillermo Farre and his friends, based on Madrid and bringing hooky melodies for hooky hearts. They got the potential to internationalize following the Pitchforkian trends and the fair offering of European acts that are able to prosper with such audience. Wild Honey sounds a bit like Real Estate, The Mountain Goats, Woods, perhaps even Camera Obscura. One would expect such an album to drown in its influences, but they pull it out adding their own spice: a calculated dose of twee pop.

The album opens with the whimsical “Whistling Rivalry”, a nice ukulele based track with handclaps and whistles about aging, “Were we ever that young?” It follows with the moistly and beautiful “1918-1920”, which serves as the sonic landscape of the entire album. Some songs reach such a level of intimacy that one would swear a couple of newlyweds are singing them. At the other end, it’s able to be politically conscious in “Kings of Tomorrow” by trusting their piece of music rather than making some kind of boring political statement. In a way, they serve upon folk to spread the message. “One Word Prayer” struggles to structure its lyrics, so the vocals are changed into a state of uncommon accelerations that although rushed, work great in a song about mourning.

In “Gold Leaf” they manage to relocate their folksy sound to make a bossa-nova chant bright and simple. Most of the album carried by Guillermo’s vocals (he sounds a bit like Jorge Drexler) but occasionally a girl or two show up to steal the attention, in this song they sound as beautiful as Natalia Lafourcade. They even manage to make a rolling road-travel song out of the self resolved “Brand New Hairdo”, “I’ve got a brand new hairdo just to persuade myself that life has order and direction, and that there’s a place where I’d like to be.” Wild Honey holds a monumental-like disposition that carries its power of simplicity quite well, while managing to sound big and tall in its dynamics.


Valentina Fel, Valentina Fel



VALENTINA FEL, VALENTINA FEL

Independiente, Chile ****
Rating: 89

By Carlos Reyes

Valentina Fel is like a hyperbole of music’s very own fetishism; her powerful funky voice literally devours any beat coming her way, it’s erotic, wacky, fascinating, and at the end, very pleasurable. Valentina Fel sounds gigantic; it’s the realm of pop on the verge of detonation. Valentina treats music as the vein that projects her own wisdom. In this sense, her approach is almost cynical to pop’s customs. Very rarely do we get such a defying authorship in pop music, she can hardly contain the vernacular strength of her voice, lyrics and volatile background treatment, it’s weird but she overreaches themes like folk artists squeeze their socially-minded subjects. In better words, Super45 calls her “the most logical evolution of a riot girl.”

Bouncy disco-ready platforms await her sky-scraping voice, every song is a confrontation, and almost every song is a triumph. The opening track and lead single “Sin Control Mi Diversion” proposes a contract, to let things go on and off as they please, to have fun without attachment. Of course it’s hard to not be attached to something, especially on an age of new media, and that’s where Valentina raises the bar, she dislocates sound as daring as she makes up new words to sew a dance tune. Hint, don’t let the lyrics dictate a song, have them be part of the process, if you want to experiment, forget about bytes and transitions, learn angles. Lyrically, “Acapulco” may not make sense at all, but you’ll feel the furious and quite violent loom in which she demoralizes power.

“Circo Podrido” is directly confrontational, “perdiendo la batalla, te invito a jugar, mover mi ritmo, ritmo que rima esta maldito… ja jaja jaa.” It may seem like she’s throwing a bunch of concepts into the air with no real coherence, but just like Santigold, Valentina’s music travels in waves, you can see such beautiful formation with Windows Media Player’s ‘Ocean Mist.’ She’s one of those personas that would suck at commanding experiments (because of the lack of technique), but a genius in brainstorm. She makes high-voltage pieces like “Alteracion” and “Take Me Home” sound effortless, also giving up tempo in “Loco Vagando” and “No Me Quiero Anular.”

Valentina’s aesthetics are best exemplified in “Las Estrellas”, the most playful and ultimately adolescent track in the album: “ya no voy a recurrir a la niƱez perdida, ya no voy a recurrir a la bebe dormida.” In the song, she also makes a reference to military stars, “hoy las estrellas dicen algo yo lo escucho, son tan deprimentes dicen todo en tu escudo, mira las estrellas, mira calaveras.” What an awesome way to ridiculize the war and use imagery to condemn it. In terms of sound, we have been exposed to this synth pop through Javiera Mena and Maria Daniela y Su Sonido Lasser (maybe even Jessy Bulbo), but none with this resonance and focus on the actual dance floor. Valentina’s has crafted a vogue manifestation of the new popstar. Valentina Fel is at this moment only available in Chile, New York’s Lizard King will be releasing her first broad material next year, one of our most anticipated albums for sure.


CUU LP, Sr. Amable

CUU LP, SR. AMABLE
Delhotel Records, Mexico
Rating: 79

By Jean-Stephane Beriot

The project of Andres Murillo gives continuation to the very pleasing EP Senor Amable Was Here, this time he steps away from the charming vowels of “Gary (ewewew)” and amplifies a dazzling line of songs that are anything but charming, seems like he’s trying to kill the kid inside him, or even more interesting, somebody else taking that away from him. Mr. Amable finds himself in a country with riveting violence, this demands bolder musical passages and for the most part the album delivers such force. However, I miss some of that messier production from his EP, something our editor calls the demo-lished suspension, CUU sounds more industrialized but equally polished.

“Me Carfa” is a brutal piece to start a show, with lines like “se oyen balas en lugar de risas” or “no vemos diferencia entre narco y policia”, or how about “soy muy popular entre la gente triste.” One would think this guy is a pessimist or at least heartbroken, or both, truth is, he is just a perceiver transcoding his surrounding through very well textured bleak songs. Big props to producer Bul who adds yet another review on this site, “Pasa las armas Bul!”CUU is covered with excessive attachment, but finds virtue in this flaw to hide his already vulnerable voice which is so beautifully conveyed in “Para Blueshit.” This is one of the most beautiful tracks in the album so I did some research, turns out this is a requiem for Blueshit, a band I could barely stand to skim, very weird unhealthy stuff, ugly things inspire beautiful ones.

Despite having one of the coolest titles, “Tema official de la semana nacional de vacunacion” drowns in goofiness trying to critique Mexico City’s rock scene, the rap sequence is laughable and dumb; everything that could’ve gone wrong does go wrong even melodically. “Carrie’s Brain” is a spare song, totally unnecessary and easily boring. Aside from those two tracks CUU flourishes truly exciting minutes of music and speech, about guns and drug trafficking, schools and whatnot. Play close attention to the collaborations of two fonograma favorites, Monterrey’s weird kid Alexico and Monterrey’s most sober cantautor Mr. Racoon. Also, don’t miss the title song, it takes a while for it to sink in, but once it does, it’s hard not get chills, the perfect mediation for a post-everything set of songs. At the end, this is a very cool pop album, not an easy album but very gratifying on multiple hearings. “Soy muy lo-fi para culturizaaaar.”