Friday, May 5, 2017

Morningrise


Dear readers,

I don't know how often I'll be posting, but you can now expect semi-regular reviews for the spring/summer, and the occasional imaginary mixtape.  There are a few vintage rarities I want to review as well, so you can expect a retrospective or two down the road.  Today, a few albums have released, and since I don't have time to listen to (let alone review) them all yet, I should just note that while I'll be reviewing Hoops's first studio album Routines (out today) [note from 2021: since removed, along with a related imaginary mixtape, following some serious allegations against their ex-drummer who I'm fairly certain also lead Jade TV, Youth Camp, and Jimmy Pop. #IBelieveSurvivors], Mac DeMarco released This Old Dog, and Slowdive is back in action with a self-titled album - their first release in 22 years!! Yes all of this happened just today. No, this isn't a dream. Yes, they're all on Bandcamp.

Now that My Bloody Valentine, Slowdive, Ride, Lush, and Swervedriver are all making music again, I think it's safe to say that shoegaze and dream-pop are genres we'll be hearing more of everywhere. It's a great time to be a shoegazer, and it's a great time to be a shoegaze fan, and I expect to turn on the radio someday soon and hear a guitar not played by someone now dead.

My next two posts are very sonically-linked, one of which is a review, and the other an imaginary mixtape.  They should both put you in the mood for an awesome summer.

And if all the music I review this summer isn't enough, I'll keep you updated with new releases of mine, the latest of which are linked below and seen above.

   Best, and glad to be back!

     -Daniel Trainor-McKinnon, Track-By-Track

https://danieltrainor-mckinnon.bandcamp.com/track/wake-up
https://danieltrainor-mckinnon.bandcamp.com/album/found
https://danieltrainor-mckinnon.bandcamp.com/album/halloween-treats
https://danieltrainor-mckinnon.bandcamp.com/album/puppet
https://soundcloud.com/user-313721910/missing-mountain-demo

Monday, April 18, 2016

Blind Spot - A Refreshing Sight

            This is my first review of 2016, and my 18th review of a release, here on Track-By-Track.

            This is a truly exciting opportunity, because it's the first major dream-pop/shoegaze band that's come out with a studio release since My Bloody Valentine's MBV.  Though Lush needs no introduction for fans of the scene that celebrates itself, it's worth noting that Lush defined a place for themselves with solid albums like Spooky, and a sound both reminiscent of, and divergent from Cocteau Twins.  They're required listening for dream-pop and shoegaze fans, and have a laid-back yet energetic sound.
            Blind Spot is a great comeback, and a solid display of classic imaginative music.  It's like visiting an old friend who, instead of reminiscing with you about past memories, grabs your arm and takes you along for new ones.  Whoever or whatever let Lush get back together, this blogger is in debt to you.
            Here's my TBT:

            The EP begins with "Out of Control", a marvelous song, and a miraculous return to form for Lush.  Their classic sound has somehow survived the 20 years between releases and the death of their original drummer Chris Acland.  Excellent production, deep bass, great drums, fitting and cool lyrics and vocals, and flanged-chorused guitars that sound... Well, lush (no pun intended).  You know that feeling when bands reform and it doesn't sound half as good?  You won't ever feel that during this EP.

            "Lost Boy", the second track, reminds me a bit of mid-phase Cocteau Twins, and early '00s David Bowie, with a spooky (pun partially intended) vibe.  Very wide guitars and vibrant strings take the cake on this one.  It sounds like what the lighter goth bands of the '90s could have turned into.  The chords remind me of Billy Corgan's leaked demo of "Identify."

             The third track, "Burnham Beaches" is upbeat, and has loads of airy atmosphere.  The chord changes are natural yet original, and horns and shimmering synths highlight great vocals.  With a catchy beat and guitars lower in the mix, it sounds like a song made years after the others.  The end is ecstatic, and sounds like the ending of an album.

            The final track of the EP, "Rosebud" is a surprise because it's slower, and more pensive than the other songs.  It's more lyric-focused, and thankfully, its lyrics vocals are worth highlighting.  It's likely the reason for the title of the EP.  It's like a fusion of the '60s, '90s, and alternative music made in the near future.  Expect to hear more songs like this from modern bands.

            Overall, Blind Spot is a fantastic return for one of the dream-pop mainstays of the '90s.  The word "refreshing" keeps popping up in my head during repeated listens, mainly because it's an EP that doesn't sound over-processed, by a band that didn't radically and unnecessarily change its sound, and hasn't watered down the melodic construction and lyrics of its music.  Will the vast majority of modern music start changing toward more experimental, honest music?  I'll let "Out of Control" answer: "Change has already begun."

Half-Gifts


Dear readers, this is another update!

Though I am returning to do a review of Lush's new EP Blind Spot, I won't be making regular posts here for another little bit.

I'm also now a happy member of the Bandcamp community, with my two latest releases being offered there: My single "If It Kills Me" and my newest EP Silver Thaw.  It's also the home of all the releases by my EDM/IDM pseudonym The Scarecrow.  See: https://danieltrainor-mckinnon.bandcamp.com/album/silver-thaw.

If you're waiting for new reviews, hold tight.  Unlike most of my favourite bands, I'm not going to wait 20 years for a comeback.

  Best,

     -Daniel Trainor-Mckinnon, Track-By-Track

Thursday, August 20, 2015

You Know I'm Not Dead

Dear readers,

I thought I'd clear a few things up: I'm not dead, I'm not deaf, and I can't do reviews until I finish a thesis.  The tinnitus ended, the hearing-loss was mostly non-permanent, and the posts were interrupted by studying philosophy full time, for which I'm now trying to gain a master of arts degree (thesis writing is time-consuming).  I'll be back some time next year after I get that degree, but in the mean time, I feel the need to mention that I just released my debut EP Early today (info: https://www.facebook.com/danieltrainormckinnonmusic).

I don't have a review for this one.  I'll let you be the judge...

   Best, and looking forward to coming back next year,

     -Daniel Trainor-Mckinnon, Track-By-Track

Friday, October 11, 2013

Tinnitus

Hello my dear readers and fellow alt-rock gourmets.

Today I won't be reviewing anything, due to the fact that I have recently received tinnitus from a live show.  I'll be back next week, with any luck though.

   Best,

     -Daniel Trainor-Mckinnon, Track-By-Track

Friday, October 4, 2013

Chance: Worth Taking


            This is a review of the EP Chance, by Australian artist Kigo, and the 17th review of a release, here on Track-By-Track.

            Well, mixtape month has come and gone, but I'm returning to my normal review style with a bang.  Australian artist Kigo (Solo artist D.P. Pearce) has been on my radar for a while, and with every new release (which tends to be nearly monthly), the sound gets even better.  Kigo definitely has a shoegaze sound, but interestingly, with digital and sampled-sounding drums, instead of the generally live-sounding drums most modern shoegaze artists have.
            A certain kind of sheer raw power comes through each track, to a degree that is incomparable to any band I can think of.  My Bloody Valentine is definitely an influence on Pearce's writing and performing, but mix-wise, Kigo stands alone.  And this is just part of a prolific, albeit young, career: Since February, Kigo has released 4 EPs, and a single with a b-side, amazingly, comprizing 20 songs.  Get ready for raw and amazing sound.
             Here's my TBT:

            Chance starts with "Dress", which in the beginning sounds like My Bloody Valentine's "She Found Now", leading into their "Soon".  The chord structure and style are very similar to "Soon", but the vocals and lead instrumentation show the differences.  The entire track is overdriven to the extreme, and the vocals are decimated out of understandability.  Loads of glide-guitar, over a drum sample or two, with bass and plenty of reverb and delays over most of the tracks.

            Then, coming out of seemingly nowhere related, the title track changes the whole trip.  Huge tremolo-affected guitar, a fast drum sample -- used slower before in Kigo's "Eyes so Bright (See the Spark)" -- and a great screeching feedback sound in the beginning are immediately noticable.  Vocals are once again obscured, mainly by eq, and not by distortion.  It's a fast song with loads of the energy that Kigo has had from the beginng, just with a slightly more-refined sound than the earlier releases, like Guilt and Closer (Hear My Voice).  It's a bit space-rock as well, like Duster's "Echo Bravo".

            "Leave Me Behind" is the third track.  The beauty of the sound is once again driven by the power, but it's a slower, more contemplative song than would be expected with the general guitar sound.  This is something I really like about shoegaze in general; artists can play powerful and huge-sounding guitar tracks, without actually playing abrasive songs.  Emotive synths show up in this one, drums are digital, and guitar is sublime.  The bass track is also more noticeable than usual, and it really drives the track into Debbie Googe territory.  Vocals are breathy and less-obscured than the previous two tracks, but still not clear enough to my ears to make out words.  The vocals in Pearce's songs are mostly equalized out of recognition, through hi-passing the base notes almost completely out, or emphasizing the higher frequencies.

            The last track is "When You Look", which again emphasizes synth and bass, and this time, vocals are even clearer.  The overall sound of the song is really warped and introspective, and it's a bit droney (genre, not boring by any means).  It's like if Spacemen 3 turned into a prog-rock band in the late '70s, but better than what that might sound like.  The only perceptable beat in the track is a soft bass kick, which might be just the bass's strings being touched, which makes it a bit more like the previous (and uncharacteristically slower) Kigo EP Some Other Place, which I also highly recommend.  The guitar, bass, and synth combination is dream-inducing, and the whole track is a fitting end.  For anything.  It feels like the end of an avant-garde movie, in one of the rare times the ending is satisfying and full of wonder.

            Overall, this is an amazing EP, and the sound of Kigo has loads to offer to the genre of shoegazing.  The raw power and soft emotion that comes through Chance is as genre-specific as it is unique.  Kigo will be coming out with an LP soon, and Pearce has also created a black-metal solo project (Afterwalker).  You can get this album (and all previous releases) for pay-what-you-want at: http://kigo.bandcamp.com/.  This is a Chance worth taking.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Singles and More: Imaginary Mixtape 3/3

            This is the 3rd imaginary mixtape, here on Track-By-Track.

            Well, here’s the last part of mixtape month.  I leave you with shoegaze, chillwave, post-rock, and dream pop songs that are inspiring, catchy, an above all else, enjoyable.  Loads of great artists, loads of great songs, and loads of room for checking out more about anything you see here.
            It's been exciting to spread the word about things I wouldn't normally review, due to being singles, or being slightly out-of-genre; and this one boasts some singles with production-values galore.  Maybe next September...
            Here's my TBT:

            1. “1991” by The Fauns (2009)

            This track is like if a band were transported from the ‘90s, straight into right now.  When I listened to “1991”, I felt waves of an intensely personal, yet distant contentment, shrouded by some cold sense of looming melancholy.  It so beautifully captures the sound of ‘90s dream pop, trapped in a modern digital winter.  The feeling of long-lost memories tainted (or perhaps improved) by data-loss.  I know this sounds a lot like gibberish, but it’s how I feel when I listen to the track.  Beautiful almost-whispered vocals with great delays and lyrics, a soft textured beat, delayed and processed guitar, bass that compliments the rest of the track through taking a major role (and perfectly so), and samples or synths (or both) that provide a great backdrop to the intensely melodic and evocative “1991”.  Every track was leveled, processed, and performed to perfection.   Beautiful job; absolutely beautiful.  The Fauns are coming out with a new album this December, which will likely be fantastic.  (http://thefauns.bandcamp.com/)

            2. "Hiding Place" by Observer Drift, [single] (2012)

            I can't say enough about this artist.  This is a chillwave track in all the right ways.  Great lyrics sung under just enough reverb, Summery reverb-drenched guitar with surfy overtones, old-school digital drums, addictive bass, and warm synths.  There's a certain feeling that the song evokes; a kind of happy nostalgia, not too bittersweet, but just enough of an old-feeling vibe to make the song instantly and constantly repeatable.  All the elements fit together perfectly to make a song that really defines Collin Ward's Observer Drift sound.  Be warned though, it's so addictive that you won't be able to listen to it just once. (http://observerdrift.bandcamp.com/)

            3. “Front Porch” by Gloss, [single] (2013)

            "Front Porch" is the kind of indie/chillwave crossover that I predict will explode on music scenes everywhere in the coming years.  It's a track with definite '80s influences, but it's not a direct '80s copy of style.  Vocals and guitars are indie, but with a bit more processing than I'd expect of most indie tracks, which really differentiates Gloss from straight-up indie.  The synths are really nice, and drums aren't too harsh to take away from the relaxing mood, despite being at a fast pace.  Bass is a bit like the more melodic songs by Sonic Youth, and the lyrics work perfectly with the vocal style and reverb/delays.  Just listening to the guitar makes me want to take up surfing.
(http://glossmusicmn.bandcamp.com/)

            4. “Winter’s Hum” by Silver Wren from Thought Streams (2013) (originally from the Fall Sky-Winter’s Hum 2011 Bad Panda Records release)

            "Winter's Hum" is a great acoustic/shoegaze crossover song.  It has a very icy sound; loads of hi-freqencies in the vocals and guitars.  There are occasional cymbals, but mainly, it's a couple acoustic guitars wonderfully making use of stereo, vocals sung expertly with great poetic lyrics, and an understated shoegazy guitar loop beneath.  This is what I think, when I think of alternative music in general.  Instruments and chords that could be ordinary, that are turned into new sounds through production and artistic intention.  In less verbose terms, Silver Wren (Ross Campbell) has created an icy alternative treat with "Winter's Hum" (http://silverwren.bandcamp.com)

            5. “Anonymous” by The Sound Of Rescue, from their eponymous album (2012)

            The instrumental track starts with a sweet warm ambient wash (likely of guitar), then a nicely equalized bass comes in, pre-empting what the track is going to turn into.  It's similar to Georg Hólm's bass in Sigur Rós, and going with that, the track becomes a thoroughly uplifting post-rock song.  Guitars with huge reverb and slow, emphatic drums come in, for a track worthy of Sigur Rós themselves.  "Anonymous" is the kind of richly mixed and performed ambient/post rock track that makes it feel like finding a haven in otherwise undesirable surroundings; relaxing or stimulating depending on what mood you're in, and often both. (http://thesoundofrescue.bandcamp.com/)

            6. “Totally True” by Violens, [single] (2011)

            Amazing ‘80s sound, with almost no hint of modern distortion of the style they’re going for. 
One of the rare times I’ve actually thought a song was around 30 years older than it is.  Violens somehow managed to write, perform, and produce music that sounds like contemporary competition for Unforgettable Fire-era U2.  New wave to the nth degree, the only clue to its modernity is the lead guitar at the end.  Amazing melodic structure, with all the right sounds to really prove that good and classic music can still be made right now.  Great vocals and harmonies, slightly chillwave guitar, bass that defies modern style, classic drums and tambourine, and did I mention “competition for Unforgettable Fire-era U2”? (http://violens.bandcamp.com/track/totally-true)

            7. “Visions of Katya” by Bulldog Skin, from White EP (2012)

            Warping galore, with this heavily compressed and strangely equalized track.  Vocals jump out as a mix of older rock influences, and modern surf, through eqs that sound almost like a megaphone frequency-range.  Drums and synths start the track, both distorted and processed in a strangely analogue-digital collaborative sound.  Then comes the guitar; huge and drifting in and out of key with that trademark shoegaze warping.  I can’t really tell if there is a bass in the track other than the synths, but if there is, it’s obscured by the other sounds pretty heavily.  Lyrics are odd, and fit well with the track.  Just think surf-music by post-EDM shoegazers.  And amazingly, it's a solo project!  Marc Z. Gold from Toronto produces and performs almost the entire EP.  (http://bulldogskin.bandcamp.com)

            8. “Locationship” by This Gratia, from Qi (2012)

            This is a more ambient track than the rest of this imaginary mixtape.  There are elements of shoegaze in it, but it’s definitely deep-ambient as well.  It starts with a warm low-passed synth loop, and then come the sounds of something strange being phased, sped up and cut up guitars, flurries of vocals, and a soft bass kick.  “Locationship” keeps on going from there, progressively adding more and more sounds and instruments.  Synth bass, backward-sounding other instruments, and a sympathetically pitch-warped piano or similar-sounding sample, are among the many sounds.  It’s intensely relaxing, and there’s just enough reverb and compression to give it a decidedly soft, warm sound. (http://thisgratia.bandcamp.com)

            9. “You Came Out Of Nowhere” by Owsey, Stumbleine & Shura, from Remixes and Collaborations [Stumbleine] (2011)

This one took me by surprise.  I don’t know whether the samples are from other songs, but I do know this one is as Summery as anything I’ve listened to.  While not strictly shoegaze or alt-rock, Stumbleine (named after a Smashing Pumpkins song) has the sensibility of softer ambient/dream pop/shoegaze/EDM crossovers, especially present in “You Came Out Of Nowhere”.  A string section, a pre-dubstep tremolo-affected bass synth, and a slow, textured beat are the perfect backdrop to soft and beautiful vocals, glockenspeil, and possibly a koto.  Reminds me of Bonobo’s downtempo songs, but with a more free-flowing, less obviously loop-based style, and with loads of delays and reverb.  Definitely on my playlist this Spring and Summer. (http://stumbleine.bandcamp.com/)

            10. “Heaven Is A Place Where Nothing Ever Happens” by Wheat Fields, [single] (2012)

            This is a track that sounds instantly classic.  The guitars alone create a beautiful, textured sound, with interesting and beautiful chords; but that's only one element.  The bass takes a front-role as well, in what I guess can be called lead bass.  It's as prevalent as any other element, and the guitars seem almost to support it, instead of the usual other way around.  Drums are kept to a minimum, with only a tambourine loop and bass pedal kicks keeping the beat, a little like a slower Spacemen 3's "Walking With Jesus".  Vocals sound wonderfully as if they're out of the '70s; sung with just enough emotion, and through heavy reverb, with simple but good lyrics.  Synths come in late, and they're in keeping with the mood and sound as well.  When I first heard the track, I wanted a certain guitar-bass combination to happen at the end, and I wasn't disappointed.  Basically, I love this track.  (http://wheat-fields.bandcamp.com/)


            Overall, these are 10 more great tracks from 10 more great artists.  I call this imaginary-mixtape project a success, with all of the sounds from these posts.  Next week I’m back to one-release reviewing, but it’s been a blast reviewing so many bands that have become musical staples in my ears.  No, not the metal kind.