Best Songs of 2013, Vol. I – Surfer Blood, Sigur Ros, Deerhunter, Phoenix, Kurt Vile, Wild Nothing, The National, Daft Punk, Big Deal

surfer-blood-pythonsby Devin William Daniels

As you’ve probably noticed over the past few weeks, IRC has posted playlists of the Best Songs of 2013. Musician and IRC contributor, Devin William Daniels, has picked dozens of his favorite songs from the Top 10 Songs playlists of 2013 and written a series of reviews about the songs. There was no shortage of indie and alternative rock singles from 2013. Many of the singles in this post, and throughout the series, are from the Best Albums of 2013.

Listen to all four volumes of the Best Indie Rock Songs of 2013

This is the first of a series of the Best Songs of 2013 based on the Top 10 Songs playlist; there have been, and will be, other posts and playlists highlighting the other top songs of 2013, including those that did not make it on the Top 10, as well as many amazing DIY songs of the year that you probably won’t hear anywhere else. Stream any playlist uninterrupted by clicking the exfm play button in the bottom right of the page or the first song on the page.

“Demon Dance” – Surfer Blood

The lead single from Surfer Blood‘s solid LP, Pythons, allows John Paul Pitts to flex his guitar muscles a little bit, albeit more tonally than technically. I wish he let loose a little more, as he does in Surfer Blood’s excellent live show, but the restraint gives us a piece of well-crafted, pristine guitar pop. JPP’s guitar kicks things off with a nice clean riff that’s soon interrupted by the sound of airplanes dying or robots screaming, before we’re treated to a tasteful verse, bridge and chorus. The imagery is extremely biblical: the first line recalls the first line, “A word has weight,” is a snarky reflection of the slightly more famous first line of the Book of Genesis, and we also hear talk of apples, snakes, a Pentecostal choir and the hounds of hell. Is the narrator’s offer that he or she “can suck the venom out of [our] bones” an offer of salvation of a temptation to damnation? I’m not sure, but Surfer Blood set this dilemma to three parts that are so well constructed from a pop perspective (when most pop can’t manage two legitimate sections), you’ll mostly just be waiting for the next hook.

“Demon Dance”Surfer Blood from Pythons

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“Dream Machines” – Big Deal

Big Deal embrace dream pop a bit too literally with the aptly titled “Dream Machines,” but the styling serves them well. What could be a sing-songy folk pop number transforms into a textured, slightly obscured single. The drums echo to a bombastic degree, and the guitar plays a memorable, carnival-esque melody before a fuzzy, anthemic power chords briefly explode before fading behind the twin vocalists, who dually confess, “I’ve been dreaming of dropping out/ Will it matter if I’m around?” The boy/girl dynamic of the voices is the highlight here, and while that’s often paired with acoustic guitars and not much else, here the dreamy, drugged backdrop serves as the perfect accompaniment.

“Dream Machines” Big Deal from June Gloom

Monomania

“Monomania” – Deerhunter

Done with the dreaminess of past efforts, Deerhunter frontman Bradford Cox seems desperate for anything tangible. Oddly, his chosen route to achieve this is prayer, as he sings, “Come on God, hear my sick prayer/ If you can’t send me an angel/ If you can’t send me an angel/ Send me something else instead.” The idea of “something else” seems key in this caustic title track, in which the narrator can’t convince his or her boy to “leave his lady,” pushing the issue as he sings, “let me tell you that/ If you wanna be with me/ I can be your home away.” Cox’s delivery has a jarring, confused quality that’s part tough guy and part seductress combined into some sort of pulp cartoon figure. Perhaps its these conflicting sides of himself, not two characters, he is addressing when he sings, “There is a man/ There is a mystery whore/ And in my dying days/ I can never be sure.” In spite all of the duality and the urge for “something else” – whatever it may be – the song devolves into white noise and the endlessly repeated mantra of “mono, monomania.” It’s an obsession with the “one” – or perhaps the idea that he his multiple sides are supposed to neatly combine into one – that ultimately does Cox and Deerhunter in.

“Monomania”Deerhunter from Monomania

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“Entertainment” – Phoenix

The title recalls the all-time classic hit, “Entertainment!,” by Gang of Four, and while Phoenix aren’t tackling commodification, Great Man theory and the avant-garde with the same intensity and intellectualism as the seminal post-punk group, there’s certainly a deal of meditation on the double-edged nature of artistic success in this track, particularly the parallels between the struggles of fame and the struggles of romantic relationships. Lyrics like “Entertainment/ Show them what you do with me/ When everyone here knows better” could be directed as a significant other as easily as a massive festival crowd. One imagines that Phoenix, late bloomers who achieved sudden success after years and albums had passed by, would find their fame more absurd and arbitrary than artists who’ve been on top from the beginning, and they seem to conclude it isn’t worth it with the chorus’s last line: “I’d rather be alone.” Of course, this confession is set amidst the pop-minded, synth-laden music that brought on that fame, so perhaps Phoenix want the festival gigs to keep coming.

“Entertainment”Phoenix from Bankrupt!

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“Walkin’ on a Pretty Day” – Kurt Vile

Kurt Vile‘s chill tempo and tastefully strung out guitars are almost hypnotizing, so you might miss the pretty enlightened thoughts he mumbles with the voice of a just woken Lou Reed. “Wakin on a Pretty Day” espouses a philosophy of loneliness, championing an existence without connection, present but distant from the concerns of the surrounding world. It’s appropriate then that the song’s main prop is the narrator’s cell phone, which Vile notes is, “ringing off the shelf/ I guess it wanted to kill himself.” The cell phone is both the symbol of and the primary source of our intense, persistent connection to the world and its demands and expectations, so Vile can appreciate the suicidal tendencies a phone might suffer, channeling all that pressure. He encourages detachment, singing: “Don’t worry ’bout a thing/ It’s only dying” and “Floating in place, no need saying nothing.” In fact, the song itself almost escapes the Earth’s grip and float off into space after the last notes of a guitar solo, before gravity pulls it back down with a drum roll and a short instrumental lead-in to deliver the final verse. What follows that verse is several minutes of music accompanied by few words but a series of “yeahs” – there’s no need for language in the world of embraced loneliness.

“Walkin on a Pretty Day”Kurt Vile from Waking on a Pretty Daze

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“A Dancing Shell” – Wild Nothing

Wild Nothing‘s “A Dancing Shell” tells the story of someone who doesn’t know how to love and destroys himself to earn it. The narrator’s fatal flaw is viewing love as a one-way street – he will do nothing – selling himself, being a monkey – “if it makes you love me,” with no concern for the effect on his own soul. His one-sided commitment to the object of his supposed affection destroys himself (“I am not a human/ I’m just a body/ Just a dancing shell here to make you happy“) and as a result he cannot even tell if he is indeed experiencing love. With this reduction to the nothingness of his moniker, Wild Nothing leaves us with nothing but doubts – “Is that the way? I never knew/ Is that the way?” — and the final resignation: “I was a waste.”

“A Dancing Shell”Wild Nothing from Empty Estate

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“Brennisteinn” – Sigur Rós

Sigur Rós recall the classic material of ( ) while forging into new, darker territory. At their best, Sigur Rós often sound like a soundtrack to some cosmic, heavenly plane, or at least a gorgeous, Icelandic mountain view somewhere. The excellent “Brennisteinn” twists our expectations and offers a soundtrack to hell, not in the typical usage of that phrase as someone might apply to a really intense metal song or some other brand of supposedly “tough” music. “Brennisteinn” goes far beyond the earthly concerns of such music, providing us a sound that is just as cosmic as their best recordings but inverted, portraying the darker forces as just as powerful and beyond comprehension as the greater forces, but with an added element of terror.

Again, not the terror of horror movies and cheap scares, but the terror of the incomprehensible, brought on by otherworldly tones and voices. Then, things go quiet, the last guttural tone cuts out, and we’re treated to a brief moment of silence before the opposing force cries out in an ethereal lament over cinematic percussion and long, droning tones. The language here is lofty, but Sigur Rós are a band that, when they’re on their game, should be evoking grandiose prose, and it’s good to have them delivering.

“Brennisteinn”Sigur Rós from Kveikur

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“Get Lucky” – Daft Punk

With the album that came to dominate the summer of 2013, Daft Punk sought to recapture a bygone era and did so with enough success to make this record as divisive as the actual disco material that inspired it. At first glance it seems like either a critique or a misguided tribute, with the conclusion that “we’re up all night to get lucky” a fairly base encapsulation of the disco era. However, the song simultaneously asserts that “we’ve come too far to give up who we are,” which seems to me to suggest that there’s something in this time that, for Daft Punk, is worth fighting for. The idea of “get[ting] lucky” seems thus to be about more than just sex, but about dreams of becoming someone, of witnessing the future. To capture that feeling, Daft Punk goes into the past. Musically, Pharrell Williams provides the hookiest melody of the year, but my favorite part is when he drops out and the vocoding comes in, giving us a more robotic but less seamless transmission of the song’s message.

“Get Lucky”Daft Punk from Random Access Memories

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“Sea of Love” – The National

One of the few contemporary bands approaching “legends in their own time” status, The National‘s sixth LP was yet another excellent entry in what is becoming a colossus of a discography. Evolving from moody post-punk songs to romantic piano pieces to orchestral, operatic alt-anthems, the National offer something more raw with “Sea of Love,” but it is still just as epic and affecting as their High Violet material. Masters of dynamics, the National provide a frenetic verse for the pacing questions of his narrator, cutting loose for a line you can’t ignore if you’ve read the album’s cover sleeve: “If I stay here, trouble will find me.” This is the sad belief of a reluctant nomad, but it reflects the practices that have made the National so great: constant movement forward, no staying behind to enjoy one’s previous successes, to stop moving is to die.

Some things are constant however, such as Matt Berninger‘s penchant for telling highly specific stories (see his use of particular names and places, “Jo” and “Harvard” in this song) in a universal way, without coming off as cheap “Jack and Diane”-esque pandering. The song’s repeated line “Hey Jo, sorry I hurt you, but/ They say ‘love is a virtue,’ don’t they?” never really comes off as romantic, but on examination is a terrifying justification in a song of drowning rationalizations, set to beautiful music. Like drowning – alternatively peaceful and horrifying – the clash of moods of “Sea of Love” is what makes it, and the National’s music in general, interesting and reflective of the often counterintuitive, incongruous nature of human experience. Be sure to check out the excellent music video, a tribute to the equally great Russian post-punk band Zvuki Mu.

“Sea of Love”The National from Trouble Will Find Me


Devin William Daniels is a writer and musician from Pennsylvania currently teaching English in the Republic of South Korea. Follow him on Twitter or listen to his recordings on Soundcloud. Read more of Mr. Daniels’ posts and reviews via IRC’s archives.

Best New Releases for Week of Feb. 21, Part One – Fun, Princeton, Wild Nothing, Grimes, Perfume Genius, Dirty Ghosts

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This week’s Best New Releases is an interesting mix of anticipated new releases from artists such as Fun, Princeton, Grimes, Perfume Genius, Wild Nothing, and Dirty Ghosts. We wanted to focus on the top releases in this post, so there will be a Part Two shortly that contains all of the other top singles from new albums out this week, including songs from Archers of Loaf, Lambchop, Tindersticks, and many more.

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With February rapidly coming to a close, bands and music fans are gearing up for the beginning of the festival season – SXSW in March; Coachella in April. With winter (what winter?) soon to transition to spring, artists and labels are rolling out more new albums, EPs and singles.

For example, the week of Feb. 14th new releases, brought amazing new albums from bands like Shearwater, Band of Skulls, Phenomenal Handclap Band and Young Magic; and the week of Feb. 7th, there were acclaimed new albums from Dr. Dog, of Montreal, The Twilight Sad, Sharon Van Etten, Ben Kweller and more.

The lead-off song for this week’s Best New Releases is by the band Fun, featuring special guest Janelle Monae on vocals. The track, “We Are Young,” keeps circling back and finding it’s way onto IRC’s Twitter and Facebook – mostly because it’s so incredibly infectious, we love it, and so do a lot of listeners, just based on how many times it’s been streamed and downloaded. “We Are Young” really took off in large part because it is featured in a series of new Chevy Sonic commercials, which ran twice during the recent Superbowl broadcast. Well, this week is the official release of the album, Some Nights, that the song appears on. But it’s not the only great track on Some Nights. Currently, it’s the No. 1 MP3 on Amazon.

“We Are Young”fun. (featuring Janelle Monáe) from Some Nights

Good to great new album; pretty bad album cover (album covers matter even in the 'digital' age)

L.A. Indie Pop Band Princeton Release Follow-Up to 2009 Acclaimed Debut

Los Angeles band Princeton has been a favorite ‘indie’ pop band at IRC for a number of  years, especially thanks to their spectacular 2009 debut album, Cocoon of Love. Princeton consists of twin brothers Jesse (guitar, vocals) and Matt Kivel (bass, vocals), plus members Ben Usen (keyboard) and David Kitz (drums). The commonalities between Princeton and some of the other highlighted bands in this week’s Best New Releases, are interesting, to say the least. Together with Wild Nothing, Perfume Genius, and to some extent, Grimes, there are similarities in style, time lines of the artists’ ascent, and when they released their official first albums.

In fact, Princeton’s first lead single, “Shout It Out,” off their ’09 debut album, seems on the surface to be the original question to Dirty Ghosts‘ (artist featured below) new lead single, “Shout It In.” Now Princeton has released their new, sophomore album, with the title track, “Remembrance of Things to Come,” as the lead single. The song has all the elements of a great indie pop song that fans have come to expect from a clearly talented, and increasingly popular, band.

“Remembrance of Things to Come”Princeton from Remembrance of Things to Come

Bonus Track: “Florida”Princeton from Remembrance of Things to Come

Flashback Track: “Shout It Out”Princeton from Cocoon of Love

Flashback Track: “Clamoring For Your Heart” – Princeton from 2011 single

Princeton’s 2012 Tour Date Schedule

One-Gal Band Grimes Officially Drops Her 4AD Records Debut LP

From Montreal-via-Vancouver, Grimes, the moniker of the one-woman musical dynamo Clarie Boucher, officially dropped her third album, and debut LP with 4AD Records this week. After the re-issue of her first two albums, and a successful North American tour opening for Lykke Li, last year, Grimes built up a strong fan following that continues to grow. Increasingly known for her ethereal and electro pop fusion of contemporary instrumentation with classical, lush vocals, synths and choppy beats, Grimes new album, titled Visions.

“Oblivion” – Grimes from Visions

Double-shot: “Vowels = Space and Time”Grimes from Visions

Grimes 2012 Tour Dates Schedule

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Wild Popularity of Wild Nothing Gets New Boost from New Single, “Nowhere”

Musician Jack Tatum is the man behind Wild Nothing from the college town of Blacksburg, Virginia, and one of our favorite one man bands of the past few years. In the summer of 2009, he began recording dream pop demos at home during a time when the C86 movement was experiencing yet another revival that produced a sleuth of new one man bands, duos and groups across the United States playing lo-fi, raw dream pop.

Some of his demos, including a cover of Kate Bush‘s “Cloudbursting,” made the rounds on the important ‘indie’ music blogs, and within weeks Wild Nothing signed with Captured Tracks. Prior to the release of “Cloudbursting,” Wild Nothing’s first single, “Summer Holiday,” was all over the place during the summer of 2009, including right here on IRC. As with many one-man, or one-woman, bands in recent years that quickly became popular on the blogs, and beyond, the label wasted no time getting Tatum hooked up with a live band.

Flashback Track: “Summer Holiday”Wild Nothing from Gemini (2010)

As one of the most anticipated debuts of 2010, Gemini, was released in the spring of 2010, paired with appearances at SXSW that made Wild Nothing, along with other relative newbies like Washed Out, Beach Fossils and Memory Tapes, one of the most talked about bands at the annual music event in Austin, an event, not unlike CMJ in New York, that can launch artists from relative obscurity to the lime-light of the indie music, and even mainstream music, press and blogosphere.

In October of 2010, Wild Nothing released the Golden Haze EP, that was well received, but the tour following its release was considered by many to be lackluster Sometimes that’s what happens when a so-called ‘bedroom’ artist gets overly hyped fast, and with no live performance experience set out on a cross-country tour. On top of that are the pressures to do more and more tours and performances because, for many artists, that’s where the money is made – it’s certainly not flowing in like it did in the days of vinyl. Put it altogether and it really wasn’t a surprise to see 2011 go by without another album or EP from Wild Nothing. People simply wanted more great new songs fast, but that’s not how the truely genius magic happens for most artists.

That said, there are sure to be a lot of WN fans happy with the official drop off the new single, “Nowhere.”

“Nowhere”Wild Nothing from Nowhere 7″


Seattle’s Perfume Genius Follows Up Acclaimed 2010 Debut

Yet another one-man band project, Perfume Genius, is the moniker of Seattle solo artist, Mike Hadreas, who we featured in December 2010 upon the release of his widely praised debut album, Learning. Like Wild Nothing, Hadreas started out with home-made recordings a few years ago and fairly quickly shot up into the indie rock stratosphere, thanks to coverage on many influential blogs that featured Perfume Genius’ lo-fi, DIY taped demos, such as “Mr. Peterson” and “Learning.” Matador Records wrote of their relatively new roster addition, “[Hadreas is] one of the most endearing and quietly forceful performers today.”

While the name is not as ‘cool’ as Wild Nothing, Dirty Ghosts or Grimes, Perfume Genius already has a successful musical career,  especially since he writes his own tortured lyrics, piano and other notes for his songs, performs them and sings. A talented artist, which Hadreas clearly is, naturally gets more credit for writing his own lyrics and song compositions, but also deserves even more points for playing an instrument and singing at the same time.

In both the blogosphere and mainstream media, Hareas’ lyrics and voice have been compared to Elliott Smith, Cat Power and Sufjan Stevens. We can definitely hear the Elliott Smith in the painful writing; Cat Power in the heartfelt vocals and sad piano melodies and a likeness in the singing of Sufjan Stevens. This week, Perfume Genius,  released his sophomore album, Put Your Back N 2 It, and the lead single, “Hood,” clearly show a maturation in his abilities as a singer/songwriter and musician. The album title below links to the buy page for the MP3 Amazon Exclusive Version of the new Perfume Genius album via Matador Records.

“Hood”Perfume Genius from Put Your Back N 2 It (Exclusive Amazon Version)

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Dirty Ghosts One-Woman Band Project of Allyson Baker Drops New LP

In 2006, Allyson Baker, a fairly well-known punk and hardcore teenage Toronto guitarist, and later one-half of San Francisco‘s sludge-blues combo Parchman Farm, recreated herself, along with her musical duo partner, Carson Binks, to create a new entity, Dirty Ghosts. Together they changed things up a bit, writing rhythmically driven new songs built around intricate drum loops pieced together by Aesop Rock.

Because they couldn’t find a vocalist they agreed on, Baker decided to get the nerve up to be a vocalist for the first time in her musical career that started when she was only 17 years old. But in 2011, Binks broke off from Dirty Ghosts to join another band.

With little other choice, Baker took over Dirty Ghosts on her own, and with help of a drummer, began experimenting with other sounds – discordant disco mixed with dub funk, such as on the lead track, “Shout It In,” from the just-released new album Metal Moon. viaLast Gang Records.

Dirty Ghosts performed live last evening for San Francisco’s Noise Pop Festival, which will also includes shows from The Flaming Lips, Built to Spill, Princeton, Grimes, and Cursive, to name a few.

“Shout It In”Dirty Ghosts from Metal Moon

Upcoming: Other New Releases for Week of Feb 21st including Lamchop, Damien Jurado, Tindersticks, Archers of Loaf, and many others, plus the Best DIY Releases of 2012 (So Far) and the VII installment of Best Songs of 2012.

Best New Indie Releases, 2010 – Sufjan Stevens, Beach Fossils, Real Estate, Cloud Nothings, Wild Nothing, Wolf People, Gold Panda

This week in best new releases is one of the most diverse, and largest (37 songs), mixtape reviews of the second half of 2010. The reason is simple: there are so many fantastic new singles and albums out this week from indie rockers, chillwave (omg, we said it) artists, buzz bands, unknown bands, new artists of the year, country and folk musicians, dance-oriented artists, exclusive tracks, and big buzz releases from, of course, Sufjan Stevens and Belle and Sebastian. Both of those artists were featured in the recent post,  Five Anticipated Autumn Releases.

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We are really digging Sufjan’s popular new single, “Too Much”, a track that has some of the elements of the chamber pop of Illinoise and orchestra, electro experimentation of The BQE, the latter of which Stevens told The Irish Times last week: “[BQE] was really exhausting and all-encompassing. I went beyond my means creatively and lost my way in the process.”  We love Sufjan’s music, but still can’t help but to feel betrayed that his much anticipated “states album” project was just a “joke.”  So, we started something similiar to that last year, called the State of Music playlists. We have been building new mixtapes for the State of Music playlists which we hope to start publishing by the end of the year and well into 2011.

The Age of Adz, so far, sounds terrific, from introspective tracks like “Now That I’m Older” to the wonderfully rich and multi-layered orchestration and chorus singing of “Vesuvius”, and other fantastic songs that you’ll just have to get the LP to discover – because this album, like many of Sufjan’s previous works, is a personal journey and an amazingly involved and complex project that is affirmation that he has found his niche again. Plus, as profiled in Five Anticipated Autumn releases post, we’re still also absorbing the new Belle and Sebastian, but so far, it sounds like the cerebral folk pop and story-telling we enjoy so much, especially after four years since the band’s last release. We’d love to hear what you guys think of Adz or any other releases the Comments section.

“Too Much”Sufjan Stevens from The Age of Adz

Download for free a new MP3, “I Walked,” (from Adz) from Sufjan’s BandCamp page.

Also, LA’s JumpClubb released today this cover/remix of “Futile Devices” that appears on The Age of Adz.

One of our favorite new bands from this year’s South by Southwest, Brooklyn’s Beach Fossils, have released a new seven-inch vinyl single this week titled, “Face It”.  The track continues on the band’s reputation for delivering summertime-like tracks, and reaffirms the band’s rising stake in the  dreamy, sunny, sandy sub-genre of “chillwave/glo-fi” – a movement that has been a mainstay within the indie music domain for the past 18 months or so.

Beach Fossils’ new single is not a break-through for the band, but combined with their self-titled debut LP that dropped earlier this year, it’s enough to keep fans tied over, we think, until the ever-so-stressful sophomore album starts to leak out.  While Beach Fossils is mostly the work of the wonderfully prolific Dustin Payseur, band members accompany him on tour and other live shows. In fact, after this weekend’s performance at the Brooklyn Bowl, Beach Fossils will set off next week for an extensive, month-long tour of Europe.

“Write About Love”Belle & Sebastian from Write About Love

“Face It”Beach Fossils from Face It/Distance 7″ via I Guess I’m Floating

One of the reasons were especially excited by this week’s best new releases is the fact that there are so many bands that will be on many best new bands lists by the end of this year. Two more to add to that list are Cleveland band Cloud Nothings and Milwaukee‘s indie outfit The Goodnight Loving. Cloud Nothing’s memorable lo-fi pop punk style mixed with the so-called chillwave sound has translated into blogger buzz and then a fan following. The band enjoyed praise for their live shows and their fuzzed out riffs and melodic pop hooks. Turning On is basically a collection of already released songs from their singles and tracks off their debut album that came out in June.

Another band that will likely be on a good number of top bands lists over the next few months is The Goodnight Loving with their debut, Goodnight Loving Supper Club. Although the band is not necessarily a new band – they received good reviews as far back as 2008 – they didn’t come on to many folks radar until this year with the promotion surrounding their newly released debut. The track here, “Doesn’t Shake Me” sounds just like a pop-rock radio hit from the 1970s, with Big Star being the band we thought of first when reviewing this track. But it also reminds us of more recent bands, such as Free Energy and The Rassle

“Leave You Forever”Cloud Nothings from 12 inch EP

“Hey Cool Kid”Cloud Nothings from Turning On

“Doesn’t Shake Me”The Goodnight Loving from Goodnight Loving Supper Club

Another break-through band of 2010, New Jersey‘s sunny, surf popsters, Real Estate, drop a new seven-inch single this week to keep fans engaged until their sophomore LP is released. Plus, the debut release from boyfriend/girlfriend outfit, Houses, is out with the lead single, “Reds,” bringing more sunny, warm vibes – so it’s no surprise that their home base of Hawaii served as the nest for the writing and recording of the LP. And, of course, the electro ambient pop of Gold Panda.

“Out of Tune”Real Estate from Out of Tune/Reservoir 7″ double single

“Reds”Houses from All Night

“Same Dream China” – Gold Panda from Lucky Shiner

The lead track from Wolf People‘s new album, Steeple, is an audio time machine back to the late 1960s/early 1970s. “Tiny People” might as well have been released 40 years ago with its psychedelic folk rock jam reminiscent of Traffic and The Yardbirds, and complete with Jethro Tull-like flute infusions and solos, bluesy guitar riffs and heavy percussions.

“Tiny People”Wolf People from Steeple

A quiet new release this week that we probably wouldn’t have known about if the band didn’t contact us,  is the debut album from Soft Landing, the new project from Beirut members Paul Collins and Perrin Cloutier. They teamed up with producer Griffin Rodriguez (Beirut, Need New Body, Icy Demons) for their self-titled debut, out now digitally and on vinyl. Stay tuned to us on Twitter for CD/MP3 album giveaways and ticket contests for Soft Landing and many others.

“Baptism” Soft Landing from Soft Landing

The band Suuns brings the electro dance pop on the track, “Arena”, which sports a long instrumental intro until the lead vocals and blazing reverb guitar licks take hold. Following Suuns, is the band Starf*cker, who the FCC doesn’t allow us to print their entire name – even though everyone knows what it says!

Anyways, Starfcker keep the dance beats going, and crank up the synthesizers, on their new dream-pop single, “Julius” – a song that is just bursting with glistening keys. Gears shift just a bit on the next track, “I Have Seen Everything,” from Climber‘s new LP, The Mystic. While it’s more pop-oriented, the track keeps in step with the dance-influenced trio of Suuns-Starfcker-Climber, not to mention it’s intriguing lyrics: I’ve seen you naked/ all of your hidden flaws exposed…You’re not embarassed/is that your problem?

“Arena”Suuns from Zeros WC

“Julius” Starf*cker from Julius 7″

“I Have Seen Everything” Climber from The Mystic

We’re getting low on ink, but you’ll definitely want to check out the following bands’ new singles from bands to watch and bands on radar,  including the fantastically catchy music of Fox in the Henhouse, Great Lakes, Sunset, So So Glos, Fox in the Henhouse, Fresh and Onlys, Envy, Ten Million Lights, The Brute Chorus, and others.

“Fears”Fox in the Henhouse from Fox in the Henhouse

“Late Night Dawning”Sunset from Loveshines but The Moon Is Shining Too

“Five” – Young Man from Boy EP

“Lindy Hop”So So Glos from Low Back Chain Shift

“Four Days Straight”Scattered Trees from Four Straight Days 7″

“Kill Your Idols” Ten Million Lights from Ten Million Lights


“Heaven” The Brute Chorus from How The Caged Bird Sings

“Waterfall”The Fresh and Onlys from Play It Strange

“A Breath Clad in Happiness”Envy from Recitation

Now, our readers might see why we’re a bit late putting out this week’s Best New Releases mixtape review. If you just finished listening to the songs above, there’s still more. The best way, at least for us, to listen to the huge mixtape/playlists we published on IRC, is to click on the first song and let the Yahoo Media Player stream through all the songs automatically so you can do other things, instead of clicking from one song to the next.  As promised, there’s more:

Updated 10/14: There was such a strong reaction to IRC’s exclusive new track from the band Take Care that we decided to post another track in addition to “Halfway House.” We think that if you liked that song, you’re probably going to enjoy the Take Care track, “Trips.” Let us know and see more – and download the Demo 2010 EP at Take Care’s website.

“Trips” – Take Care from Demo 2010 – IRC Exclusive

“Halfway House” – Take Care from Demo 2010 – IRC Exclusive

We’re not so sure about the title track from Violent Kin‘s new release, Velvet Hideout, so if any of you would like to write up a mini-review in the Comments section, please do, for the world to see.  In fact, comment about any song – it’s a great way to share your thoughts with thousands of other people.  Some folks may also enjoy the under-the-radar band, Carissa’s Wierd,and songwriter-singer Brandie Emma.

“Velvet Hideout” Violent Kin from Velvet Hideout

“Fluorescent Lights”- Carissa’s Wierd from Ugly But Honest (vinyl reissue)

“Let Go”Brandie Emma from Photographic Memory

A musical substitute for Prozac comes in the form of the blissful, floating ambiance of the single, “Over There”. As with Cloud Nothings, today’s release from Banjo or Freakout contain previously released songs; so “new” in this case finds itself in a bit of a snafu. But seriously folks, is this song not somehow heavenly? To keep a good vibe going, let the stream go for Manzanita y su Conjunto‘s “Agua”, from a compilation of psychedelic music from Peru, plus Simian Mobile Disco and Cheyenne Marie Mize.

“Over There” Banjo or Freakout from Way Slow Series; Volume One: Banjo or Freakout

“Agua” Manzanita y su Conjunto from Roots of Chicha 2: Psychedelic Cumbias From Peru

“Nerve Salad”Simian Mobile Disco from Is Fixed

“The Spirit Was Gone” (download) – Antony and the Johnsons from Swanlights

“Best” Cheyenne Marie Mize from Before Lately

The final tracks in this release are all ones we like or ones that we think a lot of our regular readers/listeners would like. In a way to keep all of these tracks more organized, we’re trying to group them as much as possible, like the way the more ‘dance’ tracks above were grouped. The same thing was done for the country and folk rock singles, from bands like The Moondoggies, The Black, The Black Heart Procession, Whitey Morgan and The 78s, and others are grouped together below. Plus, we have a number of exclusives that we’ll be interested to see the reaction to.

“It’s A Shame” The Moondoggies

“Love Don’t Need A Reason”The Black from Sun in the Day, Moon at Night

“Blank Page” The Black Heart Procession from Bloody Bunny/Black Rabbit

“I Ain’t Drunk” – Whitey Morgan and The 78′s from Whitey Morgan and The 78′s

“Summer Fruits”Great Lakes from Ways of Escape

More New Releases This Week (compiled by Pitchfork):

10-11-10

A Band of Bees: Every Step’s a Yes [Fiction] Antony and the Johnsons: Swanlights [Rough Trade] [European release] Benoit Pioulard: Lasted [Kranky] Dexys Midnight Runners: Searching for the Young Soul Rebels [EMI] Esben and the Witch: “Marching Song” 12” [Matador] [UK Release] Josephine Foster & the Victor Herrero Band: Anda Jaleo [Fire Records] Paul Smith: Margins [Billingham]

10-12-10

Antony and the Johnsons: Swanlights [Secretly Canadian] [U.S. release] Badly Drawn Boy: It’s What I’m Thinking: Photographing Snowflakes [The End] Banjo or Freakout: Way Slow [Lefse] Beach Fossils: “Face It”/”Distance” 7″ [Captured Tracks] The Beets: Stay Home [Captured Tracks] Big Search: Lay of the Land [St. Ives] The Black: Sun in the Day Moon at Night [Moon Records] The Black Heart Procession: Blood Bunny/Black Rabbit EP [Temporary Residence Ltd.] Blank Dogs: Land and Fixed [Captured Tracks] Blue Water White Death: Blue Water White Death [Graveface] Breathe Owl Breathe: Magic Central [Hometapes] British Sea Power: Zeus EP [Rough Trade] [Vinyl Release] Callers: Life of Love [Western Vinyl] Cloud Nothings: “Leave You Forever” 7” [Carpark] Cloud Nothings: Turning On [Carpark] The Dead C: Patience [Ba Da Bing] Die Antwoord: $0$ [Cherrytree/Interscope] Doug Paisley: Constant Companion [No Quarter] Envy: Recitation [Temporary Residence Ltd.] Esben and the Witch: “Marching Song” 12” [Matador] Florence and the Machine: “Dog Days Are Over (Yeasayer Remix)” [Island] The Foreign Exchange: Authenticity [Foreign Exchange Music] Franz Nicolay: Luck & Courage [Team Science/Sabot Productions] The Fresh & Onlys: Play It Strange [In the Red] Gangrene [The Alchemist and Oh No]: Gutter Water [Decon] Gold Panda: Lucky Shiner [Ghostly International/NoTown Recordings] Hauschka: Foreign Landscapes [130701] Heavy Times: “No Plans” b/w “Ice Age” 7” [HoZac] Holy Sons: Survivalist Tales! [Partisan] Houses: All Night [Lefse] Idle Times: Idle Times [HoZac] Jane Birkin: Di Doo Dah [Light in the Attic] [reissue] Kedl Winter: Apple Core [Steeple] Kelly Stoltz: To Dreamers [Sub Pop] Lil Wayne: I Am Not a Human Being [Young Money] [physical release] Maserati: “Pyramid of the Moon” 12” [Temporary Residence] Peter Gordon: The Love of Life Orchestra [DFA] Purling Hiss: Public Service Announcement [Woodsist] Real Estate: “Out of Tune” b/w “Reservoir” 7” [True Panther] Silje Nes: Opticks [FatCat] Simian Mobile Disco: Is Fixed [Defend Music] Starf*cker: Julius [Polyvinyl] Styrofoam: Disco Synthesizers & Daily Tranquilizers [Nettwerk] Sufjan Stevens: The Age of Adz [Asthmatic Kitty] Suuns: Zeroes QC [Secretly Canadian] Various Artists: Jackass 3D OST [Epitaph/ Kings Road Merch] Various Artists: From the Land of Ice and Snow: The Songs of Led Zeppelin [Jealous Butcher Records] White Moth: White Moth [Angel Oven Records] Wolf People: Steeple [Jagjaguwar] Zola Jesus: Valusia EP [Sacred Bones]