08.03.2007, 03:22 AM | #1 |
Super Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 5,895
|
http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/articl...-comp-revealed
Now That's What I Call Indie! Comp Revealed Well folks, it's really happening. Promoters today announced the inaugural release in the previously discussed This Is NEXT series-- essentially the Now! That's What I Call Indie compilation-- and it should further spur the (perhaps moot) debate over just what qualifies as indie. All that aside, however, it's also chock full of great tunes, from the likes of Sonic Youth (major label alert!), the Shins, Spoon, Yeah Yeah Yeahs (ditto!), Bright Eyes, Bloc Party, Of Montreal, the Hold Steady, Neko Case, Deerhoof, M. Ward, Ted Leo, Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, and, wait for it...Cold War Kids (their best tune, to be fair). Not-so-independent Vice Records will release this first volume, and all acts are culled from ADA Distribution allied labels (who'll rotate in releasing future volumes). This Is NEXT hits stores August 21, by which time something else will invariably be "next". Hey kid sister, here, happy birthday! This Is NEXT Volume 1: 01 Bloc Party - "The Prayer" 02 Yeah Yeah Yeahs - "Cheated Hearts" 03 Sonic Youth - "Do You Believe in Rapture?" 04 The Shins - "Phantom Limb" 05 Spoon - "The Underdog" 06 Bright Eyes - "Four Winds" 07 Cat Power - "Lived in Bars" 08 Neko Case - "Hold On, Hold On" 09 Of Montreal - "Heimdalsgate Like a Promethean Curse" 10 Deerhoof - "The Perfect Me" 11 The Hold Steady - "Chips Ahoy!" 12 Cold War Kids - "Hang Me Up to Dry" 13 Ted Leo and the Pharmacists - "Colleen" 14 M. Ward - "Chinese Translation" 15 Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - "Satan Said Dance" |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 03:40 AM | #2 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 9,527
|
What a bunch of sell-outs. Next thing you know, they'll be selling CDs in Starbucks.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 05:13 AM | #3 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: sardinia, italy
Posts: 1,262
|
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vice_%28magazine%29
>>As the result of publishing a string of articles aimed at opening a dialogue about immigration and environmental issues, Vice has been accused of using "irony" to conceal reactionary politics or to promote what some see as racist attitudes. In response to these criticisms, co-founder Gavin McInnes published an article attacking liberals in The American Conservative entitled "Hip to Be Square: It’s getting cooler to be conservative" in August 2003.<< ? |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 05:40 AM | #4 |
100%
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Huddersfield, England
Posts: 670
|
Its not the worst complation ever. Theres some good stuff and bad stuff on there.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 06:31 AM | #5 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: behind you
Posts: 10,807
|
satan satan satan satan satan satan.. satan.. said dance!
i actually kinda like this tracklisting.
__________________
fuck i'm frustrated, freaking out something fierce, would you help me? i'm hungry and i stuffer and i startle, i struggle and i stammer til i'm up to my ears in miserable quote unquote "art" |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 06:56 AM | #6 | |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Cardiff, Spiderland
Posts: 1,465
|
Quote:
yeah but later Gavin McInnes said the attack was a joke. Its usually utterly humourless people who attack Vice for being rasist, conservative or indeed far left. I like Vice mag, its a good read especially since its free. This compilation: not to good but it could be worse. Do you believe in rapture is a strange choice, I would have gone for the more instantly joyful Incinerate or Pink Steam.
__________________
....Of Course its some kinda cosmic payback for being too ironic! |
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 07:12 AM | #7 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: behind you
Posts: 10,807
|
yeah, rapture's a poor pick.
__________________
fuck i'm frustrated, freaking out something fierce, would you help me? i'm hungry and i stuffer and i startle, i struggle and i stammer til i'm up to my ears in miserable quote unquote "art" |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 07:43 AM | #8 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 28,843
|
wow, that comp is fucking terrible. there's like 2 good bands on it. and that sonic youth song is the WORST.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 08:02 AM | #9 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Buffalo, NY
Posts: 1,484
|
I have to agree... what a poor title
sounds boring, I'd have to pass on this one. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 09:19 AM | #10 |
100%
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 764
|
part of the idea of indie music is discovering it... this completely goes against that
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 09:20 AM | #11 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 9,623
|
They picked, no doubt, the worst Sonic Youth song of all time.
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 09:25 AM | #12 |
the end of the ugly
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 958
|
i don't like that song....it's boring
|
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 09:36 AM | #13 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: wexford, rep of ireland
Posts: 6,930
|
rapture is not the worst song of all time....... no way. so what if theres an idie comp. a good way of hearing sy through the speakers of yr local supermarket....
who the fudge is ted leo and where is gogol bordello on this album? |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 12:48 PM | #14 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 28,843
|
haha are you kidding?
ted leo... hearts of oak is an okay album.. yeah... "where have all the rude boys gone?" is kinda a jam... i love deerhoof, that's the only other band on this comp i just love. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.03.2007, 06:02 PM | #15 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: behind you
Posts: 10,807
|
yeah, gogol bordello! "sally" would be pretty sweet on here.
ted leo is the man. listen to shake the sheets in its entirety. i have received a hug from him.
__________________
fuck i'm frustrated, freaking out something fierce, would you help me? i'm hungry and i stuffer and i startle, i struggle and i stammer til i'm up to my ears in miserable quote unquote "art" |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |
08.16.2007, 02:29 AM | #16 |
Super Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 5,895
|
http://www.villagevoice.com/blogs/st...llout_even.php
Is Sellout Even a Dirty Word Anymore? posted: 4:56 PM, August 15, 2007 by Tom Breihan Please explain: how is that speakerbox supposed to look like an E? Maybe the weirdest thing about the existence of This is Next, Vice and MTV2's new Best Buy-targeted mainstream-indie comp, is that it isn't really all that weird at all. As Pitchfork has pointed out, the compilation aims to be a sort of Now! That's What I Call Music for indie-rock, and most of the compilers' choices are appropriately obvious. Vice and MTV2 used the most nebulous definition of indie that you could possibly imagine. Indie here doesn't necessarily have anything to do with actual independent record labels, so we get major-label stuff from Sonic Youth and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, as well as Vice beneficiaries Bloc Party, who, to be fair, fit as neatly into this album's structure as any of the other bands. (Refreshingly, Vice opts not to exploit synergistic opportunities to shoehorn in any of its other acts; we won't find any Black Lips or Boredoms or Run the Road album-tracks here.) Most of the other acts come pilfered from bigger indies: Spoon from Merge, the Shins from Sub Pop, Ted Leo from Touch & Go. And while it's a bit tough to see what might unite the Hold Steady with Of Montreal or Clap Your Hands Say Yeah, it's basically true that all of them occupy places in some loosely defined indie-rock continuum. The compilation's press release mentions the Garden State soundtrack as a precedent, and the comparison totally holds water; the Garden State soundtrack might've featured a decidedly non-indie Coldplay song, but then This Is Next could absorb Coldplay into its fabric just as easily. Probably with good reason, Vice and MTV2 mostly pull from the subsections of indie that share as little obvious lineage as possible with punk and postpunk. Even prog is in short supply; there's no Muse or TV on the Radio here; either one might make cultural sense, but neither one would work aesthetically. Pulled from the contexts of their respective albums, Sonic Youth's "Do You Believe in Rapture?" and the Hold Steady's "Chips Ahoy!" are both a whole lot more MOR and palatable than those bands' respective bodies of work might suggest. The only band that's allowed to work up anything resembling a threatening clangor is Deerhoof, whose inclusion is pretty hard to figure out, even if their song here, "The Perfect Me," is accessible as fuck by their standards. The album isn't targeted toward people who consider clangor to be a virtue; it's a Whitman's Sampler of blog-friendly pop-rock. The cover includes the term "indie's biggest hits," but it offers no indication of what that might mean. The packaging, in fact, looks like someone spent five minutes with some instant album-cover Quark template, and the liner notes don't have any rapturous accounts of touring in busted-down vans and sleeping on strangers' floors. Instead, we get the pictures of the bands' albums and a quick note that maybe we should check those bands out. Plenty of people, after all, don't have an hour to parse Pitchfork every morning, and so this approach makes a certain sense. It's a quick, clean overview of what I guess we'll be calling indie from now on. And here's another surprise about the album: it mostly hits its marks. The whole thing makes for a remarkably pleasant listen. It moves easily between subgenres and covers a whole lot of ground without venturing too far outside of a fairly strict set of aesthetic guidelines. And honestly, the logic that applies to the Now! compilations works just as well with indie albums. Now! works on the idea that plenty of mainstream pop albums surround their few singles with a whole lot of padded-out filler, and plenty of indie-rock albums do the same thing. I'd rather hear "Phantom Limb" in between Sonic Youth and Spoon than on the actual Shins album. One particularly yawnsome Bright Eyes/Cat Power/Neko Case troika at the center of the album almost derails the momentum by sounding like stuff you'd hear in a dentist's waiting room, but even that part isn't without its charms. And This Is Next even unearths a couple of minor gems. I remember listening to that last Clap Your Hands album a couple of times, but I somehow totally missed out on "Satan Said Dance," a nicely fuzzed-out, skronkified take on disco-punk from a band that could always stand to pay a little more attention to rhythm. And I'd avoided ever hearing the Cold War Kids before listening to this album, mostly because a lot of the critics I know tend to fly into apoplectic rages at the merest mention of the band. But if "Hang Me Up to Dry," is any indication (which, who knows, maybe it is), this band is a whole lot punchier than most of their contemporaries; their drums have some actual swing to them. I don't feel particularly compelled to further investigate either band, not while I still haven't heard the new Chingo Bling album or anything, but I could see how these songs might give someone cause to pay a little more attention to this whole indie thing. Indie, of course, has long prided itself on being ethically above this sort of nakedly cynical marketing ploy, but it's hard to stay huffy about that stuff when this music routinely finds its way onto TV commercials. If anything, it's almost a welcome reminder that the moral high ground no longer exists. The only substantive difference between M. Ward and James Blunt is that one is a lot richer than the other. It's tempting to posit the release of This is Now as this generation's moment of reckoning, a rough equivalent to the time that Janis Joplin song showed up in an actual Mercedes Benz commercial. It wouldn't really be true, though; This Is Next has precedents. In 1999, K-Tel, the company that first made its name releasing an endless series of proto-Now! hits comps, tried to relaunch itself by releasing the hilariously titled Nowcore! The Punk Rock Evolution, a pretty good survey of what passed for emo back then. Nowcore! was surprisingly catholic in its selections; obvious names like the Promise Ring and Braid were there, but so were the Dismemberment Plan and Unwound and even Modest Mouse, a band who would've fit pretty well on This is Next. And way before even that, MTV had a similar short-lived racket going. In 1991, the network released a couple of companion compilations to its 120 Minutes show, even more hilariously titled Never Mind the Mainstream. Those albums provide a fascinating time-capsule glimpse of pre-Nirvana alt-rock: the Stone Roses' "Fools Gold," the Church's "Under the Milky Way Tonight," World Party's "Put the Message in the Box." If I saw this CD in a dollar bin somewhere, I'd snap it up with no hesitation, and it's sort of fun imagining future-kids doing the same thing with This Is Next sixteen years from now. One band even shows up on both compilations: Sonic Youth, who I suppose are cursed with always being next. I wonder how many volumes of This Is Next will hit shelves before, say, Lightning Bolt sneak their way on. |
|QUOTE AND REPLY| |