Listen to 1000 albums.

Busdriver - Roadkill Overcoat (2007)
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Spotify

1. "Casting Agents and Cowgirls"
2. "Less Yes's, More No's"
3. "Kill Your Employer (Recreational Paranoia Is the Sport of Now)"
4. "Ethereal Driftwood"
5. "Secret Skin"
6. "Sun Shower"
7. "Go Slow" (Featuring Bianca Casady of CocoRosie)
8. "The Troglodyte Wins"
9. "Pompous Posies! Your Party's No Fun"
10. "(Bloody Paw on The) Kill Floor"
11. "Mr. Mistakes (Bested by the Whisper Chasm)"
12. "Dream Catcher's Mitt"

I spent a long time disliking hip-hop, mistakenly believing that it was gangsta rap was representative of the genre. It's clearly not.

That (rather large) mistake aside, Busdriver is easily one of my favourite rappers. Always original, lyrically superb and frequently weird as hell, he's great. Roadkill Overcoat is definitely his most accessible album, though it's still hardly Top 40 material. Personal favourites are bolded, but really the whole album is great.

Youtube - Casting Agents & Cowgirls video


Youtube - Sun Shower video


Album promo clips
1 - from The Trogladyte Wins


2 - from Dreamcatcher's Mitt)


3 - from Go Slow


4 - from Secret Skin


5 - from Sun Showers


6 - from Kill Your Employer
 
Busdriver - Roadkill Overcoat (2007)
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Like you I found hip hop quite difficult to get into but I've been listening to a lot of the roots, common and NWA recently and expanding my horizon. Like this though, had some good beats and an interesting voice I'll certainly be adding this to my growing collection.
 
I can't access Spotify or any other website that requires streaming/downloads because I'm at work and I work with cnuts.

But look up Enjoy Destroy's album "Little Dreams"
It's on Spotify and it's very good

Mactier
Cities
Music To Love You To
And For What
Take Me To The Drover
LBJ
Little Dreams
Lobby Pianist
Screamer
Glad We Met You
Hospital Bed

Not really a bad track on the album.
 
So I listened to this, I think most people cant be arsed if they actually have to download it!
Was interesting in a quirky kind of way but Ive heard much better from the DIY bedroom producer types - there was enough there for me to give it another go though.

Do you have a connection to this label as I seem to remember you posting something from there before?

Yeah should probably have recognised people are too lazy to press one link and hit save :)

Quirky is quite a good reflection of the album, there is something about his lyrics that I really like though, probably stems from the fact that like my favourite artists Paul Simon and Bob Dylan he's not scared to mix humour and the banal into his tunes. Would love to hear some of the DIY stuff too if you've got links to them.

Yeah I think I posted "drugs made me smarter" before but nah I've no connection to them, I just accidently stumbled upon their website once which has a load of free albums on and have found a few gems.
 

I can't access Spotify or any other website that requires streaming/downloads because I'm at work and I work with cnuts.

But look up Enjoy Destroy's album "Little Dreams"
It's on Spotify and it's very good

Mactier
Cities
Music To Love You To
And For What
Take Me To The Drover
LBJ
Little Dreams
Lobby Pianist
Screamer
Glad We Met You
Hospital Bed

Not really a bad track on the album.

There you go mate.
 
Seafood - Surviving the Quiet (2000)

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Spotify Link

1."Guntrip" – 2:35
2."Easy Path" – 3:12
3."Belt" – 5:23
4."Dear Leap The Ride" – 2:54
5."This Is Not An Exit" – 3:43
6."Led By Bison" – 4:29
7."Toggle" – 6:02
8."Beware Design" – 2:06
9."Folksong Crisis" – 4:32
10."fscII/The Quiet" – 10:51


I bought my first Seafood album (Messenger In The Camp) after reading a review that compared them to Sonic Youth, and it's a fair comparison. Seafood, despite being an English band, were clearly influenced by the American alternative rock bands of the 80s and 90s, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Pixies, Sebadoh et al.

They remain one of my favourite British bands of all time, criminally underrated and sadly no more, they're well worth a listen. Surviving the Quiet was their first real album (they'd earlier released a collection of singles and eps), and while not as good as the follwup (When Do We Start Fighting?), it's the only one on Spotify.

Personal favourites from this album are the distortion heavy fury of Folk Song Crisis, and the bittersweet twee indie pop gem that is Beware Design.
 
Seafood - Surviving the Quiet (2000)

Surviving%20The%20Quiet.jpg


Spotify Link

1."Guntrip" – 2:35
2."Easy Path" – 3:12
3."Belt" – 5:23
4."Dear Leap The Ride" – 2:54
5."This Is Not An Exit" – 3:43
6."Led By Bison" – 4:29
7."Toggle" – 6:02
8."Beware Design" – 2:06
9."Folksong Crisis" – 4:32
10."fscII/The Quiet" – 10:51


I bought my first Seafood album (Messenger In The Camp) after reading a review that compared them to Sonic Youth, and it's a fair comparison. Seafood, despite being an English band, were clearly influenced by the American alternative rock bands of the 80s and 90s, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Pixies, Sebadoh et al.

They remain one of my favourite British bands of all time, criminally underrated and sadly no more, they're well worth a listen. Surviving the Quiet was their first real album (they'd earlier released a collection of singles and eps), and while not as good as the follwup (When Do We Start Fighting?), it's the only one on Spotify.

Personal favourites from this album are the distortion heavy fury of Folk Song Crisis, and the bittersweet twee indie pop gem that is Beware Design.


I'll have a blast of this tonight. This sounds like something that may interest me.
 
Dave Tyack's Dakota Oak - Am Deister (2001)

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Am Deister - Dakota Oak - Spotify

Was disappointed by this album. Most songs would start, I'd like the first 10-15 seconds, but then the songs just wouldn't go anywhere. There were a lot of nice little riffs and ideas, but each song seemed to just have one idea/riff- it's like, instead of recording 26 songs, he could have combined a few to make about 10 good songs.

Blue Oyster Cult - Fire Of Unknown Origin.

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LastFM:Fire of Unknown Origin
Spotify: Blue Oyster Cult - Spotify

Think it's safe to say I'm not a BOC fan. It's just a sound/genre I don't connect to. Sounds too polished, too...cock-rocky, too limp. I like rock music that has a bit of anger or passion - this sounds very studio recorded.
 
And seeing as everyone's fecked off out of this thread, this is what rock music should sound like:

At The Drive In - Relationship of Command (2000)

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Spotify Link
Last.FM

1. "Arcarsenal" – 2:55
2. "Pattern Against User" – 3:17
3. "One Armed Scissor" – 4:19
4. "Sleepwalk Capsules" – 3:27
5. "Invalid Litter Dept." – 6:05
6. "Mannequin Republic" – 3:02
7. "Enfilade" – 5:01
8. "Rolodex Propaganda" – 2:55
9. "Quarantined" – 5:24
10. "Cosmonaut" – 3:23
11. "Non-Zero Possibility" – 5:36
12. "Extracurricular" – 3:59
13. "Catacombs" – 4:14

Their last album before splitting, this was At The Drive In's crowning glory - an album of frantic, almost insane yelping, ear splitting guitars and half-screamed vocals - but it's all held together perfectly, it never quite spirals out of control.
In their post ATDI guises Omar and Cedric formed the Mars Volta and gave in to their OTT desires, while the rhythm section of the band formed Sparta who were solid but lacking in any imagination or spark. But together they balanced each-other perfectly.

Some reviews:
"Welcome to the breath-robbing, heart-pounding Relationship of Command, an album many have been waiting for with red-faced anticipation since their last EP, the brilliant Vaya. On this 11-track masterpiece, so full of adrenaline and swarming moods, ATDI has created one of the most infecting and mind-blowing rock albums in a long time. While most of the tracks are of the more aggressive edge, this is undeniably the band's most focused and well put together and, therefore, best all-around album yet. "Quarantined" and "Sleepwalk Capsules" alone make this album worth purchasing: This music is seamless and inspiring. Electronic movements meshed into "Enfilade" stretch the texture of the album further, into the unique backup vocals of Iggy Pop on "Rolodex Propaganda." Amidst all the rock, there is the undeniably unique edge about ATDI's sound, something that has permeated through their music from the Hell Paso 7". Beautiful vocals bursting passion in quirky, abstract, and often thrilling lyrics, youthful energy, driving melodies, and a sense of beyond-the-moment urgency. Moving from Relentless to Grand Royal, as well as to the notorious and mostly infamous producer Ross Robinson, has not killed the band's spirit or sound, as many loyal fans feared it would in the pattern of Jawbreaker, Jawbox, among others. If anything, it has allowed the band to push themselves to new limits, to fulfill what they have been working for relentlessly for so long. This is not a band that could ever be insincere. You can see it in their eyes and feel it in their music and work ethic. ATDI is one of the saviors of true emotional straight-up rock!" - AMG

"In the autumn of 2000, two albums were released that would send shockwaves through the forthcoming decade, influencing innumerable acts and topping critical lists the world over. One was OutKast’s Ms Jackson-housing Stankonia, a dizzying, dazzling cornucopia of genre-dashing invention. The other was this, a post-hardcore album that nobody totally saw coming.

OutKast were a known force, their Aquemini LP of 1998 earning plaudits aplenty; their eventual commercial breakthrough, while hardly inevitable, was certainly likely. Texan quintet At the Drive-In, though, were toiling away on the toilet circuit on both sides of the Atlantic, touring their own 1998 album, the recorded-as-live In/Casino/Out, at such salubrious venues as the Joiners in Southampton’s dodgy St Mary’s district. But whispers soon built to roars, the group’s ferocious live reputation (do, please, watch their self-sabotaged Later… performance from December 2000 on YouTube) eventually attracting the attention of the Beastie Boys, who swept to secure the release of the band’s next album through their Grand Royal imprint.

And what an album it was. What an album it continues to be, a decade on. Relationship of Command is, simply, a landmark release – not because it ripped up any rule books, or positioned post-hardcore as a vital commercial force. The band adhered to compositional traits long established, albeit shot through with remarkable ability, and Relationship of Command, for all its five-star reviews, only charted at 33 in the UK. It is remarkable because of what didn’t happen next. It should have been its makers’ Nevermind, introducing them to new audiences and wonderful opportunities. Instead, the band split just a few months after its release, playing their final show in February 2001.

Vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala – who alongside guitarist Omar Rodríguez-Lopez founded The Mars Volta almost as soon as ATD-I were declared over – shouldered the responsibility for the band’s break-up. He felt their fairly straightforward set-up – guitar, drums, bass, vocals – was holding him back creatively. Listening today, there are undoubtedly suggestions of the more adventurously arranged music to come across Relationship of Command – the alien squelch of Enfilade, Non-Zero Possibility’s funereal march, Bixler-Zavala’s deeply cryptic lyricism – but this is a record best remembered for its instances of explosion, rather than its occasional withdrawal into introspection and flirtations with compositional indulgence.

It’s not surprising that the ATD-I song most recently played on BBC radio (at the time of writing) is One-Armed Scissor – Relationship of Command’s lead single is one of the most invigorating rock songs released in the last 20 or 30 years, let alone the past 10. It’s shot through with sizzling adrenaline, ensnaring anyone with the slightest appreciation of fast-paced, heavily-amplified rock within seconds of its four-minute run time. It bursts into life before cooling down, like a magnificent, massive celestial body; its core grows hotter and hotter, until finally – well, around the 40-second mark – the inner unrest tears through a crust of reservation and suddenly legs are where arms were, heads are upside-down and your body’s heading stage-wards. Not that they approved of that sort of thing, as any ATD-I concert attendee with a little too much enthusiasm (or lager inside them) can tell you.

The One-Armed Scissor single (US magazine Alternative Press’ number one single of the 00s) came backed by Pattern Against User, another of this record’s bracing-is-an-understatement numbers, stirred into life by a magnificent yelp from Bixler-Zavala. He might croon his way through The Mars Volta’s catalogue these days, but in ATD-I his primary weapons are a sharp bark and a mighty bellow that’s as ferociously feral as it is beguilingly graceful, swooping between the jagged guitars of Jim Ward and Rodríguez-Lopez, prancing atop the busy bass patterns served forth by Paul Hinojos (also lately of The Mars Volta) and Tony Hajjar’s accomplishedly propulsive drum work. Similarly striking at the first time of asking: the boundlessly bombastic Cosmonaut, which appeared around Relationship of Command’s release on a cover-mounted Melody Maker CD, Born to Do It Better; the frenetic opener Arcarsenal; and the Iggy Pop-featuring Rolodex Propaganda, where The Stooges frontman rasps and dribbles something about a "manuscript replica" while Cedric squeezes a thousand syllables into space best suited for a half-dozen.

If there’s a criticism to be levelled at Relationship of Command – and this is something many a latecomer to it struggles with – it’s that Bixler-Zavala’s wordplay is so across the line marked pretentious that he’s practically inventing new synonyms for the term. As magnificently epic-of-feel though Quarantined is, what on earth do lines like "Shackled the grapple and sentinels found / Binoculars watch cardboard towns / Strung up in webs, the net was flung / Over the auditorium" actually mean? What are slithered entrails doing in the cargo bay, exactly? And where’s your entrance when it’s at home, since you’re getting bitten on it? (Oh, there? Sorry we asked. You might want to put some ointment on that.) But while such indulgence can be subjected to ridicule, ATD-I’s preference for such content immediately marked them out from the post-hardcore pack, many protagonists within which were adhering to an emo path already so worn from being frequently travelled that it’s a wonder the genre ever navigated itself free of the underground at all. My girlfriend this, my broken heart that – boring, said ATD-I, and invented their own intriguing, but utterly disorientating and insanely complex lexicon.

One of the most vital albums of the first decade of this millennium according to NME, and one of the most important rock records of all time to the ears of Kerrang!, Relationship of Command is completely mesmerising, a statement of grand intent that could never be followed. Not by the men behind it, and certainly not by those who came in their wake, those citing it as a key influence, a core text on their own musical curriculum. It has remained in a prism since release, reflecting adulation out into the creative cosmos, opening the entire spectrum of contemporary rock for all to appreciate. If picked apart its constituents are easily assimilated; but experienced as only it should be, as a triumphant whole, and its impact hasn’t diminished in the slightest. This is still an album to switch on, turn up and flip out to. It is the high against which every post-hardcore record since 2000 has been measured against. And every one has come up short.

In layman’s terms, this sews its way through you like matrimony. Once attached, it’s impossible to ever let it drift into the ether of record collection indifference. It’s a love for life".
- BBC
At The Drive In on Jools Holland

 
so I see this thread almost died while I was away (well done to Second Fig for keeping it going) - where the feck is everyone?!

Anyway that At The Drive In album is good stuff - i might be mistaken but have they already appeared in this thread?
We could do with an update to the OP with all the albums posted if anyone can be arsed !
 
I keep thinking of a good album to post and then finding it's not on bloody spotify.

Can we do what other forums like theparadox/rapidfind/bolt do and have an offsite download link for records that aren't on there? Otherwise I'll have to post classics, second choice artists just due to their availability or second albums by bands already represented.

As for At the Drive In, it's pretty good, but I never really got that into them. Not sure why, really. Busdriver - I hate this kind of music, just irritates the tits off me and feel an overwhelming need to switch it off after just a few seconds. Enjoy Destroy - average pop-rock sounds like a mix of early Foo Fighters and Green Day. A bit like the last record Vulture posted, in fact. Seafood - Had I heard this album (although it hadn't been recorded) when I was 17, I think I'd have really quite liked it. Now, I feel it wears it's influences on it's sleeve a bit too obviously while not really being a patch on the bands they are emulating.
 
Post whatever you want - although I suppose it is more likely to be listened to if on Spotify but ye lots of stuff I have thought about putting up isnt on there.

In fact I'm only posting the next album because there is nothing else by this artist on Spotify apart from a couple of random EPs ...
 
AFX - Hangable Auto Bulb (1995)

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Hangable Auto Bulb - AFX - Spotify

This is an old release from Richard D. James - as far as I am concerned he is one of the all time musical geniuses across all genres and I rate everything he has ever done. Best known as Aphex Twin but released this as a couple of EPs under the AFX name back in the 90s and it was made available on CD a few years ago.
Not by any means my favorite work of his, but still brilliant and shows some of the origins of 'drill and bass' and all the glorious stuff he released more recently.


Pitchfork review - (8.9/10):
In a recent Mojo feature on Bob Dylan's 100 greatest songs, Frank Black talked about his attraction to "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again". What Black loves about the song above all are the drum fills at the end of each verse. This is where Black looks for the most powerful emotions on Blonde on Blonde, and he says that those fills can have him close to tears. Black's response popped out for me because the idea of "emotional" drumming resonates and yet you don't see mentioned often. Rare is the music where the percussion does this sort of lifting, but when it happens, the effect is striking.

Richard D. James' single greatest talent may be his ability to program drums that convey feeling. He's always had a gift for melody and texture, obviously, but how these components work against his drums is what I'm always listening for. Which is, perhaps, why I've never much rated Selected Ambient Works Vol. II. To me it sounds like only half the Aphex Twin picture.

In 1995, James' music was climbing along a Moore's Law curve, one release after the next filled with strange and adventurous sound that made the future of electronic music seem terribly exciting. In October, a few months after the release of I Care Because You Do, Warp put out two limited vinyl singles titled "Hangable Auto Bulb". These 12-inches featured James' first experiments in pairing his unusual melodies with stuttering, chopped, jungle-influenced drum programming, which wound up defining his sound in the second half the 1990s. Both releases were limited and have been widely sought by collectors since; 10 years later Warp has released both together on CD.

James was fond of percussion that didn't even pretend to sound like real drums. The spastic taps going through the title track sound like a pair of scissors banging on a metal desk, with no timbral body to speak of. But the failure to reference proper instruments (or even previous digital approximations) gives an extra squeeze of the "alien" quality noted by so many attempting to describe James' style. Then on "Wabby Legs" the drums are constantly sent into a roll so fast they are transformed into another kind of instrument, a highly tactile buzz that seems to breathe. When this sound duets with a real or imaginary thumb piano as the track comes to a close, another aesthetic plateau is reached and the music's place in time becomes fuzzy.

"Custodian Discount" is the only track that makes obvious use of "bass" part of the drum'n'bass equation, with a huge balloon of low-end bouncing between the finely cut beats. In general James was too obsessed with balance to let the bass dominate. The swooning, half-sick synth lines that overlap on "Laughable Butane Bob" hint at the classical sensibility that would be tweaked and brightened on The Richard D. James Album the following year, while "Every Day" brings the tunefulness even further forward with a hypnotic distorted synth "singing" lead. Everything here is memorable and at eight tracks over 34 minutes Hangable Auto Bulb leaves you wanting more.

Compared to how hectic James and others would get with the drill'n'bass template, Hangable Auto Bulb is very restrained-- serene, even-- despite beats that can never stop twitching. The drums throughout seem strangely alive, full of energy but fallible, ready to take off at the slightest provocation. That tension, between the otherworldly yet effortlessly tuneful melodies purring along beneath drums that constantly struggle to frame them, is what the ensuing era of James' music is all about, and Hangable Auto Bulb is a hell of an intro.

— Mark Richardson, November 2, 2005

Hangable Auto Bulb - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Einstürzende Neubauten - Tabula Rasa

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(Headcleaner is the last song(s) on this album. The rest are bonus tracks.)

I can think of a couple of their albums I'd rather post (had Spotify let me), but they have a handful that are well worth it, and this is one of them. They are celebrating their 30th year of existence these days, and I got to see them at Kentish Town Forum this Saturday. Class.
 
Death From Above 1979 - You're A Woman I'm A Machine (2004)

death-from-above-1979-youre-a-woman-im-a-machine-with-bonus-disc.jpeg


Spotify Link

1."Turn It Out" – 2:39
2."Romantic Rights" – 3:15
3."Going Steady" – 2:49
4."Go Home, Get Down" – 2:19
5."Blood on Our Hands" – 2:59
6."Black History Month" – 3:48
7."Little Girl" – 4:00
8."Cold War" – 2:33
9."You're a Woman, I'm a Machine" – 2:53
10."Pull Out" – 1:50
11."Sexy Results" – 5:55

I got this album to review when it came out, put it on, listened to about 10 seconds and turned it off. I came back to it a few weeks later in a different mood, put it on to play, and loved it.

Live perfomances:
 
has this thread died?

Had a listen to Teebs - it is the type of stuff that should appeal to me but for some reason I couldnt get into it - will give it another go though
 
Wasn't really my kind of thing, I just found it tedious to the point that it intefered in my playing of FIFA even though it was only on quietly in the background. Maybe it's because I don't play an instrument I couldn't appreciate it, meh I dunno.

Was disappointed by this album. Most songs would start, I'd like the first 10-15 seconds, but then the songs just wouldn't go anywhere. There were a lot of nice little riffs and ideas, but each song seemed to just have one idea/riff- it's like, instead of recording 26 songs, he could have combined a few to make about 10 good songs.

I met Dave several times and saw him play pretty often - as Dakota Oak Trio and playing with other people on Twisted Nerve. Nice guy, not overly impressed by his music though. I remember several friends and aquaintances going over to Corsica to look for him fairly regularly. Was a real shame what happened to him.

Not much love for Dave Tyack then? That's a shame!
I can actually understand the criticism though as the album is a bit unstructured and many tracks just meander aimlessly but that is also kind of the reason i like it!

Didn't realise people had even gone looking for him - unfortunate story but good that he was found eventually to end all rumours.
 
Infected Mushroom - Converting Vegetarians (2003)

Infected_Mushroom_Converting_Vegetarians_Cover.jpg

Converting Vegetarians - Infected Mushroom - Spotify

This one is a double CD album but each disc is completely different - I recommend listening to Disc 2 (The Other Side) first as that is the one that sets this apart from other Infected Mushroom releases. I do also like Disc 1 but that is standard psytrance stuff and will not appeal unless you are fan of that genre.

The title track is one of my favorite tunes ever!


Converting Vegetarians - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
AFX: Interesting more than enjoyable. I like James's stuff, but I never actually find myself in the mood where I want to sit and listen to it.

Einstürzende Neubauten: Really not my cup pof tea. Hate the sounds. Very dated.

Death From Above 1979: Don't like this one either. A whole album of distorted bass guitar. Heard it when it came out, hasn't grown on me since.

Teebs: Nice sounds on this, fairly pleasant listen, but a bit dull. Will give it another go though.
 
Ah, that's interesting, I've long thought that I need to have a wee listen to Neu! and I never really did. But I'm tempted to boycot it after your Neubauten comments! Grrr! (I would've accepted though disagreed with you until "dated".)
 
The apology helps. I will only postpone the listen.

Which is what I've done lately, too much to do, hopefully I will find the time to have a listen to the last 10 or so posts soon.
 

I like this - like you say best appeciated with high quality equipment where you can hear each sound properly.

Anyway you need to get more involved in this thread - I thought it would be right up your street !



Busdriver - Roadkill Overcoat (2007)

I spent a long time disliking hip-hop, mistakenly believing that it was gangsta rap was representative of the genre. It's clearly not.

Glad you eventually realised that - too many people still write off the whole genre!
Anyway this is the first albums I have heard from this bloke and I thought it was hit and miss with a few high points but mostly average - I like what he is trying to do but it doesnt always seem to come off. Will check out some of his other stuff though.
 
Anyway you need to get more involved in this thread - I thought it would be right up your street !
It is, I just don't have time to listen. I'm either working, sleeping, watching football or listening to my own (a little too) rapidly growing collection. But I'll be back at some point.
 
But look up Enjoy Destroy's album "Little Dreams"

Not really a bad track on the album.

Not really a good one either from what I can tell! This is 'indie rock by numbers' - absolutely nothing to set it apart from 50 other bands churning out the same average stuff.



Didnt mind this - even the Kraut lyrics didnt put me off - although maybe the bonus stuff was better then the actual album. Im more likely to listen to NIN if I was in an 'industrial' mood but found it was still worth a listen.

Have we reached 100 albums yet? Maybe we shoudl rename the thread and leave it at that !
 
Maybe to keep it alive for the moment, we should get back to posting albums on the weekend and allow people to post an album on cosecutive days if no-one else has posted one after a good few hours and that they keep their choices fairly different in style.
 
Maybe to keep it alive for the moment, we should get back to posting albums on the weekend and allow people to post an album on cosecutive days if no-one else has posted one after a good few hours and that they keep their choices fairly different in style.

I reckon that is probably a better idea then leaving the thread for 2 weeks as that will probably be the final nail in the coffin!

The main problem is that people aren't bothering to comment much on stuff that is posted so after a while people dont bother to post stuff up - I remember in the past that some people said they were listening to stuff but didnt bother to post any comments, I never understood that!

Anyway it is Burndogg's thread so it is upto him I suppose.
 
I would have commented had I listened, but not much time for that lately. My work involves audio, so I can't listen while working, and I usually work when I am at the computer. This remains one of the more interesting thread of the Caf, so we need to keep it alive.

And NiN and Neubauten are not at all comparable. Pffft!
 
Someone post the Rival Schools album up. It's on Spotify (I can't do it from work)
If no one like this, I'm giving up.

United By Fate - Rival Schools - Spotify

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rival_Schools_(band)

"Travel by Telephone" – 2:47
"Everything Has Its Point" – 3:21
"High Acetate" – 1:53
"Undercovers On" – 5:30
"Good Things" – 3:43
"Used for Glue" – 3:18
"World Invitational" – 3:35
"The Switch" – 3:04
"Holding Sand" – 3:43
"My Echo" – 1:59
"Favorite Star" – 2:58
"So Down On" – 3:19
"Hooligans for Life" – 2:28
"Grunge Model" – 3:27 (UK only bonus track)
 
65daysofstatic - we were exploding anyway (2010)

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We Were Exploding Anyway - 65daysofstatic - Spotify

I've not even heard this yet - new album from a band I rated a few years ago (good live show) so interested to see how their latest stuff compares

BBC Review:
Having pushed instrumental guitar music through textural and tempo barriers for three albums before this one, 65daysofstatic have now reeled in the complexity and instead emphasised volume and dynamics. We Were Exploding Anyway seems to dispense with the subtlety and glitch-laden rock of yore, replacing it with the kind of cavern-defying hooks that The Prodigy, or even drum’n’bass goons Pendulum, could hinge their entire careers on.

Of course without the lessons learned through almost 10 years of touring, plus a massive coup in the form of an arena support slot with The Cure last year, We Were Exploding Anyway may well have hit jagged rocks with such an approach. 65daysofstatic transcend the competitive loud war by layering simple, effective and evocative ideas akin to an aural acropolis of cards.

The gargantuan centrepiece of the record begins with the Robert Smith-smeared Come to Me, which alights upon ambient hums before signature electronic bell percussion sets in. Within three minutes the track has begun pounding and The Cure's vocalist is looped upon a churning, ebbing thrash parading as a dance anthem. The ebullient flow streams across eight minutes and yet it's still difficult to shake upon its abrupt end. This is followed by Go Complex, an ominous Ministry of Sound death-rattle that bellows scintillating air raid grooves over itself. If club music imploded, this is probably what it would sound like. The only problem is that these two opposed beasts are so all-consuming that it may feel that this black hole core is all everything else leads up to.

Nevertheless, the streamlined digital punch of opener Mountainhead captures the freshly mutated forms of previous work – the lead guitar lines, the lateral drumming, and the technological seething underneath. Crash Tactics and Weak4 hold their own by virtue of 65days' insatiable beat patterns and jerky stop-start crescendos. Dance Dance Dance in particular has an astonishing tribal breakdown a minute-and-a-half in, which could stampede across synapses in a deliriously exhilarating fashion. So, even without the aforementioned central themes, this album still engages the listener with its intense and shuddering sonic trauma.

More than anything the live setting seems made for every single one of these songs, rather than the other way around. From being a fringe concern – albeit one with an underground reputation worthy of rabid devotion – 65daysofstatic have grasped hitherto unimagined opportunities, capitalised on experiences and brought an eclectic yet huge arsenal with which to entice newcomers and open-minded veteran travellers with. --Brad Barrett

Would be good if you feckers could actually listen and comment on it :mad:
 
Someone post the Rival Schools album up. It's on Spotify (I can't do it from work)
If no one like this, I'm giving up.

United By Fate - Rival Schools - Spotify

Cheating, as I've got this albvum somewhere, so didn't need to listen to it anew, but in general - good album. Used For Glue in particular is superb. Overall I suspect this is one of those albums that I like more for their influence on later bands as I find over the course of the album it drags a little, but it was influential at the time in the whole post hardcore movement. Also, they were fantastic when I saw them live back in 2002.

65daysofstatic - we were exploding anyway (2010)

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Again, I have this album, and it's good - not my favourite 65dos album, but still very good. A lot more dance/electronic in it's influences, it's still a really good album. Having said that, Tiger Girl (last track) is fecking incredible, I used to go running and the last 1/2 mile was an incredibly steep hill back to my house, I'd stick on Tiger Girl and crush the cnut.
 
Again, I have this album, and it's good - not my favourite 65dos album, but still very good. A lot more dance/electronic in it's influences, it's still a really good album. Having said that, Tiger Girl (last track) is fecking incredible, I used to go running and the last 1/2 mile was an incredibly steep hill back to my house, I'd stick on Tiger Girl and crush the cnut.

I'm actually a bit disappointed by it - like you say it is more electronic than before and I think it loses something by downplaying the rock side of their sound. Not a bad album by any means but not on the level of some of their stuff from before.
My favorite is 'One Time For All Time' - an incredible album which unfortunately isnt on Spotify. But they do have this one track which is the highlight anyway: Radio Protector - 65daysofstatic - Spotify

BTW I think we should take up decorativeed's previous suggestion and post albums every day again so feel free anyone ...