Showing posts with label Glocca Morra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glocca Morra. Show all posts

Friday, December 21, 2012

Best of 2012: Indie/Emo/Punk


Well this is the longish one.  There are a whole bunch of albums from this past year that I haven't had a chance to spend quality time that probably belong on here, but they will be added into the archives once that time comes.  The first ones are just a bunch that aren't in any particular order and then there is the top 15.




  

  

  

  

  

  





15. Dimaggio

These up and comers from Italy put out these two releases this year that probably flew under a lot of radars.  In fact, I may be overcompensating by putting them so far up on my list so more people check these guys out.


14. Scherbatsky by Snowing


Really? You're going to put up a 7 inch that featured only one previously unreleased song? Yeah, I damn well am.  This was the final goodbye to a band that may continue to influence bands for a long time.  They remastered "Pump Fake" which made an already great song sound even better, and the other side is a new song called "Scherbatsky" that is a wonder in that it was never on one of their other albums.

13. Fade by Cloudkicker


When you're making an entire album yourself, you can really pump out material.  Ben Sharp does it all in his Cloudkicker project.  The highlight is the guitar work but he still has a knack for the entire composition in general.  Although I don't find this release as good as last year's Let Yourself Be Huge, it still is something to behold.

12. Ormai by Fine Before You Came


Another group of Italians!  I am part Italian, so maybe I have a bias (thanks Nana for all the gnoccis).  Or this album is just awesome, which it is.

11. It's Still Pretty Terrible by Dowsing


Dowsing has been around here quite a few times; they are from Chicago and myself from Michigan.  In fact, Saturday we are making the trek to Chicago to catch Coping's last show and these guys are supporting them!  However, this will be our first time seeing them since this came out.  Let the sing alongs commence!

10. Feeling Better by Nai Harvest


These lads form the UK put out this 7 inch this year, and are in the process of recording new material at the moment.  In fact, you may be hearing it soon...on our winter sampler.  Oops!?  No but for real, I listen to these songs way to much.  So this is(n't) new to meeee!


9. Giant Orange by Cheap Girls


When I went on the road with Peace Be Still, we kind of weren't prepared for the rides music wise.  We stopped at record shops and got cassettes and cds.  We listened to a lot of The Cure, The Police, Sirs, Algernon, and Chalk Talk.  We also listened to a fuckload of this album after picking it up from them at Pouzza Fest.  Maybe it's nostalgia, but this album makes me feel all sorts of good inside.


8. Future Reference by Legs Like Tree Trunks


I tried pretty hard to set something up for these guys in Michigan this past summer, but it didn't work out.  Honestly, I really wanted to see them which was a big disappointment.  I think this came out a little bit after that, and I was even more mad that I couldn't hear these songs live. Oh well, please come back guys!


7. NOPE by Coping

This is a farewell to a great midwest emo band.  In a couple days, they will be playing their last show at the Subterranean.  I hope to get some documentation of this, and maybe throw it up on here.  But I may be pretty fucked up.  Actually, seeing that we are staying nearby, I know I will be fucked up.  It's going to be a hot mess, in a good way.


6. Broad Shoulders by Dikembe


It's weird how things go.  When the Chicago Bowls EP came out, I was immediately hooked on this band.  Then their full-length came out on Tiny Engines, and I gave it a listen before it falling to the wayside.  When I started thinking about this past year's releases a month ago, I started listening to this again.  I kicked myself; why did I give up on it so easily?  Oh, Dikembe, we have been catching up this past month haven't we?


5. Awkward Breeds by The Sidekicks


So, this album is a pop punk dream.  It is just clear cut greatness, and it's so easy to sing along to.  There isn't much more to say, just a really solid and uplifting album that separated itself from the rest for me.


4. Sirs by Sirs

Back in August, there was a day in Grand Rapids that began with a house show that featured Sirs, moved down the street to Mulligan's where Glocca Morra and Kite Party played and then to the Pyramid Scheme for free pinball and Algernon Cadwallader.  It was one hell of a day/night and Sirs got it kicked off right.  I was afraid I was going to miss them to go catch Glocca; I had thought another band was starting and then SIrs was on next.  Well, a familiar song kicked in and I asked Matt Weaver next to me who this was because the song was awesome, and he said it was actually Sirs.  The song was in fact "Early Riser" and it had taken me a minute to recognize it.  Granted, I really started listening to this album heavily after I picked it up on vinyl that night.  



3. Eunoia by Invalids

It's hard to justify putting an album so far up here that was created by two guys that have never met eachother.  Or maybe that makes it even more charming?  Either way, the music speaks for itself.  There was a point where I would listen to "Steinborgium" at least once a day for a month.  The song is great before 2:35, but then it just gradually starts hitting on all cylinders for me.  The best part is that after I eventually got somewhat burnt out from that song, there were easy pickings for new songs to obsess over.  Seriously, when any of these songs pop up on shuffle, I am immediately immersed back into this album and just want to listen to the rest of this song.


2. Get Disowned by Hop Along


For the longest time, I thought this album would be the album of the year for me.  Frances has a way with her voice that can make knees buckle.  It doesn't hurt that she is also a great songwriter that had the help of producer Joe Reinhart to make every part sound as good as it could in the Algernon Warehouse.  Plus, she told me about some Korean breakfast place in Ann Arbor I never heard of that is really awesome.



1. Glocca Morra (1 and 2)



Just Married and Get Disowned were neck and neck for me until Glocca Morra spit out another great EP in An Obscure Moon.  Their delayed full length Just Married was good enough by itself; every song has a part in it that flicks something in my brain.  Obscure was a departure from that LP, but was still fucking awesome and had hints of Just Married scattered in.  My last.fm scrobbled for the past year don't lie, Glocca Morra has saturated my library/brain and for these two great releases.  I can easily say they were my favorite artist this past year.


Wednesday, October 17, 2012

An Obscure Moon Lighting an Obscure World by Glocca Morra (2012)



Kind of Like: The Greek Favourites, Stable Boys, 
Genres: Punk, Emo, Post-hardcore
Preview: Spotify
Buy (serious): Kind of Like Records

So, Ghoul Intentions came out last year and then Just Married this year.  It strange because Ghoul Intentions was pretty raw and rough around the edges, but not in a bad way necessarily.  Then Just Married comes out and it is almost like culmination of all the work before Ghoul Intentions came out.  It was more melodic like their older stuff, and more, for lack of a better term, twinkly.  It seemed like a odd regression back to their older sound, but it turns out Just Married was written before Ghoul Intentions and just had taken so long to get all the production stuff done that it was released after.  Honestly, I love Just Married, much more than I liked Ghoul Intentions, so I was a little worried about material coming up next.  Well here we are, as far as I know this is their newest/last recorded stuff, and I think I was worrying for nothing. The feel of this album seems to fall right in between the sound of Just Married and Ghoul Intentions; it has a cleaner more melodic feel, but there is a dissonance about it that still sounds a lot different from Just Married.  The vocals are even different, and I actually really like them the way they are now.

These guys have been known for not taking themselves seriously, and this EP has carefree all over it.  The twinkle genre is getting older/less original by the minute, and good for them for wanting to get away from that niche.  This is a nice balance between the raw/dissonant feel of their last EP and the catchyness/great transitions and riffs of Just Married.  There are some parts on here that I think is some of the best stuff they have done to date.  But which do I like better overall?  I think I will sort that out with the end of the year lists.

Listen Here:


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Best of 2011: Indie/Emo/Punk


Alright, finally getting around to this.  First I had this split into Indie and Emo/Punk, but I still found that a ton of the bands could easily fall two or all three categories, so I just combined it to make a monstrosity.  This is gonna take me a little bit, so here goes.  The first 25 aren't gonna have explanations, or else this would take days and I probably wouldn't finish it.  But you can click the pictures to go to where you can read the original posts on them.

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 

  

 
 

15.
Small Brown Bike- "Fell & Found"

This was the first Michigan natives, Small Brown Bike, released since their break up in 2004.  They were also the first band I saw at Fest this year.  They played in the Florida Theater which wasn't very complimentary to many bands, but they got my music juices flowing the music and mayhem that was going to occur that weekend.  Live performance aside, this album impressed me immediately and I still listen to it quite a bit since reviewing it in April.

14.
Mansions- "Dig Up the Dead"

I am having a really hard time putting this in front of Owen's Ghost Town.  They both are fairly similar artists, but I think Owen does exhibit a bit more skills technically and compositionally, but the fact of the matter is, I have listened to this album a lot more than Owen's up until this point, and there are quite a few songs on here that are so catchy and sing-along-able it's really hard to deny it.  I am really looking forward to seeing this band and A Great Big Pile of Leaves in spring next year.  I feel odd not having A Great Big Pile of Leaves on this list, but Boom! did not do it for me like their previous two albums did.  "Drought of Snow" is a great new song, but all the re-done songs weren't close to surpassing the originals for me.  The album seemed kinda unnecessary for me.

13.
Jet Set Sail- "Jet Set Sail"

Ever since Algernon Cadwallader recommended this band to people, I have been listening to it quite a bit.  I have been in the process of discussing putting this out on vinyl with the band because I think these guys have a bright future.  Next month, I am heading out to Philadelphia to catch these guys along with Restorations, Signals Midwest, Everyone Everywhere and Glocca Morra. 


12.
Signals Midwest- "Latitudes and Longitudes"

I wish I could do a release with these guys, but Tiny Engines have already scooped them up.  I am really excited to see them in Philadelphia along with the other bands.  I might even play a trombone part from one of their songs, haha.  I have been e-mailing these guys the past month and not only do we share some ska roots, but they seem like really nice guys as well.

11.
The Middle East- "I Want That You Are Always Happy"

I started listening to this band around the time they released their previous album, Recordings of the Little East.  They had a couple great songs on there but overall it was forgettable.  I love when bands take an album like that and blow it away with their next release.  It was great to see this band mature even more and become a bit more structured and catchy in general.

10.
Glocca Morra- "Ghoul Intentions"

I know I wanted to only focus on albums that were featured on here, but I can't ignore this band.  It was featured on Circling the Drain.  If Songs in the Key of Ayyyyyy was released this year, it would've easily been in the top three albums for this year.  That split with Greek Favourites is still my favourite material by them.  This new EP is a tad grittier, a tad punkier, and is still pretty great, but I haven't fallen for it like I did for songs like "Bedford Avenue" and "New Years Eve".  I couldn't get a chance to see these guys at Fest because the venue filled up before I could get in there, but I am absolutly stoked to see them next month in Philadelphia.


9. 
Rubik- "Solar"

I have a feeling that a lot of people really won't dig this Finnish band, but I don't really give a damn.  Like a bunch of the albums that ended up making these lists, I didn't make much of a fuss over them initially, but the more I listen to them the more I like them.  I will listen to one song a bunch for awhile and then I will realize another song on it has some great moments as well.  They are poppy, but it makes them accessible and they still hold the indie aesthetics as well.

8.
Weatherbox- "Follow the Rattle of the Afghan Guitar"

I'll admit it, I used to like Say Anything up through ...Is A Real Boy.  Then by the time In Defense of the Genre came out, it was over for me, and I realized I wasn't a big fan of Max Bemis anywas.  Weatherbox, reminds me a bunch like Say Anything for some reason, but in a very good way.  I don't feel like they are a band that I will get over quickly like Say Anything.  They have that catchiness but they also have the intricateness at the same time, it is a lot more complex than Say Anything.  And if you never even liked that band to begin with, forget I mentioned it and just give this EP a good listen and see how you feel about it before you jump to conclusions.


7.
Restorations- "Restorations"

This is also not an album that was featured on here, but I did feature their previous EP that is also good.  This album came out this year though and was also featured on Circling the Drain.  I really want to include this because not only was the album great, but they literally blew me away at Fest.  They closed a show on Sunday, and they put on a performance that was one of my favorites at Fest.


6.

Kite Party- "Baseball Season"

Not a huge fan of baseball, but I became a huge fan of Kite Party after catching their set on accident at Fest.  They were opening up the show for A Great Big Pile of Leaves, and I am so glad we ended up getting their early or else I probably would have never been exposed to this band.  At least it would've taken longer anyways.    Their mixture of folk, punk, and post-rock is actually a lot like Restorations.  Maybe throw in a bit of Prawn in there as well, especially in their live sets.  


5.
Peace be still- "64"

Yeah, yeah, this is the band that got me my label going, but there is a reason for that.  This album kills it.  As a Michigander, I miss Bear vs. Shark, and when I heard this I immediately got reminded of them by the yelling/screaming vocals.  Then throw in the music that has similar guitar work/music to bands like CSTVT, Snowing (RIP) and Algernon, and you end up with an album that impressed me faster than many other albums I reviewed to this year.  Remember if you wanna preorder the physical 12" record you can do so here!

4.
Dikembe- Chicago Bowls

This EP blasted Dikembe on the scene and got Tiny Engines attention along with mine immediately.  Shortly after this was put out for free, Tiny Engines began to get in talks with them for another release.  Sure enough, a few months later they officially signed on board to release their upcoming LP with them.  When I first hit play on their bandcamp for this EP, I immediately recognized the Freaks and Geeks audio clip and right when it ended it burst into something great.  I listened to this over and over again for a few months, especially that first song.  I am hoping that their LP that comes out next year will be nothing short of amazing.  When we saw them at Fest, they put on the best show, it was great.  Look out for them in 2012.

3.
CSTVT- "CSTVT"

How the hell does a two song 7" make a best of the year list?  Probably because the two songs on this album are their two best songs released to date, in my opinion.  I actually saw these boys last night at a show, and they put on a good show.  They really seem like they are having a great time and they talk a bit to the audience and joke around with each other.  Dikembe's LP and CSTVT's LP are the two albums I am most excited for next year.  This 7" shows some great guitar work, great transitions, and they are drifting from the twinkle daddy thing to less yelling and better singing.  They still have that edginess about them in the vocals at time though.  Here is a SIGD exclusive, a brand new song that should be on their LP next year.  Sounds killer except for the little tuning issue 40 seconds into it.



2.
Prawn- "You Can Just Leave It All"

This album sure got Topshelf Record's attention, and I loved enough to want to follow these guys around for a couple days and see them perform twice and interview them.  It turns out, these guys are really nice and fun to drink and shoot the shit with.  They also put on a great fuckin' show.  The mixture of post-rock with 90's emo is something that is somewhat unique to these guys and I hope the best for them next year.  Hopefully they will be back in Michigan again soon!


1.
Algernon Cadwallader- "Parrot Flies"

This was kind of a no brainer for me, I listen to this album regularly since it came out this summer.  I have talked to people and a lot of thems till feel albums like "Fun" and "Some Kind of Cadwallader" are better.  I may be in the minority, but I think this album is better.  I can see that their previous albums could definitely have a sentimental/nostalgic value to them.  But as far as writing/production go, the material on this album far outdoes anything they have put out in the past.  I saw them one and a half times at Fest, and their shows are something to be reckoned with; they make the bodies fly.

On a side note, at some point yesterday, we hit 100,000 views.  Woo!