J's Indie/Rock Mayhem

Playlists, podcasts and music from WQFS Greensboro's J's Indie/Rock Mayhem - Wednesday Nights 6pm - 8pm at 90.9 FM!

Thursday, December 24, 2009

J's Indie/Rock Podcast - Christmas Edition 2009


Hey, folks. I hope you're having a happy holiday season so far. J's Indie/Rock Mayhem is on holiday break this week, but I'll be back next Wednesday with the 8th Annual J's Indie/Rock Top 25 Albums of the Year. It's going to be an amazing show.

In the meantime, in what I hope will be the first of a number of non-radio podcasts in the coming year, I wanted to share with you my first attempt at a homemade podcast for the Christmas season. Since I didn't get to do the usual Christmas show this year, I've whipped together a few of my favorite holiday songs into a handy podcast that clocks in at just over an hour. This means it's perfect for downloading and burning to CD or putting on your mp3 player for the car trips over the coming days. There's a mix of classic and heartwarming moments, some hilarious, ribald and mildly sacrilegious ones as well. In other words, something for everyone. Check out the download link and track list below. As usual, the podcast is also available via iTunes.

Happy holidays and I'll see you next week!

J's Indie/Rock Podcast: Christmas 2009 Podcast

Big Star - "Jesus Christ" (demo) [from the keep your eye on the sky boxset]
David Bowie/Bing Crosby - "Little Drummer Boy/Peace on Earth" [television special performance.]
Josh Rouse - "Christmas with Jesus" (live) [from under cold blue stars radio sampler EP.]
Run-D.M.C. - "Christmas in Hollis" [from a very special christmas.]
Ramones - "Merry Christmas (I Don't Wanna Fight Tonight)" [from brain drain.]
The Kinks - "Father Christmas" [from come dancing with the kinks.]
John Denver - "Please, Daddy (Don't Get Drunk This Christmas)" [from rocky mountain christmas.]
Vince Guaraldi Trio - "Skating" [from a charlie brown christmas.]
Joni Mitchell - "River" [from blue.]
Type O Negative - "Red Water (Christmas Mourning)" [from october rust.]
Johnny Cash - "Blue Christmas" [from the christmas spirit.]
Didjits - "Under the Christmas Fish" [from hey judester.]
Patton Oswalt - "My Christmas Memory" [from feelin' kinda patton.]
Elastica - "I Wanna Be a King of Orient Aah" (live) [from the radio one sessions.]
Flaming Lips - "Christmas at the Zoo" [from clouds taste metallic.]
Nicolai Dunger - "Going Home for Christmas" [from tranquil isolation.]
Jim White - "Christmas Day" [from no such place.]
Vince Guaraldi Trio - "Christmas Time is Here" (instrumental) [from a charlie brown christmas.]

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Thursday, December 17, 2009

J's Indie/Rock Mayhem - 16th December 2009
The Top Singles of 2009


[Another year, another year-end wrap-up and another Top Singles of the Year show. This show has come to almost rival the Top 25 Albums show in my heart, if only because this is the show with nothing but wall-to-wall favorite songs from the year. Tonight's show was really something and I love my top 12 picks this year, as well as all the other songs that slid around in there. It makes for quite a show and I hope you enjoy it.

Also, as a small bit of celebration, this particular blog post marks the 500th post here at J's Indie/Rock Mayhem. The blog started back in September of 2003 and so that might seem like a glacial pace of posting, but for the majority of the blog's existence, it's been one post per week. There was a period of time where I did weekly album reviews before I began writing for Aquarium Drunkard, but this is still a great accomplishment. Fittingly, the blog recently also crossed the threshold of its 75,000th visitor. While my blog certainly doesn't generate major traffic, it does great for its purpose and weekly updates, so thank you, those of you who come to read and listen.

The 8th Annual Top 25 Albums of the Year show will be in two weeks - Wednesday, January 30th - and is a 4 hour extravaganza from 4pm - 8pm. The first two hours will feature also-rans from the year's best albums, all leading up to the Top 25 countdown from 6pm until 8pm. Only the Top 25 section will be podcast. I'm terribly excited.

Now, let's celebrate 2009 in style. Onward.]

J's Indie/Rock Podcast: 16th December 2009 - Top Singles of the Year

Theme Song - Peaches - "Rock Show"
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Ladyhawke - "My Delirium" [from her self-titled 2008 album. so why on the 2009 single list? well, i think this was pushed as a single this year and i just heard it for the first time myself this year and...well...listen to it, fer cryin' out loud. holy god, this would've been in my top 5 no question otherwise.]
the Streets - "David Hassles" [not from any record, but released via twitter. probably the first song on my list to be done in such a way. the streets didn't put out a new record this year, but mike skinner did release new songs online and this was the peach of the bunch, i'd say.]
Langhorne Slim - "Say Yes" [from be set free, a fun record in its own right, but this song certainly grabbed me from the first time i heard it. and that's really the theme of most of these songs tonight.]
the Henry Clay People - "Something in the Water" [from for cheap or for free. if there's a band you're bound to hear more from, and not just on my show, it's these guys. they're on the way to something great and this record is a fantastic debut. singles, ahoy.]
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Future of the Left - "Arming Eritrea" [from travels with myself and another. i did a pretty good job of keeping a lot of the top 25 album contenders off of the top singles list. not purposefully, mind you. it just happened that way, but there was some crossover and here's one big one. this album is full of great songs.]
Passion Pit - "Little Secrets" [from manners. while i certainly slept (no pun) on their amazing single "sleepyhead" last year, i definitely didn't make that mistake twice. this band was made to churn out singles and this was my favorite of the bunch.]
Tommy Keene - "Hide Your Eyes" [from in the late bright. speaking of great single makers, tommy keene has been cranking out awesome pop for a long time and his latest was a great late-period effort. it was a tossup between this and "goodbye jane," both amazing songs, but the ballad won out. what can i say? i'm a sucker.]
Black Moth Super Rainbow - "Born on a Day The Sun Didn't Rise" [from eating us. another return to the top singles list. and another band, like passion pit, who cranks out amazingly infectious songs on a regular basis. BMSR has such a unique sound that it really draws you in immediately.]
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New York Dolls - "Cause I Sez So" [the title track from their second post-reunion album and it's another winner. the songs are rockin' and fun and everything the new york dolls always were. there's a celebratory nature about everything they do now.]
Echo and the Bunnymen - "Shroud of Turin" [from the fountain. i certainly wouldn't have expected a single from echo being on my list at the beginning of the year, but here it is. you should come out also to joe g's cover band explosion this saturday, december 19th, at the blind tiger in greensboro. $5 at the door which goes to the NC humane society and it nets you great cover bands of echo and the bunnymen, the breeders, joe jackson, the ventures, the black keys and queens of the stone age. plus, yours truly MCing. what else could you want in a charity donation?]
the Clean - "In the Dreamlife You Need a Rubber Soul" [from mr. pop. the new zealand band cranked out another great pop record this year and the result is also one of this year's most fun beatles-alluding songs.]
Birdmonster - "Yuma" [from blood memories. birdmonster was in the top 5 singles last year, but it's not a case of mighty-have-fallen. they're still making great songs and this band's album is another fantastic one.]
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Superchunk - "Learned to Surf" [from the leaves in the gutter EP. superchunk's first new music since 2001 and it's a doozy to be sure. especially this song. i'm still picking my jaw up. long live NC rawk!]
Her Space Holiday - "Sleepy Tigers" [from the sleepy tigers EP. a pretty fun and sweet song that was released originally in 2008, but here re-released on an EP that is fun and, well, sweet.]
Patterson Hood - "Back of a Bible" [from murdering oscar (and other love songs). a pretty lovely song and one of my very favorite patterson songs, i do believe. i'm super excited to hear the truckers' latest in the spring - they'll also be playing back-to-back nights at the lincoln theatre in raleigh in february - on a friday and saturday, no less! february 12th and 13th. i'll be there. both nights. count on it.]
Girls - "Lust for Life" [from their self-titled record that really grabbed me by surprise. i tend to get turned off to the similarly named bands and, well, there's another band called women. and it just seemed too hokey. so i paid no attention at first. will i ever learn my lessons? naw.]
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Animal Collective - "My Girls" [from merriwether post pavillion. i've been slow to come around to this band in general, but this was the song that finally broke me and made me give them a fair listen. it's not always my cup of tea, but it's the jubilant "woo"'s that explode in the chorus of this song that snagged me.]
the Love Language - "Lalita" [from their self-titled debut. they've been signed to merge records, so we'll doubtless, and hopefully, be hearing a new record from them again in 2010, but we can still revel in the awesomeness of this debut.]
Samantha Crain and the Midnight Shivers - "Songs in the Night" [the title track from her album out on ramseur records. a really great songwriter that ought to be fun to watch in the near future.]
the Thermals - "How We Fade" [from now we can see. these guys were one of the absolute highlights of my stint at the pitchfork festival this summer and the record is a winning and proud post-punk record with a great sense of pop style. this song especially rarely left my head.]

[Now the countdown of the top twelve singles begins. Here we go - the best singles of 2009.]

12. the Damnwells - "55 Pictures" : The Damnwells have always been great at singles, but putting out their latest album as a free download, and then hoping the dividends would pay in touring and exposure, was a bold mood for a band that as recently as a couple of years ago had been on a major label. It'll be interesting to see the results, but it's obvious Alex Dezen and company haven't lost their knack for great roots-flavored power pop. This is the best of a record full of great songs. From One Last Century.

11. the Foreign Exchange - "Daykeeper" : The Foreign Exchange returned with a record that really defied expectations as Phonte Coleman all but completely eschewed rapping in favor of r&b crooning over top of Nicolay's unique creations. This song, the album's opener, is a great primer for the album to come and a melancholic song that hints at things deeper than its surface. From Leave It All Behind.

10. Brendan Benson - "Garbage Day" : The call back to sweet, 60s/70s r&b and soul on this song is a winning feel for Benson, a truly standout song that mines some areas he hasn't gone to extensively. While the overall album was a bit underwhelming, this song is a big addition to his catalogue of great power-pop. From My Old Familiar Friend.

9. Son Volt - "Jukebox of Steel" : This is a closing song to rival Trace's cover of "Mystifies Me." Jay Farrar's writing skills hit a good run this year, but this song is so winning and immediately infectious in its chorus ("throw the calendar away / go and find a jukebox of steel") that it is a welcome competitor. From American Central Dust.

8. A.C. Newman - "The Heartbreak Rides" : It's the "yo-ho"'s. Seriously. It makes the whole thing sound like a jaunty, pirate adventure. Like two people setting off on a grand adventure, cutlass thrust into the wind. It's the type of slow-building pop that Newman thrives within and he does it just as well as ever. From Get Guilty.

7. the Veils - "The Letter" : Not really of a comparison to the Box Tops' classic song, but something much darker. Finn Andrews has a voice like a melancholic fallen angel, lamenting and admiring his fate simultaneously. This song, as well as its album of origin, is a much darker trip than its predecessor. Dark music for dark times. From Sun Gangs.

6. Phoenix - "1901" : A lot of people piled on the praise for this album, but it didn't stand the test for me. Not that I don't like Phoenix, but they are more of a singles band and this song is without question one of the year's finest. A great sense of style that feels both classic and new at the same time, "1901" is the sound of the future and the past dancing. From Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix.

5. Mos Def - "Auditorium" : I love Mos Def's rhymes here, but what puts this song over the top is the subdued, but brilliant turn by Slick Rick. His gleefully obtuse narrator, itself a great commentary on broader public perceptions of the Iraq War, is a winning weave with his self-reference. It's the type of song that insidiously mounts itself in your brain and takes up residence. From The Ecstatic.

4. the Pains of Being Pure at Heart - "Young Adult Friction" : Aside from the winningly goofy pun in the title, this is a blast of pop perfection on an album that is nothing but. The greatest C-86 album recorded since the early 90s, the wintery briskness of the guitars is a godsend for jangle pop lovers. I'd list the whole album if I could, but this song stands mightily above them all. From The Pains of Being Pure at Heart.

3. Lake Inferior - "Spiders" : The best single from a North Carolina band this year is this hybrid of Animal Collective's spartan, electronic adornments and the funky thump of Talking Heads. It's the type of song that comes along and changes your thoughts about what pop music can be and how it has to work, where it's come from and where it's going. From Lake Inferior EP.

2. the Raveonettes - "Heart of Stone" : I really had the Raveonettes pegged as a one-trick pony after their first, excellent album. But while the core of their sound hasn't shifted a lot, they've refined it to a honed edge. This song is the epitome of everything that can possibly be right with a song by this band - the lo-fi haze, the ethereal vocals, the aural callbacks to girl groups and original rock and roll. If you don't feel all of that buzzing beneath the surface, then the title may be more about you than you know. From In and Out of Control.

1. P.O.S. - "Low Light Low Life" : I don't know if I can rightly explain what it is about "Low Light Low Life" that kept it constantly in my mind. Cultural and historical allusions, both high and low. Boston Tea Party and "Lean Wit It, Rock Wit It" and Law and Order? Check. But it's the way that P.O.S.'s rhymes seem feverish, determined and lucid. There's a forceful righteousness, a seething love, a smothering anger. All of it combines with the production of punchy synth hits, bells and guitar to create perfection. Indeed.

That'll do it for the Top Singles show. Thanks for listening this year. I'll be back in two weeks, on December 30th, with the 8th Annual Top 25 Albums of the Year show. Please tune in - you won't want to miss a second. Until then, Go Panthers! Go Heels!, and take care.

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Wednesday, December 09, 2009

J's Indie/Rock Mayhem - 9th December 2009


[Welcome to the last regular edition of J's Indie/Rock Mayhem for 2009. Next week will be the annual best singles show and then in three weeks, on December 30th, the 8th annual J's Indie/Rock Top 25 Albums of the Year. It's a lot later than normal this year, but it's been a crazy year. I won't be on the air on Wednesday, December 23rd - it's my dad's birthday, so I'll be otherwise occupied, but I'm hoping to do a special Christmas oriented podcast that week, so stay tuned for that. Hopefully.

Now, while the going's good, onward.]

J's Indie/Rock Podcast: 9th December 2009 Show

Theme Song - Peaches - "Rock Show"
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Cymbals Eat Guitars - "Some Trees (Merritt Moon)" [from why there are mountains. really raucous and blustery music from this year. this has been a good year for music, so to stand out as this has is a good sign.]
the Twilight Singers - "Teenage Wristband" [from blackberry belle, one of this week's decade pieces at aquarium drunkard. go read it here. i love greg dulli's music and this album is a peak moment for him without question.]
Blur - "Bugman" [from 13. the head drunkard and i were having a discussion about this album the other day and while for me it's usually songs like "coffee and t.v." and "no distance left to run" that stick out, he called out this song in particular and i remembered that yes, it is pretty righteous. so here it is.]
Lake Inferior - "Johnny B" [from the new pegasaur EP. great music from a great north carolina band who we had up here in the studio last week for an interview. hope to get them down here for a show at some point as well.]
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the Flaming Lips - "Convinced of the Hex" [from embryonic. they played this when i saw them this summer and it was the first new music i'd heard from them in quite some time that i really enjoyed. so here's to it.]
the Rain Parade - "Blue" [from explosions in the glass palace. i'm becoming more and more convinced that this EP might be better than the rain parade's debut album. the quality of their albums drops after this one, but man this EP is good.]
Bash and Pop - "Fright Night (Is Killing Me)" [the title track from their one and only album. this was tommy stinson's first post-replacements project and he knocked it out of the park as far as i'm concerned.]
Califone - "Alice Marble Grey" [from all my friends are funeral singers. can i please see these guys live sometime, please? thank you. one of those bands who are subtly your favorite band. they may not leap to mind when you're asked, but then you look at your cd collection and it's full of stuff by them.]
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Susu - "M.B.T." [from the forthcoming r and r and r. the fine folks in this band were nice enough to send me an advance copy of their record that'll be out next year because they're super sweet and wanted to gift me with their new record. we'll hear more in the new year.]
the Replacements - "They're Blind" [by request. from don't tell a soul. i used to play this when i played in coffee shops in high school. a really gorgeously styled song that still hits me in the right places.]
the Whigs - "Right Hand on My Heart" [from mission control. these mugs have a new record coming out next spring, but will be playing at the local 506 in chapel hill next monday, december 14th. so you know you wanna see them. seriously one of the best live rock acts around.]
Bill Callahan - "Diamond Dancer" [from born on a whale heart. bill will be playing tomorrow night, thursday, december 10th, at studio b at the broach theatre here in downtown greensboro. the show is co-sponsored by WQFS and WUAG and is FREE! so go get you some free smog action.]
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Built to Spill - "Planting Seeds" [from there is no enemy. not too many songs in the world that namecheck bill hicks on their way to making a pretty solid point, but this is one of 'em. great stuff.]
Silver Jews - "Punks in the Beerlight" [from tanglewood numbers, another of this week's decade pieces at aquarium drunkard. go read it here. this was the album that truly got me into the joos as well, so i wholeheartedly agree with this choice.]
Pixies - "Hey" [from doolittle. since the pixies have been out doing this album in its entirety, they showed up on the fallon show the other week and did "debaser" and then followed it up with a web-only clip of them doing "hey." very awesome.]
the Duke and the King - "Summer Morning Rain" [from nothing gold can stay. ex-felice brothers member and not a bad little record.]
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Tom Waits - "Metropolitan Glide" (live) [from the new glitter and doom live album. this particular song is from the knoxville, tennessee show which is the one i was at. i think you can here me and my friend, jeremy, yelling around the 2:38 mark.]
Wilco - "Sunken Treasure" [from being there. been listening to this record quite a bit this week, but especially this song. the line that stuck out to me most was when tweedy sings "if i had a boat.." which immediately made me think of...]
Lyle Lovett - "If I Had a Boat" [from pontiac. yup. this is how i piece together a lot of my show each week - lyrical connections. well, at least i like doing it that way. that said, i love lyle lovett.]
Romancer - "The World is Exploding" [one of the new recordings from romancer, a project of tiger bear wolf, ex-health member jonathan moore, who just had a new baby born. congrats, jon and laura.]
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Tune-Yards - "Sunlight" [from bird brains. really unique sounding stuff and we'll have to hear more in the new year. but i've heard this is a truly fantastic album from this year too. just to be safe, squeezed it in so i can play it on the album show if need be.]
T. Rex - "Mambo Sun" [from electric warrior. okay. so, this is the only t. rex album i've ever heard in its entirety. i love it. where do i go next. suggestions?]
Fleet Foxes - "Blue Ridge Mountains" [from their self-titled LP, another of the decade picks this week over at aquarium drunkard. go read it. it took me awhile to warm up to this record, one of a few that i did that with this decade, but it is a stellar, unique and gorgeous piece of work.]
Grizzly Bear - "While You Wait for the Others" (live) [apparently this came from the sound opinions show on NPR. pretty great listen to a stripped down version of grizzly bear. i'm going to be a curmudgeon and probably put this band's release way lower than it deserves, or not on the list at all, but that's not to say it's not worth listening to - i just haven't gotten into it the way others do.]
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Sufjan Stevens - "The Upper Peninsula" [from michigan, another of the decade albums this week. go read about it here. i think i've spoken of my ambivalence towards sufjan stevens before, though i've never heard this album and this song is pretty good. i've heard this one is less glossy than illinoise, which is where all my experience with him lies. worth checking out, i suppose.]
Polaris - "She's Everywhere" [from songs from the adventures of pete and pete. one of the most gorgeous songs by this band and in mark mulcahy's entire catalogue.]
Bobb Trimble - "One Mile From Heaven" [from iron curtain innocence. i had never heard this guy before until this piece at aquarium drunkard hipped me to a musician i obviously need to pay attention to. two self-released albums of 80s psychedelic revival and they are magnificent. so much great music falls by the wayside.]

So that'll do it for the regular shows of 2009. See you back here next week for the best singles of the year - wall-to-wall great singles for two hours. It's one of my favorite shows of the year, no doubt. Until then, Go Panthers! Go Heels!, and take care.

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Wednesday, December 02, 2009

J's Indie/Rock Mayhem - 2nd December 2009


[Welcome to another edition of J's Indie/Rock Mayhem. We really are getting down to the wire on this year's best-of sets. In two weeks, on Wednesday, December 16th, it'll be the annual Best Singles show, with the best single songs of the year that you heard on the show. Then, two weeks after that, on Wednesday, December 30th, it's the 8th annual J's Indie/Rock Top 25 Albums of the Year. It'll be an awesome holiday season around these parts for just that reason.

Tonight I was joined in studio by 2/5ths of the members of Lake Inferior for a fun chat. They're super nice guys and you should absolutely go pick up their new EP, Pegasaur, which is available on vinyl with a free digital download to boot. Only 420 copies available, so get on yours. It's well worth it.

Now, without further ado, onward.]

J's Indie/Rock Podcast: 2nd December 2009 Show

Theme Song - Peaches - "Rock Show"
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Lucero - "The Devil and Maggie Chascarillo" [from 1372 overton park. this is my favorite song off the record so far and one hell of a rambunctious single. i guess i need to go see lucero live at some point.]
Dinosaur Jr. - "Over It" [from farm. you might just hear this pop up again in two weeks. it is a great video and an awesome song to boot. viva la reunion albums.]
El-P - "Drive" [from i'll sleep when you're dead, one of this week's decade picks over at aquarium drunkard. check out my write-up here. this album was on my best-of list back in 2007, but its power has only grown with me over time.]
Sleater-Kinney - "Entertain" [from the woods. this was my other decade write-up for the week. check it out here. another album that has only gotten more righteous with age. man, i miss these ladies.]
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Tom Waits - "Goin' Out West" (live) [from the new glitter and doom live album that is out. if you missed out on either of his tours in the past couple of years, this is a great insight into what you missed. good stuff.]
Modest Mouse - "Tiny Cities Made of Ashes" [by request. from the moon and antarctica. caller wanted to hear something from lonesome crowded west, but this was as old as i could find that hadn't walked out. ah, thievery.]

[Here came my interview with Nasir and Logan of Lake Inferior. They were kind enough to come down and talk about the band, its origins, influences, are they more musicians or music geeks and their new EP, Pegasaur. Super nice guys and a great live show that we will, hopefully, turn into some Greensboro shows one of these days. I'm on a mission to make it happen.]

Lake Inferior - "Spiders" [from their self-titled EP from earlier this year. without a doubt the song that grabbed my ear the first time i heard it and has led to my sincere love for this band. probably destined to be heard again in two weeks as well. ah, well.]
Lake Inferior - "Addressing Parents" [from the new Pegasaur EP. the new EP chases some different themes musically and is a pretty great listen.]
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Lake Inferior - "Gepeddo" [also from pegasaur. another really fantastic song. go get your copy so you can enjoy it on vinyl.]
St. Vincent - "Save Me From What I Want" [from actor. how far up the top 25 ladder will this end up? i would've thought it a shoe-in for top 5 earlier this year, but now i'm not sure. still on the list though.]
Invisible - "Battle Rap: Spider vs. Lightning" [from irresponsibly electric, the 'rock' record from one of greensboro's most truly original and unique bands. they're playing this friday night at the kress building on elm street as part of first fridays with the arts. 7pm show time. go see them after you see me play at 6pm at the corner of elm and mlk for the first friday indie-market.]
the Raveonettes - "Bang!" [from in and out of control. there's a whole litany of great singles off of this record. seriously. geez.]
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Califone - "Polish Girls" [from the gorgeous all my friends are funeral singers. speaking of a sleeper hit bound for the top 25. can califone not make beautiful music?]
Dungen - "Panda" [from ta det lungt. eric, a friend of lake inferior's who came up with them, selected this from the stacks and it is some gorgeous stuff. really intriguing and actually fit in with some other things that popped up this evening.]
Guadalcanal Diary - "Watusi Rodeo" [from walking in the shadow of the big man. one of our newer contributors at drunkard, j. kress, threw up a great post about this band last week and it's well worth reading.]
Bombadil - "Sad Birthday" [from tarpits and canyonlands, the awesome new album from durham, north carolina's bombadil. can i say enough good things about bombadil? answer: no.]
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Megafaun - "Gather, Form and Fly" [the title track from their latest. more amazing north carolina music. this has been an amazing year for just plain beautiful music and this is a great example.]
Teenage Fanclub - "Sparky's Dream" [from grand prix. because you really can't go too long without hearing this song. this was my exposure to teenage fanclub, lo those years ago, and i'll never forget it. ever.]
Sonic Youth - "Disconnection Notice" [from murray street, another of the decade albums from this week. certainly my favorite sonic youth record of the decade. go read the write-up and see if you agree.]
Panda Bear - "Comfy in Nautica" [from person pitch. i'll admit to being unsure what to make of animal collective at times, so i definitely stayed away from this solo project from one of their main members. i still don't know if i get it, but it's interesting and i know people believe it to be one of the best of the decade, otherwise marty wouldn't have written about it. so there you go.]
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Iron and Wine - "Promise What You Will" [from the creek drank the cradle. yet another of this week's decade albums. i, personally, would've gone with the woman king EP, but you can put up an argument for any of their works, really.]
Bonnie 'Prince' Billy and Matt Sweeny - "My Home is the Sea" [from the superwolf album. another honestly moment: i remember when this came out, but paid it no attention, but did note that people loved it. listened to this song for the first time tonight. oh, man. what was i thinking?]
Happy End - "Haru Ranman" [one of our other newest contributors at drunkard, brendan mcgrath, posted about this band over at his blog, the rising storm. japanese classic country rock. what more could you ask for? these songs are seriously good, too. man.]

That'll do it for this week. Next week will have me dabbling in some Christmas music (because I can and, well, because there won't be any other time) as well as the usual goodness, so make sure you tune in and that you drop by First Friday Indie-Market at the corner of Elm Street and MLK this Friday night at 6pm for me playing guitar. Why not? Until then, Go Panthers! Go Heels!, and take care.

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