I had an idea for another story
Aug. 4th, 2011 11:58 amMidway through Beirut's set at Osheaga on Sunday. You know how when inspiration strikes really hard your brain goes into this weird whiteout mode and you later realize you have no idea what the other person's been saying to you for the last five minutes? I lost a good 10 minutes of that set, which annoys me because it's not like I get to see Beirut play every other week. It's not the sort of idea I'd normally ever write out, either, but now I feel like I have to, just to have something to show for my distraction. XD;
Anyway. It turns out that Beirut has a new album out (on MP3 - it leaked early, so the digital version went out early while the physical formats ship for an August 30 release date). Because I am a nonpareil of deduction I figured this out when they started playing songs I didn't know. I've just gone and pre-ordered the LP for a chance at the special ed., since I have a ridiculous textbook-case mania for clear vinyl. Beirut makes good vinyl-listening albums so the risk isn't great: I nearly always put The Flying Club Cup on from beginning to end. I've gradually come to realize that that album is a bona fide decade top 20. It's weird because no individual song on it is as good as "Elephant Gun" or "Postcards to Italy" or "Gulag Orkestar" (except arguably "Cliquot"), but it's perfectly sequenced and does what it does so well. I remember when it first came out, someone wrote a review which identified the perfect use case: the evening after moving into a new place, unpacking boxes while unwinding with a glass of wine. Packing a suitcase before next morning's flight, too, it works for that. As long as I continue to travel for pleasure, this album will never fully leave the rotation.
My ranking of Beirut releases, based on how often I listen to them:
The Flying Club Cup
Realpeople Holland (particularly "Venice", because I can't get over that it actually sounds like Venice)
Lon Gisland EP
The Gulag Orkestar (a good album, but I only ever replay three songs on it)
March of the Zapotec (I barely listen to this one at all)
So clearly I approve that Zach Condon chose to return to indiepop roots on The Rip Tide, instead of making a vuvuzuela-gamelan fusion record or something which was the only other career route this could have taken. It can't ever be disgustingly twee, anyway, what with the brass instrumentation and dude's vocal style, although "East Harlem" makes a concerted effort. I don't know how much I'll end up listening to it yet, but I imagine as much as Lon Gisland EP surely.
IMO this is the best of the new songs (dodgy Soundcloud upload, listen before it's gone):
The Rip Tide - Beirut by DJmich
Anyway. It turns out that Beirut has a new album out (on MP3 - it leaked early, so the digital version went out early while the physical formats ship for an August 30 release date). Because I am a nonpareil of deduction I figured this out when they started playing songs I didn't know. I've just gone and pre-ordered the LP for a chance at the special ed., since I have a ridiculous textbook-case mania for clear vinyl. Beirut makes good vinyl-listening albums so the risk isn't great: I nearly always put The Flying Club Cup on from beginning to end. I've gradually come to realize that that album is a bona fide decade top 20. It's weird because no individual song on it is as good as "Elephant Gun" or "Postcards to Italy" or "Gulag Orkestar" (except arguably "Cliquot"), but it's perfectly sequenced and does what it does so well. I remember when it first came out, someone wrote a review which identified the perfect use case: the evening after moving into a new place, unpacking boxes while unwinding with a glass of wine. Packing a suitcase before next morning's flight, too, it works for that. As long as I continue to travel for pleasure, this album will never fully leave the rotation.
My ranking of Beirut releases, based on how often I listen to them:
The Flying Club Cup
Realpeople Holland (particularly "Venice", because I can't get over that it actually sounds like Venice)
Lon Gisland EP
The Gulag Orkestar (a good album, but I only ever replay three songs on it)
March of the Zapotec (I barely listen to this one at all)
So clearly I approve that Zach Condon chose to return to indiepop roots on The Rip Tide, instead of making a vuvuzuela-gamelan fusion record or something which was the only other career route this could have taken. It can't ever be disgustingly twee, anyway, what with the brass instrumentation and dude's vocal style, although "East Harlem" makes a concerted effort. I don't know how much I'll end up listening to it yet, but I imagine as much as Lon Gisland EP surely.
IMO this is the best of the new songs (dodgy Soundcloud upload, listen before it's gone):
no subject
Date: 2011-08-08 02:35 am (UTC)...there are clear vinyl records???
Sounds perfect for this gizmo (http://perevision.tumblr.com/post/4767932609/333333333333333333)...although if this got any more hipster-looking the universe would implode.
Unless you meant 'clear' in terms of sound. In which case I sheepishly withdraw.
no subject
Date: 2011-08-08 08:18 am (UTC)I have a transparent Fugazi 7", a white Patrick Wolf 7" (that one's also "heavyweight" vinyl, though not as voluptuously thick as the 7" of PSB's "I'm With Stupid", which they had pressed in Japan - basically vinyl is, like denim, one of those quintessentially American things that Japanese otaku now do better than anyone else), a white Lansing-Dreiden LP, probably something else I’ve forgotten, and the 12” remixes of Bran Van 3000’s “Drinkin’ in L.A.” in translucent turquoise, which I legit found in a used record store and is the prize of my collection - I bought the others new, which to me isn't quite the same. XD
no subject
Date: 2011-08-11 01:43 am (UTC)The only vinyl I ever owned was the 12" audiobook adaptation of The Aristocats XD But my uncle still has his turntable and 70s Motown records.