Category Archives: Music

In Defense of the Red Hot Chili Peppers: A Ranking

I am here today to talk about the Uplift Mofo Party Plan. A plan based on a band, a band based on a plan.There shall be no slaves in the land of lands, it’s a Hollywood jam.

Over the past 35 years a little band out of California has raised hell and spread good vibes around the world: the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Formed by high school friends and nurtured in the fertile alternative music underground of Eighties Los Angeles, the Chili Peppers have gone on to become one of the most prominent rock bands of the modern era. Unlike other bands that blew up in the Nineties, they aren’t associated with grunge, but combined punk, funk, and psychedelia to create a distinctive brew of sound that earned them a spot in the mainstream while still rewarding deeper listening. More personally, they are one of my favorite bands ever; they happened to release the music video for “Dani California” right when I was 15 years old and just starting to get into music. It hooked me and I’ve been a big fan ever since. 

My fandom, however, isn’t a given, as it seems that just as there are millions of fans around the world, there are also plenty of detractors. It’s very, very common, especially in hip music circles, to bash on the Chili Peppers. It seems like self-serious hipsters just can’t let themselves enjoy something that is supposed to be unabashedly fun. At some point, the Chili Peppers (along with Rage Against the Machine) got blamed for the rise of the often maligned “rap-rock” and nu-metal of the late Nineties, but are musically much more supple than their angsty imitators. They’re also associated in the public’s mind with the bro reggae of Sublime and 311 types. While RHCP do propagate some form of West Coast sunshine chill that is very stoner friendly, frankly they’ve always been way more than just surfer-bro fare. The best of their music is pure emotional expression; whether that emotion be celebration, melancholy, or lust, it comes across with an appealingly good-natured sincerity. Plus they do all this with an instrumental acumen that is far above many dreadlocked peers.

In fact, bassist/trumpeter/sometimes-vocalist/heart-of-the-band Flea is inarguably one of the best bass players ever, who combines energetic slap technique with deeper melodic grooves to create a supple foundation for everything they do. Vocalist Anthony Keidis originally drew from hip-hop as one of the first vocalists to consistently introduce rapping into a rock context, yet over time he’s become more comfortable with melody. Keidis is another major point of criticism for the band to many people. True, he isn’t a traditionally strong singer, but he is certainly distinct and a great performer. His lyrics often seem unclear or juvenile, but at the same time his abstract associations build upon themselves to conjure unique images that strike to the heart of an emotion. While I agree that Keidis is the weak link of the group, they certainly wouldn’t be the same band without him. I think most fans acknowledge this, and take it with knowingly good humor. The Peps have boasted several guitarists and drummers over the years who have each added their own spice to the proceedings; Chad Smith has been a reliable beatmaster since 1989, while their most frequent and successful six-string man John Frusciante has come to be acknowledged as one of the most brilliant guitarists of his generation.

At the end of the day, a little band that started as a side project between friends has built up into an alt-rock institution. The musical chemistry and genuine personal love between the Red Hot Chili Peppers, forged through both immense success and unfathomable tragedy, has spawned great, versatile music over the course of their career. We’re due for another release to come out on April 1st called Unlimited Love. With Frusciante back in the fold for the first time in a decade, expectations are high. No matter what we get, I’m confident that it will enhance the ongoing saga of one of the best bands of our time.

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I Digress: An Unvarnished Take on the Taylor Swift v. Damon Albarn Songwriting Controversy

The floodgates are opened, and there is no turning back. The social media mob is out in full force. Someone wrongly criticized Taylor Swift. On Tuesday, it was revealed that as part of an interview with The LA Times, British musician Damon Albarn stated that he doesn’t believe that Taylor Swift writes her own songs. 

Some background. Damon Albarn was the lead singer for Nineties alt-rock band Blur, and since the new millennium is primarily known for being the lead creative force in the virtual hip-hop band Gorillaz. He’s also been part of supergroup The Good, The Bad & the Queen with The Clash’s Paul Simonon, The Verve’s Simon Tong, and Tony Allen, who played with Fela Kuti. He also put out The Rocket Juice & The Moon, a collaboration with Flea and Tony Allen, as well as a string of collaborations with various African musicians. On top of all that, Albarn sporadically releases music under his own name. Needless to say, he has had a varied, influential, and in all regards successful career in the music industry for about 30 years.

Taylor Swift needs no introduction. If you have followed anything about music or popular culture at all over the past 15 years, you know who she is. The country-turned-all-around-pop star has amassed an amazing amount of commercial and critical success on the back of her personal songwriting and stylistic evolution. She’s also just as notable for the control she exerts over her image and career compared to many other female stars, as well as several high-profile relationships and celebrity feuds. I can confidently say, with no reservation, that Swift is one of the biggest celebrities in the world, by any measure.

If there is one thing Swift’s massive army of fans, dubbed “Swifties,” will tell you, it’s that she writes her own songs. This has been foundational to her narrative and persona from the beginning, and a big reason why her success is so lauded in the mainstream. It’s truly perplexing, then, why Albarn would so confidently state otherwise.

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Five Best Albums of 2021

This entry comes a little late into the new year. I tried to tally up a bit year-in-review like I did for 2020, but I couldn’t. I’m not sure what it was, but I didn’t listen to nearly as much music in 2021 as I did in 2020. If I had to guess, it probably has something to do with the fact that I wasn’t sitting at home for the entire year. During lockdown, there wasn’t much to do but listen to new releases. Now that life has moved closer to normal (although we are by no means out of the woods) my time was filled with other things. Visiting with friends, heading out of a bar, and, egads, actually going into work monopolized more of my time this year.

So I don’t have 20 albums that I recommend from this past year. Sorry. I published more individual reviews this year as music was released, so look back at my recent few posts to see a few albums that certainly would have ended up on such a list. I do, however, have my best 5 albums of 2021, listed by order of release. I’ve included a playlist at a bottom that contains a couple choice selections from each. Even though I didn’t sample as much, I stand by these picks as much as anything. If you missed them, do yourself a favor and check them out. Or, use this as a reminder to revisit them, as I surely will be doing in between whatever 2022 throws our way.

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“Henki” Presents an Oddball Fantasy from Richard Dawson & Circle

It’s very uncommon nowadays to find a music release that is genuinely different from anything that has come before. Or at least, find music that is different enough from what’s around that it feels fresh. Henki, by a collaboration between English folk singer Richard Dawson and Finnish rock band Circle, is just such a release.

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Mastodon Consolidate Their Powers on the Expansive “Hushed and Grim”

No one doubts that Atlanta’s Mastodon is one of the best and biggest metal bands on the current scene. They have consistently put out engaging and complex music for their entire career, music that manages to be at once brutal, melodic, and thematically cohesive. However their past few studio releases have slowly shifted away from the bludgeoning aggression that made their initial run so gripping, towards a more mainstream sound that can fit (maybe, slightly) on the radio. Don’t get me wrong – it’s not bad stuff. Like I said, Mastodon is one of the best metal bands going, and their recent stuff is no exception. It just hasn’t been as heavy as the first half of their career.

Last year, the band released the compilation Medium Rarities, which rounded up unreleased tracks and stray live cuts from throughout their career. The included material is much more of a piece with their early stuff than the polished constructions of late. In a word, it’s raw. This made me wonder if the band was turning back to their roots, getting in touch with the aggression that made them belles of the headbanger’s ball. 

This brings us to Hushed and Grim, their newest LP – a double album, no less. Inspired by the death of their longtime manager from cancer, it is a rumination on death and remembrance. Mastodon is no stranger to concept albums; in fact, almost every record they’ve ever put out has a unifying theme. They’ve never done one that’s so long, however, but all in all the double album format gives them time to stretch out, incorporate almost every facet of themselves, and put together a fantastic return to form.

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Courtney Barnett Winds Her Way to Acceptance On “Things Take Time, Take Time”

Since her stellar 2015 debut, Aussie indie rocker Courtney Barnett has staked out her territory in a very specific sound. Her lyrics are rambling observations about the minutiae of everyday life and her delivery is conversational; yet the songs are greater than the sum of their parts. Over alternatingly ragged and lackadaisical guitar, she perfectly encapsulates the feeling of aimlessness and self-doubt, zooming in on the very real emotions that can be found within the minutiae. Her first album, Sometimes I Sit and Think, and Sometimes I Just Sit caught fire in the indie rock world. Its lead singles “Pedestrian at Best” and “Elevator Operator” are the best encapsulations of what makes her approach so fresh. There really isn’t any posing or pretensions – it’s just her, and she’s welcome.

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On “I Don’t Live Here Anymore,” The War On Drugs Get Comfortable

The best War On Drugs records blur together. The songs, while quality on their own, form a tapestry of sound that couches Adam Granduciel’s vocals in pillowy keyboard, grooving drums, and building guitar that stretch out to emotional transcendence. The Philadelphia five-piece’s last two albums, 2014’s Lost in the Dream and 2017’s A Deeper Understanding, got a lot of positive press in rock circles, and rightly so. They were deep explorations that perfectly encapsulated their respective titles. A Deeper Understanding, especially, was one of the best records of its year.

The War On Drugs’ latest release, 2021’s I Don’t Live Here Anymore, is quite a different beast. Gone are the lengthy guitar and saxophone explorations, as the band turns its energy toward producing a tight set of self-contained songs. They sound confident and comfortable, but perhaps could have used a bit more fire. The War On Drugs have always borrowed from the sounds of Eighties album rock, but here they really lean into it. Most noticeably, they use a drum machine half the time. I’m not sure what drummer Charlie Hall feels about this, but let’s just say it makes much of the music sound tepid. The synths, processed guitar, and thin percussion make it seems like they are going for a Phil Collins vibe. 

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Boil, Boil, Toil and Trouble: A Very Witchy Halloween Playlist

You what time it is! It’s that spookiest of seasons: Halloween. As people get their costume ready and deck their halls with cobwebs, it’s time we get in the mood with some eerie music. As a theme for this Halloween, I’ve chosen to represent one of the most classic mythologies of horror: witches.

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Trying to Guess What Kind of Music Better Than Ezra Makes Based Solely On Their Instagram

In the wake of comedian Norm Macdonald’s unfortunate passing, I saw a clip of him closing a Nineties-era Saturday Night Live Weekend Update with the joke “And this week on the college charts, at number 1 we have Better Than Ezra, and at number 2 we have…Ezra.”

It’s a funny joke, because, as we all know, Better Than Ezra is a band that existed in the 1990s. Right? And that name screams to be lampooned. Because it surely means something…but what? Who is this poor sap Ezra who the band decided to permanently degrade? Thinking about this trivial mystery made me realize that, outside of being vaguely aware of their existence, I’ve never heard one Better Than Ezra song. I do not even know what kind of music they make. I guess some form of alt-rock? Because that’s broadly what all 90s bands played? I guess?

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Covers: All Along the Watchtower

For the next edition of my Covers series, I’m looking at one of the most legendary songs ever: “All Along the Watchtower.” Originally written and recorded by Bob Dylan, it was soon made definitive by Jimi Hendrix, who turned the lyrical drama up to 11 and unleashed one of his most iconic solos. It’s a rare instance in which the cover is almost universally acknowledge as better than the original. Perhaps that’s why it hasn’t been covered in the studio by as wide a range of artists as our previous entry “Dancin’ in the Streets.” Jimi already nailed it, so what’s the use of even trying?

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