OceanAngel
Back?
- Jan 23, 2004
- 19,153
- 467
- 51
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Single
- Politics
- US-Libertarian
Nightwish Once(UK Special Edition)
Lacuna Coil In a Reverie
Lacuna Coil In a Reverie
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
See, here's my thing.philN said:Really? I think Madvillainy is great. I only bought three rap albums last year (Madvillain, Kanye West, Dizzee Rascal), and I thought all three were pretty good. I can see how some of the songs could be considered a little repetitive, but I would hardly call the whole album anti-climatic.
philN said:Califone - Heron King Blues
Devendra Banhart - Cripple Crow
musicPhan#41 said:Lonesome Crowded West - Modest Mouse

I really like them both. I can't even really describe Califone's style of music. It's like part singer/songwriter stuff, part jazz, part tribal music, and part experimental. It all comes together really nicely though. The songs have a really nice feel to them. Cripple Crow is fantastic too. I like it at least as much as Rejoicing In the Hands and Nino Rojo, possibly more. It feels like there is some more instrumentation on it than his past stuff -- no drastic changes, just little flourishes here and there. I was going to wait until next month when it is actually released to get it, but the temptation was too strong.How are these?
Haha. They are both usually clumped together because they are both part of the "free-folk" sub-genre that's been gaining some popularity in indie music. They both also have pretty distinct voices -- as in there really aren't too many other people out there that sound like either of them. I think that's why they get alot of comparisons to one another.I'm only on track 2, but Devendra Banhart is great. Because of the comparisons to Joanna Newsom, I assumed that Banhart was a chick. I amaze myself.![]()
I can sort of see what you are saying, and while I agree there are parts that end a little abruptly and other things that I suppose could be interpretted as being underdeveloped, none of that is really distracting enough for me to not enjoy the album as a whole.See, here's my thing.
I was listening to the album and I realized that every song feels like a clip of a full song... kind of like what you get when you sample a cd at Barnes and Noble. They throw you right into the track, rap over the same thing for several minutes, then abruptly end the track. It's very formulaic. And then throw in those skits... which, albiet, are better than on most rap albums, still are nothing more than filler.
I don't know. I love how the album feels, production wise. And the rapping voices are satisfying. But it just feels very underdeveloped.
philN said:I really like them both. I can't even really describe Califone's style of music. It's like part singer/songwriter stuff, part jazz, part tribal music, and part experimental. It all comes together really nicely though. The songs have a really nice feel to them.
I've never heard about that, but it's definitely possible. Califone has been around for awhile and has a pretty loyal fanbase; I'm new to the bandwagon.This is all from memory, so I could be way off base, but I think I read that Isaac Brock was real into Califone a few years back, and tried jamming with the band, but it didn't work out because he couldn't keep up with them instrumentally.
musicPhan#41 said:yesterday i stopped by a sweet cd store on my way to the j. johnson concert, and i picked up:
Alanis Morissette - Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie
Bush - Sixteen Stone
each for $2.99
it was SOOOOOOOOOOO good. and the openers were good too (Matt Costa and ALO)Dying2Live4Christ said:How was the J. Johnson performance? Any good?