Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Bott Jams Volume 2


**NOTE** My book of the week will now be on a podcast starting this week. I'll throw the link on this blog by Friday.

I've been given some feedback on my music selections from last week's posts. Most of it was shock that I, a librarian, would ever entertain the thought of listening to "that type of music." I laugh most of the time I hear that because, in my opinion, growing up in the early to mid 90's during the height of metalcore and indie rock was the best time for music...Forget the Beatles, I had Botch. You can have Pink Floyd, I had Pavement. It wasn't the most popular music, but if you had a good group of people who knew had access to a decent record shop, you struck gold.

My parents never listened to music around the house. My dad played some Frank Zappa on occasion, but other than that I was on my own. My cousins were older and in high school already by the time I hit 12 years old and were hanging out with guys in bands that were playing a mix of metal (think old thrash metal) and punk rock. They used to practice on the other side of town and I hung out with them once or twice and got to browse through their catalogs of old records and tapes (yes tapes). Before I knew it, I was hooked. One thing I need to clarify, just because people play loud, screamy music doesn't mean they're evil.

From metalcore I graduated to some indie rock bands that played catchy and above all interesting music. Music that I couldn't find on the radio (aside from say, Nirvana). So that's a really brief summary of why I dig the music I do. Work for your music. Go on the Internet and search for good bands. Go to shows (more on that next week). I found good bands in 1993 and there was no Internet.

Now for the music:

Instrumental Music:
Explosions In The Sky- My favorite instrumental band. Beautiful music that at times can be crushing and they always illicit emotion. Probably the loudest live show I've ever been to.
Godspeed You Black Emperor - Weird and always dark, Godspeed makes for a really interesting show and each one of their albums ebbs and flows through a range of dissonance and melody.
Russian Circles - Chicago based band that is heavier than the previous two I mentioned with a much more drive background of rock influenced instrumentals.
Pelican - Heavy, downtuned, and sometimes confusing. Their first EP was disgustingly heavy and blew out a speaker in my old car. Since then, they've been a little more structured in the music and that works to both their advantage and disadvantage at times.
Mogwai - By far the eclectic band on this list. They do have some vocals in certain songs but for the most part they are instrumental; heavy when they want to be and melodic most of the time.

Explosions in the Sky


Noise Rock/Just Noise
Lightning Bolt: I love this band. I saw them once in Manhattan and before the opening act played their last song, LB (who were set up in the middle of the floor amidst the crowd) just started playing...LOUD. Looking up their song Dracula Mountain on YouTube.
The Melt Banana - I honestly don't know what to make of this band. It sounds a little like throwing instruments down a flight of stairs. Some noise, some grindcore, some synth, lots of confusion.
Daughters - They're from Canada. They're done now, but their first album featured all screaming. Their next two, none. So I don't know if they're metal or noise, but they are strange fo sho. Hit up The Locust while you're at it

Lightning Bolt


Rap/Hip Hop
Aesop Rock - NOT ASAP ROCKY - Aesop Rock is a dude who can throw rhymes like crazy and raps stories with feverish fluidity.
Blackalicious - I know, hilarious name. But seriously, they rap the alphabet...How can you beat that? Two dudes who throw rhymes in multisyllabic format. It's a win.

Aesop Rock

For the Indie Crowd:
The Shins: Wonderful musicians with a knack for hooks that will have you singing along ALL THE TIME.
Pavement: First heard this band in the 90's. A little quirky, grooving guitars, and influenced bands from Weezer to Bright Eyes.
Bright Eyes: Speaking of which, Conor Oberst writes a lot of music. That's one of the things that irks me about Bright Eyes; the shear volume of songs he puts out. I can't keep up, but their catalog is wonderfully eclectic. Sometimes quiet, sometimes loud, always interesting.
Balance and Composure: So they're not really "indie" - in fact, I might classify them as a little grunge- but I love this band. It's easily the most interesting, fluid rock band I've heard in years.
The Appleseed Cast: Solid band, sometimes instrumental and always influential. They are a bit harder than Explosions in the Sky and when you throw in the haunting vocals it makes for a phenomenal and since unmatched combination.

The Shins

HONORABLE MENTION:
3 bands here: The Deadly (Philadelphia), Burning Love, The Bronx. All 3 of these guys are punk rock machines. Their stuff will make you tap your feet and want to see them live. The Deadly is since defunked, but their album "The Wolves Are Here Again" is from Pluto Records and you can buy it for like 2$.





Disclaimer: These recommendations are personal views and not associated with any entity other than Mr. Bott himself.


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