Judging By The Cover: ‘Wonderful Christmastime’

I have mixed feelings about Christmas songs. I don’t celebrate the holiday, so I don’t have any sentimental or spiritual reasons for listening to these songs. And it’s easy to get inundated with holiday music playing at every place you turn from basically October until New Years. But despite all that, I do tend to enjoy the music for music’s sake, when it’s not too overplayed. I’m sure I’m not alone on that. Typically my favorite Christmas songs tend to be those that invoke a bit of melancholy, introspection, or even subversion, rather than being sugary sweet. Newer songs like Low’s “Just Like Christmas” or Sam Phillips’ “It Doesn’t Feel Like Christmas” or many of Sufjan Stevens’ new songs on his two massive box sets have been excellent additions that find that right tone.

But I’ll admit, sometimes I just want to hear a big burst of joy.

One of my favorite songs from this time of year is Paul McCartney’s 1979 hit “Wonderful Christmastime,” known for that distinctive synth riff from a Sequential Circuits Prophet-5. McCartney did a pretty delightful version to end Saturday Night Live this past weekend, and it got me thinking about how much I like this song.

“Wonderful Christmastime” is a song that I think many view as treacly and overly sentimental McCartney pop, the way a lot of his post-Beatles music is viewed. Sure, it has got no teeth. This ain’t “Helter Skelter” — let alone “Jet.” But to me, this song, and especially the chorus “Simply having a wonderful Christmastime” is impossibly catchy and actually fun. And as part of a mix of newer holiday fare, it’s a nice addition to the canon.

Still, “Wonderful Christmastime” has been pretty popular, inspiring its fair share of reinterpretations — from Barenaked Ladies and Hilary Duff to Jars Of Clay. None of them have been particularly good. But just this year, I’ve heard two new covers of this song and both are fairly solid offerings.

The first, by The Shins, on a new Starbucks-produced compilation album called Holidays Rule*, is a more-or-less straight-up indie pop recreation. It’s a perfectly fine and serviceable rendition, but doesn’t quite add enough of James Mercer’s flavor. But it also certainly doesn’t detract at all from McCartney’s original. Sometimes a new artist playing a song as you want to hear it is enough.

*As far as new Christmas comps go, Holidays Rule has some decent selections played by many artists I really love: Rufus Wainwright and Sharon Van Etten, The Civil Wars, Eleanor Friedberger, Y La Bamba, Andrew Bird, and even McCartney himself. It’s definitely worth checking out.

The other cover of “Wonderful Christmastime” that I’ve heard is by a brand new baby band Ex Cops. The Brooklyn band’s upcoming 2013 debut True Hallucinations is already a favorite new discovery of mine, so it’s cool to hear them play those synthy chords and then give the chorus an energetic boost of crunchy guitar distortion and throttling drumming.

My Year In Music, 2012

Exitmusic's 'Passage' is one of the most dramatic and emotionally lovely records of 2012. (Courtesy of the artist)
Exitmusic’s ‘Passage’ is one of the most dramatic and emotionally lovely records of 2012. (Courtesy of the artist)

Here’s a roundup of my favorite musical moments and a couple disappointments from 2012, originally written for WNYC’s Soundcheck.

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Comics Review: Marvel Now Point One

MARVEL NOW POINT ONE #1

by: Nick Spencer, Luke Ross / Brian Michael Bendis, Steve McNiven / Jeph Loeb, Ed McGuinness / Kieron Gillen, Jamie McKelvie / Matt Fraction, Mike Allred / Dennis Hopeless, Gabriel Hernandez Walta

As far as introduction teaser anthologies go, Marvel Now Point One succeeds at building excitement for Marvel’s latest initiative. It’s clear that moving around writers (namely Bendis, Fraction, Ed Brubaker, Jonathan Hickman) and artists to new projects and different characters after many years on a book has reinvigorated the stories. While the old guard’s runs were hugely successful and built the foundation for nearly a decade worth of stories, it’s nice to see new blood on properties and writers jazzed to begin their own epic runs.

Point One succeeds by not just proving the first few pages of a new book, but creating short stories that tease the tone and feel of what’s on tap with books like Guardians Of The Galaxy, Nova, FF, Young Avengers, Cable And X-Force, and Secret Avengers.

Among those that look the most enticing would be the new FF series and Young Avengers, both of which bring a mod pop art look and superb design sense to the characters, the panel layout and colors that catch the eye. The tone of both series seems to be a ton of fun, and not your typical superhero book. These look to be modernist, deconstructionalist, but ultimately family-friendly takes that take advantage of the tropes of superhero comics but also feel like indie books with a lot of quirks and distinctive feel.

The others — Cable and X-Force, Guardians, Nova, and Secret Avengers — show promise as well. There seems to be a push towards diversity, even within the superhero format, proving that many of these books coming down the line in this new initiative will be worth trying out, sampling the kinds of books you’re looking for. There’s a lot to be excited about and there’s certainly something in this batch for you.

Sufjan Stevens Returns To His Majestic Winter Wonderland With ‘Silver & Gold’

It’s not even Thanksgiving yet, and I’ve already listened to 100 Christmas songs — all by Sufjan Stevens. To some this may sound great. To far more, this may sound tortuous. And to think, for a time there, I wasn’t totally sure we’d get more songs from Sufjan Stevens.

Back when Stevens released his Illinois album in 2005, I, like many, geekily hoped he would make good on his plan to do a record for each of the 50 states. It was fun to imagine what state might be next to get the Sufjan treatment (“Maybe it’ll be Kansas next!,” I may have actually thought). But deep down, I think we all scratched our heads over how such an ambitious project would even be logistically possible.

It wasn’t. Stevens more or less dropped out of the scene after that, worked on his cinematic symphonic work, The BQE, and pondered out loud that he wasn’t so sure he wanted to write “songs” anymore. Stevens eventually did resurface obviously with 2010’s EP, All Delighted People and its immediate follow-up, the radical and majestic masterpiece Age Of Adz, but not before quashing any remaining hope of another states album, admitting that the whole idea was just a “promotional gimmick.”

So while the Fifty States Project never actually materialized, Stevens was indeed busy in those five years. It turns out, he’d been quietly plugging away at writing and recording more Christmas songs. A lot of them.

As you might recall, Stevens first released 2006’s Songs For Christmas, a sprawling 42-song, 5-disc set of Christmas-themed EPs, initially created for his family and friends each year from 2001-2005. Mixing gorgeous original works with re-arranged Christian traditionals — like his stunning banjo and piano rendition of “Come Thou Fount Of Every Blessing” — that idiosyncratic and fun treasure trove rejuvenated a somewhat tired Christmas canon with vibrancy, spiritual reverence, and conflicted feelings about the over-commercialization of the holiday.

Now, six years later, Sufjan Stevens has unloaded Silver & Gold, a whopping 58-song follow-up recorded between 2006 to 2010. For those that purchased this new box set, the collection contains a huge 80-page booklet, stickers and temporary tattoos, and one of those fold-it-yourself paper ornaments. Oh yeah, and five discs of original songs and faithful and odd interpretations of traditional holiday fare that rolls through a variety of styles: choral pieces, ramshackle jingles, instrumental interludes, weirdo genre exercises and under-developed sketches.

Each disc is more or less split up thematically, and each has its own distinct personality. The first and fourth EPs, Gloria and Let It Snow, feel the most traditional, with the biggest concentration of straight ahead buoyant takes on familiar jingles and carols. But each successive entry — I Am Santa’s Helper, Christmas Infinity Voyage, and Christmas Unicorn — begins to experiment in form and texture, while also looking inward, grappling with what’s important about Christmas.

Perhaps the most interesting and bizarre set is the third EP, Christmas Infinity Voyage, which incorporates the newfound glitched-out 8-bit synths and Auto-tuned vocals Stevens has developed recently. On Christmas standards we’ve heard for years, like “I’ll Be Home For Christmas” or “Joy To The World,” it remarkably works, as bits of noise, static and otherworldly computerized cacophony begin to creep into the corners, only to climax with a reprise the jubilent chorus of “Impossible Soul” from Adz.

And some of the best entries are those that throw away the basic structure, sliding into expansive electronic jams, such as the 15-minute epic “The Child With The Star On His Head” or “Christmas Unicorn,” which peaks with a repeated chant of Joy Divisions “Love Will Tear Us Apart.”

In all Silver & Gold is yet another really excellent addition to Stevens’ ever-ballooning Christmas catalog, even if it might not be the most satisfying listen if you set out to play each EP straight through. I Am Santa’s Helper, in particular, has the most inconsistent or undeveloped ideas. Ultimately that’s also the nature of such a project: Even if it doesn’t all succeed, I’m glad someone like Stevens is out there trying and experimenting. Still, buried within these five volumes are plenty of pieces — both playfully heartwarming and dark– that will easily sit alongside your favorite Christmas songs, if not your favorite Sufjan songs.

For an unpredictable artist always searching for something grand, and aspiring to high concept ideas, Sufjan Stevens’ imaginative musical world is, at his best, powerful, moving, and always worth visiting. Here’s hoping there’s more songs to come.

—–

With so much to hear and wrap your mind around, it’s easy to miss out on some of the gems of Silver & Gold. Hear six more of my favorite highlights from the album.

1) “Baracola (You Must Be A Christmas Tree)” (Disc one, track 7)

A melancholy ballad that builds to a cathartic chorus of voices as emotionally satisfying and lovely as anything on this collection.

2) “Mr. Frosty Man” (Disc two, track 13)

A fun, rough and tumble garage-rock banger, all blown speaker fuzz and feedback, it’s as if the Seeds or Velvet Underground decided to sing about about a super-cool bossy snowman.

3) “Angels We Have Heard On High” (Disc three, track 1)

A traditional call-and-response Christmas carol, reworked with new lyrics from Stevens that reference flying saucers and feeling lost amidst the commotion of the holiday, all while tiny bursts of feedback swell underneath the autoharp, banjo and angelic voices.

4) “Do You Hear What I Hear?” (Disc three, track 2)

One of the most inventive re-envisioned songs, this 9-minute, multi-part piece brings in the serrated computer beats, Casio-synth sounds and vocoder, allowing it to easily reside in the middle of Steven’s Age Of Adz universe.

5) “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow” (Disc four, track 7)

A holiday favorite of mine, given a complete re-harmonization, turning this joyful winter tune into a haunting and enrapturing minor-key lament.

6) “Justice Delivers Its Death” (Disc five, track 8)

With the lines “Silver and gold, everyone wishes for it / How do you measure its worth, just by the pleasure it gives here on Earth?” Sufjan’s ponders his place in a world that values wealth and youth in one of the most beautiful songs he’s written in years.

Compare And Contrast: ‘Game Of Pricks’

It’s difficult to truly calculate how many songs have been recorded by indie veterans Guided By Voices and its frontman Robert Pollard. Certainly hundreds. Maybe thousands? But it’s safe to say that with such a giant output over the years, it’s hard for fans to know where to start, what records to listen to, or which songs to focus in on with way-too-prolific band. Sometimes it just takes a single song as an entry point. This is the case for me and GBV.

Like many, one of my favorites that’s stuck with me over the years from Guided By Voices is “Game Of Pricks” from the band’s album Alien Lanes.

The main draw for me is the way this feels completely realized with excellent hooks, despite being under two minutes. Much of Pollard’s work is concise, but his last five to ten records have more “unfinished” sketches in need of a second verse than lean pop bangers like “Game Of Pricks.”

But another reason why “Game Of Pricks” has become one of my favorite songs is two cover versions recorded in the last few years. Both do an excellent job of keeping it straightforward and simple in their approach, but still maintain the lax, grunged-out feel and relatable point of view. Sometimes a cover song need not completely reinvent, strip down or rethink, but just be a kick ass interpretation that makes you remember how great the song is. These two covers do that and then some.

Here’s Telekinesis’ version, from the EP, Parallel Seismic Conspiracies:

and here’s a decent live version from Telekinesis:

And then there’s this cover version from fellow longtime indie rocker, Lou Barlow (best known for his work with Sebadoh and Dinosaur Jr.), from a GBV compilation, Sing For Your Meat: A Tribute To Guided By Voices.

Also be sure to check out a cool performance of the song by violinist extraordinaire Owen Pallett, as part of The A.V. Club’s Undercover series.

Telekinesis, With A Little Help From His Friends At CMJ 2012

Telekinesis performs at Merge Records’ showcase at Mercury Lounge during the CMJ Music Marathon in New York, NY on Oct. 18, 2012.
Telekinesis performs at Merge Records’ showcase at Mercury Lounge during the CMJ Music Marathon in New York, NY on Oct. 18, 2012. (© Michael Katzif – Do not use or republish without prior consent.)

“I’d like to thank Merge for getting me off my couch.” — Michael Benjamin Lerner, Telekinesis

At one point or another, we’ve all read about an extraordinary concert in some book, or in Rolling Stone, on Pitchfork, or just on social media and thought “Damn, I wish I was there.” It doesn’t make much sense fretting about missing out if Band X played its entire album front-to-back or Band Y played a surprise show at two in the morning. That’s life, right? Can’t be there for everything. But it is music geek human nature to feel the slightest twinge of regret.

Still, every once in awhile, if you go to enough shows, you luck into seeing something special that will make others seethe in nerd jealousy. For me, last night’s Telekinesis set — at Merge Record’s CMJ showcase at New York’s Mercury Lounge — was one of those times.

Continue reading Telekinesis, With A Little Help From His Friends At CMJ 2012

The Luyas’ ‘Animator’: Seductive Orchestral Pop

The Luyas' album, Animator, is out now.
The Luyas’ album, Animator, is out now.

In a year brimming with stellar records featuring a female singer awash in dreamy atmosphere and epic soundscapes (Exitmusic, Cat Power, Beach House, Purity Ring, and numerous others) The Luyas may get somewhat lost in the mix. While the band may share some musical DNA with those artists — the breathy vocals; the analog synths and slowly decaying echoes that envelop the songs — the Montreal quartet is proving just as inventive, crafting some of this year’s most alluring, sad music.

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Django Django: Buoyant Pop And Psychedelic Rock Riffs Fill The Bowery Ballroom

As Django Django bopped around the stage (in matching striped t-shirts, no less) at New York’s Bowery Ballroom, the band’s appeal is easy to see. If nothing else, the Edinburgh-via-London group’s mesmerizing psychedelic music is fun, pulling together twanged-up British Invasion rock riffs, buoyant synth pop, and Kraftwerk-ian drones, all while remaining crisply modern.

It’s a sound that brings to mind elements of Spiritualized, a bit of Hot Chip, and most evidently, the dearly-missed Beta Band. That last one begins to make sense: Turns out Django Django’s drummer and producer David Maclean is the brother of Beta Band’s John Maclean. Through steady word-of-mouth and an adventurous, catchy self-titled record, Django Django — which has been nominated for this year’s Mercury Prize — the group has found critical acclaim and rising popularity for its youthful originality.

On stage, singer and guitarist Vincent Neff proves to be a wildly enigmatic and animated presence, especially when singing closely-paired harmonies and chants. While Django Django’s nearly-hour-long set toned down some its album’s inventive production tricks on songs like “Default” or “Life Is A Beach,” the band still showed a knack for its raw live showmanship by juking up song tempos to an ecstatic gallop on these dance-ready songs.

Still, Django Django found places to stretch the song arrangements thanks to tribal drum breakdowns where each member — Neff, drummer and producer David Maclean, bassist Jimmy Dixon and keyboardist Tommy Grace — set aside their guitars and synths to bang on comically oversized tambourines, clopping on coconut halves and wood blocks, and even a perfectly-timed rattle from a vibraslap.

Elsewhere in the set, Django Django huddled over an impressive array of vintage keyboards and synths — all creating warmly textured flutters of noise and simple repeated melodies.

And just as these musical diversions began to veer dangerously into drum circle territory, the band knew exactly when to joyfully fold it all back together for a final chorus. Django Django may still be a young band, but its members are acutely aware what they want to be, and just polished enough to pull it off. With a live show this fun, Django Django is certainly a group to keep an eye on as its career develops.

Breaking Bad’s Superb Use Of Editing And Music In Montage

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PH-CWq6jVeo

Has there ever been a more perfectly used piece of music on a TV show montage? Maybe, but I’m struggling to think of one.

Sunday’s mid-season finale of Breaking Bad had a gorgeous montage, even for a show known for its gorgeous montages. This scene, which (mild spoilers ahead) serves as a culmination of the kind of success Bryan Cranston’s Walter White has been aspiring to ever since he decided to go into the meth business. The montage is always a bit of a cheat when it comes to displaying the passage of time in movies and television, but Breaking Bad effectively uses it here to push us forward into a new chapter. It would be one thing if they montaged over major drama, but this is peacetime and seemingly very little happens outside of the clockwork precision of cooking and selling meth.

This is about as happy an ending as this show is gonna get — showing the man making a boatload of money in an impossibly synchronized dance of cooking, handing off bags of money and embezzling it. You can see Walt’s increasing exasperation on his face, as he seemingly has made his business into a never-ending treadmill just to keep up with the unquenched demand for his product. This is his job now, a routine as wearying as his old chemistry teacher or car washer jobs.

I also love the coordinated fades and bleeds between shots in this, showing how everything, even people fit together. Truly a masterclass in editing.

This is not the final scene of the episode, there’s a few more scenes that set up Walt’s downfall, which will come next year. But still this series of shots is expertly edited, with the perfect song to back it up: Tommy James and the Shondells’ “Crystal Blue Persuasion.”

Surely Vince Gilligan and the show’s producers have had this song in their back pocket for some time — I mean obviously Walt’s signature 99% pure product is bright blue. It must have been tempting to use the song earlier in the show’s run.

But you have to think that they had this scene (or one like it) in mind that they were saving it for. That takes a lot of restraint. Breaking Bad has always incorporated excellent needle-drop song picks, as well a great score from composer Dave Porter. But I’ve gotta say, it might not get any better than this iconic scene from one of the best shows on television.

Old Things That Are New To Me: ‘Save It For Later’

I recently watched the oddly nostalgic gross-out comedy Hot Tub Time Machine. The film stars John Cusack (and Clark Duke, Rob Corddry, Craig Robinson, Lizzie Caplan, Chevy Chase) as he and his old pals travel back in time to the late 1980s via a ski resort hot tub. Yup. There they are their same old selves, trapped in their ’80s bodies, reliving a trip they took when life was still full of promise and not made terrible life choices. Antics ensue, as expected.

Also as you might expect, the film employs an array of classic and cliched period hits of the 1980s: the hair, the legwarmers, the jackets, the big hair. But also the music. A lot of it was expected, but buried beneath some of that was this song:

The song is “Save It For Later,” by a band called The Beat, or here in the U.S. were better known as The English Beat. I had never heard of them, nor heard this song. But I sorta fell in love with that very typically British sound: the brightly strummed guitars, the XTC-esque singing, the great chorus. So yeah, who knew that a weird buddy comedy would be a place to discover an ’80s band I probably should’ve known about. Go figure.