Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The Antlers-Burst Apart


Grooving Poignancy

Burst Apart is the second full-length album for The Antlers. Hospice, their first album was a critically acclaimed masterpiece that put them on the map. Hospice is a concept album about a person in a relationship with someone in the terminally ill ward of the hospital, and it is as heart wrenching as it sounds. Sylvia and the Epilogue greatly illustrate the pain and beauty of the album. Unlike Hospice, Burst Apart is not a concept album. But in an interview, lead singer Peter Silberman said "I tend to think of the songs on Burst Apart as being a picture of a period of time in my life, less like one story and more like a change in a way of thinking over time. It begins in a pretty negative, anxious place, at arm's length — and as it progresses, it becomes warmer and more trusting." It is easy to see this change through the album. The first song is called I Don’t Want Love, and the last is called Putting the Dog to Sleep. The last four lines of Putting the Dog to Sleep are, “Put your trust in me, I’m not going to die alone, I don’t think so.” In a music industry where the single rules all, it is fun and enjoyable to listen to a cohesive album, instead of a collection of singles. Peter Silberman’s voice is completely breathtaking and possessing. In songs like Rolled Together, his voice soars over the minimalist instruments, and is similar to Thom Yorke or Jonsi. This is a wonderful follow-up album to one of the best albums of the decade, and shows that The Antlers will be making astonishingly beautiful and visceral music for many years.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Sims-Bad Time Zoo

Bad Time Zoo is the newest album from Minnesota rapper, Sims. Sims is in the Hip-hop collective, Doomtree. This is where I first heard of Sims. Bad Time Zoo is Sims second full-length album. Lights Out Paris was his first, and Osmosis and Key Grip are two standouts from that album. Like all Doomtree artists, Sims is a staggering lyricist. In this album he speaks about commercialism, politics, and technology. Topics that are a little more thought provoking then your common money, sex, and bragging rappers that dominate the Top 40 charts. In One Dimensional Man, he criticizes the liberal, green frenzy.  “You did your part, you gave your hundred bucks to NPR, you joined the co-op now, bought the hybrid car, switched to peace coffee, went to three rallies, then wiped your hands with sanitized solution, good deeds tallied”. This album is chock-full of lyrics like this. Lazerbeak, one of two producers in Doomtree, is the producer on this album. His beats are unusual and some of the most progressive around. The lyrics and delivery by themselves are exceptional, but added with Lazerbeak’s beats; this album is miles above others of the Rap genre. Sims is a criminally unknown artist and deserves a lot more recognition, and he will hopefully continue to make many more records like this. He is currently on tour promoting his album with fellow Doomtree rapper Dessa.