TRANSVERSO

- A culture magazine reaching terminal verbosity -

Thanks, Obama! POTUS Releases Two Summer Playlists

Music List, Music NewsTransverso MediaComment

The White House released two Spotify playlists today, both "hand-picked" by POTUS himself. One is made for the daytime, featuring artists such as Bob Dylan, Coldplay, and Florence + The Machine, while the other is for the night, with music from Van Morrison, Ray Charles, Leonard Cohen, and more.

This comes after current presidential candidate Hillary Clinton recently released her own playlist, though her airtight, overly-uplifting pop picks came off more as a campaign exercise while Obama's selections feel a bit more genuine, especially with so much classic soul and surprise picks like the lesser-known Okkervil River. If you're gonna feed us a PR stunt at least make it sound good enough to make us forget that part.

The President's playlists clock in at just over an hour and a half each, and you can Ba-rock out to both of them below. (We're so sorry.)

Now we eagerly await Donald Trump's inevitable contribution.

 

Santah Announce New Album 'Chico'

Music NewsWeston PaganoComment

Chicago-based indie outfit Santah have confirmed their second full-length record Chico, in which they "try to live inside two worlds at once," will be released November 6th.

You can preorder the album and various merch through their Pledge Music page here, and check out the post-break up heavy music video for "Sunkeeper," the first single from Chico, below.

Majical Cloudz Announce New Album 'Are You Alone?', Release Single "Silver Car Crash"

Music News, New MusicWeston PaganoComment

Thankfully it appears that the first minimalist, white-colored album containing hauntingly emotive music from Majical Cloudz was not a one-off deal, with the Montreal-based duo of Devon Welsh and Matthew Otto announcing they have done it again.

This time it is called Are You Alone?, and you can hear the beautiful first single from this sophomore LP, "Silver Car Crash," below. Continuing the dreary yet intensely driven synthesizers and immaculately heavy vocals of 2013's Impersonator, the track is quintessentially Majical Cloudz.

In a Tumblr post today, Welsh revealed an Andy Warhol painting to be the song's main inspiration, saying,

Our song “Silver Car Crash” is named after this painting by Andy Warhol, called “Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster)“. He made it in 1963 as part of a group of paintings that are known as the “Death and Disaster series”.
His paintings can sometimes be very spiritual and preoccupied with an other world, even though their surface makes them seem more innocent. (When I look at these paintings I always imagine that Andy Warhol is asking, “What happens after death?”)
I really like that kind of double meaning, and the way the paintings combine two different preoccupations that are, in life, always mixing together.
I think the song “Silver Car Crash” also has a kind of double meaning and combines emotions which are usually combined in some form anyway.
It was inspired by life but also by Andy Warhol!
Andy Warhol's painting "Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster)"

Andy Warhol's painting "Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster)"

An official statement on the forthcoming LP further explains,

Building off a solidly-laid visual and sonic foundation, the narrative remains – simple yet emotionally forthcoming lyrics showcasing raw vulnerability, backed by sparse instrumentation and minimalist production. [Main songwriter Devon] Welsh delivers melancholic but melody driven vocals echoing off elemental tones, praising love and friendship, commiserating over heartbreak and sadness.

Are You Alone?

  1. Disappeared
  2. Control
  3. Are You Alone?
  4. So Blue
  5. Heavy
  6. Silver Car Crash
  7. Change
  8. If You're Lonely
  9. Downtown
  10. Easier Said Than Done
  11. Game Show
  12. Call On Me

Are You Alone? is due out October 16 via Matador.

Watch Youth Lagoon Play With a Gold-Masked Man in New "Highway Patrol Stun Gun" Video

New MusicWeston PaganoComment

Youth Lagoon has previously released "The Knower" from forthcoming record Savage Hills Ballroom, and now the second single "Highway Patrol Stun Gun" is here with a new music video directed by Parisian filmmaker Kendy Ty.

The video shows Trevor Powers and a gold-masked accomplice with whom he is seen bowling, going out to eat, and generally gallivanting around New York City, while the track itself layers Powers' mousey vocals and melodic keys over dark, driving synth pulses.

Powers explained the concept via Fader, saying,

[It’s] this idea of having this extension of yourself. We go down these life paths and we feel like we’re always alone, but we have those different aspects of our personality that are essentially grounding us; we’re not quite alone, because we have our spirit. It was that idea, combined with the idea of losing someone and having them still be alive throughout your day to day—because I think that’s a very real thing. Anyone who’s experienced any sort of loss, you know you go out on a windy day you feel the wind on your skin and you feel like they’re still there.

Watch the video below.

Savage Hills Ballroom is out September 25th via Fat Possum. Check out Youth Lagoon's tour dates here.

Watch Gardens & Villa's Bizarre "Fixations" Music Video

Music News, New MusicWeston PaganoComment

Gardens & Villa are back already, following 2014's spectacular record Dunes with two new singles for the forthcoming album Music For Dogs which is due out August 21st via Secretly Canadian.

One of the tracks, "Fixations" comes with a bizarre music video that's a cross between the Warhol-esque psychedelic party scene in Midnight Cowboy and MGMT's "Flash Delirium," featuring costumes, vomit, and a particularly aggressive drone. "Fixations," and the other new song "Everybody" to a lesser extent, show Gardens & Villa seem to be moving away from the more hard-hitting and dramatic sounds of their last LP and subsequent Televisor EP for a more light and playful vibe.

Check out both singles, the video, Music For Dogs cover art, and tour dates below.

Gardens & Villa Fall US Tour

8/17 - Los Angeles, CA @ Bardot (DJ Set)
9/15 - Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom 
9/17 - Austin, TX @ The Parish
9/18 - Dallas, TX @ Club Dada 
9/19 - Houston, TX @ House of Blues/Bronze Peacock
9/20 - New Orleans @ Gasa Gasa 
9/22 - Atlanta, GA @ Aisle 5 
9/23 - Carrboro, NC @ Cat's Cradle 
9/24 - Washington, DC @ Rock & Roll Hotel 
9/25 - Brooklyn, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
9/26 - Philadelphia, PA @ Boot & Saddle 
9/29 - Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair
9/30 - Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz PDB 
10/1 - Toronto, ON @ The Garrison 
10/2 - Detroit, MI @ UFO Factory
10/3 - Chicago, IL @ Lincoln Hall 
10/4 - Minneapolis, MN @ 7th St. Entry 
10/6 - Denver, CO @ Bluebird Theater
10/7 - Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge 
10/8 - Las Vegas, NV @ Bunkhouse Saloon
10/9 - San Diego, CA @ IRENIC

Arcade Fire's 'The Reflektor Tapes' Tickets Go on Sale, Release Date Changes, Watch New Trailer

Music News, TV/Film NewsWeston PaganoComment

The Reflektor Tapes, Arcade Fire's "unique cinematic experience [that meets] at the crossroads of documentary, music, art and personal history" will now be released a day earlier on September 23rd. It's also been announced today that the band's first feature film will premiere at the 2015 Toronto International Film FestivalYou can find screenings and purchase tickets here.

Arcade Fire explained via The Guardian, “There were parts of the Reflektor tour where I think we, Arcade Fire, came the closest in our careers to putting on stage what we imagined in our heads. We were insanely lucky to have Kahlil Joseph documenting from the very beginning.”

Watch the new official trailer, which joins previous previews shown here, below.

Mac DeMarco Does It Again on 'Another One'

Music ReviewWeston PaganoComment

Whether you call it an EP or a “mini-LP” as his label Captured Tracks would have you, Mac DeMarco’s Another One is eight glittering tracks of simple love songs in the endearingly easygoing and Viceroy-scented way only he can provide.

Leading up to today’s release with a self-directed music video in which he dressed as Michael Jackson and a cover challenge for which the prize was 69¢, DeMarco’s increasingly goofy antics never reach sensationalism as the fanfare is always earned by the end result.

DeMarco doesn’t stray far from his signature sound that made his 2014 release Salad Days so popular, and with good reason. Often labeled as “slacker rock” and self-described as “jizz jazz,” it’s carved out a niche in the saturated world of indie odes that doesn’t look like it’ll be getting old any time soon. Sitting somewhere between the time you turned your cheap childhood record player to a lower speed for a laugh and what whisking an egg in slow motion probably feels like, Another One is an alternately soothing and groovy jaunt through the Canadian’s affable heart. In the title track he manages to make even anxious jealousy (“Who could that be knocking at her door?”) sound smooth.

While the lackadaisical title may imply an overly casual throwaway effort, Another One is as expertly crafted as anything else in the gap-toothed crooner’s discography, exuding just enough substance to satiate the deservedly growing DeMarco cult at least until the next proper record. "I'll put that sparkle right back in your eyes," he promises. And he delivers.

The mini-LP concludes with the instrumental “My House By The Water,” which appropriately includes the sound of the gentle waves his Far Rockaway abode looks out upon (and that feature in the cover art). Signing off with yet another intimate spoken message for his listeners, DeMarco offers "6802 Bayfield Ave, Arverne, New York. Stop on by, I’ll make you a cup of coffee. See you later,” before a warm tape recorder click ends Another One for good.

As if he wasn’t personable enough already, his habit of addressing you – yes you – after the serenades are through further strips away the barrier recordings can build between the artist and the listener, making you wonder how an album could ever end any other way.

Watch Modest Mouse Feature in a Particularly Awkward Episode of 'Sound Advice'

Music NewsEllen WilsonComment

Saturday Night Live's Vanessa Bayer (who also recently appeared in Trainwreck) has been playing painfully uncomfortable media coach Janessa Slater in her Above Average web series Sound Advice for a while now, making us cringe with sessions including artists from Drake to Sleater-Kinney. Today, she somehow got the elusive yet outspoken Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse to sit down with her and take some constructive criticism, rendering him speechless. Watch below as Brock awkwardly nods off her suggestions and proves he's not really one for improv. 

Strangers To Ourselves is available now on Epic. 

"Anaconda" Snub is Just the Tail End in a Long History of Racism in the Music Industry

EditorialNneka EwulonuComment
Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup

Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup

Award shows tend to be polarizing and subjective; a song you hate may win "Song of the Year" and somehow, incredibly, Leonardo DeCaprio has yet to win an Oscar. Some of this can be chalked up to different opinions (although really, how has Leo not won an award yet?), but currents of racism and sexism are also present. The issue of racism in award ceremony has been brought up again in light of MTV Music Award nominations; "Anaconda" by Nicki Minaj, arguably a musical and cultural phenomenon, was not nominated for video of the year. Minaj took to twitter, claiming "if [she] was a different "kind" of artist, Anaconda would be nominated for best choreo and vid of the year..."  Unfortunately, she has a point. Music, arts, and pop-culture in general have a long history of ignoring or appropriating the creations of African-Americans.

Whether or not you agree that "Anaconda" should have been nominated, controversy surrounding white artists receiving accolades for music black artists are ignored for creating is nothing new. Perhaps the most poignant example of this is Elvis Presley. Elvis has gone down in history as an influential musician, often being heralded as the king, or even creator of Rock and Roll.  While he was undoubtedly a talented musician, many don't realize how much of his music and style were stolen from African American communities.

The late 19th and early 20th centuries saw the advent of secular music amongst African Americans, and from blues to jazz to swing, these styles saw their birth and success in black venues and clubs. Rock and Roll is no exception to this trend. What Elvis did was not innovative or creative; he merely repackaged African American rock and roll and made it "acceptable" for white audiences to listen to. His second single, Good Rocking Tonight, was released in 1954 and was an explicit re-recording of a song by blues artist Roy Brown, who recorded it in 1947.

Theft is prevalent in even Elvis' most famous songs: "Hound Dog," arguably one of his most famous songs, is a remake of a track released four years earlier by blues artist Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thorton called "That's All Right" and its year of release are used to mark the birth of rock and roll in Memphis. That, in turn, is a cover of a track blues artist Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup released 8 years earlier, not to mention the fact that "Rocket 88," a song by Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats that was released three years before Elvis's cover of Crudup, is considered to be the first real birth of Rock and Roll itself.

Elvis was not the first to steal from black musicians, and he most certainly was not the last. Rap and R&B, genres with undoubtedly black origins, have become saturated with white musicians who overshadow their black counterparts. This is not the say that music should be segregated by race, but it's odd to see white musicians overtaking a genre that stems from west African musical and drumming traditions (especially those with almost a complete lack of authenticity). These genres have followed the path of rock and roll; they weren't mainstream until repackaged and popularized by white musicians.

In his song "White America", Eminem raps "let's do the math: if I was black, I woulda sold half." No one can deny Eminem's talent, but even he is aware that his fame stems more from his race than his talent. In 2014, Ed Sheeran was named the most important act in "Black and Urban Music. Let me repeat: a white, English musician was named the most important act in black and urban music. The irony speaks for itself.

Again, this is not an attempt to advocate for musical segregation, nor to dismiss the talent of white musicians. But in this day and age, there is no excuse for the continued denial of black contributions to music and art. "Anaconda" was certainly not the most original or innovative music video, but it was absolutely everywhere. Magazines wrote about it, Ellen covered it, and 1,000 Nicki Minaj cutouts from the video were placed on the steps of a cathedral in Helsinki, Finland. For MTV to deny this track the recognition it deserves in an award show that essentially rates music by popularity as the main standard just goes to show that, despite increased racial equality, the music industry has not changed much at all.


 

Transverso's 2015 Lollapalooza Playlist

Music ListTransverso MediaComment

With Lollapalooza looming large we've compiled the 30 best tracks from the best artists you can expect to see at the festival this year. With artists from Paul McCartney to Shakey Graves, Chicago's Grant Park is the place to be this weekend, and you can prepare yourself by clicking play below or on our Spotify profile!

Relive Bonnaroo with our two playlists for that festival, take the "Music Festival Name or Type Illness Quiz" on Buzzfeed here, and if that's not enough, you can always turn on our 2015 Summer Playlist.