#with background hints of moog
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
here’s a trollsona i made for my friend @gravenravens last night :333 rhe last 3 are just overlay variations teehee. i wanted to rly get their vibe down cuz the music they listen to is so cool… and theyr just really cool in general😯
Techno + Rock inspos. but its a prog rock + psychadelia troll :-)
#with background hints of moog#i enjoyd making ths one immensely#also its already said but i love prog rock as a title for ths troll cuz it sounds aquatic#liek frog rock…#trolls#dw trolls#dreamworks trolls#trollsona#trolls sona#art#i added the back spikes cuz they like dinosaurs teehee#important note is that they have that little squid buck tooth like in splatoon#trying to sneak in as many aquatic themes in as i can#lie#trying to sneak in the aquatic themes i find fun
10 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
STEPHEN MALKMUS - VIKTOR BORGIA [3.78] The 2019 music press, in which a new Stephen Malkmus song is introduced as such: "Stephen Malkmus summons an Ariana Grande android in his 'Viktor Borgia' video"...
Vikram Joseph: On listening to Stephen Malkmus's attempt to go electro, you wonder if he's listened to any electronic music released in the last 30 years. This half-baked dirge sounds like it's been produced on the sort of software we used to use at school for GCSE Music compositions, perhaps by an actual 14-year-old. Malkmus's voice is gutted of its usual off-key knockabout charm, which tips his lyrics from quirky to embarrassingly banal. It's actually hard to imagine how this could have been much worse. [1]
Iris Xie: So awkward, like I had to attend a really devastating David Bowie impersonator show. A weak non-vocal delivery, a goofy but not quite smart or referential enough synth in the back, and a frail hint at drama with some kind of epic tale. If I had to escape the destruction of Earth on a spaceship and I was trapped with the human equivalent of this song, I can't say my fate would be much better off. [2]
Claire Biddles: Stephen Malkmus is so good at matching his pathos-laden lyricism with sad, pathetic, sinister music that I'm surprised it's taken him this long to release a tragic disco record. I don't know if this is "good," but I love Pavement and I love miserable electronic music, so I'm here for it. [7]
Thomas Inskeep: Why is this so SLOW? Hurry up and get it done already. Sure, hearing Malkmus backed by synths is a novelty -- but nothing more. [3]
Alfred Soto: When Paul Westerberg -- excuse me, Stephen Malkmus -- coats his curdled nyuk-nyuks over presets he discovered last Tuesday, the world -- well, what does the world do? [4]
Joshua Minsoo Kim: Go back to those gold soundz. [2]
Ian Mathers: Back in the late '90s/early '00s there was a really good British indie band named Hefner. They were kind of rock-ish, kind of folk-ish -- their "biggest" moment was a very... distinctive video for "I Took Her Love for Granted." Their last album, Dead Media, came out in 2001, and in what seemed like a pretty sudden turn at the time, it revealed that they'd been getting into analogue synths -- not a flavour previously discernible much in their songs. The gap between Dead Media and their previous album didn't include a bunch of solo records I never got into, and maybe that explains the difference, but all of this is to say, I have proof that I don't automatically hate it when bands that meant a lot to my adolescence (or the singers thereof) abruptly switch to the bleeps and the bloops. In fact, I suspect I'd like this one more just as an instrumental. [5]
Katherine St Asaph: There are plenty of reasons I want to like this -- fealty; the futzed-with motorik beat; the vocals for once that are actually vocals; the Earthbound pings and squeaks in the background; the propensity to hate this of basically everyone, from indie lifers who'd rather consume arsenic than electronics to people who actually like clubs, whose reaction to hearing "we walk into the club, thank the heavens above there's a place we can go" on this makes me flinch imagining it; the unexpected goodwill I'd extend if I heard this from some legacy-less SoundCloud guy making ersatz Gary Numan Amiga music. But this is as high as I can go. [5]
Tim de Reuse: As a self-aware, cheesy passion project from the frontman of a band that did great things in a completely different genre a quarter-century ago? Yeah, it's all right, I guess. What if I were to instead consider this as just a fun little ditty that (presumably) some Brooklynite millennial banged out on a borrowed Moog as a exercise in 80's post-post-post-ironic synth nostalgia? Yeah, it's still all right, I guess. [5]
[Read, comment and vote on The Singles Jukebox ]
1 note
·
View note
Text
Sontag Shogun x Lau Nau — Valo Siroutuu (Beacon Sound)

Photo by Alison Schopmeyer
Valo Siroutuu by Sontag Shogun x Lau Nau
In 2019 composer Lau Nau (Laura Naukkarinen) and experimental trio Sontag Shogun came together on the Finnish island Kimitoön. The four musicians wrote, recorded, and sunk into their surroundings (Naukkarinen's home area). The time together led to new album Valo Siroutuu, which translates to “the light scatters.” The tracks blend composed pieces, field recordings, ambient sounds, and more for a record written “on and for the island.” As such, it captures a natural sort of warmth, background throat-clearings blending with geographical setting, and develops more than simply a memento of artists' time together.
The album begins with “Badminton Motif,” full of the sounds of children playing and, we can guess, the sounds of a racquet hitting a birdie. The simple music and the outdoor sounds quickly establish setting: a remote and peaceful place, but not one devoid of energy, if you know how to look. “Leikkikalu” expands the sound, beginning the spectral diffusion of the disc. The track, like much of the album, maintains a certain sheen while letting in the sun. We won't mistake Finland for Miami in any manner. Each carefully constructed track circles around its setting, mixing in natural noises with spacious music.
The approach leads to something approaching an indie folk Sigur Ros. Naukkarinen's Finnish vocals add to the effect, but they also keep the album centered. The album could move into ambient or minimalist styles, but the musicians frequently bring the pieces back to traditional songcraft. The group works out detailed arrangements, but don't neglect melody. The title track develops out of the birdsong of its predecessor, incorporates background talking, and hangs it all on a frail guitar and whispered vocal (further developed as Jesse Perlstein joins Naukkarinen).
Not all of the album builds on the bucolic. As much as field recordings and pastoral tones guide the album, both acts use synths with comfort, and the transition to a more digital feel on “Hämeentie” arrives a smoothly as the ocean waves do at other points. A Moog and a glockenspiel and avian chittering all fit together nicely. The album — sometimes individual tracks — move in and out of various atmospheres and forms, balancing the presentation.
“Trampoliinilla Ikuisuuteen” closes the album with an appropriate tension. The scattered light now dissipates at dusk as the piece mixes an imminence with a hint of remembrance. The four artists have created something as complex at is digestible. If there's a touch of preservation to the record, it never sounds like aural scrapbooking, as the real-time experience comes through amid the subtle craft as a genuine treat.
Justin Cober-Lake
#sontag shogun#lau nau#Valo Siroutuu#beacon sound#justin cober-lake#albumreview#dusted magazine#experimental music#folk#finland
0 notes