Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
- AJOwens
- Panama
- Posts: 997
- Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:50 am
- Instruments: bass, guitar, keyboards, drums, flute
- Recording Method: Reaper, Reason Adapted, M-Audio 1010LT + 2496 (Windows XP)
- Submitting as: James Owens, The Chebuctones
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
- Contact:
Re: Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
From the file names, it looks like Rabbit and Ram and Older Brothers are crossed up on the voting page.
- Lunkhead
- You're No Good
- Posts: 8107
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 12:14 pm
- Instruments: many
- Recording Method: cubase/mac/tascam4x4
- Submitting as: Berkeley Social Scene, Merisan, Tiny Robots
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Berkeley, CA
- Contact:
Re: Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
OK, should be fixed on the main page. I will try to find other spots where this might be messed up. Thanks for catching that!
- Future Boy
- Push Comes to Shove
- Posts: 412
- Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2004 7:55 am
- Instruments: Keyboard, Vocals
- Recording Method: Apollo Twin, Reaper, Rhodes, Casios
- Submitting as: Future Boy
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Seattle, WA
- Contact:
Re: Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
Only 5, wow!
New Album: Comes Apart | Missed Connections | With Johnny Cashpoint: A Maze of Death | modular synths on Youtube
- Lunkhead
- You're No Good
- Posts: 8107
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 12:14 pm
- Instruments: many
- Recording Method: cubase/mac/tascam4x4
- Submitting as: Berkeley Social Scene, Merisan, Tiny Robots
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Berkeley, CA
- Contact:
Re: Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
Yeah. We haven't had a fight this small since "Cable Beach" over nine years ago!
http://sfjukebox.org/fights/cable_beach
http://sfjukebox.org/fights/cable_beach
- AJOwens
- Panama
- Posts: 997
- Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:50 am
- Instruments: bass, guitar, keyboards, drums, flute
- Recording Method: Reaper, Reason Adapted, M-Audio 1010LT + 2496 (Windows XP)
- Submitting as: James Owens, The Chebuctones
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
- Contact:
Re: Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
James Owens -- I wanted this song to actually make you feel cooler. Not much else to say about it, except that it started out way too short, so I stuck on the flute bit at each end, narrowly avoiding an evocation of The Cyrkle's Red Rubber Ball (in my own mind at least).
Klownhole -- This power-trio extravaganza reminds me of Blue Cheer, true phenomena in their day, if not exactly at the top of the music industry food chain. (I'd love to hear your cover of Summertime Blues.) The riff is mindlessly menacing and depressing, as it wants to be. The performances are all deliciously sympatico with the vision, and the vocals are particularly engaging. I'm not catching all the lyrics, which sound improvised, but the phrases that jump out are interesting. After about eight minutes, my wife called from the living room that it was horrible. Well done! To really understand this song you need to experience the whole nine minutes and fifty seconds.
MooseMuse -- Some of the lyrics are clever digs, such as the evocation of Fox News, but the closing reference to mindless religious faith almost feels like a non sequitur, or perhaps more fittingly a Deus ex machina. Still, it's a song fight entry and sometimes we toss these things off. The composition and arrangement go through several colorations, perhaps a little abruptly and randomly, like one of those old Paul McCartney songs that were just bits of several songs spliced together. There's one short lead guitar passage that sounds more feeble than it should, but generally the production and mixing are clear and sweet; I expecially like the sound of the acoustic guitar.
The Older Brothers -- I can't make out the singing too well, but there's no escaping the complexity of the musical passages, the intricacy and imagination of the arrangements, the technical competence at every level, and the twisted humour. I particularly enjoy the plaintive cries of "Where's all the water?" Very interesting listening.
Rabbit & Ram -- An excellent nod to surf music. Here your, uh, casiocore arrangement, if that's what the youngsters call it, is well balanced and integrated. The skipped beat at the turnaround is highly effective, and exactly what those who have asked for a little more surprise are talking about. The varied interpolations, I mean the little bells and the bongo riffs or whatever they are, add their weight in gold.
Klownhole -- This power-trio extravaganza reminds me of Blue Cheer, true phenomena in their day, if not exactly at the top of the music industry food chain. (I'd love to hear your cover of Summertime Blues.) The riff is mindlessly menacing and depressing, as it wants to be. The performances are all deliciously sympatico with the vision, and the vocals are particularly engaging. I'm not catching all the lyrics, which sound improvised, but the phrases that jump out are interesting. After about eight minutes, my wife called from the living room that it was horrible. Well done! To really understand this song you need to experience the whole nine minutes and fifty seconds.
MooseMuse -- Some of the lyrics are clever digs, such as the evocation of Fox News, but the closing reference to mindless religious faith almost feels like a non sequitur, or perhaps more fittingly a Deus ex machina. Still, it's a song fight entry and sometimes we toss these things off. The composition and arrangement go through several colorations, perhaps a little abruptly and randomly, like one of those old Paul McCartney songs that were just bits of several songs spliced together. There's one short lead guitar passage that sounds more feeble than it should, but generally the production and mixing are clear and sweet; I expecially like the sound of the acoustic guitar.
The Older Brothers -- I can't make out the singing too well, but there's no escaping the complexity of the musical passages, the intricacy and imagination of the arrangements, the technical competence at every level, and the twisted humour. I particularly enjoy the plaintive cries of "Where's all the water?" Very interesting listening.
Rabbit & Ram -- An excellent nod to surf music. Here your, uh, casiocore arrangement, if that's what the youngsters call it, is well balanced and integrated. The skipped beat at the turnaround is highly effective, and exactly what those who have asked for a little more surprise are talking about. The varied interpolations, I mean the little bells and the bongo riffs or whatever they are, add their weight in gold.
- AJOwens
- Panama
- Posts: 997
- Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:50 am
- Instruments: bass, guitar, keyboards, drums, flute
- Recording Method: Reaper, Reason Adapted, M-Audio 1010LT + 2496 (Windows XP)
- Submitting as: James Owens, The Chebuctones
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
- Contact:
Re: Don't settle for a draw (Beat the Heat reviews)
Here's an interesting link, a bit late for this fight: Vegetation Limits City Warning Effects. See how Portlandia rates!
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=86440
(So. . . wadja think of those five songs? Guess it's a bit late for that too.)
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=86440
(So. . . wadja think of those five songs? Guess it's a bit late for that too.)