New Fingertips Contest: win the Joe Strummer documentary, plus soundtrack

There’s a new Fingertips Contest, now online, with two related prizes: a copy of the movie The Future Is Unwritten on DVD, and a copy of the movie’s soundtrack on CD. The Future Is Unwritten is a documentary about the life of the late, lamented Joe Strummer, due out on DVD this week. Contest details here.

Free and legal MP3: Amy Ray

Indigo Girl, gone solo, kicks ass

“Blame is a Killer” – Amy Ray

Tough, tight, crunchy rock’n’roll from Indigo Girl Amy Ray, who for the third time now trots out her kick-ass side on a solo record. Nothing complicated to report on, just a fast, slashing guitar attack counterbalanced by some nice chords and background harmonies in the chorus.

That said, listen to how concise a sound Ray is working with here–the song rocks hard, but there’s no sloppiness, no stray sounds, no wailing or echoing guitars, no extraneous drum bashing, no casually interacting instruments; “Blame is a Killer” drives forward with the compressed vitality of a Strokes song, leading me to half expect to hear Ray’s voice processed through some sort of filter or distortion. Maybe that’s why the fully sung and harmonized chorus feels especially refreshing after the clipped vocal phrases utilized in the verses.

“Blame is a Killer” is a track from Didn’t It Feel Kinder, Ray’s third album as a solo artist, which will be released in August on Daemon Records, a not-for-profit record label founded by Ray back in 1990.

Laura Marling has a free and legal MP3 (18-year-old British singer/songwriter, with depth)

“I’m a Fly” – Laura Marling
     Here’s one young British import who a) doesn’t sing with an affected “street” accent, b) understands the utility of two names, and c) is interested in more than regaling us with tales of her dysfunctional love life, thank goodness.
     Everything about this short, precise song is warm and appealing, from its harp-like, folk-infused ukelele work through its subtly effective instrumentation and Marling’s clear and compelling voice, both musically and lyrically. Listen in particular to how her backing vocals (it sounds sometimes like multi-tracked humming) are used almost as part of the rhythm section, adding a wonderful, organic sort of texture to a song that accomplishes the unusual trick of sounding traditional and post-modern at the same time.
     All of 18 years old at this point, Marling released her debut album, Alas, I Cannot Swim, to much acclaim in the U.K. in February. Astralwerks will be releasing the CD in the U.S. in August. “I’m a Fly” is a newer song, not from the CD; it can be found as a b-side on an EP released in the U.K. in June. MP3 via music.download.com.

Free and legal MP3 from Paper Rival (Shins-ish folk rock, w/ fiddle)

“Cassandra” – Paper Rival
     The mournful fiddle melody and the crisp tom-tom beat, playing through alternating major and minor chords: what we have here is one smart and engaging introduction–and (better luck!), a song that lives up to its intro’s promise.
     A mysterious reimagination of the cursed prophet of doom, “Cassandra” chugs along with a bittersweet, Shins-like sort of vibrancy, its leisurely melody lines unfolding against an unobtrusive but carefully constructed percussive backdrop. The fiddle is central to the vibe, its disconsolate strain standing in for the prophet’s voice, in a tone reminiscent of the gypsy violin Scarlet Rivera brought, memorably, to Bob Dylan’s Desire album back in the day.
     Paper Rival is a quintet from Nashville that did business as Keating until discovering that another band had the rights to the name; they chose their new name as a good-natured nose-thumbing to the gang that got to the Keating name first. “Cassandra” can be found on the band’s debut full-length CD, Dialog, released in early June on Photo Finish Records. MP3 via Insound.

Free and legal MP3 from Joe Pug (Dylanesque youngster with heady lyrics and a big heart)

“Hymn #101” – Joe Pug
     Had the Bob Dylan haunting the Greenwich Village folk scene in 1961 and 1962 augmented his sociopolitical preoccupation with a wide-eyed spiritual awareness, he might have composed a spare, literate neo-folk marvel such as “Hymn #101.” Carefully written and plainly presented (just guitar and voice, thank you), “Hymn #101” glows with humanity and intellect, its simple Dylanesque melody hosting any number of unexpected observations and descriptions, delivered with a voice that channels not only the great one from Hibbing but multiple generations of “next Dylans” as well, from John Prine to Steve Earle to Josh Ritter and then some.
     While a potent cultural critique is layered into the song’s semi-mysterious lyrics, what moves me the most here are the moments when Pug reveals a metaphysical depth not often encountered on the indie scene. The conclusion he works up to is all but breathtaking: “Will you recognize my face/When God’s awful grace/Strips me of my jacket and my vest/And reveals all the treasure in my chest.”
     “Hymn #101” can be found on Joe Pug’s debut EP, Nation of Heat, self-released in May; MP3 via his web site. And by the way, can this be his real name? Joe Pug? His biographical information is so scanty that I suspect he’s intent on another Dylanesque maneuver: romantic obfuscation of his past.

Free and legal MP3 from Windsor For The Derby (brisk, soothing indie post-rock)

“Hold On” – Windsor For The Derby
     “Hold On” indeed: this song begins with an extended introduction, featuring a rhythm both brisk and soothing. Listen closely and for all the apparent movement you really can’t discern a whole lot of obvious activity: there’s a guitar strumming without quite wanting to call too much attention to itself, there’s a fuzzy organ that seems to dissipate as soon as you hear it, there’s a bass that appears to be playing only one note the whole time, and all one minute and six seconds of the intro features an alternation between just two chords, separated by a simple half-step.
     Then the vocals start, rather wispy and mixed down in that Yo La Tengo, resolutely-indie sort of way. But pay attention at 1:20–we finally hear a third chord. It’s a great moment but it flows quickly by, and is itself easy to miss except that the song shifts and deepens at this point. Though exactly towards what end we still don’t know. (Remember: hold on.) The melody leads us through a few more chords rather quickly (considering the context), the verse repeats, and then, at long last, two full minutes in, the chorus arrives, complete with–of all things–soaring, Brian Wilson-inspired backing harmonies. Nothing about this song signaled that it was going there. It’s a startling juxtaposition, and well worth the long and subtle buildup.
     Led by Dan Matz and Jason McNeeley, Windsor For The Derby has gone through a number of personnel changes since the group’s formation in Austin in the mid-’90s. The band is now a quintet; Matz and McNeeley, recently relocated to Philadelphia, are the only the remaining original members. “Hold On” is a song from the CD How We lost, the band’s eighth, released last month on Secretly Canadian records. MP3 via the Secretly Canadian web site.

Free and legal MP3 from Ndidi Onukwulu (jazzy, brass-infused blues, with a world music chaser)

“SK Final” – Ndidi Onukwulu
     Happy-sounding blues, with horn charts, “SK Final” hides its musical inventiveness beneath a brassy, old-fashioned vibe. Onukwulu is a British Columbia native born to Nigerian parents, and in her songs seeks to combine blues, jazz, and African music. Check out, for instance, how the song starts: those reverberant drum beats are not directly blues-based, but evoke another continent’s rhythms. When Onukwulu starts singing, she’s accompanied further by an acoustic rhythm guitar, softly marking the beat as she sings off of it, while an electric guitar soon begins to supply gentle flourishes that, again, bring a world-music flair to the musical landscape.
     In the end, however, “SK Final” is dominated by pretty much two things: Onukwulu’s vibrant alto, with its fleeting vibrato, and those snappy horns, which kick in right before the chorus. While providing traditional horn-chart-y punctuation to the lyrics, the horns also offer a mellower sort of instrumental aside (1:07, for example; even better, 1:39) that to my ears gives them a sneaky and enticing spirit, even when finishing the song off in full rave-up mode, as Onukwulu assures us, with frisky defiance, that she’s not going to cry over you again. Like I said, happy blues.
     “SK Final” is the lead track on Onukwulu’s second CD, The Contradictor, released this week on the Vancouver-based label Jericho Beach Music.

New free and legal download from the Stills (majestic and affecting rock from Canada)

“Being Here” – the Stills
     There’s a mystery to the majesty of good pop music. Seemingly lacking both surface-level complexity and a weighty philosophical foundation, pop music has always been dismissed by “serious” musicians and critics as insubstantial at best, culturally harmful at worst. What pop’s most supercilious critics don’t understand, however, is that just because pop isn’t “high art” (whatever that really is) doesn’t mean it can’t, in the right hands (underline that part), be an artistically valid mode of creative expression. Pop music cannot be dismissed simply because it does not measure up to the standards of so-called “serious music” (whether classical or avant-garde); that would be like criticizing a cat for not being a dog.
     And so can an apparently simple composition like “Being Here”–even the title communicates the ultimate in unadorned declarations–deliver something ineffably beautiful and moving in a swift three and a half minutes. You’ve heard these chords before, and the plain descending melody, centered around four adjacent notes. You’ve heard the guitars, you’ve heard the large, anthemic vibe. Whatever this song has can’t and won’t be “explained” by its constituent parts. There’s something in the sound, in the presentation, and maybe in singer Tim Fletcher’s big-hearted voice (a voice that brings to mind the late, lamented Stuart Adamson, of the Scottish band Big Country), that rivets the ear, that makes me, in any case, stop, listen, and feel truly–if mysteriously–affected.
     “Being Here” is a song off the Stills’ third album, Oceans Will Rise, which will be released on the Arts & Crafts label in August. This is the Montreal quintet’s third appearance on Fingertips (check the Master Artist List for details). Thanks to Jonk Music for the lead. MP3 courtesy of the Canadian music magazine Exclaim.

New MP3 from the Wedding Present (great guitars, via Albini and veteran Brit band)

“I Lost the Monkey” – the Wedding Present
     From its gentle, even poignant opening, “I Lost the Monkey” blossoms into a loud-but-controlled midtempo construction of prepossessing precision, with consistently impressive guitar work and a brilliant chorus.
     Just listen to those guitars–whether it’s the semi-dissonance of the second “intro” (the extended instrumental after the quiet opening verse, starting at 0:34) or the melodicism that emerges in the middle of the chorus, and then more prominently in the second verse (starting around 1:57), the guitars are used here with unusual care and sensitivity. This is not just a couple of guys strumming to fill in empty space. And then there’s that terrific chorus, which is rendered all the more affecting by lead man David Gedge’s restrained, almost whispered vocals, which make no effort to rise above the guitars, but somehow create a quiet clearing in the middle of the noise in which they can nonetheless be heard.
     A veteran band from Leeds, the Wedding Present has been through a number of lineup changes since its formation back in 1985; by now, the only constant through the years has been Gedge, now 48. (Note that in 1992, the Wedding Present released a new single on the first Monday of every month–a very internet music scene-like thing to do, well before the birth of the internet music scene.) For their new album, El Rey, the band has brought studio whiz Steve Albini back to the controls (Albini previously engineered CDs for the band in 1989 and 1991; he does not want to be called a producer, by the way). I’ve no idea what the rest of the album sounds like, but this one soars.