Update to the Fingertips Top 10

Time for an update about the Fingertips Top 10, which has changed significantly since the last Top 10 post in April. Here’s what the list looks like as of June 4; newcomers since April are marked with an asterisk:

1. “Cat Swallow” – the Royal Bangs
2. “Right Away” – Pattern is Movement*
3. “Animé Eyes” – the Awkward Stage*
4. “Torn Blue Foam Couch” – the Grand Archives
5. “To Be Gone” – Anna Ternheim
6. “Yer Motion” – Reeve Oliver*
7. “Boarded Doors” – the Morning Benders*
8. “Big Sound” – the M’s
9. “Black Lungs” – the New Frontiers*
10. “Fire” – Alibi Tom*

“Cat Swallow” is not new to the list but is new to the number-one slot, replacing “Beyond the Door” by 13ghosts, which held the spot for the previous two months. The Top 10 list is my way of putting a little bit of extra attention on ten particularly wonderful songs at any given time, but remember that Fingertips only features carefully filtered music to begin with, so you can’t go wrong with any of the MP3s featured here. Songs remain in the Top 10 for a maximum of three months, before they are retired to the Retired Top 10 Songs page, logically enough. (Note that the music player on the blog cannot find the Alibi Tom MP3 because of a technological quirk, but the song still can be downloaded if you click on it.)

MP3s from the Last Shadow Puppets, the New Frontiers, and the Morning Benders–free and legal, from Fingertips

“My Mistakes Were Made For You” – the Last Shadow Puppets
     If the Decemberists were to write a James Bond theme song, they might come up with something like “My Mistakes Were Made For You.” Echoingly atmospheric, with melodramatic strings, an ominous surf guitar, and melancholy horn charts, “My Mistakes Were Made For You” has at the same time a pleasantly wordy feel, which strikes me as an unexpected twist for a song with this sort of spy-movie vibe. (Songs from James Bond movies are, rather, renowned for the relentless fatuousness of their lyrics.)
     Another amiable difference here is Alex Turner’s simmering vocal delivery; more well known as the front man of the Arctic Monkeys, Turner here turns from the more frenetic, ejective singing style he uses with his “other” band to a softer, almost soulful sort of approach. Turner does not lose his accent (apparently a Sheffield accent) while singing; while American me is accustomed to hearing an accent like this in a hard-rocking setting (a cliche perhaps but that’s mostly what we hear of it here), I can’t say I’ve been treated to it in quite this context before. I find it rather charming.
     The Last Shadow Puppets is a collaboration between Turner and his friend Miles Kane, who’s also in a band called the Rascals. “My Mistakes Were Made For You” is from the duo’s debut release, The Age of the Understatement, which came out last month on Domino Records.

“Black Lungs” – the New Frontiers
     Here’s a prime example of an oft-repeated Fingertips theme: music does not have to be new to be great. A band need not blaze trails to be worthy. I think we’d have more consistently good music being played out there, in fact, if bands weren’t so often trying too hard to be different.
     A quintet from Dallas, the New Frontiers do not try to be different; they try to be good. With “Black Lungs,” they succeed, for reasons that are a bit difficult to pinpoint, since this appealing, well-crafted song seems to be trying not to stand out; it sounds like something we’ve all loved for a long time and kind of take for granted by now. But let’s see: that crying, arcing guitar line that launches the song is one terrific thing; singer Nathan Pettijohn is another, with his tender-rugged voice and his refusal to leap into falsetto, even when the song threatens to go there; and then there’s the chorus, which delivers a great back-door hook–which happens right around the words “back door,” in fact. The hook delights me, because it sounds like we’d already heard the hook (the leap up at 0:56, around the words “everything’s fine”), and then, in the second part of the chorus (“don’t you kick me out the back door”), the melody slyly returns to the eighth-note pattern used in the first part of the verse and that just nails everything together. There’s something old-timey and classic at work here. Close your eyes and breathe it in.
     The New Frontiers were previously known as Stellamaris, and recorded one CD in 2005 under that name. “Black Lungs” is the opening track on Mending, their first CD as the New Frontiers, which was released in April on the Militia Group.

“Boarded Doors” – the Morning Benders
     The Morning Benders return with their elusively familiar brand of sturdy yet off-kilter pop. “Boarded Doors” shuffles between a cartoony menace (that prickly guitar, that schemingly descending melody line) and a yearny sort of wistfulness, to great effect. Chris Chu sings so casually he may as well be talking, but the more I listen, the more impressed I am with his tone and tunefulness. The entire band tends to sneak up on me like that–they sound like they’re just sort of rehearsing, but underneath the informal surface lies a tight little song and a lot of expertise.
     I’m fascinated by the concise, unresolved chorus, which gives us a quick shot of something that sounds like a backward guitar and perfectly placed “oo-oo” backing vocals and then vanishes before one quite realizes hey, that was the chorus. If, in fact, a song could have a verse and a bridge and no chorus (which I think is impossible by definition) then the Morning Benders have managed to write it.
     An amiable quartet from Berkeley, California (they claim to have met while all working on Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride at Disneyland), the Morning Benders released their first full-length CD last month, called Talking Through Tin Cans, on +1 Records. MP3 courtesy of Spinner.

This week’s Fingertips MP3s: free and legal downloads from Stereolab, Tokyo Police Club, and Oh Darling

“Three Women” – Stereolab
     The semi-legendary, relentlessly inscrutable Stereolab–with their sexy vocalist, arcane musical references, and Marxist leanings–may never hit the big time, but they sure know how to entertain the left of center. Perhaps the first band to be called “post-rock,” back in the early ’90s, this British-based outfit were spinning out intellectually giddy genre-mashups when today’s laptop-rockers were in preschool. As I’m not a long-time or super-knowledgeable fan, I always find myself surprised by how sunny and accessible a lot of Stereolab’s music sounds at the simple level of listening–never-minding the underpinnings of influence and philosophy. You really don’t have to know what they’re doing–intermingling krautrock, lounge music, funk, jazz, ’60s pop, and contemporary classical minimalism, among other things, leaning on vintage electronic instruments in the process–to like what you’re hearing.
     On Fingertips, we last visited with vocalist Lætitia Sadier not too long ago, as her side project Monarde was featured in February; here, she sounds just as sultry-sophisticated (she sings in French again, as she often does), but a bit more light-hearted, as the music this time bubbles along with great pep and texture. Launched off a classic R&B groove, “Three Women” features a sneaky, meandering melody and a bright instrumental coalescence–I’m hearing Farfisa organ, marimba (or, perhaps, vibes?), trumpets, maybe even a celesta–that effortlessly evokes some other time and place without it being quite clear what time or place that might actually be. Sadier purrs, the music rolls along, and if we really have no idea what she’s saying or why, well, this is Stereolab. Absorb the vibe, observe the craft, and enjoy the download.
     “Three Women” can be found the band’s forthcoming CD Chemical Chords, not due out till August, on Duophonic UHF Disks/4AD. MP3 courtesy of Beggars Group.

“In a Cave” – Tokyo Police Club
     Buzzy, driven, incisive indie pop from a Toronto quartet with a knowledgeable vibe and the added attraction of having a singing bass player (discussed when last we met these guys). This songs strikes me as very smartly constructed–elements added at just the right time, pieces interacting with a casual sort of precision. Example of element added at just the right time: those unexpected, shouting background vocals that chime in at 0:49; example of casually precise interaction: the almost feedbacky guitar line that enters at 0:40 and, first, mimicks the melody line as it’s sung but then continues even as the melody moves on (right into the shouting vocal part in fact).
     And what are they singing about? The cave is metaphorical, to be sure, and there’s that nice touch about reversing the effects of being in the cave once deciding to leave (“All my hair grows in/Wrinkles leave my skin”), which is skillful way of extending the metaphor; beyond that we get a skittery atmosphere, both musically and lyrically, and we’re left to figure out exactly what’s going on on our own.
     As per last week’s comment about web writers who disparage music when it’s not “new” enough, TPC is likely to catch some flak in this regard–and already have, in fact: “Tokyo Police Club aren’t smashing templates or changing lives,” proclaims Stereogum, “but this stuff is catchy [as hell], easily digestible fun.” Here’s a clue for you to take around the web: anyone who does that “damning with faint praise” routine is revealing more about their own insecurities than about the subject at hand. Either like something, don’t like it, or, even, partially like it–just do so clearly; ground it in observable fact. Is that so hard? “Easily digestible fun” means “this isn’t really ‘cool’ enough for me to like but I like it anyway.” Humbug. “In a Cave” is from TPC’s debut CD, Elephant Shell (the phrase comes from this song; listen carefully), and is another sign that these guys mean business. It was released last month on Saddle Creek Records.

“Shoulda Never” – Oh Darling
     This one clicks for me in the chorus, at the end of the second line, when the melody steps slightly down, into that unresolved place, and just stays there (around 1:11). Goes to show yet again that you never know where a hook is coming from, or why. And this sort of thing doesn’t happen in a vacuum–the whole reason that unresolved detour sounds so apt is because of everything that’s come before it. For a relatively new band, these guys have recorded something that glows with preternatural charm and know-how.
     Right away note the juxtaposition of that staccato bass-and-guitar intro, a reliable implement in the rock toolbox at least since the Cars came along, and lead singer Jasmine Ash’s pure, almost child-like tone–an intriguing blend that pulls us into “Shoulda Never,” establishing the song’s subtle push/pull of soft and hard, naive and experienced, female and male (the quartet features two men and two women, and includes a mixed-gender rhythm section–male drummer, female bass). Familiar-sounding in appealing ways, the song also offers its share of subtle surprises, one of my favorites being the whistly, almost flute-like synthesizer that creates a kind of lost-world ambiance, first heard in the instrumental break at 1:24.
     Formed in 2006, Oh Darling self-released an EP at the end of last year. The band’s full-length debut is expected out this summer, on Nice Records. “Shoulda Never” can be found on both discs. MP3 courtesy of the band’s wonderful-looking web site.

Fingertips CD Review: Fireproof, by Dawn Landes

Fireproof
Dawn Landes

Cooking Vinyl Records

Fireproof is an unassuming, sneaky sort of record, performed with such casual, comfortable intimacy that it seems as much like an overheard impromptu house concert as much as a studio recording. And Landes herself is an unassuming, sneaky sort of singer, in the unadorned, plainspoken tradition of Suzanne Vega, but with a subtle quirkiness that brings Jane Siberry, occasionally, to mind. Her music, while not overtly odd in any way, eludes precise description, probably because of the offbeat but uncluttered mix of instruments she’s engaged here, which include a banjo, harmonica, pedal steel, organ, optigan (this being a strange, organ-like instrument made by Mattel in the ’70s), bells, and toy piano.

Most of the songs take a while to sink in, both musically and lyrically. Some saunter by with an Americana-ish, by-the-campfire aura (“Tired of This Life,” “Twilight,” “Dig Me a Hole”), while others exploit Landes’ eccentric musical landscape in divergent ways: the Waits-ian carnivalia of “Picture Show”, the tinkly tranciness of “Goodnight Lover,” the stripped-down urgency of “Private Little Hell,” the languid, semi-surreal banjo-funk (?) of the mysteriously alluring “Bodyguard.” She sings often of dreaming and darkness and nighttime, and her lyrics make discomfiting leaps in both thought and image. Listen to how she uses her quirky chamber group to great effect on her affecting cover of the traditional (and yet, strange) song “I Don’t Need No Man,” with some of the percussion playing, it would seem, across the room, while burbling synth sounds frolic with the fast-strumming hoedown of guitars and mandolin. Another highlight: “I’m in Love With the Night,” all lonesome-prairie torchiness and fugitive heartache.  [buy via the Fingertips Store]

(See more Fingertips CD reviews on the Album Bin page of the main Fingertips site.)

Fingertips Top 10 update

Since last we checked into the Fingertips Top 10, some changes have been made. As of April 22, here’s what it looks like:

1. “Beyond the Door” – 13ghosts
2. “Boys” – the Autumns
3. “Neal Cassady” – the Weather Underground
4. “Cat Swallow” – the Royal Bangs
5. “Bodyguard” – Dawn Landes
6. “Torn Blue Foam Couch” – Grand Archives
7. “To Be Gone” – Anna Ternheim
8. “Big Sound” – the M’s
9. “One, Two, Three!” – I Make This Sound
10. “Buildings and Mountains” – the Republic Tigers

There have been six changes in the chart since the last blog post about it in February, the most recent addition being Anna Ternheim’s lovely “To Be Gone.” As Fingertips only features high-quality free and legal MP3s, you really can’t go wrong with anything written about on the site, but the Top 10 is my way of pointing you towards ten especially wonderful songs at any given time. Songs remain in the Top 10 for a maximum of three months, before they are retired to the Retired Top 10 Songs page, logically enough.

Fingertips says: Take a break!

Fingertips declares Spring Break! In honor of Earth Day and Turn Off Your TV Week, there will be no official “This Week’s Finds” selections this week. The Fingertips Home Office will be open all week, so site updates are otherwise likely. Fingertips invites you, meanwhile, to ponder this: we do not, as a culture of educated human beings, generally benefit from filling up all available time and space simply because the space and time seems there to be filled. The mainstream media has proven that beyond argument this election year, with its microscopic idiocy and macroscopic myopia. The blogosphere, alas, proves it everyday. Fight the demon of space- and time-filling and remember to breathe, turn off your screens, and say hello to a nearby tree or two. It won’t talk back; it has nothing but time. We might learn a thing or two.

The Fingertips Top 10

Thanks to some brand-new updates, the current Fingertips Top 10 now looks like this:

1. Cherry Tulips – Headlights
2. Boys – the Autumns
3. Gila – Beach House
4. Neal Cassady – the Weather Underground
5. Saturday Night – Pale Young Gentlemen
6. Bodyguard – Dawn Landes
7. Sarah’s Game – the Loved Ones
8. The Silence Between Us – Bob Mould
9. Buildings and Mountains – the Republic Tigers
10. On the Chin – Grey Race

Note that Fingertips only features high-quality free and legal MP3s, so you really can’t go wrong with any of them. The Top 10 represents an effort to focus attention on ten especially wonderful songs at any given time. Songs remain in the Top 10 for a maximum of three months, before they are retired to the Retired Top 10 Songs page, logically enough.

Also note that the Fingertips blog now features an easy player function–click the play button next to any song, anywhere on the blog, and it will play (as long as the link isn’t dead!). Player is courtesy of Yahoo!, of all places.

Fingertips takes a holiday; SXSW MP3s now online

Due to the U.S. holiday weekend, Fingertips will post its weekly MP3s tomorrow, Tuesday.

One quick note in the meantime, for those especially eager for new free and legal MP3s: the 2008 SXSW MP3 repository is now online, featuring literally hundreds of MP3s to check out. More information about this can be found in the SXSW entry in the Music Site Guide on the Fingertips web site. Expect some of the best ones in that collection to show up here in the coming weeks, perhaps even beginning tomorrow.