If this blog were a magazine, than the days of the week would be the pages. And the last pages of magazines are usually where you find the reviews. It is by following this line of reasoning that I have come to devote the last page (day) of the week (issue) to a re-cap of the albums that I have acquired in just the last week, from Sunday to Saturday. Hence (and in a somewhat particular order), the Weekend Record Wrap-Up:
Built to Spill – There Is No Enemy, 2009: Warner Bros. I’ve been known to enjoy some Built to Spill from time to time. I’ve never seen them live, but I have enough of an interest to have tracked down almost their entire discography (save their two earliest releases, before they signed to Warner Bros.) and in my estimation this is one of the best albums they’ve put out. It might be too early to say that they peaked in 2006 when they released You In Reverse, but I can say with whatever degree of certainty opinions may contain that that’s their best album to date. There is no Enemy retains a lot of what made You in Reverse so likable in the first place: trippy, jammy guitar loops and processed synths, all very thick and layered. While some tracks might take this a bit too far (“Done”, for instance), I think the only thing hindering the enjoyment of aspects like that is the impatience of the listener. Got something better to do than listen to some sweet indie rock? Well please, don’t let us keep you. Not a bad follow-up to You In Reverse, though that remains my personal favorite (and Keep it Like a Secret would take third). I would recommend them both, for comparison. 7.5/10 [Listen If You Like: Dinosaur Jr., Treepeople, Pavement]

Foals – Antidotes, 2008: Sub Pop I have just come across this band, and for now I’m reasonably impressed. Though lacking the intricacy and density of say, Don Caballero or Battles, Foals still manages to imitate the sound pretty well, while not making the whole experience too cerebral. This might make them more accessible than bands like The Edmund Fitzgerald or Shellac, but the poppy dilution and relatively rudimentary time signatures aren’t going to earn them any street-cred with crowds of fans who listen to their music with a protractor. 7.5/10 [Listen If you Like: Q and not U, Minus the Bear, Bloc Party]
Marduk – Wormwood, 2009: Regain Records Alternately swift and sludgy, rarely never brutal, Marduk is pretty much what I imagine when I imagine black metal (or thrash metal, or sludge metal, or whatever the nerds are calling it). Aggressive riffs and machine gun double bass; I can take it in small doses, but it’s really not for me. I could hardly imagine what a lengthy festival, say three days of nothing but these kinds of bands, might mean for someone like me. Just one big high-gain communal marble gargle. I’d be a changed man. The chances that the change would be from living to dead are fairly good, so I think I’ll keeps mah distance. But if you like metal more than me, than you’ll probably like this album more than me too. 5/10 [Listen If You Like: Dimmu Borgir, Napalm Death, Funeral Mist]

Them Crooked Vultures – Them Crooked Vultures, 2009: Self-Released 2 or 3 times listening is what it might take to really get into this record. Unless you’re into that kind of thing. I don’t know. But it's always worth checking out a supergroup. 7/10 [Listen If You Like: Queens of the Stone Age, Led Zeppelin, Muse]
Jay Z – The Blueprint: 3, 2009: Roc Nation I’m a little late getting my hands on this one too, but (and especially since I don’t listen to radio) that just means it hasn’t been played out yet. I haven’t killed this album like I did the Kid CuDi one a few months ago (who even manages to make an appearance on one track with HOV), but that’s because there’s more on this album that’s worth listening to. Best since the Black Album.
8.5/10 [Listen If You Like: Jay-Z, Hip-Hop music, music in general]

Cobalt – Gin, 2009: Profound Love Records The metal’s alright, but it doesn’t really bring a lot to the table. I’m spoiled by innovation, and when it’s lacking I’m disappointed. Overall, Gin isn’t a bad album; it’s just that the bear and chicken, squawking growling vocals is more than I can stand. The whole chain-gang slave chant thing was a little weird too. It’s certainly brutal enough, I just can’t think of a time when I’d want to listen to this album, specifically, when another one wouldn’t do just as well. But just as with Marduk, if metal is what gets you off, you’ll most likely like this more than me. 4/10 [Listen If You Like: Opeth, car wrecks, industrial accidents]
Baroness – Blue Record, 2009: Relapse As a fan of prog-metal (prog-anything, really), this albums is pretty far up my alley. There’s not too much I can think of to say that wasn’t said two posts ago, so I guess just go listen! 8/10 [Listen If You Like: Mastodon, High On Fire, The Sword]

The Mountain Goats – Life of the World to Come, 2009: 4AD Releasing their 17th studio album in 18 years, the Mountain Goats are determined to prove to us all that quantity does in fact, outweigh quality. In a physical sense at least. The fact that this album is overtly biblically themed does nothing to help it’s case, but my main gripe is that it just feels and seems and sounds like more of the same. This could be attributed to the single, Genesis 3:23, having been released over three months prior to the album and by the time the album came out I had no longer associated the single with it, and hence the eerie familiarity. Or it could be due to the fact that this band has been releasing albums for longer than over a quarter of the world’s population has been alive. This album might please old fans and maybe attract some new listeners, but they will never (EVER! And I say this with all confidence…) write a better song than No Children, the pathos of which was only fully realized when juxtaposed as the opening theme for adult swim’s Moral Orel for one single episode. (PLEASE! If you are squeamish or easily offended, I would advise you not to click that last link. But if you haven’t seen this before and your funny bone’s got a bit of a bend to it, it’s thoroughly enjoyable. ~HL) 6.5/10 [Listen If You Like: Death Cab For Cutie, Deerhunter, Asobi Seksu]










