“Looking Back is for the Birds”

“Enough Words” – Spring 2012

1. Hot Chip – Flutes
2. White Rabbits – Temporary
3. Phantogram – Don’t Move
4. M83 – Reunion
5. Bear in Heaven – World of Freakout
6. Fleetwod Mac – The Chain
7. LCD Soundsystem – Freak Out/Starry Eyes
8. Elbow – The Birds
9. Talking Heads – Burning Down the House
10. Chromatics – Lady
11. The Shins – Bait and Switch
12. Neutral Milk Hotel – Two-Headed Boy
13. Franz Ferdinand – I’m Your Villain
14. Ra Ra Riot – Too Too Too Fast
15. The Walkmen – Heaven

Annotations after the jump…

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“I Fell in Love with the Burden Holding Me Down”

Hello! I’m still alive and even listening to music. Here’s the mix I made for the season.

“Happiness in Others” – Winter 2011/12

1. The Drums – How it Ended
2. Tennis – Origins
3. Grouplove – Colours
4. Gang Gang Dance – Adult Goth
5. Radiohead – Staircase
6. Peaking Lights – All the Sun that Shines
7. Talking Heads – I’m Not in Love
8. Jay-Z and Kanye West – No Church in the Wild
9. Drake – Headlines
10. Suicide – Diamonds, Fur Coat, Champagne
11. The War on Drugs – Baby Missiles
12. White Denim – Drug
13. White Rabbits – Danny Come Inside
14. Elbow – Grounds for Divorce
15. M83 – Teen Angst
16. Wilco – One Sunday Morning

Annotations:

-I don’t think the songs I choose for a season mix are usually very biographical, but this one is kind of an exception. There were a few tough choices between what made it onto the mix and what didn’t based on my headspace a while back.
-Then again, I mean, wow! Look at a bunch of those titles. “Adult Goth”? “Teen Angst”? “Grounds for Divorce”? One of the bands is even named Suicide, for fucking out loud. You might think I had a really bad season! But it was actually pretty good, for the most part. Maybe I just have a thing for depressing music?
-Award for most unintentionally hilarious segue in a while: the spoken outro of Drake’s “Headlines” (must only be on the album version, couldn’t find one on YouTube, sorry), in which he implores us to stop talking about how much something cost vs. how we got it and hey let’s maybe engage with each other more than our money you guys, which then goes straight into a song called “Diamonds, Fur Coat, Champagne”. Nice one, Meyer!
-I’ve been listening to a lot of M83 lately – especially the new album – but “Teen Angst” was a real standout from when I saw them live last month. Partly because I didn’t even know the song very well before that. There’s a lot to be said for discovering (or re-discovering) a song as the band plays it directly to you – it can be a powerful thing. Maybe next season something new like “Claudia Lewis” or “Year One, One UFO” will make it on here.
-Other close calls: Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s “Fffunny Fffriends”; Ra Ra Riot’s “Too Too Too Fast”; The Shins’ “Simple Song”.

“Told Myself I’d Never Write a Love Song”

“No Warmth in Dreams” – Fall 2011

1. Wilco – I Might
2. The Drums – Money
3. Future Islands – Walking Through That Door
4. Four Tet – Locked
5. Guided by Voices – Gold Star for Robot Boy
6. M83 – Couleurs
7. Jay Z & Kanye West – Murder to Excellence
8. White Denim – Anvil Everything
9. Fela Kuti – Gentleman
10. Little Dragon – Ritual Union
11. The Rapture – Children
12. Ted Leo and the Pharmacists – Ativan Eyes
13. Pavement – Frontwards
14. Yacht – Tripped and Fell in Love
15. Talking Heads – Take Me to the River

Mixes are much easier to make when the average song length is over 5 minutes! Dunno why this mix is so full of long songs. Seriously: four songs on here are over seven minutes, and the 11-minute Fela track is the SHORT version. And yet, Gold Star for Robot Boy is barely 90 seconds. Weird.

The title sort of sounds pretty damn depressing, but I meant it in a more motivational way, as in dreams by themselves don’t amount to much if you never make the effort to act on them. Not sure that has a lot to do with the music on the mix, it’s just kind of a general feeling from these last few months. Next season: hopefully something more uplifting!

Deferred Jams

(Being the latest in my series of quarterly mixes…this one easily a month late.)

“Too Much Time” – Summer 2011

1. Phoenix – Consolation Prizes
2. Holy Ghost! – Wait and See
3. Little Dragon – Nightlight
4. Jay-Z & Kanye West – Ni**as in Paris
5. Aeroplane – Caramellas
6. The Rapture – How Deep is Your Love?
7. Friendly Fires – Chimes
8. Ra Ra Riot – Ghost Under Rocks
9. Ducktails – Killin the Vibe
10. Okkervil River – The Valley
11. Cults – Go Outside
12. Yacht – I Walked Alone
13. The Mountain Goats – High Hawk Season
14. Times New Viking – Fuck Her Tears
15. TV on the Radio – New Cannonball Blues
16. Washed Out – Before
17. White Denim – Is and Is and Is
18. M83 – Midnight City
19. The Flaming Lips – Feeling Yourself Disintegrate

Annotations:
-I made an honest-to-god mixtape for someone this summer, and after making it felt I had to tell her not to read too much into the song titles and lyrics I chose. Same thing applies here. I’m drawn to melodies much more quickly than lyrics most of the time, and trying to literally transcribe four months of my life via song titles wouldn’t be much fun for anyone as it is. So basically, don’t look at titles like “Feeling Yourself Disintegrate” and “Fuck Her Tears” and assume I had a shitty summer or anything.
-Actually, “Feeling Yourself Disintegrate” is on there because I saw the Flaming Lips play the entirety of The Soft Bulletin at Hollywood Forever cemetery a few months back. It was nuts, and a fantastic way to revisit one of my favorite albums from college. Maybe they’ll do Yoshimi shows in two years?
-“Go Outside” was pretty overplayed and isn’t even a favorite song of mine, but it’s here as motivation, I guess – to go outside, do stuff, stay active. Or else!
-So, so tough to choose a Yacht song – I’ve been jocking Shangri-La constantly for months now, and I very nearly chose “Dystopia” or “Paradise Engineering” instead. The whole album’s great, and the band is a ton of fun live. I’m sure you’ll be seeing much more from this album on future mixes.

The latest and greatest season mix

“Almost Anything” – Spring 2011

1. Friendly Fires – Live Those Days Tonight
2. My Morning Jacket – Holdin’ on to Black Metal
3. Here We Go Magic – Hands in the Sky
4. Dodos – Good
5. Beastie Boys ft. Nas – Too Many Rappers
6. Land of Talk – Hamburg, Noon
7. Tune-Yards – Bizness
8. LCD Soundsystem – Pow Pow
9. Wild Nothing – Chinatown
10. The Mountain Goats – Estate Sale Sign
11. Junip – In Every Direction
12. TV on the Radio – Will Do
13. Peter, Bjorn and John – (Don’t Let Them) Cool Off
14. !!! – Heart of Hearts
15. Radiohead – Codex
16. Panda Bear – Afterburner
17. Fleet Foxes – Grown Ocean

Annotations:

-This was a tough one to put together because there were a LOT of close calls. I would’ve loved to include Crystal Stilts’ “Through the Floor”, Battles’ “Futura”, and Iron & Wine’s “Your Fake Name is Good Enough for Me”, but a CD’s only 80 minutes.

-Also Fleet Foxes’ “The Shrine/An Argument”, which I have the clearest memory of from seeing their concert in May. Awesome show and awesome song, but it was just too long for the mix, and “Grown Ocean” is no slouch at all (the more I think about it, the more it feels like my favorite song on the new album).

-“Pow Pow” is supposedly the last song LCD Soundsystem ever made, so it feels like a fitting representation of the season that saw the band bid us farewell. (Too bad it wasn’t actually played at their farewell show, but oh well.) Speaking of, I never got around to writing up a blog entry about the retirement of one of my all-time favorite bands – and experiencing their last show via webcast in a house full of friends – but maybe I’ll get around to that at some point.

-John Darnielle does righteous anger better than just about anyone, and I’m not saying this was an angry season for me (could’ve been, but wasn’t), but you can’t help but get swept up in his enthusiasm on songs like “Estate Sale Sign”. Darnielle sounds more alive here than he has in a good while, and the rest of All Eternals Deck is pretty great, too. Also: Pomona gets another shout out!

-Junip is the new band of Jose Gonzalez – who everyone in the world except me is already familiar with, I think. The production alone on this album, and this song especially, is just incredible. There aren’t many albums that make you feel like you’re in the room with the dudes while they’re playing, but this is one. Now I have to go out and track down Gonzalez’s other work, too.

-I dunno if it’s a happy accident or I’m just that awesome, but a lot of the transitions just KILL on here. “Good” into “Too Many Rappers” shouldn’t work nearly as well as it does, and the fade from “Codex” to “Afterburner” feels sublime to me. Overall I think this is one of my best sequencing jobs yet, so allow me to pat myself on the back.

Yep, still doing these.

“All Best Guesses” – Winter 2010/2011

1. Grouplove – Don’t Say Oh Well
2. !!! – All My Heroes are Weirdos
3. Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros – Home
4. Circulatory System – Overjoyed
5. Cut Copy – Where I’m Going
6. Peter, Bjorn & John – Second Chance
7. Kanye West – All of the Lights
8. The Chemical Brothers – Swoon
9. Wolf Parade – Cave-O-Sapien
10. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Round and Round
11. Smith Westerns – Weekend
12. Vampire Weekend – Holiday
13. Iron & Wine – Rabbit Will Run
14. The Go! Team – Buy Nothing Day
15. Deerhunter – Fountain Stairs
16. Donovan – Season of the Witch
17. Sufjan Stevens – I Want to Be Well
18. Oh No Oh My – Summerdays

(Who knows how long any of these links will last, so listen early, listen often)

 

The End of the Neon Meate Dream

Whatever you may think about SPIN Magazine, a little over a decade ago it was solely responsible for introducing me to Captain Beefheart.

Back when most websites had MIDI soundtracks and ugly wallpaper best viewed with Netscape Navigator, the blog culture hadn’t yet developed and magazines were basically the best way to keep up with the culture of music. Or at least, they were the best way for young turks like me, voracious readers and anxious learners just discovering the world of music beyond the mainstream.

One month, nestled between articles on the new exploits of Christina Aguilera and the Beastie Boys and whoever else was a curious piece on a man who hadn’t released a record in nearly twenty years. His name was Captain Beefheart. He looked nothing like anyone else in the magazine, and the article went to great lengths to explain how his music sounded like nobody else’s, either. It explored the early years of his career, his spark of popularity, and then his retreat into the California desert, severing all ties with the music industry. Though he had spent nearly two decades as a recluse and many of his albums were difficult to find, his wildly experimental concoction of blues, folk and rock continued to inspire artists to that day. And the album widely regraded to be his masterpiece, Trout Mask Replica, had just been re-released.

For a culturally suffocated midwestern teenager like me, looking for anything at all to help separate myself from the Abercrombie-clad high school herd, desperately if need be, this was like discovering the holy grail. I found a copy of Replica and purchased it sight unseen (no small feat for me; in those poor days, I would heavily vet every album at Streetside Records’ listening station before purchase). I took it home and put it on, listening with a half-frown because parts of it were so jarring, but also with a half-smile because I was prepared. This was an album I knew I would not love on first listen; it would require some effort from me, but it would be worth it in the end. I reminded myself that, according to the article, this was the all-time favorite album of Matt Groening, of all people.

I listened to it over and over again. I played it for my friends, and I even played it for my parents. I wrote a five-star review of the album in my high-school newspaper. I don’t remember specifically how I described his sound, but I’m pretty sure I quoted “Fast and bulbous!” somewhere in there. And I took immense pleasure in playing the album for the rest of the newspaper staff, a grin both wicked and smug plastered to my face when my fellow teenagers cringed or yelled “turn it off!” or “this is terrible!” or just left the room.

I rarely made it all the way to the end of the album. 28 tracks of Captain Beefheart was a little much even for me, but that didn’t really matter. I considered picking up other albums like Safe as Milk, but still being a neophyte (and, frankly, an idiot kid) when it came to music, I had figured everything else could only be a diluted form of Replica, so I passed. At that time, though, those were only details. I had found a brash badge of individuality and I did not hesitate to show it off. And I was beginning to realize, too, that you could appreciate music without always wanting to listen to it: this music, so intensely honest and unflinchingly enthusiastic, most definitely had its time and place.

I was also really proud when one of my friends purchased The Spotlight Kid of his own volition. To me, still, there are few better things in life than knowing you’ve helped someone discover a new favorite artist.

I went off to college and began working as a DJ at the radio station, quickly finding myself surrounded by like-minded individuals who were far more versed in indie rock than I. And anyone can tell you that a group of liberal art school hipsters can get pretty insufferable: their codes of necessary knowledge and aloofness are as strict as anything they loudly rebel against. So while I came in not knowing Merge from Matador or Ian Curtis from Ian MacKaye, I did possess one unshakable piece of indie capital in the form of Mr. Beefheart. Our fiercely underground library included most of his albums – all on vinyl, of course – so I played him on my show whenever I could.

Eventually I realized that my show needed a name, and I settled on “Captain Beefheart Rides Again”. That meant (to me, a least) that I had to play at least one Beefheart song per show. It was a shtick, but one I was more than happy to repeat. Usually I played songs I knew from Replica, but I would branch out every now and then, too. One day I finally dug out the vinyl copy of Ice Cream for Crow, Beefheart’s final studio album, and played the title track. It was my virgin listen, and I was as curious and confused by it as the first time I had heard any other Beefheart song. It was ramshackle crazy, its blind enthusiasm unspooling at speeds almost impossible to conceive. Even his voice sounded more surreal than usual. But this is what I should have expected from the man, I thought: the unexpected. Always.

Then the phone rang. I picked it up; it was a listener.

“Slow it down, man!” He bellowed.

“Uh, what?” I thought for a moment that this was his way of saying I was playing so much great music that he could barely handle it.

“The record, man!” He said. “You’re playing it too fast!”

I looked at the record player: it was at 45 RPM. I switched it to 33 RPM, and the hyper jamming slowed to a dirty, bluesy stomp, Beefheart’s signature howl now as deep as I remembered it.

“Oh shit,” I said, and thanked the listener.

But I regretted fixing the RPM in the middle of the song. In some ways, it felt like it would have been more appropriate to let it run at the same crazy speed. For Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band, there almost seemed to be no one right way to play a song, or sing, or even maintain a rhythm. Theirs was the sound of ultimate musical freedom, with all the highs and lows and rushes of inspiration and quagmires of confusion that come with it.

After college, I listened to Captain Beefheart less and less frequently, and eventually stopped altogether. Too much time spent keeping up with the music culture and its symbiotic relationship with the blogosphere. SPIN magazine continues to this day, though I haven’t read it in years. I can only imagine how difficult it must have been to get an editor to sign off on a Captain Beefheart article back in the late 90s, but I hope they’re continuing to take those risks. It’s one of the only articles I still remember from that era.

Captain Beefheart’s real name was Don Van Vliet. He passed away yesterday, at the age of 69.

The more I think back on my minor obsession with the man’s music, the more I realize I didn’t really understand much of it at all. But that’s partly the point, I think. With that unique authorial voice, that singular outlook which inspired such a daring and unforgettable body of work, any of us would be hard-pressed to say that we truly understood a man who began his career with Frank Zappa and ended it in the desolation of the Mojave.

My familiarity with his work didn’t end up being as encyclopedic or everlasting as I thought it would, but Van Vliet still had an undeniable effect on my musical tastes, strengthened my appetite for experimental art, and helped show me the endless possibilities that creativity can offer beyond the measured pleasures and well-trod roads of most other artists.

If I had ever been able to meet the man, I would have liked to thank him for that.

This Fall (but without The Fall)

“I’ll Sleep When I’m Rich” – Fall 2010

1. Pavement – Box Elder
2. Crystal Stilts – Shake the Shackles
3. Kanye West – Power
4. Shit Robot – Take ’em Up
5. Of Montreal – Enemy Gene
6. Sufjan Stevens – Get Real Get Right
7. Sleigh Bells – Straight A’s
8. Hot Chip – Hand Me Down Your Love
9. LCD Soundsystem – Dance Yrself Clean
10. Klaxons – Echoes
11. No Age – Glitter
12. Tokyo Police Club – Bambi
13. Caribou (Manitoba technically) – Skunks
14. Land of Talk – Goaltime Exposure
15. Les Savy Fav – Yawn, Yawn, Yawn
16. The New Pornographers – Sweet Talk, Sweet Talk
17. Los Campesinos! – You’ll Need Those Fingers for Crossing
18. Arcade Fire – Suburban War

For lack of time and interest in discussing every single song, select annotations below!

-A few years back, I would have killed to see Pavement in concert. And now I’ve seen them twice in one year, which feels weird, in retrospect. Partly because I was a little underwhelmed the first time I saw them, and kind of apathetic about the second show. Not that they sounded bad; just very ramshackle and lo-fi, which is really how they should sound live, I guess. Both venues I saw them at (Coachella main stage and, worse, the Hollywood Bowl) were way too big for their “just a bunch of dudes” charm – something like the Henry Fonda or (yeah, right) The Echoplex would have been perfect. But I end up feeling like that about most indie rock acts I see at the Bowl, so…who knows. At any rate, “Box Elder” was not a song they played, but is one that I really hoped they would play, so here it is.

-Again on the concert train, I have an Of Montreal song up partially for the Halloween show I attended (and partially because its themes are similar to a script I’m working on right now), but just realized I forgot to include a Janelle Monae song, too. Whoops. Maybe that’ll go on the deluxe re-issue 10 years from now. At least this one half-counts.

-Sufjan Stevens is an interesting case. I wasn’t really a fan of his, I guess, “singery-songwritery pleasantness” on previous albums (whether that was true or just my perception of him), but his new work, at least since his Dark Was the Night offering “You Are the Blood”, has gotten pretty nuts, and “Get Real Get Right” is a pretty perfect example, overstuffed with nervous strings, impending-doom horns and dizzying vocal acrobatics that grab you by the ears and demand your attention. I also realized after maybe a dozen listens that the song has a Christian overtone that’s pretty blatant once it’s uncovered, but – I can relate to the idea of needing to get your shit together for whatever reason, religious or otherwise. So, many reasons to include it here.

-The Sleigh Bells/Hot Chip/LCD progression is a pretty blatant chronological snapshot of their awesome Hollywood Bowl show a few months back – one of my favorite concerts in recent memory (and maybe of all time). “Straight A’s” as a song is about as loud and brief an encapsulation of Sleigh Bells’ set as possible, and “Hand Me Down Your Love” is, well, one of the few Hot Chip songs I haven’t put on a mix yet. “Dance Yrself Clean” was the first song LCD played, and it immediately knocked me for a loop: I never expected them to play that song, and it signaled the beginning of a show full of awesome surprises, focusing on the best parts of This is Happening with some welcome throwbacks to the band’s first singles. And unlike bands I mentioned earlier, LCD is completely wired to play gigantic venues; they play with such force and enthusiasm that they can’t help but envelop even the sprawling Hollywood Bowl. Did I mention I was in the fourth row? Yeah, it was a great concert.

-I’ve been listening to a lot of Caribou lately, but honestly had no clear frontrunner to symbolize this. I feel like a lot of his music works better in album form than individual tracks – I’ve had Swim on heavy rotation for months, but I’d be hard-pressed to list my three favorite tracks from it. But I’ve really appreciated “Skunks” for a long time, all the way back to 2003 when Caribou was Manitoba, so it felt as appropriate as anything else.

-Another one of my favorite albums from this year, still, is Romance is Boring, but the Los Campesinos! track this season is from 2008’s We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed, a strange 2008 release following the band’s smash debut album earlier that year. It really is LC!’s Amnesiac, overall not as strong as the album released months prior, but it does feature some of the band’s best tracks, from “Ways to Make it Through the Wall” to the title track to the one on this very mix, “You’ll Need Those Fingers for Crossing”. One of the few LC! songs that’s a definite grower, this one is less about Gareth’s tragicomic character sketches and sugary mixed-gender shoutalongs than it is about the band’s secret weapon, multi-instrumentalist Tom Campesinos!, whose melodies keep the songs together when all else seems seconds from bursting at the seams. Even if the song wavers into melodrama occasionally, it’s an easy flaw to forgive every time that soaring guitar chorus washes everything else away.

-The Arcade Fire track here was very nearly “We Used to Wait” – and it’s tough, when I’m considering a track that got really big and popular and possibly over-played during that season. The hipster part of me says “fuck it, dude, you missed the boat, now it’s cliche and you won’t even want to hear it again for a long time”, while the realist part says “fuck you, dude, you can’t pretend you don’t sometimes discover a song at the same time as everyone else.” And then they fight for a while, until a third part of me shows up and says “uh, dude, it’s all about what the song says to you, not anyone else.” And this third part is always right. So, whether I missed the boat on “We Used to Wait” or not, here’s “Suburban War”, another in a long line of Arcade Fire tracks that seems permanently relevant to me and, I’m sure, to a lot of you.

It’s that time again.

This was at first really easy and then really hard to sequence. Eventually decided, fuck it, the nine-minute track goes first. Most of these are Coachella bands/songs, though the songs chosen aren’t always “oh yeah they played that one well”.

“Spring 2010: 7 of Out of 10”

1. LCD Soundsystem – You Wanted a Hit
2. Sleigh Bells – Rill Rill (Ring Ring?)
3. Broken Social Scene – Forced to Love
4. Broken Bells – The Ghost Inside
5. MGMT – Flash Delirium
6. Gorillaz – Empire Ants
7. Vampire Weekend – Giving Up the Gun
8. MUTEMATH – Armistice
9. Pavement – Trigger Cut
10. Dirty Projectors – Knotty Pine
11. Hot Chip – We Have Love
12. Julian Casablancas – 11th Dimension
13. Public Image, Ltd. – Careering
14. The Besnard Lakes – And This is What We Call Progress
15. The National – Bloodbuzz Ohio
16. Spoon – Out Go the Lights
17. Los Campesinos! – This is a Flag. There is No Wind.
18. Working for a Nuclear Free City – The Tree

2010 Tunes: a Campesinos for All Seasons


Of all the bands I’ve come to truly love over the last few years, Los Campesinos! has been one of the most problematic to recommend to friends. Their 2008 debut album, Hold on Now, Youngster… hit a very specific wavelength of shout-along post-twee anthemic indie rock so confidently and completely that – well – it became difficult to recommend the album to anyone who wasn’t looking for exactly that sound. And is it the kind of thing you’d even know you were looking for until you heard it, anyway? At times overcaffeinated and bouncing off the walls, at others deceptively maudlin and veering close to over-smart, it was nevertheless a record that always gave 110%, a breakneck ride through the weird wonderful world of seven barely-adults from Cardiff that, OK, you kind of have to be in the right frame of mind to enjoy. And don’t get me wrong: I am there, often, and when I am the music is fucking great. I’ve just found that this isn’t the same for everyone.

But, good news: my friends won’t be able to use that excuse much longer.

The band’s “proper” sophomore album, Romance is Boring, has just been released and I’m honestly surprised how spectacularly these guys have managed to balance their sound. The album as a whole sounds a little more centrist, but it’s barely at the expense of losing anything that makes their sound so unique. If anything, they’re just growing up and branching out, but staying true to themselves all the while.

It’s there even in the first few notes of the album, a slight variation on what I call the LC Riff. If you know the band well, you have heard the LC Riff. It’s a fairly simple but memorable melody – usually played on violin but sometimes synths or otherwise – that appears in many variations across the band’s work. It only shows up at the end of Hold on Now, but pops in and out of a good chunk of odds-n-sods collection We are Beautiful, We are Doomed, often late in the song – check out 3:00 into “Ways to Make it Though the Wall” – always slightly different but an unmistakable callback, a motif, a wink to the fans, whatever. It’s here in full force from second one on Romance, immediately welcoming you to familiar territory. But 30 seconds in it takes a turn into new territory, measuring its time and building up to the big release, with Gareth Campesinos! welcoming you to the album with a phrase you never thought you’d hear him say: “Let’s talk about you for a minute”.

Already in this first minute, they’ve spelled out their mission statement. And, OK, Gareth does spend only a literal minute in second-person before returning to his hilariously pessimistic autobiographical sketches, but hey, baby steps. The song soon submerges into feedback, glides around in it for a minute, seems to meander. And you start to wonder if maybe these guys are losing their way already. But then it roars back to life, so goddamned triumphant that it brings along a whole horn section (pay attention to these horns; they’ll be back), one more killer verse from Gareth, and then, yes, a short spoken-word outro, because this is still Los Campesinos, right – and it’s done. As far as opening tracks go, it’s not a barn-burner in the vein of “Death to Los Campesinos!”, but it does set the tone for the rest of the album pretty perfectly.

The next two tracks are the album’s lead singles, and while I’m not sure I would have chosen the same ones (probably because most of my favorite parts of the album hinge on the word “fuck”), they’re more than worthy as catchy gateway drugs for new listeners. The title track in particular has a great dirty southern rock feel to it, another new direction for them. There are actually a lot of neat new flourishes all over the album, no doubt thanks to musical mastermind Tom Campesinos!. There’s the aforementioned horns, the stringy guitar scraps winding under “We’ve Got Your Back”, the blown-out punk fuzz of “Plan A”. Weirdest and most interesting is “I Just Sighed. I Just Sighed, Just So You Know” (title aside), a detuned inversion of that LC Riff getting ground around in a thick hyperspeed mash. It’s thrilling stuff. Dunno how they’ll replicate it on stage, but still, thrilling.

It’s great to see how everyone’s stepped up their game here, from Harriet’s violins to Ollie’s drums. Aleks’s presence isn’t as widespread as it used to be – which makes sense given that she’s on her way out of the band – but her contributions are more varied and vital than ever, maybe because of their infrequency. At once sarcastic ice queen on “I Warned You, Do Not Make an Enemy of Me”, judgmental conscience on “A Heat Rash in the Shape of the Show-Me State” and needling huckster on “Plan A”, she’s become far more than an easy vocal counterpoint, and her presence will be missed.

(Side note: is anyone else really wary of the new lineup? Not that it has anything to do with my hopeless crush on Aleks (well, maybe a bit) or new acquisition Kim Campesinos! personally, but the fact that Gareth’s new vocal counterpart will be his sister places the band dynamic in a fundamentally different light. Like any band with mixed genders and intensely personal lyrics – The Smashing Pumpkins, The xx, hell, Fleetwood Mac – a lot of the fans’ morbid fun comes from speculating on the romantic relationships, whether real or imagined, between the band members, and how those inform our listening experiences. The listener who thinks they must have hooked up has a different experience from the one who thinks he must have a huge crush on her and the one who thinks she must think he has a crush on her and so on. But when you’re talking about two siblings, all this speculation falls away – unless you have a really twisted view of them, which I don’t. Still hoping for the best with Kim, but there’s no denying that the Los Campesinos! of 2011 will be a very different beast.)

But this is also an intensely personal album for Gareth. The word is that most of his lyrical illustrations are only barely fictional, and I don’t think he’s even changed the names of old flames (I can’t believe that the Charlotte to whom he writes letters on “Heat Rash” isn’t the same Charlotte he thanked in the liner notes of We Are Beautiful), yet he doesn’t shy away from details whether hilarious or depressing. Only on “Who Fell Asleep In” does it become a little too much, a slow confessional dirge that’s missing most of the trademark Campesinos humor and vitality. And it’s not a matter of just being slow; by contrast, late-album track “The Sea is a Good Place to Think of the Future” is hardly fast, but carries such epic weight and emotion (and plenty of Gareth’s trademark oddball character sketches) that it easily becomes one of the band’s best tracks.

In fact, Romance is Boring has one of the best late-album sequences I’ve heard in a good long while. From the off-kilter “I Warned You” to “Heat Rash”, a steel-eyed regret that swells into a towering anthem with the return of those fucking horns, through “The Sea is a Good Place” to proper album climax “This is a Flag. There is No Wind”, a vitriolic shout-along that doubles back to familiar territory without once forgetting all the new ground they’ve tread. Here, after the shouts and the choruses and crescendos, the LC Riff comes rolling back in, ready to send the album out on the same note that ended Hold on Now, Youngster. But then it magnifies and bottoms out, and the band comes roaring back in – “Our friends have put the two of us on suicide watch!” – and our expectations are gloriously upended once again. This shit is exhilarating.

It’s a perfect end to the album, though it is followed by one more track: the fittingly-named “Coda: A Burn Scar in the Shape of the Sooner State”, which is just Gareth, his glockenspiel and a gloom of guitar feedback. It’s a hugely abrupt comedown from the previous song, but in context it feels important, a lament of personal failure aimed at… maybe one of the girls named on the album, maybe the departing Aleks, maybe all, maybe none (see? It’s fun to theorize). It’s such a downer that I usually want to skip the track – though that just starts the album over again. And I am always fine with that.

So, yes, it gives me great pleasure to say that this is my favorite album of theirs, and so far my favorite album of 2010 – which, in a year already filled with new releases by Spoon, Hot Chip, Gorillaz and Massive Attack, is really saying something. It’s exciting to hear and watch one of your favorite bands really maturing and improving, especially when they produce the kind of sound that speaks to a wider audience – without selling themselves or their fans short. It’s a rare triumph of a (technically) sophomore album, and hopefully just one more step in a long and successful career.