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Tyler Durdan

Tyler Durdan

Adventurer and blogger by trade, dreamer and listener by habit. Love to cook, I'm footloose in my Velcro shoes.

Bon Iver and the Six Facts You Need to Know

Thursday, 08 December 2011 11:28 Published in Music News
Admittedly, I am late to this party. Bon Iver has been around and touring since 2007 yet only now is the group getting the attention that it deserves. During the Grammy Nomination concert, at which Bon Iver was nominated for four awards, including Best New Artist. That night Bon Iver was trending on Twitter and their Youtube video hit counter spun like an odometer on a UPS truck. Here are six facts you need to know about Bon Iver.
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1. The group is not one person, but four: Justin Vernon (lead vocals and founder), Sean Carey (Drums, Percussion, Piano), and Matthew McCaughan (bass, drums, vocals), and Michael Noyce (baritone guitar, vocals).
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2. The name Bon Iver comes from the French phrase Bon Hiver, which means "good winter".
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3. In order to accurately reproduce the vocals on many of the bands songs, Vernon passes out lyrics to audience before shows. "The song actually needs 80-500 people singing or whatever the vibe is of that room, it needs that fight." says Vernon in an Interview with Pitchfork Music.
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4. The all solo debut album, For Emma, Forever Ago, was recorded by Vernon in a remote cabin and was self released. The first versions of the album were sold locally in Wisconsin in card stock binding.
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5. Justin Vernon was featured on the Kanye West track Monsters, which also featured Rick Ross, Nicki Minaj, and Jay-Z.
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6. Vernon lists his major inspirations for his music as Morrissey and "complete solitude".
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Foo Fighters: Wasting Light

Thursday, 08 December 2011 11:20 Published in Album Reviews
As the curtain opens on Wasting Light it is glaringly clear that his album is deeper in the roots of the Foo Fighters than the prior two predecessors. Like a locomotive barreling down the tracks, Bridges Burning pulses under the weight of opening the eleven song set, busting at the seams with aggressive percussion mixes. Rope, the first single to be released is a raw nerve demanding attention be paid to the over the top production and acts as a precursor to what is coming. The album plunges into the emotion that is trapped inside the bands guitarist-singer-overall master as he continues to answer the public and himself when confronted with questions centered on Kurt Cobain.
In a November concert in Boston Grohl stated that These Days was his favorite song he has ever written. Seconds into the melodic string motions you can tell that the angst that embodied the front man’s former band is still alive within his thoughts. This sentiment is only echoed in Arlandria, the searing breakup letter not to a girl, but to his past life in Virginia, a period of life he is not fond of. “Fame, fame go away/ come again another day” could have easily been written by Cobain, and it is strikingly refreshing to see the undying passion still present in the Foo Fighters.
Sixteen years and six albums after the initial, all solo debut of the Foo Fighters in 1995, Wasting Light is not only the band’s seventh studio album but also their best since 1997’s The Colour and the Shape. The growling machismo that is soaked in all eleven tracks is a strong shift from the pop toned production of Echoes, Silience, Patience & Grace. Dave Grohl has said in the past that each album is reminiscent of the band’s current state and that the influences drawn always vary. It seems that the biggest inspiration for this album was himself, weaving personal torment with overdue expression. The end result is a quilt of mosh pit ready guitar play with pulsing drum tones that when mixed with Grohl’s signature growl creates one of the best albums of the year.

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In Utero Remembered

Tuesday, 06 December 2011 11:48 Published in Album Reviews

Most know Nirvana to be the parents of the bastard child that became grunge music. The fusing of heavy guitars with methodical production with pop infused hooks and weighty lyrics became the signature of the group as they took the captain's chair of the early 90's rock music scene. There is a greatly overlooked piece to this puzzle as Kurt Cobain, after the success of Bleach and Nevermind, saw that his small garage band was taking shape into something, something he railed against in the early years of the group. Consistently Cobain pushed his favorite bands believing that he himself would never surpass their success. (Nirvana famously covered both The Meat Puppets and The Vaselines during their MTV Unplugged performance in 1993.)

 

In Utero, the third and final studio album from the group, was released in early September 1993 and attained moderate commercial success. The underlying terror of the album is the basis of the message expressed in this forty-four minute masterpiece. The simple fact is, Cobain and the band sought for the album to be a spit in the face of their fans, a desperate attempt to shed their undying admiration.

 

A lot has been passed and overlooked in the recent years of the recording business. As consumers, we seek out catchy, hook driven radio popularity. The art of creating an album has all been lost, with only a few diamonds in the rough shining through the waining sunlight. The genius of Nirvana, and the brilliance of In Utero specifically, is that a group of such mass popularity looked their audience square in the face and said, "thanks, but we're all set by ourselves".

 

For a change of pace, listen to the inner trappings of a man who just wanted to express what many of us share with a few of his friends. The album signifies a high water mark, where you can see the oceanic wave of thought and care that once made music great, and the point that it reached its height and rolled back into the depths of the darkness.

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