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  • Music survey…

    Music survey…

    This morning, I had an interesting experience while taking a music survey…

    And I didn’t take the survey because I write about music. I actually took the survey because I am a member of MySurvey.com, which is a site where members take surveys and earn points that can be traded in for cash or gift cards. I’ve been on MySurvey.com for about ten years and it’s been an interesting experience. Sometimes I test products. Sometimes I watch videos or commercials, then answer questions. Sometimes the surveys are really boring and tedious and sometimes they’re pretty interesting. This morning’s survey was one of the cooler ones.

    The first thing I liked about the music survey was that it was visually very appealing. It used bright colors and graphics, which I found engaging and exciting. I was asked about a variety of popular music artists, everyone from Andrea Boccelli to Lady Gaga. The questions on the survey asked if I had ever heard of them, liked their music, or owned their music. I was asked if I bought CDs, downloaded albums, or listened to “free” music sources like Spotify. I was even asked if I used a peer to peer music service like the old Napster. Next, I listened to fifteen music samples from a variety of different artists– everything from reggae to modern country. I heard a few folks for the first time that I actually really enjoyed. In fact, I found that I liked a lot of the music that was sampled, even though I’ve fallen out of touch with really mainstream pop music. Another part of the survey was about how much of certain types of music I own and whether or not I ripped CDs owned by other people.

    I noticed that the people who made the survey were probably British, based on the language they used and the way they spelled some words. And I noticed that they seemed to be pitching U2 and Lady Gaga…


    As this classic U2 song played during the survey, I realized how awesome and iconic U2 is… But maybe that’s just because I’m old.

    Those two artists got several clips dedicated to them.

    I’m sure the music survey I took this morning is about finding out what people like and what people are willing to buy. For me, it was kind of an interesting discovery process. I kind of wish I had written down the names of a couple of the singers I was introduced to on the music survey, even though they seem like they might be a bit trendy for what I usually like. But then, I don’t pay attention to what’s hot as much as I do to what I like. If I’m somewhere out and about and hear a song I like, I use Shazam to find out what the title is and who’s singing it.

    I don’t often enjoy the surveys I take on MySurvey.com, though I have made some money and scored some freebies doing them, which makes it worthwhile for me. I hope they send me more music surveys, though. This morning’s experience was very intriguing. It makes me realize that I probably ought to turn on the radio more often.

  • #44 album of 2013 – Look on the Blight Side by Louis Logic

    Artist: Louis Logic

    Album: Look on the Blight Side

    The year 2012 — which is, I agree, not the one I’m reviewing currently — was to me a year of extraordinary flowering in hip-hop. That’s not a proper belief among the true hip-hop fans I know, who hold that hip-hop’s Best Year Ever cannot possibly be any year Louis Logic Blight Sideafter 1995. But I am a false hip-hop fan, or at least an odd one, and hip-hop — despite a pioneering exception or three — didn’t develop its equivalent of the “alternative rock” scene, full of outsider questionings and over-educated wordplay and sonic experimentalism and a rejection of macho posturing, until after that. So that my 2012 could feature, all in prime form, Aesop Rock‘s hilariously encrypted emotional gut-punches; Flobots‘ smart activism, self-questioning, and live-band inventiveness; BBU‘s college-radical bratty charm and retro catchiness; Killer Mike‘s elevation of gangsta-rap to something perceptive enough to threaten beyond its own immediate (and beleaguered) neighborhood; Justinus Primitive‘s hypnotic, mystical welcoming-outsider pride; and Macklemore’s playful, good-natured mild subversions at the borders of his genre’s mainstream.

    So I’m disappointed to agree, for 2013, with the critical consensus that the year’s best hip-hop album, coming up later, was primarily about the expensive clothes, expensive cars, and unpaid groupies of (and, not in any way contradicting these, the near-slavery-like racial oppression of) Kanye West. I also enjoyed the Underachievers’ sonically playful, energetically rapped Indigoism, but I won’t be reviewing it: its assembled samples weren’t *quite* inventive enough to obscure for me the fact that it’s another rap album about getting high and using (a dull array of) naughty words.  So late in the year I asked my friend Kyle to recommend some unlike alternatives, and he came up with a couple of good ones that snuck their way onto the list. At #44, then, I have an album with a good chance of appealing to many among you who don’t enjoy hip-hop, in general, at all.

    Louis “Logic” Dorley is, on the one hand, a perky rapper with a quick tongue and a carnival-barker solicitousness that reminds me of early Eminem. Yet he’s also, at least as often, a pleasant singer drawn to lovely layered harmonies that can, as on Don’t Care, feel like psychedelia and classic doo-wop at the same time. Louis Logic‘s Look on the Blight Side is also a rare entry (like Flobots or Subtle) in the no-samples-only-live-instruments school of hip-hop. That doesn’t mean you’ll mistake it for a chamber orchestra — synthesizers are the favorite instrument here, often pushed along by heavily syncopated real drums. But it means the generally cheerful fairground atmosphere (Louis is surely a big fan of Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite) is slightly adding to the array of sounds from which the rest of the music world can steal. I honor that, as I honor the woozy 3/4 time of the Joke’s on You; the harmonica and Dixieland horns and 3/4 time again on They Don’t Make ’em Like They Used To (and, in a more chaotic 6/8, Big Fish Eat the Little Fish); the simple-but-catchy piano hook of Look on the Blight Side.

    About the lyrics, the simplest things to note are that he’s a social observer with a large vocabulary, clever rhymes, and — a serious outlier in his genre — opinions that I’d expect to read in liberal blogs and cranky Atlantic-style magazine features. He hates mass Louis Logic looming from on highmedia’s presentations of women (“It’s sad that it’s glamorous to have the chicks/ with the ugliest damages in front of these cameras./ How many shows do you know boast underfed famine-ists?”) and how they reverberate in the broader culture (“Staring at some foolhardy parent who hardly cares a/ bit if her kid ever does school if she wins some darn tiara”). He sees the scam-based aspects of capitalism, from the invention of products like bottled water (“It kills me that you pay so much for stuff the sky spills free”), to how industry long since invented “planned obsolescence”, with extensive government-corporate collusion, because there’s money in replacing junk. He challenges God’s motives in killing off all His characters in the end (“It’s not required, but he’s actually enjoying the work./ Spoiler alert… the story’s gonna end with him burying the boy in the dirt”).

    He’s perhaps less a skeptic of progress than just nostalgic (“Remember when a truthful togetherness was crucial?” Really? Are we remembering Catcher in the Rye, the Great Gatsby, or the Spanish Inquisition?). But whether or not “We’re all synthetic provisional lovers wrapped and stuffed in styrofoam”, he’s correct to note that school shootings used to be near-nonexistent, there used to be fewer TV programs about “meritless heiresses”, and that “But is anyone happier? Did you find enrichment?” is harder to answer with certainty than it should be, when happiness’s pursuit is why we’re stealing all those resources from our grandkids.

    As much as I like this album’s rejection of hip-hop stereotypes, I wish it gave a clearer sense of Louis Logic as a person (or persona). I like music’s political to be personal too: Midnight Oil’s warm welcomes to the struggle, New Model Army’s embrace of the depressed romance of inevitable defeat, Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine’s bleeding-heart empathy and determination to ward off the darkness with bleak but hilarious puns. The Coup offer brashness, shoplifting, and Communist ideology; Sage Francis offers density of detail and preposterous self-aggrandizement; Propagandhi offer poetry, intense self-questioning, devotion to their friends, and a sly sense of humor; Decomposure pleasantly admits both despair and being too lazy to fight properly anyway. Louis “Logic” Dorley slips into roles, but seems comfortable judging us from above, even when singing about his desire for romance over casual sex. So Chip Off the Old Blog and Big Fish Eat the Little Fish can’t sound to me like he’s satirizing a bully from inside the role — which I hope is the idea — when they sound like he’s being one. “Sedatives and whiskey are so passé./ You’re a class A butthead who should be living in an ashtray./ Say that the world ends today in a whirlwind./ Would a fibber like you admit in high school, you had a made up Canadian girlfriend?/ Pssshht… as if you had anyone fooled!/ Everyone knew you were never that cool” sounds like standard rap shit-talking. In which case “you’re a guy hiding far too much Venus for a Martian” does too, and how does that fit his critique of gender roles?

    Dorley *says* Big Fish is a satire of homophobia; I wish the album itself made it clearer. Still, Look on the Blight Side is good-natured, as well as agile, tuneful, a little bit trippy, and thoughtful. I’m sorta downgrading it for being less neurotic than the artists from one paragraph ago. This says nothing about me, of course. Blight Side is better than 15 or 20 or 30 other quite worthwhile albums I heard from 2013, but less good than 43 others: that’s simple numerical data. To question it would be illogical.

    – Brian Block

    To see the rest of our favorites, visit our Favorite Albums of 2013 page!

  • Kate Bush announces London gigs 35 years after her only tour!

    Kate Bush announces London gigs 35 years after her only tour!

    Could it be true? Will fans finally get to see Kate Bush perform live again?

    I have been a Kate Bush fan since the early 1980s, when my older sister bought her 1982 album, The Dreaming, and played it for me. It took another seven or eight years before I finally started buying her albums myself. I was enchanted by her otherworldly singing and unusual musical arrangements. Kate Bush’s music is not for everyone, but I have loved most of it for a good portion of my life. I would have loved to have seen her perform live when I was younger. Unfortunately, Kate Bush hasn’t been on tour since 1979, when she famously played at Hammersmith Odeon. That was her one and only tour and it left many of her fans pining for more.


    Kate Bush sings “Wuthering Heights” and proves that she can dance and act.


    The Red Dress version of “Wuthering Heights”.

    I don’t know what has kept Kate from the stage for all these years. She’s clearly very talented at everything that makes someone a great live performer. While she has been somewhat reclusive in recent years, she hasn’t completely disappeared. In 2011, she released 50 Words for Snow, which included some innovative new songs. It was her first album since 2005’s awesome Aerial, which is probably one of my favorite albums by her.


    Kate Bush’s very moving song, “This Woman’s Work”.


    Mesmerizing duet with Peter Gabriel, “Don’t Give Up”.

    Kate Bush’s Before the Dawn show will be at London’s Eventim Apollo in August and September 2014. Tickets for the fifteen shows go on sale at 9:30am GMT on Friday, March 28th. Patrons are limited to four tickets per booking and must show photo identification to the booker upon arrival at the venue the night of the show. I wish I could be among the lucky people who will get to see Kate Bush perform live again after 35 years. Those who attend her concerts are definitely in for a treat.


    Cool version of Kate Bush singing “Running Up That Hill” with Pink Floyd’s David Gilmour.


    “The Sensual World” is one of many favorite songs by Kate Bush. There’s something so seductive about this song.

    I’m sure someone will make a concert DVD of this show, which I’m certain to get my hot little hands on. For now, I can only be green with envy that those who are lucky enough to live in the United Kingdom will get the chance to see this rare event.


    One more for good measure! “Cloudbusting” is one hell of a cool song!

    Have a great weekend, everybody!