Fall may not officially start till Tuesday, but autumn feels off to the races judging by this week's release calendar and today's Indie Basement features reviews of seven new albums: Blunt Bangs, the new group from Black Kids' Reggie Youngblood, drop their debut album;José González is back with his first album in six years; Brooklyn's YVETTE finally follow up their 2013 debut; Hot Chip's Alexis Taylor finds beauty in Silence; Mild High Club take their yacht to the tropics on Going Going Gone; Ratatat's Evan Mast releases his first E.VAX album in 20 years; and UK indiepop cult band Spearmint remain in fine form on their ninth album.
If you need more new record reviews, Andrew also takes on seven albums too in Notable Releases, including Moor Mother, Adia Victoria, Injury Reserve, and MONO, in this week's Notable Releases. If you need more Basement-approved news from a very busy week, I'm happy to oblige: Cocteau Twins' Elizabeth Fraser recorded a song with Oneohtrix Point Never; Athens, GA's Love Tractor are reissuing their 1988 album Themes from Venus; Tonstartssbandht announced a new album; Canadian drone-metal band New Age Doom have an album with Lee "Scratch" Perry (and members of Sloan?); Metronomy have a new EP; the 2022 Big Ears lineup is pretty great; and watch the trailer for the new Karen Dalton documentary.
And, in what may be the most Indie Basement thing ever, Jarvis Cocker has made an album of '60s French pop covers that's a companion piece to Wes Anderson's new movie AND it features a duet with Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab.
Head below for this week's reviews.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: Blunt Bangs - Proper Smoker (Ernest Jenning Record Co)
Reggie Youngblood of Blog-era band Black Kids trades hype for classic powerpop hooks on his new band's assured debut
Florida band Black Kids got a famously raw deal, chewed up and spit out by the music industry and internet hype/backlash. The Florida group, led by Reggie Youngblood, released the Wizard of Ahhhs EP as a free download on their MySpace page which, thanks to instantly likeable songs like "I'm Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance with You" and "Hurricane Jane," quickly made the blog rounds and got Best New Music on Pitchfork. The band had only played live a couple of times when they agreed to come to CMJ where they played a whole bunch of shows (including a BV day party). Live reviews were mixed but, having signed to Columbia Records, they had no time take a break and were soon whisked to the UK to play more hyped shows and record their debut album with producer and former Suede guitarist Bernard Butler. High profile tours of the UK (with Friendly Fires, Kate Nash) and the US (Cut/Copy) followed but by the time their undercooked debut, Partie Traumatic, was released, most of the sites who hyped them up less than a year before had moved on. Pitchfork gave one of their most infamous, dickish non-review reviews: a picture of two pugs with text on it that read "Sorry :-/" alongside a score of 3.3. Black Kids carried on (Partie Traumatic album went to #5 in the UK, actually), and released a second album in 2017, but never really recovered from the grist mill they went through.
This is a long way to say that Reggie, a very talented songwriter and charismatic frontman, finally made the smart move in starting fresh in a new city (Athens, GA) with a new band, Blunt Bangs. The group also also includes Christian "Smokey" DeRoeck (Woods, Deep State), who also writes and sings, and drummer Cash Carter (Tracy Shedd, The Cadets). While Youngblood's ability to form earworm hooks and choruses remains sharp, Blunt Bangs are decidedly a rock band, sashaying between '90s-style indie rock and '70s glammy power pop on their terrific debut album. (If there's any doubt about those influences, they cover Teenage Fanclub's "Everything Flows" as a bonus track.) If you like descending Big Star-style riffs played as punk songs, Proper Smoker is an overflowing cornucopia of hits. Reggie's yelping vocal style is much more of a natural fit here than with Black Kids, and he sounds great on songs like the spirited "Decide" and "She's Gone," and dreamy ballad "Sick Moves." DeRoeck's no slouch either, contributing the Superchunk-y "Speed Reader" and the anthemic, rootsy "Silence is Golden." The album's most sublime moment, though, is the swaying "Odessa," that drops in just a little '60s pop, complete with a "shebop, shebop" chorus, and is the only hint of Reggie's old band. (It's also a little like '70s glam band The Rubettes.) But Blunt Bangs feels more comfortable, like a favorite pair of sneakers, rather than something to get tastemakers salivating. And there's not a thing wrong with that.
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José González - Local Valley (Mute)
José doesn't stir things up much on his first album in six years, and we wouldn't want it any other way
José González is one of those artist who never really changes what he does and you don't want him to either. His sound is so distinctive, so warm, so appealing, and the gaps between albums growing longer, that he never overstays his welcome. Local Valley is his first solo album in six years and gives you everything you want: ethereal folk influenced by Brazil and Africa, expertly played in his distinctive, delicate, finger-picked classical guitar style, with his airy vocals floating over top like a perfect fluffy cloud on a perfect blue sky. The production is minimal, but immaculately considered, with most songs featuring the lightest of percussion and plenty of headroom. He sounds like he was recorded in the middle of a valley, but somehow right next to your ear at the same time. The album may not have everything -- for those who love his unique cover versions of other artists' songs, Local Valley is all González originals. The album does, however, include his first ever Spanish language songs, and the beauty of "El Invento" make you wonder what took him so long to do so, but José is always working at his own pace.
We just found a few more copies of our previously sold-out, exclusive, limited-to-500 red vinyl edition of Local Valley and you can pick that up in our store.
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Alexis Taylor - Silence (Domino)
The Hot Chip frontman's meditative fifth solo album explores the quiet regions, and sometimes achieves transcendence
While you may (rightly) associate Alexis Taylor with his band Hot Chip's bangers like "Ready for the Floor," "Over and Over," and "One Life Stand," his fragile vocal style is probably better suited to more fragile, contemplative material where humanity and empathy pour out of him. One of my all-time favorite Hot Chip songs is "Look After Me," from 2006's The Warning, where Alexis' voice movingly intertwines with a gently strummed guitar and a gorgeous string section. (It is a song that, according to Setlist.fm, they've never played live. That needs to be remedied.) Taylor's solo work has usually tilted this way, with 2016's Piano being just him and his 88. Despite its title, Silence is more robust, arrangement-wise, but feels more akin to Piano than his very electronic, beat-forward 2018 album, Beautiful Thing. The idea behind the album came from Alexis wanting to convey the ambient sounds of an empty room, an experience he can no longer quite have as he began developing tinnitus after a Hot Chip show in 2019. “I started to think about what it meant to me to lose quietness, solitude, meditative head space - as that was no longer available to me.” Featuring Sam Becker (double bass), Kenichi Iwasa (horn, trumpet) and Rachel Horton-Kitchlew (harp), Silence is jazzy in a way Taylor's never explored before, at least to this extent. Taylor's meditations achieve transcendence on "House of the Truth," which turns a house-y piano riff into something more spiritual and contemplative -- somewhere between Sébastien Tellier's "La Ritournelle" and Talk Talk's Spirit of Eden -- that he should explore further. On moments like that, Silence is truly golden.