AWOLNATION

We’ve recently re-visited the music of Awolnation and after much deliberation can still only best describe it with three letters: WTF! If Jack Nicklaus took up pigeon racing in his retirement, even he couldn’t locate a suitable pigeon hole in which to shelve this one-of-a-kind artist.

It’s worth noting that this LA musician had been punted to us in the early parts of 2010 by eager PR agents and we weren’t initially swept up by his work, as each song taken in it’s solo context loses some of the overall magic. We were recently sent his new video for the track, Sail, and it once again made us shine our torches onto the full EP, Back From Earth, that had initially arrived last summer. With music such as his it is no surprise that a second listen earned him today’s post, as it’s actually deceptively rewarding.

There’s a very unusual mixture on show here, with abrasive, heavy beats, thumped synths and dirty electro punches. The whole thing shifts around like a drunk driver, with Aaron Bruno’s vocals occasionally shouting like The Agitator‘s yelping blues, before swallowing gravel like Andrew WK (Burn It Down). It doesn’t rest there either, as he even tries switching his hand to rapping (MF), before getting all sexual on us by singing to us with a bit of smooth, melodic r&b (Guilty Filthy Soul)! WTF indeed.

All of this is in the space of just a five track EP! Music this ridiculously schizophrenic will definitely switch people off, as he comes across as a jack of all trades and master of none. Perhaps this is the residual issues of a couple of failed attempts at making it in bands, after the four piece outfit, Under The Influence Of Giants, or the three piece, Home Town Heroes? That might prove to be the arc in this artist’s story, as he’s hopped around as much as his music, but before it’s written off completely we think it’s worth trying to look at the tone in which we think the EP should be taken, as there’s an attitude that’s also on show here and it’s switch from stunning melody, to abrasive hook, is pretty extraordinary.

Take the rapping on MF for example, as upon first glance it verges on the simple and ridiculous “motherfucker are you listening to me, motherfucker are you moving to the beat, motherfucker time to take it to the streets“, but when it’s delivered by an artist who clearly isn’t weighed down by the usual constraints of seriousness, much in the same way The Streets, or the early Beastie Boys were, it’s managed somewhat perfectly. It continues with Guilty Filthy Soul, where he does a Beck, circa Midnight Vultures, and shows us his sexual groove, with handclaps and flicked guitars. Like Beck it’s just a little bit silly, but also carefree, so it becomes infectious.

This is not an artist who is aiming to be held up against other intellectuals. The basslines in James Blake‘s album, or the r&b flavours of Jamie Woon, will always come across as high-minded pieces of work that have been carved out with more delicacy, but invite them to a stage battle at your club and we think Awolnation will provide the biggest punches. He wants to rock out with his cock out and provides us with a roller coaster ride of genres, with which the best bits will leave you stirred and shaken. This EP, which is available for free on his site, is for the whole ride and must only be judged by the smiles of the listeners at the end of the experience.

The whole thing closes with the most polished and somewhat slower tune, Sail, which is a radio-friendly hit in the waiting. It shows us a skill that only appears in moments through the rest of the EP, such as 1 minute 30 seconds into Burn It Down, where he decides to focus on the reduced pace and a set of addictive melodies. With Sail we find Aaron finally mastering the mix of synthetic reverb and melodic beauty that he’s clearly capable of, as he mixes up the punk, the bluesman, the electro robot and the vocalist. The lyrical refrain sums the whole thing up to perfection – “I blame it on my ADD“.

AWOLNATION – SAIL

AWOLNATION – BURN IT DOWN

AWOLNATION – GUILTY FILTHY SOUL

THE RECOMMENDER – NUMBER 100 – FELIX AND VOLCANO!

We think we can confidently state that most of the emails music bloggers receive are utter rubbish.  We’ve often considered the easy way out – to cull them all in big batches.  On many occasions our fingers have hovered over the delete button, but what stops us is that one faith-restoring email out of a hundred, with a bounty contained within it, that reminds you precisely why you got into blogging in the first place.  In truth, emails aren’t actually a music bloggers best source for discovering music, it’s actually by busily interacting online, or by reading other blogs/sites, and obviously by being active in the real world.  Like any other business, referrals are much more successful.  However, there we were, panning for email gold, and up came Felix And Volcano.  To our pleasure they didn’t roll into the usual PR fluff about how amazing they are – they did what we always prefer bands to do – namely to just give us one line and a link to listen to an mp3.  Upon clicking through to their Bandcamp and listening to their track, Shaadows, our faith in the process was immediately reinforced.  This track’s rather simplified breakbeat start is swiftly overlaid with a keyboard refrain not out of place in an ice hockey match, but the playfulness is quickly matured, as Sam Ueda’s vocals begin.  His spoken words, reminiscent of James Murphy or Lou Reed, engage you before they raise the pitch to a sublime treble.  The song then wanders down a path previously trodden by the likes of TV On The Radio, or Beck at his most sexually experimental.  It’s a minimalist piece of tidy electronic pop, before it bravely shifts gear and climaxes at an entirely different pace.  Sam from the band informed us that Aian Constantineau, who plays the keys and beats, used vintage equipment for this recording, choosing the Casio DG-20 Digital Guitar.  He also pointed out that this is a tool of choice for the Flight Of The Conchords team, with whom they share a sense of youthful abandonment.  That’s no surprise, considering this two piece met at the University Of New Hampshire and are still only 19 years old.  Having started in 2008 and previously released only a first draft EP, they’ve now put out a more polished EP, Grow Rich, this May.  Fans of Naive New Beaters, Yes Giantess, or My Awesome Mixtape will smile along to this.  Emails aside, perhaps you too will find them just as re-assuring as we did.     (MB)

Find them here:        Myspace

Hear them here:        FELIX AND VOLCANO! – SHAADOWS

Hear them here:        FELIX AND VOLCANO! – FRDM