Friday, April 25, 2014

Asher Roth 'RetroHash'
     
                                                                                                                                          By: Max Sagan

     Get ready for a wild and emotional ride through Asher Roth's new album RetroHash! His sophomore album takes you though some deep conceptual subjects and makes it easy to get lost in the smooth beats of producer Blended Babies. First, let's go back to school and take a history lesson....
     Asher Roth, became active in the rap game in 2008. He began creating a buzz throughout colleges nationwide by recording himself rapping over other artist beats. This is what became his first release the Greenhouse Effect Vol 1. It was during this time that he hooked up with talent agent Scooter Braun (manager of Justin Bieber, PSY, Carly Rae Jepson, The Wanted, Ariana Grande) by simply sending him a message on MySpace. One Week after speaking to Braun, he flew down to Atlanta to begin recording. Since then Roth has grown his hair out, made one full length and 2 mixtapes which I encourage you to check out to hear the HUGE contrast from his latest and greatest RetroHash.
     Let's dive right into it. This album sounds drastically different from his earlier work. You might be thinking "Oh no! Not another one of these!" but hold your horses cowboy. Give it a chance and you won't be disappointed. From beginning to end RetroHash radiates a "keep it real" and free vibe throughout. The opening track "Parties at the Disco" demonstrates Asher's new skill: singing. I was blown away with the dudes voice! He really hasn't sang on his tracks much in the past and it was a very pleasant surprise. Im sure it helped that he has the female vocal powerhouse ZZ Ward backing him up, but impressive nonetheless. He sings a lot on this album with gets a big thumbs up from me.
     Track 2 "Dude" is the closest to anything you might have heard from a younger Asher Roth. Teaming up with Curren$y, they lay down the heaviest hip-hop track on the album. Asher reminds us that although he can now sing, he can still spit the crazy, off topic rhymes that his first album was riddled with. His wacky flow is probably the reason I was attracted to his music in the first place. Its so unconventional, and proves that you can rap about things like daily routines or what you had for lunch and still make it sound sick.

"Bolognese, homemade, only played croquet 
 In a cloak, and like old episodes of Soul Train
 Run with the O'Jays, Whole Foods for the groceries 
 OJ, Moets, cherries and Yoplait"

     Track 3 was the first single released. "Tangerine Girl" is a song composed of 90% singing and in my mind is Asher showing off his new found singing voice. I think its about a girl he's trying to get wth, but also seems open to interpretation. It resembles a psychedelic song from the 60's with long drawn out, falsetto singing layered with heavy vocal effects. Definitely the most spacey song on RetroHash but was a ballsy move to release it as the single. I can respect that.
     Lets skip to the 6th track "Fast Life". My favorite track on RetroHash and will be my designated Summer jam. If I had to choose, this track best represents the overall theme of his album. He talks about growing up, and trying to develop a purpose in life. I love the introspective view that this song hosts. Vic Mensa is the voice you hear in the second verse. Vic is a 20 year old and very talented from Chicago. You may recognize him from his work with Chance the Rapper. I'm glad he was featured on this track because he is not very well known yet and this is great exposure for him.
     In my opinion, the album goes a bit down hill from here. I don't want to say they are bad songs but they just dont live up to the expectations of the first 6. RetroHash is a front heavy album and the end comes to a slow rolling stop at the final track "Keep Smokin". The last song is the ultimate "blaze up" song featuring the frequent collaborator Chuck Inglish from The Cool Kids.

"Change of ways and make you raise a gun
A spotless mind can't erase the sun" 

from track 5 "Something for Nothing"
     I feel like hip-hop has been changing the last few years. It is moving away from about rhyming how much money/cars/women you have and moving down a more artistic avenue. Look at artists like Chance the Rapper, Childish Gambino, Kid Cudi, Odd Future, Maclemore, and Kendrick Lamar.  Along with Asher I believe these guys are on the forefront of this movement. If you listen to their music its now starting to incorporate more real instruments into the production giving it a more real and organic sound. The guitar, trumpet, string, piano, and live drum work you hear on this album really shines through and gives it that true, laid-back feel.
     All in all, I would recommend RetroHash to music fans of all capacities. You can hear the maturity from his last release and can see where he is headed in the future. I look forward to watching him grow as as artist and continue to expand the boundaries of modern hip-hop.

ALBUM REVIEW 7/10

Notable Tracks: Parties at the Disco(feat. ZZ Ward), Fast Life(feat. Vic Mensa), Something For Nothing

Follow Max Sagan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/xvwmax



Tuesday, April 15, 2014

TANK, '9'

                Anonymously, a four-track EP titled 9 was released, via Bandcamp by the artist known as TANK. TANK is said to be a project where the music surrounds you as if you were stuck in a tank of liquid, absorbing the noise around you.  It then began to act as a “Tank” to hold miscellaneous feelings, as well as music. The Bandcamp page describes it as such:
Imperfect and tangible. Liquid. An ominous slap to the soul. Listen, and you get it. Make yourself vulnerable. Eat the sound. Hear it, but do not listen. Let it naturally grow around you. Swim in the tank.
                Hard to argue with that. The EP opens up with the distorted guitar riff of “Confidential”, then continues with drums and another guitar added in. The vocal style comes in like blown-out speakers, or a distorted megaphone. TANK’s vocal style was mainly inspired by Youth Lagoon, but also took on some inspiration from Sigur Ros and Bon Iver. The emotion bottled up, with lines like “Let the cool kids that fucked up their lives compliment each other indefinitely”, eventually explodes more than half way through the track with heavier guitar, blasting drums, and a subtle squealing guitar in the distance. An emotional first track features even more heartbreaking lyrics, “It’s true what they say/ You can’t save anyone these days”.
                Thinking of this EP in relative terms of said “Tank”, I think of “Confidence” as being the first step of being thrown in and trapped in the tank. Its heavier guitar riffs and emotional lyrics suggest this. Then the second track “Overgrown” is fully submerged and forced to be in the tank. Slow percussive sounds surrounded by piano chords, and the vocals sound like they are underwater. Without the lyrics being on the page, you may not have even known that there were words present. 
                The third track, “Tall and Spineless”, takes on more of the rock element of the element, as well as anger and heartbreak filled lyrics. You can feel the pain and anguish in TANK’s voice screaming out “I’d rather be here, tall and spineless, / then be sure and perfect. / Any day of the week.” The vocals occasionally skipping and cutting out (intentionally) suggest a deeper sense of being cutoff and ignored by someone.
                The final track, “A Small Resemblance”, goes back on the more ambient and “liquid” sound experienced in “Overgrown”. Roughly halfway through “A Small Resemblance” the drums began to stop and cut out in a way that makes you check your headphone jack to make sure something hasn’t gone wrong, but it is in fact all intentional. 9 is full of powerful lyricism including lines like, “Look deep inside my eyes. / There is something dying and inside of you.” Let us not forget to mention that at the bottom of the artist’s page one of the tagged words is “lonely”. Among the words that describe what the music sounds like there is one word set aside that is the emotion of the music: lonely.
                This EP is multidimensional with so many layers and subtle intricacies in a short four songs. Be on the lookout for more from TANK, because we will be in for a treat. 9 is a fantastic EP that I only wish was longer, because those four tracks leave me begging for more. So take my advice, and “swim in the tank.” 

Monday, April 14, 2014

S. Carey, 'Range of Light'

By: David Savage
Justin Vernon may have been the one in the spotlight of Bon Iver, but there was another member of the band with an extensive amount of talent. Sean Carey was the percussionist/vocalist in Bon Iver. On April 1st, Sean Carey (under the moniker name ‘S. Carey’) released his first studio album, Range of Light. S. Carey did have another album, All We Grow, but it was more of a home recording. The new record was recorded at Justin Vernon’s studio, April Base in Fall Creek, Wisconsin. The title, Range of Light, comes from the way Sean Carey’s hero, naturalist John Muir, referred to the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range in California. In the sleeve of the vinyl, Carey writes that this record explores the beauties of nature, the way John Muir did. Even Sean Carey’s instagram (@scareypics) has photos dedicated for each of the tracks off the new record, looking like a transcendental journey.
S. Carey has released an album (All We Grow) and an EP (Hoyas), but never a studio record. Range of Light opens up with the track “Glass/Film”, featuring an array of instruments. The track features piano, vibes, banjo, and some subtle horns. Carey is a multi-instrumentalist, dipping his hands in as many instruments as he can on this record. In Bon Iver, he was known behind the drums, but by himself the piano is his instrument of choice.
Knowing that Sean Carey is a man of nature makes the music he creates even more beautiful. He paints vast images of nature with the sound of his music. The first single off the record, “Fire-scene”, is a wondrous song with intertwining piano and smooth finger-picked acoustic guitar. The lyrics further amplify the scene he his describing as “Reddest hue/ remind you of you/ clinging love and falling true”. It makes sense why Bon Iver was such a spectacular band, because there was endless creative talent in the group, and Carey’s talent is displayed in Range of Light.
Range of Light is soft and mellower than his previous work, but it’s such a soothing pallet cleanser. Songs like “Alpenglow” feel the way spring feels after a long winter, like the one we’ve had. The piano melody in “Alpenglow” is infectious in an interesting, soul-warming way. As mentioned, Justin Vernon did some work on this album as well, with some instrumentation as well as backing vocals. Easily detected on “Crown the Pines” is Justin Vernon’s signature falsetto, but you’ll find it tucked into other tracks, such as “Fleeting Light” and “Glass/Film”.
As a “debut” album goes, S. Carey pulls off a sweet sounding record to be heard out and about exploring the world. Range of Light explores “the light and dark in everything” according to Carey, and I couldn’t agree more. This record gives a taste of various instruments all in a calm soothing style, meshed with Carey’s vivid lyricism to set the scene for listeners. The final track, “Neverending Fountain, wraps up the album wonderfully, with pacing violin and a lullaby-like harp. Range of Light is an absolute success by S. Carey. 

Favorite Tracks: “Alpenglow”, “Fire-Scene”, and “Crown the Pines”