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Music

Examining To Pimp a Butterfly’s ripples

A year after the album’s release, the world still hasn’t quite recovered

With Section.80, we were formally introduced to Compton’s Kendrick Lamar. With good kid, m.A.A.d. City, we fell in love with the rapper, his densely layered and autobiographical narrative transporting us to a stark, dangerous and very real world. Even with these increasingly staggering releases, nothing really prepared us for To Pimp a Butterfly.

In the face of mounting injustice among black Americans, To Pimp a Butterfly has found a home as the voice of many due to its fiery subject matter.

With four universally lauded releases under his belt, his latest in the form of a compilation released on March 4, Kendrick Lamar is fast becoming one of hip-hop’s most important songwriters and one of contemporary music’s standout artists. In the year since To Pimp a Butterfly was released, the dialogue surrounding the album has barely waned. If anything, its impact and reverence has only grown with time, influencing genre contemporaries and giving people, namely black Americans, a sliver of genuine hope in the face of continued oppression.

So why is To Pimp a Butterfly so highly regarded and what sets it apart from genre contemporaries like, say, Kanye West or Run the Jewels’ latest? For one, its scope is simply astounding; at 78 minutes and 16 tracks, the album explores deeply personal thematic content with unparalleled precision. Exploring the concept of black celebrity within a uniformly white system in a selfless, deeply intimate manner, Lamar touches on everything from racial inequality, toxic materialism and institutionalized discrimination while positing the entire experience through his own personal lens. Chronicling his ascent into stardom and personal descent into depression, Lamar focuses on identity and what it means to be a black man in modern America. In doing so, Lamar brings his audience to eerily unsettling corners of the human psyche, as in the heart-breaking “u” — perhaps one of the most vivid depictions of depression ever portrayed in music.

Most impressively, Lamar accomplishes the most personal and sermonizing of dialogues without ever sacrificing the album’s accomplished musicality. Featuring jazzy instrumentals by Thundercat and Kamasi Washington and the production work of Flying Lotus, Boy-1da and Pharrell Williams among many others, To Pimp a Butterfly exhibits a rich, textured and incredibly organic sonic palette that’s at once lavish and equally tasteful in light of its thematic content. As Lamar bares his soul, gorgeous string arrangements flutter while a host of jazzy horns blare freely.

As a result, Lamar’s vision is wholly uncompromised, with no selections feeling like perfunctory radio hits. With an album as critically and commercially successful as good kid, m.A.A.d. City comes creative carte blanche, and the rapper puts this to exemplary use.

Given Kendrick Lamar’s stature as a hip-hop heavyweight, one could argue his influence on the medium’s public face is undeniable, with many acts attempting to follow in his footsteps. After all, To Pimp a Butterfly’s raucous single “The Blacker the Berry” inspired nuanced debate in regards to its closing twist detailing its central hypocrisy. In the face of mounting frustration in the United States with regards to the unfair treatment of blacks, Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly got the ball rolling in a big way, inspiring mainstream contemporaries to tackle these issues head-on in an effort to add to the conversation, for better or worse.

Take Macklemore’s “White Privilege II” for example, a song with good intentions and an interesting alternative point of view on the matter that’s ultimately undone by its lack of musicality and hokey, unfocused content. Though Macklemore is no stranger to social issues, his attempts at tackling the Black Lives Matter protests in a nuanced way come up incredibly short; at over eight minutes in length, the song is simply too drawn out for radio appeal and too narratively scattershot to serve as a statement. In the end, it’s a song with a valid point of view and discourse that’s ultimately for no one. If Lamar influenced a wave of social activism in hip-hop, the level at which he accomplishes this is made resoundingly clear simply by looking at some of his contemporaries.

Most importantly however, it’s impossible to ignore To Pimp a Butterfly’s massive cultural impact. In its attempts to discuss systemic racism and the flaws of black and white America, the album found a very passionate audience among black Americans. It swiftly became the soundtrack to a struggling black America, instilling a sense of hope and empowerment in the face of mounting police violence and criminal negligence against blacks. Protesters nationwide took to the streets chanting the chorus to “Alright,” an agitated declaration of hope in the face of pain and strife, in an effort to send a vivid message. In an article for Rolling Stone, writer Greg Tate likened “Alright” as the “We Shall Overcome” of our generation. He also attributes both To Pimp a Butterfly and D’Angelo’s long-awaited Black Messiah as “the first tuneful meditations of this era to come within spitting distance of canonical conscious-groove masterworks like Curtis Mayfeild’s Superfly and Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On.”

Ultimately, 2015 was an interesting year for hip-hop and black music, with the genre being acknowledged by many as the voice of a struggling generation. Take Run the Jewels’ Killer Mike for example; a year ago, the mainstream struggled to put a face to his name, yet here he is making the rounds as Bernie Sanders’ very own hype man. Though there’s still a long way to go, artists like Kendrick Lamar and D’Angelo have provoked fruitful and interesting conversations on difficult topics, contextualizing much of black America’s problems without ever simplifying them. Though Taylor Swift’s 2014 album 1989 was deemed 2016’s Album of the Year by the Grammy Awards, To Pimp a Butterfly’s continued impact not only on music but on social movements across America ultimately renders this declaration inert.

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Music Quickspins

Agoraphobic Nosebleed – Arc

Agoraphobic Nosebleed – Arc (Relapse Records, 2016)

Though Agoraphobic Nosebleed’s genre of choice has always been grindcore, there’s something endearing about their stabs at sludge and doom metal. Arc, their latest EP, is a minute collection of Sabbath-inspired guitar licks pushed through a set of Orange full stacks. Though Agoraphobic Nosebleed bring nothing that sludge metal pioneers like Melvins haven’t brought time and time again, Arc’s guilty pleasures lie in its southern rock twang; opener “Not a Daughter” resembles a collection of discarded Down riffs before settling into an effective, slow-churning groove. There’s also singer Katherine Katz, whose vocals are absolutely feral and dripping with anguish. In the end, it’s Arc’s modest thrills that help Agoraphobic Nosebleed mildly subvert expectations, its derivative nature finding some form of validation.

Trial Track: “Not a Daughter”

6/10

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Music Quickspins

Various Artists – Star Wars Headspace

Various Artists – Star Wars Headspace (Hollywood, 2016)

Star Wars is impossible to avoid; even if you’ve been living under a rock these past few months, that rock has undoubtedly been rebranded with a nice Star Wars sticker by now. Headspace, the latest reminder by Disney, is an utterly baffling and thoroughly ill-conceived compilation straight from Hell. Assembling respected electronic artists like Flying Lotus, Bonobo and Rustie and handing them the keys to the Star Wars sound effects library, producer Rick Rubin and his lackeys phone in 15 tracks, many of which are genuinely unlistenable. There’s little to no effort made to blend the samples with their musical counterparts, rendering the whole thing all but pointless. Claude VonStroke’s “R2 Knows,” however, is already a top contender for worst song of 2016. Don’t let the names attached fool you; Star Wars Headspace is a futile exercise in brand synergy.

Trial Track: Röyksopp – “Bounty Hunters”

2/10

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Music Quickspins

Animal Collective – Painting With

Animal Collective – Painting With (Domino Records, 2016)

A complete 180 from the dizzying cacophony of Centipede Hz, Painting With is by all accounts too nondescript for its own good. Though Animal Collective double down on the sunny, gleeful pop that made their previous albums so infectiously appealing, the trio seem more content with playing with bright sounds than crafting compelling pop songs. Whereas opener “Floridada” strikes an ideal balance of colourful tones, never quite veering into self-parody, “Hocus Pocus” and “Summing the Wretch” feel more like tedious rhythmic exercises than pleasant psychedelic pop. Though never a chore, its Beach Boys influence shining through at every turn, Painting With is ultimately beset by its lack of ambition. Given that this incarnation of the band is capable of delivering an album like 2009’s unforgettable Merriweather Post Pavilion, one can’t help but be a bit underwhelmed.

Trial Track: “Golden Gal”

6/10

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Music

Bands and artists to catch at Osheaga ‘16

Cap off the summer with style with these stellar, must-see acts

With every passing year, Montreal’s Osheaga Music and Arts Festival grows larger both in scale and in attendance  with its programmers consistently enlisting some truly crowd-pleasing, multi-genre spanning acts.

This year is no different for the city’s biggest festival—this side of the esteemed Jazzfest of course; variety is Osheaga’s middle name. Though comparatively low in high profile hip-hop acts, this year’s lineup is nonetheless jam-packed with flavour, its headliners being nothing to scoff at. As we anxiously wait for the final acts to be announced, here are a handful of acts we’re already hotly anticipating come July.

Known for her lyrical prowess and impeccably paced flow, Little Simz is a name you should get used to hearing.

Little Simz

Hailing from North London, Simbi Ajikawo, better known as Little Simz, is as prolific as she is undeniably fiery. Since 2013, the British rapper has put out over seven releases, from mixtapes to EPs, each with their own distinct blend of U.K. hip hop and the electronica-driven atmosphere of mid ‘00s grime. Her unstoppable flow and unexpectedly visceral aggression on the mic has earned her accolades from some of the genre’s biggest names, including Kendrick Lamar, Jay-Z and Dizzee Rascal, the latter even offering her some studio time. Though younger than most of her peers, Little Simz showcases an incredibly assured hold on her craft, her acclaimed full-length debut A Curious Tale of Trials + Persons playing up some of her greatest strengths. The album’s hit single “Dead Body” perfectly encapsulates her cold and calculated, gut punch delivery. Given her already proven body of work as well as her numerous show stopping radio show appearances, Little Simz is bound to blow the proverbial roof off this summer.

 

Kurt Vile & The Violators

Having just played a sold-out Corona Theatre mere days ago, Kurt Vile and his band The Violators are already yearning to come back to our great city—not that we’re complaining. Though characterized by a laid-back, lackadaisical delivery and layers upon layers of reverberated psychedelic guitar tones, Vile’s oddball vocal delivery, engaging song structures and manic, livewire performances separate them from the pack. “Freak Train,” a concert staple from his 2009 album Childish Prodigy, serves up a chaotic, freight train-like urgency and continues to bewilder newer audiences with its amusing and spontaneous barrage of fuzzy guitars. The Pennsylvania-based singer/songwriter also has an impressively cohesive yet dynamic body of work under his belt, from the moody solitude of Smoke Ring for My Halo to the sunny uplift of Wakin on a Pretty Daze. As a late-summer treat, you couldn’t really ask for more.

 

Todd Terje & The Olsens

If the last few years in music have taught us anything, it’s that disco is here to stay. Though not as widespread and all-consuming as it was in the ‘70s, disco has found a new life in electronic music, specifically the throbbing stylings of ‘80s Italo disco pioneered by the likes of Giorgio Moroder. Though Norway’s Todd Terje owes much to Moroder’s signature pulsating loops and bright synths, his marriage of old trappings and new sensibilities is unquestionably modern and inviting. Terje’s full-length debut, the incredibly well-received and aptly-titled It’s Album Time, created a huge splash, benefitting from the appearance of his 2012 summer hit “Inspector Norse.” Rather than play a DJ set and call it a day, Terje has enlisted a full live multi-instrumentalist band, complete with a conga player and percussionist. The energy is real and the results simply can’t be missed.

 

Skepta

“Who’s Skepta?” For many Westerners, this was the question they asked themselves at the end of Kanye West’s 2015 BRIT Awards performance. While performing his new single “All Day” with a veritable cavalcade of rappers on-stage, West was heard shouting “Yo Skepta! Thank you” before bringing the song to a close. So who is Skepta? Only one of the U.K.’s biggest grime artists, his speedy, precise flow and imposing demeanor simply unmistakable. Though it’s taken him seemingly forever to break out of his home country, Skepta isn’t going anywhere; his 2015 single “Shutdown” proved to be a huge hit, gaining support from many North American artists. With Drake recently signing to Skepta’s label and helping U.K. hip hop and grime cross over to the Western mainstream, it’s pretty likely we’ll be hearing about Skepta in the foreseeable future.

 

Radiohead

Let’s face it. If you’re going to Osheaga this year, you’re almost certainly going to catch Radiohead. You probably don’t need convincing. And if you do, know that they put on one of the best concerts around, with jam-packed, career-spanning setlists and genuinely awe-inspiring live mixing. They also tend to have pretty great light shows. Just go. Go see them. Do it. Go. But most of all, enjoy.

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Music Quickspins

Abbath – Abbath

Abbath – Abbath (Season of Mist, 2016)

Black metal’s Abbath has always been distinguished by his love for all things rock & roll, as well as his penchant for taking the piss out of the genre’s incredibly self-serious conceit. It’s disappointing then that Abbath, his first release following a messy, public split with his former band Immortal, is such a shockingly lifeless affair. Featuring overly sterile production and third-rate black metal riffs, none of the new band’s elements play to Abbath’s eccentric strengths, his presence still as commanding and unbridled as ever. A sudden, fleeting foray into orchestral bombast on “Ashes of the Damned” essentially encapsulates the album’s biggest problem—a disheartening lack of diversity—while providing glimpses into the Abbath album that could have been.

Trial Track: “Ashes of the Damned”

5/10

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Music Quickspins

Massive Attack – Ritual Spirit

Massive Attack – Ritual Spirit (Virgin Records, 2016)

In the six long years since Massive Attack’s Heligoland, the duo has not only remained opaque in regards to new music; they’ve remained mum. Grimy and grim, Ritual Spirit serves up a densely atmospheric tease, its greatest offense in the form of its brisk runtime. Clocking in at 17 minutes and comprised of four songs, this is Robert Del Naja’s baby through and through, living and breathing in urban U.K. hip-hop decay, two-step shuffles and ominous tribal percussion. Culminating with a cavernous appearance by trip-hop artist Tricky, Ritual Spirit serves as a potent, if all too brief reminder of Massive Attack’s expert craftsmanship and pinpoint precision. That being said, an LP would be nice.

Trial Track: “Dead Editors”

8/10

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Music Quickspins

Fleshgod Apocalypse – King

Fleshgod Apocalypse – King (Nuclear Blast, 2016)

Committing wholly to their hellish penchant for orchestral excess, Italy’s Fleshgod Apocalypse double down on style and showcase little discernible substance on King, their fourth album. Thanks to a garish mix, the overblown orchestration is given a plastic-y sheen, never given enough room to coalesce with the band’s uninspired death metal. To make matters worse, King’s cabaret-style presentation does the band no favors, its spoken word sections proving insufferable. For all of their commendable attempts at reinvention, Fleshgod Apocalypse simply don’t have the songwriting chops to measure up to genre contemporaries Septicflesh. Symphonic death metal shouldn’t sound this processed and soulless.

Trial Track: “In Aeternum”

3/10

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Music

Band reunions to be cautiously excited for

Though it’s easy to get excited in the face of new music, the result can often be bitter

“Break up.” “Indefinite hiatus.” Whenever a band announces these words, there’s always a degree of skepticism in regards to their finality. Whatever the reasoning for the split, people change, as do their decisions. While the prospect of a band reuniting can be exciting, it’s important to remain rational and realistic; these things rarely go all that well, as history has showcased time and time again (see Pixies, the Axl Rose-led Guns ‘N’ Roses, Smashing Pumpkins, etc.). With that said, here are a few reunions and returns we’re cautiously excited about.

James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem.

LCD Soundsystem

Few bands have gone out with a bang quite as large as LCD Soundsystem; following the release of 2010’s This Is Happening, creative brainchild James Murphy set the gears in motion for the band’s closure, culminating in a grandiose, nearly four-hour-long concert at Madison Square Garden. Its finality couldn’t be stressed any more, a documentary chronicling the days leading up to the show being released shortly after the event itself. And yet here we are, less than five years later, with LCD Soundsystem set to headline a slew of summer festivals and a new album in the pipeline.

Though it’s easy to look at this cynically and assume that Murphy is pulling a “get rich quick” lever, his projects in the interim period not exactly filling up the space left behind by his former band, this doesn’t seem probable. Having produced Arcade Fire’s hugely successful 2013 release Reflektor and collaborated with David Bowie, the man wasn’t struggling for high profile work. Murphy has always been upfront with his fervent fanbase and this is no different, offering a sincere apology to those who traveled for their first final show. That being said, the prospect of a new album is a potentially disconcerting one, though only time will tell. It’s all still a blur of equal parts confusion and excitement, mostly due to the fact that it’s been so little time; most people haven’t even had time to miss them.

At the Drive-In.

At the Drive-In

Though angst-ridden punk rock can be timeless, some things are better left in the past. Take At the Drive-In, the seminal post-hardcore band and the seeds to spastic prog band The Mars Volta, for example; following the latter’s dissolution, the band briefly returned to the stage in 2012 to a generally middling reception. Relationship of Command, an angsty post-hardcore masterstroke, has only become more adulated with time, its prog-rock inflected song structures breathing new life into its nervy, teenage narrative. While known for their live-wire performances, the reunion found lead guitarist Omar Rodrigez-Lopez disconnected, affected by the recent passing of his mother as well as his growing disenchantment with At the Drive-In and the bad memories within. Rodriguez-Lopez even went on record at the time, ruling out the possibility of new material in an interview with NME.

So what happened? Maybe singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez-Lopez’s latest project Antemasque brought them closer than ever. Perhaps the rest of the band feels musically rejuvenated. Maybe it’s just a big paycheck. Who knows. One thing’s for sure; you can expect a new At the Drive-In album in the coming year, whether you want it or not. Here’s hoping they fare better than Refused!

Lush Photo by Jurgen Ostarhild.

Lush

With the resurgence of noise pop sonic aesthetics, the 2010s have been a particularly fruitful decade for bands occupying the more adventurous corners of ‘90s alt rock. Shoegaze in particular has experienced a boom, its pedal-clicking hisses and dissonance finding their way into other, completely disparate genres (see black metal bands Alcest and Deafheaven). With this resurgence of course came reunions from just about every founding pillar; Dublin’s My Bloody Valentine, Berkshire’s Slowdive and Oxfordshire’s Ride are all back in action. Though tragedy unfortunately put an end to London shoegaze act Lush, with drummer Chris Acland taking his own life in 1996, the band appear ready to return to the stage for the first time in 20 years. While the long-term plan for this reunion hasn’t been officially disclosed, a couple of London concerts have been scheduled and sold out, with North American dates planned in the near future. Time can certainly be cruel towards a band’s significance; in Lush’s case, time hasn’t caught up to them just yet, as reflected by today’s indie rock scene.

…E-Eddie Murphy?

Eddie Murphy

Really, the return we NEED. I want it. You want it. We can all agree “Red Light” was a bonafide banger and “Party All the Time” a moody masterpiece. What’s the hold up, Eddie? We’re waiting!

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Music

Spotify Playlist – Issue 18

In anticipation of 2016’s numerous high profile reunions, get reacquainted with some of the bigger bands to return to the stage! Also featured on this week’s playlist, some hot new tracks from Anderson .Paak, Savages, DIIV and Tindersticks!

 

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Music Quickspins

Anderson .Paak – Malibu

Anderson .Paak – Malibu (Steel Wool, 2016)

Anderson .Paak’s Malibu is what Miguel’s tepid Wildheart was striving so desperately to be; raucous, personal and sexy with charisma to spare. Following up on his eye-opening turn on Dr. Dre’s Compton, the California-born singer effortlessly lays his raspy vocals over a vivid backdrop of colourful sounds both new and old. As varied as much of the production on Malibu is, it’s .Paak’s playful, charismatic demeanor that truly brings everything to life; singing and rapping his way through innuendo-laced imagery, he recalls Kendrick Lamar at his most charming. Unapologetically funky and sexually charged, Malibu is a confident potpourri of soul sounds and a star-making release from Anderson .Paak.

Trial Track: “Am I Wrong (feat. Schoolboy Q)”

8/10

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Music

Spotify Playlist Issue 17

This week, dive into the thrilling, cacophonic and experimental world of German progressive rock with a comprehensive playlist of krautrock’s most important pioneers! Noisy, playful and mechanically groovy, discover some of Germany’s most influential musical exports!

https://play.spotify.com/user/theconcordianmusic/playlist/30AygzQEUzT62oJ3AJ80VC

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