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Audio Mixers: Wolf Bros.; Eli Crews. Recording information: MegaSonic, Oakland (02/2007-07/2007); Third Ear, Minneapolis, MN (02/2007-07/2007). Author: Marilyn Hacker. The difficult-to-categorize outfit Why? put out one of its most cohesive, consistent, and engaging efforts with 2008's ALOPECIA. A staple for the ever-adventurous Anticon label, Why? offers up their usual blend of hip-hop, indie rock, and experimental elements, but also opt for a more organic approach, sacrificing their usual samplers for a live, full-band sound. Yet Why?'s eclectic musical approach keeps things from ever sounding conventional, as does Doseone's inventive, half-sung, half-rapped vocals. Best of all, ALOPECIA has strong tunes, so the band's experimentalism is balanced by accessibility. Although Why? have often been considered an alternative rap group, and frontman Yoni Wolf a rapper, this is a designation based on their affiliation with avant hip-hop label anticon and the fact that Wolf will alternate his nasally, sung vocals with spoken word pieces, a designation based on the fact that the band is simply rather hard to categorize. Why? are not hip-hop, but they are also much more than indie rock or folk or whatever other genres are thrown at them, staying within those distinctions but also moving forward, looking outward, all while remaining esoterically accessible. This is especially apparent on Alopecia, the band's third full-length, which, while musically resting comfortably in the experimentally-tinged indie rock realm, explores as many other influences as it can touch without ever overextending its reach. It's all wonderfully, awkwardly tied together by Wolf's lyrics -- detailed and odd and sometimes all too humanly crude -- which find a way to be both extremely intimate and detached, simultaneously. "These Few Presidents" alludes to death, though it's probably about a break-up ("At your house the smell of our still living human bodies and oven gas"), "Simeon's Dilemma" is a warped take on a love song ("But I still hear your name in wedding bells/Will I look better or will I look the same rotting in Hell?), and "Good Friday" manages to discuss sex, the Silver Jews, loneliness, and R. Crumb, while beginning with the lines "If you grew up with white boys who only look at black and Puerto Rican porno/Because they want something their dad don't got, then you know where you're at." Wolf often approaches his words from a hip-hop standpoint, concentrating on internal rhyme and enjambment, but his intonation and delivery are pure indie rock. As is the band, who layer keyboards, guitars, and electric and organic percussion into something simultaneously melodic and distant, tuneful and difficult, songs that you want to sing along to but then have trouble enunciating the hook to "The Hollows," the first single ("This goes out to all my underdone, other-tongued lung-long frontmen/And all us Earth-growths; some planted, some pulled"). But that, in fact, is what makes Alopecia successful: it displays both crypticness and honesty, intellectualism and vulgarity in equal measure, challenging and placating its audience in the same drawn-out, undefined, nasally breath. ~ Marisa BrownSpin (p.106) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Laced with brainy raps, cooing backing vocals, and a keen attention to melancholy melodic detail..." Uncut (p.113) - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[A] woozily layered, beguilingly fractured affair, driven by beats and samples..." Alternative Press (p.163) - 3.5 stars out of 5 -- "Songs like 'Gnashville' and 'Good Friday' show signs of his roots, with a lyrical structure that's still quite poetic in its flow." CMJ - "[A]n all-embracing coup chockfull of nonsensical lyrics, scat-like phrasing and brooding beat-driven melodies with an underlying air of dark, fairy-tale detachment." Q (Magazine) (p.141) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[C]hatty, folk-pop hip hop....Contagious songs..." Mojo (Publisher) (p.112) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Wolf's sing-speak vocals are arresting, a warped sentimentality seeping through his dark-humoured flow on 'These Few Presidents.'" Clash (magazine) (p.64) - Ranked #29 in Clash's "The 40 Best Albums of 2008" -- "Neither hip-hop nor indie, nor folk, the band are at odds with convention, but also resonate with an admirable accessibility." URB (Magazine) (p.106) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "Embracing verse over his usual metered prose, Wolf deftly distills his stalker stories, suicidal musings and knack for kaleidoscopic detail into taut, fluff-free raps." Purchase Alopecia CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Why Elephant Eyelash CD (2005)
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Alopecia
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$16.29 Personnel: Martha Munizzi (vocals); Danielle Stephens, June Long, Yoshaundala Parker, Charise Myles, Eugenia Newman, Ebony Perry, Pamela Taylor, Marguerita Smith, Lajimmease Jones, Heath Burgett, Adrian Smith (vocals); Darryl Dixon (guitar, guitars); Joey Woolfalk (acoustic guitar); Dave Monsch (tenor saxophone); Keith Jourdan (trumpet); Brad Herring (trombone); Eric Reed, Noel Hall (Hammond b-3 organ, keyboards); Tommie Walker (keyboards, programming); Terrance Palmer (bass instrument, bass guitar); Calvin Rodgers (drums). Audio Mixer: John Jaszcz. Arrangers: Martha Munizzi; Noel Hall; Eric Reed; Phillip Lassiter. Contemporary gospel star Martha Munizzi offers up her inspirational version of slick, R&B-inflected pop on 2006's NO LIMITS. Except for her cadre of back-up singers, who occasionally utilize choral arrangements, Munizzi's music bears little relation to typical gospel. Instead, the sound borrows from mainstream 1980s pop, with plenty of synthesizers and underpinnings of dance and R&B. A two-disc live set, NO LIMITS features Munizzi delivering messages of worship and praise for an enthusiastic crowd. "Till the Walls Fall" sounds off like a mighty call to arms, while tunes like "Forever You're My King" and "Jesus Is the Best Thing" make Munizzi's Christian message plain. Energetic and bursting with faith, NO LIMITS provides the classic spiritual uplift of gospel tweaked for the pop set. Expectations ran high for No Limits: Live, Martha Munizzi's follow-up to the best-selling The Best Is Yet to Come, her breakthrough ...
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Alopecia
$9.99 The second album from Comets on Fire frontman Ethan Miller's side project Howlin Rain finds the band taking their love of classic rock swagger and cosmic choogle up to a new level. Where the band's debut felt like a one-off genre excursion--albeit a supremely satisfying one--MAGNIFICENT FIEND finds the band comfortable with their identity and fully intent on developing it. For much of the album, wallflower-baiting basslines, stinging guitar lines, and deep fried organ licks provide the perfect backdrop for Millar's exquisite white-soul wails. Elsewhere, however, the band can get downright toasty. On "Lord Have Mercy," for example, the listener is enveloped in a warm stoned-soul groove before the song concludes with an explosion of gospel-infused rock exultation. While Comets on Fire often played like a band intent on burning out in precisely the furious manner their name would suggest, Howlin' Rain's more eclectic expansive sound points to a band that could potentially ramble down the road for eternity. If Magnificent Fiend, the second album by Howlin Rain, sounds like a different band made the record, it's not the brown windowpane working its sickly magic on you, it's in many ways an accurate perception. Howlin Rain is Ethan Miller's side project when he's not playing with his "other band," Comets on Fire. HR's self-titled debut was released in 2006. It was well-received for its taut, simple song structures that evoked everything from the Grateful Dead to harder, more riff-laden big rock & roll power plays. It was loud, proud, and topped off with just a touch of country and blues. Miller, bassist Ian Gradek, and rhythm guitarist Mike Jackson remain from the band that made that album, while drummer Garrett ...
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