Welcome to a new regular feature on Skip The Budgie! I've realised that I don't talk enough about music on here, so since it is my main passion, I'll do a little slot every Friday on what I've been listening to this week, just for fun mind, nothing serious! Maybe I'll offer up some mp3's too but that's a bit dodgy - for now check out their Myspace sites or Youtube to hear the music).
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It's been a pretty mad week for music, or at least my acquirement thereof. Mainly I have been listening to prog band Coheed and Cambria's first album The Second Stage Turbine Blade a LOT. I think it's brilliant, sounds quite a lot like At The Drive In and although most of the songs are made up of the same major - harmonic minor chord change, it all fits together well.
Wikipedia reveals that the band's albums narrate a series of comics called The Amory Wars, which is the only reason I can think of that people call them a prog band, because you couldn't have a 'normal' rock/metal concept album, oh no. There are tons of Videos on Youtube, so check them out...
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Staying on a metal theme, Atreyu's new album Lead Sails Paper Anchor is quite different from their others, more rock elements than metal, less shouting more singing and the quitar riffs are toned down quite a bit with more old Metallica style chugging instead. There is also more cheesy singing and it's really not as good as The Curse, which has vampires in it.
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Dark Tranquillity have done it again with Fiction, another gloriously brutal-yet-melodic assault on the senses. Top marks here, but then I am a big fan. Stylistically it's not really any different to Character or Damage Done (my favourite), but I'm always happy to have more songs like this!
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Just to shock you a bit, I had a listen to Burial's album Untrue, even though words like 'garage' and 'dubstep' are thrown around like such cheap confetti, since lots of people seem to be going on about it at the moment. I have to say that I don't think it's the seminal must-have album of 2007, mainly because the bouncy beats and RnB vocal samples really really irritate me. The concept is sound though and it's not your usual Garage fare, as it is very mellow and atmospheric.
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Lastly, I've just finished listening to the BBC's version of Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency by the late great Douglas Adams. It's been a long, long time since I read the book, so it all seemed pretty new to me. Not as good as H2G2, but then neither was the book!












Heh, I thought only Bricky and I out of the Choke lot would enjoy a bit of 'Heed. SSTB is a good album, as is the second album (stupidly long album names), after that it gets really shit. The three penultimate songs on the third album are a good listen, and by far the most prog thing they've done, album number four made me grimace and squirm.
The comics seem to have changed names and plotlines at some point which is a shame. I guess if the lyrics are ambiguous enough you can get away with it!
I have acquired the other albums, I'm looking forward to it, I hope it doesn't go the way of the Mars Volta - which seems inevitable, but we shall see!
I remember you defending The Mars Volta's Satana-esque direction!
It doesn't go that way, it's more that they took the "quirk" of their music (Claudio's effeminate pop styles) and ran with it, chucking away most to all of what was actually musically good. By album #4 it's like listening to My Chemical Romance if they were really, really gay(er).
Hehe, true, I love the Mars Volta up to a point and that point is before Amputechture, which is an aimless sprawl of affected weirdness. Frances the Mute, on the other hand is pure genius! Wonder what their latest effort will say: "the main theme of Bedlam is the band's attempt to artistically reverse their perceived bad luck which they attribute to an object purchased by Rodriguez-Lopez during a trip to Jerusalem." (Wikipedia)
Ah well, I'm sort of forewarned now, I guess!