Tags: emergency press, first aide medicine, Nicholaus Patnaude, taipei, tao lin
Tag Archives: emergency press
Nu Trakx – “Hang On To Life” by Ariel Pink and Jorge Elbrecht
15 JulThis song is so 70’s AM radio (Stereogum mentions Chrisopher Cross (Ha!)) It’s like Jorge becomes a slicker copy of Ariel during the course of the song, transforming, within the duet, mirror images into mirages while lost on the same desert island of wistful yet warped pop song fantasies in the form of killer plants with a fetish of growing as close to the sun as possible since they love the smell of their leaves burning.
Listen to it 8 or 9 times like I just did on Soundcloud here.
Like First Aide Medicine on FB = Original Art Snail-Mailed to YOU!!!
6 MayThat’s right lads and ladies, just like First Aide Medicine on Facebook and you will be sent original artwork from the book of your choice. Every 25th liker from now on will get the art. What is First Aide Medicine, you might ask? It’s an illustrated avant-garde horror novel. That’s what it is! Again, just click on the like box over to your right and down a bit or click on the following link to take you to the page. I even post lines of obscure but eerie poets on there as well as the creme de la creme of my discoveries on tumblr.
Give me a shot to win this so-called “original art.” I’m waitin’ buster!
Luxury Liners – They’re Flowers (Western Vinyl ; 2013)
6 Apr
Distant electronic drums would seemingly not summon the impassioned sunsets howled forth here, sincerely pitched in equal doses of both hope and tragedy; surprising, in our times extinguished of earnestness. But what has been failed to understand about us the generation hovering between X and Y, is that no influence could ever quite be perfect enough—such is also true with this spectacular record. I.E. is that an Art of Noise reference I hear ¾ of the way through “Memphis Alex”? Okay, yeah, we already know all that jazz about this project started off as a collection of John Cale covers (read The News), and yet it has morphed into a creature who might look back at its creator dumbfounded and with a sense of awe.
I write this as I listen to this record for the first time, but I keep treading and treading back so that I’ve listened to the first few perplexing and amazing tracks I’m not sure how many times. I will not belittle you with cross-indexed, band-name similes, except to say this record recalls some of my listening experiences with The Knife; in other words: within each song curiosity is sparked as how it will unfold and where it will travel and go.
“Life’s a Beach” is a triumphant battle-cry, a chart-worthy pop song rising out of the waters of the previous songs on the record to transition back to via melancholy hidden melody that just barely begins at the end of “Life’s a Beach” to transition to the folky Carter Tanton waters of “Dog Days / Afternoons,” possibly more than a title-only reference to the cine verite-ish Pacino vehicle, the sort of film where a bank robber’s sudden power sheds forth a corrupted ray of hope, a light in which all our flaws and foolish ambitions might become truly terrible and too squalid to look at, but we are led right out that darkness with the upbeat hook of “Clear or Brown.” And the tone of the guitar in the solo sucks the blood right out of the previous synth sound and explodes with it across the song’s sky, painting the sun and the moon a mystical shattering diamond.
And now the record is ending. I have made it through. It won’t be my last carpet ride, either. Utterly original and unclassifiable, I cringe at what the various musical journalists will write to confuse and confiscate innocent listeners’ journeys in unknown pastures beside turbulent waters teeming with ideas and lacking a clear, discernible influence; in other words: this record is a godsend of originality in our hellish contemporary musical wilderness of name checks and influence graphs.
But let us not to depart on a note of anger or discontent, because this record loves flowers, Caribbean sunsets, big 80’s pop hooks, the earnestness of Grunge, and the 2013 breeze of burning the old wheel green and mossy flaring flames again.
“Skull Twist The Lime-Iced Margarita Closet” – A youtube playlist
21 Mar
Skull Twist The Lime-Iced Margarita Closet
1. “Diane Young” by Vampire Weekend
2. “Cut Me Some Slack” by Grohl/Novoselic/McCartney
3. “Ride On / Right On” by Phosphorescent
4. “Inhaler” by Foals
5. “This Disorder” by The Features
6. “Don’t Save Me” by Haim
7. “The Swan” by Cheatahs
8. “The Good Hand” by Wovenhand
9. “Ticky Ticky” by Owlle
10. “All The Time” by The Strokes
11. “The Hearse” by Wampire
12. “Mother” by Danzig
13. “Glitters Like Gold” by The Cribs
14. “Home” by Austra
15. “Dream State” by Psychic Twin
16. “Blue Velvet” by Childhood”
17. “Steady Pace” by Matthew E. White
18. “Carios KelleyII” by Julian Lynch
“Headrushing Marigold Winesmoke” – A Youtube Playlist
23 FebHeadrushing Marigold Winesmoke
1. “My Love Grows in the Dark” by SSion
2. “Whole Life In A Pocket” by The Pollywogs
3. “Gucci Gucci” by Kreayshawn
4. “Let Me Down Easy” by Bettye Lavette
5. “Fantasy” by MS MR,
6. “Colourless Colour” by Le Roux
7. “I Look To You (feat. Kimbra)” Miami Horror
8. “Free (The Editorial Me)” by Darwin Deez
9. “Feed Me Diamonds (feat. Raven)” by MINDR
10. “Teenage” by Veronica Falls
11. “Future Sick” by Neon Indian
12. “A Cold Dedcade L’Hallali” by 3 Cold Men
13. “You You” by Malaria!
14. “Feeling Without Touching” by Glass Candy
15. “Genesis” by Justice
16. “Sometimes” by And One
17. “Stay (Live on SNL)” by Rihanna
18. “Wir Sind Die Nacht” by Convenant





























































































