Clearing Out The Mailroom: Tuesday, June 22, 2010.
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Sugar and Gold (San Francisco)
Get Wet! (Antenna Farm)
The second full-length from
I made it to: through track two, "Sneek Freaq."
Frontier Ruckus (Detroit)
Deadmalls & Nightfalls (Ramseur)
Hailing from Detroit--not exactly a hotbed of Americana greatness--Matthew Milia and his four bandmates have stepped up their game with their second album. Rootsy folk with chamber-pop leanings, their latest album is a more accessible offering than their previous release, the rough-and-tumble The Orion Songbook. While some of the grit and character from their first disc was sacrificed for a slightly more polished production this time around, the soul of their sound wasn't sold to a poppy devil by any means. Milia's emotive, frail vocals lend the tunes a filmy, backwoods feel that wouldn't likely survive in any other genre. Any group that can poetically and effectively drop in lyrics such as "perfunctory" and "exoskeleton" are clearly an imaginative set. By the time a few tracks roll by, however, the trend of tunes where a slow crawling acoustic guitar yields to a swelling group of horns that join forces to provide the song with some definite forward motion grows a bit monotonous. Individually, though, the songs are rather enjoyable.
I made it to: through track seven, "Does Me In."
Athens V. Sparta (Austin)
The History of the Peloponnesian War (Absence of Romance)
A retelling of the story of Thucydides (an Athenian general and aristocrat) has never been so... well... ambient? While this large collection of artists and musicians have, indeed, made a noble effort to entertain while simultaneously educating, the end result is little more than background sounds for the latest uptown ultralounge that will likely have its liquor license revoked before the album finishes playing. Using soft, electro-beats and synths to provide the backdrop to the words, the first couple of tunes feel as though they are each ten minutes long, even though they aren't anywhere near such a length. The spoken word delivery of the subject matter is intriguing, but not intriguing enough for me to digest the entire story that is playing out.
I made it to: 37 seconds into track three, "The Archidamian War."



























