Because it never snows in Los Angeles, we're forced to romanticize it. The first draft of “White Christmas,” originally chided a spoiled Angeleno,”longing to be up North on December 24,” surrounded by sunshine, green grass and swaying palms. The closest you get to white winters are weekend trips to Big Bear, truckloads of artificial snow carted in for winter wonderlands, and the bathroom stalls at Hyde.
Jack Burnside, front-man for the severely slept-on, Mezzanine Owls, is the anomalous native in a city of transplants. So it's only natural that the stand-out song from the band's epononymous JaxArt EP, opens like Citizen Kane, focused on minature flurries of snow inside cold, curved glass. It's an appropriate metaphor for a slippery place, equally guilty of every bad stereotype and none at all. Backed by the band's Mr. Plow-worthy rhythm section, Burnside's wounded vocal and palpable desolation helps you realize how thin the glass is that separates an outsider looking in, from an insider looking out. –Jeff Weiss
My Morning Jacket-“Touch Me I'm Going To Scream Part II
It took nothing short of uncut blind faith to trudge through the midsection of Evil Urges- and what better to support that claim than an eight-minute, italo-inspired track turning out to be the pot of gold at the end of a sugar-rotted rainbow. Kentuckians Do It Better? Maybe it's how “Touch Me I'm Going To Scream Pt. 2” managed to retain My Morning Jacket's greatest and indisputably potent strengths in an unfamiliar setting- Jim James' nonsense lyrics somehow achieving a cavernous quality, the rhythm section locking into a dynamic and telepathic groove and, most importantly, a real element of surprise replacing the obvious dilletantism of nearly every song that preceded it. Did “Touch Me” truly salvage one of the year's most rightfully maligned turkeys? That it managed to make My Morning Jacket's next exploration seem like a welcome risk other than a frightening night terror that “Highly Suspicious” was a demand for more of the same makes it better than that.–Ian Cohen
Of Montreal-“Wicked Wisdom”
Not accustomed to praising Of Montreal, a band that can be occasionally
and extraordinarily irritating, it's no coincidence that Kevin Barnes'
sex album is where we can meet halfway. “Wicked Wisdom” is a mess, but
those same, self-conscious, over-the-top qualities make it compelling.
The surrounding vignettes sound like the Fiery Furnaces at their most
indulgent. Eventually, the five-minute suite swirls into a hooky,
stuttery chorus that quotes Queen over a staticky beat and R&B-lite
organ stabs. But not before he memorably raps “I'm just a black
shemale/And I don't know what you people are all about.”–Dan Weiss
Sam Sparro-“Black and Gold”
It's easy to hate on effervescing electro-pop like Sam Sparro's, which
sounds like it should be the soundtrack to the kind of decadent
coke-fueled narcisissm bloggers can't enjoy sitting at a computer
(well, some can). He's singing about ladies' dresses and jewelry–we
think–the colors he sees in an overpriced nightclub full of repulsive
jerks, where this music exists. Black and Gold are twin colors he sees
when he steps outside and stares at the stars–when he thinks about
faith and evolution and the why? He's fine with rhyming matter with
matter, because it doesn't. This is Sparro, not Sartre, but “if vision
is the only validation then most of my life isn't real” remains a
smidgin smarter than “I get all the girls, I get all the girls,” which