Posts Tagged ‘rihanna’

The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve Vol. XI

May 25th, 2010 | By: Max Mertens

The Gaslight Anthem

The Gaslight Anthem – “American Slang”

I realize I’m a little late coming to this conclusion, but The Gaslight Anthem are a really, really good punk band. I’ve been casually listening to the New Jersey quartet for about a year, ever since my brother played their song “Wooderson”, which appeared on the Vans Warped Tour 2008 compilation. Lately though, I’ve been listening to the band’s incredibly well-received 2008 album, The ’59 Sound, which I haven’t been able to get enough of. Filled with catchy guitar riffs, huge, anthemic choruses, several ballads that tug at the ‘ol heartstrings, and more literary and musical references than you can shake a stick at (including, but not limited to: Bob Seger, Bruce Springsteen, Charles DickensGreat Expectations, Miles Davis, and Tom Petty), I’ve discovered it’s the perfect iPod soundtrack to my early morning runs down Parliament Street and along the waterfront. “American Slang” is the first single off the band’s upcoming third album with the same name, scheduled for release on June 15th.

The Gaslight Anthem will be playing at Osheaga in Montreal this summer and will be at the Sound Academy (!!!) on July 14th.

The Black Keys – “Next Girl”

No one sings about the ladies quite like Dan Auerbach. In the past, the Black Keys‘ lead singer and guitarist has waxed poetic about the girls he’s lusted after (“Girl Is On My Mind”), the girls he’s left behind (“Things Ain’t Like They Used To Be”), and the girls who were just plain crazy (“Psychotic Girl”). At times, his lyrics evoke the spirit of the great American bluesmen such as Muddy Waters, Junior Kimbrough, Howlin’ Wolf, etc. Throw in the powerhouse drumming of Patrick Carney with talented contributors, such as producer extraordinaire Danger Mouse (who worked on the band’s last album, 2008′s Attack & Release), plus a reputation for high-energy live performances, and you have a recipe for success. After taking a break to pursue other projects — Auerbach’s solo album and the duo’s BlakRoc project which featured guest vocals from some of the biggest names in hip-hop — they are back with the fifth full-length Keys album, entitled Brothers. “Next Girl” is a catchy-as-hell, blues-rock barnburner, with Auerbach vowing, “My next girl, will be nothing like my ex-girl”.  Plus, the music video for this song features numerous bikini-clad beauties and a dinosaur puppet named Frank. What’s not to like about that?

The Akron, Ohio duo will be playing an all-ages show on August 3rd at the Kool Haus.

The Dead Weather – “Forever My Queen”
and “Blue Blood Blues”

Young bands, take note: this is how you get a headlining spot at Coachella, not to mention pretty much every other major North American summer festival. The Dead Weather‘s newest album, Sea of Cowards, is in-stores now. And it’s entirely awesome.

Girl Crisis – “White Rabbit”

Zola Jesus feat. Dead Luke – “Somebody To Love”

If there’s a better reference of a song in a novel than Jefferson Airplane‘s “White Rabbit” being used in Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas‘ infamous “bathtub scene” (recreated here in the 1998 film adaptation, starring Johnny Depp and Benicio del Toro), than I’ve yet to read it. And apparently I’m not the only one that’s a fan of the pioneering Sixties psychedelic rock band lead by (incredibly badass) vocalist Grace Slick. Girl Crisis is an ongoing collaboration between some talented female singers, including members of Brooklyn bands Au Revoir Simone, Chairlift, and Telepathe, who recently got together to record this blissed-out, dream-pop version of Jefferson Airplane’s ode to psychedelic drugs and Alice In Wonderland. They don’t have a MySpace or website just yet, just a series of YouTube videos of the band covering songs such as Nirvana‘s “Come As You Are” and Sade’s “Smooth Operator”, shot in washed-out Super 8 by Bek Anderson. Zola Jesus is Arizona singer/songwriter Nika Rosa Danilova, who makes lo-fi, experimental, gothic-tinged pop, that fans of Fever Ray, The Knife and/or Siouxsie Sioux will enjoy. Listen to her eerie cover of “Somebody To Love” and songs from her latest EP, Stridulum, over at Danilova’s MySpace.

She and her live band will also be in Toronto for two shows at this year’s NXNE, so be sure to check them out.

Chiddy Bang -”The Opposite Of Adults”

MGMT – “Electric Feel (Keys N Krates x Grandtheft Live Remix)”

Let’s do a quick survey. How many of you out there either bought or downloaded MGMT‘s debut album? I’m willing to bet that most of you, like myself and countless others,  have Oracular Spectacular or at least one of the album’s many singles (“Kids”, “Time To Pretend”, “Electric Feel”) in their iTunes library. Now, of those of you who said yes, how many of you have bought or downloaded MGMT’s second album? (sound of crickets chirping) While Congratulations has yet to catch on commercially amongst fans quite like the first one did, the New York City duo of Ben Goldwasser and Andrew VanWyngarden are still getting some mileage (not to mention royalty fees) from the record that Rolling Stone named the 18th best album of the decade. Chiddy Bang are two fresh-faced college kids from Philly,  DJ/producer Xaphoon Jones and rapper Chiddy, who are poised to become one of this year’s biggest hip-hop breakout acts. I don’t know if bloggers use the term “backpacker rap” anymore, but Chiddy Bang definitely have more in common with say Cool Kids or Kidz In The Hall, than they do with 50 Cent or Kanye. They’ve built a steady buzz for themselves, thanks to a stream of free online mixtapes, featuring songs that sample Gorillaz, La Roux, Passion Pit, Radiohead, and others. Bonus points for the Anchorman reference. The second song is a nifty remix of “Electric Feel” that comes courtesy of Toronto-based collective Keys N Krates and Montreal’s Grandtheft. It breathes new life into a tune that’s been everywhere since it came out (via 1 LOVE T.O.).

M.I.A. – “Born Free” and “XXXO”

In case you’ve been living under a rock (and even then, it’d have to be a pretty large rock), M.I.A. is back with a new album (the annoyingly-titled /\/\/\Y/\, which is set for a July 13th North American release), an incredibly graphic Romain Gavras-directed video (which is similar to the video the director did for Justice‘s “Stress”) for “Born Free”, and the album’s first single, “XXXO”, which might be the most poppiest song that Maya has ever recorded.  Judge the new tracks for yourself by heading over to the website for M.I.A.’s record label N.E.E.T. here (be warned though: if you have a past history of seizures, then you’d be well-advised to avoid).

The Hood Internet – “Rude Baptism (Rihanna vs. Crystal Castles)”

Well, well, well, what do we have here? The Hood Internet take an incredibly sub-par single by the Barbadian singer-turned America’s sweetheart-turned gossip rag editors’ wet dream, pairs it with one of the better cuts off the new Crystal Castles album, for a completely unexpected (and awesome) mashup. I don’t know what would constitute a “rude baptism”, but I do know that I’ve found my musical guilty pleasure for the summer, and this one is going to be played at my house parties from now till September.

HEALTH -”USA Boys”

HEALTH like keeping busy. When the Los Angeles noise-rock quartet aren’t touring, creating new music, or making the best videos you’ll never see on MTV (see here, here, and here), they are putting out stellar remixes of their own tunes. Many of the acts that have reinterpreted HEALTH songs have gone on to larger success, including Toronto’s Crystal Castles, Montreal’s CFCF, and Denver’s Pictureplane, among others. The band’s DISCO is one of the finest remix albums I have in my iTunes (save perhaps Bloc Party‘s Silent Alarm Remixed), and come this June 22nd, we will see the sequel. DISCO2 will also feature new single “USA Boys”, which was mixed by legendary producer Alan Moulder (who has worked with the likes of Nine Inch Nails, Depeche Mode, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and more). Listen to it and check out the track-listing over at Pitchfork here.

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The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve Vol. VIII

February 16th, 2010 | By: Max Mertens

Sleigh Bells

Sleigh Bells

Sleigh Bells – “A/B Machines”

Ladies and gentleman, allow me to introduce you to Brooklyn buzz band no. 45, 056, Sleigh Bells. Their recipe for success? Take one guy (Derek Miller, former guitarist in Florida hardcore outfit Poison The Well) and one girl (singer Alexis Krauss, who spent time in the teen-pop group RubyBlue). Next, record some demos and have a major coming out at the CMJ music festival in New York City, all without having a full-length album to your name. Add upcoming tour dates at pretty much every major American music festival (including SXSW, Coachella, and the Pitchfork Music Festival), stir in a healthy dose of blog love, and you’ve got yourself a winning formula. “A/B Machines” is a delicious slab of glitch-pop, complete with buzz-saw guitar licks, distorted drums, and Krauss’ giddy chanting. According to a recent post on their MySpace, we can expect the debut album from the duo sometime this year. Also, the word on the street is that these two are going to helping out with producing the upcoming M.I.A. album (that’s your cue to get excited). Sleigh Bells will be opening up for Yeasayer at Lee’s Palace on May 1st, so get your tickets while they last.

Woodhands – “P’iss”

If you haven’t heard it yet, Woodhands’ new album is good. Really, really, really fucking good. The dynamic duo of Dan Werb and Paul Banwatt have managed to outdo themselves with this album; Remorsecapade contains some of the most sexually-charged (“Sluts”), emotion-baring (“I Want To Be Together”), frenetic (“Coolchazine”) and anthemic (“CP24″) songs that the band have recorded to date. And while it’s far too early in the year to call, I’m pretty sure that come next December, we’ll be seeing this album on a lot of people’s “best-of” lists. Just when you thought it couldn’t get any better, we get this absolutely hilarious “Z-side”, a tongue-in-cheek stab at none other than the music website everyone loves to hate, Pitchfork. As far as diss tracks go, it’s certainly no “Ether”, but it does sample Kanye outbursts, lets Werb scream random obscenities and complain about the site’s poor HTML coding, and allows Banwatt to rap and give Eminem a run for his money. This might even better than the duo’s cover of Katy Perry’s “I Kissed A Girl”, and that’s saying something. Get it for free over at Paper Bag Records’ website, and check out Woodhands’ MySpace for upcoming tour dates near you.

Rihanna – “Rude Boy (Diplo Rudeboyz Remix)”
Major Lazer feat. Elephant Man – “Halo (Beyonce Cover)

Major Lazer feat. Busy Signal & M.I.A. – “Sound Of Siren”

Diplo is by far one of the funniest “celebrities” that I follow on Twitter. But when the globetrotting DJ isn’t Tweeting about wild partying in New Orleans (“Switched slipped pon some beeds and broke his coxix”), or starting faux beefs with everyone from Sean Kingston to Miley Cyrus, he’s sharing new tracks and remixes. And Diplo’s been busy lately. During the Grammy Awards, we got this tongue-in-cheek cover of “Halo” in response to Beyonce’s winning night, and shortly after, a mashup of Rihanna’s “Rude Boy” and M.I.A.’s “Boyz” and another new Major Lazer track. Can anybody stop this guy? Oh, and expect a new Major Lazer EP this spring, featuring a remix from none other than Radiohead’s Thom Yorke (!!!).

Jay-Z – “Lucifer (Mako Reactor)”
Clipse – “Virginia (Lost Woods)”

I don’t play video games. Maybe its because, unlike most children of the 90s, I grew up with two younger brothers in a household without a video gaming system. Occasionally I’ll pick up a plastic Rock Band axe or the microphone, but when my roommates start killing zombies on Left 4 Dead 2 or trash-talking 12-year-olds on Halo online (how do you like that not-so-subtle product placement?), it doesn’t really interest me. I’m not trying to be preachy, because I waste more than plenty of time on my MacBook, but video games have never been my proverbial cup of tea. However, there is something geeky cool about a mixtape that takes songs from some of the biggest names in rap today, and mashes them from instrumentals from classic video games. And as Massachusetts’ Team Teamwork know, you can’t get much more classic than Final Fantasy 7 and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, pairing Hova’s Black Album gem with the former, and the drug-hustlin’ Clipse’s “Virgina” with the latter. Download them both for free via Team Teamwork’s website (via Matt Braga).

Erykah Badu feat. Lil Wayne & Bilal – “Jump in the Air and Stay There”

What is it about Erykah Badu that brings out the best in other musicians? As Chris Rock once joked to Rolling Stone, “Outkast did a great record [Aquemi] while Andre was with Erykah. Common made a great record [Electric Circus] when he was with Erykah. Before I write any more jokes, I think I’m gonna call Erykah Badu.” This time around, she’s getting Lil Wayne to bring his A game, on this track from Badu’s forthcoming album, New Amerykah Part Two (Return of the Ankh) (which is easily an early contender for the worst album title of the year). And let’s face it – Wayne could probably benefit from a swift kick in the behind these days, and he rises to the challenge, to contribute some sharp verses that remind us why he might just deserve his self-appointed “Best Rapper Alive” title. “I go nuts like a Danish”? Great line. If Weezy teaming with the woman who has been called the “Queen of Neo-Soul” isn’t enough to get you excited, this song samples from Parliament Funkadelic and also features a crooning hook from soul singer Bilal. Yes, that Parliament Funkadelic. Hell of a music video too.

Japandroids – “Art Czars”

“Here’s your money back, here’s your punk rock back.” If you didn’t think that Japandroids could get any better, than this newest single from Brian King and David Prowse, proves that the Vancouver duo are more than a one album wonder after making the sublime Post-Nothing. Unfortunately these guys won’t be making an appearance at this year’s Canadian Music Week, but you can catch them in Toronto on April 3rd, when their upcoming North American tour brings them to the Horseshoe Tavern.

Harlem – “Psychedelic Tits”

If you ever wondered what would happen if King Khan and the Black Lips hooked up while on peyote, and had a illegitimate love child together, then wonder no longer. Not to be confused with Brooklyn’s Harlem Shakes, Harlem are three guys from Austin, Texas who enjoy a nice pair of cutoff denim shorts, Patrick Swayze’s performance in Dirty Dancing, and some band named Nirvana. They also enjoy making scuzzy garage-rock songs about drugs, Disneyland, and their dream girls, not necessarily in that exact order. From last year’s album, Free Drugs, which was made available as a free online download, “Psychedelic Tits” ain’t exactly Shakespeare when it comes to lyrics. But it is infectiously catchy, and it makes me want to drag out my BBQ in the middle of winter, invite a few friends over, crack open a tall boy, and have a party in my backyard. The band recently signed to Matador and their debut album, entitled Hippies, will be out April 6th. Harlem will also be touring around the States the next two months, but unfortunately, there are no Canadian dates as of right now. You can check out this song, and several more, by moseying on over to Harlem’s MySpace.

Oh No Forest Fires – “A Letter Of Apology To My Parents For Becoming An Alcoholic (Song For Claudia)”

R.I.P. Oh No Forest Fires, we hardly knew ‘ye.

Phoenix – “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands (Bob Dylan Cover)”

If anyone still had any doubts about Phoenix being the biggest band in the world right now, than the last two weeks should have silenced any doubters. First they won the ridiculously-named Grammy for “Best Alternative Music Album”, which resulted in some absolutely hilarious awkward interviews on the red carpet, including one with MTV Jersey Shore celubu-tard Snooki. If that wasn’t a big enough crossover, how about “1901″ in a fucking car commercial? Or “Liztomania” in the trailer for a godawful-looking Hollywood romantic comedy? Just when you thought these guys had completely sold-out though, they go ahead and put out this stripped-down, unpretentious cover of Bob Dylan’s “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands”, a song that appeared on Dylan’s 1966 classic Blonde On Blonde. Recorded as a live five minute acoustic cover for the German magazine Musikexpress, this song has no flashy synths or dance-pop drum beats, just strumming guitars and Thomas Mars’ earnest vocals. It looks good on them.

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The Singing Lamb Tuesday Twelve: Vol. I

September 8th, 2009 | By: Max Mertens

Shad

Shad

Welcome to the first edition of what I hope to make a regular weekly feature on the Lamb; the Tuesday Twelve, twelve new songs that you need to hear immediately, with no adherence to genres (this week we have everything from dancehall reggae to Canadian hip-hop to scuzzy blues rock), themes, or nationalities of the artists/bands.  What I’ll be doing is searching through the blogosphere (yes, that does include Pitchfork and Hype Machine), podcasts, magazines, radio stations, my own personal iTunes, to bring you the coolest new tracks that’ll make you want to sing, make you want to dance, make you want to cry (maybe even all three at the same time).  As always, feel free to comment if you liked (or disliked) a track I recommended, and tell me about the songs that you think I should hear.  Enjoy!

Ghostface Killah & MF DOOM – “Chinatown Wars (Oh No Remix)”

This just in: Wu-Tang still ain’t nothing to fuck with. On this track – written as the theme song for the latest in the Grand Theft Auto video game series – Ghost (who from the likes of this track, and his recent appearance on MSTRKRFT’s “Word Up”, is having a timely career revival) spits battle raps like a true veteran, over a bubbling beat cooked up by Oh No and fake blood-in-the-streets news broadcasts. MF DOOM is no slouch on this track either, as he raps about twisting some unfortunate soul’s limbs “like pilates” – nice to see that the man who has a affinity for hiding behind a mask can rhyme about more than food and NSFW Adult Swim cartoons.  If you’re maintaining any beefs with anyone at the moment, you need this song on your iPod.

Shad feat. Dallas Green and TLO – “…in the Black of Night (Freestyle)”

See folks, this is what happens when you gather a bunch of awesome artists, throw them in tour buses, and get them to play all across North America during the summer:  you get awesome collaborations like this one between Calgary rapper Shad, Alexisonfire crooner Dallas Green, and his DJ TLO.  Recorded during a late night on the punk rock carnival that is the Vans Warped Tour, Shad spits some clever rhymes about touring, recording and of course, Wu-Tang.  Show of hands, who would like to see guest rappers on the next Alexis album?  That’s what I thought.  Credit to EXCLAIM! for this one.

The Rural Alberta Advantage – “Don’t Haunt This Place”

It seems that every other week, we are hearing about the next big indie rock band that hail from Toronto.  Here’s the truth: a lot of the hype about these new bands is bullshit.  Not to dump on the city’s incredibly rich and diverse music scene, but many of these indie rock bands are just boring, generic imitations of better bands before them.  Fortunately for us, The Rural Alberta Advantage (also known by the space-saving acronym, The RAA), aren’t one of those bands.  Consisting of  lead singer and guitarist Nil Endenloff, keyboardist and backup singer Amy Cole, and drummer Paul Banwatt (you know him as the drummer from Woodhands), the band has seen their stock steadily rising, which has so far culminated in being signed to indie powerhouse label Saddle Creek, re-releasing their stellar debut folk-rock album Hometowns, and a (by all accounts) huge recent hometown show at the Horseshoe this past July.  Expect big things from this trio in the near future.

Joel Plaskett – “Through & Through & Through”

Returning home for the first time in eight months, only to find that I had become a stranger in the eyes who people who I had once considered friends. Working in the kitchens of a summer camp that was plunged into swine flu paranoia, after several campers showed signs and were quickly quarantined.  The godawful summer weather that Nova Scotia experienced throughout all of July, which is only now beginning to look up in August.  Yet, for all the terrible (and terribly boring) stuff that I’ve gone through the past two months, the song that will always remind me of summer ’09 is this breezy, upbeat tune from Nova Scotian guitar troubadour Plaskett.  And if there’s a pop song this summer that had better (or more Nova Scotian for that matter) lyrics than, “You be April Stevens, I’ll be April Wine /You be Israel, I will be Palestine”, than I’ve yet to hear it. Could Plaskett’s recent ambitious triple-album, Three, finally be enough for voters to give him his first – and very deserved – Polaris Prize?  Only time will tell…

Apostle Of Hustle – “Eazy Speaks”

Recently Apostle Of Hustle’s frontman Andrew Whiteman told CBC Radio 3 that this song – named after the infamous rapper Eazy E – was inspired by a rock spray-painted with the words “Eazy speaks” that the band saw in rural Quebec while on route to a show in Prince Edward Island.   Myself, I think its a fantastic thought:  what if dead musicians could give us advice from beyond the grave?  Michael Jackson would then be able to inform us of the pitfalls of facial reconstruction surgery (sorry, too soon?), Elvis would tell us to stay away from Vegas and over-eating in general, and Kurt Cobain would advise us to never, ever, <i>ever</i> trust anyone named Courtney Love.  In this case, it would seem that Eazy told Apostle Of Hustle to “keep your friends close and your enemies closer” and write a catchy, riff-filled number like this one.

Major Lazer feat. T.O.K. and Ms. Thing – “Bruk Out”

Bawdy sex raps!  Pitch-tweaked vocals! Off-the-wall futuristic Jamaican dancehall reggae!  It can only mean one thing: globetrotting DJ extraordinaire Diplo and his fellow co-conspirator, the producer Switch, are back with a whole new bag of tricks.  I’ve recommended Major Lazer – Diplo and Switch’s latest project featuring a slew of guest vocalists that you’ve never heard of (and some that you have) – to you before, but if you haven’t picked up their album Guns Don’t Kill People…Lazers Do, you should make that a priority.  Just in time for summer house parties, comes the duo’s blunt-smoking, skirt-chasing (sample line from this song: “I met Jill/She was a stripper/She said she wanted to undo my zipper”) love letter to Kingston’s dancehall and reggae scene.  Plus, you know you’ve made it when GQ magazine features you and recommends Red Bull and vodka as the “appropriate companion drug”.  This is some next-level shit right here folks.

Grizzly Bear vs. Lil Wayne – “2 Weeks ’til Prom (The Soundmen Mashup)”

Strangest mashup album ever?  New York City outfit The Soundmen recently released a three-song EP, which mashes songs from indie rock darlings-of-the-moment Grizzly Bear and the always bizarre, but usually entertaining Lil Wayne.  The title of this album? Vecktaflyest.  Perfect.  Listen to this one for yourself and decide whether its a trainwreck or not, but anything that manages to pair “Two Weeks” and “Prom Queen” together is worth a listen at least once in my books.  Download the album and read more over at Paste here.

Wale feat. Peter, Bjorn & John – “Nothing To Worry About”

Everything about this track screams “official hipster summer anthem”.  The newest single from Sweden’s biggest pop music export since ABBA, the whistling, Grey’s Anatomy-endorsed trio Peter, Bjorn and John?  Check.  Behind raps from Washington, D.C.’s next-great-hope, Wale, who so far in his career, has free-styled over Justice, managed to find a use for Lady Gaga’s sex-cyborg “singing”, and released an excellent Seinfield-themed mixtape? Check.  On a hot new mixtape called Back To The Future, produced and mixed by 9th Wonder and Nick Catchdubs, available online for the very agreeable price of free?  Check.  For all the hype surrounding Wale, there’s no denying the man has serious skills on the microphone.  We’re still waiting for his hotly-anticipated debut full-length, Attention: Deficit, which is scheduled to be out September 22nd, but this ought to be enough to tide us over until then.

Jay-Z feat. Rihanna & Kanye West – “Run This Town”

Is there anybody worse in the musical world than Mr. Shawn Carter, aka Jay-Z, when it comes to this “retiring” business?  The man’s put out two albums (the critically-maligned Kingdom Come and the much better American Gangster) after he said he was leaving the game for good, and on the not-so-subtle release date of September 11th, we can expect the third. The Blueprint III has rumoured to have been in the works for quite some time, and now some of the new songs are starting to leak, much to the delight of serious fans who consider this album to be akin to the rap equivalent of the Holy Grail.  This one has Jay rhyming like he’s just getting into his prime, a nice poppy hook from Rihanna (the role she was born to play), and some hot lines from Kanye, who also produced the album.  This album’s going to be a monster.

K-OS feat. Emily Haines & Murray Lightburn – “Uptown Girl”

Replace Jay-Z with a soulful K-OS doing his best Michael Jackson impression, Metric’s mistress Emily Haines filling in for Rihanna, and The Dears’ frontman Murray Lightburn providing Kanye-worthy backup vocals (okay, that one’s a bit of a stretch), and you basically have the Canadian version of “Run This Town”.  While this is the second single from K-OS’ latest record, Yes!, it serves as an excellent showcase for all three artists on the track, who are arguably at the peaks of their careers. Lightburn and The Dears just put out their well-received fourth album, Missiles.  Haines and her boy in Metric also have a hot new album, and have been playing summer festivals here there and everywhere, not to mention an upcoming show at Toronto’s legendary Massey Hall in October.  As for K-OS, he’s been playing packed shows from coast-to-coast and this new album should solidify his reputation as one of the country’s best rappers.

Arctic Monkeys – “Crying Lightning”

They got us to put on our dancing shoes, taught us that “D Is For Dangerous”, and still think you look pretty damn good on the dancefloor.  Yes kids, that’s right: everyone’s favourite Sheffield garage-rockers, the Arctic Monkeys, are back and once again preparing for world domination…I mean, a world tour.  This one is in support of their upcoming third album, entitled Humbug, which is being produced by Queens of the Stone Age head honcho Josh Homme, and is scheduled to be in stores on August 25th.  You can listen to the new single, “Crying Lightning”, over at the Monkeys’ MySpace here.  The Toronto stop on the tour is September 28th at the Sound Academy and if you don’t have a ticket, well…tough luck.

The Dead Weather – “Treat Me Like Your Mother (Diplo Remix)”

Unless you’ve been living under a rock the past few months, you probably know already that this is Jack White’s new band.  And if you know anything about me, or the type of music I usually listen to (you’ve read this far, haven’t you?), than you know its impossible for me to remain unbiased about The Dead Weather.  I’ve been a fan of Jack, and a true believer that anything he touches turns to gold, ever since my father brought home The White Stripes’ White Blood Cells several years ago.   As frontman for the Stripes (and of course, later The Raconteurs), he’s a true Guitar Hero, and is hopefully destined to go down in musical history as the Robert Plant or Bob Dylan of our generation.  And can you blame White for getting Alison Mosshart to play a Nico-esque muse to his Andy Warhol?  As the female half of The Kills, Mosshart is gorgeous, and has the pipes to match her looks.  Throw in Dean Fertita of Queens of the Stone Age and a Raconteur (Jack Lawrence), and you have yourself one hell of a band.  Download Diplo’s remix of Horehound’s first single for free over at RCD LBL.com.

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