yaga
06-30-09, 11:31 PM
http://i42.tinypic.com/i5pr7m.jpg
From Release Notes -
Fans of bookish, polo-shirt'd, sea-breezed Ivy League indie-pop, get ready to get your party on. Or, um, something like that. It's time to discover Discovery. That's the side project of Vampire Weekend's keyboardist/arranger/producer type, Rostam Batmanglij, and Ra Ra Riot frontman Wes Miles. Where their main bands 'whose respective debut discs, Vampire Weekend and The Rhumb Line, were two of 2008's best albums' play preppy, jangling, twee tunes, Discovery do something distinctly different.
Taking inspiration from the chromed-out gleam of modern R&B production, Batmanglij takes charge of sinuous keyboards, boinging beats, and massive synth crashes; approximating disposable pop fodder with an expert ear. Miles who normally spends his lyrical time making bibliophilic connections to e.e. cummings and Virginia Woolf sings simple refrains in a near-falsetto that's pitched even higher by the obligatory autotune. It's brightly-colored, saturated-sounding, fluttery electro fluff that's stylistic lightyears away from Upper West Side Soweto.
http://www.mediaf!re.com/?gmdw4j0mxmx
Replace the exclamation point in the link above. This is my top record of the year thus far. So fun.
From Release Notes -
Fans of bookish, polo-shirt'd, sea-breezed Ivy League indie-pop, get ready to get your party on. Or, um, something like that. It's time to discover Discovery. That's the side project of Vampire Weekend's keyboardist/arranger/producer type, Rostam Batmanglij, and Ra Ra Riot frontman Wes Miles. Where their main bands 'whose respective debut discs, Vampire Weekend and The Rhumb Line, were two of 2008's best albums' play preppy, jangling, twee tunes, Discovery do something distinctly different.
Taking inspiration from the chromed-out gleam of modern R&B production, Batmanglij takes charge of sinuous keyboards, boinging beats, and massive synth crashes; approximating disposable pop fodder with an expert ear. Miles who normally spends his lyrical time making bibliophilic connections to e.e. cummings and Virginia Woolf sings simple refrains in a near-falsetto that's pitched even higher by the obligatory autotune. It's brightly-colored, saturated-sounding, fluttery electro fluff that's stylistic lightyears away from Upper West Side Soweto.
http://www.mediaf!re.com/?gmdw4j0mxmx
Replace the exclamation point in the link above. This is my top record of the year thus far. So fun.