Chords for GREAT ALBUMS: July 2019
Tempo:
69.1 bpm
Chords used:
F
Eb
A
Abm
Gb
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Ooh.
Hi everyone, Anthony Fantano here, Internet's Busiest Music Nerd, and it's time for another
edition of Great Albums where I go over what I felt were some of the best records that have
been released over the past month or so.
Gonna list them all out, put links down below so you
can check the albums out too if they interest you, and yeah, [Eb] let's go.
First, we have the new Black
Midi album, Schlagenheim.
If you love math rock, if you love rock music with weird grooves, dark
post-punk vibes, then give this one a shot.
It's a seriously surreal and weird experience.
The band
is incredibly tight.
The guitar work is really angular, strange, impressive.
The songwriting,
for the most part, is very compelling too.
It is one of the most enjoyably freaky rock albums
I've heard this year.
The new Daphne EP for the fans of house music out there that feature lots
of disco samples, this thing is great.
It's fun, it's groovy, it's a batch of very quality tracks.
Moving on from there, we also have the new Dorian Elektra album, Flamboyant, which is a fantastic
bubblegum bass LP with elements of dance pop and electro pop.
It's just really good songs.
Really
good songwriting, some interesting bits of gender politics in the lyrics.
Tight, glossy, futuristic,
and forward-thinking production, but ultimately it's the great songs that really truly sell this
thing.
The melodies, the hooks, the clever lyrics, it's all great.
Also, gotta say Freddie Gibbs and
Madlib with Bandana are now two for two.
Two great records from these guys.
Really happy to hear them
come together once again and on such an impressive batch of tracks.
In my opinion, it is Freddie on
this LP that actually shines lyrically and flow-wise.
I think he's a lot more impressive on
this record than he was on Piñata.
Madlib's beats didn't blow me away quite as much this time around,
but still, even decent Madlib beats are pretty great generally.
Make sure you try this album if
you love coke raps, if you love hardcore hip-hop, if you love jazz rap.
Gibbs, Madlib, two of the best
[F] doing it right now, and this record proves it.
We also have the new Kieran J.
Callinan album,
Return to Center, another one of my favorites this month.
Kieran is a fantastic Australian
singer-songwriter, though this album is a covers record.
It's one of the first covers albums, though,
that to me works functionally as a character portrait of the artist doing the covering.
Kieran picks a lot of very interesting deep cuts from the worlds of singer-songwriter music and
New Wave, and his renditions are fun, creative, impassioned.
Solid album through and through.
Loved
it, loved it, loved it.
I also love the new Prince Originals collection of demos and tracks that Prince
had essentially recorded to be recorded for other artists.
I thought that came [A] out really great.
Singer-songwriter David Berman [Abm] is back under the name Purple Mountains with a new band, new songs.
The collection of tracks are great.
Berman sounds as good as ever.
If you are a huge indie folk [Gb] fan,
alt-country fan, if you loved Silver Jews back in the day and their material, you are going to love
this new record.
The new Uboa album, The Origin of My Depression, is a really harrowing mix of
industrial music, of noise music.
It's a very powerful meditation on mental health, on gender
identity, and a host of other things.
And finally, I want to give a shout out to one of the most
immense musical experiences that I've had this year, and that was my listen to the new
Lingua Ignota album Caligula.
An incredible contribution to the world of neoclassical
dark wave, powerful vocals, dramatic pianos, huge swaths of distortion and noise, a concept diving
deeply into emotional and physical trauma, abuse.
It's a very intense listen, not for the faint of
heart at all, but if you can withstand the force of what Miss Hater is bringing on this record, it
will most likely blow you away.
And I think I'm going to leave it at that.
Those are all of the
records that I wanted to mention in this video.
Quite a few albums did end up impressing me
greatly [F] just past the halfway point of this year, which I thought was kind of interesting because I
had just come out with my best albums of 2019 so far, and then all of a sudden I'm just flooded
with all these records that would have easily made that list had I made it like a month later, but
I don't know, such is life I suppose.
So yeah, those are all the records, all of them, reviews to them
linked down below.
Give them a shot if any of them seem to interest you.
Thank you very much for
watching.
[C] Tran.
Zishan, have you given any of these albums a listen?
Did you love them?
Did you hate
them?
What would you rate them?
You're the best, you're the best.
What should I review next?
Hit the
like if you like, please subscribe, and please don't cry.
Hit the bell as well.
Over here next to my
head is another video that you can check out.
Hit that up or the link to subscribe to the channel.
Hi everyone, Anthony Fantano here, Internet's Busiest Music Nerd, and it's time for another
edition of Great Albums where I go over what I felt were some of the best records that have
been released over the past month or so.
Gonna list them all out, put links down below so you
can check the albums out too if they interest you, and yeah, [Eb] let's go.
First, we have the new Black
Midi album, Schlagenheim.
If you love math rock, if you love rock music with weird grooves, dark
post-punk vibes, then give this one a shot.
It's a seriously surreal and weird experience.
The band
is incredibly tight.
The guitar work is really angular, strange, impressive.
The songwriting,
for the most part, is very compelling too.
It is one of the most enjoyably freaky rock albums
I've heard this year.
The new Daphne EP for the fans of house music out there that feature lots
of disco samples, this thing is great.
It's fun, it's groovy, it's a batch of very quality tracks.
Moving on from there, we also have the new Dorian Elektra album, Flamboyant, which is a fantastic
bubblegum bass LP with elements of dance pop and electro pop.
It's just really good songs.
Really
good songwriting, some interesting bits of gender politics in the lyrics.
Tight, glossy, futuristic,
and forward-thinking production, but ultimately it's the great songs that really truly sell this
thing.
The melodies, the hooks, the clever lyrics, it's all great.
Also, gotta say Freddie Gibbs and
Madlib with Bandana are now two for two.
Two great records from these guys.
Really happy to hear them
come together once again and on such an impressive batch of tracks.
In my opinion, it is Freddie on
this LP that actually shines lyrically and flow-wise.
I think he's a lot more impressive on
this record than he was on Piñata.
Madlib's beats didn't blow me away quite as much this time around,
but still, even decent Madlib beats are pretty great generally.
Make sure you try this album if
you love coke raps, if you love hardcore hip-hop, if you love jazz rap.
Gibbs, Madlib, two of the best
[F] doing it right now, and this record proves it.
We also have the new Kieran J.
Callinan album,
Return to Center, another one of my favorites this month.
Kieran is a fantastic Australian
singer-songwriter, though this album is a covers record.
It's one of the first covers albums, though,
that to me works functionally as a character portrait of the artist doing the covering.
Kieran picks a lot of very interesting deep cuts from the worlds of singer-songwriter music and
New Wave, and his renditions are fun, creative, impassioned.
Solid album through and through.
Loved
it, loved it, loved it.
I also love the new Prince Originals collection of demos and tracks that Prince
had essentially recorded to be recorded for other artists.
I thought that came [A] out really great.
Singer-songwriter David Berman [Abm] is back under the name Purple Mountains with a new band, new songs.
The collection of tracks are great.
Berman sounds as good as ever.
If you are a huge indie folk [Gb] fan,
alt-country fan, if you loved Silver Jews back in the day and their material, you are going to love
this new record.
The new Uboa album, The Origin of My Depression, is a really harrowing mix of
industrial music, of noise music.
It's a very powerful meditation on mental health, on gender
identity, and a host of other things.
And finally, I want to give a shout out to one of the most
immense musical experiences that I've had this year, and that was my listen to the new
Lingua Ignota album Caligula.
An incredible contribution to the world of neoclassical
dark wave, powerful vocals, dramatic pianos, huge swaths of distortion and noise, a concept diving
deeply into emotional and physical trauma, abuse.
It's a very intense listen, not for the faint of
heart at all, but if you can withstand the force of what Miss Hater is bringing on this record, it
will most likely blow you away.
And I think I'm going to leave it at that.
Those are all of the
records that I wanted to mention in this video.
Quite a few albums did end up impressing me
greatly [F] just past the halfway point of this year, which I thought was kind of interesting because I
had just come out with my best albums of 2019 so far, and then all of a sudden I'm just flooded
with all these records that would have easily made that list had I made it like a month later, but
I don't know, such is life I suppose.
So yeah, those are all the records, all of them, reviews to them
linked down below.
Give them a shot if any of them seem to interest you.
Thank you very much for
watching.
[C] Tran.
Zishan, have you given any of these albums a listen?
Did you love them?
Did you hate
them?
What would you rate them?
You're the best, you're the best.
What should I review next?
Hit the
like if you like, please subscribe, and please don't cry.
Hit the bell as well.
Over here next to my
head is another video that you can check out.
Hit that up or the link to subscribe to the channel.
Key:
F
Eb
A
Abm
Gb
F
Eb
A
Ooh.
Hi everyone, Anthony Fantano here, Internet's Busiest Music Nerd, and it's time for another
edition of Great Albums where I go over what I felt were some of the best records that have
been released over the past month or so.
Gonna list them all out, put links down below so you
can check the albums out too if they interest you, and yeah, [Eb] let's go.
First, we have the new Black
Midi album, Schlagenheim.
If you love math rock, if you love rock music with weird grooves, dark
post-punk vibes, then give this one a shot.
It's a seriously surreal and weird experience.
The band
is incredibly tight.
The guitar work is really angular, strange, impressive.
The songwriting,
for the most part, is very compelling too.
It is one of the most enjoyably freaky rock albums
I've heard this year.
The new Daphne EP for the fans of house music out there that feature lots
of disco samples, this thing is great.
It's fun, it's groovy, it's a batch of very quality tracks.
Moving on from there, we also have the new Dorian Elektra album, Flamboyant, which is a fantastic
bubblegum bass LP with elements of dance pop and electro pop.
It's just really good songs.
Really
good songwriting, some interesting bits of gender politics in the lyrics.
Tight, glossy, futuristic,
and forward-thinking production, but ultimately it's the great songs that really truly sell this
thing.
The melodies, the hooks, the clever lyrics, it's all great.
Also, gotta say Freddie Gibbs and
Madlib with Bandana are now two for two.
Two great records from these guys.
Really happy to hear them
come together once again and on such an impressive batch of tracks.
In my opinion, it is Freddie on
this LP that actually shines lyrically and flow-wise.
I think he's a lot more impressive on
this record than he was on Piñata.
Madlib's beats didn't blow me away quite as much this time around,
but still, even decent Madlib beats are pretty great generally.
Make sure you try this album if
you love coke raps, if you love hardcore hip-hop, if you love jazz rap.
Gibbs, Madlib, two of the best
[F] doing it right now, and this record proves it.
We also have the new Kieran J.
Callinan album,
Return to Center, another one of my favorites this month.
Kieran is a fantastic Australian
singer-songwriter, though this album is a covers record.
It's one of the first covers albums, though,
that to me works functionally as a character portrait of the artist doing the covering.
Kieran picks a lot of very interesting deep cuts from the worlds of singer-songwriter music and
New Wave, and his renditions are fun, creative, impassioned.
Solid album through and through.
Loved
it, loved it, loved it.
I also love the new Prince Originals collection of demos and tracks that Prince
had essentially recorded to be recorded for other artists.
I thought that came [A] out really great.
Singer-songwriter David Berman [Abm] is back under the name Purple Mountains with a new band, new songs.
The collection of tracks are great.
Berman sounds as good as ever.
If you are a huge indie folk [Gb] fan,
alt-country fan, if you loved Silver Jews back in the day and their material, you are going to love
this new record.
The new Uboa album, The Origin of My Depression, is a really harrowing mix of
industrial music, of noise music.
It's a very powerful meditation on mental health, on gender
identity, and a host of other things.
And finally, I want to give a shout out to one of the most
immense musical experiences that I've had this year, and that was my listen to the new
Lingua Ignota album Caligula.
An incredible contribution to the world of neoclassical
dark wave, powerful vocals, dramatic pianos, huge swaths of distortion and noise, a concept diving
deeply into emotional and physical trauma, abuse.
It's a very intense listen, not for the faint of
heart at all, but if you can withstand the force of what Miss Hater is bringing on this record, it
will most likely blow you away.
And I think I'm going to leave it at that.
Those are all of the
records that I wanted to mention in this video.
Quite a few albums did end up impressing me
greatly [F] just past the halfway point of this year, which I thought was kind of interesting because I
had just come out with my best albums of 2019 so far, and then all of a sudden I'm just flooded
with all these records that would have easily made that list had I made it like a month later, but
I don't know, such is life I suppose.
So yeah, those are all the records, all of them, reviews to them
linked down below.
Give them a shot if any of them seem to interest you.
Thank you very much for
watching.
[C] Tran.
Zishan, have you given any of these albums a listen?
Did you love them?
Did you hate
them?
What would you rate them?
You're the best, you're the best.
What should I review next?
Hit the
like if you like, please subscribe, and please don't cry.
Hit the bell as well.
Over here next to my
head is another video that you can check out.
Hit that up or the link to subscribe to the channel.
Hi everyone, Anthony Fantano here, Internet's Busiest Music Nerd, and it's time for another
edition of Great Albums where I go over what I felt were some of the best records that have
been released over the past month or so.
Gonna list them all out, put links down below so you
can check the albums out too if they interest you, and yeah, [Eb] let's go.
First, we have the new Black
Midi album, Schlagenheim.
If you love math rock, if you love rock music with weird grooves, dark
post-punk vibes, then give this one a shot.
It's a seriously surreal and weird experience.
The band
is incredibly tight.
The guitar work is really angular, strange, impressive.
The songwriting,
for the most part, is very compelling too.
It is one of the most enjoyably freaky rock albums
I've heard this year.
The new Daphne EP for the fans of house music out there that feature lots
of disco samples, this thing is great.
It's fun, it's groovy, it's a batch of very quality tracks.
Moving on from there, we also have the new Dorian Elektra album, Flamboyant, which is a fantastic
bubblegum bass LP with elements of dance pop and electro pop.
It's just really good songs.
Really
good songwriting, some interesting bits of gender politics in the lyrics.
Tight, glossy, futuristic,
and forward-thinking production, but ultimately it's the great songs that really truly sell this
thing.
The melodies, the hooks, the clever lyrics, it's all great.
Also, gotta say Freddie Gibbs and
Madlib with Bandana are now two for two.
Two great records from these guys.
Really happy to hear them
come together once again and on such an impressive batch of tracks.
In my opinion, it is Freddie on
this LP that actually shines lyrically and flow-wise.
I think he's a lot more impressive on
this record than he was on Piñata.
Madlib's beats didn't blow me away quite as much this time around,
but still, even decent Madlib beats are pretty great generally.
Make sure you try this album if
you love coke raps, if you love hardcore hip-hop, if you love jazz rap.
Gibbs, Madlib, two of the best
[F] doing it right now, and this record proves it.
We also have the new Kieran J.
Callinan album,
Return to Center, another one of my favorites this month.
Kieran is a fantastic Australian
singer-songwriter, though this album is a covers record.
It's one of the first covers albums, though,
that to me works functionally as a character portrait of the artist doing the covering.
Kieran picks a lot of very interesting deep cuts from the worlds of singer-songwriter music and
New Wave, and his renditions are fun, creative, impassioned.
Solid album through and through.
Loved
it, loved it, loved it.
I also love the new Prince Originals collection of demos and tracks that Prince
had essentially recorded to be recorded for other artists.
I thought that came [A] out really great.
Singer-songwriter David Berman [Abm] is back under the name Purple Mountains with a new band, new songs.
The collection of tracks are great.
Berman sounds as good as ever.
If you are a huge indie folk [Gb] fan,
alt-country fan, if you loved Silver Jews back in the day and their material, you are going to love
this new record.
The new Uboa album, The Origin of My Depression, is a really harrowing mix of
industrial music, of noise music.
It's a very powerful meditation on mental health, on gender
identity, and a host of other things.
And finally, I want to give a shout out to one of the most
immense musical experiences that I've had this year, and that was my listen to the new
Lingua Ignota album Caligula.
An incredible contribution to the world of neoclassical
dark wave, powerful vocals, dramatic pianos, huge swaths of distortion and noise, a concept diving
deeply into emotional and physical trauma, abuse.
It's a very intense listen, not for the faint of
heart at all, but if you can withstand the force of what Miss Hater is bringing on this record, it
will most likely blow you away.
And I think I'm going to leave it at that.
Those are all of the
records that I wanted to mention in this video.
Quite a few albums did end up impressing me
greatly [F] just past the halfway point of this year, which I thought was kind of interesting because I
had just come out with my best albums of 2019 so far, and then all of a sudden I'm just flooded
with all these records that would have easily made that list had I made it like a month later, but
I don't know, such is life I suppose.
So yeah, those are all the records, all of them, reviews to them
linked down below.
Give them a shot if any of them seem to interest you.
Thank you very much for
watching.
[C] Tran.
Zishan, have you given any of these albums a listen?
Did you love them?
Did you hate
them?
What would you rate them?
You're the best, you're the best.
What should I review next?
Hit the
like if you like, please subscribe, and please don't cry.
Hit the bell as well.
Over here next to my
head is another video that you can check out.
Hit that up or the link to subscribe to the channel.