matthewmcvickar + criticism   43

Stuart Berman: The Flaming Lips — The Flaming Lips and Heady Fwends (Pitchfork)
This piecemeal patchwork of tracks hangs together amazingly well as a front-to-back album.
music  criticism  review  writing 
6 days ago by matthewmcvickar
Brandon Soderberg: Nicki Minaj and 2 Chainz’ ‘Beez in the Trap’ (SPIN)
Nicki employs street hardness as a signifier of how great she is at rapping, not as an attempt to actually convince anybody that she's "hood" or any of that authenticity nonsense. She's successfully occupying the trap, ground zero for hardness, and calling its inhabitants "bitches," all to prove that she is the consummate rhyming bad-ass.
music  pop  hiphop  rap  criticism  writing 
9 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Matthew Perpetua: Madonna — MDNA (Pitchfork)
It's almost impossible to approach MDNA without some degree of cynicism, but it's equally difficult to imagine anyone being more cynical about this music than Madonna herself. Unlike previous late-period records in which she had the luxury to indulge in creative tangents and not get too hung up on scoring several hits, MDNA is a record that comes with major commercial expectations. The "this has to work" factor is high, and it's hard to shake the impression that she has some measure of contempt for the contemporary pop audience.
music  review  criticism 
9 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Brent DiCrescenzo: Madonna — MDNA (Time Out Chicago)
It didn’t have to be this bad. She didn’t even need to dig that deep on the iTunes “Electronic” page to find a producer to craft intriguing electro. Instead of Solveig, she could have emailed SBTRKT. Or Anthonly Gonzalez. Or Scuba. Anyone else. She’s clearly learning about dance music from television ads, not nights out.
music  review  criticism  dance  pop 
9 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Jenn Pelly: Mirrorring: Foreign Body (Pitchfork)
There is a tendency among music critics to create sub-stories with records and impose narratives. We might identify with a hardcore punk group this year because we are a restless generation, or with a work of hyperactive pop because the internet has made us incapable of concentrating, and so on. But sometimes we take a record for what it is: a resistant piece of art, existing as a singular entity. In a world that is newly full of "content" at every turn, it can be refreshing to find an uncompromising record that exists so honestly on its own.
music  writing  criticism  review  grouper  tinyvipers 
9 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Tom Breihan: In Defense of Skrillex (Stereogum)
I’ve spent the morning listening to Skrillex’s three EPs, and they’re fun, but they’re not really any indication of what this guy does. Maybe he’ll make a great record some day, and his tracks certainly bring the hooks, and sometimes they sound the way people wish that last Justice album sounded. But at this point, listening to Skrillex at home is almost like listening to Gwar at home. The live experience is the thing.
music  writing  criticism 
10 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Steven Hyden: The Shins: Port of Morrow (The A.V. Club)
That’s the realm that Mercer is working in now, and when he has the confidence on Morrow to follow through on his glossy pop ambitions, his music manages to be as likeable as it always has been. It’s when Mercer tries to update the old Shins playbook with big-budget production that Morrow sounds awkward and dangerously sleepy.
music  review  criticism  writing 
10 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Sasha Frere-Jones: Lana Del Rey (The New Yorker)
‘Del Rey doesn’t have the emotional and psychological depth to support all the satin and spotlights. Her invocations of Sinatra and Lolita are entirely appropriate to the sumptuous backing tracks, but, when it comes to lyrics, she and her collaborators get lost in a tangle of keywords.’
ldr  music  writing  criticism 
12 weeks ago by matthewmcvickar
Eric Harvey: Grimes, 'Visions' (SPIN.com)
‘Like so many spotlit debuts, Visions displays a young singer developing a relationship with her own voice and the seemingly infinite possibilities for shaping and representing it. The mirror stage for emergent artists who spend a lot of time online and work alone with inexpensive tools often can (and does) lead to merely replicating the surface qualities of the stuff that streams their way. Boucher's talent lies in the balance of exploiting her gifts and leveraging what's come before her, but judiciously.’
music  writing  review  criticism  from instapaper
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Rob Harvilla: Lana Del Rey: 'Born to Die' (SPIN.com)
‘The vast majority of this record is given over to rhapsodizing over some hunky, dangerous fella, and none of the alterations — sonic, biographical, cosmetic — allegedly made to the real-life Lana/Lizzy could distort the truth as thoroughly as her unrelenting Ooh He's a Bad, Bad, Sexy Man routine. It's instructive to picture what this guy would actually look like IRL, some clown with a real emotional haircut, Crocs hanging off his feet, Urban Outfitters leather jacket hung over his IKEA futon, remnants of that Taco Bell burrito with the Fritos in it congregating at the corners of his mouth as he binges on Skyrim, blasts "Pumped Up Kicks" on infinite repeat, and gargles dozens of shots of, like, Goldschläger.’
ldr  music  writing  criticism 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Lindsay Zoladz: Lana Del Rey: Born to Die (Pitchfork)
‘In terms of its America-sized grandeur and its fixation with the emptiness of dreams, Born to Die attempts to serve as Del Rey's own beautiful, dark, twisted fantasy, but there's no spark and nothing at stake.’
ldr  music  review  criticism  writing  culture  america  sex  gender 
february 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Eric Harvey: Mark Richardson’s ‘A Proposed New Year's Resolution for Music Critics’ (marathonpacks)
‘Modern societies don’t advance if they don’t create new things. So human beings start asking new questions when they encounter a cultural object or idea: what about this can I identify (i.e. what about it is “old”), and what aspects of it are new (i.e. novel enough to create demand for it)?’

‘The questions arise: What specific aspects of the past are appropriate fodder for new hybridizations, or what methods of hybridization are privileged over others? Most importantly, why is this?’
history  music  modernism  retro  criticism  culture 
january 2012 by matthewmcvickar
Vulture: Bon Iver’s Indie Soft-Rock: Transcendent or Torpid?
Nitsuh Abebe dares to say Justin Vernon is a little boring. Reading this, I think I understand why people aren't as impressed or as moved by stuff like Bon Iver and The National as I am — it has a certain New England, autumn/winter feeling and I think a lot of its appeal is in its power to evoke that snowed-in cabin, that 2am rainy city street, that drunken goodbye that we experienced or imagined. That’s how it is for me, anyway.
boniver  music  criticism 
june 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Teenage Art: Henry Rollins Wants to Do Comedy on 'The Paul Reiser Show'
“Criticism is only useful when it helps us see something we are having difficulty seeing on our own; it’s not helpful when it tells us to stop looking.

‘But what if everyone pays attention to the wrong things? We have to guide them to the right things!’ Well, eventually everyone stops paying attention to everything: time is pretty effective that way. With that in mind, we should only worry about pointing the good out, and not worrying about the bad. And in the age of the Internet, this dictum takes on added force. Think of it as the Paris Hilton effect: talking about the bad just encourages the bad. No one has ever cured a celebrity of anorexia by posting photographs of her on the Internet, or has helped Charlie Sheen get off alcohol by getting exasperated at his stupidity. Trashing bad people and bad art does not make you a good person.”
criticism  art  writing  internet  culture  celebrity 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
The A.V. Club: An open letter to LCD Soundsystem’s James Murphy, from one critic to another
“Like a lot of music critics, I feel a special kinship with you, because we are you. Or, rather, you are a better, smarter version of us. The relationship music critics have with you is similar to what film critics have with Quentin Tarantino, who, like you, started out as a know-it-all fan who, unlike most critics, took all the trivial, microscopic specificities he absorbed from every corner of his fan experience and found a way to create something new with it. But even if you guys are big-shot artists now, you’re also still critics at heart; you did it like Godard, critiquing art by making better art. Any time you’d take pains to find just the right detail to make a track really snap—a crisp snare, a squiggly synth, a warmly bouncing bassline—you were both nodding to the records you felt did it correctly, while also making an argument against the relatively chilly, slapdash way music is made in the point-and-click ProTools era. They say writing about music is like dancing about architecture, but your records actually were architecture, built from the spare parts of closely observed sounds you deconstructed and recontextualized from countless songs in your impeccably curated collection.”
lcdsoundsystem  music  writing  history  criticism 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
a grammar: Odd Future, energy, inclusion, and exclusion
Nitsuh Abebe on Odd Future's energy, and their unfortunately exclusionary lyrics.
2011  music  oddfuture  hiphop  criticism  writing  feminism 
april 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Clem Bastow: Katy Perry — Teenage Dream
“Perry’s ouevre is nasty, sticky and a little bit stupid; it’s a kind of Hello Kitty-themed update on Carry On; fruit-scented lube on a rather imposing black dildo. It works perfectly because the American ideal of the teenager - wholesome and optimistic - is of course at odds with its reality of unprotected sex and casual drug use.”
katyperry  popmusic  writing  criticism 
february 2011 by matthewmcvickar
Village Voice: Leave Chillwave Alone
On why Altered Zones is Pitchfork’s *younger* ‘sister site’, and the fundamental difference between music producers and consumers who don’t remember music before the web, never knew it was something you paid for, and aren’t as concerned with the rating of certain music as ‘bad’.

I like this, but I have some big issues with this and want to return to it:

1. Altered Zones has its own set of problems, heavy among them the double-standard to which they hold DIY music. Baby bands at AZ get heaped with over-the-top praise, which at once unfairly removes them from helpful critical influence and subjects them to fame for which they aren’t prepared. As a result many are left in the dust of the Next Small Thing.

2. These music producers and writers don’t remember music before the web? I think this is patently false and that they absolutely do remember it; they generation that doesn’t isn’t reading Altered Zones yet. And what about those music producers sampling and being influenced by music that happened before the web (the 90s, the 80s)?

3. I don’t think Pitchfork is incapable of critically assessing the bands on Altered Zones; they just don’t have the time and energy for it. Which argument means I also don’t believe Altered Zones is not a filter for Pitchfork. How many bands debut on AZ or an AZ-affiliated blog, move on to the Forkcast, get a feature, and then get a bona fide Pitchfork Review? Several. Pitchfork’s own ‘The Week at Altered Zones’ pretty much is a filter by definition.
pitchforkmedia  music  writing  criticism 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
waycooljnr: How to Get Your Music Reviewed on Pitchfork: An Interview with Scott Plagenhoef, Pitchfork’s Editor-in-Chief
“What do you recommend is the best process for getting my music reviewed on Pitchfork?

“The easiest way to contact us to email and mail something to me directly, not just to the office. I would also read some reviews, find out which writers might like what you’re doing, and try to contact them directly. Targeting people who seem open to your music is an easy way to help it along. If you do send CDs, I would expect that a one-sheet, while it could be read, is more likely going to be discarded, so if you send a promo CD you should make sure any information that anyone might want– your website, short bio if needed, contact info for booking or PR if you have it, is on the back of the CD case itself.”
pitchfork  musicbusiness  internet  criticism  interview 
january 2011 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Kanye West, Still Unfiltered, on Eve of Fifth Album
Yeah, this is that nagging thing about MBDTF.

“On Monday Mr. West, who is 33, will release his fifth album, ‘My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy’, and it’s terrific — of course it’s terrific — a startlingly maximalist take on East Coast rap traditionalism. And yet that doesn’t matter nearly as much as it should, at least partly because of Mr. West’s insistence on his own greatness. By not allowing for responses to his work other than awe, the value of the work itself is diminished; it becomes an object of admiration, not of study. Instead the focus is on the whole of Mr. West’s persona and character, which is more fractured, and subject to a far wider range of responses. The result is that Mr. West becomes a polarizing public figure who happens to be the most artful pop musician of the day, not the other way around.”
kanyewest  music  criticism 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
a grammer: internet paradox
Thoughts on the tendency of the internet to empower and break down niches.

“You can be a niche, but you’re a public niche, so you can’t expect to be left alone about it, or understood on your own terms. The internet makes niches possible, but it’s also a massive space in which loads of different people communicate — and spaces like that tend to pull everyone toward the middle, developing conventions and enforcing a cultural center. So far, this hasn’t stopped plenty of corners of the internet from getting extremely insular and specialized, but it’s still a form of cultural policing on this front.”
nitsuhabebe  writing  internet  society  culture  criticism  niche  via:paulford 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Marc Weidenbaum — Lowlands: A Sigh Collective
Another ‘response album’ from Marc Weidenaum's blog minions, this a collection of recordings that use a human sigh as their source material. The response is to the grumpy, narrow-minded art critic Richard Dorment, who questioned the integrity and quality of artist Susan Philipsz’ Turner Prize-winning ‘Lowlands‘, as well as a number of other artistic endeavors that he considers unworthy of anything more than a ‘long low collective sigh’.
music  criticism  free  art 
december 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Fuse.tv: Listen Closely by B Michael Payne: Love the Music, Ignore the Message: How Critics Are Failing Odd Future
"Overall, there seems to be a critical disconnect between the way the predominantly white, male critical establishment writes about violence and misogyny—especially as it’s primarily exhibited in hip-hop, i.e., music made predominantly by black artists. Critics such as these seem uncommonly drawn to violent, misogynistic music simply because it is shocking. This thrill of novelty seems to be nothing more than a fetishization of an alien culture."
music  writing  criticism  misogyny  culture  america  hiphop  rap  lyrics 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Shallow Rewards: Be real, it doesn't matter anyway
A good overview of where music creation and criticism is in late 2010. At least in terms of the sorts of bands who are making music for the sorts of people who are reading these sorts of blog posts (a lot!).
music  writing  criticism  culture 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Squashed: Truth and Patriotism
"If somebody you care about is bleeding profusely, it’s not loving to insist that she’s flawless and has nothing to worry about. The loving thing is to stop the bleeding then get her to a doctor. If a guy is clearly suffering from blood poisoning, ignoring the problem isn’t loving. Instead, say, 'Dude. You need to get that looked at immediately.' Or, better yet, go with him. Do what you can to make things better."
patriotism  america  culture  history  war  writing  criticism 
november 2010 by matthewmcvickar
eMusic Q&A: Rob Sheffield
"To mark the publication of rock critic Rob Sheffield’s second book, an 'I Love the 80s'-style tribute to the music of his youth called Talking to Girls About Duran Duran, eMusic’s Michaelangelo Matos took a unique approach to the author interview: a jukebox jury in which music critics, rather than songs, were the focus of discussion."
music  musicbusiness  criticism  writing  80s  90s  rock  indie  punk  duranduran 
august 2010 by matthewmcvickar
NYTimes.com: Gen X Has a Midlife Crisis
They're are distraught and stuck in a pre-maturity funk.
bookreview  criticism  culture  psychology  youth  genx  film 
may 2010 by matthewmcvickar
a grammar: The Rules of the Game: A Fuller Thought on J. Hopper and Vampire Weekend
Nitsuh Abebe on exactly why people need to stop talking about how "white" Vampire Weekend are.
criticism  vampireweekend  race  music 
march 2010 by matthewmcvickar
Terra Incognita Films: 'Into the Wild' Debunked
Not so much 'debunked', but this article calls out Krakauer on a number of conclusions and omissions from his book (and the subsequent movie). To summarize: the poison/moldy seeds theory doesn't hold water, and McCandless probably just simply starved to death. McCandless had money and a map with him on his final trek, but the book and movie omit this. Also, one of the final self-portrait photographs might have a clue as to the "injury" alluded to in his final note: one sleeve of his shirt looks armless.
intothewild  film  book  literature  criticism  truth  outdoors  hiking  people  mccandless 
march 2009 by matthewmcvickar
Riff Market: Regarding Hipster Runoff's Animal Collective Post
"You can try to know, and own the fact that there are things you do not know, or you can be knowing, and hide your own ignorance with sideways shots of been-there done-that familiarity. You can understand that shit happens and try your best to keep things together and accomplish something against all odds — YOU CAN DANCE, as this album begins — or you can blow up the hospital just to show everyone that at any moment anywhere, a hospital can blow up for no fucking reason whatsoever."
criticism  music  culture  america  animalcollective  taste  hipsterrunoff  writing 
february 2009 by matthewmcvickar
The Atlantic: The Existential Clown
Jim Carrey as a genius, the "representative jester of our time." "Carrey’s dream sequence of movies is a prophecy, a warning that this clanking ego-apparatus in which each of us walks around, this fissured, monumental self, half Job and half Bertie Wooster, cannot be sustained. Out of his own seemingly bottomless disquiet, Carrey writhes and reaches into the bottomless disquiet of his audience."
jimcarrey  existentialism  human  comedy  humor  writing  film  culture  movies  philosophy  self  criticism  celebrity  identity  life  acting  actors 
december 2008 by matthewmcvickar
37signals: Learning from "bad" UI
Interesting. "Patt can work on his colors and alignment, and hopefully please his user base with a helpful tool. Meanwhile the rest of us would be wise to work on the quality and value of our criticism."
criticism  software  gui  interface  iphone  usability  design 
july 2008 by matthewmcvickar
Subtraction: Something’s Missing in Web Design
"I’d go so far as to say that the majority of the Web design field, by and large, is too easily motivated by technique, that the majority of us are thinking tactically far more often than we’re thinking strategically."
criticism  webdesign  design  web 
april 2008 by matthewmcvickar
The Morning News: "Six-Word Reviews of 763 SXSW MP3s" by Paul Ford
"If I was in a band I would write a slow song with an 808, reverb, and a female vocalist, and call that song 'Zach Braff’s Eyes Reflected in My Nano.'"
paulford  writing  music  mp3  blog  sxsw  criticism 
march 2008 by matthewmcvickar
Pitchfork: Michael Jackson: "One More Chance"
"This track is like being raised on velvet pillows and then, on your 18th birthday, having a crazy albino mannequin begin to rub sandpaper on your face."
pitchfork  music  michaeljackson  criticism  humor  writing 
february 2008 by matthewmcvickar
Stylus Magazine: The Bluffer’s Guide to Stylus
Stylus is shutting down, unfortunately. Here's their own excellent guide to the best of the site. Great weekend reading.
music  writing  criticism  humor 
october 2007 by matthewmcvickar
Wikipedia: Advanced Theory
"An artist is Advanced when they do something that is neither expected of them nor the opposite of what is expected of them." Tongue-in-cheek, but the article lives on. Note the notes on Val Kilmer and C-Murder.
advancementtheory  art  criticism  humor  music  popculture  culture 
october 2007 by matthewmcvickar
Chuck Klosterman: Real Genius
On Advancement Theory: it's not bad; you just don't get it. "The most Advanced figure of all time is Lou Reed [who in] 1986 released the song 'The Original Wrapper,' in which he raps about AIDS, Louis Farrakhan, and waffles."
advancementtheory  art  criticism  humor  music  popculture  culture  klosterman 
october 2007 by matthewmcvickar
Jason Hartley: Advanced Theory Blog
"Your guide to understanding Lou Reed, Bob Dylan, David Bowie, and other highly Advanced musicians." If a genius does something you don't understand, it's probably even more genius.
blog  music  humor  art  criticism  popculture 
october 2007 by matthewmcvickar
Parsefork
"The Really, Really In-Depth Music Review Aggregator"
music  criticism  datamining  pitchforkmedia  stylusmagazine 
february 2007 by matthewmcvickar

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