Dirty Projectors

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Yeah, and he cowrote the track as well.

Frederik B, Thursday, 23 February 2017 22:29 (nine years ago)

I listened to the album on headphones today, and musically it's great and inventive. Unlike fgti I think there's plenty that engages with the music of today, much more than on most indie-albums. With it's bass-triplets working against a stuttering 4/4 drumbeat, Work Together is basically a juke tune (and I'd guess the mellotron sounds is stolen from Islam Chipsy). Ascent Through Clouds keeps tumbling into a sorta german schaffel techno groove complete with cut up vocals, while Up In Hudson has that drum outro as well. Most of all it's an r'n'b album, with Death Spiral being a straight up Timbaland homage, and the whole thing playing a bit like Dawn's last few albums. Both Keep Your Name and Winner Takes Nothing has rap breaks, with Winner Takes Nothing trying to do the Migos triplet flow.

And if that sounds unbearably embarrassing, well ok, then this is not for you. But it's not more imperialistic or coopting than Vampire Weekend or Paul Simon or Animal Collective. I get why Dave would long for the days of 2009, because this was basically what indie tried to do back then, to plow through different sounds and incorporate them into their own visions. And it collapsed, mostly because none of GADPY managed to really follow up on their 2009 albums with something equally succesful. So it's sorta an oldfashioned way of making music, but I loved it back then, and I like it now.

But then there's the lyrics... yeah... It's not as if it becomes redeemed, but I See You does try. He ends with saying that 'the projection is fading away / and in it's place / I see you' which, keeping in mind the band was called Dirty Projectors, could sorta mean that he tried to turn Amber into something she was not, and now will let her be herself. But... that's not enough...

Frederik B, Thursday, 23 February 2017 22:48 (nine years ago)

Vampire Weekend and Paul Simon.

Really.

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 February 2017 23:41 (nine years ago)

Sigh

Le Bateau Ivre, Thursday, 23 February 2017 23:53 (nine years ago)

I think this is good:

It always hurts, and sometimes turning that hurt into a meaningful piece of art is a balm. But other times, trying to convert your pain into something that will publicly redeem you comes across just as selfishly as it sounds.

http://uproxx.com/music/dirty-projectors-break-up-album/4/

in twelve parts (lamonti), Friday, 24 February 2017 19:16 (nine years ago)

Occurred to me today that the closest analogue to this record is Robin Thicke's Paula, the record he made after "Blurred Lines" and his wife left him for cheating and being drunk and zonked out on Vicodin.

flappy bird, Friday, 24 February 2017 19:26 (nine years ago)

Yeah, because that's the only breakup record ever made.

Frederik B, Friday, 24 February 2017 19:42 (nine years ago)

Dude, there's a difference btwn Blood on the Tracks, Sea Change, Vulnicura, and For Emma Forever Ago etc. and this DP record. They're not grounded in specific details or about public people. Good breakup albums take a common and uninteresting personal experience and make it universal/abstract. "You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go" vs. "You'd sell out the waterfront for condos" and "what I want from art is truth / what you want is fame" etc etc

flappy bird, Friday, 24 February 2017 22:29 (nine years ago)

Good breakup albums are spiritual salve. There's no room for anyone but Longstreth here.

flappy bird, Friday, 24 February 2017 22:30 (nine years ago)

Blood on the Tracks had Idiot Wind on it too

duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Friday, 24 February 2017 22:32 (nine years ago)

I'm really really into that Uproxx review

fgti, Friday, 24 February 2017 22:36 (nine years ago)

There's no room for anyone but Longstreth here.

― flappy bird, 24. februar 2017 23:30 (three minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Yeah, that's pretty much the point of the last song on the album, I See You, as well. That he got lost in 'the projection' and everyone else got crowded out, including Amber.

And there's also a pretty big difference between this breakup and Thicke 'cheating and being drunk and zonked out on Vicodin.' There's nothing on Dirty Projectors as accusatory as comparing Longstreth to what Thicke did. Cool, you don't like it, but if your point is that Longstreth is being a dick, try not to be as big a dick yourself.

Frederik B, Friday, 24 February 2017 22:40 (nine years ago)

I like the uproxx review as well, but think this part is confused:

Instead of finding resonance in these lines, I’m reminded of the times when I valued the power of my own pain over the way weaponizing it might create more pain in others.

That is finding resonance in the lines. They resonate against the shitty parts of her own life. So it's shitty resonance, but it's still resonance.

Frederik B, Friday, 24 February 2017 22:55 (nine years ago)

portajohn reverb

Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 24 February 2017 22:59 (nine years ago)

keep counting on portajohn reverb
OK, open your eyes

Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 24 February 2017 23:01 (nine years ago)

There are some major failings on this album, and I get if people just won't bother, but most of the songs are without hate (really, the shitty lines are on Keep Your Name, Up In Hudson (although it doesn't say that they cheat on their spouses, that's a misreading) and Winner Takes Nothing) and there's a bunch of good songs with interesting musical ideas. It's not as hateful as Robin Thicke, heck, it's not even as hateful as Like a Rolling Stone. And the problem isn't that it's 'grounded in specific details or about public people', if we didn't like that Lemonade wouldn't have been the best album of 2016. It's tainted with misogynism, and it fails as a narrative, but it's a fine record. Comparing it to Robin Thicke, or saying that it can't resonate, is absurdly overblown.

Frederik B, Friday, 24 February 2017 23:02 (nine years ago)

It is true that "some of these lyrics make me feel like shit just for hearing them" may be a better line of attack

Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 24 February 2017 23:13 (nine years ago)

I do think it makes the last two tracks feel even better by comparison to the whole, though.

Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 24 February 2017 23:17 (nine years ago)

Also seems like "DL is fucking up in a way that is similar to my fuckups" is a different type of resonance altogether that is at least more separate from the music

Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 24 February 2017 23:26 (nine years ago)

It is not like "DL wrote fountain of sorrow but with opposite polarity" resonance. It is different and distracting.

Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 24 February 2017 23:28 (nine years ago)

When the 2nd track StArted I thought he was singing over Timberlake's Mirrors

duped and used by my worst Miss U (President Keyes), Saturday, 25 February 2017 02:05 (nine years ago)

It's tainted with misogynism, and it fails as a narrative, but it's a fine record

sure but is it better or worse than iceage

mookieproof, Saturday, 25 February 2017 03:47 (nine years ago)

for the record I am fine with records that are grounded in specific details or about public people, that's hard to avoid if you ever want to broach the subject as an artist; it's the contempt that I'm not fine with

a self-reinforcing downward spiral of male-centric indie (katherine), Saturday, 25 February 2017 05:05 (nine years ago)

Yes, and the reason the difference is important is that while the whole album is filled with specific details about public people, it's only a few lines that have contempt.

Frederik B, Saturday, 25 February 2017 12:04 (nine years ago)

And while that could be enough to dismiss the album, it does not turn Longstreth into Robin Thicke.

Frederik B, Saturday, 25 February 2017 12:05 (nine years ago)

Yeah no that Uproxx review is garbage. Isolate the parts where the music is discussed and realize... she has nothing to say that isn't about her.

maura, Saturday, 25 February 2017 13:00 (nine years ago)

"Musically, the record is inventive, fascinating, and experimental in the best sense of the word. His ability to fuse R&B, folk, pop and deeply intelligent songwriting with alien electronic sounds is on stunning display here." Like... where are the red pens? Show don't tell??

maura, Saturday, 25 February 2017 13:02 (nine years ago)

Also starting off a review with a five-year-old self-retweet of praise is... not the best look

maura, Saturday, 25 February 2017 13:03 (nine years ago)

If coming off like as much of a narcissistic egotist as Longstreth is some sort of reviewer performance art, I guess I apologize, but that didn't make it easier to read.

maura, Saturday, 25 February 2017 13:05 (nine years ago)

anyway, sorry for getting heated, i just bristle at the abuse of length-trumps-insight "longform" in both personal essays and music crit

maura, Saturday, 25 February 2017 13:13 (nine years ago)

"what I want from art is truth / what you want is fame"
hahaha these are actual lyrics w t f

niels, Saturday, 25 February 2017 13:51 (nine years ago)

the thing i mainly remember about that uproxx review is the word "regretted"

the raindrops and drop tops of lived, earned experience (BradNelson), Saturday, 25 February 2017 14:00 (nine years ago)

also "an sh*thead"

the raindrops and drop tops of lived, earned experience (BradNelson), Saturday, 25 February 2017 14:04 (nine years ago)

iirc most of the lyrics on bitte were just imgaistic non sequitir. do irc? if so, idk why he switched tack
― flopson, Thursday, February 23, 2017 2:23 PM (two days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Might be true on the whole, but the only lyrics I remember from Bitte Orca sound like they were lifted from chill gchat convos and are aggressively non-expressionistic / symbolic:

Definitely you can come and live with us
I know there's a space for you in the basement, yeah
All you gotta do is help out with the chores and dishes
And I know you will

/

Maybe I will get a job
Get a job as a waitress
Maybe waiting tables in a diner
In some remote city down the highway

ヽ(´ー`)┌ (CompuPost), Saturday, 25 February 2017 14:05 (nine years ago)

maura otm

sean gramophone, Saturday, 25 February 2017 15:14 (nine years ago)

xp hm true I was thinking of stuff like this

The renegade feeling satisfied
You blinked and closed your eyes
You like the feeling of Saturday
You love the danger in the night
The restless corpse is collapsed wind
The breath is daffodil
What not become what is lapsing
Into the universal fill
Or maybe just

flopson, Saturday, 25 February 2017 15:18 (nine years ago)

BO is a great album

flopson, Saturday, 25 February 2017 15:20 (nine years ago)

that song rules so hard

flappy bird, Saturday, 25 February 2017 15:38 (nine years ago)

the elephant in the room here is that the music of the Dirty Projectors is 1000% garbage

example (crüt), Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:06 (nine years ago)

on stunning display

mookieproof, Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:11 (nine years ago)

Re the Uproxx review, I thought it was a coup to respond to "an album of undisguised criticism of a public figure" with a critique that was essentially a self-indictment

fgti, Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:43 (nine years ago)

Like, responding to a grossly non-empathetic album with empathy? Thank you Caitlin. Who cares what the album sounds like we all know at this point what to expect tbqph

fgti, Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:44 (nine years ago)

https://i.ytimg.com/vi/AGQLRKywRqg/hqdefault.jpg

Whiney G. Weingarten, Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:46 (nine years ago)

mistaking self-aggrandizement for some sort of brilliant coup against the system is what basically got trump elected, but ok

Whiney G. Weingarten, Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:47 (nine years ago)

glad we're past describing what albums sound like, it's long gotten in the way of me shoehorning in mini-histories of my life as a music writer in brooklyn

the raindrops and drop tops of lived, earned experience (BradNelson), Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:51 (nine years ago)

brad you live in queens

maura, Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:57 (nine years ago)

shhh they'll hear you

the raindrops and drop tops of lived, earned experience (BradNelson), Saturday, 25 February 2017 18:58 (nine years ago)

lots of dirty projecting in this thread

the Rain Man of nationalism. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 25 February 2017 19:00 (nine years ago)

This bad album is relatable to me bc I too am bad at my job

Sufjan Grafton, Saturday, 25 February 2017 19:04 (nine years ago)

lmao

Whiney G. Weingarten, Saturday, 25 February 2017 19:08 (nine years ago)


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