Monday Mixtape, Vol. 106

This is a particularly good Monday as the middle of the week's bloated hump gets disregarded due to July 4th, and we can all celebrate while taking a short week! There are many things to rant and rave about with this country right now, and it's almost impossible to click on Google News or Twitter or The New York Times or The Wall Street Journal or (you get the point) without becoming thoroughly depressed, but I do try to remember how and why this whole experiment of a country started, and exhibit some sense of pride in our ideals and optimism and what we've accomplished as a country, and more importantly, as people. 

That all being said, I also just finished reading "Killers of the Flower Moon" by David Grann, a true story about many, many Native Americans who were systematically murdered by white people and covered up by more powerful white people because AFTER the United States banished them from their profitable and farmable land, the United States jammed this tribe, the Osages, to what was believed to be a worthless area of Oklahoma, but it turned out the land was worth untold millions due to oil underneath the ground, turning the Osage nation into the richest people per capita in the world! Once the wealth of the Osage became apparent as the color of their skin, the racist belief that these individuals were worth less than the "regular" and God-fearin' folk, was really all anyone needed in that part of the country to kill them off for their inheritance.

Luckily, the FBI eventually came in to try to solve some of the problem, and some individuals with integrity and overall decency picked apart and found some of the murderers, yet so many remain unsolved to this day.

I went on that tangent because my first paragraph, and any other soliloquies we all will make this week about our country being the best country in the world (which I still believe to be true while being VERY sorely tested right now) should always come with a caveat to remember the many terrible things we have done as a nation and allowed to happen. This caveat should not solely be a means to shame or embarrass us, but a lesson to learn. To remember where all of our family lines (even the Osage and Native Americans!) came from at some point: different countries hoping for something better.

God knows I got it. I am one of the many "luckiest people living in the world" right now. I had truly amazing parents and role models. My family is one of a kind, and I know so many of them who would do anything to help me. My friends have always been there for me, many of them since I was a child. My wife, my one of a kind, my everything that I look at and love more every day, makes me sure of my luck. I've worked my ass out for a lot of things, but I've had a lot of opportunity to do it thanks to my parents that worked their ass off before me and their parents and their parents who boarded a boat...for something better. 

Enjoy the 4th, proclaim why you will always love this country despite our failures, and remind yourself how lucky you are to be an American. And as always, enjoy the music :)  

Monday Mixtape, Vol. 86

I was looking back at my playlist of Top Albums of 2017:

THERE HAVE BEEN SO MANY GREAT ALBUMS THIS YEAR! 

This has been a fantastic year in music. I can't say there was a life changing album, BUT it's still been so consistent across the board and much better than last year. 

That tangent has nothing to do with this week's music, it's more of an observation that we're very lucky mohave Kendrick Lamar, Ryan Adams, Hippo Campus, Future, John Mayer, Chris Stapleton, Fleet Foxes, Vince Staples, SZA, Washed Out, Haim, Foster the People, Electric Gues, LCD Soundsystem, and so many more, creating such great music. 

#blessed. 

ANYWAY, this week's mixtape is weighted by Alvvays, a band whose 2014 debut was really impressive yet their sophomore album even more so! You know me and sophomore albums: they're usually regurgitations of the previous album at half the quality and originality. This album is an exception, and the two tracks from them on this mixtape are my faves from their new album about a certain love lost. "What's left for you and me? I ask that question rhetorically...There's no turning back / after what's been said," Molly Rankin sadly states on "In Undertow."

Alvvays gets a bit more upbeat with the catchy "Saved By A Waif" that all comes to a crescendo with that amazing chorus.

Bully relased one of the more raw rock releases this year. A kick ass album with no sheen, just distortion and a bit of yelling. I really dig, "Spiral."

Slackers Courtney Barnett and Kurt Vile made their own record and it's about what you'd expect: a bit unfocused and rambled, a bit by the seat of their pants, but it's got some good tracks, highlighted by "Over Everything."

ODESZA is one of those huge bands adored by the EDM crowd that I'll get on board with. They relax me, they bring me up, they just do it for me. You too?

This mixtape is ended with King Krule, a young kid (I think he's now 22 or 23) and critical darling, who just released a new album. Some may immediately turn away at his voice, but his music and production is always on point and original, and I just love the beat of this track. ]

Have a great week all!  

Playlist - Wait...Rock? Vol. 2

In my first playlist of this series, I worried that rock had died the day of Kurt Cobain's suicide. Fortunately, there's been a wave of new bands bringing rock back to the forefront. These bands continue to pop up and rock out.

Almost every band on this playlist has only released one album (and the Wavves/Cloud Nothings collaboration technically counts as their first album!), so it's primarily brand new stuff!