12/31/2023

Shoving Music Down Your Throat [2023 edition]

 MUSIC! AGAIN!

Some of these were coincidentally released in 2023 but this is just a list of music I listened to in 2023.

Here's a playlist where I compile a song from each album:
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7iql4Cxyjj59DpBpL9iqBg?si=76ca4ada5e684fec

This playlist has a song from each album on the list. Not the best song, not my favorite song, though maybe both of those. The point is that it's a song that I think illustrates how I feel about the album and/or will cast a wider net to more audience members.


Somewhere in the Between by Streetlight Manifesto [2007]
Genre: Ska punk

I really liked Streetlight Manifesto's first album, Everything Goes Numb, so I decided to listen to some of their other stuff. So on a trip to come visit my partner before moving in with them, I decided to put a long playlist together for the road, on which I included Somewhere in the Between. So let me tell you now the two main reasons I think this album rules.

The first one is that the album slightly throws away the whimsical nature of what people would expect from modern ska and the politically centered lyrical content expected from punk. That might sound bad or mislabeled but what is in these aspects' place with the most entertaining bouts of sheer existentialism and mortality I have heard in an album. Almost every song is at least connected in some way with death; a concept I think about probably unhealthily often! It is not necessarily brooding. It's more about living with the constant knowledge of mortal finality.

Reason 2: The nonstop energy of the first two Streetlight Manifesto albums is here, typically contrasting the grim lyrical content without coming off as comically out of touch. The guitar tones mix well with the drums and brass about as well as their previous albums while still having a closer punk sound to Everything Goes Numb versus Keasbey Nights

The songs are all pieced together in a way that really resonates with me and has theming that hits harder here in an ongoing pandemic where I constantly fear for my loved ones' safety. Out of all ten albums I have talked about here, I would recommend this one to general audiences the most both for accessibility to general audiences just looking for catchy tunes and for sharing how hard it hit me personally.

 

Tomorrow, in a Year by The Knife [2010]
Genre: Alternative electronic, opera

Tomorrow, in a Year is a fucked up electronic opera soundtrack by one of my favorite groups of all time, The Knife. They also made this with artists I've never heard before, Mt. Sims and Planningtorock. Kristina Wahlin Momme, Jonathon Johannson, and Laerke Bo Winther are also directly credited on the album release. Tomorrow, in a Year is an avant-garde, Darwin-focused opera and not like how Pink Floyd did The Wall. This was a legit opera; an on-stage opera with actors, sets, an audience, etc. I haven't found a way to watch the whole thing yet but I digress. Is it worth listening to on its own since the album version, at least in the US, is more accessible than the full performance? I would say yes with some caveats. The Knife has weird bops (Deep Cuts, The Knife, Silent Shout, and the "Shaken-up" versions of a lot of songs) and then they have stuff that is supposed to juggle your brain on purpose (Shaking the Habitual and for sure Tomorrow, in a Year). This isn't to say that none of Tomorrow, in a Year is slappy but you should expect the weirdest side of The Knife possible. Shaking the Habitual, in comparison, has noticeable beats, rhythms, and melody lines blended in with shrill and wracky timbres throughout the entirety of its length. Tomorrow, in a Year, is more split. The vast majority of it is the weird stuff. Though it is smart and thoughtfully crafted noise, it is still noise. That is not a diss but not something everyone is prepared for nor are they excited about. As you get to the final 25% of the album's runtime, there is relief in this sense. I decided to put Coulouring of Pigeons on the playlist this year for reference. This song is where the relief starts in this sense. It is still weird, don't misunderstand me. But it's more melodic than the rest of the album. There are still figures to pick out in the noisier stuff that are used effectively to make their own beats, even if they aren't bangers. I wouldn't be talking about this album if I thought it was a complete waste of time. It was one of the most interesting things I heard this year so I thought I would share it, again, with caveats.


Strange Mercy by St. Vincent [2011]
Genre: Progressive pop

St. Vincent is a largely influential artist to me as a fan of music, a student of music, and a creator of music. Admittedly, I had not listened to that much of her stuff. So I finally gave Strange Mercy a shot and ended up really enjoying it. This is as good of a time as any to mention that I did listen to more than 10 albums I had never heard before this year. This album has a lot of very ambient pop music. I find it a lot less simplistically and less predictably structured than the self-titled album overall. There's less I have to say about this album overall. I just wanted to say that all the songs on this album are real good. It's a real good mix of funky riffs, chill beats, and delayed synth pad ambience.

 

Shadow Theater by Tigran Hamasyan [2013]
Genre: Jazz, Armenian Folk

Tigran Hamasyan is a wacky pianist and everything I have listened to by him so far has shown this. He's also a good songwriter who has very distinctive and unique arrangements. Shadow Theater is less wacky piano and more unique arrangement. Each song on this album is a lot different from the last but not enough to be jarring. The vocals are soothing as much as they are impressive and well-arranged throughout the album. This album has legitimate metal moments, which I was not expecting since none of the previous stuff I had heard from him explicitly did. Shadow Theater overall is just this weird candy shop of different sounds all wrapped-up in cozy, strange packaging.

 

Contrast by Majiko [2015]
Genre: J-Pop

This album slaps so fucking hard. Oh, you don't understand. It is so crazy. Banger after banger. It all rips. There are so many songs on this album and it all rips. "Hypocrite Syndrome" is the first Majiko song I ever heard. My friend showed it to me and I said "this rips, what do you know this artist from?". They responded with "I dunno, that song just kinda came on and I thought you would like it."

Contrast spans a lot of different genres. Just calling it J-Pop doesn't really describe what you're in for by listening to Contrast. It has plucky, happy synth stuff, metal, synth pop, stuff that sounds like PS1 JRPG OST. It's the bomb. It is so good. Contrast is a trip through so many different genres and styles and it nails all of them. Majiko also has a nice and unique voice. I find her voice super-endearing. I need to listen to more Majiko so don't be surprised to see her in "Shoving Music Down Your Throat 2024".

 

Abyss by Chelsea Wolfe [2015]
Genre: Dark wave, gothic rock, doom metal

Abyss is not as varied as a lot of the albums I have talked about on here but it is called Abyss. Imagine if doom metal were looped underneath brooding, brutal, and high-pitched vocals. Does that sound kind of freaky? It is. I love it. It is delightfully freaky. Compositionally, the album is mostly straightforward but emotive enough for me to not call it basic. There really was not a weak song on this album. It all fits a certain mood and demeanor I really appreciated and I am curious to say if it hits other people the same way. By that, I mean other people that read this. People know who Chelsea Wolfe is, she doesn't really need my help.

 

Clarion Call by The Human Project [2018]
Genre: Melodic hardcore

I am a fairly radicalized leftist and it sounds like at least one member of The Human Project is too. Most of their lyrics are unabashedly critical of the US government, government conceptually, and bigotry. However, the politics of a song are not what grab me about it. The Human Project are just a good band regardless. Their vocals match the energy given by the instruments and I really love the vocal harmony arrangements and mix. This band has a lot of what I like about The Police but angrier and more in your face. This album is a good one for shuffling in with other stuff I listen to regularly. Front-to-back, it kinda lulls a little toward the middle. I listened back to those songs on their own and they're still good songs.

 

t.i.a.p.f.y.h. by Left at London [2021]
Genre: Indie pop

This album rules front-to-back. The end song might be one of my all-time favorite Left at London songs. I did not put that on the playlist though because I would rather people's first impressions of that song be after the other songs like it was originally made. So I put on another one of my favorite songs on here. Left at London albums and EPs always feel like a journey onto themselves and t.i.a.p.f.y.h. is no exception. Musically, I was impressed with how many weird turns the album takes while still being ultimately a pop album. By this, I mean mid-song, the song will change drastically like it's prog more than pop. If you have seen previous installments of "Shoving Music Down Your Throat", you will probably recognize that I appreciate that kind of thing.

 

ROMCOM by Jakey [2022]
Genre: Electro-pop

So I was waiting for this album to drop for a while and somehow missed it for a whole year. So now I've listened to it at least four times front-to-back upon writing this. This might be one of my favorite albums of the decade. Could easily be thrown out of that ranking since it's only 2023 as of writing this and probably 2024 as of posting this publicly. I don't 100% know what the album is about but I can tell the story it is telling was something Jakey really wanted to tell and was probably best told in this medium (I swear if I use that term it's not a punny reference to another Jakey song). Little details thrown here and there that connect to each other and reference other songs released before ROMCOM feel less arbitrary the more I listen to the album. Any concept album can reference lyrics, reuse lyrics, or repeat motifs. How it all comes together on FATHEAD, the last song on this album was something I was skeptical about at first. But after listening all the way through, I couldn't get the songs out of my head, including the final few bars of FATHEAD. I realized the next day that it wasn't just because the album has a lot of catchy melodies and cool samples. I wanted to listen to it again. And then later that night. And I listened to a few tracks the next day while running errands. Then the whole album again the next day.

Jakey's one of those singers that has such a unique vocal tone, you know what you are hearing isn't the most technically sound vocal performance ever, and you don't care. Who does have the best voice, who knows how to use it the best, and why would that even matter? At the end of the day, I think a believable vocal performance is the most important thing. Singing is, in a sense, acting. I think this album overall demonstrates this really well and exemplifies what I have liked about Jakey's music for a long time. Aside from the vocals, the instruments are pretty on par with what he's been known for for a while. For example for those of you who don't know who or what I'm talking about, there's a dope Shadow of the Colossus sample in "TOTALLY FREAK ME OUT". I don't recognize all the video game and meme samples used for ROMCOM but none of them are jarring. A lot of the vocal processing, some more noticeable, some less noticeable, rules. I think "TOMMY HANKS" might be my new favorite Jakey song. However, his voice is pitch-shifted throughout the entire song so to represent the album better to get people interested, I put "SURVIVAL HORROR" on the playlist this year. I also really like that one and it is one of Jakey's songs out of all his music that I think maybe hit me the hardest in terms of speaking to me on a personal emotional level.

The vibe I get from a lot of the album is broken expectations and overcoming beating oneself up. That's my interpretation anyways. I haven't deeply analyzed the lyrics or anything. I have just listened to the album several times all the way through and a few of the songs on their own. Whatever the album is about, it feels unapologetically honest. Highly recommend. Obviously. It's on this list. Anyway.


Fauna
by Haken [2023]
Genre: Prog Rock

I spammed this album this year and love every song on it. For a few months, I tore myself away from it with other music just to not listen to the same thing over and over again. Haken is one of my favorite bands known for their impressive prog metal prowess with catchy melodies and great leitmotif use. They were known for a lot of synth use before their keyboardist started leaving the band around the release of Virus in 2020 (don't worry, they planned the album out well in advance and it is not what you think it's about). Fauna re-introduces Haken's former keyboardist and sounds both like their old stuff and nothing like anything they've released before at the same time.

The theme is animals and our connections to a lot of animalistic traits. That sounds silly and it can be at moments. It never gets too silly to the point where it's embarrassing. The silliness is unironically part of the appeal. The cover art is a monkey in a suit. A lot of this also ties into the loss of one of the member's father, especially "Eyes of Ebony", the last song. "Taurus" upon development became a song more about Ukrainian refugees. There are a lot of deeper topics while not being too much of a bummer of an album. It isn't explicitly brooding. It feels more like a conversation being had in front of you than a thematically conclusive story, and that's a good thing.

The music is so good. The tones are never wracky. A lot of the distorted guitars are mixed just as fully as previous Haken releases without relying as heavily on distortion. There are also a lot less blistering guitar solos in exchange of focusing more on song structure, which I personally think rules. Your mileage may vary since people listen to metal and guitar-based music for different things. For me it's weirdness. Metal is one of my most frequented genres because it was always supposed to be something that challenges your expectations. That is why Haken is still one of my favorite metal bands recently and of all time. I was scared of Fauna but after listening to it way too many times, I can safely recommend it to others. Even if you don't like metal, I would say give this one a shot.



Honorable Mentions

Execution by Single White Infidel

Unfinished Again by Lexi Karma even though a better version is coming out May 6, 2024

AnimalJam by AnimalJam

3/01/2023

Wuhufoce!

 Wuhufoce (One hundred follows celebration) is upon us! We hit 100 followers on Twitch in February and it's all thanks to you! Or if you've never seen my Twitch, then I guess not but feel free to watch at twitch.tv/randomrings when we do this crazy thing called Wuhufoce!

The week of March 19th, we're doing all kinds of fun stuff.


This list is subject to change but is pretty close to what we're planning on doing. (Last updated March 18)

DAY ONE:
SUN, March 19th - 1pm EST:
Cat Quest w/ Kimmi

Kimmi wanted to play this cat game with me anyway so she suggested we do this for Wuhufoce. And no we're not kitty girls. We're not. So don't even ask. Please. No kitty girls on stream. Not even one.

DAY TWO:
MON, March 20th - 3pm EST:
Downwell (or something else if I think of something else to put here)

Downwell used to be a Randomrings Streams staple. We haven't played it in like a year and half. So we're bringing back Downwell to see if I can finally beat it!

We might put something else in this slot if I think of something else I want to put in this time slot.

MON, March 20th - 8pm EST:
Red Dragon Inn

Wanted to do something with Tabletop Simulator and my friends love this game called Red Dragon Inn. I barely know anything about it!

DAY THREE:
TUE, March 21st - 4pm EST:
SOMETHING

I realized I have time to do this time slot after making all the others. So I guess we'll do something here.

TUE, March 21st - 8:30pm EST:
Jackbox

Gonna get some friends together and do some goofy Jackbox stuff.

TUE, March 21st - After Jackbox:
Dork Congregation Watch-Along of Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children

We're gonna watch Advent Children in the Randomrings Dork Congregation! Even if we're not mutuals, you can still watch us watch this movie! I just can't really stream this kind of thing on Twitch!

DAY FOUR:
WED, March 22nd - time TBD:
Multigame Multiworld w/ Duckie, Kimmi, Urza, Val, and Waffle

Multiworld Randomizers have become a staple of what I've done on the channel since November. So Duckie thought it would be a good idea to do all the Multiworld-able games I know how to run in one seed. So I'll be running Sonic Adventure 2, Pokemon Blue, and Timespinner in the same multiworld. Everyone else will be running their own games and probably getting understandably impatient with me.

DAY FIVE:
THU, March 23rd - 5pm EST:
Gartic Phone

Gartic Phone is funny, yeah?

THU, March 23rd - 7pm EST:
Sonic Robo Blast 2 Kart

Sonic Robo Blast 2 Kart has been a staple of Sonic Month but I usually don't play it outside of June. I figured this would be a good cool down for Wuhufoce.

1/09/2023

Shoving Music Down Your Throat [2022 Edition]

 Here's stuff I listened to in 2022!

These are nine albums and an EP I want to talk about because I like them to the point of recommending them to you. Yes, you! Most of these were not released in 2022.

Here's a link to the Shoving Music Down Your Throat 2022 playlist:

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2Xk15F6CEYfu40Xe2LXWyV?si=eac28e88220e4604&pt=f1ddd3e3a70073b4fa8da92934e5ab43

This playlist has a song from each album on the list. Not the best song, not my favorite song, though maybe both of those. The point is that it's a song that I think illustrates how I feel about the album and/or will cast a wider net to more audience members.

Lovelife by Lush [1996]
genre: Britpop

Lush is a 90s British pop-rock band. I always wanted to check them out. I liked their overall sound but wasn't a huge fan of the couple of songs I heard prior. Turns out Lovelife fucking rules front-to-back. It's still what you would expect from a pop album in the sense that it can easily be shuffled. The songs on there are really fucking good though. The guitars are punk-ish without being wracky, the drum mix is pretty good for its time, and the vocals are full of great harmonies. One of the trademark selling points of Lush back when they were famous was that they had two vocalists hitting really high notes in a really soft tone. 

Kid A by Radiohead [2000]
genre: experimental rock / electronica

Kid A is one of Radiohead's most acclaimed albums. Radiohead was one of the bands that pulled me out of my adolescent metalhead funk but I had just been spinning OK Computer, In Rainbows, and The Bends for years since then. Kid A is one of the most interesting albums in Radiohead's discography to look into the history of and listen to. This album's creation almost ended the band due to Thom Yorke's creative differences with the band and his reluctance to make purely melody-focused rock songs. A lot of the lyrics are just sayings and general notions cobbled together over synths and loops mixed with occasional elements of their previous albums. This should be terrible. It's awesome. It's easily in my top-three Radiohead albums now.

Altered State by Tesseract [2013]
genre: prog metal / djent

Tesseract is one of the most popular prog metal bands ever and largely influential to the following generation of what a lot of people consider "bedroom rock". For those unfamiliar, it's what it sounds like from the subgenre's name. Altered State is the only album in Tesseract's discography with Ashe O'Hara, who fucking nails the vocals on this album. It's baroque with vocal harmony layering and the instruments are well-layered and organized without being too busy while still using creative and complicated time signature teases. It's prog metal that fans of more melodic and straightforward forms of metal can enjoy for the same reasons.

Intellectual Hooliganism by Flummox [2018]
genre: avant-garde doom metal

Intellectual Hooliganism is a band heavily inspired by old stuff like The Misfits, Dio, and Black Sabbath but with the recording fidelity of a 2018 album and with intentionally silly lyrics. Even if you're not crazy about the kind of music that this band took notes from (I'm not crazy about it), this is still worth a spin. The whole album has a very fun air about it. It's pretty clear that the band enjoyed making this and reminded me that not every collection of music released by an artist or group of artists has to be the most serious and thought-provoking album in the world to be memorable and worth recommending.

Любий друг by Khrystyna Soloviy [2018]
genre: folk

I was going to listen to a bunch of albums from around the world and didn't even make it a tenth of the way through the list. I started with Ukraine and found a lot of songs I liked from various artists. In terms of a full album to put on this list, I decided to go with this one. Khrystyna Soloviy is kind of like the pop stars we have over here that got their fame from American Idol or America's Got Talent. She got popular on TV and then continued a successful career in modern folk. This album is very calming. I'd talk more about it and how rad its guitar tones are but I don't speak Ukrainian. I love the vocals but have no idea what the themes of this album are. I encourage you to enjoy it anyway. I did.

The Process of Dissension by Animal Jam [2020]
genre: swancore, alternative metal

My friend showed me this EP and I was surprised by how good it is. It's kind of like metalcore but with almost no scream vocals and more clean guitars than one might expect. The opening track in particular is really good. There is a lot of thematic cohesion in the lyrics and in the composition. I'm not a huge shill for metal but these songs are catchy enough for me to recommend to people who aren't that into metal either.

Eternal Blue by Spiritbox [2021]
genre: metalcore, djent, prog-metal

This really isn't the "proggiest" prog-metal album. It leans a lot more toward a poppier side of djent. It's still really good though. If nothing else, listen to "Constance", which is on the "Shoving Music Down Your Throat - 2022 Edition" playlist I linked above. For those unfamiliar with Spiritbox, they are a metal band with aggressive tones but with serene vocals. There are screams but they are tasteful and fitting to the songs they are paired with. They never feel like they are just there to show off.

Turbo by Dirty Loops with Cory Wong [2022]
genre: jazz fusion

Dirty Loops is a three-piece pop/jazz fusion that got famous from doing covers of famous pop songs. They do more original work now and it's rad. Cory Wong is a jazz guy on YouTube who is good at guitar. Turbo is a collaborative album that swings way more toward the modern jazz side. The first track, "Follow the Light" is more in line with what Dirty Loops is known for. The last track is a cover of Thriller. The other songs are actually primarily instrumental. I feel like this would be a good introduction to pop fans unfamiliar with jazz structure. There is a lot of really good brass accompaniment on the pop and jazz parts. If you're going to get into Dirty Loops for the first time, I recommend Phoenix over this but Turbo was still a pleasant surprise for me personally. I was really excited for a new Dirty Loops release. I watched the video they made for "Follow the Light" expecting a Cory-Wong-flavored Phoenix-like experience. I definitely don't like Turbo as much as Phoenix or Loopified but I can't say I'm disappointed either. For a while, I had been curious what Dirty Loops might sound like going full jazz and now I extensively know. Honestly, out of all the albums on here, this is probably one of the ones I would generally recommend the least but it's worth noting that I listened to more than ten albums this year and still chose to keep this one on the list.

Pharalis by Dir En Grey [2022]
genre: alternative metal

I have talked about Dir En Grey in almost every single "Shoving Music Down Your Throat" installment. They are metal with freaky throat noises and shrieks. Most of it is pretty melodic. It's kind of hard to explain why I like Pharalis so much without describing a short history of their discography. I'm not going to do that to you. Suffice it to say that all their albums sound a bit different from each other. Noticeably different. However, they went through this phase of being a lot more death metal. Dum Spiro Spero is my least favorite album by them because it is where they leaned into this the hardest. I'm not inherently against death metal. One of my favorite bands is Finnish melodic death metal band Children of Bodom. When it's death metal and everything has the same tone and timbre for 50 minutes, I rapidly lose interest. Pharalis sounds like the audio fidelity of those albums with more of the attitude of Withering to Death and Arche with a bit of the album they released before Pharalis. The vocal performances and melody lines are stronger on this one than on their previous album, The Insulated World. The mix is good. The guitar layering rules. It kind of reminded me that sometimes a band making the same old, same old is fine if the "same old" is really good. I rarely feel that way but I feel that way about Pharalis. If you're just now interested in Dir En Grey, I would recommend Arche or Withering to Death to start out with. Pharalis is honestly not bad to listen to afterward.

Systems Music for Home Defence by Bis [2022]
genre: indie, alternative punk, disco

I started listening to Bis recently and did not expect a full-length album to come out in 2022. Systems Music for Home Defence surprised me. It's definitely more melodic than their really early punkier stuff but they've always been kind of electronic punk. There are still a lot of elements from their old stuff on this one. It definitely sounds like a modern version of Bis. Not sure what else someone would expect from a 2022 Bis album. The lyrical content is just as punchy as their older songs, they just aren't shouted as much. Between this, The Gazette's new album last year, and Dir En Grey's new album this year, I guess I just lucked out with bands I really like still being passionate about what they do. They're still passionate enough to put out stuff that sounds like a new version of where they are at as musicians. I like what comes out of it. I guess being raised on mostly rock and metal put me into this mentality that bands just get "worse". Albums like Systems Music for Home Defence have proved me wrong.