Stereogum Home
July 23, 2007

Jeff Tweedy Likes Animal Bands (And Battles)

“I’m probably the only person that wanted to be a rock critic and failed at it and started a band" is the crux of Jeff Tweedy's shot at a music crit column in yesterday's New York Times. Pretty sure Jeff's isn't an unprecedented maneuver, but it's a nice slice of trivia. And knowing that, it's probably safe to say Mr. Tweedy reads most Wilco reviews (we already know he balked at EW's Sky Blue/Eagles comparisons). Anyway, yesterday he had the chance to misconstrue and improperly cross-reference other bands' music with his very own pen, and based on the records he's into these days, we've decided Jeff Tweedy would most definitely enjoy Stereogum. His picks and accompanying quotage:

DR DOG: Almost everything about Dr. Dog and the way they sound draws on my favorite stuff on earth. They’ve got elements of the Band, the Beatles, the Beach Boys — all the bands that begin with B ... They sound like real singers, people that really love to sing, as opposed to people that you kind of wonder why they’re singing. Maybe I fall into that category sometimes.
After the jump, Jeff talks Bears, Hawks, and Battles. Oh My.

GRIZZLY BEAR: I read a lot about this band but resisted based on the snide expression on a couple of their faces in a magazine. I can’t get past those first impressions easily. There’s so much music to listen to, so you narrow it down any way you can. I’ve missed out on a lot of stuff (probably based on arbitrary facial displeasure). They make really beautiful, evocative music that has a gauzy fuzziness to it; you can’t accurately pinpoint their place in time. Their music is like a painting by Monet; there’s something soft about it ... I like records that have their own internal logic, their own universe. This feels like a fully formed world, a real place that I’m not a part of but I get to visit.

BATTLES: If I’m going to listen to math rock, I want it to have a pedigree. I don’t put much stock in classifications, but all these guys have been in math-rock bands so it’s a math-rock supergroup. “Mirrored” (Warp) is music that sounds like you have to be really smart to remember how to play it ... I recommend the video of the song “Atlas.” It’s really smart dance music. I don’t tend to dance, so I enjoy listening to the technical side of what they’re doing. A lot of music classified as math rock is maybe cold and technical. But this record has a sense of excitement and whimsy that contrasts in an intriguing way with how regimented the rhythm has to be.

A HAWK AND A HACKSAW: I followed this band because Jeremy Barnes used to be in a band called Neutral Milk Hotel, and I loved their records ... [A Hawk And A Hacksaw] has a cymbalon, which is like a piano played like a hammered dulcimer ... I don’t know the background of everyone in this group, but the music has a freshness to it. Just love that cymbalon, can’t get enough of it.

PANDA BEAR: I did see Animal Collective once a few years ago and was pretty astonished at how great they were and how powerfully lost they would get in everything they were doing. It was inspiring, one of the more memorable shows I’ve seen in the last five years. Panda Bear (I still have trouble saying the name seriously) has made a beautiful record. There’s some sort of internal logic to “Person Pitch” (Paw Tracks) that you only experience by listening to it. The easy critical shorthand to describe it is a Brian Wilson-Phil Spector-influenced wall of sound, but it’s much more trance inducing than those polished pop nuggets. It’s more like girl-group music or Beach Boys music as meditative, droning mantras. It’s a fantastic record.

Good taste, eh? Jon Pareles likely ain't losing any sleep over the column, but this only makes us want to peek at Jeff's iPod even more. After mentioning Jeff's love for Grizz, Panda, and Battles to a girlfriend at McCarren Pool yesterday and describing the 'I Have Battles In My Life' bag purchased at P4K last weekend, we added "but whatever, everybody loves Battles." And said friend retorted, "No, only dudes like Battles." Wha? Is that true? Are Battles a bro-band? And while we're throwing around untenable and overly simplistic descriptors: Are Battles the 'dude rock' to Wilco's 'dad rock'? And most importantly, for Jeff Tweedy: Future in rock writing post-Wilco? Or 'don't quit your day job?'


[Pic from Wilco @ Bonnaroo '07]

Posted at 9:15 AM
Tags:  |  |  |  |  |  |




-->

7 Comments

I'm a girl and I'm the one that told my guy friends about Battles. and there definitely were girls at studio b on friday, but i'd say it was about 4:1.

Posted by: adrienne at 07/23/07 9:44 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I wonder what Mrs Featherbottom would say about his rock writing?

Posted by: Jeff at 07/23/07 9:46 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

i love jeff tweedy.....

Posted by: maya lucia at 07/23/07 9:48 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

yea im a dude and battles were really great at studio b. there were some girls and a lot of fun dancing. there was also definetly about 7 pasty sweaty shirtless men moshing(!) right in the middle of it all. euuugh. the band was mesmerizing though.

Posted by: ew keep your shirts on at 07/23/07 10:38 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

i'm a dude and i don't like battles.

Posted by: isaac at 07/23/07 2:12 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

the studio b show was def in girls' favor to attend. or at least the brand of us that (heart) rock nerds.

and tweedy might get his nose punched for using the "m" word.

Posted by: katie, a princess at 07/23/07 3:33 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I'd read Jeff Tweedy rock criticism anyday. You gotta trust the taste of someone who writes music you love. Even though, judging a band just by their photo? Must be violating some music critic law right there.

Posted by: Tam at 07/24/07 1:57 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Leave a comment


 

The 'Gum Drop

Get our newsletter. MP3s and giveaways weekly.

Search




Sort by:date relevance

Information

  • Contact:
  • About
  • Press
  • Advertising
  • Stereogum RSS Stereogum RSS XML Icon
  • MP3-Only RSS Stereogum RSS XML Icon

Staff

Founder/Editor-In-Chief
Scott Lapatine
Executive Editor
Amrit Singh
Senior Writer
Brandon Stosuy
Columnist
Jon McMillan
Technology & Operations
Jim Jazwiecki
Angela Williams

The Cool Kids

All Stereogum Posts

Band to Watch logo

Band To Watch: Fredrik

Earlier this year we shined a light Swedish pop outfit the LK and their electro lovely, wintry gem "Stop Being Perfect." Had we known the band had a side project sooner, we probably would have written sooner. Instead, we came...

MORE »

Quit Your Day Job logo

Quit Your Day Job: Megafaun

Raleigh-via-Eau Clair BTW Megafaun debuted impressively earlier this year with Bury The Square. The trio nip-and-tuck experimental tendencies (tape splicing, white noise colliding with banjo, junkyard-laced spring reverb, screeching feedback at the tail end of a quiet back porch lament)...

MORE »

Premature Evaluation logo

Premature Evaluation: of Montreal - Skeletal Lamping

Skeletal Lamping is anything but skeletal. When we took a close listen to album closer "Id Engager" we mentioned it wasn't the strangest, most ambitious, or best tune on of Montreal's new one, but after absorbing the other 14 tracks,...

MORE »

Video Hangover logo

Video Hangover: Marcy Playground - "Saint Joe On The Schoolbus"

Every week, we dig in the archives for videos that we find noteworthy, memorable, or just unbelievably stupid. And then, Jon McMillan breaks 'em down for you. This week: Marcy Playground blows their one chance at video immortality.

MORE »

Oldstand logo

OldStand: Rolling Stone, September 13, 1984

Take our ink-stained hands and join us at the OldStand, where Jon McMillan goes to remind everyone what an honest-to-goodness music magazine is supposed to look like. Lots of Huey Lewis (and the News) news lately, so let's go back...

MORE »

The Outsiders logo

The Outsiders: Vol. 17: Bird Show, Hair Police, Hush Arbors

Not all of Stereogum's favorite sounds conform to what folks expect us to cover. In this space, resident Bananafish fetishist Brandon Stosuy focuses on bands, albums, singles, and villages in Sweden that may otherwise pass by unnoticed. This installment's virtual...

MORE »

The 'Gum Drop logo

Horse Feathers - "Father"

Portland songwriter Justin Ringle's evocative vocal twang and sharp lyricism are at the center of Horse Feathers' bedroom Americana. The band's second album House With No Home, which follows 2006's Words Are Dead, finds Ringle's vision fleshed out by multi-instrumentalist/composer...

MORE »