Zoos of Berlin
Zoos of Berlin are some honest Detroit friends. They could have easily shouted out some obscure Carl Craig record or one of the members many side projects, but ZoB doesn't play it like that. They made us feel like our crates were slim in comparison. Abbey Road-esque tropicalia? Let's trade tapes!
» Zoos of Berlin made us feel like our crates were slim in comparison.
Collin Dupuis:
The Jesus Lizard, Goat, 1991 This album fucking rules! It is so raw and well recorded. It sounds so good really loud! Steve Albini really knows how to record drums and guitars and make them sound humongous!
PJ Harvey, To Bring You My Love, 1995 The production and vibe and writing on this record are really great. So many good songs. "Down by the Water" is one of my favorites. Lots of minimal ideas and sounds.
Trevor Naud:
Roberto Cacciapaglia, The Ann Steel Album, 1979 Italian composer Roberto Cacciapaglia recorded a few albums of Glass/Reich-inspired music before this, his first (and only) dive into avant-garde pop. American model Ann Steel provided all of the vocals--and her range and style reminds me a bit of Julie Andrews. Cacciapaglia utilized sequencing, analog synths and harpsichord to arrange a majority of the music. Guitar and live drums make cameos. Fans of Stereolab, krautrock and Itali-disco should seek this out. It's a masterpiece.
Milton Nascimento and Lo Borges, Clube Da Esquina, 1972 So much of Nascimento's music is insanely good. But when I listen to "Clube Da Esquina," it rests on the apex. To musically pinpoint it, which is kinda hard, I'd say Abbey Road-era Beatles mixed with Tropicalia. At 21 tracks, Nascimento, Borges and the rest of the Club crew made one of the true classics of 1970s Brazilian music. Not a mix tape gets made without the song "Clube Da Esquina No. 2."
Will Yates:
Great Lakes Myth Society, Great Lakes Myth Society, 2005 One of the most underappreciated albums of the decade, in my opinion. Great Lakes Myth Society does pop-rock as well as anyone these days. Their music falls in the tradition of thinking man's pop like XTC and Jellyfish, colored with celtic/folk/drinking song elements. The Michigan history-centric lyrics (some based on archival research) are consistently evocative, and the songwriting and melodies are top-notch.
The Heavy Blinkers, The Night and I Are Still So Young, 2005 Another candidate for underrated album of the decade. Painfully beautiful Brian Wilson-informed orchestral pop from Halifax, Nova Scotia. Possibly the only band for whom I've ever felt compelled to leave a gushing MySpace comment (which was kindly responded to!). When Ruth Minnikin sings "All of my dreams hit the ground" over a climactic half-diminished chord on "Don't Get Me Wrong", it is breathtaking.
Listen to "Black in the Sun Room" (below) to hear how Zoos of Berlin's eclectic interests translate to record. Zoos of Berlin'sTaxis is out now.
The Jesus Lizard, <i>Goat</i>
Great Lakes Myth Society, <i>Great Lakes Myth Society</i>
Milton Nascimento and Lo Borges, <i>Clube Da Esquina</i>
PJ Harvey, <i>To Bring You My Love</i>
Roberto Cacciapaglia, <i>The Ann Steel Album</i>
The Heavy Blinkers, <i>The Night and I Are Still So</i> Young
Posted on October 19, 2009
I liked them before this article, but if a band's listening habits are any indicator of their worth, then Zoos of Berlin are made of musical solid gold.
— Laura on October 20, 2009