Friday, September 7, 2012

Woodsist Records: 5 Must-Hear Albums


I first heard of the freak-folk band Woods about four years ago. My sister saw them play at a coffee shop at Fordham University and sent me their cover of Graham Nash's "Military Madness." After listening to a few of their records, I started digging deeper and found that frontman Jeremy Earl ran his own record label which, until recently, was operated out of his Brooklyn apartment. Everything about Woodsist Records-- from their lo-fi recordings to their hand-drawn aesthetic-- has a homemade and authentic feel. While the nebulous genre of "indie rock" becomes increasingly sanitized and Starbucksified, the Woodsist label consistently puts out interesting and innovative records that are refreshingly original.

Below is a list of records I love that were put out by Woodsist.

1. Woods - Songs of Shame


With their melancholy melodies, singer Jeremy Earl's Neil Young-esque vocals, and underlying, undulating ambient noise, Woods' distorted psych-folk is both enchanting and haunting. While many former Woodsist affiliates have since ascended to indie-rock stardom, it is refreshing to see Woods staying close to their DIY roots. Woods continues to put out records on the Woodsist lebel and often play unconventional venues. (I recently saw them play a tiny free show at Brandeis University full of gawky undergrads.) This album, 2009's Songs of Shame, remains one of my favorites, and this song, "Rain On," is still heart-wrenching three years after I first heard it.

2. Kurt Vile - Constant Hitmaker


Originally released on Gulcher in 2008, Kurt Vile's debut album Constant Hitmaker was reissued on vinyl by Woodsist. While he plays with a full band of long-haired Vile clones these days, this album features a solo KV on guitar backed by a drum machine. Despite the lo-fi fuzz on this album, he proves he's got the song-writing chops to be an auteur of American folk rock.

3. White Fence - Is Growing Faith


White Fence's tinny upbeat psych-pop is infectious. Their influences from yesteryear are plentiful, ranging from the Beatles to the Kinks to Syd Barrett, and they balance strong melodies with experimentalism as well as the Olivia Tremor Control. (How meta have we become that a modern-day band can be reminiscent of a band from the 90s that was reminiscent of bands from the 60s?)

4. The Art Museums - Rough Frame


This San Francisco-based duo injects some California blood into Woodsist's predominantly East Coast-based catalog. The Art Museums combine ethereal harmonies with rudimentary instrumentation: Casio beats, cheap synths, rattling guitars. I love the crudeness of this album.

5. Real Estate - Real Estate


I've already gushed about Real Estate at length in this blog, so I'll keep this brief. Their self-titled debut album, released on Woodsist in 2009, is less polished than their follow-up Days, but that's not necessarily a bad thing: the lo-fi fuzz enshrouds their music in a subtle haze that accentuates their dreamy sound. While Real Estate signed with Domino for Days, the band still pals around with the dudes of Woods. A Woods show I attended in Brooklyn last fall was flanked by Real Estate members: Alex Bleeker and the Freaks (the side project of Real Estate's bassist) were the openers, and Matt Mondanile joined Woods on drums


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