The 2009 Albums Thread

This announcement had me too excited to wait for someone to start this thread some time in the next couple months.

Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion


Love the title! :D
I saw that earlier. Very weird…but I'm pretty psyched.

And while it's not 2009, I just saw this too:

Ween Live at the Catâ??s Cradle 1992 w/bonus DVD
Chocodog Records will be releasing a live Ween CD from our old days as a duo. Live at the Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill, NC 12/9/92. It will come with a bonus DVD which features clips from our first tour of Holland, and also Stache's in Columbus, OH. The whole thing is so brown that it's almost black. Pre-orders will start here on 10/11 and also at myspace.com/ween.
Awesome!


I've been saying since Claude left that they should take the duo out on the road again.
whoa.
the strange thing that is ween. i remember the days of yore when driving giddy like teens and my friend putting in pure guava for me to hear for the first time. could i express to my dear lord above that this was music to be enjoyed beyond anything mighty heard before thus? no said i, and clichely have everything they have ever released (i believe) to this day. now ween is dusty and worn, and rarely sees the light of my time; too busy with the new and mighty future of others. and the return of phish cometh.

but the point of this all was when i read the post from nkotb, i was moved once again by the place and the date of the show. ween in their primest, and now i'm about as horny for it as i still am for hot chip!
I thought they were playing MPP in January for a second. It'd be freaking freezing and embarrassingly undersold.
ween sucks
Originally posted by manimtired:
ween sucks
alternate opinions make interesting people.
They couldn't even fill the Electric Factory last april.

Originally posted by Julian, certified WEBLEBRITY:
I thought they were playing MPP in January for a second. It'd be freaking freezing and embarrassingly undersold.
Also, new MBV is due out in '09 (hah! like that'll happen).
Originally posted by azaghal1981:
They couldn't even fill the Electric Factory last april.
Hence my confusion.
Maybe IMP finally decided to do with Merriweather what is done with that Camden venue every winter and hold indoor shows and this is one of them? Still would be entirely too big for AC.


I'd much rather it be an album (with two nights at the club soon after!), anyway because just about everything this band puts out is pure gold.
the obvious: Ween rocks.

been seeing them live since about the Mollusk tour (including the 12 country greats tour).. never let me down yet…always a great time…FUN
La Cucaracha was less than stellar, though.
Granted…but it still had some choice moments. Hopefully, though, I never heard Blue Balloon or Object again.

Still, bring on the '09 releases…sorry to hijack the thread.

Originally posted by azaghal1981:
La Cucaracha was less than stellar, though.
Originally posted by azaghal1981:
La Cucaracha was less than stellar, though.
I like it….its a fun record to put on at a party…

But hey I'm biased.. I love these guys…

My favorite music critic Erlewine sees it the same way:

In the initial round of promotion for 2007's La Cucaracha, Ween's first album for Rounder and first in four years, Dean Ween called it a "party record, unlike our last record (Quebec) which was more of a Jonestown type party vibe," which is about as accurate a self-criticism as an artist has ever given. Quebec left a hazy, narcotic aftertaste that the giddy La Cucaracha blows away as the band reverts back to all their signatures: they never stay in one place too long, they spike most songs with their impish humor, and every track shows their knack for savvy, sly, odd arrangements. In that sense, the record could almost be seen as a back-to-basics album, as it's pitched somewhere between the sonics of Pure Guava and the sensibility of Chocolate and Cheese, but that's misleading, as it suggests that Ween are self-consciously striving to recapture past glories. Nothing could be further from the truth. La Cucaracha is the sound of Ween cutting loose, reveling in the lower budget and expectations an indie label brings, and playing music that simply sounds good. And, make no mistake, this is a party record – quite literally so, as it's bookended with the spangly, mariachi rock & roll instrumental "Fiesta" and the decadently suave "Your Party," two songs that explicitly celebrate parties. The latter features a divine cameo from David Sanborn, whose alto saxophone gives this lounge party precisely the right sense of velvet flair, and whose very presence signals just how far Ween have come as musicians since the heyday of The Pod and Pure Guava. Back then, they were wildly imaginative young punks, creating their own world on a four-track, but they continued to expand their horizons with each successive album for Elektra in the '90s, growing as writers and musicians with each LP.

With La Cucaracha, they return full circle, recording the album in a rented farmhouse in their hometown of New Hope, PA, and they seem re-energized by the smaller scale yet they don't abandon the frightening musical acumen they've garnered in the past 15 years. As such, the album is almost the best of both worlds: it has the devilish, off-kilter vibe of the earliest records but it's played with the skill of their latter-day albums, so this bounces from the elastic pop of "Blue Balloon" to the full-throated roar of "My Own Bare Hands," as punishing a rocker as they've ever cut. And while they never abandon genre-hopping – "The Fruit Man" is this album's excursion into reggae, "Spirit Walker" and the ten-minute "Woman and Man" their prog rock numbers – nothing feels like a deliberate parody. All the different musical strands feel fully absorbed, to the extent that when Gene Ween dips into Roger Miller nonsense on the chorus of the deliriously fun "Learnin' to Love," it doesn't seem like a send-up, it just feels like a natural move, an indication of how ferociously talented this duo is. At this point, 17 years after their debut, Ween may not surprise as often as they once did, but they've long ago transitioned away from relying on shock humor and have become one of the most consistently satisfying rock bands in America, and La Cucaracha captures them at a peak, which is surely reason enough to throw a party. After all, Ween have given you an ideal soundtrack for one with this album.
Wilco
Band of Horses
Neko Case
Those myspace tracks had me hoping against hope that the new Circulatory System would finally surface this year but to no avail.

'09!
Gallows
fingers crossed for a new Howling Bells
Antony & the Johnsons

COMETS ON FIRE
new Handsomeboy Technique CD this winter [clever sample-based and heavily layered music in a similar approach as The Avalanches, who will also have their own second CD out. The first HBT CD had more good tracks than the Avalanches and I predict the same for this round]