Tag Archives: Deerhunter

TUiW Radio 4.19.2011 Playlist

For your archiving pleasure:
1. Dodos – “Black Night”
2. Dom – “Jesus”
3. Boat – “King Kong”
4. Eternal Summers – “Promises”
5. Vivian Girls – “Lake House”
6. TV on the Radio – “Second Song”
7. Panda Bear – “Tomboy”
8. Radiohead – “Supercollider”
9. tUnE-yArDs – “Powa”
10. Thao and Mirah – “Squarehead”
11. Times New Viking – “Want to Exist”
12. Deerhunter – “Nosebleed”
13. My Morning Jacket – “Octoplasm”
14. The National – “Exile Vilify”
15. The Antlers – “Every Night My Teeth Are Falling Out””
16. Destroyer – “Savage Night at the Opera”
17. Jesse Ruins – “Dream Analysis”
18. The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – “Anne With an E”
19. Yuck – “The Wall”
20. Built to Spill – “You Were Right”
21. Elf Power – “Paralyzed”
22. The Gerbils – “Glue”
23. Apples in Stereo – “Tidal Wave”

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TUiW Radio 4.12.2011 Playlist

Missed today’s show? Check out the playlist and grab some free tunes!

1. Mogwai – “Mexican Grand Prix”
2. Vivian Girls – “Dance (If You Wanna)”
3. The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – “Belong”
4. Panda Bear – “Surfer’s Hymn”
5. TV on the Radio – “Keep Your Heart”
6. My Morning Jacket – “Circuital”
7. Low – “Especially Me”
8. The National – “Think You Can Wait”
9. The Raveonettes – “Apparitions”
10. Kurt Vile – “Puppet to the Man”
11. The Mountain Goats – “Birth of Serpents”
12. Wye Oak – “Hot as Day”
13. Dum Dum Girls – “There is a Light That Never Goes Out”
14. Memory Tapes – “Today is Our Life” [MP3] [Right Click + Save As]
15. MUDL – “Anarthro”
16. tUnE-yArDs – “Bizness” [MP3] [Right Click + Save As]
17. LCD Soundsystem – “Live Alone (Franz Ferdinand Cover)”
18. Handsome Furs – “What About Us”
19. Yuck – “Holing Out (Live on Daytrotter)”
20. Deerhunter – “Disappearing Ink”

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TUiW 3.17.2011 Playlist

After a week off, TUiW Radio is back! Check out the playlist and snag some tunes!

1. Dum Dum Girls – “Wrong Feels Right”

2. Wavves – “Horse Shoes”

3. Wye Oak – “The Alter”

4. Rural Alberta Advantage – “Stamp”

5. the Fresh and Onlys – “Do You Believe in Destiny?” [MP3, Right Click + Save As]

6. Here We Go Magic – “Hands in the Sky” [MP3, Right Click + Save As]

7. Jessica Lea Mayfield – “Grown Man”

8. The Mountain Goats – “Beautiful Gas Mask”

9. R.E.M. – “UBerlin”

10. Radiohead – “Separator”

11. TV on the Radio – “Will Do”

12. Thao and Mirah – “Eleven [ft. tUnE-yaRds]“ [MP3, Right Click + Save As]

13. Ponytail – “Easy Peasy” [MP3, Right Click + Save As]

14. The Dodos – “Don’t Stop

15. La Sera – “Sleeptalking”

16. My Morning Jacket – “Butch Cassidy (Live)”

17. Deerhunter – “Hazel St.”

18. Beach House – “Walk in the Park”

19. Grizzly Bear – “Ready Able”

20. The Weakerthans – “Civil Twilight”

21. White Rabbits – “Percussion Gun”

22. The Walkmen – “Thinking of a Dream I Had”

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TUiW Radio 7.21.2011 Playlist

1. Radiohead – “Lotus Flower”

2. Flying Lotus – “Do the Astral Plane”

3. Dosh – “Don’t Wait for the Needle to Drop”

4. Yuck – “Get Away”

5. Ty Segall – “Caesar”

6. La Sera – “Beating Heart”

7. P.J. Harvey – “On Battleship Hill”

8. Deerhunter – “Helicopter (Live)”

9. Asobi Seksu – “Trails”

10. LCD Soundsystem – “I Can Change”

11. TV on the Radio – “Love Dog”

12. Animal Collective – “No More Runnin”

13. Thao with the Get Down Stay Down – “Geography”

14. Mirah with the Black Cat Orchestra – “The Light”

15. Miniature Tigers – “Cannibal Queen”

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TUiW Radio 1.10.11 Playlist

Hey everyone! The new year brings us a new season of TUiW Radio at SCADRadio.org! Our first show is playing this morning from 8-10 EST right here. You can follow the playlist and get links to some of the tracks right here, so stay tuned! (P.S.: Disregard the time on the logo above, our graphics department sucks)

1. The Fresh and Onlys – “Until the End of Time”

2. Screaming Females – “I Don’t Mind It”

3. Wye Oak – “Civillian”

4. Bright Eyes – “Shell Games”

5. The Decemberists – “Down by the Water”

6. The Mountain Goats – “Tyler Lambert’s Grave”

7. R.E.M. – “Discoverer”

8. Destroyer – “Chinatown”

9. Andrew Bird – “The Sifters”

10. Metric – “Hustle Rose (iTunes Session)”

11. Vampire Weekend – “Cousins (iTunes Session)”

12. Bear Ceuse – O-K-L-A-E-E-H-O-M-A

13. Laura Marling – “Alas, I Cannot Swim”

14. Camera Obscura – “Tears for Affairs (Live)”

15. The National – “You Were a Kindness”

16. Deerhunter – “Primitive 3D”

17. Free Energy – “I’m Going Down (Springsteen Cover)”

18. Surf City – “See How the Sun”

19. Titus Andronicus – “Anxiety Block”

20. Radiohead – “Bangers n Mash (Live)”

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TUiW Best of 2010: The 15 Best Albums of 2010

Our Year end list-making comes to a close today our list of the year’s best albums. Be sure to add your thoughts in the comments and have a Merry Christmas!

15. Arcade Fire – The Suburbs
Over the course of three albums, Arcade Fire have become titans not just of the indie scene, but of music in general. Their third record finds the band exploring new territories musically, with solid results. Taking on the theme of urban sprawl, The Suburbs is a powerful album full that finds the band getting loud (“Empty Room”), getting quiet (“Wasted Hours”) and offering their trademark churning, building, rock songs (“Ready to Start”), creating a winning combination. (M)

14. Marnie Stern – Marnie Stern
Marnie Stern decided to choose a simpler name for her 2010 release than her second album (This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It and She Is It and It Is It and That Is That) but that is just about the only thing that is simpler. On songs like “For Ash” and “Nothing Left,” Stern improbably bridges the gap between metal, jittery post-punk, and Animal Collective spazziness. And yet all of it is in service of a record that deftly depicts mental turmoil and depression in an engaging and exciting new way. (J)

13. The National – High Violet
After the triumph of Boxer, the National returned with another record that gets better and better with every listen. As the band has gotten older and wiser, so has their music, with lead singer Matt Berninger offering ruminations on married life and being a father as the Dessner Twins combine on the bubbling melodies below. If there was any question that the band would loose steam, High Violet more than dispelled that notion. (M)

12. Sufjan Stevens – The Age of Adz
When Sufjan released All Delighted People EP, it was a bit of misdirection, pointing at what seemed to be a continuation and slight expansion on his trademark sound, which only made The Age of Adz all the more surprising. Loaded with apocalyptic imagery and electronic instrumentation, Adz is a world away from the gentle orchestral music that Sufjan is known for. The record is dense and difficult, but immensely rewarding for the listener willing to invest some time. (J)

11. Robyn – Body Talk
It’s hard to believe that in the late 90’s, Robyn was being promoted in the States as a version of Brittney Spears and the other pop princesses of the time. It’s now clear however that Robyn was going to take that crown, just a little later. The three body talk mini albums are pop perfection, full of dancable, catchy, fun songs that become ingrained in you head, not just for days, but weeks at time. Hopefully Robyn won’t take another five years to give us a follow up, and we get more great songs like “Dancing on My Own” or “Hang With Me” soon. (M)

10. Best Coast – Crazy For You

There weren’t many records this year that were more straightforward than Crazy For You – a celebration of cats, beaches, weed, and boys. But its beauty is in its highly listenable simplicity, as Bethany Cosentino and company presented just enough variations on those themes to keep Crazy for You catchy and interesting. From “Boyfriend” to “When I’m With You,” Crazy for You was the obvious choice for soundtrack of the summer. (J)

9. Wolf Parade – Expo 86
On their first two records, Wolf Parade has had songs by Spencer Krug and songs by Dan Boeckner, but Expo 86 finds the two frontmen joining forces and crafting their most complete album yet. Expo 86 is the band’s best record to date, one that is relentless and incredibly fun to listen to. The band announced it was going on an indefinite hiatus to focus on their side projects, so until they return, but it’s a good thing we got an album this good first. (M)

8. Big Boi – Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty
After a troubled history and numerous delays, Big Boi finally unleashed Sir Lucious Left Foot on the world and it was glorious. From the bass-rattling of “Daddy Fat Sax” and “Shutterbugg” to conspicuous consumption of “Shine Blockas” to the melancholy “Be Still,” Sir Lucious Left Foot was worth the wait. (J)

7. Superchunk – Majesty Shredding
Majesty Shredding comes after a nine year studio hiatus from Superchunk, but it sounds like they’ve hardly missed a beat. The record is full of energy and insanely catchy songs, and ranks among the band’s best. Songs like “Digging for Something” showcase Superchunk at their rockiest, while other tracks like “Fractures in Plaster” and “Rosemarie” show a maturity they gained in their years off. Listening to Majesty Shredding makes us awfully happy to have Superchunk back. (M)

6. The Walkmen – Lisbon
The Walkmen are quickly getting into the musical Twilight Zone where every record they put out is so good that it is kind of boring to talk about how great The Walkmen are. Nonetheless, Lisbon may be among their best, from the light jangle of “Juveniles” to the forlorn funeral march of “Stranded” to the blister of “Angela Surf City.” The Walkmen are a more focused band right now who are currently going through their prime, churning out great release after great release, and Lisbon follows perfectly in that series. (J)

5. Beach House – Teen Dream
Teen Dream is a record that finds Beach House growing as songwriters, adding a lush arrangements to their dreamy (no pun intended) sound. The songs on Teen Dream are far more expansive than on their last record, Devotion, with standout tracks “Walk in the Park,” “Norway,” and “Used to Be” offering a great amount of depth and variation in the band’s signature sound. Victoria Legrand’s voice floats above Alex Scally’s surprisingly bright guitar work on a record that is the sound of late, lonely nights. (M)

4. Titus Andronicus – The Monitor
It takes a mix of confidence and foolishness to attempt an hour-plus punk rock concept album about the Civil War, but it takes true genius to pull it off. With The Monitor, Titus Andronicus somehow made a record that feels both sprawling and tight, sweeping and intimate, by filtering the Civil War through modern college turmoil (or perhaps vice versa). From “A More Perfect Union” to “The Battle for Hampton Roads,” The Monitor is a record of soaring, triumphant, fist-pumping rock, concept be damned. (J)

3. Deerhunter – Halcyon Digest
On record number three, Bradford Cox and company seamlessly integrated the ambient rock of Cryptograms and the sprawling rock songs of Microcastle. The combination finds the band at their best, with a record that ebbs and flows, finding the right places to offer homage to the sounds that influenced them and the places to showcase their own. Both Cox and Lockett Pundt have crafted their best album to date with Halcyon Digest, a record that will undoubtedly prove to be influential for years to come. (M)

2. Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
Kanye West, the genius behind the famous Twitter account @kanyewest, decided to branch out into music this year too! All kidding aside, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy is an explosive pop record that manages to be sophistacted and complex but catchy and accessible. Certainly there are the singles – the straight-up nasty “Monster,” the soaring “Power,” and TUiW’s song of the year “Runaway” – but the album never slows down or stops to catch its breath. Many athletes famously use personal slights – real or imagined – to fuel their competitive fire. In 2010, it seems like Kanye worked the same way, molding all his turmoil and drama into one incredible record. (J)

1. LCD Soundsytem – This is Happening

With This is Happening, James Murphy and his band became the undisputed champions of their genre. As Kanye examined his self destructive tendencies, Murphy continued to examine his own status as an aging hipster, but not without giving up his goofy side, a struggle he characterizes in “Pow Pow” as having “advantages to both.” The album plays out as such, with tracks full of sincerity like “I Can Change” and “Home,” but also songs like “Drunk Girls,” where the title speaks for itself. Either way, This is Happening is a top notch record musically, with so many catchy hooks its practically impossible not to want to listen to over and over. (M)

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TUiW Best of 2010: The 15 Best Songs of 2010

2010 has been a fantastic year for music, making it especially difficult for us to narrow our list down to 15. After much deliberation, we’ve made our choices and now bring you TUiW’s picks for the Best Songs of the Year.

15. Local Natives – “Sun Hands”
Local Natives have all the sophistication and worldliness of Grizzly Bear without the austerity. There’s no better example of that than “Sun Hands,” an energetic, wide-eyed indie anthem with all the pastoral trappings and Talking Heads influences that you need to Make It on a blog in 2010. And yet Local Natives is more than the sum of their parts, and “Sun Hands” is a catchy song that is hard to get out of your head once it takes up space there. (J)

14. Broken Social Scene – “Forced to Love”
When the record came out in May, I wrote that “Forced to Love” is “the type of song that demands loud speakers on a sunny day,” a description that holds true even in the cold days of winter. It’s the standout track on Forgiveness Rock Record, one that has the band at their best, not only playing to the rafters, but over them. (M)

13. Wavves – “Post Acid”
Wavves mostly ditched the lo-fi in favor of a different quintessentially 1990s sound: the power-punk of Lookout Records. Like someone else you’ll be seeing a little higher on the list, Nathan Williams distilled his self-loathing and public meltdowns into some of the most infectious and catchy music of the year. On “Post Acid,” Williams turns in a ranging, stomping piece of SoCal punk with energy and hookiness to spare. Its hard to think of a song that earned an intro from John Norris more than “Post Acid.” (J)

12. The Morning Benders – “Excuses”
A lush, beautiful song that recalls the Wall of Sound, “Excuses” kicks off Big Echo in grand fashion. The crashing drums and wobbly strings, combined with the “la-la-las” make the song incredibly catchy, and one that won’t leave your head for days. (M)

11. Wye Oak – “Emmylou”
My Neighbor/My Creator, like a lot of EPs, expanded Wye Oak’s slowcore-leaning musical aesthetic, nowhere more so than on the infectious rocker “Emmylou.” The song reshapes the Wye Oak aesthetic, adding a punkish energy and a slight power-pop edge, while not losing their confessional, sharply lyrical style. Like other Wye Oak songs, “Emmylou” is pretty, but it isn’t nearly as fragile.

10. Best Coast – “Boyfriend”
Best Coast had a breakout year in 2010, and the lead off single from Crazy For You is about as catchy as they come. Bethany Cosentino shares her yearning for a boy, while also adding that he has a better girlfriend already that’s “prettier and skinnier.” It’s a charming track that’s just as fun to listen to one the hundredth time as it is on the first. (M)

9. Arcade Fire – “Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)”
Even given the expanded sonic palate of The Suburbs, the album concluding Blondie/disco of “Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)” comes as a bit of a surprise. The only song that features Regine on lead vocals, “Sprawl II” makes great use of her voice, setting it against a rising synth line that betrays a kind of innocence. “Sprawl II” summarizes the entire album, finding a measure of beauty in the “Dead shopping malls” that “rise like mountains beyond mountains” while still showing how stifling living there can be (“quit these pretentious things and just punch the clock”). (J)

8. Robyn – “Dancing On My Own”
One of the most infectious dance songs of 2010, “Dancing On My Own” displays a vulnerability not often found in the genre. Frequently aggressive in her songs, here Robyn has a sad side to her tone, offering up a song that is both moving and catchy as hell. It’s hard to listen to “Dancing On My Own” without hoping that all pop songs could be this good. (M)

7. Deerhunter – “Desire Lines”
On “Desire Lines” Bradford Cox digs deep into his library, merging everything from 1960s doo-wop to shoegaze to ambient noise to make an anthem to being bored and disappointed. With lyrics about outgrowing enthusiasm, “Desire Lines” feels like a great anthem for a time when a lot of us were struggling just to find jobs we didn’t want. And yet there’s a quality of serenity to the song, as if Cox is at peace with the notion of forever cycling through desire and disappointment. (J)

6. Superchunk – “Digging for Something”
After a nine year absence from the studio, Superchunk returned, with “Digging for Something” kicking off Majesty Shredding. It’s a swift and insanely catchy rocker, and it’s probably the year’s best rock song. With John Darnielle providing some back up vocals, “Digging for Something” is the type of song that you can listen to and start over right away.(M)

5. Big Boi – “Shutterbug”
Being the straight-man in a group is a difficult and unrewarding task. Ask Jason Bateman or Chico Marx. So it was easy to, if not overlook Big Boi, then at least expect a more straightforward album than you’d look for from Andre 3000. However Big Boi smashed that expectation, nowhere more so than the infectious bass-rattler “Shutterbugg.” Big Boi rattles off classic lyrics like machine gun bursts, climaxing in the catchy bridge and a command to “throw your deuce up in the sky for the shutterbugg.” (J)

4. Joanna Newsom – “Good Intentions Paving Co.”
With a nod from Joni Mitchell and Carly Simon, Joanna Newsom offered up one of her catchiest and most accessible songs. Always a fan of long, flowing narrative, Newsom her crafts a song full of pop sensibility without giving up her unique sound in the process. If you’ve been hung up on Newsom and her love it or hate it voice before, be sure to give this track a try before writing her off. You won’t regret it. (M)

3. Beach House – “Walk in the Park”
For such a melancholy song, “Walk in the Park” is oddly soaring. That contrast, one that permeates Teen Dream, somehow makes “Walk in the Park” all the more heartbreaking. Depicting a shattering relationship with Beach House’s usual ambiguity (“the face that you saw at the door, isn’t looking at you anymore”), before switching to its equally wrenching conclusion. “Walk in the Park” is a beautiful, fragile, sad song and one of the best of the year. (J)

2. LCD Soundsystem – “I Can Change”
James Murphy hasn’t been shy about getting introspective in the past, but on “I Can Change,” he starts to question the idea of we change one another to be in love. “Love is a murderer” he cries in the song, offering a serious rumination on love in complete contrast to the goofier “Drunk Girls,” found previously on the record. Murphy has said there might not be any more LCD Soundsystem records, but if he keeps putting out singles like this, we’ll have more than enough great songs to keep us satisfied.

1. Kanye West – “Runaway”
What better way to summarize 2010 – a year that gave us The Decision and Rand Paul and the continued success of Jersey Shore – than with an infectious toast to douchebags, assholes, and scumbags. On “Runaway,” Kanye confronted his public persona, his award show escapades, and his outspokenness and generally agreed with the haters, while at the same time showing how that side of his personality is inseparable from his genius. From 35 minute music videos to moving paintings to epic SNL performances, Kanye reminded us all of his outsized ambition, and nowhere did he cash in on that more than our Song of the Year. (J)

Be sure to come back tomorrow as our Best of 2010 coverage wraps up with the 15 best albums of the year.

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TUiW Radio 11.10.2010 Playlist

Thanks to all that listened today! If you missed it, be sure to tune in next week from 8-10am EST at SCADRadio.org! Here’s the playlist:

TUiW Radio 11.10.10 Playlist:

1. John Legend & The Roots – “Wake Up”
2. The Walkmen – “Angela Surf City”
3. Deerhunter – “Don’t Cry”
4. Best Coast – “Goodbye”
5. No Age – “Skinned”
6. Superchunk – “Crossed Wires”
7. Elvis Costello – “Jimmie Standing in the Rain”
8. Tim Kasher – “A Grown Man”
9. Murdocks – “OMG”
10. Comic Wow – “Chimp on a Pew”
11. Robyn – “Criminal Intent”
12. Lyrics Born – “Lies x 3”
13. Swedish House Mafia – “Your Name (Feat. Pharrell)”
14. LCD Soundsystem – “All My Friends (London Session)”
15. Glasser – “Glad”
16. Panda Bear – “Comfy in Nautica”
17. Wolf Parade – “I’ll Believe in Anything”
18. The Thermals – “How We Fade”
19. Land of Talk – “Blangee Blee”
20. Elf Power – “Spidereggs”
21. My Morning Jacket – “Gideon”
22. Grizzly Bear – “Little Brother (Electric Version)”
23. The National – “About Today”

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Listen and Download Free Music From Kanye, Sufjan, Deerhunter, The Thermals

Since it’s the Monday of TV premier week and things have been a little slow here at TUiW, we thought you might like a little music to kick off your week! Without further ado:

Deerhunter – Halcyon Digest

What honestly prompted this music binge is that NPR is streaming Deerhunter’s phenomenal new record Halcyon Digest a week before it comes out. The band reached new heights with their last record, Microcastle, and on first listen, Halcyon Digest moves the sticks pretty far forward for the band. A more in depth review will come after more listens, but my first impressions are that this record will make a substantial amount of year end lists, probably in the Top 5. Stream it here.

The Thermals – “Never Listen to Me”

The Thermals have a formula that works extraordinarily well: cut the bullshit and just play music. You’ll rarely catch them going outside of their punk roots, but they nail it every time. The second single from their new record Personal Life (out Oct. 19), “Never Listen to Me” is a solid track that, as with most Thermals songs, will get lodged in your head and not escape.

The Thermals – “Never Listen to Me” [MP3]

Sufjan Stevens – “Too Much”

This may have hit the web a little bit ago, but this glitchy track from The Age of Adz is about as far from Sufjan’s old sound as you can get, but with the all the same power of the pretty songs about Illinois. Sharply contrasted from his newest EP, All Delighted People, the album looks to open a new, fantastic chapter of Steven’s post-50 States career. Download it here.

Kanye West – The GOOD Fridays Series

Also making buzz on the web for the last few weeks has been the apparent onslaught of free music from everyone’s favorite crazy rapper, Kanye West, through his GOOD Fridays series. This week’s track “Lord, Lord, Lord,” featuring Mos Def, Swizbeats, and Raekwon is a solid winner, but if you haven’t heard “Monster,” the collaboration with Rick Ross, Jay-Z, Nicki Minaj, and Bon Iver, download that one first get blown away by the insane verse dropped by Minaj at the end. Check out the songs here.

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TUIW Goes to Coachella: Sunday

Stephen Malkmus of Pavement

TUiW spent the past weekend in Indio, CA for this year’s Coachella festival. Here’s our recap of Sunday:

Local Natives
The L.A. band got a lot of support from the locals at Coachella, who packed the tent well in advance of their set. Local Natives worked through tracks off of their stellar debut Gorilla Manor, and brought even more energy to tracks already filled with plenty. Album stand outs “Sun Hands” and “Airplanes” sound even more gorgeous live, as the band’s stellar harmonies floated over a more raw, live sound. With a great debut and a tight live performance, the future looks awfully bright for Local Natives.

Owen Pallet
Owen Pallett brought his quirky, formal style of violin and looping (complete with a multi-instrumentalist accompanying him) and focused mostly on tracks from Heartland, his really good new album. The show also featured Pallett’s amiably goofy stage presence, like when he referred to the stage he shared with Jonsi and Bradford Cox as the “gay ghetto” and then asked his accompanist if he had tried “cornholing.”

Deerhunter
Though they were beleaguered with technical problems, Deerhunter put on a fantastic live set, thanks in large part to the enthusiasm of frontman Bradford cox. During one particular technical setback, Cox improvised a Coachella songs, pondering the number of people who OD’ed or had faulty condoms. He also gave a shout-out to fellow Coachella performer Julian Casablancas before closing with “Disappearing Ink,” on which he admitted to ripping off Casablancas’ vocal style. The rest of the set was full of fantastic, fuzzed out jams, with the highlight being a great version of “Nothing Ever Happened.”

Yo La Tengo
It was oddly delightful to see Yo La Tengo, a band that has toiled so long in relative obscurity, play the main stage of a major festival. Their brief set functioned as a kind of greatest hits and the band tore through songs like “Autumn Sweater” and “You Can Have It All” (complete with some stylish dance moves) while saving enough time for one of their trademark noise freakouts at the end. All in all, it was an immensely satisfying set from a great band.

Spoon
Continuing the theme of unexpected bands triumphantly taking their rightful place as festival headlines, Spoon played a great set to an adoring audience. While the show didn’t reach further back than Kill the Moonlight, it featured all of Spoon’s newest essentials, even if the crowd didn’t seem as into the songs from their newest album. Also, Bradford Cox joined the band on guitar for “Who Makes Your Money.”

Pavement
For what we’d estimate was a sizeable minority of Coachella-goers, this was it. The reason we shelled out $300 and drove 20 hours to a desert in the middle of nowhere in California. So was it worth? Hell yes. From the first strains of “Silence Kit” to the triumphant finish of “Cut Your Hair,” Pavement was back with an energy and a fire that betrays the slacker storyline. Playing a range of music from across their career (but centered on Slanted and Enchanted and Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain) Pavement was, simply, everything we dreamed they’d be.

Thom Yorke and Atoms for Peace
They weren’t Radiohead, but Thom Yorke’s new band injected new life into 2006′s good-not-great The Eraser (which they played through from start to finish). Yorke was bouncy and energetic (and had a bit of an unofficial dance-off with Flea) and all the stuff he played was great, but the highpoint was when he played “Airbag” on just an acoustic guitar and then moved to a piano for “Everything in Its Right Place.”

Gorillaz
A somewhat disappointing end to Coachella, Gorillaz much lauded stage showed was stripped down, with the band appearing as themselves as pictures and weird video clips playing behind them. The music was alright, but without the much discussed holograms or even a video of the cartoon’s singing, it was a fairly typical set. There was no Lou Reed appearance, as was the rumor floating around, but De La Soul (who performed on their own earlier in the day) and a video of Snoop Dog appeared to rock out with Damon Albarn and co.

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