if there is ever the impregnable question of why
what did or didn't pass
it would help to seek comfort in destiny
but i really don't
we don't see eye to eye

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from Norway

seen from Malaysia
seen from Russia
seen from Norway
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from Oman
seen from Malaysia
if there is ever the impregnable question of why
what did or didn't pass
it would help to seek comfort in destiny
but i really don't
we don't see eye to eye
Stillness is the move. 76. “Bitte Orca” by Dirty Projectors
Everything from the album cover, to the non sequitur title, to the edginess of Amber Coffman and Angel Deradoorian’s often-wordless harmony vocals, paints Dirty Projectors as a capitalization-implied Art Pop band.
My introduction was via David Byrne’s mark-of-approval guest spot on “Knotty Pine” from Dark Was The Night, and the antecedent to David Longstreth’s angular electric guitar in opening track “Cannibal Resource” and World music-flavored disco in “Stillness Is The Move” can be found in Talking Heads. The L.P. also explores pastoral, lovestruck ballads in unexpected ways, segueing from the acoustic strumming and string quartet swirls on “Two Doves” to the schizophrenic style suite of “Useful Chamber” (in which trip-hop alternates places with caffeinated noise rock). Except for the moments when things get a little strange, the songs create a perfect bubble for mind-wandering. And yes, perhaps there’s an unspoken invitation to contribute to that float with your favorite substance, but if you’re not inclined, you can find your own “Fluorescent Half-Dome” with some spare time and a pair of headphones.
Dirty Projectors - Self-Titled Review
This album is frustrating. I have never had so many different reactions to an album with each listen. I am a fairly big fan of Dirty Projectors, and when Keep Your Name dropped I was practically in love with David Longstreth. Almost everything about the track was perfect to me and I was so hyped for this album. The album is the story of the break-up between David Longstreth and Amber Coffman. Amber Coffman was one of the backup vocalists of the band. I personally love very personal and hard-hitting albums, so I was ready to love this album.
And then I listened to it.
I wasn’t sure how I felt about this album after the first listen. Or second listen. Or third listen. My opinions have never changed so much from listen to listen with any album before this album. The main issue with this album to me is it felt...awkward. Almost too personal. The lyrics on a lot of these songs feel kind of confrontational. It feels like David angrily wrote a lot of these lyrics minutes after the breakup. He puts himself on a pedestal and comes off as pretentious.
‘What I want from art is truth, what you want is fame’
‘Your heart is saying clothing line my body said Naomi Klein’
‘Feeling like I’m sipping on some Rene Descartes and you’re Big Gulping the Bible’
It just feels malicious to an extent and almost too personal.
But the music is so good.
I can’t stress how amazing of an experience listening to this album is. The production is flawless. I have never heard an album that sounds like this. It’s like a really well put together fusion of everything that makes Dirty Projectors and R&B great.
The album opens with Keep Your Name which starts with these warped church bells and these incredible down-pitched vocals. The song definitely sets the tone for the direction the rest of the album is taking with this really well done rap in the bridge.
Right after it is my least favorite song on the album, Death Spiral. It opens up with these really good strings but is bogged down by a generic vocal melody and average percussion.
The album is quickly redeemed though by the song Up In Hudson which has these amazing horns throughout the track and an infectious chorus. The only negative thing I really have to say about the track is the fact he used the word SMS in a track. It’s a dumb gripe but I can’t help but cringe every time I listen to it and it gets to that part.
Work Together is next and has a really, really well done chorus and is overall just a really solid and interesting track.
Work Together would have more of an impact if it wasn’t followed by the incredible Little Bubble. This conveys emotion better than any other track on this record. There are these beautiful strings that run through it and a beautiful piano melody played in the chorus. It’s just really, really good.
Unfortunately the momentum of the album is ruined by Winner Take Nothing which is the most forgettable track on the album by far. The vocals are just average compared to the rest of the album. It’s not necessarily a bad track but it doesn’t have room to breathe in my opinion. It’s sandwiched between the best track on the album and the best song streak and the chorus is just forgettable. I can see how people would like this track but to me it just feels like he recorded it because he needed another track. It’d be a great B-side.
But Ascent Through Clouds, Cool Your Heart, and I See You hit consecutively and close the album in such a beautiful way. Ascent Through Clouds has this amazing groove running throughout the track and this really cool bridge departure, and Cool Your Heart is just a catchy song. The beat warps and rewinds constantly and Dawn absolutely makes the track as good as it is.
I See You isn’t as good as the other songs while listened to separately, but in the context of the album it is one of the best tracks. It has a gospel feel to it and swells up and ends abruptly in this beautiful way.
I love this album. The lyrical content bothers me but the music is just so good.
8.5/10
Best tracks: Up In Hudson, Little Bubble, Ascent Through Clouds
Worst Tracks: Death Spiral, Winner Take Nothing
-- written by G. D.
DIRTY PROJECTORS “Up In Hudson”
Following the excellent new tracks, “Keep Your Name” and “Little Bubble”, Dirty Projectors have finally announced that their self-titled new record will be released on February 24th via Domino. The band also released a third song from the album called “Up In Hudson”. Listen above and pre-order the limited edition, clear black smoke vinyl here.
https://www.musikblog.de/2025/04/dirty-projectors-and-david-longstreth-and-s-t-a-r-g-a-z-e-song-of-the-earth/ Das Album zum Klimawandel? David Longstreth von den Dirty Projectors nahm sich mit „Song Of The Earth“ vor, einen Song-Zyklus für Gesang und Orchester zu schreiben, der das schiere Chaos der Welt (im ökologischen Sinne) zusammenfasst. Das Ergebnis, in Kooperation mit dem Berliner Kammerorchester s t a r g a z e, ist entsprechend etwas […]
Review of Dave Longstreth’s School of Song course
I recently completed a month-long songwriting course with the Dirty Projectors’ Dave Longstreth. Overall, it was a highly analytical perspective of tapping into the abstract and the unconscious during four distinct stages of starting, patterning, managing, and completing a song. I am sure I am a bit bias from being such a fan of Dave’s music, but this series really let me shed those bias’ and look at him in an untethered light. I write this critique because I am an asshole in search for truth. Hot takes trigger warning. The man has a lot of great theories and techniques no doubt, but he is not as in-tune with the unconscious as he thinks he is.
Week 1: The moment of inspiration
The first lecture was preceded by a 20 minute songwriting exercise, which according to Dave is relatively how long the moment of inspiration lasts. It’s like eating a meal he says. It’s about grabbing as much excess of inspiration as you can in the moment, for you cannot access that moment later. Try to prevent the “garage door” from closing on your creativity by developing multiple parts in an instant and not being too judging to them, but rather trusting in the parts you come up with and allow for tweaks later in the process. Do not waste time looking for a “memorable chorus.” I asked him a questions about his praised Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds album and he says that he loves Brian’s new piano album, and enjoys when music switches genres. Most classmates’ songs were stripped down and folk-y this week.
Week 2: Patterns
As said in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpaiW-Vezok “The first thing I ask myself these days is ‘does it make a satifying pattern?’ ....does it shimmer and ripple in new and exciting ways?‘”
I have to say that this I found to be the strongest lecture. I think that developing rhythmic patterns is one of Dave’s strongest abilities and this lecture solidifies this. He takes apart a few of his newer songs according to their wave-like melody shape that literally reverses the melody at points and mutates the waves together, and deconstructs the beats into their competitions for space in the low end of a low and high kick, or super intricate high hat patterns, often adding a 2nd high hat in the 4th bar and overall getting more chaotic to make up for lost time in a grid feel during the 4th bar. I asked a question about quantization and got this response:
“as far as quantization, for me, it depends on the song. sometimes not quantized at all; sometimes 100% grid mode.
my sonic ideal is dilla: as long as the distance between 1 and 1 is pretty locked, anything can happen in between. if it’s at all consistent, our ear finds the pocket. slightly early backbeat can be amazing. or a late backbeat. pushed or early kick happening in the middle of the measure is gonna feel aggressive and intense. late or lazy kicks in the middle of the measure, whole different feel. dilating the time in a specific kick/snare interplay in the middle of the measure and then buying the time back by, for example, rushing the fourth beat is going to feel a certain way too! anything is possible, any feel can be beautiful and perfect and deepen the emotion of the song — it just depends on the song! but generally i think it’s good to be a little wary of the grid. songs that feel inappropriately quantized often hit me as lethargic, or not confident/trusting, or just boring. as a listener, i'll take looser over tighter pretty much ten times out of ten. imagine you wanted to write someone a thank you note. you looked up ‘thank you note template’ online, signed your name at the bottom of the first or second google hit, and pressed send. sometimes quantization feels that way. it’s the default. it’s an abstraction/reduction of what rhythm is, with no actual specific musical relationships playing out, and no feelings or history. the grid is the law. but you want to be true & honest to the song. i find the inverse of the dylan quote from absolutely sweet marie — ‘to live outside the law, you must be honest’ — is often pretty true in music: ‘to be honest, you must live outside the law’. … that said, i think break-thru is pretty grid mode”
He also used a student’s song to demonstrate alternation between trochee and dactyl poetic meter in vocal phrasing.
Week #3: The Mayor Mode
This stage of the songwriting process comes after 1 & 2, being in that it is very different from the non-judgemental early parts of the song. This is the point when you want to start making judgemental decisions in the song. If the part you wish to add or take away is a large part of the song, consider scrapping the whole idea. The main structure should already be outlined. He advocates the use of Feynman's diagram of story writing, which I just looked up and is not a real thing, or maybe I am misremembering it, but it is essentially this: The song should be a story. There should be a beginning development, an inciting incident, a rising action, a climax, a falling action, and a resolution. The climax should be the bridge. He lists four great prompts for this. It usually is in contrst to the rest of the song. He advocates for going to the sub-dominant or sub-tonic, which is basically either the 7th or the 4th. Idk I don’t know much about theory but I agree about that! He also makes a metaphor with Jurassic Park about the beginning of the songwriting process is where you get your Dinosaur DNA, and the rest is where you get your frog DNA. Dinosaur DNA is essentially originality, and Frog DNA are common tropes and nuances that are specific to certain genres.
Week #4: The song is over, if you want it
Classmates’ songs were covering the map at this point in pop, dance, experimental, psychedelia, and folk. Dave is a musician’s musician, so it’s only natural that the stuff is mind-blowing. In the final lecture, he advocates that the song being done now is better than later, which is the mentality from the first lecture. He advocates to not spend more than a day mixing, and that sometimes mastering is indeed not needed.
Overall, Dave prioritizes speed above the unconscious I find. But that’s a good thing in his case. It causes him to have a balance between the unconscious and the conscious/theoretical aspects of music. It certainly works for him. He mentions his self-titled being an example of something that he put too much effort into, which is an extremely insightful comment that makes sense. He says at the top of songwriting hierarchy, he first thought it was lyrics, then he thought it was to be true to the writer, and now he finds it is to be modern. To be able to make people see things in new and unique ways. An aside: Bob Dylan’s songwriting book coming out in the fall is called the Philosophy of Modern Songwriting.
Dave is certainly not my favorite philosopher, but he is indeed as Pitchfork famously said, an artistic genius. I am extremely grateful for the experiences I learned and feedback I received in this class and would sign up again in a heartbeat.
Rise Above (Dirty Projectors/Black Flag) — I think we could all use some punk ethos these days, to relieve the frustration. Something about Longstreth’s slow, soft treatment of a punk tune is a perfect adaptation for our times. [60sec does not quite get us to the chorus… just check the Tube if you want to see the rest!] 📺 #singersongwriter #acoustic #cover #acousticcover #dirtyprojectors #blackflag #indie #vocals #longstreth #wearebornwithachance (at Salish Sea) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZKJN5pFdKJ/?utm_medium=tumblr
#coco #dirtyprojectors #morerecords #music #音楽 #cd #cdジャケット #artwork #アートワーク#入荷情報 #モアレコ入荷情報 #入荷 #oomiya #大宮 (more records) https://www.instagram.com/p/CZI7YsGJnOg/?utm_medium=tumblr