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YOY: First, Last, and Favorite

For our first 2019 edition of our First, Last, and Favorite column we’re featuring YOY! YOY is a little bit local and a little global, operating here but with members from Malaysia and Japan. They make spastic playful punky noise-rock unafraid to be both odd or catchy. A look at the records these guys have been rocking will give you a good idea. Your last chance to catch them live for a good little while will be this Friday, or you can swing by the shop for the The Inner Journey Goes Wrong tape any old time.

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Conner (drums), Daniel (guitar), and Moe (bass) each picked us a record from their past, present, and eternity. Let’s get into YOY’s picks for their First Last and Favorite records:

FIRST

Conner: Nirvana From The Muddy Banks of the Wishkah

When I was 12 years old and just starting to get pissed off at the world for irrational pubescent angst I heard this record and was instantly hooked. For more than a decade its retained the feeling of Kurt is spitting on you while Dave’s drumming kicks you in the shins and Krist is eating a sandwich. In my insignificant opinion this is the greatest Nirvana album and it got me playing drums. 

Moe: Sheena Ringo Shoso Strip

When I was 13 years old, I was introduced to this artist by one of a young teacher-in-training, Mr Kimura at school. I bought a copy of this album and still remembered how it blew my mind. Even if I were reincarnated, I’d like to discover this album again.

Daniel: Nirvana Bleach

Everybody knows this record, and they should! Because it’s a great record. ‘Bleach’ came into my life at the best time. I had just given up on learning the violin because I was done getting kicked in the shins by a 70 year old man for playing ‘ode to joy’ wrong. Around this time, my older brother taught me an E minor chord and a G chord on the guitar, and I learnt to play ‘About a Girl’. It was the time of my life! I learnt to play a power chord, and suddenly I could play along to every song in the record. I really doubt I will ever be as happy as that, this was about last week.

LAST

Conner: BADBADNOTGOOD IV

This album has a little bit of everything I want to hear in 50 minutes, it's Jazz that people who don't like Jazz can get into! Instrumental adventures like “Structure No.3” “Confessions Pt.II” & “IV” and mellower numbers “In Your Eyes” and “Time Moves Slow” are notable hits.

Moe: Mitski Be The Cowboy

Around the end of last year, I saw this album as Andrew’s (from New Bloom) best album of the year on Instagram. Out of curiosity I listened to it and it was really a good album.

Daniel: V/A A Day in the Life: Impressions of Pepper

A really interesting guitar player I’ve been listening to lately is Mary Halvorson. I really like atonality and free improvisation, so I really dig her sound and method. She contributes a cover of ‘With A Little Help From My Friends’ that I really like to this compilation and I’m still listening to the rest of it now. So far, me like.

FAVORITE

Conner: The Mars Volta The Bedlam and Goliath

Though there are many albums that are “my favourite” this one covers a lot of ground as it was the first time I heard a record that decimated my entire understanding of what music can be. It’s an album with meticulous chaos, similar to a Rube Goldberg machine in the sense that it feels like it’s about to disintegrate into a million intricate little parts at any second but the music always pulls through through in a kaleidoscopic flurry of unparalleled musicianship, catchy melodies and an unbelievably explosive display of drumming by Thomas Pridgen. 

Moe: Pavement Brighten The Corners

In 2015, Daniel sent me a bunch of music to listen to, so I put my iTunes to shuffle mode and was listening to them randomly. Then, I heard this one song. I thought it was a Radiohead song, but I knew that it was too sad and desperate to be Radiohead, in a good way. Still my favorite album now.

Daniel: Melt Banana MxBx 1998/13,000 Miles at Light Velocity

Definitely an all-time favorite. This is a ‘Live in Studio’ type album that archives the set Melt-Banana toured the US with in 1998. I wish more bands made records in this format! It’s raw, rehearsed to death (a result of the extensive US tour), possibly done in one take;  it really captures their 4-piece era at its absolute best. Melt-Banana are heroes to me. They’re like chicken soup for the DIY soul, and I think this is a great first record to get into their stuff.