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Make Believe Melodies’ Best Albums Of The Year: 20-11

Photoshop scares me, so I’m mailing it in with my favorite character of the year holding a guitar.

Back in 2011 when I published this list (remember when I skipped doing this last year? Best album was from MiChi, best song was from…AKB48), a question that writer James Hadfield posed to me was…how many of these would actually make it on a general top ten list? Like, including non-Japanese releases? My answer…two, the albums in the first and second positions. Neither would be the actual #1 overall.

This year, the list of all my favorite music would probably feature mainly Japanese releases. Now, to be fair, I’m way more focused on what comes out in Japan in 2013 than I was in 2011…but I really do believe the past 12 months have been especially strong for Japanese music in general, especially when compared to other nation’s output this year. If nothing else, I do think this is the strongest year of music I’ve heard since starting this blog. So I’ve gone and made a list of my favorite (“our best” if you will) Japanese albums of the year. It was very very very hard narrowing this down, with so many great releases coming from every direction…but here’s what stuck.

Numbers 20-11 will appear on this blog, while 10-1 will actually be published on another website, which I will link to. We will also have an “honorable mentions/interesting stuff” post to round it all out. Enjoy!

20. Various Artists Upwards And Onwards

Shortly after this compilation, netlabel Ano(t)raks spent their time hunting down new names and creating country-spanning indie-pop compilation albums, featuring new names galore. Until releasing Post Modern Team’s (very good!) debut album late in 2013, the imprint felt like they were intent on hunting down every undiscovered twee band and showing them to the world in .zip form. So Upwards And Onwards feels like a special collection, a last gasp for Japan’s indie-pop scene featuring many names who made it seem like a “thing” over the last two years. A lot of the artists featured here released their own albums in 2013, but those often felt a little too long. Many of these outfits sound best as quick blasts. See the catchy simplicity of Boyish’s murky “Obvious,” the darty “Someday” by Post Modern Team and the goofy fun of Foodie’s “Make It, Break It.” Kai Takahashi would shine as a more traditional twee vocalist later in the year, but here he crafted a sunny afternoon electronic jam, positioning him as one of the year’s most promising young producers. Canopies And Drapes was quiet in 2013, so it was nice to hear her voice on a song as well…even if a new name like Jam The Mod stole the show with the stunning eight-minute “2nd Rainbows.” Ano(t)raks would try blazing new paths later in the year…this just sounds like a celebration.

19. Especia Midnight Confusion

There are a total of three original songs on this “album,” the rest of the disc stuffed with instrumentals and remixes. But fuck it…nobody in Japan released a pop song better than “Midnight Confusion” this year, and the fact they could include two super strong songs alongside it make this a lock for the top twenty as far as I’m concerned. I’ll spill more words on the title track later, but all credit to the folks behind this Osaka idol-pop group’s sound, carving out a retro-leaning sound that doesn’t give itself over (entirely) to stereotype. “XO” is a late-night piano bar lament (with sax!) while the other new track is a glistening, chimey bouncer that’s not quite as showy as “Midnight Confusion,” but every bit as catchy (with sax!). But seriously…Especia’s entire identity seems to be “the idol-group with KILLER saxophone solos,” and I’m ok with this. Oh, added bonus! The remixes are great too, highlighted by city-pop lover Greeen Linez nailing it.

18. Sapphire Slows Allegoria

It swelters and pulses, urging you onto a dancefloor lit by only nearby neon signs. It encourages you to let loose, but even at its loosest and most swinging a bad feeling remains in your bones. It’s that voice, mainly…always near your ear but seemingly coming from the far back. Identifiable words sometimes make it through, but for the most part, it just bleeds together with the synths and rinky-dink beats, making the good time you were previously having feel wrong. Your hairs raise up…but you can’t walk away.

17. Mioriyuri Plastic Feather

Not content with the best Tweet of 2013 (and the runner-up Tweet of the year), beat-making duo Mioriyuri also came out of practically nowhere to release one of the strongest debut album from anyone this year. Finding a comparison to Plastic Feather isn’t easy…cuts like “Gulfy” and the sweaty “Miti” bring to mind American producer Clams Casino, but he’s never gotten as foreboding as this pair get on shiver-starter “You Are Still Inside Me” or the sex-dream-gone-menacing “Love Like Ice.” And he…and, like, a lot of producers falling in the “hip-hop beatmaker” sphere…has never sounded jubilant as Mioriyuri do on “Twinkiez,” a tune that practically glows. Still, the biggest surprise to me is that nobody tried rapping over any of these beats, as they are among the finest instrumentals I’ve heard anywhere this year. Nonetheless, hell of a start.

16. Kaela Kimura Sync

Although not technically released in 2013…rather, in the dead zone that is late December, when year-end lists are already starting to cool, Sync managed to stick around the entire year. Sync isn’t Kaela Kimura’s breakthrough, but it should be the album to cement her as one of the more creative pop artists in Japan today after the 2011 stunner 8Eight8. Sync highlights her versatility, Kimura choosing to have almost every song produced and arranged by a different person (only two people get more than one number). And, stylistically, the album is all over the place – not uncommon for Kimura, whose albums always seem like a collage of what’s hip in J-Pop, but more daring this time around. There are weak moments – the sleepy pair of “Sun Shower” and “Coffee,” and the album’s one stinker, a lazy cover of “Hello Goodbye” produced by Jim O’Rourke, who most have needed some extra scratch to cover his electricity bill that month – but Sync proves to be a strong listen, from the fidgety electro-pop of “Mamireru” and “So I” to rockers like “My Way” to easy-breezy “Cherry Blossom.” It also ended up with the year’s best commercial tie-in song, and a reminder why we should show no mercy for “Mirai No Museum” – her “Wonder Volt” was commissioned for the fucking Frankenweenie Japanese end credits, yet Kimura uses the opportunity to create one of the weirdest songs in her catalog.

15. Buddy Girl And Mechanic Buddy Girl And Mechanic

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In another year, this probably could have taken the top spot, as it fills the role on this list once occupied by She Talks Silence and Miila And The Geeks…who topped this blog’s previous end-of-year lists. It’s 2013’s most unsettling listen, a lurching shadow-dweller of an album that rarely ever takes a second to sound normal. The seven-minute opener starts skeletal as can be, before evolving into a fidgety sorta-Krautrock burner featuring echo-heavy vocals. It doesn’t sound intentionally creepy…that would be too easy. Most of the time, Buddy Girl And Mechanic’s songs sound like they are being held together with clear tape, the pieces dangling around (“Sexy,” the especially sparse “Buddy My Cloud”). Regardless of where it falls here, it’s a gem of an album.

14. Homecomings Homecoming With Me?

I got a Facebook message from a friend who I had been particularly shitty about keeping in touch with earlier this year, a person who means a lot to me but who left Japan. After apologizing for not getting back sooner (I truly did!), we got to talk about music. “Jah, you really got into anime rave music, didn’t you?” he wrote. He was write…some of my favorite music this year came from artists influenced by anime and the culture around it, and I spend a lot of time hanging out at Vocaloid club events and anime raves (went to one last Saturday!). Everyone on Maltine deserves some attention, even if I couldn’t peg one album they put out as making the top 20. My friend correctly noticed that what I liked in 2013 was a lot different than what I used to before.

But old habits die hard, especially when an album like Homecoming With Me? zips by.

Kyoto’s Homecomings can practically be created by twee algorithm. This quartet offers no new wrinkles or sudden swerves to indie-pop music…they can be linked to The Field Mice or Heavenly or Tiger Trap or whoever you want to pull out of your cardigan pocket. This is pure indie-pop pleasure, and I love it. Homecomings don’t wast anyone’s time, instead creating jogging verses that lead into ear-worm choruses overflowing with ennui (oh, and they are killer harmonizers). See indie-pop gems “You Never Kiss” and “Sunday,” wherein the still-college-enrolled-in-college outfit study the history of indie-pop and replicate it magnificently. Simple, sweet…and Homecomings stick with you. I’ll always have a place in my heart for this stuff.

13. Cuushe Butterfly Case

“I had the craziest dream last night,” a friend tells you over brunch, and you brace yourself for a wacky tale full of bizarre imagery and lols. Cuushe tells you that, and then she stares into your eyes and says “I love you.” Her label, Flau, and her have been perfecting her brand of dream-pop for some time now, yet what’s most striking about the music on Butterfly Case is how direct everything sounds. Every synth here sounds intimate, even when Cuushe puts on her own bedroom firework display on “Butterfly.” Every sounds blurs together, which manages to contain every simple word that comes from Cuushe. She is, wisely, not verbose, given these close quarters…the lyrics that emerge from the haze are simple sentiments that, when repeated many times, hit even harder. Which is especially true on the stunning “I Love You,” where she turns those three words into a mantra.


12. Sotaisei Riron Town Age

It’s a testament to how strong Town Age is sonically that you don’t have to understand a word of what Sotaisei Riron sing about to be drawn into it. Despite the fact that Etsuko Yakushimaru’s lyrics…previously often coming from the perspective of teenage girls, and veering towards the fantastical and sci-fi friendly…have been this group’s calling card since they formed. And look, in five years time, this could be ten spots higher or off the list entirely…but for now, Sotaisei Riron’s latest album stays because of how damn good it sounds. The group sound as dialed-in as ever, guitars and drums gracefully gliding over one another, but Town Age finds the band introducing some disconcerting sonic elements too. Opening track “Shanghai-an” begins with recorder, as if a kindergarten kid wandered in and the band decided to record it, before letting various random knick-knacks sound off. The final song here features some of the best, pulsating synths they’ve ever dabbled in, while highlight “YOU&IDOL” turns the steel drum into a mysterious presence on a song that seems to be coming from the perspective of an idol otaku. More than anything, though, is Yakushimaru’s squiggle of a voice, which might not show much range, but I’ve never heard anyone use a monotone as well as she does.

11. Hotel Mexico Her Decorated Post Love

This should be a coronation, not a band obituary. It shouldn’t feel like I’m bumping up Her Decorated Post Love up to just outside the top ten because it will be the last album (most likely) from one of the best Japanese bands of the last few years. Kyoto’s Hotel Mexico called it quits this past fall, after releasing a stellar debut single in “It’s Twinkle,” and a pretty good first album. And, in winter of 2013, this album. Heck of a final bow, right?

The thing is, as a conclusion for Hotel Mexico, Post Love sucks. Their second full-length was an overall improvement of everything introduced on their debut album – the music itself sounded more polished and less likely to use the word “chillwave” as an excuse for what could at times sound half-baked. Songs like “Boy” added extra force to that mid-day swelter, without abandoning any of the intriguing elements that made them jump out in the first place (sticking with that song, listen to those muffled vocals, how they drift in tandem with the music so well). It sounded smoother, more confident – check the guitar and bass lines on “G For Good,” or how the lead singer adopts a deep, strange delivery for that track and opener “Suicide Of Pops.” More than anything else, the songs just sound better written, with all sorts of twists and turns. I still get chills hearing those deep hoots at the start of “A.I. In Dreams,” and the entirety of the longing “A Space In The Loveless Field.”

Post Love is the sound of a band hitting their stride, and that’s why I hate this as a conclusion for Hotel Mexico. This should be the set-up for something bigger, and group finding their confidence and then soldiering forward to take the next artistic leap.Instead, Post Love will be trapped in time as the sound of a band forever running forward, approaching a mountain that never comes.

New Tomggg: Popteen

Not quite time to break out the year-end accolade around these parts yet…getting closer…and that’s good, because producer Tomggg just released a new three-song album via Maltine Records. Despite only boasting a trio of new material, Tomggg overloads almost every second of these numbers with sounds. Each song is named after a Japanese fashion magazine aimed at young women, so it is possible these cuteness-stuffed songs are meant to evoke those glossies teenage reader base. Well, good work – the skittery “ViVi” is skittery (Vocaloid?) vocals tripping over a cotton-candy storm of synths. It’s sort of what I wish CAPSULE’s Caps Lock explored more this year. “So-En” fakes out with a minimal introduction, but soon the wisps of digi voice enter in and the song transforms into a shifty dancefloor number. Best of all is the title track, a candy-coated bit of “EDM” (which is to say, there is a drop but wherein, say, Skrillex would aim for sonic schrapnell, Tomggg wants to show you his Candy Crush score). It’s delirious for us types who like dancing but don’t like the eye-rolling machoism. Get it here.

Music Alliance Pact December 2013

Time for the Music Alliance Pact! This is 2013’s last installment of MAP, where more than 30 blogs from all over the world share one song with everyone else. This month, Make Believe Melodies highlights Coffee And TV’s Prefab-Sprout-sample-boasting “Guess What? Summer’s Arrived.” Listen to it and a lot more below!

Click the play button icon to listen to individual songs, right-click on the song title to download an mp3, or grab a zip file of the full 27-track compilation through Ge.tt here.

JAPAN: Make Believe Melodies
Coffee And TVGuess What? Summer’s Arrived
It is one of the most factually incorrect song titles of the month, but Tokyo producer Coffee And TV conjures up the warm vibes of the summer on this track. He does so simply. With little manipulation, he finds a snippet of Hey Manhattan! by Prefab Sprout, loops it and milks it for all it’s worth. From this basic sonic material he manages to make an easy breezy song that’s good for any time of the year.

ARGENTINA: Zonaindie
Cam BeszkinCucharita De Manual
We came across Cam Beszkin’s music when she was a member of Las Bailarinas Anarquistas, Mariana Bianchini’s solo band. This song is from Cam’s sophomore album Este Amor Ya No Es Para Tanto, in which her potent vocals adds up to a solid guitar and drum rock duet.

AUSTRALIA: Who The Bloody Hell Are They?
House Of LaurenceJust Don’t Move Me
Let’s be real – if the industry was a caste system, psychedelic/prog music would sit on the lower rung. Thankfully, we don’t fear throwback in this country. We embrace it with open arms and wild, flailing John the Baptist hair. Just Don’t Move Me is the brand new track from Melbourne band House Of Laurence. If the image of Tame Impala’s Kevin Parker in a white pressed suit, struttin’ (barefoot) down the Fremantle boardwalk makes your insides feel like goo then this is dedicated to you.

AUSTRIA: Walzerkönig
Hella CometTinker Boat
The post-punk sound of four-piece Hella Comet calls for Sonic Youth comparisons, although their freshly-released second album Wild Honey, from which Tinker Boat is taken, is not afraid of pop either. Hella Comet were selected as one of 18 bands to represent this year’s focus country Austria at Europe’s most important music festival/conference Eurosonic.

BRAZIL: Meio Desligado
Castello BrancoNecessidade
Necessidade is taken from Castello Branco’s first album Serviço. It’s typical of the easygoing feeling he generates to make songs that speak directly to our souls.

CANADA: Quick Before It Melts
Rebekah HiggsLoneliness
Rebekah Higgs’ new release Sha La La is shot through with the spirit of 60s girl groups minus the innocence and politeness of those times. Higgs gets down and dirty climbing Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound. She throws classic doo-wop pop down an echo chamber and what comes out the other end is a gauzy, hazy doo-wop/drone-rock hybrid that’s utterly compelling. Loneliness has never sounded better.

CHILE: Super 45
Ali B & The Mayan WarriorWorld Class Bouncing
Ali B is the latest winner of Nuevos Sonidos, a demo contest Super 45 has hosted since 1997. She is a rapper who sings in three languages and mixes rhythms from all over the world. Her songs are homemade, built around an MPC and samples taken directly from vinyl. The jury of Super 45 was mesmerized by her infectious flow. Past winners of the Nuevos Sonidos contest include Gepe, Protistas and Fernando Milagros.

COLOMBIA: El Parlante Amarillo
Laura y La Máquina De EscribirLaberinto
La Máquina De Escribir (“The Typewriter”) is the project of Laura Torres, who has been involved in the world of music for more than two decades (since she was a little girl, obviously). From her piano, she recreates a world that reflects her feelings, which are evident in Laberinto, the track that gives its name to her 2013 album.

DENMARK: All Scandinavian
Sylvester LarsenThe End Of Dancing
In October, Sylvester Larsen released his fifth album (his second in English) The End Of Dancing, and here’s a MAP exclusive download of its great title track, which is reminiscent of soul and funk giants Stevie Wonder and Sly Stone. Also, check out the video for first single and album opener Stand Up.

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: La Casetera
Whitest Taino AlivePiel De Leather
We’ve chosen the newest sensation of Santo Domingo, just to see how the rest of the world reacts to its message. That is, if you can handle it. Full of non sequiturs only true Dominicans understand (or so we think), Whitest Taino Alive emerges as a futuristic hip-hop act that combines trap, trill, minimal electronic and naughtiness. Their debut EP Chopería Fina is out now and available for free.

ECUADOR: Plan Arteria
Ricardo PitaCanción Para El Resto De Los Días
Modern, hopeful and nostalgic bohemianism – that sums up the single Canción Para El Resto De Los Días by Ricardo Pita, a songwriter born in the heart of Guayaquil’s independent music scene. A musician with a great album and a promising career, Ricardo Pita is a must-listen if you want a vision of contemporary Latin folk music.

ENGLAND: Drowned In Sound
Lanterns On The LakeGreen And Gold (Generator Session)
From Sting and Prefab Sprout to Maxïmo Park and The Futureheads, the north-east of England has built a reputation for excellence, but it’s rare to uncover an act there, or anywhere, that’s as precious and heart-kickingly gorgeous as Lanterns On The Lake. They have elements of post-rock which make their tear-duct bothering sadness soar – not unlike the way Low construct epic melancholy. Their second album was recently released by Bella Union and it’s gorgeous. Watch the video of this live session track here.

FINLAND: Glue
Robin PahlmanGhosts
After relocating to Vienna via Seattle, Finnish songwriter Robin Pahlman has been working on a series of heartfelt acoustic folk home recordings that form his debut self-titled EP, recently released via Berlin-based label Monkey Records. Here is the inspiring single Ghosts.

GREECE: Mouxlaloulouda
The CallasEast Beat
Noisepop minimalism, raw garage melodies and kraut psychedelic elements meet to create the kaleidoscopic universe of The Callas’ album Am I Vertical? The group mix their experimental art and film background with an addiction to pop tunes to present a witty, truly impressive record that balances darkness and light, innocence and sin, joy and lust.

INDONESIA: Deathrockstar
Andrew NaratamaPutar Haluanmu
Putar Haluanmu is a retrospective song about memories and all the beautiful moments the singer had during his childhood with friends. Andrew Naratama is also a member of KarnaTra, a rock band from Jakarta.

ITALY: Polaroid
TempelhofChange
There’s no easy way to describe electronic music, especially when the sound explores multiple paths and you are constantly finding yourself in new territory. Tempelhof is an electronic duo from the town of Mantova and I think they are true explorers more than simple musicians. IDM, shoegaze, house, ambient – everything comes to build the striking sound that you will find in their new album Frozen Dancers, out now on Hell Yeah Recordings.

MEXICO: Red Bull Panamérika
Chico SonidoNiñas Fresas feat. Camila Sodi
Los Angeles-based Mexican producer Chico Sonido has just released his debut album Nalga Bass, which is quite a gamechanger for electropical music. In a market overcrowded with underdeveloped SoundCloud tracks, Chico delivers a coherently mixed record that transmutes and pushes forward genres such as nu-cumbia, trap, tribal and reggaeton, with a twist of humour and naughtiness. They’re good for headphones (and twerking too!).

PERU: SoTB
Daniel & The Dead End My Valentine
Daniel & The Dead End is the new project of Daniel Ruiz, the former Space Bee drummer. Having been abandoned by his band before recording, disillusioned and ready to rock, Daniel decided to do all the work himself, giving life to the first EP.

POLAND: Łukasz Kuśmierz Weblog
Armando SuzetteAdvent Mists
Armando Suzette is a Kraków-based band led by Mateusz Tondera. Their music, which combines a variety of genres and influences, is something unique in Poland and it’s impossible to describe it in one word. If you feel lost, Advent Mists is for you. As they sing: “Hope you have a real Christmas this time.”

PORTUGAL: Posso Ouvir Um Disco?
The Weatherman feat. Emmy CurlIt Took Me So Long
Alexandre Monteiro’s The Weatherman project has a new version of the single It Took Me So Long, taken from the latest album which will be released in Holland and Belgium in January. Emmy Curl, who was featured in the November 2010 edition of MAP, was invited to sing with Alexandre in the newer version of this track. Once again Alexandre confirms his high credentials as a composer, singer and creator of great pop songs. Mariana Lopes directed this great video.

PUERTO RICO: Puerto Rico Indie
BuscabullaTu Loco Loco Y Yo Tranquilo
Buscabulla is one of Puerto Rico’s most promising emerging acts, a breath of fresh air in a musical climate that often struggles to bridge pop smarts with heartfelt and engaging music. Singer Raquel Berríos and her band conjure an intoxicating mix of classic cool with more forward-thinking flourishes on the group’s first single Tu Loco Loco Y Yo Tranquilo, a cover of master composer Tite Curet Alonso’s song made popular in 1969 by salsa legends Roberto Roena y Su Apollo Sound. Buscabulla’s debut EP is due in 2014 – it’s going to be a good year.

ROMANIA: Babylon Noise
After WhatWho
After What is the side-project of the frontmen of two Romanian indie bands, The Amsterdams and The MOOod, both of whose influences are apparent – the music inherits the creativity of the former and the energy of the latter.

SCOTLAND: The Pop Cop
MedalsDisguises
JP Reid is a familiar name in rock circles through his band Sucioperro as well as Marmaduke Duke, the side-project he shares with Biffy Clyro frontman Simon Neil. JP Reid’s new venture Medals, however, is arguably his most appealing. Debut album Disguises is an honest, pop-focused body of work and its title track stands out as a refreshingly unapologetic crowd-pleaser that you’ll likely play again and again.

SOUTH KOREA: Korean Indie
Glen CheckPacific
Glen Check have been around since 2011 and already made quite a name for themselves at home. With a fanbase growing abroad, the duo is taking their rock and electronica sound to SXSW in 2014. The infectious electro-pop tune Pacific is the lead track off the band’s recently-released second album Youth!

SPAIN: Musikorner
Tiger Menja ZebraCom Començar Una Guerra
Tiger Menja Zebra was born from the ashes of Camping, a Catalan post-rock band that achieved great success in the past decade. With this new project, while sticking to the post-rock genre, they haven’t given up on pushing their boundaries.

UNITED STATES: We Listen For You
Está VivoHow Strange feat. Steffaloo
Está Vivo perfectly titled his newest offering, How Strange. It certainly is strange, yet extremely alluring due to a fascinating mixture of robot-esque male vocals and whimsical female vocals that take turns floating above churning electronics. Let the track simmer and it will certainly take hold as one of the more hypnotic listens of the year.

VENEZUELA: Música y Más
AspenAhora Ya
Aspen developed from the creative union between members of different bands. Influenced by the classic sound of British artists such as Badfinger and Oasis, their debut single boasts a slight psychedelic tinge. Aspen are one of the first bands on the roster of Macca Records, who also represent Los Paranoias.

Holiday Cheer: Annie The Clumsy’s Merry Little Christmas From My Messy Room

Getting older has resulted in a lot of changes in my behavior the 21-year-old me would recoil in terror at – I sometimes like wearing suits, for example, and love sushi (21-year-old me could barely eat pizza with vegetables on it, yet alone sushi). But he would be most distressed by how much I’ve come to enjoy Christmas music. I was eating dinner at a curry restaurant tonight, and found my foot tapping along with the piped-in music. Then I realized it was a smooth-jazz piano cover of “Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer.” I bobbed my head along to “Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas” as it played at my workplace. Younger me is sobbing into his Wolf Parade album while wondering why nobody wants to go on a date with him.

I like this current version of me, now, and it has allowed me to enjoy Annie The Clumsy’s little Christmas album, Merry Little Christmas From My Messy Room. She takes a break from the double entendres and subversive ukulele music she’s been releasing this year to record a straightforward, lovely little EP of Christmas songs. You get “Santa Baby” – which works well with the style she’s shown off this year – “Winter Wonderland” and a gather-round-the-fireplace-and-feel-good take on “The Christmas Song.” Let’s all embrace the holidays…and listen to this. Listen below, or get it here.

Bubbly Test: Firedrill’s Strawberry Karaoke EP

Datafruits is a little online radio station, which plays a wide range of music from all over the world – I flipped it on for this post, and I was greeted by a Japanese rapper doing his thing over a Clams Casino beat. They also release music, and their latest offering comes from the Tokyo-based artist Firedrill. The Strawberry Karaoke EP is a playful collection of fuzzy feelings and 8-bit memories wrapped up in dancefloor-ready sounds. Opener “Cute Garage” is a skippy number built out of big bright synths and a skittery beat…oh, and sounds from what I think are one of the Kirby video games. Like the best sorts of songs crossing over into the world of video games, Firedrill isn’t presenting cheap nostalgia (“remember this game, that ruled!”) or just coasting on bloops – those Kirby sounds are just another sonic detail, and a clever one at that. More ecstatic is the squiggly “Falling Girl,” the highlight here, which gives itself over completely to hi-definition escape. Get it here.