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Constant Hitmaker

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (191 ratings)
Constant Hitmaker album cover
01
Freeway
2:41 $0.99
02
Breathin Out
2:57 $0.99
03
Space Forklift
5:35 $0.99
04
Slow Talkers
3:00 $0.99
05
Trumpets In Summer
2:25 $0.99
06
Don't Get Cute
3:02 $0.99
07
Intro In Z
0:29 $0.99
08
Take My Advice
3:15 $0.99
09
Deep Sea
5:12 $0.99
10
Black Hands
1:43 $0.99
11
American Folded
1:28 $0.99
12
Best Love
3:22 $0.99
13
Classic Rock In Spring/Freeway In Mind
6:07 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 41:16

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

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Alex Naidus

eMusic Contributor

03.03.08
A set of great, breezy bedroom-pop gems
Label: Gulcher / Revolver

Kurt Vile's Constant Hitmaker has all the telltale signs of a bedroom-pop album: super-fake, tinny percussion, amateurish production technique and whispery, "don't wake up the roommates" vocals. Lo-fi, do-it-yourself indie rock has been around for years, but the advent of hyper-simple recording software has made it so someone like Vile, who's twiddling with a four-track or Garageband, can only stand out one way: with great songs. Luckily, Hitmaker has ones like "Breathin 'Out" — three minutes of rinky-dink drum machine, grain-silo reverb and an undeniable, see-sawing, mega-catchy melody. It's a joyous, buoyant guitar-pop song, played with charm and quirkily produced. There are wacky levels of delay on the guitar, like Vile was going for Roy Orbison but went too far and broke the knob off entirely.

Hitmaker is full of simple gems like "Breathin 'Out." Relying mostly on guitar, vocals and drum machine (primitive-Casio keyboards are sometimes used for added effect), Vile's best songs play like underwater versions of classic rock staples. "Freeway" is just a few chords, an excited, chirpy vocal melody and a looped, loping drum-bounce. The back half of the album lingers in at-home, D.I.Y. sound experiments and a couple of slower, muddy folk songs. The collage… read more »

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Give this a chance

michaeljseaton66

This guy is great - give the album a chance , It really grows and then hooks its way into your head. Please emusic get the rest of his albums for us.

user avatar

hmmm?

mccain007

Sounds like a cassette tape I made thirty years ago in high school when I was learning to play guitar.

user avatar

Love it!

Mrplatypus

The songs are catchy and have interesting and unusual lyrics, some nice guitar playing too. The simple homemade sounding production does not take anything away from this... it is just plain good music.

user avatar

easy to listen to, even easier to like

Otterpaws

kurt vile's songs slip into your head and slip into your heart. i understand that some people are over all this low fi stuff but kurt's the real deal. i second the ariel pink comparison but would say vile's less weird for weird sake, his songs more often stay on task.

user avatar

Thank god for Garageband...

lurrz

If it's making it easier for musicians like Kurt here to get their stuff out, then thank merciful Zeus for it indeed. Those of you with no fear of lo-fi have plenty to adore here. Insanely catchy melodies, fun lyrics and? AND? HANDCLAPS! Those of you with an aversion for stuff which hasn't been processed into oblivion, give this a chance and I doubt you'll have many complaints unless you mind whistling the same song a week after your first listen.

user avatar

Loooooo-fi...and yet....

timabouttown

Yes, it's redolent of laptop pop...but the pop sensibility is so razor sharp that, as fresh as this is, some of it sounds like it could have come from the radio strapped to your sissy bar as you rode through the late 60s into the early 70s. Quirky where Ariel Pink is strange, song-y where Atlas Sound is impression-y. Even if you don't know (or like) those guys, know this: on a very short list of the year's best.

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They Say All Music Guide

He’s no R. Stevie Moore — yet — but Philadelphia homebody Kurt Vile is definitely as much of an acolyte to the home-recording mastermind as Ariel Pink: prior to Constant Hitmaker, his first “proper” album, Vile self-released a steady stream of homemade CD-Rs and the occasional 7″ single, many consisting of solo acoustic songs, often instrumentals heavily indebted to John Fahey and his acolytes. There’s a little of that on Constant Hitmaker, but overall, this 13-track set features the singer/songwriter’s lo-fi pop side. The “lo-fi” part of that sentence should likely take precedence over the “pop”: not since pre-Bee Thousand Guided by Voices has there been an artist so philosophically devoted to the concept of muddy sound, echoing vocals, bad mixing, and tape hiss as a deliberate musical element. What makes Constant Hitmaker a compelling listen even for those not attuned to such deliberately primitive acoustics is that for every bit of self-indulgent experimental noise like “American Folded” or “Intro in Z,” there are three immediately arresting pop gems like “Don’t Get Cute,” “Freeway,” and “Trumpets in Summer.” Playful and experimental without getting too pretentious about it, Kurt Vile has the goods to be more than a tiny cult figure for the home recording underground. – Stewart Mason

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