TRACK REVIEW: “Give It Up”

htrk1I wouldn’t consider myself an especially devout David Lynch fan, but I love Twin Peaks rabidly and uncritically, and I watch the show in its entirety at least once every winter. Never when the weather’s warm. My theory is this: something to do with frigidness, and the overarching quiet that comes along with a thick blanket of snow, demands a Lynchian blend of detached dreaminess and surreality. So maybe the recent snowstorms and having Laura Palmer on the brain is to blame for the way I feel about this track–it’s otherworldly, it’s vaguely sinister, and it’s an utterly appropriate backdrop for the weather these days. 

Duo HTRK claim an affinity with Lynch’s aesthetics; you can hear a kinship in the hypnotic chilliness of the melody, the scratched-out echoing synthesizers that ripple outwards as if a pebble’s been dropped into the beat of the song. Church-organ reverberations in minor mode plod menacingly up and down in the periphery, like mystery men in black trench coats and low-brimmed hats. The repetitive, androgynous vocals add to the sense of uncanny that characterizes this track.

HTRK stir some real polish into this mix, too–with glitzy production and a beat that suggests driving fast on open roads late at night, in a deserted city or through an empty stretch of highway. The sultry and foreign landscape that the song creates provides a space in which to detach from the outside world, whether in the dubious isolation of a dream space or nestled into the warmth and stillness inside a fast-moving car. The group’s new LP, Psychic 9-5 Club, will be out in 2014 and promises an expansive and rich musical landscape. For now, listen to “Give It Up” below:

YEAR END LIST: Best Soundtracks of 2013

Soundtrack

We all know that music has the ability to make or break a cinematic moment.  Would Jaws be as scary if it weren’t for the theme song? Or would we cry as hard when Leo Dicaprio sunk to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean if Celine Dion didn’t belt “My Heart Will Go On” every five minutes? Probably not. Creating the perfect soundtrack is no easy task. This list details my favorite soundtracks of 2013.

 

10. Girl Rising

Girl Rising is a documentary film directed by Richard E. Robbins. The film profiles nine girls from different parts of the world who face adversity and injustice in their struggle to receive an education.  Each profile is written by a famous writer from their respective countries of origin. The soundtrack is composed by Rachel Portman and Lorne Balfe. With unique songs drawing from the World Music, this soundtrack accompanies each of the girls on their journeys. It subsequently takes the listener on a trip around the world, from Cambodia, Haiti, Nepal, Egypt, Ethiopia, India to Peru.

9. Something in the Air

Something in the Air is a French drama directed by Olivier Assayas. The film takes place in France during the events leading up to the May 1968 strikes and boycotts. The soundtrack is a mixture of politically charged rock and folk songs from the period. From Phil Ochs’ “Ballad of William Worth” to Captain Beefheart’s “Abba Zaba,”  this soundtrack succeeds in choosing appropriate yet unobvious songs to compliment the political turmoil in the film.

8. Spectacular Now 

Rob Simonsen scored The Spectacular Now, a romantic drama directed by James Ponsoldt and written by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber (500 Days of Summer). Rob Simonsen is a veteran when it comes to scoring films (his prolific body of work includes Moneyball, Little Miss Sunshine and The Life of Pi).  All twenty of Simonsen’s instrumental tracks vary in style and composition. While some tracks feature horns (“My Name is Sutter Keely”) others are minimal (“Walk in the Trees”).  Among the best tracks are “Walk in the Trees,” “Im’ing Cassidy,” and “Sutter and Amy.” Phosphorescent, Kurt Vile and Ariel Pink & Dam-Funk  are also featured on this soundtrack.

7. The Lords of Salem 

While I’m rarely a fan of horror movie soundtracks, Rob Zombie’s  are always so over the top that they add an almost comedic element to the film. His most recent horror flick, The Lords of Salem, includes an eclectic range of genres, featuring a combination of punk, metal, funk and classic rock. Highlights include “Give it to me Baby” (Rick James), “All Tomorrow’s Parties” and “Venus in Furs” (The Velvet Underground).

 

6. 42

Written and directed by Brian Helgeland, 42 is a bio pic about Jackie Robinson. Regardless of the fact that Jay-Z’s “Brooklyn Go Hard”, was featured in the trailer, the actual soundtrack is time period appropriate.  Featuring rock and roll (Hank Williams and Wynonie Harris) gospel (Sister Wynona Carr) and jazz (Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole and Duke Ellington), 42’s soundtrack is a collage of early 20th century African American musicians.

5. What Maisie Knew  

What Maisie Knew is a drama about a young girl dealing with her parent’s divorce and the ensuing custody battle.  Devotchka’s frontman, Nick Urata, scored nine instrumental tracks off of this original soundtrack, which also includes Lucy Schwartz’s “Feeling of Being (What Maisie Knew),” and two collaborative tracks with Julianne Moore (who knew she could sing!?) and The Kills.

4. Ginger and Rosa

Ginger and Rosa is a dramatic film about two teenage girls living in London in 1962.  The movie documents the strain on their friendship within the political and cultural turmoil of the time. While I expected the soundtrack to consist of 60s rock and roll, the Ginger and Rosa soundtrack features a mixture of traditional jazz music. The soundtrack is littered with jazz favorites, including tracks by Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Django Reinhardt and Les Paul.

3. A Place at the Table 

Directed by Kristi Jacobson and Lori Silverbush, A Place at the Table explores hunger in America through examining stories of Americans experiencing food insecurity.  The mostly instrumental soundtrack is a collaboration between prolific rocker, T Bone Burnett, and folk/rock duo, The Civil Wars.  It includes four The Civil Wars songs, seven T Bone Burnett songs, and three duets to create an amalgamate of blues, country, folk and bluegrass.

 

2. Inside Llewyn Davis

If you’ve ever seen a Coen Brothers movie, you will know that their soundtracks are always impeccable. Therefore, when I discovered that Inside Llewyn Davis was about a 1960s Greenwich Village folk singer, I had extremely high expectations. Some of the music on this album was to be expected. Greenwich Village folk staples Bob Dylan and Dave Van Ronk, for instance, are featured. More interestingly, many of the actors in the movie are also featured on the soundtrack.  In fact, one of the strongest songs on the soundtrack is “Five Hundred Miles,” sung by Justin Timberlake (who makes his folk music debut in this film) and Carey Mulligan. Current Americana bands such as The Down Hill Strugglers and Marcus Mumford of Mumford and Sons are also featured.

1. Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby might seem like an obvious choice, but I don’t care. Produced by Jay-Z and The Bullitts, The Great Gatsby soundtrack did an excellent job at exposing the parallels between the ostentatious displays of the wealth of the upper class in the 1920s and that of today. All of the songs on this album have similar themes of youth, wealth, and unhealthy romantic entanglements. The soundtrack was probably actually the best part of the movie. Highlights include “Together” by The xx, Beyonce & Andre 3000’s version of “Back to Black,” and “Love is Blindness” by Jack White.

AF LIVE: Spike Hill 12/18

Live Music

Ooooh, we’re having a showcase! Please join us on 12/18 at Spike Hill in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and peep some local bands who we believe should be heard and seen. Doors are at 730 and the show is free. Below please find artist profiles of the talent we booked. We hope to see you there!

 

8PM: Wildcat Apollo

Wildcat Apollo

Formed in 2012 by Alex Margolin and brothers Taylor and Aaron Eichenseer, with lead singer Cat Tassini completing the indie rock/synthpop band a few months later, Wildcat Apollo released their debut full-length in October of this year. The 12-track eponymous record combines elements of garage rock and dancey shoegaze, full of catchy bass lines and innovative guitar hooks.

AF: We read that you guys are planning to make a permanent move to Austin, TX to join your bandmate Aaron. How do you anticipate that move influencing your sound, or inspiring each of you musically?

 Cat: Well, we’ll all be together, so we’ll be writing together and growing together musically and just feeling more like a unit.  I think Austin’s more relaxed vibe will definitely sink into our skin and come out in our music.  It’s Aaron, Taylor and Alex’s hometown, and even though it’s not mine, I love it there, and I think we’ll all feel really comfortable and confident.  And of course all the festivals and venues there will inspire us to be on top of our game.

AF: You all seem to share a lot of instrumental duties within the band (Cat and Alex both doing percussion and synth, Taylor and Aaron both on guitars). Do you also share songwriting duties? How do you generally go about collaborating as individual artists to create your music?

 Taylor: Everybody in our group contributes to the songwriting; there’s certainly no set process as to how we develop a new song.  It’s a mixed bag.  Sometimes there is an independent writing process going on, where one member will come to the group with a decently formed concept and everybody else is left to fill in the blanks.  Like when I was working at an after-school program and the fourth graders would take pink highlighters and glitter and brown and purple crayons to sketches I would do in my notebook.  Collaboration breeds magic.  You can’t be afraid to let your vision grow into something bigger.  But we also do a lot of jamming and recording of jamming with a loop pedal or on a computer.  This is great because it lets the music be the guide and you can turn your brain off and just let it flow and figure out what happened after the fact.  It’s how we express ourselves, by shutting up and playing.  Also, that everyone is artistically motivated in our group is a real blessing, because we hold each other accountable to be our absolute best.

AF: Where’s some of your current inspiration coming from?

 Cat:  I’ve been listening to Lorde, Miley Cyrus, and Sky Ferreira all week.  Taylor:  Brutally honest self-reflection.

AF: Cat, you’ve said you had no previous experience being in a band before you joined Wildcat Apollo last year. What are some of the things you’ve learned along the way, so far?

 Cat: The biggest lesson I’m learning is giving up control.  My artistic life before the band was dominated by directing.  I was doing performance and video projects where I would handle almost everything and I’d just work with a friend or two on it.  I came up with the idea, figured out all the details and made sure it all happened.  So I didn’t have to depend on anyone else.  But I missed the camaraderie of being a part of a cast and a crew.  And eventually I felt limited and wanted to work with more people, people who were better than me.  And in my the rest of my life, I was traveling and trying different jobs, floating around in the post-collegiate nebulous phase, just being totally free and independent, but also feeling confused and angsty.  And then I got drawn into the band, which sort of came out of nowhere, but gave me a great sense of belonging and gave my life a direction.  But I had to learn how to be a part of a team again and do it in a brand new context.  And that context was a group of guys who had been playing music together their whole lives, so that was intimidating.  Also I tend to have really strong artistic visions, so I had to learn to trust my bandmates and not just reject an idea because it’s different from the idea in my head.  It’s something that I’ll have to keep learning over and over again: how to disregard my perfectionist control freak instincts and just trust the process and the people around me.   Also, I recently co-directed one of our music videos and worked with Bull Moose Pictures on it, and it was a wonderful experience.  So I’m learning and I’m happy the band is giving me an opportunity to experience that.

AF: Since it’s the end of the year and all, what are each of your New Year’s resolutions?

Aaron:  To really push boundaries sonically and to embrace new technology in the song writing process.

Alex:  To find a job.

Cat:  Mine is always to be better with time and money.

Taylor:  To release another, better record by year’s end.

Wildcat Apollo wishes to thank you, Annie, and everyone at AudioFemme for the tremendous opportunity to take part in your monthly showcase, especially considering the abundance of great music in Brooklyn and on the internet at large.

*Aw, yr welcome, Wildcat Apollo. Can’t wait to hear you play tonight!

Listen to “Gotham”, here, via Bandcamp:

 

 

9PM: New Politicians

New Politicians

New Politicians have been building some great hype with their two EPs, Alpha Decay and Drag A City, both released earlier this year. Their self-described post-punk sound has a gritty and straight-forward aesthetic, paired with melancholic lyrics. The four piece band are set to accomplish a lot more in the coming year.

AF: How did you guys come together as a band? Are you all still based out of New Jersey?

Gian:  All four of us are currently based out of New Jersey. Around the time the band was formed though, I was living in Philadelphia attending college and Renal was working in Manhattan. We would share files via email and then come home to Centerville on the weekends to jam. As brothers, Renal and I have always connected over music and have been writing together since we were young. Winston and I went to school together and had been playing in a few projects before the idea for New Politicians was formed. When I tracked the demos for some of our first songs, I brought it to them and we decided to form a band around it.

Q: Your two EPs were released about 6 months apart. How do you think you developed as a band in that time and in what ways are the two releases unique from each other?

Gian: Well, since the release of Alpha Decay we’ve had a lot of opportunities to play live in New York and New Jersey which has given us plenty of experience playing together as a group. We recently recruited a new drummer, Chris, who allowed us to implement a pretty rigorous practice schedule that’s been refining our skills collectively and individually as well. From the song writing aspect I think there is a continuity between the songs on both EP’s. The only major difference is that Drag a City was self-produced at home in our apartment where we didn’t feel the restrictions of time and money during the process. That allowed us to take control of our sound for the first time and we ended up with a record that we’re really proud of.

 Q: Your most recent EP includes a song titled “Are We The Dining Dead?,” presumably a reference to the Eternal Sunshine line. What other non-musical sources do you draw inspiration from?

Renal: Why yes, it is a reference to Eternal Sunshine. At the time of writing the lyrics to that particular song I had finally gotten around to watching the movie from beginning to end. Lyrically, I tend to draw most of my inspiration from life experiences as well as books and movies. Finding connections between my life and what I am reading or watching helps me generate multiple perspectives. While we were writing for the Drag a City EP, I had just finished reading Tender Is the Night and “Winter Dreams”, both Fitzgerald stories that served as a catalyst for my ideas.

 Q: What’s the story with your band name?

Gian: Renal came up with the name New Politicians and when he brought it to the group we immediately liked the irony of calling a rock band “politicians.” It’s more tongue-in-cheek than it is a deep statement or anything. However, a lot of truth is said in jest.

 Q: What are your plans and goals for the upcoming year? A full-length release, perhaps?

Gian: We’re planning to play as many shows as we can in support of Drag a City as well as continue to promote the record with the goal of receiving some label attention.  So far there’s been a lot of positive feedback on our social media sites and we hope to continue to gain new fans throughout 2014. A full-length isn’t completely out of the question but we feel we don’t currently have access to the resources necessary to make a quality debut record. Regardless we will continue to write, record, and build our song catalog so who knows what the future holds for New Politicians.

Listen to “The Length Of Our Love” here, via Bandcamp

 

10 PM: Wild Leaves

Wild Leaves

This folksy five-piece and their “sun-drenched harmonies” sound like a far cry from Brooklyn’s cityscape, but the fresh local band is making waves with their debut EP, Wind & Rain. The 7-track release is a confident showcase of their wispy, nostalgic melodies, which are sure to bring some comfort and warmth to our showcase!

AF: How and when did you guys come together as a band?

 WL: Wild Leaves officially formed as band in January of 2011. But its roots run much deeper.  We had the pleasure of being friends in college, moving to Brooklyn together, and experiencing a similar struggle to find our respective places in the world. The band formed in the midst of that struggle as we began to articulate the challenges we experienced, through songs. Starting with intimate two-piece performances in our Crown Heights apartment, and growing into regular gigs, across the city, as a five-piece.

AF: What are you focusing on right now? Any plans in place for 2014?

 WL: We just recorded a new batch of songs a couple weeks ago so we are mixing them now. This is a fun part of the process because a lot of the pressure is off (temporarily) The songs are what they are at this point and we get to just focus on putting the whole presentation together.  We’re looking to do a release in early 2014 followed by massive amounts of touring.  We’ve got people to see all across this beautiful country.

AF: Seven tracks is a good amount for an EP. Why did you decide to go with an EP release and not a full-length album debut?

 WL: Ultimately it came down to releasing something that encapsulated a moment. We had a bunch of songs that didn’t make the cut because they felt ancillary to the place we were in.  Recording those seven songs was a turning point in our collective time together in this city. A lot of work had gone into our transition and the songs were a away of acknowledging the past, while still embracing the future.

AF: What are your long-term goals for the band? Where do you anticipate going from here?

WL: Our long-term goal as a band is to write songs powerful enough to change the world. One of the major driving forces in our creative process is the open conversation we maintain with the people we come across on the road.  Whether its through lyrics, a performance, or a conversation after the show, we view each experience as an opportunity to exchange ideas and hopefully make the world a better place.

AF: What are your New Year’s Eve plans this year? Any parties, shows, etc?

 WL: Our new years plans are to lay low and spend some quality time with our loved ones.  It’s been a wonderfully busy year. We played something like sixty shows, made new friends in many new places, but didn’t spend a lot of time at home.  Winter is the perfect time for reflection and recuperation.

Listen to “Everyone”, here, via Bandcamp:

 

After the live show, stick around for dancing, courtesy of the ever-wild, B-Tips, who’ll be spinning all your faves til late.

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NEWS: Wayne Coyne goes on record store tour

Flaming lips

Flaming Lips frontman Wayne Coyne will hit the road this Thursday, December 19th, for what is being billed as his Record Store Tour. Coyne will be meeting and greeting fans and signing copies of the Lips’ first-ever EP, The Flaming Lips 1st EP, and The Flaming Lips 2nd Cassette Demo.

Wayne will be selling an extremely Limited Edition version of the EP which will be housed with a hand-crafted, custom-made solid chocolate skull. Anatomically correct and life-sized, of course. Each skull will contain a special Golden Coin that is redeemable as admission to any headline show by the band in the world. See below for all of Coyne’s upcoming tour stops.

This product contains quite a substantial amount of high-quality, gourmet chocolate accompanied by tthe very earliest music created by The Flaming Lips in their original incarnation and pressed onto color vinyl.  A feast for the senses, indeed.

The Flaming Lips 1st EP  will be available as a limited edition 12-inch on green vinyl and signed by Coyne. The last time this recording was available on vinyl was in 1986. It was originally recorded in two sessions at Benson Sound in 1984 and released on the group’s homemade label Lovely Sorts of Death Records. This edition has been remastered by Lips bassist Michael Ivins and given a reimagined cover by freak artist Charlie Immer.

Also for sale, will be The Flaming Lips 2nd Cassette Demo (recorded in 1983), which will be available as a limited-edition 7″ on blue vinyl, also signed by Coyne. Originally recorded in 1983, it captures the group in a transition from its primitive shambolic drug-damaged punk-pop to the primitive shambolic drug-damaged hallucinogenic cosmic brother death rock heard on the 1st EP. The music has been remastered by Lips drummer Kliph Scurlock and the cover photo is by Wayne’s brother, Dennis Coyne. Both items go on sale from participating record store retailers on December 24th and only 2,000 copies of each piece will be made available.

Wayne Coyne’s Record Store Tour:

12/19 @ 4pm       Nashville, TN        Grimey’s

12/20 @ Noon     Louisville, KY       Guestroom Records

12/20 @ 8 pm      Chicago, IL           Permanent Records

12/21 @ 5 pm      St. Louis, MO       Vintage Vinyl

12/22 @ 5 pm      Lawrence, KS       Love Garden Sounds

The Flaming Lips upcoming shows:

12/29    @ 7 pm                  Broomfield, CO                  1stBank Center

12/30     @ 9 pm                 Aspen, CO                        Belly Up

12/31    @ 9:30 pm             Aspen, CO                         Belly Up

01/10     @ 3:30 pm            Squaw Valley, CA               The Last Chair Festival

01/26                                  Riviera Maya, Mexico         My Morning Jacket One Big Holiday

01/27                                  Riviera Maya, Mexico         My Morning Jacket One Big Holiday

01/28                                  Riviera Maya, Mexico         My Morning Jacket One Big Holiday

01/29                                  Riviera Maya, Mexico         My Morning Jacket One Big Holiday

01/30                                  Riviera Maya, Mexico         My Morning Jacket One Big Holiday

03/08                                  Tampa, FL                          Gasparilla Music Festival

03/21                                  New Orleans, LA                BUKU Music + Art Project

03/22                                  New Orleans, LA                BUKU Music + Art Project

YEAR END LIST: Top 10 unexplainable Kanye moments

Kanye

It’s been a weird year for Kanye West; although really, with Kanye, what year isn’t weird? He’s become renowned for his crazy shenanigans, which most of us are now familiar with. From his “George Bush doesn’t care about black people” slip in 2005 to his infamous “I’ma let you finish” bluster at the 2009 MTV VMAs, Mr. West has built up quite a reputation for himself. His musical talent has remained impressive throughout his 6-album career (Yeezus easily made several of this year’s “best of” lists, from SPIN to AV Club) but Kanye’s persona has been the subject of parody and scandal for a long time now.

This year, though, held several moments of Kanye-crazy that stood out among the plethora of examples from his memorable past. Before we head into 2014—a year which is sure to see many more unsurprising surprises from Kanye—I’d like to take a walk through the most bizarre Kanye West moments of the year.

10. SNL teaser

Back in the spring, Kanye performed on SNL when Ben Affleck hosted. The performance itself was fine, but the promo teaser was incredibly awkward. Kanye, Affleck and Fred Armisen are standing around, trying to make jokes. Kanye merely stands there, delivering his lines with no real expression on his face. I don’t know what he was going for there. Unfortunately, NBC is pretty good at taking promos of SNL off the air shortly after they’re over, so there is no footage available for us to relive this awkward moment.

9. Naming his child North

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Celebrities essentially run the crazy-baby-name game. It’s almost as if famous children are expected to be scared for life by the crazy “creative” ideas their parents come up with. Apple? Suri? Blue Ivy? It’s just a thing they do. Kanye joined the game by naming his child with now-fiance Kim Kardashian North. This might not be so bad if his last name weren’t West. I don’t know what the influence for this was, but there can’t be any explanation worthy of this horrible decision. I liked Kimye better.

8. Dressing Kim Kardashian

I remember watching an episode of Keeping Up With the Kardashians a while ago when Kim and Kanye first made their relationship public.  There was a scene where Kim was struggling with emptying her entire closet. Kanye had made her a deal that if she got rid of her wardrobe, he would buy her a complete new one. Ever since then, there has been a clear Kanye influence on her style. She has become more, um, adventurous, and not always in the best way. At the Met Gala, she wore a floor-length, floral Ricardo Tisci gown. With attached floral gloves. And a high collar. It was incredibly unflattering to the pregnant, curvy Kardashian. Girl can afford to hire a stylist that isn’t her wanna-be designer boyfriend, and she should.

7. Comparing his tour stunts to being a police officer or soldier

“Kanye did another interview and said some things that got people angry” could be the lead of most stories about Kanye this year. Recently, he did an interview with Saturday Night Online where he compared the stunts he performs on his tour to the adversities that police officers and soldiers are faced with on duty. This was incredibly insulting. And Brimfield Ohio police chief David Oliver took to his Facebook page (which is a popular outlet for the chief to talk to the residents — I attended college in the town next to Brimfield and can vouch that the page is well-known in the community) to reprimand Kanye for his insensitive assertions. But it wasn’t the first time Kanye offended someone, and it probably won’t be the last.

6. Bringing Jesus on tour

When Kanye does a concert, he is meticulous in its planning and execution. So, in keeping with the Yeezus themes, he had an actor dress up as Jesus during the opening night of his Yeezus tour. He called him “white Jesus” and apparently squealed with glee, then performed “Jesus Walks.”

5. Being a genius all the time

This isn’t anything new, but this year, Kanye seemed to take time repeatedly to remind us that he considers himself a genius. This may be true, but why does he need to keep saying it about himself? He may feel empowered by it, but the rest of us just feel that it is celebrity self-worship at it’s most banal. A little humility goes a long way: something he has yet to figure out.

4. BBC Interview

I don’t have enough room here to describe all the crazy that went on during this interview. The highlight? Probably the “Fendi leather jogging pant.” If you haven’t seen the video, check it out.

 

3. “Visionary streams of consciousness”

Sometimes, when Kanye feels the need to say something, he just really goes for it. Lately, this has taken the form of ranting during interviews, or even live shows. During a tour stop at Madison Square Garden, Kanye took a break from performing to go on a confusing, nonsensical rant, which apparently he has referred to as one of his “visionary streams of consciousness.” Few topics were spared as he talked about being a genius, The Hunger Games, classism, how he feels boxed into his role as a musician, and how much he apparently wants to design clothes. He also dismisses people who want things just to be cool, yet in previous interviews says that making cool things is essentially what life is about. Maybe he blacks out during these streams of consciousness?

2. Jimmy Kimmel Face

After the BBC interview with Zane Lowe aired, Jimmy Kimmel’s team got ahold of the footage and decided to recreate several interesting moments of the interview, using children to play Lowe and Kanye. It was a childish (pun intended) move, as the bit delivered several of Kanye’s answers without context, and selected specifically to make Kanye appear foolish. However, once Kanye found out about Kimmel’s stunt, things got weird real quick. He took to Twitter to rant — in all caps, typical Kanye style — about Kimmel. One rant went so far as to talk about Kimmel’s face, accompanied by a Photoshopped photo of Spongebob Squarepants, hands framing his face, with the words “Jimmy Kimmel Face Motherfucker” surrounding the photo. It was straight up cray.

1. “Bound 2”

It was so awkward, Seth Rogen and James Franco had to do a mock video (Bound 3) to emphasize how awkward it was. As if that wasn’t obvious in the original. Essentially, the video is Kanye either riding on a motorcycle with Kim Kardashian  bouncing naked in front of him, facing him, or him standing in front of the camera rapping. There were also intermittent scenes of horses running and some type of canyon/desert. The Franco/Rogen version has Franco in the role of Kanye and Rogen in the role of Kim. It’s a scene-by-scene recreation of the video, which is all it takes to point out the ridiculousness of it all.

 

**Don’t get me wrong, I’m a huge Kanye fan, and Yeezus was one of my favorite albums this year. I just think Kanye is ridiculous, and I constantly can’t decide if I love it or hate it.**

 

YEAR END LIST: Top 7 To Anticipate

 Colourful 2014 in fiery sparklers

I’ll be honest: 2013 wasn’t the best year for me. I had my moments (like joining AudioFemme, for one), but overall this past year had a few more downs than ups in my experience. So I’m ready for 2014 and determined to make it a good one no matter what—although, by the looks of it, I’m not going to have to try too hard. Between the exciting festival rumors and anticipated album releases, 2014 is already shaping up to be a pretty amazing year (at least musically speaking). Here are some of the reasons I’m counting down the days until that New Year:

Outkast’s reunion at Coachella

outkast-reunion-big-boi-andre-3000

Rumors of Big Boi and Andre 3000 ending their hiatus began in November and got everyone (including myself, obviously) up in a tizzy. It’s been a decade since the hip hop juggernauts performed on a stage together (and twenty years since the release of their debut full-length, Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik) and their reunion at the April 2014 festival (confirmed most recently by Outkast collaborator Sleepy Brown) will be a welcome jolt for the hip-hop genre overall.

Album releases from longtime favorites and newcomers

February ’14 is going to be a particularly big month for music. Highly anticipated new releases from Beck, St. Vincent, and Neneh Cherry (her first solo effort in 16 years—check out our review of her album’s title track here) are all coming out in February, and that’s just the beginning of a long list of albums to look forward to. Keep an eye out for new work from NPR and Spotify’s “artists to watch” Banks and Sam Smith (among others) as well.

Gary Richards Planning All-Female Event

Music executive and founder/CEO of HARD events Gary Richards revealed in a recent interview with Wildspice Magazine that he’s got some thoughts about putting on a festival with an exclusively female lineup (think modern-day Lilith Fair, or so we hope). Richards described his idea, saying “I have a concept for a show that’s all girl performers… It’s not a 70,000 person event. But I do see more females coming up and… I’m definitely gonna do it 2014.” Here’s to hoping this amazing opportunity for female artists/musicians/DJs actually pans out.

New venues 

brooklyn-postcard2

With brand new places opening up around Brooklyn, 2014 is sure be replete with amazing indie shows all around the borough. We’re especially excited about Baby’s All Right in Williamsburg, Radio in Bushwick, and Friends and Lovers in Crown Heights—all three of these amazing new spaces have already put on some great shows with some of BK’s favorite local bands. We’ll take this as a sign of more venues and concerts to come in the next twelve months.

The festivals

2014 is looking like it’ll host an unforgettable festival season, with the released lineup for SXSW alone offering enough to get your blood pumping. The Austin, TX festival’s confirmed acts include Kevin Drew, Tinariwen, the So So Glos, Sage Francis, Black Lips, Diarrhea Planet, Blouse, Avi Buffalo, Phantogram, and hundreds more (with even more to be added as the festival draws near). Rumors circulating the blogosphere are also hinting at a pretty exciting Glastonbury (Pixies and Arcade Fire) and indicating that acts like HAIM, Neutral Milk Hotel, Justin Timberlake, and Prince are all going to be hitting up some of our favorite fests in 2014.

Hamilton Leithauser’s solo album in spring

Among all the confirmed album releases for next year, this is perhaps the most intriguing. The Walkmen’s distinguished lead vocalist Hamilton Leithauser has announced that he’s embarking on a solo venture with the help of friends Rostam Batmanglij (Vampire Weekend), Richard Swift (the Shins), fellow Walkmen member Paul Maroon, and Morgen Henderson (Fleet Foxes). With such a solid backing band, we can only assume this album is going to be a standout for 2014.

Tours

With new releases come national tours, and 2014 will see a whole slew of unmissable shows from bands like the Broken Bells and War on Drugs. War on Drugs is making a particularly exciting return, not only with the March ’14 release of their third album Lost in the Dream (a follow-up to their critically acclaimed 2011 sophomore release) but also with their Springtime North American tour. Several other bands are sure to release tour dates as the year goes on, so keep a careful watch!

Track of the Week 12/16: “Flawless”

beyonce-chanel-chain-bootsLast week, Beyonce did what only Beyonce could do. She released a new album, unannounced, accompanied by music videos for each song. In an interview explaining her creative process, she stated that when she listens to music, she naturally sees its intended vision. For her, music and vision are one, and that is proven time and again throughout this groundbreaking endeavor.

Beyonce was a pioneer in the now common practice of releasing singles prior to an album, in attempts, for her, to gain  more creative control over her work. Now she is taking the reigns once again, releasing her album unannounced to the world , in a highly unprecedented move.

The track of the week is “***Flawless.” I could have picked a more sentimental, meaningful song, like “Blue” that captures Beyonce’s motherly role and what has become most important to her in life, but the song is just so infectious and yet also has a great message. While a good chunk of the album is especially sensual in nature, Queen Bey changes direction to bust out “***Flawless,” (clips of which were featured on last spring’s “Bow Down/I Been On”), which likely would have been the hit single had she followed the typical album release trajectory.

Beyonce is at her best when she is being a badass feminist. Past hits like “Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It),” “Irreplaceable,” “Diva” and “Run the World (Girls)” center on women taking their lives into their own hands and not depending on a man. The diva is back again for “***Flawless,” where she once again asserts herself in the world and reminds us all how powerful women are. It’s an incredibly empowering track.

However, Bey doesn’t spread this message alone. She takes a sampling of Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche during a talk at TEDxEuston titled “We should all be feminists.” She speaks about girls being held back by society from a young age, and having the world reinforce the idea that motherhood is all they should amount to. Adiche questions these assertions in saying:

“Because I am female

I am expected to aspire to marriage

I am expected to make my life choices

Always keeping in mind that

Marriage is the most important

Now marriage can be a source of

Joy and love and mutual support

But why do we teach to aspire to marriage

And we don’t teach boys the same?

We raise girls to see each other as competitors

Not for jobs or for accomplishments

Which I think can be a good thing

But for the attention of men”

Beyonce backs up this sentiment with her words “I took some time to live my life/ But don’t think I’m just his little wife/ Don’t get it twisted/Get it twisted/ This my shit/ Bow down, bitches.” Beyonce is saying that she made the choice to get married and start a family, but that she will not be overlooked because she stepped back for a while. She is still the talented artists she was before she made those choices, and she’s going to show us all what she can do now that she has made a family of her own. Yes, she’s telling bitches to bow down, but it’s promoting the healthy competition that women need to be encouraged to display more often in work.

Queen Bey is back — with an edge. And we all better listen up, because we might learn a thing or two.

Watch the official video for “Flawless” Here:

TRACK REVIEW: “Comfortable Life”

Comfortable life for you, always a comfortable life for you. I used to think it was true, we all get as fucked over as I do. But now I know It don’t happen to you, ‘cause you get everything you want. But I like my way, struggle every day, that’s how I learned how to hunt.

Childhood friends Kerry Kalberg and Dan Francia began playing music together in High School. After meeting Nick Dooley at NYU, they formed Flagland. Kalberg (vocals and guitar), Francia (bass and vocals) and Dooley (drums) moved across the river to Brooklyn and have since released three albums, Danger Music/ Party Music, Tireda Fightin, and a split record with BIG UPS in 2013. Flagland will be releasing their next full-length album titled Love Hard, on February 25, 2014.

Self described as a band that plays “panic rock for the panicked,” Flagland’s repertoire floats through numerous genres, namely punk, grunge and 90s alternative. Part of their charm is their character. I had a chance to see them on 12/6 at Shea Stadium, where Kerry Kalberg stripped down to nothing other than his boxer briefs to play their entire set. Apparently that wasn’t a one-off, but rather something that he usually does during his shows.

“Comfortable Life” is the first single off of Love Hard. In three minutes, Kalberg, Francia and Dooley manage to drag the listener through a wide range of contrasting emotions. The track is initially colored with a simple, sugar-sweet melody and Kalberg’s soothing, yet understated vocals. By the second verse, the guitar picks up, and Francia and Dooley enter the mix on the drums, bass and xylophone. There is a diminuendo at the end of the second chorus, where Kalberg descends on each note until there is complete silence. Then the music explodes. Kalberg’s voice completely transforms, and what once was a bittersweet lament is now an impassioned emotional release. Kalberg, Francia and Dooley turn the volume all the way up on this verse and completely let go. With guitar feedback, vocal shouts and guitar power chords that starkly contrast the understated and restrained first half of the song, the second half of “Comfortable Life” is jarring and disconcerting, but in a good way.

The song’s garage band feel (pretty much the whole album was recorded in Dooley’s apartment) combined with its dynamism and emotional range makes “Comfortable Life” both genuine and raw.  If this is any indication of what is to come, expect rich dynamics, varied musical styles, and intense emotion to fill all twenty tracks of Love Hard. Listen to “Comfortable Life” Here:

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LIVE REVIEW: Fred Falke/Starsmith

FF

How do I say this…sometimes you think you can dance in public, because recently you’ve become more comfortable dancing in your kitchen alone. Yet still, you think: “I’ve got this!  I’ve been practicing.

No.

A thousand nos.

It’s similar to when I used to push the grocery cart for my mom as a kid and I thought it would prepare me for driving.

I only recently got into French House for which I simultaneously blame and thank spending a year in Europe.  I started easy with Daft Punk, as protocol, and then ended up at an Alan Braxe show in London without really knowing what I was getting into.  After a little research I discovered Fred Falke who had provided the sugary retreat from Braxe’s hard-hitting bass lines when the two worked together in the early 2000s.

I spent months working on my college thesis with headphones in my computer, hand sewing at a small desk and dancing in my chair to songs like “Intro” and “Face To Face.”  All I wanted to do was go to a DJ set and dance my face off.  Well, some things are better in your chair than in reality.

There was absolutely nothing wrong with Fred Falke or Starsmith’s set at Le Poisson Rouge on Thursday.  Falke was in good form and the crowd was dance-happy.  As DJ sets go, there was no definitive start or end to any “song” and I didn’t recognize what he was playing per se, but it certainly had the Falke touch.  He is the master of infectious dance beats afterall.  Starsmith was spinning classic French House tracks with some wise sampling (a stretched out take on The Smiths’ “This Charming Man” for instance).  The only thing wrong with the evening was my unabashed awkwardness.

I fortunately had a plus one, and was able to drag my friend along with me.  Between my rigid posture and his spike-encrusted vest and piercings, we were the sorest thumbs in the room.  We joked that the only thing we looked like we were doing there was selling drugs, and waited for someone to hit us up (no one did).

The show went on until the early morning and my only salvation before the mission home was a 2 am slice.  I wish I could have shed my inhibitions for the evening and danced with everybody else, but the truth is:

I can only dance when no one’s looking, and usually, in a chair.

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: Patti Smith Live

patti smith

I was surfing the internet for vintage Patti Smith videos the other day when I came across this gem. I was so excited that I decided to dedicate my newest installment of Flashback Friday solely to this video, which is a 1979 performance of Patti Smith’s “My Generation” at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, New Jersey.

“I pledge allegiance to the flag…

The clip begins with Smith reciting the “Pledge of Allegiance” (She even put her hand over her heart)  over a Hendrix-esque “Star Spangled Banner” guitar solo. You can see an American Flag plastered in the background. With her back to the stage, she finishes the pledge. The room then fills with discordant noise coming from the guitars, drums and amplifiers. Once the chaos dissipates, the drummer signals the beginning of the song by striking his sticks together to define the beat. Then it begins.

It is no secret that punk rock poet Patti Smith is a dynamic musician who is full of energy and character, but watching her perform live and listening to her recordings are like night and day.  With no shoes on her feet, hair awry and a presence that generally suggests dishevelment, Smith completely lets loose on stage. According to Smith, this experience is just as important as the music. Smith prefers expression to accuracy, and often strays from the key, rhythm or melody in order to fully express herself within the music. The performance is spontaneous and seemingly genuine.

The song breaks down right before the end. She turns her back to the stage while the music escalates in speed and volume. The drums are pushed over onto their sides, the guitarist puts down his guitar, and Smith is left playing alone. She seems entranced as she strums randomly on the guitar and overworks the whammy. The music gradually becomes more esoteric as she crouches and kneels with the instrument, even shaking it at times to produce a piercing tone. After a couple of minutes, the band members return to the stage. Smith walks over to interact with the bassist, who begins to hit the guitar with his microphone.

She then returns to center stage, faces the audience, and recites one final impromptu verse:  

“Here I am

Empty warrior

Here I am

Back on the straight and narrow

here I am

with my broken arrow”

While Patti Smith still performs fairly often in the NYC area, it is still exciting to see old footage of her from back in the day.  Enjoy.

LIVE REVIEW: Not Blood Paint/Bad Credit No Credit

Not Blood Paint live

not blood paint

 

A friend of mine has been nagging me to see Not Blood Paint almost every week for the past two months.  She lured me in with stories of their famously dramatic shows and musical dexterity.  Apparently its members have a background in theater and performance, which was nothing less than obvious the night of their show at Shea Stadium last week.  The foursome mounted the stage in greenish-gold face paint, leggings, and spray-painted tunics. Their look fell somewhere between Spinal Tap and cheap costumes for people dressing as “Satan Worshippers.”  I was skeptical of this display immediately.

Oh, here we go, some theater kids.  Just like the ones in high school who greeted every morning with a star jump and vocal exercises.  Great…  I watched with a raised eyebrow for the first few songs, confused about my feelings over what was transpiring on stage, and then I realized something: they’re fucking incredible musicians.

Truly, every single one of them is a master of their instrument.  I would be fawning over the guitar licks until I noticed the precision of the drum parts, and eventually I’d stumble all over the bass riffs.  On top of that, they can do perfect barbershop quartet style harmonies, and stretch their vocal range to that of Steve Perry.

I had heard a handful of their tracks prior but could never pinpoint their style.  Every song I listened to sounded different from the last, yet all sounded familiar at the same time.  I say this because Not Blood Paint is not a genre-defining band.  Their musical roots clearly lie in early metal, glam rock, prog rock and jazz.  Yet what they lack in innovation they make up for in pure craft, passion, and sense of humor.  Some of their live performance stunts can get a little gimmicky, but they’re the kind of guys who just like having fun and don’t give a shit what pesky writers like me say, so more power to ‘em.  They certainly know what they’re doing and I’d love to see them again.

The headlining band, Bad Credit No Credit fell under a similar category as Not Blood Paint. While the music itself was different from their predecessors’–they played their own brand of ‘90s revival ska, punk, and jazz–their set was no less theatrical, and gimmicky.  And again, despite the Christmas costumes and backup dancers, Bad Credit No Credit are a pack of damn fine musicians.  I could listen to the horn section alone and be happy.  Throw in Carrie-Ann Murphy’s Sax ‘blowin and phenomenal vocals (she must be operatically trained) and you have a pretty impressive bunch.

It was a fun show regardless of any nitpicking I’ve committed.  The crowd was dancing hard, and everyone was happy.

Just as a last nod to the overwhelming talent of Not Blood Paint, here’s a round of applause for their diversity as musicians.  Check out the difference between this:

And this:

Pretty damn impressive if you ask me.

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LOUD & TASTELESS: Cults

Every Thursday, AF profiles a style icon from the music world. This week, we’re highlighting Madeline Follin and Brian Oblivion of Cults. Piles of black clothing compliment the duo’s haunting sound.

 

Madeline Follin and Brian Oblivion tend to have slight variations of the same outfits almost every time I see pictures of them or videos of their performances. And that’s OK with me. Follin sticks to either a skater dress/shirt and pleated skirt combo, usually in dark colors. If it’s summer, bare legs and sneakers are involved. In winter, she warms up with black tights. Oblivion sports various button-down shirts (usually a crisp white), frequently buttoned to the top and paired with either jeans or suit pants. Sometimes he’ll throw on a tie, other times he’ll throw on a cardigan. Regardless, he always looks polished and she always looks cute in a not-to-be-messed-with way. Together, they make a great duo, musically and stylistically. We’ve picked out some pieces from Urban Outfitters that are likely to be in their closets or packed away for tours. Listen to their song “High Road” from their most recent release, Static, via Soundcloud while you check out our Cults-inspired Pinterest board, linked below.

 

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LIVE REVIEW: King Krule

King Krule

I don’t think there will be “the next Beatles.” Or Elvis, or Michael Jackson, or Bowie, or Madonna.  I’m always skeptical when a pop star bursts onto the scene like some industry-crafted tune-bot and a sea of people truly believe they will stay at the top for more than two years.  The fact of the matter is, our demand for the now-new-next is so accelerated that there is little space for a lasting presence in the music scene.  I’d rather not get into whether this is a good or a bad thing, but I really think the ability to build longevity in the music industry is becoming increasingly more difficult, simply due to an amped-up turnover rate.

That being said, when I first heard 19-year-old Archy Marshall, a.k.a. King Krule, I was absolutely guilty of thinking: “this kid is the next….THING.”  I have no idea what thing because his sound is so unique, and that is even more rare than longevity these days.

I bought my ticket to see King Krule at Webster Hall months ago (before I was at the blog–no comp ticket for me!) and I’d been counting the days until the show.  Unfortunately, it was one of those events where the behavior of the crowd pulled the tide of my experience.

I’ve heard many stories regarding the shittiness of Webster Hall, but up until last night I couldn’t empathize with them.  I’d always had a fine time there.  That night the issue was not the bands, nor was it the sound system; it was the seven-dollar PBR.  This is the people’s beer.  It is a civic injustice to demand such a high price for the nectar of the broke.  But as I mentioned initially, the problem was predominantly the crowd.  I suffered the short-person’s dilemma of peeking through shoulders and heads to see the band.  Worse than that, a sea of smart phones obstructed the view of the stage.  I literally had to watch the show through a thousand iPhones and Instagram frames.

The openers were Harlem-raised brat-pack Ratking.  They’re a rap group that’s been getting quite a lot of attention lately from  Tyler the Creator, etc.  I’ll admit I wasn’t crazy about them that night, though it wasn’t their fault (I didn’t like how one of the kids danced.  I’m an asshole.)  Listening to them now I realize they’re actually a pretty talented bunch.  Their musical interests reach back to punk and hardcore, and although you can’t pinpoint it in their sound, they do have a unique and energetic take on contemporary rap.  Their beats and vocal style have an awkward tension to them that I find exciting.

I hoped that somehow the crowd would stop smacking their bubblegum and put down their phones when King Krule came onstage, but that would be like asking a five-year-old to surrender their iPad, so naturally it didn’t happen.  The entire set girls were screaming “Arrrrrccccchhhhyyyyy!!!” like we were at a One Direction show and I felt like everyone was talking throughout.  Aside from that, King Krule and his band were impeccable.  Marshall was wearing the same ochre-colored suit he donned in both the “Easy, Easy” music video, and on Letterman.

Seeing King Krule live solidified my already strong admiration for him as an artist.  There is nothing disingenuous about him…especially his voice.  He was baritone-pitch-perfect all night and delivered ample energy with his guitar playing.  He didn’t say much, though he never seemed cocky; only fully focused and absorbed in what he was doing.  He opened with “The Noose of Jah City” (my personal favorite) and ended with “Easy, Easy” (my second personal favorite).  I hate to sound corny, but I haven’t been moved by a new artist this much in a long time.  Marshall has this innate ability to express the most universal dilemmas: heartbreak, class struggle, angst, etc. and he does it with a sincerity that is all too rare these days.  Aside from that, his songs are just downright strange and good.

I’m incredibly eager to see what this kid comes up with in the coming years.  Maybe he’ll be gone before we know it.

Or, maybe he’s the next…

 

VIDEO OF THE WEEK 12/10: “No Needs”

entranceband2013A few weeks back The Entrance Band premiered its video for “Spider,” off Face The Sun, and we here at AudioFemme were awed and enchanted by its surreal intricacies and enigmatic, unsettling imagery. Then, yesterday, Entrance Band bassist and director of the”Spider” video, Paz Lenchantin, announced that she’ll be touring with Pixies this summer, and today, the band released its second video directed by Lenchantin, a collaboration between London fashion brand Sister Jane and photographer Amanda Charchian, for “No Needs,” also from Face The Sun. It’s been a good few months for The Entrance Band, and the new video is possibly even cooler than the “Spider” music video that came out early last month.

Dream imagery and an undertow of violence characterizes the beginning of the video. The silent, cinematic opening brings us to a dark thicket, sporadically lit by flashing floodlight, with lyrics from “No Needs” scratched across the screen–“Dear one, the time has come to face the sun…”

A psychedelic array of colors, painted on the faces and monotone dresses of a robot-faced parade of models, dominates the video’s aesthetic. It’s simple theme and variation, with colors that cross-hatch, kaleidoscope or blow into each other as the story line progresses. Like “Spider,” this video evokes a spooky strangeness emphasized by flashed lighting and sped-up frames. Images warp or refract, models arrange themselves and scatter. What we’ve come to recognize as Lenchantin’s signature blend of creepy and pretty is in operation here in full force, complete with a choreographed ring-around-the-rosie in front of a yellow UFO. With added insight from Charchian and Sister Jane, the images come barreling, frame after frame, in this video.

You can watch the music video for The Entrance Band’s “No Needs” below, and the entire Face The Sun album is available for purchase here!

No Needs from The Entrance Band on Vimeo.

NEWS: Blouse to tour w Dum Dum Girls, spring 2014

Blouse

Blouse are very pleased to announce that they will be joining Dum Dum Girls on their 2014 Spring tour. The month-long will take them in a loop around North America, beginning in San Diego in March and ending in San Francisco in April, including stops at SXSW and Dallas’ Spillover Music Festival.

Full dates below.

03/07 – San Diego, CA – Casbah
03/08 – Las Vegas, NV – Backstage Bar
03/09 – Phoenix, AZ – Crescent Ballroom
03/10 – Albuquerque, NM -Sister
03/12-15 – Austin, TX – SXSW
03/16 – Dallas, TX – Spillover Festival
03/18 – Nashville, TN – Exit/In
03/19 – Birmingham, AL – Bottletree
03/20 – Atlanta, GA – The Earl
03/21 – Raleigh, NC – Kings
03/22 – Washington, DC – Black Cat
03/23 – Philadelphia, PA – Johnny Brenda’s
03/25 – New York, NY – Bowery Ballroom
03/26 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg
03/27 – Boston, MA – Brighton Music Hall
03/28 – Montreal, QUE – Il Motore
03/29 – Toronto, ONT – Lee’s Place
03/30 – Ferndale, MI – Loving Touch
03/31 – Chicago, IL – Empty bottle
04/01 – Minneapolis, MN – Triple Rock
04/04 – Vancouver, BC – Biltmore
04/05 – Seattle, WA – Neumos
04/06 – Portland, OR – Doug Fir
04/08 – San Fransisco, CA – Independent

The band, who are currently on tour in Europe, recently released a video for their single “A Feelng Like This.” Watch it here, via Youtube.

TRACK REVIEW: New Bums “Black Bough”

NewBums_byJasonQuever_04Longtime acoustic guitar mavens Ben Chasny and Donovan Quinn have joined forces as New Bums, complete with a full-length record, Voices In A Rented Room, in the works. Although apparently the pair didn’t like each other very much in the beginning, Chasny and Quinn have quickly solidified their twelve-strings-and-the-end-of-the-world style, as evidenced by this desolate, plodding single off Voices.

Gloriously morose and tempered with some sprinklings of upper-register piano key flourish, “Black Bough” moves steadily through its four and a half minutes. Equal weight is given to Elliott Smith-style, eerie vocals and the festering slow burn of the bluesy bass line. It’s not so much catchy as it is commanding—the kind of song that slows down the pace of your whole day—and a strange choice to open a debut album: New Bums don’t demonstrate any desire to make a big splashy entrance, choosing to dive right into the dark stuff instead. However, the very understatedness of the opening track stands out more than a showier—more expected—debut might. Personally, I can’t wait to find out what kind of album comes after “Black Boughs.” But wait I must, until the album drops on February 28, 2014. Until then, listen to “Black Boughs,” off Voices In A Rented Room, below via Soundcloud:

LIVE REVIEW: Holograms & TV Ghost

Holograms

Last year around this time everyone I knew was nervous about the world ending.  At the very least, friends of mine made Mayan Apocalypse jokes until I wished the sky would just blow up already.  But on the morning of December 21st, everything was the same as it had been the morning before.  There were no explosions.  There were no human sacrifices and no meteor and no floods and no getting sucked into a black hole.  The world went on unchanged.

If you’re ever in the mood to fantasize about where humanity might be if gravity had reversed, causing catastrophic disasters, shortages of resources, and mass rioting, and you need some kind of soundtrack to compliment it, you could certainly do worse than TV Ghost or Holograms.  Both bands played 285 Kent last Friday and the mood was calamitous to say the least.

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Holograms
Holograms prefer to play in the dark behind a veil of fog and wall of synths

Holograms hail from Stockholm, an area of the globe closely linked to black metal and kidnapping.  In December they only get six hours of daylight.  In terms of culture and architecture and progressive politics though, it’s probably far less bleak than living Lafayette, Indiana – the birthplace of TV Ghost, and of Axl Rose.  Both bands released highly-regarded records this year – Holograms’ sophomore effort Forever is an unflagging deluge of melodic Scandinavian post-punk, and Disconnect promises to be the dark gem that will finally put enigmatic no-wavers TV Ghost on the map after two stellar but mostly underrated albums.  They’re on tour together throughout December and one can only imagine the conversations they have (or don’t have in favor of morosely staring off into space), but if their albums are any indication then disillusionment, synths and slasher flicks are topics that probably come up frequently.

On stage it’s interesting to note the way each band’s approach to live performance skews Scandinavian vs. Midwestern.  TV Ghost frontman Tim Gick swivels and stumbles like a drunken Frankenstein, climbing speakers one second and crawling through the crowd the next, black curls trembling on his forehead, his voice somewhere between haunted croon and hollow moan, Adam’s apple looking like it’s about to burst through the pale skin at his throat.  He’s fascinating to watch, at once unabashed and seemingly wounded, his bandmates plugging away with intense focus, as if there is no maniac writhing between them and the audience.

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TV Ghost
TV Ghost creeping out 285 Kent

Gick’s gothic antics come off distinctly American next to Holograms’ minimalist approach.  The band was mostly obscured by fog machine and strobes (and by the synths that took front and center stage).  But somewhere in the haze, past the tumultuous mosh pit, Andreas Lagerström’s monolithic howl rang out, ominous and urgent.  It’s the constantly undulating synths that permeate each track and pierce the somber moodiness of the band’s shows.  I saw Holograms last fall on the tour that famously broke them before sending them back to Europe destitute and both times I was astounded by the sheer energy Holograms project and inspire, regardless of the weightiness of their work.  On their Facebook page, the band implores followers for floors to sleep on, on “Ättestupa” Lagerström wails “I’m so tired”.  Maybe that’s true, but you also get the sense that Holograms are plodding ceaselessly onward toward some indefinable future, and will continue to do so until the fire so frequently mentioned on Forever consumes the Earth and each of its inhabitants.

When that day comes, lets hope our record players are still working.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

TRACK OF THE WEEK 12/9: “Birth in Reverse”

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“Oh what an ordinary day / Take out the garbage, masturbate,” begins St. Vincent‘s brilliant new track, “Birth in Reverse.”  In her typical fashion, St. Vincent (the moniker for multi-instrumentalist and singer-songwriter Annie Clark) manages to entice and electrify with this preview to her upcoming album, St. Vincentdue Feb. 25th.

The song is spastic yet mechanical with its fast-paced pulse and gritty guitar. The first few seconds bring a car junkyard to mind—robotic and metallic—but the song builds up with a kind of anxious energy. It’s confident, almost boastful, and a perfect way to tease Clark’s anticipated fourth album (her first solo album since 2011, following 2012’s collaborative album Love This Giant with David Byrne).

Listen to “Birth in Reverse” here:

And check out the teaser for St. Vincent’s European tour which features a snippet of another similarly crunchy song, presumably one of the other ten tracks on the upcoming record.

YEAR END LIST: Notes From The Road – Top 5 Musical Destinations of 2013

I took several road trips this year. At the beginning of 2013, adventure felt overdue—something about going to new places, with no routine or expectations, opens you up to hear music you’d never think to listen to otherwise. Below are the five biggest, best surprises from the road—hopefully, you’ll feel inspired to go looking for some adventure of your own.

5. Layla’s Bluegrass Inn—Nashville: This september I went to Nashville, TN for the first time in my life. Walking down Broadway felt like the scene in The Wizard of Oz when Dorothy lands in Oz and suddenly everything is in technicolor. Oh my God, I thought. Everything was lit up with neon! Everyone was wearing cowboy gear and drinking before noon! Every bar sold cheeseburgers! Wafting out of every single venue was the bass line of a country song so infectious that, had I heard it while walking down the street in New York City, I would have dropped whatever I was on my way to doing to go watch whomever was playing it.

Layla’s is a fashionably divey and slightly over-touristed honky tonk, brimming with down-home vibes and energy, and with a band to match: The Jones were on stage, fronted by the energetic and angular Memiss Jones, who looked too small for her upright bass but slapped its wood uproariously on the downbeat anyway. They played originals and covers with equal skill, always trending towards rowdier interpretations of Southern spirituals like “I’ll Fly Away.” They captivated the crowd: a band of what looked to be retirees on a country tour began square dancing on the floor, and behind the table where I was sitting, a misty-eyed cowboy nipped stoically at his drink, lips trembling during ballads.

Memiss Jones plays at Layla’s every Thursday, from “11:30 AM ta 2:00 PM” according to her website. I bought The Jones’ CD,and predictably, it wasn’t as irresistible as the live show had been. Honky tonk music works best in the rough, playful realm of spontaneity, and Memiss Jones worked the stage with an energy that could never be duplicated on recording.

4. Willie’s Locally Known—Lexington: There are better bars in Lexington, Kentucky. Really, there are. This one is located in kind of a strip mall parking lot area, with a dust-caked neon lit-up sign floating in the window and terrible food and bikers who play Bruce Springsteen on the jukebox. One night, wedged amidst “Born In The USA,” in the back room where they keep the football fans trolling for a quiet place to watch games, a bunch of banjos and mandolins lay piled on top of the pool table.

The state of Kentucky, in general, is not hurting for live musicians, but here they seemed to happen almost by accident, coming out of the woodwork without ceremony or audience. Six or seven men sat in a circle and unassumingly began to play. The word hootenanny came to mind. Dating back to the Civil War, when a hootenanny referred to a “meeting of the minds” between strategists. Hootenannies differ from shows in that they’re played for the process—for that complicated, invisible knot that ties people playing improvised music together—more than for the product: a show to entertain an audience. Though the venue also functions as a performance space, that evening did not involve a stage, only a collection of people sitting in chairs. Banjos dominated the impromptu stage plot, with about four for every two mandolins, plus a fiddle and a guitar. The very rough-edgedness of the performance contributed to its special magic, as if music could, under the right conditions, spring fully-formed from the beer-sticky dingy surfaces of a dive downtown, listless in the boredom of a Wednesday night.

 

3. Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival—Oak Hill: Set at the top of a hill of one of the most gorgeous sections of New York’s already gorgeous Hudson Valley, Grey Fox Bluegrass Festival has been an annual institution since 1976. The atmosphere of the event feels like homecoming—all the performers seem to be friends with each other, and with festival producer Mary Tyler Doub.

While not much of a road trip from New York City—the festival takes place about a two hour drive north of Manhattan—the difference in scenery couldn’t be vaster, with the Catskills looming in the background and cowboy hats rampant in the crowd. Old and young bluegrass fans turned out in equal measure, and to that end, the spectrum of the acts varied widely from traditional bluegrass bands like the Travelin’ McCourys to newer and more hybridized roots outfits. One of these, I Draw Slow, hailed from Ireland and brought a very light Celtic touch to their style, which mostly focused on expressive storytelling without compromising catchiness. Another, a cellist from California by the name of Rushad Eggleston, adopted a stage persona that originated from the made-up planet of Snee, and performed a blend of metal, bluegrass, classical, and frankly unclassifiable cello music. These two bands, while still relatively unknown compared to many of Grey Fox’s acts that weekend, garnered a lot of attention and sizable crowds for each of their performances throughout the duration of the festival.

Though Grey Fox has long represented a kind of home, a family reunion—and this was true for me, too; I used to live in the Hudson Valley—this year, the memorable acts were the ones that no one had heard of before, and who didn’t stick within the grooves of pure bluegrass. While still in keeping with the spirit endemic to the festival, they expanded and improvised on it, providing reassurance to the concertgoers, it seemed to me, that the bluegrass genre is not yet finished evolving.

 

2. Maryland Deathfest XI—Baltimore: Baltimore, MD, burial site and sometimes-home of Edgar Allan Poe, held up the Poe-ish legacy of the grotesque and absurd, of sublime revelation as discovered through darkness and extremes, with the eleventh iteration of the festival billed as “America’s most extreme annual metal party.” Highlights included acts like Sacred Reich, Sleep, Pentagram and black metal founding fathers Venom. Before their set even began, an audience that stretched backward from the stage about the equivalent of three full New York City blocks had appeared, packed tightly together onto the lawns, streets and parking lots that had been sectioned off as concert grounds for the outdoor festival.

Equally compelling were the concert-goers themselves, who descended upon Baltimore on Memorial Day weekend. On Sunday, the last day of the festival, downtown residents had cleared out, and the run down office buildings, streets and parks served as a veritable playground for metalheads. As I walked around the city, everyone I passed looked terrifying: clad in black and leather, heavy metal t shirts and metal chains, the festival goers seemingly changed Baltimore’s topography altogether. Just before heading into the festival, I saw a rare non-concert-goer—a homeless man, nearly disfiguringly withered and old, with a shopping cart in front of him and long hair that had coagulated into a single massive dreadlock—do a fantastically scandalized double take as an extremely tall and thin man walked by dressed in head to toe leather, combat boots, and extensive facial tattoos.

Venom appeared hulkingly on stage, with shoulders and thighs so huge that they often couldn’t  dance or thrash, and instead just stood still and made menacing faces. Although the theatricality of metal shows has grown tamer since the nineties, the aesthetic of the performance was impressive: strobe lights pulsed, a yawning, doom-heralding bass line shook the framework of the stage, and a deep bass came over the loudspeakers: Ladies and gentlemen, from the depths of hell…VENOM!

Venom spit abuse at the front row and demanded a bigger mosh pit, reverberating—I’m sure—into the rest of Baltimore. One weekend every year, the city turns into Metal Central, so inescapably that walking around downtown feels like being in an episode of The Twilight Zone. The world abruptly became colored in a spectrum of things that were not metal to things that were very, very metal (24 hour Wendy’s, metal; getting lost on the way to the 24 hour Wendy’s, not metal.) Cars booming on the overpass above the road where I parked my car were nothing more than heavy doom bass writ small, and, for about a day, all other rock and roll sounded wimpy—and as if it were playing from about fifty miles away—by comparison.

 

1. Happy Home Old Regular Baptist Church—Amburgey

Lined-out hymnody, a style of church singing once prevalent in seventeenth-century British churches, gradually lost favor in religious communities once psalm books and greater general literacy became the norm. This a capella style of call-and-response singing, in which a group leader would sing one line which would then be slowly repeated by the rest of the congregation. The singing, which resembles shapenote or Sacred Harp songs, sounds ragged and ploddingly slow, as the singers were often unfamiliar with the tune and the words of the song they sang. But the often-dissonant vocal chorus created a particular kind of singing which today is more or less unique to the rural churches of Appalachia, including, notably, the Old Regular Baptist churches of eastern Kentucky.

I went to one such church this fall, in a small out-of-the-way building about an hour from the Virginia border. The Old Regular Baptists don’t allow music in church, nor do they encourage music in the secular lives of their members. This belief essentially stems from the thought that God cannot be worshipped by man’s hands, and that a pretension to beauty, or godliness, with the aid of a musical instrument disrespects God. I’m not religious, and I told the pastor of Happy Home as much before the service started, but I was interested in the music. It would be just fine for me to come to the service, he assured me. The Old Regulars are a small community, growing ever smaller, and their shrinking singing tradition represents a part of life in the mountains of Appalachia that may soon disappear.

Singing starts every Sunday at nine. Before the service, those who arrive early to church begin a song, usually led by a preacher, and others join in as they enter the church, shaking hands with everyone—and I do mean everyone—already gathered in the building. In good weather, the preacher throws open the windows of the church, casting the sound of the slow, swelling hymns up the mountains and echoing into the small towns of the valleys. Even the preaching in the church had a rhythmic, incantation-like quality to it, as sung as it was spoken, and marked with cadences and crescendos that felt downright bluesy.

Many people living in the area—religious and not—grew up with the sounds of these songs, so particular and evocative that they have a meaning to anyone who hears them. People often say the lined-out singing style sounds mournful. Most of the people who sing it disagree, instead thinking of the style as a joyful expression of praise.

 

We’ve Been Had: The Walkmen’s Final Show

The Walkmen at Union Transfer

It wasn’t supposed to be about The Walkmen.

What started as a fundraiser for Philly’s very own High Line-esque project (known as The Rail Park and every bit as awesome) became something different entirely when Peter Bauer (The Walkmen’s organist and bass player) announced last week via a Washington Post interview that the band had absolutely no plans to make a new record, tour, or really be much of a band in the future at all.

“We really just have no idea,” Bauer said. “I don’t think any of us wanted to write another Walkmen record. Maybe that will change down the line, maybe it won’t, maybe we’ll play shows. I think it’s weird to make a hubbub about something if there’s nothing to really make a hubbub about.”

He went on to include sentiments that have been echoed by other members in the band – that because they’re not the “archetypal rock band where everyone lives in an apartment” but in reality have lived in different cities since the release of A Hundred Miles Off in 2006, getting together for a show is more like Thanksgiving or a bachelor party or a family reunion.  In the fall they played a short stint in Europe, and the summer prior saw them added to several festival line-ups, including Brooklyn’s Northside.  With each one-off they left behind wives and young children, saying goodbye to one family to be embraced by a family of a different sort in what must have been an exhausting cycle.

When the “indefinite hiatus” was announced, there were two shows left on The Walkmen’s calendar: one in D.C. at new venue Dock 5, and the gig at Philadelphia’s gorgeous Union Transfer.  Up to the moment they took the stage, it remained a benefit show for Rail Park as scheduled, supported by a full roster of all-star acts.

Sharon Van Etten was joined by Adam Granduciel (of The War On Drugs), Mary Lattimore and Jeff Zeigler for a three-song harp-inclusive set comprised of Lou Reed’s “Perfect Day”, Van Etten’s own “I’m Wrong”, and Big Star’s “Thirteen”.  Philadelphia’s Birdie Busch and the Greatest Night gave an impassioned performance, Busch stating between songs that in all her dreams, a project like the Rail Park was the best thing she could imagine for Philly.  Spank Rock’s similarly short but charismatic set blended into a rousing performance from Sun Ra Arkestra, led by Marshall Allen.  The stage was filled with nearly twenty vibrant jazz musicians, clad in glittering garb, horns lifted to Saturn (the claimed birthplace of the group’s now deceased founder) in an incredible performance that fused free jazz, ragtime, and big band sounds.  All this after a fully catered shmooze-fest where I binged on fancy cheese and pumpkin mousse.

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The celebratory tone changed only slightly when The Walkmen took the stage for what would be the last time until who-knows-when.  Members of Sun Ra Arkestra remained to provide brassy accompaniment for “Red Moon” and “Canadian Girl”.  Ever the charismatic frontman, Hamilton Leithauser’s voice was in top form, his gangly form outfitted in a blazer and tie per usual.  Matt Barrick’s indefatigable drums ricocheted throughout the venue, punctuating Paul Maroon’s confident guitar as well as Walter Martin and Bauer’s turns on bass and organ.  They performed dutifully but never dispassionately.  There was no question that as a whole, the group was leaving behind a legacy as one of indie rock’s most exciting and skilled syndicates.

In looking at a typical Walkmen setlist, there was nothing wholly out of place in the band’s chosen sequence of songs, which included material spanning the band’s fourteen-year run.  But it was hard to escape the feeling that it was curated specifically for a farewell show, seeming at times like a mixtape you’d give to someone you were dumping.  Cast in this last light, the latently wistful themes and lyrics about looking back stood out and took on a whole new tone.  From the hopeful line “You will miss me when I’m gone / But the happy music will carry on” in “Canadian Girl” through the world-weary “All the years keep rolling / The decades flying by” in “On The Water” to the anthemic “And my heart’s in the strangest place / That’s how it started / And that’s how it ends” bellow of “In The New Year” the set could have been a manifesto as to why the band was choosing to leave its spotlight.  And that was just in the first few songs.  They spoke for themselves; when Leithauser mentioned the break-up early in the evening he was almost dismissive of the gravity of it, encouraging the audience to have a great time and celebrate along with them.

And The Walkmen did parlay a well-deserved celebratory attitude.  The sardonic undercurrents, delivered as always with a trademark sneer, gave a sense simply that no one had wanted to overstay their popularity as a band.  In The Washington Post, Bauer put it this way: “It’s been almost 14 years now.  I think that’s enough, you know?”   There hasn’t been a dramatic blow-up or falling out – it’s just that all five members of The Walkmen are ready to go their separate ways.  No one is interested in becoming a band that tours for all of eternity, on into their older years.  Instead, everyone is focused on solo projects.  Leithauser has collaborated with members of Fleet Foxes and Vampire Weekend for an album slated for spring release.  Bauer speaks emphatically about his upcoming solo record Liberation!, a psych-tinged project released under his full name that sees him not only playing guitar but actually singing.  Martin is releasing an album of “cleverly done” children’s songs (Leithauser’s description), Maroon’s doing soundtracks for an unnamed documentary.  And Barrick will likely go in a completely new direction, having shot beautiful photos of the band’s tours, street performers in New Orleans, and his family life among other subjects, now finally able to focus more acutely on that passion.

The Walkmen at Union Transfer

A victory lap was in order, and the last half of the set was just that.  “We Can’t Be Beat” provided the build-up – Leithauser’s voice arced easily over the crowd on the line “It’s been soooooo  loooooong but I made it through” before ending the set with what could arguably be considered their most triumphant swan song, “Heaven”.  He literally lifted a fist into the air during bouyant cries of “Remember, remember!” and the rest of the song was just as sentimental: “Our children will always hear / Romantic tales of distant years / Our gilded age may come and go /
Our crooked dreams will always glow”.  Those feeling particularly nostalgic need only watch the video for the track, which collages archival photos and footage from the band’s career.

Amid thunderous (and maybe even some tearful) applause, they returned to the stage for “138th Street”, a fitting ballad about growing up from Bows + Arrows, serving as further explanation to anyone still in need of a reason for the hiatus, or maybe a reminder that life unfolds no matter what antics you pull.  The crazy things we do as kids recede into memory someday, not unlike that one time, in the spring of 2006, when I spent twelve hours wasted on the lawn of OSU’s campus during a little event my good friend Ahmed Gallab had organized (appropriately called Springfest).  The Walkmen headlined that year, somewhere around the eleventh hour of my drunkenness.  I think I was dancing on top of a speaker when a girl I didn’t know ran by, grabbing my arm.

“Hey,” she said, breathless.  “Wanna dive off the stage with me?”  Well, yeah.  I did.  So we ran backstage, and then onto it, past Barrick and Bauer and Leithauser and Martin and Maroon and leapt into the crowd.  It went by in a blur.  I don’t even remember what song they were playing – just that at the time, they were one of my favorite bands.  On the walk to legendary Columbus divebar Larry’s (RIP to that place), I “knew everyone I saw” so to speak, and everyone had seen me do it, and we all had a pretty good laugh, right there in the streets.

Sometimes, I really am just happy I’m older.  Seven years later, the twinkling, ramshackle piano line of “We’ve Been Had” stirred fans at Union Transfer.  Leithauser introduced the song as the first the band had written, back in the day when the boys really were that archetypal band making a go of a music career by moving to New York, living together, running amok, not knowing where the road would lead.  Everyone shouted those iconic lines along with Leithauser: “We’ve been had /I know it’s over / Somehow it got easy to laugh out loud”.  The jangling melody stretched longer as Leithauser introduced his bandmates “for the last time in a long time”.  Then he made the rounds down a runway set up for the fashion show that had been part of the Rail Park fundraiser, shaking the hands of fans who stood alongside it.

For years I’ve taken The Walkmen for granted, assuming they were a band that would be around forever.  I basically “grew up” listening to them. Not in the way that you grow up dancing in your diapers to your parents’ Beatles records, to be sure.  But these songs were with me throughout my twenties, as I made my way through college, out of Ohio, adrift in the wilds of Brooklyn, and into some semblance of adulthood.  And Wednesday’s show was every bit the reminder of just how good a soundtrack The Walkmen made for anyone going through that process, because they were honest and true in their songwriting as they went though it themselves.  As their narrative ends, the relevance of that contribution only skyrockets.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

LIVE REVIEW: Flatbush Zombies 12/3

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When I told my best friend that I was going to the Flatbush Zombies show on Tuesday, she accused me of being late to the party.  Well, I’m only three years late.  That’s just about punctual at my pace.  My buddies have been going to their shows for about 2 years, and it somehow took me this long to catch them live.  I would like to point out that I was out of the country for a cumulative amount of 1.5 years, if that’s any consolation (for myself).  I’d also like to point out that I’m incredibly lame. I’m also not “with it.”  I’d even go so far as to say I am “without it.

Not only was this my first Flatbush Zombies show, this was my first hip-hop show period, unless you count that one I went to on accident when I was 12, but I don’t.  In all my pre-show excitement, I didn’t really realize that it was my first hip-hop show until I was squashed between testosterone-loaded teens and it occurred to me: “I have no idea what to expect from this.”  I began asking myself a series of embarrassing questions like: “how do people dance at hip-hop shows?”  “Will there be ‘grinding,’ ‘twerking,’ or ‘freaking?’”  “Is ‘freaking’ even a thing?”  “Am I really this much of a herb?”  Yes.  Yes I am.

In any case, this herb had a great time.  Hot 97’s Peter Rosenberg opened the show, spinning all the best in old school hip-hop.  He did get a little preachy with his old-timer hip-hop sermon, but that’s to be expected.  Following Rosenberg was Spanish Harlem native Bodega Bamz, a.k.a. PAPI.  He made sense as an opener for a few reasons, namely his NYC origin and recent collaboration with Flatbush Zombies on “Thrilla.”  Bodega Bamz put on an energetic performance and has a surprisingly large following.  There were more than a few kids next me that knew all his lyrics in both English and Spanish.

Flatbush Zombies more than filled their slot as the headliners.  Performing one of the last shows of their pan US tour promoting the new Better Off Dead mixtape, they didn’t pull a single punch.  The show was perfect from start to finish, to the point that it seemed choreographed and spontaneous at the same time.  The energy of their set was undeniably visceral and downright exciting.  The experience was doubly compelling because for me, it was a new one, and moreover, because the crowd engulfing me was so energized by the music.  Everyone seemed to know every beat, breakdown, and lyric (except for me of course).  Bodega Bamz joined the FBZ boys for their second to last song, and they reappeared for an encore, inviting the crowd on stage.  The whole show was a fucking blast.

As I left, a bit smelly and a lot sweaty, I thought of something:

“Can someone be fashionably late to the party?”

Probably not, but who gives a shit?

 

 

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: John Hammond (Jr.)

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When I was about 12 or 13, I was making my bi-annual visit to Grandma’s house in California.  Being at the peak of my Punk-Rock-ness, I would scour through local newspapers looking for shows and record shops to alleviate my pre-teen boredom.  Then I’d beg my mom to drive me to them.  On one such hunt, I saw an ad for a record store in Costa Mesa called Noise Noise Noise.  It was a tiny, piss-wreaking place where you had to sit on the floor to flip through the filmy milk crates full of records.  I used to pray I’d find some rare, colored-vinyl, perfect condition, original pressing of The Germs or Catholic Discipline…as if the record store that specialized in Punk music wouldn’t know what they had and I’d snag it for a buck fifty.  I thought I was sooo smart.

Well, I didn’t ever find anything like that for less than $40, but I did stumble upon something that I still treasure to this day.  It was an original pressing of John Hammond’s first studio album from 1964.  Self titled, it had a black and white photo of a young, very attractive man mid-croon, holding a guitar.  I knew the name from somewhere…John Hammond.  I bought it for less than five bucks anyway, knowing that my memory would kick in and I’d realize what I had at some point.  Eventually the switch flipped: Bob Dylan.

John Hammond was the guy they say discovered Bob Dylan.  While that is still a point of contention, Hammond did sign Dylan to Columbia records in ’61. Dylan was not well received by the label, and was referred to as “Hammond’s Folly.” Hammond also discovered Aretha Franklin, was personal friends with Benny Goodman, and active in the Civil Rights movement.

The man lived a novel-worthy life, and while I would expand on it, the record I bought was not his…it was his son’s.  The record’s moniker is John Hammond, but the artist is in fact John P. Hammond, a.k.a John Hammond Jr., spawn of the famous producer and activist.  Yet despite the easily reached conclusion that Jr. had it easy, being the son of a talent scout and all, he was actually raised by his mother and rarely saw John Hammond Sr.

He recorded his first album on Vanguard records when he was just 22 after dropping out of college and submerging himself in Southern Blues culture.  He is one of the most respected, yet little-known white blues artists of the genre’s mid-‘60s revival, and has recorded 35 studio, and two live albums since the start of his career.  The New York Times interviewed him when he was only 20.  He hung out with the likes of Robbie Robertson and Jimi Hendrix, and was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2011.  He is also a long-time friend of one of my favorite artists of all time-Tom Waits-and released Wicked Grin in 2001, a collection of Waits covers that was produced by the gravel-mouthed Californian himself.

Despite Hammond’s irrefutable proficiency in traditional blues guitar and barrelhouse vocals, Hammond has never been a songwriter.  His specialty was performing the traditional blues ballads of the 30’s, 40’s and 50’s.  His style was so pure and convincing, his voice so full and deep, one would never guess he was a scrawny white boy from New York City.

When I first put on the record, I was blown away.  It was so sparse, yet so full-bodied.  All that could be heard was guitar, harmonica, that voice, and one, solitary foot stomping on an echoing stage.  It was brilliant.  Hammond’s vocal style is one of booming trains, slow-moving molasses, and good, old-fashioned pain.

While I wish I could share the whole album with you, it was incredibly difficult to find tracks from this specific record on the web.  I was able to locate track five, a rendition of Big Bill Broozny’s “This Train.” Still, I highly recommend you continue the search yourselves.  Maybe you’ll find something in a crusty record shop in Costa Mesa.

(Hammond is still alive, well, recording, and touring to this day.)

 

Tracklist:

1) Two Trains Running (McKinley Morganfield

2) Give Me A 32-20 (Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup)

3) Maybelline (Chuck Berry)

4) Louise (Mixed Sources, Plus Robert Pete Williams)

5) This Train (Big Bill Broonzy)

6) East St. Louis Blues (Furry Lewis)

7) Going Back To Florida (Lightning Hopkins)

8) Mean Old Frisco (Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup)

9) I Got A Letter This Morning (Eugene “Son” House)

10) The Hoochie Coochie Man (Muddy Waters)

11) Crossroads Blues (Robert Johnson)

12) See That My Grave Is Kept Clean (Blind Lemon Jefferson)

 

 

 

FLASHBACK FRIDAY: Graceland

graceland

In 1986, Paul Simon released his critically acclaimed, music-history-making album Graceland. The record would make waves across the globe, topping charts in the US as well as the UK and snagging the Grammy’s Album of the Year award in ’87. We know its songs well to this day: “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes,” “You Can Call Me Al,” and, of course, “Graceland” are staples in Paul Simon’s discography. But, as many already know, the most notable aspect of Graceland’s genesis, reception, and lasting influence on musicians around the world is its firm footing in South African music.

The story of this album begins with a cassette tape of the Boyoyo Boys, a South African group that captivated Paul Simon and incited much of the inspiration that would give birth to Graceland. He was so enthralled by the sounds that he ventured to South Africa at a time when the country was still deeply in the thralls of apartheid, disregarding a United Nations cultural boycott that was fiercely supported by several popular artists at the time. It was a bold move that eventually led to a lot of criticism, but Simon was fueled solely by his artistic desire to work with the South African music he was so stirred by.

During Paul Simon’s first visit to South Africa, Nelson Mandela was still in prison. But three years after Graceland‘s release, Simon was invited by Mandela himself as the first American to play a concert in post-apartheid South Africa. Because, as Simon stated in an interview with National Geographic last year, “what was unusual about Graceland is that it was on the surface apolitical, but what it represented was the essence of the anti-apartheid in that it was a collaboration between blacks and whites to make music that people everywhere enjoyed.”

Graceland’s enormous success spotlighted the many South African musicians featured on the album and introduced to the world artists and groups like Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Ray Phiri, and The Gaza Sisters (to name just a few). Songs like “Homeless” and “I Know What I Know,” recorded in collaboration with these artists, featured traditionally South African musical styles like mbaqanga and isicathamiya, made accessible to the West by Paul Simon’s treatment. The music depicted an exuberant and colorful culture, despite coming out of a horrible and disgusting political context.

In response to the loss of Nelson Mandela, Paul Simon had this to say:

Mandela was one of the great leaders and teachers of the twentieth century. He conceived a model for mortal enemies to overcome their hatred and find a way through compassion to rebuild a nation based on truth, justice and the power of forgiveness. His passing should reignite a worldwide effort for peace.

Today, flash back to the sounds of Graceland and South Africa and celebrate the life of Nelson Mandela.

LOUD & TASTELESS: Empress Of

Every Thursday, AF profiles a style icon from the music world. This week’s icon is Lorely Rodriguez, the Brooklynite better known as Empress Of. She made her rounds at CMJ 2013 and stole our hearts with her dreamy pop and feminine menswear.

Though relatively new to the music scene, Empress Of is already stealing our hearts. Her hits like “Champagne” and “Hat Trick” have the perfect combination of dreamy ’90s pop and new-age synthesizers to get a crowd to hang on her every note during performances. And then there is her clothing. She combines oversized blazers with awesome print pants to accentuate her tiny frame. Who doesn’t love a good pant? Other times, she’s sporting button-ups, and there’s usually a collar involved. It’s business meets girly, much like her music. While we wait for her to rise to stardom on the radio, we’ll be busy ordering every peter pan collar shirt ModCloth will let us buy. Check out our Pinterest page for ideas on how to nab Rodriguez’s sweet style.

Before you do, listen to “Realize You”, one of our faves from the talented beauty, here via Soundcloud:

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