Friday, January 11, 2013

More Low (Though Not Lower)


Oh. look.  Minneapolis Mormons Low have released Just Make It Stop, the first single from their forthcoming album, the Jeff Tweedy-produced The Invisible Way.  The song is reportedly but one of five songs with lead vocals by Mimi.



Low are touring in support of the album, but are not coming anywhere even near the American South.  However, they will be playing Portland's Mississippi Studios on Friday, April 5.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Iron Jayne, Lonesome Leash, Spirit Temple at 529, January 9, 2013



The Winter Doldrums have finally passed and the 2013 concert season has kicked off with as fine a show as one could hope for a season opener.  The show was held in East Atlanta Village's 529, which for some reason has replaced the wall that had been torn down during the Om/Daniel Higgs show.  I was anxious to see how the club would expand into the new space, but was surprised to instead see the old wall back up.

The evening's headliner was new Atlanta band Iron Jayne, but the star of the evening was Lonesome Leash, the solo project of Dark Dark Dark's Walt McClements.  Spirit Temple opened with a revelatory set, and Atlanta's Cousin Dan provided retro DJ sets as "Moreland Brando" between each act (I hadn't heard Patty Smith's Gloria in years, and I especially enjoyed his segue from Bowie's Fame to Destroyer's Kaputt).

The opener was Atlanta's Spirit Temple, Walter Fox's very enjoyable and interesting one-man band.  Performing in silhouette behind a screen, he looped guitar, recorder, and percussion to build beautiful sonic soundscapes.  


While he played, various abstract video images were projected onto the screen, apparently by members of Atlanta electronic duo Featureless Ghost.  That's Emily Kempf (see below) in front of the screen in the picture above.  

Spirit Temple sounded at times like Frippertronic-period Robert Fripp, and at other times a little like Owen Pallett.  Near the end of the set, when he overlayed bells, drums, and flute over a bass-like guitar line, he  even evoked the spirit of Pharaoh Sander's Upper Egypt.



Walt McClements' Lonesome Leash is another, slightly more traditional, one-man band. Walt primarily sings and plays accordion, while simultaneously playing a small drum kit and occasionally adding flourishes of trumpet.  The resulting output has a somewhat gypsy-flavored, Slavic sound, and Walt's songs generally build up in intensity to an emotional climax before cooling back off to the conclusion, much like a jazz soloist. A native of New Orleans, McClements brings some of the Crescent City's eclecticism to Lonesome Leash's music.

 

His set included the rousing Feeding Frenzy as the second song in his set, and closed with Ghosts, played without the drum machine he usually uses for the song, as it reportedly broke during his recent performance with Franz Nicolay at Brooklyn's The Sycamore.  Undaunted, he still managed a terrific and emotive performance which was well received by the appreciative audience.





Lonesome Leash was the reason I came to this show (that and nearly two months of Winter Doldrums), but the evening had still more in store for us. The evening's headliner was Emily Kempf's new band, Iron Jayne. Kempf, formerly of Atlanta's The Back Pockets, has stripped away not only the theatrics and audience participation of The Back Pockets, but also turned away from the freak-folk sound that characterized the former art-damaged band for a more straight-forward pop rock. Gone are the violins and horns and other odd instruments, and in their place the band consists of Kempf on keyboards, Garrett Goss on drums, Ryan Odom on guitar, and Chad  LeBlanc on bass.  Kempf's vocals are still simultaneously quirky and appealing, especially when she came out from behind the keyboards and sang at the front of the stage.





The band has gone through a few personnel changes since forming last August, and this was the first performance by this line-up of Iron Jayne. At one point near the end of the set, Kempf declared, "Alright, now we're really a band."  The set was surprisingly short, probably because they don't have all that many songs yet, but still conveyed a sense of potential greatness for this new band.  

Iron Jayne's next performance will be back at 529 on February 7, when they will be opening for U.S. Girls.  


This was my first show since the Of Monsters and Men concert at The Tabernacle back on November 29.  The Winter Doldrums were cold and long, and I'm glad they seem to finally be over. On the other hand, between the lush ambiance of Spirit Temple, the rousing folk polka of Lonesome Leash, the assertive rock of Iron Jayne, and Cousin Dan's nostalgic DJ set, I couldn't ask for a better return to the Atlanta music scene.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

La Big Vic's Cold War

La Big Vic at The Earl, June 27, 2012

Oh, look.  Brooklyn trio La Big Vic, last seen in these parts opening for Moonface at The Earl, have a new album, Cold War, coming out January 29th and have released two tracks, All That Heaven Allows and Ave. B.   

La Big Vic consists of keyboardist Peter Pearson, who apprenticed under Pink Floyd's live sound engineer, violinist/vocalist Emilie Friedlander, senior editor of The Fader and co-founder of the web sites Ad Hoc and the former Altered Zones, and guitarist Toshio Masuda,  who was once in a Japanese boy band and has produced hip-hop beats.  




Monday, January 7, 2013

Debut: Hilang Child


Hilang Child is British drummer Ed Riman, a touring member of Midnight Beats and Garnet's Home.  His First Writings EP is available for free on Bandcamp at http://hilangchild.bandcamp.com/   For a taste, here's the opening track, the gentle and soothing Chaturanga.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

March Madness



It used to be so easy.  To figure out who worth seeing was going to be playing in town on any given night, in any given month, all you had to do was look at the schedule for The Earl.  Now, the axis of activity has shifted just ever so slightly to the south, and as many quality acts are booked into 529 as The Earl, or anywhere else in Atlanta for that matter.

That being said, 529 still hasn't released much of its lineup for March Madness, but here's what we have in store so far:

March 1 - Lotus (Terminal West)
March 2 - Efterklang (The Earl)
March 5 - The Eels (Variety Playhouse)
March 6 - Alt-J (The Masquerade)
March 7 - The Ruby Suns (Drunken Unicorn)
March 8 - Cowboy Junkies (Variety Playhouse) Chelsea Light Moving (The Earl)
March 9 - Mount Moriah (Drunken Unicorn)
March 11 - Starfucker (Terminal West)
March 14 - Kishi Bashi (The Earl)
March 16 - Mission of Burma (The Earl)
March 18 - Thao & The Get Down Stay Down / Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside (Smith's Olde Bar)
March 22 - Hey Marseilles (Vinyl)
March 26 - Javelin, Raleigh Moncreif (529)


Like Rocktober, March Madness does not really exist as an identifiable entity, but is a conceptual festival put together by stringing together as many concerts as possible during the month of March.  The number of concerts during the month, according to my current, working theory, is a direct effect of Austin's massive SXSW festival on March 8-17.  Bands heading to Austin from NY or other points north of Atlanta try to pick up a gig or two on their way to or from SXSW, and Atlanta is a pretty well situated to pick up a lot of those gigs.  West Coast bands figure they might as well tour through the South a little as long as they're in Austin as well, so we pick up some more gigs that way, too.

It's still early and there will undoubtedly be more shows announced in the coming weeks, but I figured I might as well share what we've got so far.


Update:  Apparently, I'm not the only one who's noticed the SXSW mass migration.  Savannah, Georgia is holding a Savannah Stopover festival March 7-9, claiming "The best up and coming indie bands stop over in Savannah on their way to SXSW in Austin, Texas for 3 nights of music in the the city's famed historic district."   The Festival takes place across multiple venues "within walking distance of all Savannah has to offer "  

More than 80 bands are expected to perform, and so far of Montreal, Chelsea Light Moving, The Whigs, Mac DeMarco, Ducktails, Jonathan Toubin, Dent May, Delicate Steve, Turbo Fruits, Snowmine, The Last Bison, Ben Sollee, Ponderosa, Cheyenne Mize, Sean Bones, Little Tybee, Field Report, The Coathangers, William Tyler, and Naomi Punk are scheduled to perform.  

Snowmine and William Tyler will be opening for Mount Moriah at The Drunken Unicorn in Atlanta on March 9, and I wonder how many other of the Savannah Stopover artists will also be stopping over in Atlanta.