Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Another Thao Song


On February 5, Thao Nguyen's band Thao & the Get Down Stay Down will release their new album We the Common via Ribbon Music. The follow-up to 2009's Know Better Learn Faster was produced by John Congleton (Modest Mouse, St. Vincent). One of the album's tracks, Kindness Be Conceived, is a duet with Joanna Newsom.

Thao pointed out on her Facebook page that the duet with Ms. Newsom and several other songs would not exist without the Hedgebrook Retreat.  Hedgebrook supports "visionary women writers whose stories and ideas shape our culture now and for generations to come."

Hedgebrook Retreat is located on Whidbey Island, about thirty-five miles northwest of Seattle. Situated on 48-acres of forest and meadow facing Puget Sound, the retreat hosts women writers from all over the world for residencies of two weeks to two months, at no cost to the writer. Residents are housed in six handcrafted cottages, where they spend their days in solitude – writing, reading, taking walks in the woods on the property, on nearby Double Bluff beach or trails around the island. In the evenings, they gather in the farmhouse kitchen to share a home-cooked gourmet meal, their work, their process and their stories. The women who come to Hedgebrook are writing in all genres, and are of all ages, ethnicities, backgrounds and levels of writing experience.

Update:  Meanwhile, Thao released a second hilarious installment in her Behind The Scenes, The Making of The Making Of . . . video series.  Who knew she was such a great comedian?


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Local Natives



Local Natives play the Music Hall of Williamsburg this Friday, and the show will stream live on The Bowery Presents Live YouTube channel at 10 p.m. EST.

Above, they play a live version of Ceilings, off their about-to-be-released second album, Hummingbird.  Below, they perform Heavy Feet, also from the new album, at last year's Paris gig.

 

Monday, January 28, 2013

Pillowfight


Following the release of Used To Think, Santa Barbara's KCRW named a new Pillowfight song as their Top Tune for Wednesday, January 23, 2013.  According to the station:
Gorillaz' Dan the Automator and multi-instrumentalist Emily Wells team up for a ferocious new project called Pillowfight. It feels like a party when Kid Koala contributes on the 1's and 2's and graffiti artist David Choe handles the artwork. Today's Top Tune, Get Down, from Pillowfight's self-titled debut, features Lateef the Truthspeaker on vocals.


(Sounds a little like vintage Big Audio Dynamite at the 2:00 minute mark)

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Akron/Family


Akron/Family have leaked No-Room, our first taste from their forthcoming album Sub Verses, due out April 30.

Meanwhile, my copy of their CD, ATL 2 ELP, which includes their performance last year at The Drunken Unicorn, arrived the other day.   The band returns to the DU on April 29, which, wouldn't you know it?, is a Monday night so I probably won't be able to make it.

At least not by the doors-open time . . .

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Calexico y Yo La Tengo at Buckhead Theater, January 25, 2013


So, yeah, last night was Yo La Tengo with Calexico opening at The Buckhead Theater.  Apologies for not posting more yesterday, but when I left for the copy shop at 4:30 to make four copies of a report for my job, I had no idea that it would take me three hours to complete.  As it was, I ran directly from the copiers to The Buckhead Theater, stopping home only to pick up my Will Call printout, and got to the show at about 8:00, a half hour before Calexico started the evening.

It was my first time at The Buckhead Theater.  The BT is actually the restored former Roxy, which I hadn't been to either, even though it's a mere three miles from my home.  Go figure.  Anyway, it's a nice venue and like Terminal West still has that "new car smell."  It has a large stage, a balcony, and really spacious rooms up front for drinks, the merch table, and coat check.  

Back in 1984, when Yo La Tengo first formed, Buckhead was a very different place than it is now, and I had spent many an evening socializing and partying in the old neighborhood at bars, restaurants, and nightclubs like Good Old Days, Carlos McGee's, Aunt Charlie's, Peachtree Cafe,  the Five Paces Inn, Texas State Line Barbecue, and the Steamhouse Lounge, among others.  Now, it's all boutiques and shops for the One Percenters or One Percent wannabes, and it actually now feels a little incongruous to be listening to live music, much less good live music, in the area.

But enough nostalgia. "The memories of a man in his old age are the deeds of a man in his prime," Pink Floyd once sang  (or as the Gang of Four put it, "Nostalgia, it's no good").  Last night was an evening of good live music, stating with the opening set by Calexico.


Calexico formed from members of The Friends of Dean Martinez, one of my favorite instrumental, post-rock bands of the '90s.  Led by guitarist and singer Joey Burns, the band merges indie rock with mariachi and Tejano music styles.  The band is currently touring as a septet with many of the members playing multiple instruments, including two trumpeters, accordion, pedal steel, and vibes.  Their sound is exciting and uplifting, and as soon as the music began, I forgot all of my troubles back at the copy shop.


The group includes everything I like in an indie band. Upright bass?  Check.


Horns? Check.


Vibes? Check.


Accordion playing multi-instrumentalists? Check.


More guitars?  Check.


When they weren't playing together mariachi-style, trumpeter Jacob Valenzuela also contributed several terrific vocals in Spanish, while trumpeter Martin Wenk occasionally filled in on accordion.  All in all, it was a wonderful set of great music, with just the right amount of jalapenos to spice up the night.


Here Calexico play one of its singles, Maybe on Monday, in a Lower Manhattan studio.


But as good as Calexico was, it was Yo La Tengo who ruled the night.  Although they're been around for some 30 years now, this was actually my first time seeing them, and I'm already kicking myself for all of the missed opportunities - I've seen them billed so many times, yet never found it in me to make a it a set before.  


The band formed as the husband/wife duo of Ira Kaplan and Georgia Hubley in 1984, with bassist James McNew joining the band around 1990.  The band can make a reasonable claim at being the original indie rock outfit, and their musical styles encompass punk, post-punk, folk rock, noise pop, dream pop, ambient, and jangle rock.  In other words, they're all over the map and are happy to explore and stretch themselves, while never content in being stuck in just one place.




The band is famous for its large back catalog and impressive selection of covers, as well as their annual Eight Nights of Hanukkah shows at their native Hoboken's Maxwell's.  I understand that some of their cover songs at last year's Maxwell's event included The Fugs' Frenzy, The Beatles' Eight Days a Week, Dylan's You Ain't Going Nowhere, Adam & the Ants' Antmusic, The Velvet Underground's Heroin and Sister Ray, Blue Oyster Cult's Burnin' For You, Neil Young's Time Fades Away, and Sun Ra's Nuclear War (which was actually their best-selling single), the latter performed with members of the Sun Ra Arkestra. Their 2012 Hanukkah show also included this feedback-drenched guitar orgy, which should give you a pretty good idea of how they sounded much of last night:



The Soundcloud gadget above is from the exemplary NYC Taper, which has most of the 2012 Yo La Tengo Hannukah shows available for free download.  

Last night's set started out loud and electric, with lots of post-punk songs and compositions and members  of the band exchanging roles and instruments.  Mr. McNew even took over on the drums from Ms. Hubley during the middle of a song without either missing so much as a single beat.    

Midway through the set, Mr. Kaplan switched to acoustic guitar and led the band through several quiet songs from their new album, Fade, with Ms. Hubley on vocals.  Although slower than the previous songs, the band still managed to keep the audience spellbound and quiet, and after a couple of those quiet, acoustic songs, Mr. Kaplan joked, "Now, we're going to slow things down a little."

Sometimes they were Sonic Youth and sometimes they were Low.  Sometimes they were the Velvet Underground and sometimes they were REM.  And sometimes they were Calexico, inviting the twin trumpeters on stage with them on one song.  



The highlight of the evening, though, was the closer to their set, a long instrumental jam which built up and up as one member after another of Calexico came on stage and joined in, and slowly wound back down again as the members left the stage one by one to rapturous applause from the audience.  The piece lasted for what felt like a blissful eternity, and even though it was all built around one very simple chord progression, I don't think anyone in the audience wanted to hear it end.





For their encore, the band went back to quiet, acoustic mode, ending the night with Ms. Hubley singing a lovely cover of a Johnny Cash song, with vibes by Calexico's John Convertino.




I don't mean it ironically when I sat that last night's show was the best concert of the year.  If and when I look back on 2013 and try to select a "Best Of" show, last night's performance will have to be given serious consideration.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Dude, I Was There!

Sealions at The Goat Farm, March 29, 2012

Last year, Atlanta dream-pop band Sealions performed as part of the Atlanta Film Festival Music Experience at The Goat Farm.  Fittingly for a film festival, the IndieATL crew caught the whole thing on video, projecting the images in real time behind the band as they played and later posting the videos on YouTube.

Here are Sealions performing Indian Summer at the event.