Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Austra

Austra at The Tabernacle, February 2, 2013
New, piano-heavy song, Home, from Olympia, the forthcoming album from Austra (apparently pronounced "Oh-stra").



We heard a lot of new songs when Austra played the Tabernacle last month, and my speculation that it was leading up to a new album proved to be correct.  Olympia will be released June 17.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Thao & The Get Down Stay Down and Sallie Field & The Sound Outside at Smith's Olde Bar, Atlanta


It may take me a day or two to find my breath again and restore my memory after last night's performance, but for the time being, here are my pictures from last night and just a couple of thoughts.

SALLIE FORD & THE SOUND OUTSIDE




Sallie Ford ventured away form her well-known rockabilly sound into more rockish territory, dancing when she wasn't playing her guitar.  She played new songs from her new album Untamed Beast, as well as some older material like Dirty Radio.



Awkward moment of the evening: Sallie reminisced about the last time she played Atlanta, when she encouraged all the patrons of The Earl to light up cigarettes.  "We never played Atlanta before," her guitarist reminded her.


THAO & THE GET DOWN STAY DOWN


Possibly one of the most fun shows of the year, Thao played songs from her new album We The Common, as well as Get Down Stay Down favorites like When We Swam.



Thao played a number of stringed instruments, from acoustic and electric guitar to slide guitar to banjo to mandolin.  She even rapped a few lines from Atlanta's own Ludacris during one song.






ENCORE


For her encore, Thao performed her song Body before inviting Sallie Ford and the entire Sound Outside back onstage for a nostalgic conclusion.




Monday, March 18, 2013

James Blake + Brian Eno

James Blake feat. Brian Eno:



Blake and Eno.  Worlds collide, and I can't even begin to describe how cool this is.  You'll have to hear for yourself.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Dear New Orleans


Here's a pretty cool video documenting a group of musicians, including Thao Nguyen and tUnE-yArDs, joining local activists and musicians to put on a benefit show in New Orleans.

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Caveman



Another great new song from the great Brooklyn band, Caveman, who will be performing at The Drunken Unicorn on Saturday, April 6.

Friday, March 15, 2013

Kishi Bashi at The Earl, March 14, 2013


Kishi Bashi played to a packed, sold-out Earl last night.  He played 529 last summer, but on a Monday (so I missed him), and he played MFNW 2012 at the Doug Fir, but I got talked into going out to Troutdale, Oregon to see My Morning Jacket at McMenninin's at Edgefield.  As it turns out, the third time was the charm.  

But before he performed, the set was opened by the charming Elizabeth and the Catapult.


The Catapult is actually just Elizabeth Ziman, but that's all that's needed, as she sings beautifully and selects her songs carefully, including last night's cover of Dawes' When My Time Comes.  She was fighting off a cold but still both played and sang remarkably well between her sniffles, and used her not inconsiderable personal charm to totally win over the audience.




Elizabeth eventually invited Tall Tall Trees (Mike Savino) to come on stage and join her for a few songs.  The two are actually Kishi Bashi's tour band, so it was basically just Kishi without the Bashi (Bashi without the Kishi?)





There was only a short break between sets before Kishi Bashi took the stage, performing solo at first before being joined on stage by Elizabeth and the Catapult and Tall Tall Trees.


Mr. Bashi is known primarily for playing bright, cheery pop, most notably the song Bright Whites which you've probably heard by now in a Windows 8 commercial.  What surprised me during his over-60-minute set was the variety of musics he played, ranging from his signature pop to a fiddle-and-banjo bluegrass showdown with Tall Tall Trees, to some Bela Fleck-style jazz, hip-hop beat boxing, and even some noise rock and looped feedback freak outs.  In fact, he kicked into the instantly recognizable opening lines of Bright Whites after an extended jam with Tall Tall Trees, creating a perfect collision of the sequential and  the purely veridical.




Use of a repeater pedal to create on-stage loops is common by now, and I've seen plenty of artists create sonic textures and complex backing sounds to accompany their own playing (e.g., Owen Pallet, Dustin Wong, etc.).  But no one is the maestro of the technique that Kishi Bashi is, and beyond just having an interesting technical approach, he creates music that is fun, joyous, and consistently interesting to listen to.




The bow tie came off midway through the set for what he jokingly called Kishi Bashi After Dark.  






Overall, this might have been the most fun set since David Byrne and Annie Clark brought Love This Giant to the Cobb Energy Center, and the most musically satisfying since Calexico and Yo La Tengo at the Buckhead Theater.





Thursday, March 14, 2013

The Postal Service Auditions



Funny Or Die does it again, getting some terrific rock musicians to perform lacerating parodies of themselves, although Moby takes it to a whole other level.