Tuesday, August 20, 2013

School of Seven Bells



Here's School of Seven Bells playing an acoustic set on the concrete campus of Georgia State University (Georgia's Great University) for indieATL.

Don't know if I have anything to say about this, other than how come I don't know about these Georgia State gigs?

Monday, August 19, 2013

More Pickwick


The good news:  Pickwick, the best band you've never heard of, have released another new video, this time for their song Hacienda Hotel, a favorite here at MDW.

The bad news: their tour plans, which include several dates with Neko Case, don't include anything in the American South.  

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Foxygen

Foxygen at 529, February 23, 2013
Since appearing at Atlanta's 529 late last winter, Foxygen have had their fair share of trials and tribulations, including an apparent meltdown at SXSW, reported tensions among band members in social media, altercations with concert security, and lots of cancelled dates.  Now frontman Sam France has broken a leg falling off stage, requiring surgery, a metal rod, and physical therapy.

Any of this is enough to break up lesser bands, and I hope all this doesn't mean last winter marked Foxygen's last and only appearance in Atlanta.  Here's hoping they hold it together and keep on recording and touring.


Saturday, August 17, 2013

Anticipation



Not that I'm counting or anything (okay, I actually am), but it's 16 more days until I see Seattle's Ivan & Alyosha at Bumbershoot.


18 more days until Glasgow's Chvrches at Portland's MFNW.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Wooden Indian Burial Ground


After winning first-come, first-served tickets on Monday for Thao & The Get Down Stay Down at the KEXP Music Lounge during Bumbershoot, I've managed to snag tickets to several more KEXP shows, including Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside, Superchunk, ZZ Ward, and Charles Bradley, "the Screaming Eagle of Soul."  I literally can't go near my computer without tickets to shows falling in my lap (okay, literally, I can, but you know what I mean).  

This is a good thing, of course, but it's causing me to have to rearrange my festival schedule. F'rinstance, since I'll be seeing Sallie Ford at 12 noon on Sunday, I can skip her Saturday-night set at the Plaza Stage and instead go see Washed Out at the Fountain Lawn.  Fortunately, none of the shows I've gotten into are scheduled during any "must-see" sets, although I'll be cutting it pretty close post-Superchunk to see alt-J.

But anyway, there are no longer any "dead zones" in my Bumbershoot schedule, or times where I'm forced to choose between several bands of whom I've never heard.  I won't even be seeing The Flavr Blue, even though I posted a video of them here to get myself better acquainted.

The schedule for MFNW is even stronger, and there's only a handful of bands on that schedule that I don't know.  One such band is Portland's Wooden Indian Burial Ground, who'll be opening for Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Branx following Animal Collective's set at the lovely Pioneer Courthouse Square (Portland's Living Room).  But based on this video for Heliocopter, I'm pretty impressed - they may be the only band in the world that could hold their own after a set by Animal Collective. 

Thursday, August 15, 2013

New Kishi Bashi


Kishi Bashi at The Earl, March 14, 2013
Speaking as we were yesterday about Kishi Bashi, it's coincidental that some new music has surfaced this week from the Japanese violinist/pop auteur. Here's Philosophize In It! Chemicalize With It! from his forthcoming second LP.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

The Last Bison at Terminal West, Atlanta, August 13, 2013


Okay, remember that day last year when I was in Portland for MFNW and got talked into leaving the festival to go out to someplace called Troutdale, Oregon, to see My Morning Jacket perform at McMenamin's Edgefield? I missed most of the show that I was planning to see that night, which included Kishi Bashi at the Doug Fir Lounge, although I did get back in time to catch Sad Baby Wolf and the headliner, Moonface.  My Morning Jacket were terrific, though, and I don't regret my decision for a moment.

The bill that night at the Doug Fir was actually quite full, and included several other bands in addition to Moonface, Sad Baby Wolf, and Kishi Bashi.  In addition to missing Kishi Bashi, I also missed the opener, a band called The We Shared Milk.  But there was a fifth band on the bill, one I found intriguing (at least by the MFNW write-up), performing in between The We Shared Milk and Kishi Bashi, that I also missed. Last night, I finally got to see that band, The Last Bison, when they played at Terminal West. 


Sean Spencer opened with a solo set of songs on acoustic guitar.  Sean normally plays with a band called Seven Handle Circus, who are scheduled to play Terminal West on September 14.  They'll be playing The Georgia Theater in Athens this Friday.  But even without his band, Sean played a pleasant and compelling set of songs, including a cover of Paul Simon's The Only Living Boy in New York


The Last Bison took the stage a little before 10 pm.  They play an interesting amalgam of indie rock, folk, bluegrass, Americana, and chamber music.  The usual comparisons are to Fleet Foxes and Mumford and Sons, although I heard and saw a lot of similarities to The Lumineers, Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, and Typhoon.  There were so many people on the stage (seven) that it takes two pictures to capture them all.


There's a lot to like here, including the percussion which gives potions of their songs a tribal vibe.  They don't employ a traditional drummer, but several members of the band, including frontman Ben Hardesty, take turns banding on a bass drum or a floor tom.

My only complaint is the outfits.  They dress like historical reenactors from Colonial Williamsburg.  The Lumineers do this too, but its all a part of their otherwise elaborate stage show, but when The Last Bison does it, it feels contrived and derivative.  For some reason, Amos the cello player was the only one who wore modern clothes.


Ben Hardesty has a decent singing voice and writes interesting songs (I assume he's the songwriter), which often build up into mini-epics.  A nice touch was when the string section, Teresa (violin) and Amos (cello), offered a little chamber piece to fill in the time it took Ben to re-string his guitar after a string broke (it happened at least twice).  These passages provided lovely, meditative, little oases of sound during the show.

The set ended with their song Setting Our Tables.  Here's the video:


For the encore, Ben played a few songs accompanied only by his guitar and Amos, the cellist.  Then they called Teresa, their violinist, out to the stage and performed an unamplified song on the floor with the audience gathered around them.


And that was The Last Bison.  More pics are posted over at the Flickr page.  Since that day last September, I've now managed to catch Kishi Bashi and The Last Bison, and only have The We Shared Milk remaining, and they're not currently touring.