Monday, October 28, 2013

Dirty Projectors

Dirty Projectors at Variety Playhouse, August 9, 2012
Dirty Projectors claim that this will be the last video from 2012's Swing Lo Magellan.  I hope that this means they're back in the studio working on the next album, and that means they'll be touring again soon (too long!).

Sunday, October 27, 2013

Neutral Milk Hotel at The Tabernacle, Atlanta, October 26, 2013


It's both easy and hard to call any given show "Concert of the Year."  Easy in the excitement and rapture you experience as you're leaving the venue.  Hard, as in how can you compare, say, Savages at Vinyl with Yo La Tengo at the Buckhead Theater, or Blind Pilot at Centennial Olympic Park with Foxygen at 529?  However, given all these cautions and risks, Neutral Milk Hotel presented as strong a contender for Concert of the Year last night as one could possibly hope to hear.

Half Japanese opened. 


Photography, even with cell phones, was strictly forbidden at last night's show.  Although the crowd was big enough - the show was sold out - that I could easily have snuck in a few pictures, I decided to abide by the artists' request in the spirit of cooperation.  I found the Instagram picture above of Half Japanese on someone's Facebook page and since I never agreed not to share someone else's pics, there you go.  The Neutral Milk Hotel setlist at the top of the page isn't from last night's show (or even last night's sequence of songs), but the closest thing that I could find on Google.

But I digress.  The semi-legendary band Half Japanese opened with a full, hour-long set.  They are considered a punk rock band, but listening to them now just reminds me of how broad a range of music the term "punk" was applied to back in the late 70s and early 80s (sort of like "alternative" in the 90s or "indie" today).  Their music nowadays would probably be called "garage rock" or "lo-fi" rather than "punk,"  but then, who needs categories, anyway?  

Half Japanese are led by singer and "guitarist" Jad Fair. I put "guitarist" in quotes because Jad does not play guitar in any traditional manner, once stating "the only chord I know is the one that connects the guitar to the amp."  Instead, he banged and strummed on an untuned electric guitar, eventually breaking the neck off the guitar body and still continued to bend the strings and pull sound from the instrument before abandoning it all together.  

Half Japanese have been together for over 30 years now, although I vaguely recall seeing Fair perform solo once back in the late 80s in Albany, New York, of all places, but don't hold me to that - the memory's pretty vague. In any event, last night the band included longtime members, John Sluggett, Gilles Rieder, Mick Hobbs, and Jason Willett.  Highlights included no less than two separate songs about Frankenstein, a cover of Daniel Johnson's King Kong, and Fair's presence and sly sense of play throughout the set.

After a fairly long break between sets, Jeff Magnum took the stage solo, looking almost like the Unabomber with his long beard and hair.  His first words were to request that everybody put their cell phones away ("We want to play for you"), and then he launched into Oh Comely.  The audience was delirious - no one can cover Jeff Magnum like Jeff Magnum - and when the trumpeter came on stage for the horn portion of the song, they exploded in approval.

The band pulled out all the stops for this performance. For King of Carrot Flowers, the second song of the set, they had a three-member horn section, and at other times during the performance they had a s many as eight people on stage with them.  Band member Julien Koster (The Music Tapes) was as eclectic as ever, bowing a carpenter's saw, playing accordion, bass, a small Moog, or whatever the song required. 

It may not be possible at this point in time to define an "indie" sound, but whatever that sound may be, a strong argument can be made that Neutral Milk Hotel was the first to achieve it. One hallmark of what I consider the indie sound is the use of traditional acoustic instruments such as banjo and accordion, instruments usually associated with Amerciana music, but used in a non-traditional way to fill out the band's sound.  Neutral Milk Hotel have long been innovators in this, as well as the way that they use horns. You can still hear their influence today in the music of bands such as Arcade Fire, Beirut, and The Decemberists.

Neutral_milkWhat was remarkable was how faithfully they captured the sound of the revered recorded versions of their songs, especially considering the 15 years that have passed since the release of In An Aeroplane Over the Sea.  Magnum's voice seems not to have aged at all, and not only did they have the rest of the original Aeroplane band members back together (Mangum, Koster, Scott Spillane, and Jeremy Barnes), but they apparently used the same expressive individual instruments as on the recordings (french and english horns, saws, bowed banjo, and so on).

The result was an entertaining, uplifting, and musically adventurous evening (as if we expected anything less).  The band played a full hour and then returned for a three-song encore.  After King of Carrot Flowers I forgot the sequence of songs, but they included Two-Headed Boy, Holland 1945, and Everything Is, as well as unrecorded songs like Ferris Wheel On Fire (appropriate for The Tabernacle, situated as it is next to Atlanta's new ferris wheel); in short, everything one could have hoped for.

I don't think anyone left unsatisfied, and as we walked out, I heard many people wondering if they'd be able to get back in tonight (Saturday was the first of a sold-out, two-night stand).  In you were a fan of NMH, the evening was everything you could have wanted, and I'm sure that if you hadn't have heard them before, you would have left a fan last night.


It was a wonderful, perfect set, lacking nothing.  Concert of the Year.     

Friday, October 25, 2013

MFNW 2013 - Day Three Retrospective


Day Three, Thursday, is when MFNW finally got into full swing, and this particular Thursday, this particular Day Three, was probably about the most awesome day one could have reason to expect.

It started with a 10:30 am set by Chvrches in the small, intimate Doug Fir Lounge, a broadcast performance for KEXP.  I got right up front by the stage, much, much closer to Chvrches than I had gotten the night before. An over-zealous KEXP volunteer wouldn't let me take pictures; however, I still managed to squeeze out a couple of Lauren Mayberry during the set.



Someone else was able to sneak an iPhone video of an entire song (Recover).



And if you haven't fallen in love with Mayberry yet, here's her Jawa impression, which ought to do it for you (did for me):



Since KEXP, or at least their volunteer, wouldn't let me take any pictures, here are the ones from their website:





After seeing Chvrches the night before at the 1,400-person Roseland Theater, it was pretty cool seeing them the next morning at the Doug Fir (300-person capacity, although there were only about 75 people there for the weekday morning set).  In Atlanta terms, it's sort of like seeing a band at The Tabernacle and then again the next morning at The Drunken Unicorn.

At noon, The Baseball Project played a KEXP set at The Doug Fir.  The Baseball Project is Steve Wynn (Dream Syndicate), Mike Mills (REM), Scott McCaughey (The Minus 5), and drummer Linda Pitmon.  Peter Buck of REM is in the band as well, but wasn't at the Doug Fir.  


All of their songs are about baseball, either the game itself, or individual players (e.g., Jackie Robinson), or memorable MLB moments (e.g., Doc Ellis plunking the first three Reds batters in the first inning of a game).  Even if you're not a fan of the game, it's still fun just to hear their REM-style jangle-pop, and watch them try to find new things to say within the self-imposed limitations of The Baseball Project.

Here's some more KEXP pictures (the photo nazi was still patrolling the crowd):





At 2:00 pm, we got !!!.   We saw !!! at Bumbershoot just a couple days before, and just like Chvrches earlier in the day, it was great seeing them up close and personal at the Fir (I was front row).  I posted the Dude-I-Was-There! video a few days ago, and there's really nothing more to be said, so here's the KEXP photos from that set:








Austra was up next at the Fir, but I left after !!! to go to a party for VIP wristband holders put on by Marmoset music.  I don't know what Marmoset actually does - I think it has something to do with licencing soundtrack music for movies - but they have a warehouse in southwest Portland and were hosting a party with free beer (Heineken) and music.


Not fully knowing what to expect, I headed down and wound up having my best time of MFNW.  When I arrived, Portland's Wild Ones were on stage.



I didn't know who they were when I arrived, and when I leaned over to ask the people standing next to me who the band on stage were, I realized that I was standing next to the superb Portland band Radiation City, whom we saw at The Earl a few months ago.  In fact, as I hung out for the day, I began to realize that fully half the audience, at the very least, were musicians, some of whom were playing that day, and some of whom who weren't (e.g., Onuinu, who was milling about the crowd).  Free beer, good music, rubbing elbows with the bands - what more could a music fan want?

Marmoset had two stages set up, one outside under a tent, and one inside the warehouse in a mock-up living room.  After Wild Ones, San Francisco's Family Crest played the inside stage.


As you could guess from the picture above (by the way, note the Boxed Water cartons on the floor), the Family Crest plays orchestral folk-rock.  What you can't tell is how great they are at playing it.  They had me absolutely mesmerized with their well-honed songs.  They reminded me of early Fanfarlo, and I was impressed enough to buy their CD, the one and only CD I bought that whole week at either MFNW or Bumbershoot - they were that good.


I had wanted to see the Portland band Shy Girls, who were up next at the outdoor stage, but I went to get something to eat first (Marmoset had several food trucks set up at the party) and wound up talking for a while to a bunch of folks (an environmentally-conscious gay couple who had also bought the Family Crest CD and a straight older couple, older even then me, who were nonetheless fans of the Portland music scene).   After my lunch, I went back inside the warehouse and caught the Bay Area musician, songwriter, producer, and recording engineer (Tiny Telephone studio) John Vanderslice.


Vanderslice performed a solo set on acoustic guitar, singing politically aware songs in between some of the most personal yet hilarious stage banter I've heard in a while.  I can't remember a word he said, though - I can only remember laughing.  

Next up was North Carolina's lo-fi The Love Language.


It was inevitable, but during The Love Language set it finally started to rain, the first rain I've encountered in three consecutive years of MFNW.  I was prepared for it - it had been cloudy all week and well forecast - and I was wearing my new REI raincoat, bought just for this occasion, so all was good.  Besides, we were under a tent.  No worries.


We've seen The Love Language opening for The War On Drugs at Variety Playhouse during March Madness 2012.  They played a typically loud, energetic set, and later that day, Radiation City credited them for being the band that inspired them to start a band of their own.  It was that kind of feel-good, mutual-admiration day.

By this time it was raining pretty hard, but I simply dashed from the tent back to the warehouse to hear Eric D Johnson, singer, guitarist, and frontman for the fine band Fruit Bats, one of the highlights of Bumbershoot 2012.


As he was setting up, someone brought him a beer, even though he already had one (or two) on stage with him.  He turned to me, sitting just a couple feet away, and offered me his beer.  It's not often when the band gives you the drinks, and even though they were free, the gesture was appreciated.


Johnson played a great set of Fruit Bats songs, and the appeal of the band has always been Johnson's quirky voice and the great songwriting, so nothing was lost in the stripped-down, solo versions.  A fine, fine, satisfying set.


If that was it for the party - Wild Child, The Family Crest, John Vanderslice, The Love Language, and Eric D Johnson - it would have been a great event, but as the late-night commericals say, "But, wait, there's more!"  Portland's Radiation City played next under the tent, performing their bubbly, upbeat pop songs, and temporarily driving the rain away.



I don't know if I've ever seen singer Lizzie Ellison not in a see-through blouse.

Radiation City at Marmoset Party, MFNW 2013
Radiation City at OPB Party, Mississippi Studios, MFNW 2013 
Radiation City at The Earl, June 2013
You gotta love a woman who sings so well, writes such great songs, and has a seemingly endless wardrobe of see-through blouses.

Meanwhile, back in the warehouse Daniel Blue of the band Motopony performed a set with a few friends.


This was one of the most dramatic changes is stage appearance I've ever seen.  We saw Motopony back at Bumbershoot 2011, and were blown away by their driving music and avant-glam look, especially singer Daniel Blue, who looked like the love child that Jim Morrison and Kurt Cobain might have had, if such a thing were biologically or chronographically possible.

Motopony at Bumbershoot 2011
It was hard to believe that the quiet, almost shy, young man in the flannel shirt and carrying a "This Machine Does Not Kill" guitar was the same person who performed so flamboyantly at Bumbershoot, leading to my wondering which was the persona and which was real?  Both?  Neither?


Of course, ultimately it didn't matter, as Daniel and his young friends played a soothing and totally charming set of sincere folk, with the ladies seductively purring sweet background vocals.  Another great set, and Daniel Blue just becomes more and more interesting.


By this time, it was getting dark and the rain had returned, but Florida's Surfer Blood headlined the party.


Their sound matches their name perfectly - loud beach music that you might expect to hear at a frat party.  Of course, it's hard to take them seriously anymore ever since frontman John Paul Pitts' arrest on charges of domestic battery.


But forgive and forget, I say.  I almost hate to admit it, but they rocked.

So that was it for the Marmoset party, quite possibly one of the coolest, if not the coolest, parties I've ever been to.  A stellar line up of bands, free beer, lots of free snacks, and rubbing elbows with the bands, most of whom hung out to hear each others' sets.  The hours spent at Marmoset were the highlight of a very highly lit week.

But wait, there's more!  It was only about 8:00, and even though I had missed Youth Lagoon's rain-soaked set at Pioneer Courthouse Square, there was still a lot more MFNW to go that day.  I hopped onto a bus just a couple blocks away from Marmoset, which soon dropped me off right in front of the Star Theater, an historic, former silent film theater just off Burnside Street in Old Town, Portland. The place was once a burlesque showcase, an adult movie theater, and a strip club where a teenage Courtney Love once worked. The property was owned for several years by Gus Van Sant, who eventually sold it to the owner of Dante's, who turned it into a fairly upscale live music club.

File:Star Theater.jpg

The spooky drone metal band Vice Device started just after I arrived.



So that was cool.  The next band up was Diana, named after their lead singer.




I don't know exactly what it was that didn't quite click for me with this band - quite possibly it was the time of the very long day (they were about the 13th band of the day for me).  Maybe it was that I wasn't familiar with their songs, or that I couldn't comfortably place them into any particular category.  In any event, my attention wandered during their set, at least until I realized that I was standing, or rather leaning against a rail, next to one of the members of The Family Crest, my new favorite band of the day, still dressed in his grey shirt and tie.  Anyway, Diana's band features a tenor sax, so there's that.


The headliner, and the 14th and final band of my day, was Toronto's Austra, the band I passed on at the Doug Fir earlier in the day to go instead to the Marmoset party.



We've seen Austra before, back during Rocktober 2011 when she played The Earl (with Grimes opening!), touring in support of her debut Feel It Break record.  We saw her again at The Tabernacle opening for The xx, where she previewed a lot of new songs, which eventually became her second album, Olympia. Her tour in support of that new album took her through Atlanta, a show that I missed, although I've heard that she didn't have her remarkable backup singers, twin sisters Sari and Romy Lightman, who also perform as the band Tasseomancy, in Atlanta (they weren't with her at the Tabernacle show, either, but were in tow at The Earl in 2011).  Fortunately, they performed with her that night at the Star, adding an extra dimension to the show.


The performance was spectacular and epic and everything you'd expect from an Austra concert.  Katie Stelmanis' voice was in fine shape as she carried the almost operatic vocals.  The band was tight and muscular, propelled by Maya Postepski's precise drumming.  It was a perfect climax for a perfect day, and when I finally left the Star Theater, the rain had subsided to a mere drizzle, providing a cool and comfortable walk back to my hotel.

It's for days like this that I do all of this, that make it worth the flight out west, the hotels, the off-days, the disappointing sets, and the long hours.  This day made it all worth while.  This day was perfect.

It's my hope that you too, gentle reader, have many days as good for you as this one was for me.