Showing posts with label Unknown Mortal Orchestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Unknown Mortal Orchestra. Show all posts

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Unknown Mortal Orchestra

Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Terminal West, Rocktober 2013
One band we regretfully missed at Shaky Knees this year was Portland's Unknown Mortal Orchestra, because the festival organizers put them on at the same time as Parquet Courts.  And it's not that Parquet Courts are necessarily better or worse than UMO, it's just that the unique opportunity to see them and Ought on the same day is probably, but just barely, better than seeing UMO.

In any event, Unknown Mortal Orchestra have just released a new song, First World Problem.  Ruban Nielson said, “I think First World Problem is about modern love in a crumbling empire. The feeling that you’re trying to build your life and get what you need while a decadent world falls apart around you.”

Enjoy!

Monday, January 11, 2016

Music Is Dead, Part III


After the disappointing lineup announcements for Coachella and Governor's Ball, the announcement came out today for Atlanta's Shaky Knees Festival and . . . it doesn't suck!   Only one of the three headliners is a 90s nostalgia act, and there's nary a hint of hip-hop or EDM.  It's all good, solid indie rock and includes a lot of bands I would go to see and have gone to see on their own.  My faith in the restorative powers of rock 'n' roll is renewed!  Music's not dead after all (it just smells funny).

Sure, we could quibble about Huey Lewis and the News performing their album Sports, but a) it's not a headlining set, and b) it'll be good to know where all the d-bags are.


But on the glass-half-full side, Florence + the Machine!  And My Morning Jacket puts on a great live show, as does JJ Grey and Mofro.  And, oh look, The Decemberists!  And we'll finally get to see Bloc Party (even if they are a decade past their prime).  And Savages and Parquet Courts on the same bill! 

It's like every time I look at the lineup, I see another band I'm excited about:  The Kills and Explosions in the Sky (haven't seen either of them in a while). Phosphorescent. The Black Angels. Unknown Mortal Orchestra. Ought. St Paul and the Broken Bones. Shakey Graves.  Even Eagles of Death Metal to show that the terrorists didn't win! I could go on, but I'm close to reading off the entire lineup.

Meanwhile, with David Bowie passing away yesterday, it makes Thursday night's TT Mahoney's Bowie In Sweats show less campy and all the more relevant.

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Necessary Evil

Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Terminal West, June 13, 2015
Adult Swim premiered the new UMO video for Necessary Evil last week, and here it is in all its animated glory. 



Sunday, June 14, 2015

Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Terminal West, Atlanta, June 13, 2015


As mentioned yesterday, despite a number of other offerings, last night I went to Terminal West to see Unknown Mortal Orchestra.

Opener Alex G is "just a normal, energetic girl who loves music, Carol Burnett, and food."  No, wait, that can't be right.  Turns out there are two "Alex G's" on the internet, one the aforementioned, self-described pop singer, and the other is young Pennsylvania native Alex Giannascoli, who's "gnarled, wobbly, unfailingly melodic guitar pop evokes Big Star, Elliott Smith, and Built to Spill, as well as more recent low-key breakouts like Youth Lagoon and Jackson Scott" (according to Pitchfork), which is interesting because Jackson Scott opened for Unknown Mortal Orchestra when they played Terminal West during Rocktober 2013.


Live, everything sounded a little more deconstructed and experimental than the polished bedroom recordings Alex has been posting on the internet.  I was reminded at times more of the post-emo of bands like Slint and American Football than Big Star or Built To Spill, and not to take away from the latter, but the live similarities to the former are a good thing. 


If I have a criticism at all, it's that their set was too short - I was just getting into their sound when the set was over, but that's probably the fault of the show's promoters and tour schedule, and not the band.  I look forward to hearing more from them in the future.


One of the benefits of watching Unknown Mortal Orchestra perform over the years is seeing how frontman Ruban Nielson has gained confidence and stage presence since 2011.  His moves and mannersims - squatting down low during guitar passages, even sitting on the floor while playing at times, and his almost Motown-style twirls - have always been there, be now seems to relish entertaining an audience with his presence more than ever.  Between that and the polished performance of his tight band - now with added keyboards - last night was the best all-around performance of the five UMO shows I've seen. 


Nielson used many of the songs as launching pads for his searching guitar solos, and gave the band plenty of room to do their own thing, too - the set included several instrumental passages from the band and even a good old-fashioned drum solo, much to the audience's delight. With the addition of keyboards, Nielson was even free to sing one song without accompanying himself on  guitar, and used the opportunity to roam the stage, even climbing up on top of the amplifiers.  Meanwhile, bassist Jake Portrait can lay equal claim with The War On Drugs' David Hartley as "best bassist right now in rock music."  






UMO played songs from their new album, Multi-Love, as well as songs from their previous two albums, including early hits like Ffunny Ffriends, Thought Balune and How Can U Love Me, to later material like From the Sun. Swim and Sleep (Like A Shark), and So Good At Being In Trouble.  For the encore, they played two new songs from Multi-Love, Necessary Evil and Can't Keep Checking My Phone.


A great set of music from a band that right now is at the top of its game.  I'm sure all of the other shows performed last night were great, too, but I have no regrets of choosing what I did.   

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Tonight

Bonnaroo logo broadcast a7ecb8f28e6997499597399eaa33ff958d1efbbc66b4d9ee9e8c261fadbdd837

What to do tonight, you ask?  (Of course, you don't - I put that question rhetorically merely so I could give my own answer).  Today is one of those embarrassment-of-riches days where there's more going on than any one person could possibly take in.

Chances are good that if you're one of the 10 or so readers of this blog, you're probably already at Bonnaroo up in Tennessee right now - the festival's going strong and is already in its third of four days.  I don't go because too big, too crowded, too hot, camping, too much hip-hop, etc. Also, selected sets are being web cast at Red Bull TV, but if you're there have fun and radiate positivity! 


If you're not at Bonnaroo but still want to hear a bunch of bands, you could go over to Oakland Cemetery for the 5th Annual Tunes From The Tombs (better hurry - it ends at 8 pm; wouldn't want people in the graveyard after dark).  In one of those things that sounds like it just couldn't really be true, the cemetery sets up about four of five stages in between the historic graves, crypts and tombs on the grounds and allows music to play for a small, one-day festival.  They even sell beer.  This year's bands include Atlanta's Little Tybee and 90's veteran Matthew Sweet.  I've gone to the first three, and passed for the first time last year, as each year the bands booked were less and less eclectic and more and more adult-friendly ("Dad-rock").  Little Tybee don't fall into that category but if you live in Atlanta, you don't hurt for opportunities to hear Little Tybee, so I'm not going this year either - besides, I just visited the cemetery last Memorial Day weekend.


If it's the eclectic you're looking for, you may want to head over to The Goat Farm for Samādhi-Bhāvanā: The Stone Tapestry, a piece commissioned by the Barlow Endowment for Music Composition at Brigham Young University.  This hour-long piece is composed for contrabass flute, vibraphone, percussion quartet, and electronics, and will include guest artists The A/B Duo, Meerenai Shim and Chris Jones.


That may sound a little high-brow, so on the other extreme, Quintron and Miss Pussycat is playing at The Earl tonight.


Meanwhile, The Helio Sequence will be playing at The Drunken Unicorn.


Bonus points: fellow Portland band Lost Lander will be opening.

Lost Lander at The Doug Fir, MFNW (RIP), 2011
Apparently, it's Portland night here in Atlanta, because while The Helio Sequence and Lost Lander are playing at The Drunken Unicorn, Portland's Unknown Mortal Orchestra will be playing at Terminal West, fresh from last night's performance at Bonnaroo.  


As previously noted, it's one of my unofficial jobs to support bands playing here from the Pacific Northwest, so that reduces the number of options for me tonight to The Helio Sequence and Lost Lander at The Drunken Unicorn and Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Terminal West.  It was a hard choice, but I bought my ticket for UMO and am looking forward to the show, even though I've seen them several times before.

Unknown Mortal Orchestra at The Doug Fir, MFNW (RIP), 2011
Unknown Mortal Orchestra at 529, Atlanta, 2013
Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Branx, MFNW (RIP), 2013
Unknown Mortal Orchestra at Terminal West, Atlanta, Rocktober 2013

Would that we had this much choice every weekend!

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Strange Music


As you may have noticed, Unknown Mortal Orchestra rated pretty highly in all of my year-end lists, including the Best Concert and Best Album categories.  Last year (it still feels strange calling 2013 that), we saw UMO three times - at 529 with Foxygen, an incendiary performance at Branx in Portland during MFNW, and back in Atlanta again at Terminal West (above), and each show was a delight.

The band is touring China right now, with shows scheduled in Shanghai, Beijing, and Hong Kong.  But before they left, Ruban Nielson gave the world a parting Christmas gift - a 22-minute, experimental, ambient guitar exploration titled SB-01, which sounds a little like Robert Fripp on codeine, or Animal Collective in Transverse Temporal Gyrus mode.  Enjoy! 

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Top 10 Concerts of 2013

Okay, first of all, I acknowledge right up front that there's 12 shows in my list of Top 10 Concerts of 2013, but that's the kind of year it was.  While 2013 might have been merely so-so in its recorded output, the live shows this year were outstanding.  So without further ado, here are my choices of the best live shows of the year, presented in chronological order:

January 25 - Yo La Tengo & Calexico, Buckhead Theater


Not my first show of the year, but still a nice, early show in the year to get 2013 rolling.  After all this time, this was my first time seeing Yo La Tengo live, and I wasn't disappointed in the least.

February 23 - Unknown Mortal Orchestra & Foxygen, 529


This was a big year for UMO, who released a great album that made my Top 10.  I saw them three times this year, and this wasn't even their best show - that would be their incendiary performance during MFNW at Branx.  But this was still a fine performance, though, and what really put it into the Top 10 category was their opener, Foxygen, who suffered all sorts of major and minor calamities, mishaps, and internal strife this year, but still were able to deliver a thoroughly entertaining show to the packed house at 529.

August 31 - !!!, Bumbershoot (Seattle)


It's easy to slip into sensory overload at a three-day festival like Bumbershoot, and both get carried away in the excitement of the event over a so-so performance by a so-so band, as well as get so glazed over that you completely overlook an outstanding set by a great band.   !!! added some real excitement to the first day of Bumbershoot, and when I saw them the next week at MFNW, they confirmed that they really were that good - it wasn't all just festival overstimulation after all.   

September 6 - Radiation City, Mississippi Studios (Portland)


I also saw Radiation City several times this year - at The Earl back in June and then twice during MFNW. Although their performance at the totally radical Marmoset party left little to be desired, they really shined at Mississippi Studios during the OPB party and gave the best performance I've heard by them yet, all sweetness, harmony, and pop ecstasy - if you need proof, the entire set is posted on the OPB web site.

September 14 - Little 5 Fest


September 21 - Okkervil River & Torres, Variety Playhouse


Okkervil River's been around for a while now and I've enjoyed their records over the years, but like To La Tengo, it wasn't until this year that I finally got around to seeing them perform live. But mark my words - I will not purposely miss another live show by them again.  The evening was heightened by Torres, who was totally new to me, performing a spellbinding opening set. 

October 7 - Junip, Terminal West


As hypnotic and mesmerizing as an evening of gently psychedelic electronic folk-rock can get without the actual use of hallucinogens.  Wow, just wow!

October 9 - Savages, Vinyl


I don't have any photos to share of this show due to the band's strict no photography, cell-phone, or other mindless distraction policy, and since I was at the very front of the stage mere feet away from frontperson Jehnny Beth, I abided by their rules.  As promoter Alex Weiss tweeted after the show, "Just when I thought that it couldn't get any more intense, they brought it to another level entirely. Definitely one of the best shows I've ever seen. If you ever get a chance to see this band live, do it. That is all."  Transcendent post-punk from London.

October 26 - Neutral Milk Hotel, The Tabernacle


Another show with a pretty strict, "no pictures" policy, but I managed to snag a few that got posted on line. It's not like this comeback tour didn't have any hype surrounding it and it's not like the expectations weren't sky high, but they not only met those expectations, they elevated the breathtaking show into the pure realm of high art. 

November 2 - Thee Oh Sees, Terminal West


The best live band in the business proved once again why they're the best at what they do.  If you were there, you'd understand, and if you understood, you were there.  With great openers OBN III and The Blind Shake, the evening was a showcase for the state of 2013 punk, but no one whips a crowd up into more of a frenzy than John Dwyer and company.  Let's hope the rumors of their demise remain just rumors.

November 18 - Colin Meloy & Eleanor Friedberger, Variety Playhouse


Two master singer-songwriters, both unique in their idiosyncratic ways, gave the audience a totally charming set of songs and stories.  Added bonus points for Kinks covers. I still haven't had the chance to see The Decemberists perform, but between a composite of frontman Meloy's set and the October show by backing members Black Prairie (which very nearly made the Top 10 list - it came down to an elimination bout between this set and theirs), I feel like I can approximate the experience.   

December 11 - Joseph Arthur, Eddie's Attic


I said it before and  I'll say it again - why this man isn't a major star is beyond me.  He released one of the best records of the year, The Ballad of Boogie Christ, and I saw him perform at Criminal Records (where he briefly worked back in the 90s) during L5Fest with just a drummer and then at Eddie's Attic with bassist Mike Mills (REM), and both times he's rendered me speechless. And man, can he play guitar!  Let's hope that Mills' box office appeal brings Arthur some of the recognition he deserves.  

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Top 10 Albums of 2013

I'm well aware that nobody cares what an old man thinks the best albums released in 2013 are - I'm not exactly any band's target audience or some sort of taste-maker - but 'tis the season for year-end lists and all that, so here I go anyway.  It may be self-indulgent, but it's certainly better than listing other people's favorite songs, n'est-ce pas?

All things taken into consideration, 2013 wasn't really all that great a year for album releases in my humble opinion, which isn't to say it was a bad year for music, it's just that so much amazing material was released the past couple of years and many bands spent much of this year still touring behind those previous releases. Some other bands put out some perfectly fine new albums this year that sounded perfectly in keeping with their prior output - no loss of quality at all, but didn't break any new ground or otherwise become the singular recording by which the bands will come to be identified by, which is fine - a band doesn't have to and shouldn't redefine itself with every new album, but those status quo releases, while still quite good, weren't satisfying enough to make a Top 10 list.  Or at least my Top 10 list.

It was a great year for concerts, so I'm not saying the year was without its merits, it's just that you might not know it from the recorded output.  Still, having said all that, there still were several great releases, both from new artists (Savages, Courtney Barnett) and established masters (Yo La Tengo, Joseph Arthur), and much in between.  

So here's my Top 10 list, presented in alphabetical order (it's really impossible for me to say any one of these is better or worse than any other).  It's a pretty predictable list and I don't think there's any surprises here, but here you go anyway:

C Is For Courtney Barnett - A Sea of Split Peas




F Is For Foxygen - We Are The 21st Century Ambassadors




J Is For Joseph Arthur - The Ballad of Boogie Christ




L Is For Local Natives - Hummingbird




M (or O) Is For of Montreal - Lousy with Sylvianbriar



P Is For Parquet Courts - Light Up Gold



P Is Also For Pickwick - Can't Talk Medicine




S Is For Savages - Silence Yourself


U Is For Unknown Mortal Orchestra - II



Y Is For Yo La Tengo - Fade



Hope you enjoy, and please don't be offended if I left out your favorite - it's not that I didn't like it, it's probably that I just forgot to include it! 

Saturday, November 2, 2013

MFNW Day Four Retrospective


It would be unfair to compare Friday, Day 4 of MFNW, to the epic dimensions of Day 3, but that would be true of almost any day of your life.  In the scale of days of your life, there's the largely forgotten day of your birth, the unforgettable first time making love, the miraculous birth of your first child, and the totally awesome Day 3 of MFNW, in about that order of specialness.  Day 4 of MFNW wasn't at the same level as Day 3, but how can any day with performances by Animal Collective, Washed Out, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, and Ty Segall be considered anything less than awesome?

For starters, the rain of the day before had stopped. The sun still hadn't come out, however, resulting in a rather cool and cloudy, although not at all unpleasant, day. 


The music started with a 10:30 am set by The Shivas for KEXP at the Doug Fir.  Exhausted from the day before, I almost didn't go ("Who are The Shivas again?"), but at the last moment I found my energy, rallied, and made it across town in time to catch an energetic and enjoyable set from the young band, who played surf-tinged garage rock reminiscent of Austin's The Strange Boys.  


The KEXP photo nazi was still patrolling the audience forbidding people from taking any pictures at all with any type of camera, so these pictures are from www.kexp.org.


Speaking of which, KEXP also posted the entire Shivas performance on line ("Dude, I was there!"). 


I skipped breakfast to make it to the Fir by 10:30, so as soon as The Shivas set was over, I went upstairs to the Doug Fir's diner and ate some vegetarian chili and black coffee, the breakfast of champions.  The people at the next table looked familiar, and I quickly realized it was The Shiva's drummer with what I assume were her parents, and they were soon joined by the rest of the band.

After breakfast, the next band up was Georgia's own Washed Out.  Not seeing any sign of the KEXP photo nazi around, I resumed taking my own pictures (without flash, of course, in accordance with the sign by the entrance).


We previously saw Washed Out just the weekend before at Bumbershoot, but that in no way diminished the enjoyment of seeing them again a week later.  In fact, in ways, it enhanced the enjoyment.





KEXP also posted a video of the entire Washed Out set for our second "Dude-I-Was-There" moment.



The third band of the day at The Doug Fir was Seattle's Beat Connection at 2:30 pm.


We also saw Beat Connection at Bumbershoot, coincidentally on the same day as Washed Out, but that in no way etc.



Beat Connection were kind enough to again bring along their three-piece Butternut Horns section.



After Beat Connection, North Carolina's The Love Language were scheduled to play at 4:30 pm.  However, since I had just seen The Love Language the day before at the totally awesome Day 3 Marmoset party, and since there would be a 90-minute wait until their set, and since I was still dragging butt not only from Day 3 but from the entire previous week of Bumbershoot and MFNW, I left the Doug Fir to eat a more substantial meal than chili and coffee, wash up, and get ready for the evening's performances at the Pioneer Courthouse Square, Portland's "Living Room."

I had missed the Pioneer Courthouse Square sets the day before, being as I was at the totally awesome Marmoset Party, which was probably just as well, as it rained and rained hard during that time.  Day 4, however, was getting noticably cooler, and, for the only day of the entire week up in the Pacific Northwest, I had to break out the hoodie that I had packed.

So as it turns out, the first Pioneer Courthouse Square performance of MFNW 2013 for me was a band, Haerts, of whom I had never heard.



They weren't bad at all but somehow never quite clicked with me.  I couldn't quite figure out what they were doing, or where their music was supposed to be taking us.  I subsequently came to realize that part of the reason for my lack of involvement was that I was watching the show from a comfortable but distant position on the steps way toward the back of the Square, back by the food and beer vendors and the more talkative element of the audience.  My sight line was unimpeded, but that distance tends to let one be easily distracted from the music, and without a familiar song or sound to hook me in and hold my attention, it wandered and I became disaffected.  So what I'm trying to say here, Haerts, is that it wasn't you, it was me.


About those "Long Live Oregonians" signs around the stage.  At first, I thought it was just some sort of provincialism ("Hurray for us!) but I later came to learn it was the slogan for Cover Oregon, which is the state-run health insurance exchange set up under the Affordable Care Act (aka, Obamacare).  Cover Oregon were one of the co-sponsors of the festivities to encourage young people to sign up for health insurance.  None of the well documented problems in accessing the federal insurance exchange web site affected Oregon, as they were among the handful of states with the wisdom to take the initiative and set up their own exchange, as encouraged by the ACA. In fact, I've read that a full 10% of the Oregonian uninsured got coverage on the first day of eligibility.  But I digress and don't want to bother the gentle reader with reminders of political realities (meaning, that's exactly what I'm trying to do).  

After Heaerts, the next band up was Baltimore's Dan Deacon.


How to describe Dan Deacon?  His set was as much audience participation as it was artistic performance, and he encouraged the crowd to engage in barrier-breaking activities like turning around and waving at all of those people, like me, sitting on the steps toward the back of the Square.


Deacon himself performed not on the stage but down in the audience, removing yet another barrier, this time between performer and participant.


One fun feature of the set was an ersatz dance contest, wherein the dancers would randomly tag a spectator to indicate it was their turn to get up and dance to Deacon's zany electronic beats in the middle of the crowd. This meant that individuals had to spontaneously get up and do something, anything, creative and entertaining for the rest of the audience, often with very humorous results. 



I think the facial expressions of the two young women in the upper right of the picture below aptly capture the reaction of much of the audience.



After the dance contest, inhibitions were sufficiently broken down to allow just a general dance party.


After Dan Deacon, Animal Collective, another Baltimore band, headlined the Pioneer Courthouse Square set. 


We last saw Animal Collective at Atlanta's Tabernacle almost a year ago, although much of their set, including the stage design, were similar to that show last year.  That's nor a bad thing - Animal Collective put on a great show, and that night at Pioneer Courthouse Square was no exception.


However, due my distance from the stage and all of the distractions around me, it still wound up taking me nearly half of their set to finally get engaged and really appreciate their performance.  At the time, I blamed it on the sound system or on the band themselves, but I now realize it was all on me.





MFNW captured a scene from the Animal Collective set with the courthouse itself in the background, and used it as their "thank-you-and-farewell" message for the 2013 festival.  


That was the end of the Pioneer Courthouse Square sets, but that wasn't the end of the day.  After Animal Collective, I was hoping to make it across town to the club Branx to hear Wooden Indian Burial Ground, but I got there in time to hear only the last couple notes of the very last song of their set.  

No problem, because the main reason I wanted to go to Branx was to see the headliner, Portland's own Unknown Mortal Orchestra. 


Even though it was pretty chilly outside, it felt about 90 degrees inside Branx, a dark club that appeared to be illuminated by no more than two or three red, 40-watt light bulbs.  But regardless, UMO put on the best set I've heard from them, with guitarist Ruban Neilson unleashing some furious and intense guitar leads. The set felt like more of a statement about Neilson's place in the guitar-god pantheon than just another home-town concert.  Just incredible, incendiary stuff.


It's a long walk back from Branx to my hotel in NW Portland, but fortunately, Dante's, the club where I ended Day 1 (Redd Kross) and Day 2 (Murder By Death), was almost at the half-way point. Better still, as I passed, Ty Segall was playing, and I was able to flash my VIP wristband to the bouncer and walk right in past the people waiting outside in the "one leaves, one enters" stand-by line. 




An unexpected treat:  I had no idea that I was going to be able to fit this set into the day's schedule.

And that, after I walked the remaining distance back to my hotel after Segall's set, was Day 4.  Eight bands, including one of my favorites (Animal Collective), two Bumbershoot stand-outs revisited (Washed Out and Beat Connection), two new discoveries (The Shivas and Haerts), the inspired lunacy of Dan Deacon, a major statement from Unknown Mortal Orchestra, and a "surprise" (at least to me) set by Ty Segall.

Not a bad day at all.  And the rain had quit for the rest of the week.