Category Archives: Music

The Low Anthem

Dearest Low Anthem. I never knew you existed. I’m so sorry. You folks are simply divine. From the gritty chops of Ben Knox to the musicianship of Jeff Prystowsky and the harmonies of Jocie Adams, these sounds do a spirit good.

If you folks like the sound of Bon Iver, this is as soft and intimate as “For Emma, Forever Ago” and dare I say maybe more so.  It was even recorded in a winter cabin. “Oh My God Charlie Darwin” was self-released in September of 2008 and we are all running late for a date with this band. So I suggest you hurry up and have a listen.

Golden Silvers

I realize it’s been a while. And I do apologize. I went to New York to visit a friend and there are pictures and events that must be covered but right now I’m in the midst of the fieriest cleaning frenzy this side of the Mississippi. So here’s some music to check out. It simply will have to do.

Golden Silvers:

A band from London signed to independent record label XL. The line-up consists of vocalist and keyboardist Gwilym Gold, Ben Moorhouse on bass guitar, and Robden Alexis Nunez on drums.

By the way, how much do you love the name Gwilym? Yeah, me too.

Anyway, their debut album “True Romance” came out in April of 2009 and it makes me feel warm inside. The best way I can describe their sound (especially in the track Arrows of Eros) is a marriage between the bands of The Clash and Cut Copy. If you don’t agree, then you don’t know those bands. It’s actually very very Clash-esque, which is righteous because they happen to be one of my favorite bands.  It works. You can dance to it, it’s not terribly deep, but it could make you happy on a lonesome day. Yay Go Golden Silvers.


Kings of Convenience-Declaration of Dependence

I’m a tad tardy (as in late, not retarded) on this one. The third studio album from the Norwegian band Kings of Convenience actually came out in late October, but here you are anyway.  :  )

If you find yourself driving over 100 miles, baking with friends,  staying in on a cold day, or snuggling with the one you love,  I would suggest playing this album. It is quiet, boasts some very beautiful harmonies and really just soothes the soul.

Listen to Declaration of Dependence

And yes, there’s an obvious similarity to Simon and G.

Portland…the new Seattle.

Hailing from Portland Oregon, Loch Lomond  toured with the Decemberists in late 2008.

I love love.

Blind Pilot. Also from Portland, so much good stuff coming out of this fine city, currently. If this song doesn’t make you want to dance a jig, then your life is pointless.

Julian Casablancas

My friend Maz and I showed up to the Palace in downtown LA around 8:15pm for the 9 o’clock show.  I knew we were at the right place due to the stormy sea of black leather jackets and skinny jeans being donned by the uber-cool greasy-haired hipsters making their Friday night pilgrimages from Echo Park and Silver Lake.

The first victory of the night was getting by security unscathed. Meaning, they didn’t confiscate my camera.  God knows I would have forgotten to pick it up and left without out it. That’s just how I roll. Anyway, there was a bar available upon entrance into the theater, but I’m just about as poor as poor gets and Maz didn’t seem to be taking any interest in the alcoholic bounty, so we quickly found our seats about seven rows back on the left, downstairs.

The 20-30 something crowd could either be found quietly sipping their brown ale, killing time on their iphones or just chatting with chums. The vibe in the place was cool, collected, anything but rowdy, much like the man we were all there to see.

As the curtains opened, there was an immediate, undeniable shift in energy from the (once) disinterested mob. Everyone was on their feet in a split second, literally shouting at the top of their lungs. We’re talking Beatles,  Ed Sullivan Show, 1964-type excitement.  Now, being the mega-star that he is, you might think that Julian would be used to this type of welcome. But from the moment he sheepishly walked to the front of the stage, you knew that this show was different. This was special. He was vulnerable. He was thankful. There was a genuine look of relief when he realized how excited his fans were to see him again. He placed his hands together as if praying  and thanking us for the salvation of acceptance. He looked weathered, slightly tired, but had a younger and more innocent aura than I was anticipating. See I’ve never actually seen The Strokes live, I’ve been listening to them for the past six years or so and never had a true desire to shell out the dough for a performance. There have been too many mediocre reviews of their concerts. Too many rumors of Julian producing sub-par performances due to inebriation and basic lack of respect for his fans.  I didn’t want any part of that, but when my buddy told me he had an extra ticket for this show, I figured I’d give it a shot. And am very glad I did.

For the first time in his musical career, Casablancas wasn’t sharing the spotlight, this concert was his baby and he was going to revel in the new life he created and cradle it until it coo’d.

If you know anything about The Strokes then you know their distinct sound;  Fabrizio Moretti pounding and slicing the drum beats through the “in your face/come hither” guitars as to create excitable stress, but backing off just enough to give gracious respite and keep you coming back for more. Casablancas’ solo work seems more free-form, less controlled, allowing his youth and honesty to take front and center. The synthesized melodies could send any 80′s pop expert into a whirlwind of nostalgia.  “I wish air clouds could hold me up, Like I thought as a child growing up,” he sang on “Tourist,” one of my favorite performances of the night.

In between songs, Casablancas conversed with the crowd. So relaxed, so smooth, what a dangerous man. “F@#%in’  LA, man. F@#%in’   Ellllll Laaaaaay,” he crooned and giggled after the first song, as if we were college buddies he hadn’t seen in a few years.

A treat in the night came about five songs in when, after finishing up, Casablancas looked to the crowd and stated that the band would be back in  five minutes. No one had any idea what was going on. Was that a self-implemented encore? I don’t know. Do you know? You don’t know. Great. But sure enough, no less than ten minutes later the curtains are torn to their respective corners and reveal the six-piece band donning white tuxes and twinkle lights, backed up by a stage that seemed to be a cross between the set of Tron and old Hollywood.

Just before performing his last song, Casablancas confessed “this is, in fact, the last one, we have no more songs, I promise you,” which immediately translated to a crowd of boo’ing and hissing loyals begging for more. Luckily, since this was the first show out of a four-Friday residency in November, Casablancas stated that he would neglect to share that piece of information in the future. And with that, a giant kaleidascope lit up the stage to distract us from our new found disappointment.

Come to think of it, the stage was probably one of the best features of the show.  So much thought was put into each theme, as it changed from song to song. We never saw the same image for more than three minutes at a time, a true delight for the A.D.D community (such as myself). There was a desert background, an aquarium, a wild wild west sequence, an apocalyptic city, and so on.  When Casablancas stated in a Pitchfork interview that the show was “like half Pink Floyd laser light show” he wasn’t kidding around. Mind blowing and such a welcomed retreat from anything I’ve seen as of late. Bravo, indeed.

Take a look and see:

Dirty Projectors-Live performance for Sirius Radio

Yay for these vocals.  The girls are so prim and proper, take a glance at their posture.

Ready, Able

The new video from Grizzly Bear off the “NEW MOON” soundtrack. Don’t ask me how this film pulled so many decent artists i.e. Thom Yorke, Bon Iver and St. Vincent. The song is so hauntingly beautiful, freaking love the sound of Ed Droste’s voice. It feels like you’re getting a group hug from heavenly angels. The claymation in this video is either extremely disturbing or an ingenious work of art. I propose both.

Also, heading out to a Julian Casablancas concert tonight with my buddy Maz. Free Free Free. That’s the only way I can hack it. I will tell you alllllll about it this weekend.Oh…you haven’t heard much from him? That’s because his solo album was just released. Here’s a taste. Savor the flavor.

 

Year in the Kingdom by J Tillman

Fleet Foxes’ drummer J Tillman’s second solo album.

Just lovely.
Feel it.


Please listen and then proceed to buy this album, it is well worth it.

You may do so here.

Have a happy Tuesday, everyone.

San Deezy Eazy Peazy/Monsters of Folk 2nd Edition

Oh yeah. You better believe I did. More on that later.
I headed down to SD directly after my interview on Tuesday and got there around 4. I basically just wandered around the harbor near the USS Midway and enjoyed the sunshine. It was such a beautiful day, not that I expected anything less from the near-perfect San Diego climate, but really. People were exercising, couples were enjoying their late lunches on the patios of the harbor restaurants and life just seemed right.
Oh. Bon apres-midi.

“Unconditional Surrender”

Some of downtown (how obsessed with the saturation technique am I?)
Made me really miss my old stomping grounds, so many great memories there.
Around 5 I met up with my friend Deron and we made the trek from Broadway to Balboa Park. We found another Spreckles theatre and it looks like this:
At this point I’m thinking,
1) Why have I never been to this part of Balboa Park. I am a waste of human life.
2) Why can’t the concert be at this Spreckles.

3) Spreckles must have been loaded.

Then Deron said that on a run through the park one day, he stumbled upon some cute little houses that represented different countries around the world. Apparently on Sundays, the Park puts on cultural appreciation days and you get to visit these buildings and eat their native cuisine. I lived here for five years and know nothing of this. Disgusting. Well, we went searching for them and low and behold.

They look like this:

and this.
There are actually a lot more of these houses but I thought I would just let you see two of them.How undeniably righteous is that?I’m making sure to go back on a weekend to have the opportunity to go into a few of these, even if it means going alone. I seem to be doing a lot of things solo as of late. I’m kind of digging it.

Concert started at 7pm which means it started at 8:30, obviously. I got myself situated in my seat, which was in the top-most balcony about 100 miles away from the band.

But let’s talk about this theater. Gorgeous. Want to learn something today? I thought so. It was built in 1913 by Claus Spreckles, a German immigrant who would eventually come to be one of the wealthiest men in America. His first stop in the states was South Carolina, then soon after moved to NYC and would then settle for a short time in San Francisco where he opened a brewery and made a killing. He ended up using that wealth to purchase large tracts of land in California and Hawaii to grow beets and sugar cane. He would use the capital from those ventures to purchase the Pacific Commercial Advisory, which is now known as the Honolulu Advisor, one of the largest newspapers in circulation today (but for how long, right?). Anyway, the cat had money. And I like what he was doing with it in this theatre.

Here are a couple of wretchedly amateur photos that don’t do it any justice at all.


So back to the show. There was no opening band. The curtains went up after keeping the audience waiting for quite some time (I can appreciate anticipation) and the four musicians were having a ball. This concert was nothing short of mind-blowing. These guys were not only extremely talented, but they were having the time of their lives up there. The chemistry between musicians that aren’t even in a band together was really inspiring. Monsters of Folk consists of Jim James (lead singer of My Morning Jacket), Conor Oberst (lead singer of Bright Eyes), Mike Mogis (uber-producer and mult-instrumentalist from Bright Eyes) and M Ward (half of the duo which is She and Him).Mogis had a large hand in creating the Monsters of Folk sound, both as producer of the record and as an instrumentalist.

//
On the record, Mogis is credited with playing at least 17 instruments, including drums, various guitars, dobro, bass, bongos and a Wurlitzer organ. I’m pretty sure he played all seventeen of those instruments that night. I was pleased.It was really something special to be there on my own, I sat between two people I didn’t know, but there was a lot of freedom in that. I gave myself permission to lose myself and just experience the music on the most personal level. There’s something liberating about not feeling obligated to conjure up a verbal reaction in response to everything that’s going on.

Between songs, Jim James seemed to be the biggest ham. My favorite part of the night was when there was this long silence as the group was switching instruments and tuning for the next song. Some woman shouted out “I love your beard!!!” obviously to Jim, who was the only one with facial hair past his chin. Conor replied right away saying “We love you too. Thank you for coming out-” and before he could say “tonight” Jim just points at the chick and fires back “I love your beard too.” The whole place erupted. They played for almost three hours. Sometimes they didn’t even face the crowd. It was as if they were having a pow wow and we were only invited to a few songs. They played for themselves and they played for each other and sometimes they would remember “Oh yeah, people came to see us” and they would turn around and face us again. No one minded. Was it selfish? Probably. But it was the best kind of greed.

Best song of the night? My fave, “Dear God.” They saved it for last. Where else would it have fit.

Monsters of Folk

Here is a track from my current obsession Monsters of Folk. This indie all-star group is comprised of Jim James (My Morning Jacket), Conor Oberst (Bright Eyes), M. Ward (She & Him), and Saddle Creek producer Mike Mogis.They played at The Greek last night and a ton of my friends went. I couldn’t afford it. They said it was spiritual, possibly the best show they’ve ever seen. Blaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah.

Freak.Me.

Here it is anyway:

Dear God

And just for kicks I’m going to throw in a performance from last week’s show in Portland.