A Music Blog Focusing on Los Angeles and Brighton

Well, if it’s not 2010 by you yet, it’s almost there! 2009 has been such an excellent year, filled with hype bands, type bands, shit bands, but most of all: the greatest bands in all the world, of course! I had an amazing year where I saw 96 concerts…. ONLY four shy of my goal – so pretty good job, me! SXSW was amazing yet again, I had a couple of other trips to see a bunch of gigs that were really fun, too. I got to see a bunch of bands that I never thought I’d get to see (mostly, JoFo, P. Doh, and The Sonics) so that was wonderful….

I’m going to be ending my year the way that every year should be ended AND started. Hell, the way every day should start and end! Which is o’course, at the Echo watching MY PET SADDLE and the GROWLERS (aka THE GREATEST BAND ON THE PLANET) so if you’re in LA and still need plans – cruise by!

2010 is sure to bring some amazing things, including an awesome SXSW, maybe Camden Crawl, definite Great Escape and who knows what other festivals! In the mean time, I give you the entire album of songs that Bob loves and has played on his theme-time hour (with your host, BOB DYLAN) since I won’t be able to post – I’ll be in the front of the bus on the airplane (business baby) going back to Blighty… Happy New Years!

CD1
1. I Drink / Mary Gauthier 4:33
2. Mother Earth / Memphis Slim 3:34
3. Pouring Water On A Drowning Man / James Carr 2:42
4. Ay Te Dejo En San Antonio (Ranchera) / Santiago Jimenez 2:49
5. Mona / Bo Diddley 2:22
6. Roadrunner (Twice) / The Modern Lovers 4:06
7. Ain’t Got The Money To Pay For This Drink / George Zim… 2:35
8. Bottle And A Bible / The Yayhoos 3:35
9. If You’re So Smart, How Come You Ain’t Rich? / Louis Jord…2:59
10. Okie’s In The Pokie / Jimmy Patton 2:26
11. Black Coffee / Bobby Darin 4:02
12. I’d Rather Drink Muddy Water / The Cats and the Fiddle 2:49
13. Big Long Slidin’ Thing / Dinah Washington 2:58
14. I Walk In My Sleep / Berna-Dean 3:16
15. Mama Tried (The Ballad From Killers Three) / Merle Hagg… 2:14
16. Only A Rose / Geraint Watkins 3:44
17. Stars Fell On Alabama / Jack Teagarden’s Chicagoans 3:00
18. Cool Water / The Sons of the Pioneers 2:55
19. How High The Moon / Slim Gaillard 4:33
20. Eat That Chicken / Charles Mingus 4:40
21. Mama, Get Your Hammer / Bobby Peterson Quintet 2:00
22. Cry Tough / Alton Ellis & The Flames 4:12
23. (Everytime I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone / Roy Montrell 2:24
24. I Ain’t Drunk / Lonnie ‘The Cat’ 2:24
25. Those DJ Shows / Patrice Holloway 2:32

CD2
1. Ay Te Dejo En San Antonio (Ranchera) / Santiago Jimenez 2:49
2. Mona / Bo Diddley 2:22
3. Roadrunner (Twice) / The Modern Lovers 4:06
4. Ain’t Got The Money To Pay For This Drink / George Zim… 2:35
5. Bottle And A Bible / The Yayhoos 3:35
6. If You’re So Smart, How Come You Ain’t Rich? / Louis Jord…2:59
7. Okie’s In The Pokie / Jimmy Patton 2:26
8. Black Coffee / Bobby Darin 4:02
9. I’d Rather Drink Muddy Water / The Cats and the Fiddle 2:49
10. Big Long Slidin’ Thing / Dinah Washington 2:58
11. I Walk In My Sleep / Berna-Dean 3:16
12. Mama Tried (The Ballad From Killers Three) / Merle Hagg… 2:14
13. Only A Rose / Geraint Watkins 3:44
14. Stars Fell On Alabama / Jack Teagarden’s Chicagoans 3:00
15. Cool Water / The Sons of the Pioneers 2:55
16. How High The Moon / Slim Gaillard 4:33
17. Eat That Chicken / Charles Mingus 4:40
18. Mama, Get Your Hammer / Bobby Peterson Quintet 2:00
19. Cry Tough / Alton Ellis & The Flames 4:12
20. (Everytime I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone / Roy Montrell 2:24
21. I Ain’t Drunk / Lonnie ‘The Cat’ 2:24
22. Those DJ Shows / Patrice Holloway 2:32
23. Tommy Gun / The Clash 3:16
24. Walk A Mile In My Shoes / Joe South and the Believers 3:44
25. Chain Of Fools / Aretha Franklin 4:21

DOWNLOAD -> ALL OF BOB’S FAVORITE TUNES @ MEDIAFIRE

Bookmark and Share
category: Funny
tags:

Damn, wasn’t 2009 amazing? At least music-wise, if nothing else. There is so much to look forward to in the new year/new DECADE and I absolutely can’t wait for it to start.

Thanks for reading and supporting, or reading and leaving nasty comments (LOVE US OR HATE US WE STILL GET THE PAGE HITS BITCHESSSSS), and have a really fun and safe night tonight. Get into trouble, but don’t get yourself killed because we want to see you alive in the new decade! Dance, drink lots of champagne (or gin), kiss somebody cute at midnight, and let’s all start 2010 right–with great music, positivity and friends. It’s the year of the tiger! We can’t go wrong!

And of course, if you’re in Los Angeles we hope we’ll see you at The Echo tonight because that is OBVIOUSLY the place to be!

Happy New Years, we love you!!

Colette

Bookmark and Share

Well, it’s the end of 2009. I still have a big roundup post to make, or that I’m telling myself to make, who knows if it’ll happen. I still have to pack, anyway. As Liz Lemon would say, Blergh! But this year’s New Years Eve looks like t’will be the best in years. I’ve had a couple of traumatic new years eve’s in a row, I know Jamie T knows what I’m talking about…. but this year is NOT going to be shit because THE AMAZING GROWLERS and the awesome MY PET SADDLE are playing at the best venue in the world. I would get tix for this, as it’s going to be amazing!

Bookmark and Share
category: Video
tags:

Bookmark and Share

The Stevenson Ranch Davidians are celebrating the release of their new album Life and Death next Thursday at Spaceland. Also playing are one of my favorite bands The Quarter After and the lovely Miranda Lee Richards.

Please come out as it’s sure to be a great show. I have a copy of Life and Death and it’s beautiful. It’s exactly the kind of sunny, jangly music we need to get us through this horrible time of year we call winter.

DOWNLOAD –> The Stevenson Ranch Davidians – Feelin’ Good

Bookmark and Share

Surely you guys remember my favorite small Texas band who are going to be getting a lot bigger very soon, THE UPTOWN BUMS! I’ve talked about them a lot and saw them a buncha times when I still lived in Tejas, including an excellent show this year in the days between Psych Fest and SXSW in a well, bunker in Denton. If you like King Tuff, and it has anything to do with me, thank these guys for they turned me onto his music. Anyway, they’ve been doing some recordings which are turning out FAN-FUCKING-TASTIC, they’ve come a long way and are only getting better and now are going on tour! Yes! See them at any/all of the dates below…

Dec 31 2009 10:00P NEW YEARS PARTY AT RGRS W/ BAD SPORTS, VIDEO DENTON, Texas
Jan 4 2010 8:00P REPLAY LOUNGE W/ TBA LAWRENCE, Kansas
Jan 5 2010 8:00P FRANK’S POWER PLANT W/ MAGIC WORDS MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin
Jan 6 2010 8:00P TBA CHICAGO, Illinois
Jan 7 2010 8:00P TBA DETROIT, Michigan
Jan 8 2010 8:00P HELP WITH THIS SHOW!!! PHILDELHPIA, Pennsylvania
Jan 10 2010 8:00P LULU’S W/ TBA NEW YORK, New York
Jan 11 2010 8:00P TBA ATHENS, Ohio
Jan 12 2010 8:00P VOLLRATH TAVERN W/ BROTHERS GROSS, THUNDERS INDIANAPOLIS, Indiana
Jan 13 2010 8:00P TBA NASHVILLE, Tennessee
Jan 14 2010 8:00P TBA HUNTSVILLE, Alabama
Jan 15 2010 8:00P TWO STICK W/ THE UNWED TEENAGE MOTHERS OXFORD, Mississippi
Jan 16 2010 8:00P TBA W/ THE BELLYS SHREVEPORT, Louisiana

Bookmark and Share
category: Funny
tags:

Y’know how sometimes I like to go on about how this is a comedy blog, too? Well, this was just pure gold, I got it from the Guardian site where they asked people what was the last lie they told….

Peter Doherty, musician
‘The last time I told a lie was ‘not guilty”

(The real question is: are you talking about the lie you told at court, or the lie you told after court when you were arrested?)

Bookmark and Share

Making a top 10 albums of the year post is fucking tough. I’ve been thinking about it for months, and how mere months can change your opinions toward albums, bands, songs etc, so making an albums of the DECADE post is even more difficult. So I’ve got to kind of cover my own ass and say that these are my favorite albums of the decade. Albums that just the mention of them bring to mind images and times in my life that meant something to me or changed me in a way. I’m no authority (not on music and certainly not on anything else) so just enjoy my top 10 favorite albums of the decade.


10) Is This It? – The Strokes (2001)

What is there to say about this album? It’s already been said and glossed over and repeated for years and years. It ushered in a whole new era for music most especially for people who came of age in the 00’s. ‘Is this It’ is my favorite track off this album.

The White Sport (Songs The Postman Can Whistle - Front)
9) Songs The Postman Can Whistle – The White Sport (2004)

This album, sadly, was mostly only listened to by people who are really in the Libertines and Babyshambles. It features Andrew Aveling on guitar and vocals (now in Littl’ans), Pat Walden on guitar (and possibly bass?) who is now in nothing (is Big Dave still around?) but is ex-Babyshambles, and Adam Ficek on drums. It’s definitely a series of dark moments (Aveling’s voice has a natural sort of melancholy quality to it) interspersed with inexplicably white beautiful moments like my favorite ‘I Was Once A Girl’. Pat Walden really leads this album – his guitar work is nothing short of excellent, I could listen to him ramble on at the end of ‘Yur Wrong’ for ever and ever.


8) Paper Television – The Blow (2006)

This was the last album Khaela Maricich and Jona Bectolt did together. Their previous albums were excellent, YACHT certainly has a way with beats and sounds that I never fully appreciated until this album, and sparingly appreciate since; and Khaela’s voice is a bell. A shining, beautiful, angelic shining bell. This album is sparse and romantic and thoughful and just beautiful. ‘True Affection’ was the first ever Blow song I heard, and most certainly the best. It’s 3 minutes and 23 seconds of nautical blips and the heartache of being with someone and never being sure if you’re good enough or vice-versa sung beautifully and written in some of the most off-kilter poetic ways.


7) Back To Black – Amy Winehouse (2006)

This album is a fucking bonafide classic. Amy Winehouse is a crackhead but the bitch can write music – she was more heavily involved than just singing and writing lyrics, she had a lot of sway in the musicality of this album too. Her voice is magnificent. Nothing I’m saying about this is original, but this album will always remind me of my first semester at college and ACL 2007 where Amy pulled out and we were forced to see the Arctic Monkeys instead… big disappointment.


6) College Dropout – Kanye West (2004)

This is probably a choice that 0% of the people that I know saw coming, but I’ve always loved Kanye West. I remember when his first album came out and I just loved it. He was a rapper, yes, but he had something to say and went about saying it in the most hilarious ways. This album was a slice of life that I knew nothing about and still was able to connect with the songs and feel moved by them. ‘We Don’t Care’ amused the shit out of me; ‘School Spirit’ made me sing along (yes, me saying ‘ooh hecky naw that boy is raw’ is a hilarious image!); ‘Breathe In (Breathe Out)’ got me through so many roadtrips over the years. And Kanye, around this time, was an excellent live performer. He is today, I’m sure, but I’ve stopped because he’s not the same – not live and not on record – but this album made him, and it captured a lot of my youth, too. Unfortunately, this statement he made, way back when, is now true… “I’ve always said if I rapped, I’d say something significant, but now I’m rapping about money, hoes and rims again’.

To reflect on my top 5… Those are the ones that I can clearly identify certain moments in my life with. Like, when I play them I have such a smiling case of nostalgia and a good case of the thoughtfuls, but I don’t play them all the time anymore. I’ve moved on. 10 years is a long time, but none of those albums are actually 10 years old. Most are 6 or 5 or 4 years old which really isn’t even that old, but I have Adult On-set ADHD (self diagonosed of course) so it seems really long ago that these albums meant so much to me. However! My top 5 are albums that are just as old (there’s not a whole lot of new albums on this list, 2006 being the eldest) but are so good that they’ve permeated my life in a way that doesn’t stop with certain phases or episodes in my life – they’ve consistently been with me and that’s what, to me, marks an amazing album – not one that appeases the people who read fucking lists (Pitchfork, Kid A par example) or one who is so esoteric that I couldn’t even list it here. So I give to you, my top 5 albums from this decade (note: I hate the fucking word ‘Noughties’)…


5) The End of History (2006)

I was trying to explain to someone the way I feel that Fionn Regan is a good approximation of a semi-Bob Dylan figure and the person I was talking to disagreed heartily saying that it was insulting to say that someone made sub-par Bob Dylan albums – but that’s not what I was getting at. This album to me is a modern folk classic, the same way Freewheelin’ or Another Side Of are perfect records of folk music. It’s beautifully written, with weird, dense imagery; the timing, so off kilter, keeps you in the moment, hanging off of every hyper-literate, poetic word Fionn utters – the same way Bob has us eating out of his hand on the aforementioned albums. But really, ‘Put A Penny In The Slot’ is one of the best songs I’ve ever heard. That sounds like such a grand claim, but there’s something about the simplicity of what he’s playing on guitar mixed with the complexitiy of the story he’s telling – complete with tangents, life advice, and literary references, that just makes me swoon. The emotive quality his slightly feminine whispery voice has serves him best on this song, it makes one believe the longing and nostagia, and keep pace with him even though he’s quite obviously further than we are. That said, his new album, will most certainly be a ‘Bringing It All Back Home’ moment. Whether it’s insulting to say someone makes sub-par Bob Dylan albums (even though EVERYBODY does, so how insulting can it be?) or to complement and raise Fionn up to below, but still near, Bob status somehow insulting Bob himself… well, remains to be seen.


4) Down in Albion – Babyshambles (2006)

Now that I’m in the top four, it’s getting harder and harder to make any objective and rational comments about the albums. This album marked such a tumultuous period in my life (fittingly, though, no?) and helped usher in a whole new self that I’d never explored before – and that’s fucking HIGH PRAISE of the affect an album can have without speaking so much as a word about the musicality of it all. Pat Walden’s guitar work on this album will surely go down as some of the most underrated of the decade surely and Pete’s lyrical work on this album, although not as masterful as on any Up The Bracket (thanks, Heroin), still trashes anyone else writing lyrics around this time. I don’t think I can say anymore on an album that I don’t listen to frequently anymore just due to the things it reminds me of…. Shame.


3) Panic Prevention – Jamie T (2006)

God, it pained me to have to put this album in at number three, when in reality, it’s one of the best albums of the decade. I know I professed my love for early Kanye West so it would be unfair for me to say that I strictly don’t like rap but, not so strictly, I don’t like rap. Starting off talking about Jamie T by immediately classifying him as rap is completely off target, because what he does, in my twisted mind, isn’t just rap. I don’t think it’s fair to pin Jamie T to a box because he does SO many things on this album: so many intertwining samples, beats, bass lines, guitar riffs that all meld together to create such layered, textured songs that have so much more to offer than one listen can pick up on. It took me forever to realize that Jamie T is also extremely gifted lyrically – due to his strong accent (FAKE OR NOT, haters) and his like side-cocked way of spitting words, oh and his dense, often confusing, and extremely British storylines it’s often hard to understand exactly what is going on or how anything connects. Like, ‘Alicia Quays’, which is a 6 and a half minute epic which, by god, is an absolute epic about youth and having fun and still having a strong sense of self-reflexivity (What am I, What am I, What am I in my own dear eyes?). So Jamie T writes a ton of songs about going out. He doesn’t do it in the way the early Awkward Monkeys used to – there’s no obvious fake poetic pretense, just the nitty gritty (whether real or fake AGAIN) and his turn of phrase that makes the poetic, epic moments all whilst retaining his youth and his sense of fun and his sense that his music is for himself. This is an absolute gem that probably will be recognized more as the shite from 2006 etc (Fratellis, Kooks, NYPC, other contemporaries) fades away, or maybe not, but it’s a fucking gem.


2) Let It Bloom – Black Lips (2005)

It seems fairly standard that anyone just getting into Black Lips would prefer ‘Good Bad Not Evil’ just due to the fact that it’s cleaner, the melodies more present, and the pop influences out for everyone to see. But ‘Let It Bloom’ is really the quintessential Black Lips album, and the best work they’ve ever done. And I know, by the way, that Black Lips are a fairly easy band to get into – but I think there’s a lot to digest with the album. It works on so many different levels (like peeling an onion, right?): there’s the fuzz on the outside, then it’s the irresistable riffs underneath with the pop hooks, then comes the rebellious, funny, youthful, even (gasp) witty lyrics and then once you’ve gotten to the bottom of that, you can appreciate them all together – or at least that’s how it worked for me. This is just such a modern burnout classic album. Four dudes who couldn’t hack it in school, couldn’t hack it in life, so they got in a band where they could practically not hack it and could hardly play their instruments who then made this brilliant album of flower-punk anthems (Not A Problem? Sea of Blasphemy? Everybodys Doin’ It? Fuck yeah). I’m fully aware that a band with three layers isn’t considered complex or hard to appreciate or get into… but the simplicity of it all, the youth factor (very big with me, if you can’t tell) makes it the classic it is…


1) Up The Bracket – The Libertines (2002)

Life changing, life affirming, poetic masterpiece of youth and mistakes, all wrapped up in sexually frustrated guitar riffs (courtesy: Carl Barat) and melodies (and lyrics and lines) that has been tread and retread by bands over the past decade with little to no success. None of the members have ever come close to making an album as perfect as this since the split of the Libertines, nor will a reunion be able to come near or top this – although the only thing keeping me from a reunion will be my own death.

Bookmark and Share

Happy Christmas! Here’s some stuff from a Bob rarity called ‘Mystery Tape’ that included these three alternate mixes/takes of some BoB stuff – Blonde on Blonde btw.

Fourth Time Around (remix)
Sooner or Later (unfaded 45)

Bookmark and Share

Bookmark and Share
category: Mp3
tags:

So this year has been the weirdest winter EVER. I’ve spent it in Brighton where I was patting myself on the back for having handled myself during the cold so well, thinking that it would soon be over. Then I come back to LA where its beautiful and sunny and warm for the winter and my expectation that winter is on it’s way out was held up…. Then I heard about all the snow in London and Brighton…. and how I’m going to have to go back…. TERRIFYING. So this playlist is kind of all over the board because I’m all over the map recently and am really confused… There are some fun ones, some dirty ones, some acoustic ones and some of the most amazing Christmas songs ever… ENJOY

TRACKLIST:
MY BOYS by TAKEN BY TREES
MY GIRLS by ANIMAL COLLECTIVE
CLOSER by LYREBIRDS
PATRICIA’S MOVING PICTURE by THE GO! TEAM
THE CHRISTMAS SONG by THE RAVEONETTES
IF YOU’RE GOLD, I’M GONE by WOVEN BONES
COLLAGEN ROCK by MCLUSKY
WALKABOUT by ATLAS SOUND
DEREK by ANIMAL COLLECTIVE
SO LONG TO CAROLINA (LIVE @ MAPS) by BLACK LIPS
JENNY CAN RELY ON ME by JAMIE T
LITTLE DRUMMER BOY by THE DANDY WARHOLS
TIJUANA by THE GROWLERS
NO HOPE KIDS by WAVVES
LITTLE DRUMMER BOY by BOB DYLAN
CRANES AND CRANES AND CRANES AND CRANES by JOHNNY FOREIGNER
WHAT MY LIFE COULD’VE BEEN by A CLASSIC EDUCATION

Aditionally, we here at Nu Rave Brain Wave, on behalf of Colette, George Costanza, Larry David and myself, wish to wish you a happy festivus….

Bookmark and Share
categories: Interview, Mp3
tags: , ,

My most favorite new musical discovery, Austin TX’s WOVEN BONES, did an excellent interview in LA’s LA Record right before they played at 5-Star Bar in LA and way before their awesome show at the Smell that I caught last week. Read the interview below and download a Woven Bones song after that….

I couldn’t find a single interview with you guys online and it’s not for lack of blog and press coverage. And most all of your EPs have sold out. It feels mysterious.
Andy Burr (guitar/vocals): Yeah, it’s pretty remarkable how our music has spread around for how small the pressings of our records are. But there’s not really a personal identity out there for us as a band.


I think it’s better that way sometimes, though.

Andy Burr: I think so too. It’s random that you might actually get somebody who’s going to portray the band according to exactly what we said. And fuck it—I think the music should speak for itself.

So what should we tell L.A.?
Andy Burr: We just wanna rock out for people and hope that they get it, you know? We don’t have any sort of mission, like …

Like melting brains?
Andy Burr: We would like to melt faces. If the sound guy can make it loud enough for people to really get into it and get melted that would be pretty cool. At the most, I just hope when we come out to California, all the people who have been asking us to come out there come out and get to see us for the first time. We’ve been sort of like ghosts.

There’s a lo-fi/neo-garage scene that’s been developing into this critical mass—especially in L.A.—over the past few years, and Woven Bones seems to be getting a lot of recognition alongside it.
Andy Burr: Yeah, there’s definitely an element of appreciation for old bands that have been really influential in what we’re all doing, but I think the scene for what we’re doing is more eclectic. Instead of being a carbon copy of one of those bands, I think there’s a youth to it and an understanding that all of these bands are standing out in a very modern way. All these bands—like Dum Dum Girls, Crystal Stilts, Times New Viking, the Crocodiles, Jacuzzi Boys, Blank Dogs and Thee Oh Sees—none of us are making throwback ’60s psychedelic posters or any of that shit. At the heart of it, we’re all kind of like punk bands that have evolved out of our influences. The Velvet Underground was a punk band. Whatever people think we sound like at the core, the Velvet Underground is my favorite band. I’ll sit around and listen to that shit for the rest of my life. It’ll never get old. I know people keep talking about this ‘lo-fi’ thing and how there are so many bands like that now. It’s kind of like what happened in the ’60s with the garage scene. There were so many garage bands. When you think about it, there were just as many garage bands then as there were punk bands when we were in high school. We’re just trying to take the past hundred years or whatever and move forward. It’s the dawning of all the nerdy kids who were sitting around and listening to the same stuff and wanting to do something. We’re recording all of this stuff ourselves and putting out records on our own, or through strong, small labels. Now that the record industry is no good for the most part … you get the idea.

You’re not trying to get into a TV commercial.
Andy Burr: Whatever happens, happens. We just wanna be on the road. We wanna play and we want to put out records. We have no ambition to sit around town and be bored because we’re not doing what we want to do.

Even though your music is really primitive and minimal, your lyrics resonate in this broad and powerful way.
Andy Burr: I think that comes with keeping everything—even lyrical content—on a simple but intelligent level. I write about stuff that’s relevant to me and my everyday life and stuff that I’ve been through. Some of the lyrics are about a really dark time in my life when I dropped off the face of the earth. Sometimes they’re just about me and my friends—honest dudes who go through regular stuff. It’s less of me feeling sorry for myself as it is more of me belting out a story about what happened at the darkest point in my life.

Would you rather that some crazy shit happened than not?
Andy Burr: I’m a firm believer that everything happens for a reason. I might have turned out to be some graphic designer dude living in New York, wearing really expensive jeans. When I hit ground zero, the only thing I had to keep me moving was a guitar and an amp. It was something that was totally self-gratifying. So lyrics, you know, sometimes they’re just about girls—or a girl—some bad ass girl that rules your mind and you’d rather have her kick your ass than ever think about another girl.

‘Janie’?
Andy Burr: Yeah. We were in art school together and we promised to move to New York afterwards. In the meantime, I fell into this dark abyss and didn’t end up graduating, and she did. It was a really fucked up thing and I was left behind. We sort of both knew what was going to happen and then one day she was just gone. It wasn’t either of our faults. You can read that song from my perspective, or from hers. You know, ‘My baby left me crying.’ I really love the lyrical style of the Modern Lovers and Jonathan Richman. Or like when Lou Reed sings, ‘She hit me with a mop,’ you know exactly what that means. It is what it is.

I came across a blog that likened your music to ‘drinking warm beer out of a carburetor’ and someone else said one of your songs reminded them of ‘waking up too early on a Saturday morning, shuffling into the kitchen and noticing the table is filled with a bunch of empty beer bottles.’ Another called your music ‘venomous, sweat-stained rock.’ Are you guys really as feral as your music seems to suggest you are?
Andy Burr: I mean, we party with all our friends and I’ll wake up on somebody’s couch because we were too drunk to go home or whatever, but I think a lot of that perception has to do with the drawl in my voice, or the fact that we’re from Texas. Our songs are dirty and I see that as more about our influences than us being from Texas. None of us are even from Texas, anyway. I mean, we like to get just as fucked up as anyone else. We just play primitive rock ‘n’ roll, so take it or leave it.

You’ve mentioned that in the past you’ve felt a little ‘green’ up on stage. I remember when we saw you in St. Paul you broke a string mid-set.
Andy Burr: It takes crazy voodoo to unite the three of us. If it’s not there, it’s really stressful. Now we’re not worried about it at all. Once we had been together and played together for about five shows, we felt solid. Since Colin—our drummer—has been with us for a while now there’s not really much of that green-ness left. And Matty’s my best friend, so at this point we’re just running on our subconscious.

Which album would you request to be buried with?
Andy Burr: Velvet Underground—self-titled. I could listen to ‘What Goes On’ forever.

DOWNLOAD -> IF YOU’RE GOLD, I’M GONE by WOVEN BONES

Bookmark and Share
categories: Fuck This Band, Video
tags:


I Blame Coco feat. Robyn – Caesar

I BLÅME COCO | MySpace Music Videos

So I Blame Coco, the moniker of musician, sometime-model, and all-around spoiled daughter of Sting, Coco Sumner. Last year she came on my radar doing some playing with Pete Doherty and Carl Barat (seperately) and I downloaded a set that she did at the Torriano and I was really blown away by her! She had something to say and her voice was really interesting and so was the guitar-playing, even if it was just a short acoustic set! I Blame Coco is a fantastic song, so is Humner Humner and Bohemian Love, even the track I downloaded off some Islands Record 2009 compilation was okay. So I see that she’s releasing a video and I get all stoked on it and then I watch it and, WHAT THE FUQ is that? Cheesy electro beat? Check. Guest vocals by someone who also needs publicity? Check. Video that costs $$$ and sucks anyway? Check. Any semblance of what made her first songs so great? Nope, nowhere to be found. This to me just screams exploitation of what the market is going crazy for at the moment. Because we need another Bat for Lashes. Another Florence. Another Little Boots. Another Lily Allen. Another Gaga. ETC. God damn, but what can you do when Island Records owns your soul?

By the way, does this take hipstering to a whole new demo? Saying that one live recording is better than any of her currently released material? Elitism, ftw.

Bookmark and Share
category: Video
tags:

If you can’t find the awesomeness and wonder and fun embedded in this video that I am embedding, then you obviously hate music and should just go listen to the Arcade Fire for the rest of your life.

Bookmark and Share

Jay has never come off as a proficient musician; not on the acoustic sessions that he has released on the internet and certainly not live. Standing on A Chair will certainly not change that perception. However, it is his ethos, it’s what he’s about that make his rudimentary songs extraordinary and worthy of listening. Having said that, the exorbitant amount of tracks on this album takes away from what it could be. When you have a jungle of 50 songs to get through, the best ones are sure to get lost in the jumble. ‘Fuck the Smoking Ban’ is a hilarious take on what was lost when smoking was banned in clubs. ‘I Fancy Laura Marling’ highlight Jay’s love for the young and talented chanteuse Laura Marling, even if it is an April-September/inappropriate kind of love. ‘M.D.M.Azing’ is a wonderful tune about new lovers who meet at a festival and bond over drugs. Another love ‘ballad’ about drugs, ‘Coke’ works wonderfully live as Jay asks everyone to raise their hands if they are addicted to cocaine, no matter who you are – everyone raises their hands. These tunes are what make Beans on Toast appealing, his mastery of a smooth, glib manner with his sardonic tone and his excellent use of rhyme.

ORIGINALLY FOR DROWNED IN SOUND, READ THE REST AT DiS

Bookmark and Share
category: Review
tags: ,

Here’s a secret. I’ve never been to a gig in the OC. I’ve also never been legally of age for a 21+ show the way I was on Wednesday night. The Growlers played a homecoming show at a little place called Surf City Saloon in Huntington Beach that I was lucky enough to be in attendance for. It was a weird night. Arriving to a venue only to find that it’s in a strip mall on the corner of Beach (and dance in the street to the barnacle beat, yeah!) is a weird feeling, but the venue was so cute and kitschy – all kinds of beachy shit all over the place and a mural with the Beach Boys, Johnny Cash et all. For someone whose favorite place ever – The Echo, which has practically nothing inside of it, Surf City Saloon was like a secret hilarious gem of a find.

The first band up was Austin, TX’s own Woven Bones. Watching them was a real treat. I even came up with a bandmathematical equation to describe their music, even though I’m so against that, but I think this one rings true: Wavves (sound) + The Raveonettes (rhythm section) + King Tuff (vocals) – White Denim (another Austin 3-piece) = Woven Bones. They play a really intense show, the simplicity of the drums with the intricate and driving bass lines provides the perfect undercurrent to the screeching, reverbed, distorted craziness that is the guitar. The vocals remind me so much of King Tuff – not something I’d normally think might be particularly pleasing to the ear, but then after a minute or so it melds so well with the music and is so evocative and passionate that it’s irresistable. Woven Bones plays with a lot of intensity and passion and the live show and most especially the recordings that I’ve gotten my hands on since really reflect that urgency. They may be in the garage recording through tin cans for now, but they won’t be able to stay under the radar for that much longer…

After suffering through two bad openers and enjoying one opener, I know that I was so excited to see The Growlers. Not seeing them for nearly 8 weeks was torture! The sound system at the venue was really weird, or maybe it was just the mix, but the vocals really dominated everything, the guitar was really secondary. One can usually count on the Growlers to keep the guitar and vocals on top of everything else, although the bass usually shines live, so seeing them in what seems like a non-traditional enviornment with a different sound mix was strange but they pulled it out. Brooks was on the top of his game, slithering and sliding around stage as is his way, grooving around and controlling the audience as if he was Gepetto and we were all Pinnochio, hanging on his every word, mimicing his every bodily whim.

The Growlers mixed old classics from ‘Couples’ with some new songs off of ‘Are You In or Out’ (to which the answer most definitely needs to be: IN). The guessing of what will be on the setlist is always one of the higlights of going to a Growlers show. This time the beautiful, jangly ‘Acid Rain’ was the star of the show (or perhaps I’ve just had it on repeat for too long) but they also regaled us with the haunting and stunning ‘Sea Lion Goth Blues’, the hyper-poetic, hilarious ‘Something Someone Jr.’, and slowed-down-but-still-groovy rendition of ‘Empty Bones’. As always, the Growlers did not come anywhere near the dreaded ‘d’ word – disappointment. I am continually impressed with their magnetism, their laid back effervensence, and their ability to stun me everytime I catch them live (that’s 8 times this year, with two more to go!).

Bookmark and Share

108ebf4

A while ago, it was reported that Bob Dylan’s unreleased track ‘California’ would be released through the NCIS (TV Show) OST. Really weird, innit? However, I got my little hands on the track and hope you enjoy it…. It’s like half new song/half demo-weird version of ‘Outlaw Blues’.

DOWNLOAD -> CALIFORNIA by BOB DYLAN

Bookmark and Share
category: Show
tags:

l_05518ef92eb44510aba7a32472d175f3

My Pet Saddle @ Myspace
love love love them

Bookmark and Share
category: Video
tags: ,

I would have given my left foot to have witnessed this live.

Bookmark and Share
category: Free Show
tags:

christmas_cacophony

Would you like to relive the greatest moments of you life at Psych Fest 2009? I know that Colette and I had a wonderful/terrifying experience at Psych Fest where we got to see some amazing bands – not as many as we’d have liked – seeing as we got chased out of the venue (full sprint!) on two occasions by Neil Young’s doppelganger. What was initially fucking terrifying, probably would be comedic now provided someone caught it on tape and put it on the DVD. Speaking of the DVD, you can purchase it through Pysch Fest’s online store.

Additionally, they’re having a really cool little screening in Austin if you’re around on the 19th of December….

CHRISTMAS CACOPHONY

The Black Angels & The Reverberation Appreciation Society present:
CHRISTMAS CACOPHONY featuring:

The premiere screening of:
AUSTIN PSYCH FEST 2
A film by Alta Real Pictures
(screening at 8PM)

followed by live music from
SHAPES HAVE FANGS
THE VIET MINH
THE GHOST SONGS
HORSE + DONKEY

Bookmark and Share

Whatever I say next, just know that it’s 100% begrudging. I’m coming around to Bradford Cox. I’m really getting into his Atlas Sound album ‘Logos’. Hence the next post. Bradford’s posted an old CD-R he did with Deerhunter that’s apparently very experimental and lo-fi in nature so there’s that. Atlas Sound has two dates coming up in February – more surely to come – in New York and San Francisco. And finally, via Pitchfork, his top 10 albums of the year. I really like his writing style – there’s something totally communal and awesome and genuine about this guy. /hate myself.

Deerhunter – Carve Your Initials Into the Walls of the Night (2005, Notown Sound)
Tracklist:

1. Bright and Early (8:30)
2. Cicadas (3:56)
3. Rotation (8:03)
4. But I’m A Boy (6:54)
5. Three Dolphins Melting into Orange Wax (4:20)
6. Snow Dogs (2:12)
7. Dogs are Cool (3:41)
8. Homorobotic (3:54)
9. Cordless (2:05)
10. When I Taste Blood (2:53)

Atlas Sound – 2010 Tour Dates
Wed 02/03/10 The Bell House Brooklyn NY
Fri 02/26/10 Great American Music Hall San Francisco CA

Top 10 albums of 2009

1. Privacy: Songs
I was given a test pressing of what I think is one of the most beautiful and haunted records I’ve ever heard. Only one person, Laurel Knapp, delivering fragmented songs with only a nylon guitar and her voice. I actually wore out the test pressing. It sounds very “alone” and evokes dust, crystal radios, and gin. My favorite thing I have heard all year.

2. Kurt Vile: Childish Prodigy
I just got this and don’t know what to say. It is mind-blowing and reminds me of why I started playing music in the first place.

3. Ducktails: Landscapes
Afternoon music I can really get into. Half of it reminds me of this bootleg of Slowdive demos I bought somewhere, but better. The other half reminds me of Casino Versus Japan 4-track demos. I don’t mean to compare him [Matthew Mondanile] to other artists, but I hold Casino Versus Japan sacred, and it’s very rare someone captures that vibe.

4. Animal Collective: Fall Be Kind EP
I’m sure MPP is the most common no. 1 on everyone’s list, but I’ll be damned if this EP is not even more refined. Dave [Porter] sent it to me during my battle with pneumonia, and it honestly seemed to have a healing effect. It mixes with medicine well. I’d describe it like having a close friend who has been as sick as you currently are and is telling you, “You will get better.” It does sound darker, but it also is somehow uplifting. Only real vessels of energy can manage to do that with music. I’m just being honest.

5. Broadcast and the Focus Group: Investigate Witch Cults of the Radio Age
I honestly did not get this at first. It seemed tossed off. Then I toured with them. I still didn’t get it. It seemed like chaos had taken over and killed a pop band. Then halfway through the tour, it suddenly and without explanation made total sense to me. They are doing something new and fucked up. It’s not always easy to digest. It has nothing to do with now. It is ritual music. They made something that genuinely challenged me as a listener, and it’s been a long time since that’s happened. I love them for it.

6. White Rainbow: New Clouds
Everything Adam [Forkner] does I adore. If I could have one person around all the time, it would be him. This record continues his run of great ambient records with his personality embedded in them.

7. Big Star: Keep an Eye on the Sky
Bought this for [Deerhunter guitarist] Lockett [Pundt] on his birthday because he’d been listening to their LPs a lot lately. I had never really “gotten” Big Star. I borrowed it one day and got sorted out.

8. St. Vincent: Actor
I am awe-struck by Annie [Clark] and her raw talent and consistency. She makes me want to try harder and practice more.

9. Neil Young: The Archives Vol. 1: 1963-1972
Very neat.

Bookmark and Share
category: Album
tags:

The Soft Pack’s self-titled debut album is released on February 1.

The album’s tracklisting is:
‘C’mon’
‘Down On Lovin”
‘Answer To Yourself’
‘Move Along’
‘Pull Out’
‘More Or Less’
‘Tides Of Time’
‘Flammable’
‘Mexico’
‘Parasites’

Bookmark and Share

The band who release new album ‘Who Killed Sgt Pepper?’ on January 22, will hit the road in May as part of a European tour.

The band will play

London Shepherds Bush Empire (May 14)
Birmingham Academy 2 (16)
Manchester Academy 2 & 3 (17)
Glasgow ABC (18)
Belfast Spring & Airbrake (19)
Dublin Academy (20)

Bookmark and Share
category: Mp3
tags: ,

Avi Buffalo, the LB-born, LA-current wunderkind stopped by the Daytrotter HQ to record their first ever Daytrotter session. Here’s the gush-sesh that Daytrotter wrote down (that’s the first mistake) in case my glowing recommendations don’t cut it for ya:

The songs come across as sprawling and multi-dimensioned takes on puzzlement and cracking through the hardships of young and undeveloped love, while making the subject matter sound mature and interchangeable with the relationship misery of a couple twice or thrice as old. They find ways to sound like “Harvest” and “After The Gold Rush”-era Neil Young, with soft-spoken sentiments, cured with flurries of tempers ever so slightly held in check. It’s easy to relish the dreaminess of Avi Buffalo, but it’s just as easy to relish their many instances of nearly breaking something, of letting the frustrations of the content turn them red. It’s an exciting combination to keep all eyes on.

Download all the Avi Buffalo tracks below and keep your SXSW schedules open to see these guys:


DOWNLOAD -> COAXED by AVI BUFFALO
DOWNLOAD -> JESSICA by AVI BUFFALO
DOWNLOAD ->REMEMBER LAST TIME by AVI BUFFALO
DOWNLOAD -> WHATS IN IT FOR? by AVI BUFFALO

Bookmark and Share
categories: Free Show, Show
tags:

avi9

In Store Performance
Sat. Dec. 12th, 2009
3pm At Origami Vinyl
1816 W. Sunset Blvd
(Next Door To The Echo)

Bookmark and Share
categories: List, Video
tags:


10. The Magic Wands – Black Magic


09. The Morning After Girls – Part Of Your Nature


08. The Lovetones – Journeyman


07. The Raveonettes – Heart of Stone


06. Devendra Banhart – 16th & Valencia Roxy Music


05. Julian Casablancas – 11th Dimension


04. A Place to Bury Strangers – Keep Slipping Away


03. Fitz & the Tantrums – Breakin the Chains of Love


02. The Dead Skeletons – Dead Mantra


01. Pink Mountaintops – Execution

Bookmark and Share
category: Tour Dates
tags: , ,

l_e5208bc366d24f3ab48cbeac136c76a7

One of LA’s best kept secrets (not for long, though, obviously) Fool’s Gold, who have just come off an excellent tour with Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeroes have announced they’re going abroad. Coming to my stomping grounds now! View all the dates below, and London and Brighton friends, don’t hesitate to go to these shows. They’re sooo incredible live.

January 21st – Yoyo’s
January 22nd – Fabric
January 23rd – Proud Galleries
January 25th – Pure Groove Records in-store (FREE)
January 26th – Madame Jojo’s

Bookmark and Share

ok4w8p

Bob Dylan and Tom Petty have been friends forever. Like, beyond forever. I’ve been appreciating their friendship with this amazing bootleg from 1986 called Live USA where Tom Petty joined Bob onstage for a fair few songs including a cover of my favorite little man Chuck Berry’s ‘Johnny B. Goode. Awesome find.

1. Positively 4th Street
2. All Along the Watchtower
3. Masters of War
4. I’ll Remember You
5. Johnny B. Goode
6. Breakdown
7. Just Like a Woman
8. Blowin’ in the Wind
9. Like a Rolling Stone
10. Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door

Bookmark and Share
categories: Mp3, News
tags: ,

I hate actually having to call them the Soft Pack now, but the Los Angeles boycott of calling the Muslims the Soft Pack has probably got to officially end. Now that they’re releasing their debut album (to say nothing of all their previous work OBVIOUSLY) I’m just gonna refer to them by actual name. So, this Soft Pack have released a new mp3 from their DEBUT album entitled ‘The Soft Pack’. It’s called ‘C’mon’ and I think they’ve been playing it live for a little while, and have played it on a session at some point, so not totally new, but totally excellent!

DOWNLOAD -> C’MON by THE SOFT PACK

Bookmark and Share

l_77622bb870ed4348a856572d8b8aeea8

Having opened for Mumford and Sons this year and being buddies with Alan Pownall, Jay Jay Pistolet, Laura Marling, Kid Harpoon and the rest of the nu-folkies, I had high hopes for King Charles’ first ever Brighton gig at Communion. King Charles took to the stage looking very much like an impoverished bohemian aristocrat with his signature dreads up in a bouffant, very much like above, and wearing clothes that were tattered and too big with exquisite loafers.

Due to the very textured nature of his music, he had one drummer, a keyboardist, himself on guitar and a guy manning the laptop – but it all ended up taking the backseat to Charles’ guitar playing. Most especially on ‘Love Lust’ (his current single) which begins with some chanting and goes into some layers, some texture and finally (especially live) goes into a crazy guitar jam that allows him to showcase his amazing playing.

‘Oh Dear God’ was a song that I wasn’t sure about at first – it saw Charles go back to the second drum kit and start pounding out this indigenous, tribal rhythm in tandem with the first drummer only to jump back on MC duties and tear the fuck out of the stage. By the end, I was completely won over. His energy, his intelligence, his voice although completely non-remarkable unifies what he’s trying to do.

He’s a young guy and the few songs he played us live jumped from genre to genre – doing each quite well, but I think that in the future he probably needs to take a solid route. I personally liked his bluesy streak, but his not-electro-but-with-guitar route worked pretty well for him too and his beat-based songs were excellent too. The kids got some fucking talent and is surely going to be a force to be reckoned with in 2010. I had never heard anything he had done before, really, and by the end, I’d been converted to a King Charles fan. Isn’t that the best endorsement I can give to a band?

DOWNLOAD -> LOVE LUST by KING CHARLES

Bookmark and Share