I Didn’t Know You Could Get That Film Anymore

October 31, 2010 at 9:58 pm | Posted in Gigs, Music, Seattle, Video | 4 Comments
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Allo Darlin’, Math & Physics Club, Special Places at Jewelbox Theater, Seattle | 29 October 2010

If there is a more perfect place than the tiny Jewelbox Theater to enjoy the precious pop of the likes of London’s Allo Darlin’ and Seattle’s Math & Physics Club and Perfect Places it likely only exists in my imagination or some storybook. After providing the secret knock to the theater door I entered into a Seattle’s small but familial indiepop world. Allo Darlin were a long way from home and I can only imagine here because of the enthusiasm of Three Imaginary Girls who booked the sold out show.
Allo Darlin’s album on Fortuna Pop came out earlier this year. It was recorded in the basement of the Duke of Uke shop in London, where people like Darren Haymen, and the Wave Pictures like to hang out and a place where Allo Darlin singer and ukulele player Elizabeth Morris probably had her choice of ukuleles to play while recording. Morris started off the set solo with a new song she called Talulah, that contained a line about listening to that Go-Betweens album on cassette. Usually I would assume that a song with an obscure reference to a Go-Betweens album would be lost on the audience, but I think it’s safe to assume that everyone in the room got it. The song was about as gentle and tender Allo Darlin would be this night.
The rest of the band then joined her on stage for what they referred to a slow-burn of a set. A slow burn according to the band is gradually turning up the heat as the night goes on. Their self-titled album on Fortuana Pop is fun and similar to Camera Obscura, but where Camera Obscura are stiff and standoffish on stage Allo Darlin’ are the types to put their arms around your shoulders and pogo with you until you’re out of breath. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a bass player jump so high and still keep a beat as Mr. Bill Botting did. A good thing the place had a high roof because He and Morrise would get in sync on their jumping nearly every song and their verticals had to be about one and half to two feet. The band were definitely having a good time and everyone there to see them couldn’t help but have a good time too. Songs like Kiss Your Lips and If Loneliness Was Art raged full on almost making you question their twee roots. On the Polaroid Song they snuck in the chorus to the Bangles‘ Walk Like an Egyptian to everyone’s delight and the band’s as well as they were all grinning ear to ear.  It was infectious, even after they left the stage and denied us of an encore, I couldn’t seem to wipe the giant grin from my face.

mp3: Allo Darlin – If Loneliness Was Art (from their Fortuna Pop album, buy the CD  here or the vinyl here)


Hometown boys Math & Physics Club must have drawn the short straw back stage having to follow Allo Darlin, but their sublime understated set was a delight.  This was the first chance that I got to hear the new songs from their second album I Shouldn’t Look As Good As I Do live.  Maybe I pay more attention to guitars these days, but I don’t remember them sporting Rickenbackers.  Both James and Charles had shiny and shimmering ones and they looked as good as they sounded.  Another thing I noticed that I had either forgotten or never picked up on was how meaty and bouncy the bass lines were.  Before the final song when Ethan Jones and James Werle switched instruments, Jones noted as he picked up Werle’s guitar how his kid brother’s friend said to him when he found out Jones was in Math and Physics Club how his favorite MAPC bass line was for the one song he didn’t play bass.  I was hoping that they would have come back out with Allo Darlin for a rousing rendition of We’re So DIY with Elizabeth Morris singing the Ya, oh ya’s while Tullycraft were in the audience.  No such luck.  No encores from Math and Physics Club either, but I counted myself fortunate having seen them as their appearances around town are all too rare.

mp3: Math & Physics Club – We’re So DIY (from their album I Shouldn’t Look As Good As I Do, buy it from Matinee)


I shouldn’t complain, half of Tullycraft, Jenny & Cori opened the show as the Special Places.  Jenny was sporting a newly acquired accordion which she said she just learned to play a few days before.  The keys had stickers on them to remind her where to put her fingers as Cori pointed out after a false start.  Their set was totally DIY and off the cuff, but their acoustic songs  felt like a breath of fresh air wafting through the the tiny theater.

Taking It To the Banque

October 23, 2010 at 11:10 pm | Posted in Deutschland, mp3, Music | Leave a comment
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A German band with a French name for a German bank? Guitars that sound like they’ve been coughed up, spit out and then gurgle down the drain? Seemingly as obscure in their native Germany as they are here in the States? Have you been looking for such a thing? If  you answered yes to one or more of those questions and  like Big Black, the kiwi noise of the Gordons, early Gang of Four, the urban decay of Tyvek and like keeping a German to English dictionary handy then Banque Allemande are for you.

Sacramento’s S-S Records has plucked this seemingly willfully obscure German band from the subway cars and hamburger grills of Berlin to release their first full length record that’s been years in the making. If you’ve ever wondered what a grease soaked maelstrom that slides off the rails sounds like in German look no further than Banque Allemande.

mp3: Banque Allemande – Geld Wie Wir (Order up a copy of Eins, Zwei on vinyl from S-S or digitally from Midhaven.)

Clean Surfers

October 19, 2010 at 8:28 pm | Posted in Kiwi-rock, mp3, Music, New Zealand | 2 Comments
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Surf Friends are from Auckland, New Zealand. I don’t know how they met, but based on their name and their sound I would guess it was over some conversation that they struck up about fellow New Zealanders the Clean at some point break while waiting for the next set to come in. They’ve put out a slew of singles on Power Tool Records down south and now they have decided to put out a long player which they’re calling Confusion. It rolls with some Krautrock grooves, jangles in a few places and Velvet Underground riffs abound. Derivative you ask?  Yes, but it looks to all the right places.

mp3: Surf Friends – You’re On My Mind


Stream and/or buy a download of the album at Bandcamp.
Buy a hard copy of the album from Power Tool Records.

Getting Ready for Flu Season

October 13, 2010 at 9:52 pm | Posted in Music, Serendipity | 1 Comment
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I got my flu shot today, so I’m feeling pretty invincible. The only thing that could infect me would be the following five songs which have been on repeat in this order throughout my day.  Not sure how this short play list came to fruition. I just live in the moment and don’t question higher powers.

Seattle’s Brent Amaker and the Rodeo have make a good case for doing an entire album of Kraftwerk covers with their version of Pocket Calculator.  This song is not on their new album Please Stand By that comes out next week,but they might play it at the Crocodile next Thursday for their record release party.  The only thing better than listening to this cover on my computer with headphones would be listening to this cover at the Crocodile while scantily clad girls wearing pasties dancing around on stage with Mr. Amaker and the Rodeo, which I’m sure is bound to happen.

mp3: Brent Amaker and the Rodeo – Pocket Calculator
The new album from Brent Amaker and the Rodeo Please Stand By is out next week on Sparkle and Shine.



Hailing from somewhere up in the great white northern Canadian province of Alberta, Myelin Sheaths finally answer Mudhoney‘s Touch Me I’m Sick with a blast of rock that is part Cave Weddings and part White Wires.  What is their answer?  “I’m not afraid of getting sick!” The boy-girl vocals are totally contagious.  I think I’m sick.

mp3: Myelin Sheaths – Everything Is Contagious
You can pre-order Myelin Sheaths self-titled debut from Southpaw.


I won’t go into how Weekend are from San Francisco and have named their album Sports, but I will say that End Times which first appeared on a split single with like-minded Frisconians Young Prisms on the Transparent label is a blissed out wall of sound that reminds me of Slumberland veterans Lorelei.  Well, what do ya know, Weekend’s debut album is due on Slumberland next month!

mp3: Weekend – End Times
Weekend’s double debut LP Sports comes out November 9 on Slumberland.


When I saw Tyvek a few weeks back here in Seattle I remarked to myself how much they reminded me of Wire.  The teaser song from their In The Red debut does absolutely nothing to dispute that assertion.  What we have here is ex-lion tamers hoisting the pink flag and succeeding.

mp3: Tyvek – 4312
Tyvek’s second album Nothing Fits can be orderd direct from In the Red.


Many have attempted to ape the My Bloody Valentine sound, but few can get it right and write a pop song at the same time. Austin’s Ringo Deathstarr may have done just that.  The first song from their debut record which isn’t due until early next year sounds like it was directly influenced by Isn’t Anything.  While you wait for next year, you can listen to Imagine Hearts and  you can track down Sparkler the Japanese only CD that compiles most of there EP’s and singles to date.  You won’t be disappointed doing one or both.

mp3: Ringo Deathstarr – Imagine Hearts
No news on who’s putting out Ringo Deathstarr’s Colour Trip. Head over to RCRDLBL for UK tour dates.

The Limiñanas

October 11, 2010 at 9:28 pm | Posted in La France, Music | Leave a comment
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If you didn’t know any better you might think that Trouble in Mind dug up a long lost 60′s record from some dusty Parisian attic.  the Limiñanas debut album is Jacques Dutronc, Velvet Underground and Françoise Hardy rolled up into a single slab of wax. You literally throw this record on and you feel like you’re doin’ the time warp en français.  It conjures such an authentic 60′s vibe that  I bet they have bands lining up to record with them to get that sound.  After two top notch singles earlier this year, one on TIM and the other on Hozac I was really looking forward to this record, but a little afraid I would be disappointed from heightened expectations.  No such problem, expectations met and exceeded.

mp3: The Limiñanas – Down Underground


mp3: The Limiñanas – Funeral Baby


The Limiñanas debut is due very soon from Trouble In Mind on both LP and CD formats.  If you’re into this kind of thing, be sure to check out Les Bellas which the Limiñanas were part of and whose album just saw the light of day earlier this year.

Pleasures of the Crayon Fields

October 8, 2010 at 10:04 pm | Posted in Australia, Music, Orchestral Pop | 4 Comments
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I just read a tweet from the Vaselines where they called Belle & Sebastian pure showbiz.  I think they meant it as a compliment, but I took it as a put down.  I’ve been down on Belle & Sebastian since seeing them on the Dear Catastrophe Waitress tour.  While I liked that record, live they just got a little bit too full of themselves and then the cringingly bad Life Pursuit and its live show demonstrated that the band seemed to be quite content to be mired in MOR quicksand (Word to the wise, don’t torture yourself with their new record, especially the Nora Jones duet). What was great about those early B&S albums was the DIY spirit, the  tension they could conjure and the bare bones approach to orchestral pop.  What’s a guy to do when a favorite band goes astray?  Go find another favorite band of course.  The Crayon Fields are the perfect replacement.  Their latest album All the Pleasures of the World was an unheralded orchestral pop gem. They share the same influences with Belle & Sebastian in  the Go-Betweens, Zombies, Bee Gees and the Left Banke, and they remind me of B&S circa If You’re Feeling Sinister, a little awkward in front of an audience, but able to deliver the goods in an anxious, taught way.  You won’t get a string section at Benaroya Hall, but you will get a feeling of the delicate and the sublime from songs like Disappear and Mirrorball, or an inkling of the exotic from How Loved Are You.

The Crayon Fields are no strangers to these pages, but they are just about to embark on a rare set of US dates which is the impetus of this post.  The band have released an EP in preparation for their US landing over on Bandcamp.  It includes a live version of Graceless, a cover of Roxette‘s It Must Have Been Love and a new song,and  the afore mentioned How Loved Are You.  If that’s not enough new stuff for you, Crayon Fields main dude Geoffrey O’Connor has his second solo album (his first was under the moniker Sly Hats) ready for release.  It will be out soon on Chapter Music, the same label as the Crayon Fields and label has graciously shared up a song to preview its release.

mp3: Crayon Fields – How Love You Are


mp3: Geoffrey O’Connor – Now and Then


Catch the Crayon Fields in the flesh if you live near one of these places:
Oct 11 – Soda Bar – San Diego, CA
Oct 13 – Muddy Waters W/ The Spires and Watercolor Paintings – Santa Barbara, CA
Oct 14 – Rickshaw Stop w/ Magic Bullets  – San Francisco, CA
Oct 16 – Northern w/Karl Blau – Olympia, WA
Oct 17 – Mississippi Studios w/Karl Blau  – Portland, OR
Oct 18 – Tractor Tavern w/Karl Blau  – Seattle, WA
Oct 21 – Glasslands Gallery – (CMJ) – New York, NY
Oct 22 – Rockwood Music Hall (CMJ) – New York, NY
Oct 24 – Black Cat Backstage w/ Family Portrait – Washington, DC
Oct 26 – The Fire w/Air Waves – Philadelphia, PA
Oct 27 – TT The Bears w/Air Waves – Boston, MA
Oct 29 – Hotel Cafe – Los Angeles, CA

Kelley Stoltz Still Keeping the Flame

October 6, 2010 at 9:56 am | Posted in Album Review, Antique Glow, Music | 4 Comments
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For a while there, you couldn’t turn on the TV without one of Kelley Stoltz‘  songs blaring from the boob tube being used to hock credit cards, hotels, Volvos and Viagra (not true). My guess is that about 70% of of Kelley Stoltz fans do marketing for a living. The rest of us do other stuff. To Dreamers is Kelly Stoltz third album for Sub Pop and number six overall if you’re counting. The man is still fastidiously solo, in his house crafting multilayered pop songs all alone and getting by with a little help from his friends when necessary. The guy is meticulous, every listen seems to provide some new found sound on every listen.

While To Dreamers is primarily a guitar album, Stoltz incorporates horns into a handful of the songs. The effect is subtle, and they are so deftly employed that you sometimes think they’re another guitar. On the opening Rock & Roll With Me I didn’t notice them until the second or third listen. I Like, I Like features a saxophone right up front, but not in your face like Springsteen and John Cafferty. You almost have to struggle to hear it near the end of the song, instead of it breaking out into some kind crazy solo.

The Kinks, Beach Boys and Harry Nilson are still ever-present in Stoltz’s antique glow, but he seems to be broadening his pallet this time out, because I swear I hear some Electric Light Orchestra (Rock & Roll with Me), Fred Neil (Pinecone), Bowie (Fire Escape), and Krautrock (Keeping the Flame) not to mention a bit of post punk droning in places. When he’s not being a rock n’ roll star, Stoltz works in a record store in San Francisco, and you see how the dusty stacks of vinyl seep into his mind and keep expand his musical horizons. To Dreamers benefits from Stoltz’ ever expanding musical palette,  making it a more varied record and so far, my favorite of his albums. The record ends with the pensive Bottle Up which gives a nod with it’s baritone guitar to Jack Nitzsche‘s Lonely Surfer. Stoltz’ sixth  album is another solo triumph, shooting the curl at some obscure California break. I just hope that there are some people back on the beach watching besides those in the TV commercial making business.

mp3: Kelley Stoltz – I Don’t Get That


Pre-order the record from Sub Pop and get a bonus CD containing 5 unreleased songs. Stoltz will also be in town on Monday, October 18 for a gig at the Crocodile.

Stream: To Dreamers

Check out this video made by Yours Truly about the making of To Dreamers. Sounds like Mikey from Eddy Current Suppression Ring turned Kelley onto doing the cover of “Big Boy” Pete Miller’s Baby I Got News for You.

Kellies

October 2, 2010 at 10:20 pm | Posted in Argentina, Music | Leave a comment
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“I don’t believe you.  You’re just too good to be true.” are the first lines on Kellies just released third album.  That was my exact thought when I heard them.  It seems Everette True has been writing about this Argentinian band Kellies for the last year, but not many have picked up on them. Surprising, very surprising. Maybe it’s because finding their records is near impossible if you aren’t living in Argentina, or maybe it’s because True isn’t part of the right blog clique. The band have just released their third album in Argentina and though you will be hard pressed to find it at your local record store, you can find it on bandcamp.

My advice is to head straight there and do not pass go, especially if you’re someone prone to buying properties like Gang of Four, Wire, and the Raincoats you will want to take a chance on Kellies. They are like a legit Elastica, post punk punks who write taught, angular party songs like Chicks On Speed with a little Butter 08/Cibo Matto spread on top. If all that coded babble means nothing to you give these three songs a listen and you’ll mortgaging some property or at least reaching for your credit card.

mp3: Kellies – Prince In Blue (from Kellies)


mp3: Kellies -  Bling Bling (from Kellies)


mp3: Kellies – Rebaixes (from Kalimera)


Their self-titled third album is available from bandcamp.

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