Recommended Show: Eternal Summers + Beets on Friday

May 26, 2011 at 9:12 pm | Posted in Previews, Seattle | 3 Comments
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Sasquatch, Folklife, Rain Fest, am I missing one? Memorial Day weekend in Seattle is all about Festivals. If you’re not the festival type and you are sticking around Seattle this weekend there’s a show at the Healthy Times Fun Club Friday night that is well worth your time. Roanoak, Virginia’s Eternal Summers and Queens, New York’s the Beets will be in town and playing there tomorrow night. The Beets show at the Funhouse with German Measles a little more than a year ago was a blast complete with piñata, but I’m most looking forward to Eternal Summers who’s album Silver from last year was a favorite of mine. It dialed in stuff like the Spinnanes, Throwing Muses and Galaxy 500 while breaking new ground. The band have a new EP called Prisoner coming soon on Kanine/Forest Family Records. Seattle’s Witch Gardens and the Pharmacy round out the bill.

mp3: Eternal Summers – Prisoner

Keeping Up With Bob Or the New Theory of Everything

May 25, 2011 at 9:02 pm | Posted in Music, Powerpop, Theories | Leave a comment
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Much has been said about the pace and fecundity of Robert Pollard in these pages and elsewhere so I’ll try to refrain from quipping about not being able to keep up. Some choose to embrace it and buy everything, some choose to ignore everything while others try to cherry pick the best ones…. What are you gonna do? Buy every one? Every other one? One? None? I’ve come to terms with Pollard’s output by focusing on his non-solo albums. Capricious maybe, but a guy has to be weed them out somehow.  I think it’s been working out pretty good so far.  The Boston Spaceships albums have all been high quality, the Lifeguards album from a couple of months ago was good and Mars Classroom may be the his best record so far this year. Mars Classroom is a collaboration with Gary Waleik of Big Dipper and Volcano Sun and Robert Beeman of Pell Mell.

The songs on The New Theory of Everything are more fleshed out and subtle than many of Pollard’s records.  That may be due to his working with Gary Waleik. Pollard said that he was intimidated and blown away by Waleik’s songs. You could probably classify this as powerpop. New Theory kicks off the record with its huge hook and chorus and there’s no let down after that. Man.Wine.Power! rips with its corkscrew riff, and then things slow down for a moment on There Never Was a Sea of Love, but it’s not a let down, just a one of the prettiest songs on the record. That’s just the beginning, corkers like Pre-Med’s a Trip, and Dr. Newpile continue to fly by, and he saves the best nostalgia drenched heart string puller to the end with Wish You Were Young. Pollard brings his A material to match Waleik’s challenge. He even incorporates parthenogenesis into a chorus, something I haven’t seen done since Shriekback’s Nemesis. This is classic stuff and it rivals his much vaunted other other other band.

Be on the look out for another Pollard solo album and a Boston Spaceships double album this summer. The guy sweats songs. Also, for a blast from the past, Guided By Voices will be at Sasquatch this weekend, they play Monday on the Sasquatch stage.

mp3: Mars Classroom – New Theory

mp3: Mars Classroom – Wish You Were Young

Order up your copy of The New Theory of Everything vinyl, CD or the convenient mp3.

Repeating: Las Kellies

May 24, 2011 at 9:23 pm | Posted in Argentina, Girls, Music | Leave a comment
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This is kind of a repeat except it’s on a different label.  Last year I was hit over the head with killer record from Las Kellies an all girl band from Argentina who all take the last name Kelly the way the Ramones all adopted the surname Ramone.  Kellies was their third album but my introduction to them.  The record is now getting a US release on 5 July courtesy of  Fire records.  Kellies melded angular post punk riffs from the likes of Wire via Elatica with the fat beats of Bronx sisters ESG whose Erase You they cover on the album.  It was one of my favorites albums of last year and well worth picking up now that it is getting a domestic release.

mp3: Las Kellies – Perro Rompebolas (from Kellies)

Here’s one from ESG. The original of Erase You which Las Kellies cover.

mp3: ESG – Erase You

Terry Malts Sez

May 19, 2011 at 9:53 pm | Posted in 7 inch, Music, Mysteries, Singles | 2 Comments
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I wondered why the press release for the new Terry Malts single was so sketchy. All this stuff about them being mysterious and no one knowing who these enigmatic bay area punks were. It’s not like they’re wearing giant eyeballs on their heads when they play. So why the obfuscation? Are they trying to keep it a secret because their boss doesn’t like moonlighting? At first I thought it was a Weekend side project where they shoveled some dirt away from their melodies, but it turns out it’s a Magic Bullets side project where they shovel some dirt on top of their melodies.

Terry Malts are a trio of bullets who shed their Orange Juice affectations and don a punk rock leather jacket with Ramones and Redd Kross badges on it.  The Go-Betweens were never considered punks, but the chorus of Distracted is a dead ringer for Lee Remick.

mp3: Terry Maltz – Distraction (from their debut Slumberland single)

The Black Hole of the Crystal Stilts

May 15, 2011 at 10:11 pm | Posted in Crocodile, Music, Seattle | 2 Comments
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Crystal Stilts, Case Studies and Posse at the Crocodile, Seattle | 11 May 2011

Brooklyn’s (by way of Florida) Crystal Stilts played the Crocodile this past Wednesday night to a sparse audience. Apparently their darker take on the pop song doesn’t resonate as well with the kids as their labelmates and neighbors the Pains of Being Pure at Heart brighter stylings who sold the place out a few weeks ago. Where the Pains are bright colors and glistening pop hooks, Crystal Stilts dredge around below the ground in the dark of night. Their second album In Love With Oblivion recently released on Slumberland is a more assured effort than their debut. JB’s guitars rattle, jangle and shatter with a Bo Diddly tenacity while singer Brad Hargett keeps his vocals murky making you dig just a little for the melody.

Oblivion doesn’t make you dig too deep with its abundance of hooks as their previous effort Alight of Night did. Its glistening guitar more often than not offsets Hargett’s caliginous musings.  The band have never been ones to lead sing-alongs at their shows, opting to put up a distinct boundary between them and whoever shows up to see them play,  and this night was no different.  Crystal Stilts where there to play, oblivious to whether there were 50 or 500 people in the room which was good and bad.  Good  because there were only about 50 people there. They belted out a set of big moody songs that sparkled at times like a partly cloudy day in Seattle.  Sun breaks came with the Felt inspired Half a Moon, the pop of Through the Floor, and single Shake the Shackles and then the sun became obscured with the likes Prometheus At Large and Flying Into the Sun. Bad because it seemed like the set was cut short by the band’s disaffection.  Nine songs is like a set from the opener. We were there to see the Crystal Stilts headline. What they played was great, but it wasn’t enough. They all but ignored their first album Alight of Night, only playing The Dazzled and neglecting  early favorites like Cripple Croon.

I should not complain too much, because what they played was great. Evoking the Bunnymen, Velvets, 13 Floor Elevators and Felt at once is no easy feat, but it felt like it wasn’t enough. If you’re only going to play nine songs why even bother with an encore? Just play 10 and leave the stage. Do it like you mean it and leave me wanting more. The encore of Love Is a Wave sounded great, but forced. A band like Crystal Stilts who seem to not give a fuck about whether you’re there or not shouldn’t conform to the tired encore. If they would have done it like they meant it they would not have come back for the encore. They would have left me wanting more, but as it was they left me wondering why they only played 10 songs.

mp3: Crystal Stilts – Half a Moon (from In Love With Oblivion available on vinyl and CD from Slumberland Records)

Jesse Lortz who was the Duke in the Dutchess and the Duke has a new moniker in Case Studies. I had seen him a couple months ago at Cairo with only an acoustic guitar and thought his new songs were ho-hum, but this time getting some help from 3/5 of the Crystal Stilts the songs seemed to have more of an impact. The performance felt more like a practice with Lortz coaxing the Stilts on to “try another one”, but it seemed like they were on the right track and left me hoping the Lortz employs a band when goes to actually record some of these songs.

Kicking off the evening were Seattle’s very own entry into the 90′s retread, Posse. Versus come to mind and that in and of itself should wet your whistle. The trio sounded amazing, and seemed totally comfortable on the Crocodile’s super high stage giving a shout out to their parents who showed up to see them play.  If you haven’t checked them out over at their bandcamp page, what are you waiting for?

Messages from the 80′s

May 10, 2011 at 9:47 pm | Posted in 7 inch, 80's, Singles | 2 Comments
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photo from icki’s photostream

The 80′s done this well doesn’t happen too often, but this debut single from Andy Human will have you feeling like you weren’t even born yet (or 15 in my case). Andy Human is one of the current projects of Andy Jordan (his other being LENZ) who was in the bay area band the Cuts and Time Flys.  The two songs on the single go for the Hughes jugular with their mix of The The, Microdisney, OMD and John Foxx era Ultravox.


mp3: Andy Human – Toy Man (get your copy on vinyl or mp3 at Midheaven)

In other Hughes/80′s/teen movie news, I saw that the 7 inch single that John Hughes sent to his fan club of Beat City by Flowerpot Men around the time he made Ferris Bueller’s Day Off is going for a cool $300 on eBay.  No soundtrack for the movie was ever released making that single the only place you can find a hard copy of that excellent song. If you don’t remember the song, it was in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off after they get Sloane from school and are cruising on the freeway in Cameron’s dad’s Ferrari into Chicago.

mp3: Flowerpot Men – Beat City

Boomgates Speaking My Language

May 8, 2011 at 10:23 pm | Posted in 7 inch, Australia, Music, Singles | 2 Comments
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Boomgates,  the Australian supergroup for trainspotters are back with their second single, this time on the San Francisco label SmartGuy Records. Last year’s Bright Idea was a beauty and their second single is like it’s better looking sister.  Boomgates are Brendan Huntly who you will undoubtedly be familiar with as the singer of Eddy Current Suppression Ring teaming up with Steph Hughes of Dick Diver as well as member of the Twerps, Teen Archer, and Trial Kennedy.
Layman’s Terms is my favorite of the two songs. The combination of Huntly and Hughes reminds me of the Mekons and Comet Gain, and the song itself is firmly rooted in a lineage that can be traced back to Brisbane’s Go-Betweens. With a song like Layman’s Terms, the other side could be crap and it would still be a great single, but instead it’s the driving more Eddy Current like Nothing which works itself up into quite a maelstrom and leaves you with no other option than flipping the record over for another go. I hope these guys have a stash of songs that they’re sitting on just waiting to unleash on us, because these two singles have really got me wanting a lot more from the Boomgates.

mp3: Boomgates – Layman’s Terms (Order up a copy of the record from SmartGuy Records)

Waxing Idolic

May 5, 2011 at 10:29 pm | Posted in 7 inch, Singles | 2 Comments
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That old saying you should never judge a book by its cover is totally wrong in the case of record sleeves. The latest batch of Hozac singles arrived at my doorstep last week and the one that jumped out at me was the Wax Idols single. Its clean lines and grainy photo made it seem like it was 30 years younger than it’s 2011 copyright. In actuality this record was born in the present day San Francisco garage scene. Heather Fedewa who has spent time in Bare Wires and Hunx and His Punks is the main idol employing the help of members of Sic Alps and Dreamdate the Splinters. The A-side, All Too Human reminds me a little of the Runaways with it’s confident swagger and chorus of Fedewa pining about being someone’s lover that drips with both lust and regret. Its crashing drums, ringing guitars and vociferous chorus make for an intense and satisfying three minutes. See for yourself.

mp3: Wax Idols – All Too Human (Get your copy from Hozac)

You Want Fries With That?

May 4, 2011 at 9:45 pm | Posted in 7 inch, Brooklyn, Music, Singles | Leave a comment
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There was a time you could get 7-inch singles from fast food restaurants. I distinctly remember getting a couple records from Burger King when I was a kid. One had Chic, Leif Garret, Roberta Flack and Genesis and the other one had Abba, the Spinners, Firefall and England Dan and John Ford Coley. I think I may have been partial to the Abba and Spinners single, but I was too young to care whether the music was any good. I was just excited to have a record of my own to put on my parents’ record player.  I don’t remember McDonalds ever giving away records but who knows what next year’s Record Store Day might bring?

In other news, three former burger flippers from the likes of Bright Lights, Oxford Collapse and Cause Co-Motion have gotten together and formed a band and named themselves after the golden arches. McDonalds have just released their first single on the fledgling Oh Wow records.  The druggy, danceable, psychedelic haze coming off this thing will have you wondering if it’s the late 60′s, or the late 80′s. Get your copy from Oh Wow before they’re sued and have to change their name.



Up the Down Escalator

May 3, 2011 at 9:54 pm | Posted in Music, Scotland, Singles, Virtual | 1 Comment
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Straight outta Edinburgh, Scottland come Edinburgh School for the Deaf. Their moody, fuzzed out maelstrom on the A-side to their virtual single is a sound not unfamiliar to their geography, and then the virtual B-side figuratively flips that sound on its ear getting introspective, delicate and quiet (also not unfamiliar to their geography). The only complaint I have about this record is that it ain’t  a physical record. It’s part of Bubblegum Records For Singles Project which limits each single to 200 downloads. I’ll take a download but I’ll still pine for a 45 that I can plop on a turntable and crank  up.


Here’s the A-Side Orpheus Descending:

And the B-Side Orpheus Ascending:

Edinburgh School for the Deaf’s debut long player New Youth Bible is due 13th June. In the meantime head over to Bubblegum Records to buy a download of this virtual single.

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