| | | weekender | | | | Not the greatest weekend for music, but some solid stuff going on here and there. I again have to be a bit short today... guess I just can't get my shit together on Fridays. Anyway, we'll have the lists about an hour or two earlier starting next week, which will hopefully help a bit. FRIDAYTonight you can start the evening off with the Evangelicals, who are playing a free in store at Good Records at 6pm. I guess you better hurry considering that you're probably reading this at 5:00. Anyway, Evangelicals have put out one of the most interesting psyche pop records of the year, and it also happens to be one of the most fun to listen to. And since its free, you might as well trust me. Drop the Lime | DJ Mundo/ Keith P/ Tiny MC (Sons of Hermann Hall)
This should be the place to be tonight. Drop the Lime is surely a touring DJ that is worth your time and trouble to see... his influences are all over the place, and the beats are insane. You can click here to read Central Booking's take on the night, and you'll also find a link to an excellent new Drop the Lime mix tape. I don't have much info on Mundo and Keith P, aside from the fact that they seem to be interested in uk garage and 2step, meaning that they should be a solid opener as well. I've never been to a dance show at Sons, and I'm guessing it will be... interesting? Yeah, thats the ticket. This show will surely be the most fun you could possibly have tonight. Also, Strawberry Fields in Denton will be hosting a screening of the excellent bio pic The Devil and Daniel Johnston. I highly recommend it. And apparently, a shitload of other people do too. Starts at 9. SATURDAYDJ Shadow will be doing an instore at Good Records starting at 2:30pm. I've heard various stories about his good records appearance. Some say that it is simply an autograph session, and others say that it is a full instore. Either way, I heard they'll have free beer, so I'm sure it will be worth it. You can also catch Shadow later on Saturday night at the Gypsy Tea Room with Lateef the Truth Speaker. Jose Gonzalez ( Gypsy Tea Room)
Anyone that tries to tell you that Jose Gonzalez is anything but a brilliant songwriter is completely full of shit. He gained a lot of attention late last year with his cover of The Knife's "Heartbeats," which prompted a lot of people to pick up his record and discover that just about every song on it is absolutely fantastic. Everything he does has been done a million times before, and he's still fucking great. His music is soft, quiet, sad and hollow sounding, and yes, he's actually able to pull all of those things off without sound like a douche. In fact, he sounds absolutely brilliant more often than not. Magnolia Electric Company | Bottomless Pit | Tre Orsi (Rubber Gloves)Mad Happy | Wanz Dover | Beauregard | 1337 Geek Beat/ DJ Stephen R (Bell House; at the Corner of Bell and Summit off Lower Greenville)
This show is going down at Stephen R's house off lower Greenville. Its three bucks to get in, and they will have two kegs for your consumption once you've paid your way inside. I'm sure there will be dancing too. Just mapquest the interesction above, drive to it, and you'll find it. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | for those who want to know... | | | | We've received some emails about the Projection comp and where to download it, so we've added a permanent link to the Projection post over on the sidebar. Just click that, then click the link in the post. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | it list : thursday | | | | 1. Serena Maneesh | Woven Hand | Evangelicals (Rubber Gloves) Serena Maneesh has received a lot of international acclaim for their resurrection of late 80's/early 90's reverb flooded guitar murk. They offset it with an occasional stab at more upbeat material but that part of their sound is probably not why they've been paid so much attention. The truth is that many music fans seem to long for that era of guitar rock judging by the enduring popularity of (mostly British) bands from that era. Also at Rubber Gloves tonight is Woven Hand, who feature the main songwriter from the now defunct Sixteen Horsepower. Their fan created myspace page calls them Gothic/Folk and I don't know if their fans are necessarily doing them a favor with that tag. Opening band The Evangelicals play energetic pop. 2. Idi*Amin | The Mad Scientists | Violent Squid (TJ's in Denton) Looks like a good lineup at a fairly repulsive venue. I don't know if I've ever heard anyone say a single good thing about this place but that probably won't matter too much tonight. I'm interested in seeing Idi*Amin since I've heard there's been a lineup change and they now have a member of You are The Universe playing with them. I don't know if that means less guitar skronk and more Powerbook but we'll see. The Mad Scientists should be in good spirits since lead member Brannon is celebrating his birthday by playing this show. If I could make a birthday wish for him I would probably wish that he'd cut his solos a few minutes shorter. But that's part of the fun of The Mad Scientists. I've never seen Violent Squid but that's just another reason to go to this show. 3. Zoo; A Visual Menagerie (The Cavern) Recent outings to this event have been really entertaining, even when I hated the artists on certain videos. I heard and saw a good mix of Soul, Pop, Rap, New Wave, Indie Rock, Classic Rock, Electronic Music, and old fashioned Metal the couple of times I've been. Good job on finding the especially obscure promo clips. 4. Dixie Witch | Mescalero | Secret Devil Sign (Andy's in Denton) I just want to quickly add that once upon a time when Dixie Witch was a local band, they were the only local band I could stomach and actually liked at the time. The drummer/singer is really something to experience live and puts on one of the most impressive displays of force and effort I've ever seen on a stage. | | | | | Defensive Listening | | | | | | | | ratatat @ gypsy tea room | | | | Before Ratatat took the stage at Gypsy Tea Room last night, you could sense the electricity in the room. After they finished their set, the electricity was slapping the packed house across the face. Last night was one of those rare moments in Dallas music that made you feel like people actually give a shit, and whether it was just an illusion or not, it felt great to be in a sold out venue full of people who there to see a band that was actually worthy of the buzz. Ratatat's performance was everything I thought it would be and more, easily earning a spot on my list of favorite shows of the year. When I saw the band perform a couple of years ago, things were a bit different. For one, the entire performance was little more than two guys standing still, a drum machine, and some psychedelic visuals in the background. For another, there were about 30 people in attendance, most of whom appeared to be relatively unfamiliar with the material. It was a great show to be sure, but the mood was a bit subdued and the crowd was a bit puzzled, as many in attendance couldn't seem to quite figure out what they were looking at. Last night, Ratatat put on a much more animated stage show complete with better visuals, a third member on keyboards, and a large, informed audience that treated the whole thing like a dance party instead of a rock show. Its a good thing too, because the energy of the crowd was a huge factor in making the show as much fun as it was. As I said in my post yesterday, Ratatat seems to take inspiration from such a wide variety of genres and past movements in pop that they really end up sounding like nothing you've heard before. The most obvious reference points are disco, hip hop, post-rock, idm, funk, house, and a healthy dose of prog guitar groups such as Yes and King Crimson. In a live setting, their music is largely beat driven and funky, and it was clear that the band wanted their songs to be used rather than dissected, infusing their music with a level of complexity that is interesting on its own yet completely disposable, considering that the vast majority of the focus was on moving asses rather than impressing music dorks. Of course, that isn't to say that Ratatat's musicianship wasn't impressive, because it was. The songs were tight, the guitar playing was complex and flashy, and the layers of sound were mood altering and joyous. As the band moved through their hour plus set of album cuts and newer tracks, it became clear that much of the energy and thought that went in to making their songs so interesting was actually more of an afterthought for the band and much of the audience, who were busy throwing their hands in the air, freaking their girlfriends, and generally not giving a shit about how cool they looked. Its probably useful to note that much of this band's recent output has come in the form of dance remix singles, because their performance was so tight that it often sounded like a DJ spinning dance records rather than two guys playing guitar on stage. Even the more subdued songs had a robotic and electronic feel that made you forget that the music was being played by human beings. Many people were there to see a rock show, no doubt, and in many ways they got it. But the band was so good at what they did that the crowd was able to interact with the music freely, without having to focus all their attention on the band itself. The culmination of this mood came during the band's last song, when dozens of audience members jumped onstage to dance one last time. The audience was as much a part of the show as the band and almost as important as the music, and it was clear that Ratatat fed off this state of affairs and thrived as a result. As I watched people dancing and screaming and having a blast, I was reminded of Pitchfork's review of The Rapture's Echoes, which the site named record of the year for 2003. In it, the author discussed the newness of seeing "indie" kids dancing at what appeared to be a rock show. Of course, this phenomenon is nothing new these days, and I'm not going to try to tell you that it is. In fact, it really wasn't an entirely new development back in 2003 either, since many seem to forget the close relationships that existed between post-punk, disco, and hip hop in the late 70's and early 80's. However, its still quite refreshing to see an audience get so excited about a band as innovative and unique as Ratatat. Promoters and record labels can keep trying to shove the same old bland "indie" pop down our throats, but its clear that people are looking elsewhere for inspiration and entertainment. And its safe to say that last night, they found what they were looking for. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | it list : wednesday | | | | Ratatat | Panther | Envelopes (Gypsy Tea Room)
Mark my words: you're going to be pissed off at yourself if you miss this show. I've come around on Ratatat's records, and now thoroughly enjoy both of them. However, I didn't really dig this band until I saw them live in Austin a couple years ago. I was completely blown away by the guitar playing, the stage presence, and the general power of their songs in a live setting. They might not move around and jump up and down on stage much, but their performances are really a sight to be seen. Their music is influenced by disco, hip hop, and synth pop, and they don't really sound like guitar music at all. But they are. And you need to see them play. The somewhat hazy and totally robotic synth funk of Panther should be a good start... think Art of Noise, an in your face Arthur Russell, and a dash of Tom Tom Club and Off the Wall era Michael Jackson if he had been a drug addict. Good stuff. I'm gonna go ahead and give you the ol' WSJR guarantee for this one. Current Leaves | Grits N Gravy | I Love Math | Slider Pines (Club Dada)
This is the LAST night of Current Leaves' residency at Dada, and you really should go see them tonight if you haven't had a chance to go to Dada this month. Go see what everyone is talking about. And of course, you know you can head up to Denton to see Dj Nature and the party at Rubber Gloves. And I almost forgot: Ratatat after party tonight at the Cavern. Its free with your Ratatat ticket stub, or five bucks at the door if you don't have one. Member(s) or Ratatat (not sure which) will be spinning around one a.m., but you should head over early to see Gorilla vs Bear, Sober and Select do their thing. This is going to be a shitload of fun. Here is a Ratatat video: | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | the power of independent trucking: the touch and go 25th anniversary block party (text and photos by defensive listening) | | | | Summer ended last week and along with it, the U.S. music festival season. So what did I miss? A chance to see Kanye West and AFI at Bumbershoot in Seattle? Hmm...Kanye and AFI are also playing at Street Scene '06 in San Diego. Did I miss paying $80 to see Blood Brothers and Yellowcard share the same stage? Oh wait, Yellowcard is playing Street Scene as well, along with Tapes 'n Tapes. But wait a minute, Tapes 'n Tapes is also playing some Coney Island Fest in New York, which is free thanks to festival sponsor Budweiser. You know, the king of Beers? To get some perspective on the whole summer festival scene, I flipped through the Summer '06 issue of Filter magazine and took note of all the cross pollinated sponsorship in an attempt to figure out why the same fifteen acts were playing at just about every major festival in the U.S. this year. Filter even went so far as to congratulate themselves for the little party they threw for that most ghastly of festivals, Coachella, earlier this year. It ended with this little beauty of a paragraph: "Extra special thanks to the folks at Honda in helping make the event happen and capturing silly shots of attendees in the new FIT ride. Shout-Outs to Puma and Napster for the goodie bags and arts and crafts; word up to ASCAP, Urban Outfitters, Indie 103.1 and Imeem.com, as well as Heineken, Red Bull and Glaceau for keeping everyone entertained and adequately sauced."How 'bout big ups to Glaxo Smith Kline for making Wellbutrin and keeping everyone emotionally numb enough to endure three days of overrated bands? Props to all my motherfuckers at Lockheed Martin for keeping the US safe enough to spend $400 on something as trivial as a two day VIP pass to Street Scene. I was so amazed at the above corporate shout outs that I felt like I had made the whole thing up. Recently, I've started to feel that so called underground music is being completely overtaken by indie culture's increasing flirtation with mainstream garbage, co-dependent publicists, and various corporate interests. In order to improve my mental well being, I decided on a whim to go to the Touch and Go 25th Anniversary Block Party in Chicago, hoping to find some light at the end of the tunnel. After three days and dozens of bands, I not only regained faith in underground culture, but in all of mankind as well. First of all, the Touch and Go Birthday party featured more than 25 different acts over three days for a measly thirty five dollars, which comes out to a little more than a dollar per band. And considering that Touch and Go is arguably (and I will argue with you) the greatest independent record label of all time, the small price was more than worth it. Traveling all the way to Chicago was the catch, but it certainly didn't stop me. After all, if I had wanted to see something in my own state, the only option was Austin City Limits, which would have required paying $115 for the privilege of melting in a huge pile of baby boomers sweating it out to Van Morrison. For too long now I've needed to wipe such repulsive situations out of my system. I was desperate to not think about the silliness and infighting of the local music scene, or the way big business swoops in and chokes everyone with advertising as they circle like buzzards around demographics data and pie charts on what's hip and who's for sale. This three day celebration was the perfect way to do that. To my amazement, there was not a single banner advertising anything behind the bands as they played. The stages weren't called Washington Mutual or At&t or anything else that has absolutely nothing to do with music. One stage was called Touch. The other, Go. You'd almost think Touch and Go was run by fools if you consider the cash they burned by not having sponsored stages. Touch and Go, however, is not run by fools. It is run by a man named Corey Rusk, and if I hadn't known that before the festivities, I surely would have known afterwards, considering that pretty much every band I saw unabashedly praised him onstage at one point or another. Mr. Rusk's original business model for Touch and Go was a simple handshake agreement providing that everything would be split down the middle after the label recouped its initial expenses. This extremely fair relationship between artist and label was an anomaly at the time and in a lot of ways, it still is. Touch and Go has somehow remained vital and relevant these past 25 years through countless changes in the underground, the mainstream, and that hazy twilight where the two meet. They have been successful without compromising, pandering, yielding, or any of the other things that lesser labels spend much of their time rationalizing their way through. The acts themselves were the living embodiment of all the things Touch and Go has stood for all these years. The festival started on a Friday afternoon with the precision rock of Shipping News, and ended with a Sunday night performance by the maraca wielding Calexico. Neither of these bookends, as enjoyable as they can be, really captured the intensity that lurked in the very center of this block party. Saturday was probably the single most satisfying day I've ever spent at a concert, so forgive me if that's where I'll tend to focus. I can't imagine a better lineup even if you broke the label-only structure of the event. Bands started playing at noon and the New Year blew everyone away with a flawless lunchtime set. As much as I like The New Year, I couldn't believe the nearly dozen bands that would follow them, each somehow outdoing the last. Uzeda, a band of middle aged Italians, followed The New Year and threw down the gauntlet so hard that I thought the earth would crack and blood would rain from the sky. Uzeda was not just incredible for the way they built up and tore apart each sound they roared at the audience, but also for how they were noticeably older than a lot of bands that would later perform. Age seemed to be a theme on Saturday as many veteran and reunited groups completely stole the show from the younger bands playing on Friday and Sunday. That's saying a lot considering the number of beloved young bands in attendance (Enon, !!!, Ted Leo, and the Black Heart Procession for example), but they were really overshadowed by the chaotic firestorm of noise that left the crowd completely spent on Saturday. Tim Midgett and Andy Cohen of Silkworm played a single song as a poignant respite between all the dissonant heavyweights on Saturday. Silkworm unfortunately met an untimely end when drummer Michael Dahlquist was killed by a young woman who intentionally struck his car from behind in a failed suicide attempt. Two friends and fellow musicians also died in the accident. Silkworm, as the world knew them, would never play again. Needless to say the remaining members of Silkworm performing a final song from their catalogue was moving for many people in the audience. Many in the crowd wept, and singer Andy Cohen visibly broke down when he left the stage. Tim and Andy were followed by The Ex, and a raging joy returned to the audience at the beginning of their set. The Ex represent the opposite of everything wrong with rock music. They defy all odds, stereotypes, pigeonholes, rules, sonic boundaries, international boundaries, and every possible categorization. They are probably the only band that performed who were older than the label itself. The Ex truly believe in what they do with a purity that has always been rare but seems especially lacking in contemporary rock. Their debut album, "Disturbing Domestic Peace", put Gang of Four's "Entertainment" to shame and whatever album they release next will completely shred anything around its release date. What sets The Ex apart is that they have never broken up, never reunited. They have always just been there, living a parallel existence to Touch and Go. They literally bleed for their music, playing with such force that both guitars are caked with blood by the end of the set. They have toured Ethiopia. When I think about that fact alone, I laugh at all the local bands that catfight about who charges too much for drinks at what bar and how lame this or that booking person is for not giving their band a chance. Give me a break. There's an entire world beyond this dense little scene and people like The Ex didn't wait for it to come to them. They went out and did it. They didn't wait for someone to hand it to them. They fucking took it. Their clattering, chugging, improvised, exacting yet explosive music is some of the most significant art made in two centuries. I'm not telling you this to be a snob, but if you haven't already, please discover the truth of this band. By the time The Ex were done playing, it was still only 3:40 in the afternoon. Following The Ex was a one-two-three punch of Killdozer, The Didjits, and Negative Approach. All three bands put on impressive sets for not having played in so long and each set was a love letter to Touch and Go for keeping their records in print all these years. Touch and Go famously keeps all their records in print which is not only a feat but also puts the label at odds with people like Sub Pop who have milked every limited edition collectible tactic they can, making them something of an annoying Ebay genre unto themselves. The crowd was getting noticeably more riled up at this point but I saw only one person actually get kicked out. Negative Approach in particular were very brutal and convincing, reminding me why hardcore blew my mind at age fourteen. Catching their full set caused me to miss my chance to find a good view during Scratch Acid, but I surprisingly enjoyed Negative Approach more. I really wished I had caught Scratch Acid play their hometown of Austin the weekend before. David Yow has not lost any credibility as the world's greatest front man in his absence from music. I got flashbacks of a 90's Jesus Lizard show where I hid in the balcony at Trees because the pit was so out of control. Scratch Acid was the only band I saw that played an encore and Texas should be proud that their oft copied sludge noise is our state's gift to the world. The only thing that could top a Scratch Acid performance and encore was the improbable reunion of Big Black. How does a band with a drum machine and four songs own an entire three day music event? Despite singer/guitarist Steve Albini's contentions, Big Black lived up to the hype of a band that formed to outweigh Heavy Metal and out-hard Hardcore. Their guitar sound was easily the most shocking noise I have ever heard come out of an instrument, period. The sound was akin to bombs dropping and bouncing a few times before they blow mid-air and unleash a torrent of treble, bent nails and gunpowder into every open eye, ear, pore and orifice in the audience. I will never forget the feeling of screaming along with 7,000 people, "I can kill a cow/Fast as any other fucker can!". Talk about camaraderie amongst strangers! There was a very healthy and friendly attitude in general during the weekend and people from all over the world knew they were experiencing something that was actually special, rather than the prepackaged "special" that comes at the ridiculous price that greedy organizers of other three day music events were asking for this summer. I saw Big Black open for Shellac and I can't even believe I just typed that sentence. It was a privilege. Shellac could have and probably should have closed the festival. I was thrilled that they played Dallas early in the summer and I was still just as thrilled to see them in Chicago. Much like The Ex, I wish more bands would aspire to their lack of convention. They don't tour to "promote the album", they tour because they want to. They don't send out promo copies, they let the critics do some legwork and not just sit around expecting handouts. In other words, if they want to review the album they have to go out and find it (or in Stonedranger's case, download it). It's almost an unthinkable concept these days: A band that isn't begging you to like them or pay attention to them. I wish there were more. The world would certainly be more interesting. Shellac ended their triumphant set with drummer Todd Trainer dragging two girls onstage, handing them drumsticks and letting them hit cymbals with the rest of the band. It was a beautiful moment and a contrastingly gentle way to end such an overwhelming day. Acts as diverse and respected as Seam, Pinback, and Coco Rosie played on Sunday but it almost seemed like a gloomy afterthought. I enjoyed myself anyways. The Monorchid was the last aggressive yelp of the reunited bands, and the festival came to a close with little fanfare after Calexico. I'm still recovering from that weekend... in a good way. Sometimes the cynical silliness of the local scene causes me to forget that original, transcendent, and challenging music even exists in the world. I'm just as guilty of the narrow mindset that I mentioned before because I let the pettiness and DFW tunnel vision cloud my own thinking. I can't stress enough how refreshing it was to have all that chipped away and realize that we can all be better. Better Bands. Better label owners. Better music fans. I was truly in awe of what Touch and Go had accomplished and what we could all possibly accomplish if we tried even a fraction as hard as Corey Rusk and all of those bands. If nothing else, I would like to thank Touch and Go for helping me detox the baggage of the local music scene out of my system, even for just a weekend. We're all very lucky this record label still exists. To quote Todd Trainer, "Thanks for enriching all of our lives."  Jason Noble of The Shipping News Matt Kadane of The New Year Andy Cohen of Silkworm Uzeda GW Sok of The Ex Steve Albini of Big Black/Shellac | | | | | Defensive Listening | | | | | | | | it list : tuesday | | | | We Are Scientists | Art Brut | The Spinto Band (Gypsy Tea Room Tea Room)
Weren't We Are Scientists supposed to be like a huge band or something? You would have expected them to be if you had read the praise that many of the major MP3 blogs were giving them back in January. It was supposed to be a really big year for them, but considering that they haven't graduated from the Tea Room to the Ball Room, I guess it wasn't as big as many expected. This development is surprising to me, considering that they seem to have the perfect formula for fake indie to mainstream crossover success: a watered down amalgamation of just about every retro sound that has been fashionable over the past five years, mixed in with just the right amount of pop-punk to keep the kids bouncing. And OMG, they're from Brooklyn too! Of course, they really aren't quite as bad as all that makes them sound, but I would hardly tell you that they are worth seeing. Art Brut is a different story all together: almost everything about them tells me that I should like them, and I've seen them put on two very good live shows in the past year. However, I'm just not crazy about them. I like the Fall, and Television Personalities, and Buzzcocks, and everything else they seem to be influenced by, but theres something hold me back. I don't know why. The Spinto Band I can take or leave for the most part, but they might actually be the most interesting band on this bill. Probably not the coolest thing to say, but its true. Lost Generation w/ Wanz (Cavern upstairs)
What Wanz has tonight: "Stand out tracks in tonights set: The new Slits ep(playing emo's nov.11th), some other more rare Slits material, Serena Maneesh(playing Rubber Gloves later this week, and of course Cygnus(Our laptop deathmatch Champ). I will have a few copies of The Lost Generation Ultimate krautrock mixtape on me tonight. If you wanna copy just let me know. Come by and have a drink and say hi." | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | you're voting for who? | | | | | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | it list : monday | | | | Supersystem | Zombi | Flashlight Party DJs (Hailey's)
The artists formerly known as El Guapo bring their DFA influenced dance electropop stuff to Hailey's tonight. To me, Supersystem is a pretty good singles band. I really like "Born into the World," as well as a couple of other songs off their first album and the more recent one, which I don't think has been released yet. Maybe it has, I don't know. Do release dates even really matter anymore? Anyway, I don't think their albums are as consistent as they could be, but I bet that they are a lot of fun to see live, and they are obviously very skilled musicians who will probably permit their songs to come through nicely in a live setting. Zombi also sounds great: new romantic pop, Night Rider, early acid house and Italo disco all seem to be good reference points for this Pittsburgh group, and I have a feeling that you'll want to check them out too. And be sure to show up early for Flashlight Party, who will be playing: "a bundle of new shit from over seas, so we'll be playing lots of new stuff from: sebastiAn, vitalic, and aufken (all super good french shit) and remixes from lcd soundsystem, phoenix, hot chip and the rapture. get there."Those who can't make it out to Denton can also check out Jazz Night at Amsterdam. I'm pretty sure drinks are cheap there on Mondays, and the musicians that show up to play are all fantastic. Always a very chill time. Watch homeboy eat a cookie: | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | last week's good records sales chart | | | | 1. The Polyphonic Spree - Wait 2. Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - The Letting Go 3. Midlake - The Trials of Van Occupanther 4. TV On The Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain 5. The Album Leaf - Into the Blue Again 6. My Brightest Diamond - Bring Me The Workhorse 7. Ben Kweller - Ben Kweller 8. Pilotdrift - Water Sphere 9. Cursive - Happy Hollow 10. Red Monroe - Red Monroe 11. OOIOO - Taiga 12. Grizzly Bear - Yellow House 13. Ratatat - Classics 14. Darkel - Darkel 15. Joseph Arthur - Nuclear Daydream 16. Mountain Goats - Get Lonely 17. Thom Yorke - The Eraser 18. The Theater Fire - Everybody Has a Dark Side 19. Bob Dylan - Modern Times 20. The Mars Volta - Amputechture
I hear so many different opinions on Mars Volta, and almost all of them are quite extreme. It seems like people either think they are the best band in the world or the most annoying, and there doesn't seem to be anyone in the middle. Any opinions? | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | what | | | | Apparently we are having some problems with the blog this morning. We are working on them.
UPDATE: I guess we fixed it. Blogger does some strange things. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | the weekender | | | | Don't have time to write a whole lot today, but I've got all the shows you want to see, the links you need, and a picture of Kool Keith looking at porn. So kiss my ass! FRIDAYDr. Octagon | Dj Nature | DJ Stephen R | Joint Method | The Dream Tigers (Granada Theater)
Anyone that would consider going to this show probably already knows who Dr. Octagon is, but if you don't, go listen to the Myspace page. Kook Keith has been one of the most innovative MCs in this country for years, and also one of the most genuinely strange figures in hip hop. Dr. Octagon is one of his many projects, and it is my favorite. The music is trashy, minimal and creepy, and his lyrics are almost pyschedelic and at the same time rather violent and crude. The real attraction however is his flow, which is second to none. You already know about Nature and Stephen R by now, but Dallas' Dream Tigers, who I think I just listened to for the first time today, are the absolute shit. They describe themselves as "dirty southern geek core," and I suppose that is as good a description as any. They've got a great party vibe to them, and I highly recommend getting there early to check them out. Doors are at 8, so I'm guessing they'll be on around 9. M. Ward | Portastatic (Hailey's)
I honestly have yet to hear M. Ward's new one, and I didn't think Transistor Radio was as strong as Transfiguration of Vincent, but I really want to see M. Ward live. I think it will be a great show. His music is touching and emotional without being sappy, smart and daring without being preachy. Portastatic sounds like a pretty good little pop band too. T.E.F | Steel Hook Prostheses | A Fail Association(Link) | Goat/ Aunt's Analog | Sparrow Hawk? (House of Tinnitus- 628 Lakey St. Denton)
While the anon geeks are talking a bunch of shit, House of Tinnitus is putting on really daring shows (bring earplugs to this one) and having fun. They win. The Great Tyrant | Silk Stocking | Stag Film (Amsterdam) Lebanon | Tame Tame and Quiet (DoubleWide)SATURDAYThe Gossip is playing an in store at Good Records tomorrow at 2pm, and will then be playing a show at Hailey's with Mika Miko and Swan Island. John Congleton | Daniel Folmer | Cheyenne Schweitzer | New Science Projects (Liquid Lounge)
New Science projects goes on around 10. Blowfly | El Paso Hot Button | The Triggermen | Chief Death Rage (Rubber Gloves)
Check out Blowfly's cover of "T.V. Party." Its annoying as all fuck. Creeping Nobodies | Blonde Girls | Nouns Group | Daniel Francis Doyle (Metrognome- Ft. Worth)Lebanon | Tambersauro | Bob White and the F Electrics (Fra House- 2127 W. Oak St. Denton) SUNDAYLaptop Deathmatch (DoubleWide)
This is the one year anniversary of Laptop Deathmatch. Go see why so many people have been talking about it lately. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | "guilty pleasures? fuck it, its a party." the story of central booking | | | | In February of this year, Dj Nature overheard two "art school rock kids" talking about The Party, his Wednesday night residency at Rubber Gloves in Denton. One of the kids explained to the other that he had gone to Rubber Gloves for one of Nature's sets, only to find that "the Dj was playing all this ghetto music, and I was like what the fuck is this? This is gross." Statements like these really make one wonder about the state of pop music in the metroplex. Looking at a list of the largest metropolitan areas in the United States inspires further contemplation: Dallas- Ft. Worth ranks number five in population behind New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Philadelphia, and just ahead of Miami, Houston, Washington D.C., Atlanta, Detroit, Boston and San Francisco. If you think about it for a moment, you'll realize that just about every single one of these cities has gained national attention for their local music scenes at least once in the past 25 years. Whether it be the D.C. or L.A. hardcore scenes of the early 80's, Detroit's garage rock, Houston's hip hop, New York's downtown/mutant disco, or Chicago's post rock, all of these places have produced movements full of bands and artists that have had a significant impact on the music that many of our readers listen to. All except for Dallas- Ft. Worth. Sure, this town had the Toadies (who were featured on the Black Sheep soundtrack!), Tripping Daisy and Erykah Badu, but Dallas is the only one of these large metro areas that hasn't had any real movement to call its own, almost nothing to indicate that the area even has a pulse when it comes to cutting edge musical culture. You can explain this phenomenon however you want (there are so many ways to do so), but part of the blame must surely be placed on the attitude expressed by the art school kid above. Many music fans in the metroplex appear to be relatively close minded when it comes to discovering new music and mediums, and this rather conservative mindset seems to be especially prevalent amongst local "indie" rock fans who somehow have the audacity to insist that they have good taste. Just take a look at all of the most popular rock bands in Dallas right now (Death Ray Davies, Titanmoon, all the singer songwriter garbage, Burden Brothers, etc.), and tell me that this town hasn't simply copied the line up of Edgefest 96 and repeated it over and over and over again ever since. Bands, concert promoters and fans all seem to be unwilling to move away from the past as they watch their concert venues shut down, music festivals fail, and radio stations refuse to deliver any new exciting music on a massive scale. Flipping through the pages of the Observer often seems like a convenient way to pretend that the last several years of independent, experimental and electronic music never happened, and venues are generally having a hard time selling the vast majority of same old same old local bands to audiences that are complacent but clearly bored. This has all been discussed to death before, but its worth repeating: by many measures, Dallas- Ft. Worth is still in a slumber, and it might not wake up any time soon, especially now that the Morning News is cutting its entertainment staff and the Observer is about to start being run by a robot or something. Simply put, getting any kind of attention for doing anything new, different or even just quality is going to be a challenge around here for quite a while. The good news amidst all this doom and gloom is that there appears to be some exciting new activity brewing just under the radar, and Dj Nature, Select and Sober, the three key figures that make up the Central Booking Agency, are right in the middle of it. In fact, all three of them actually see a lot of emerging bright spots in Dallas right now, mostly revolving around the expanding dance and experimental electro scenes that have been gaining momentum around town for the past several months. "When we say that we feel like things are starting to happen in Dallas, its more us restating what people have been telling us for the past few months," says Sober, a.k.a. Will Rhoten. The group references many conversations with out of town music figures who claim to have heard very good things about the happenings in Dallas as of late, and one can make a pretty good argument that Central Booking is itself partly responsible for the recent onslaught of good vibes. "I think we just sounded the alarm," says Sober, "and the rest of the people who were already on the same page heard it and responded." The alarm they sounded was one that many Dallasites needed to hear, and Central Booking has received a quick and rather loud response from a surprisingly diverse group of people. Not diverse in that latte liberal NPR sort of way, but more like a diversity of tastes, interests, ages, attitudes, and musical persuasions, all of which are being brought together by a group of DJs that defy simple genre classifications and inadvertently call into question many of the antiquated assumptions that a good portion of local rock fans still seem to have about dance music and DJs. Central Booking's mainstay thus far has been The Party, Dj Nature's weekly show at Rubber Gloves and monthly event at ZuBar on lower Greenville. People that read this blog surely have heard all about the party by now, but judging by the crowds that have been showing up to Central shows in Dallas recently, there are a lot of other people that are starting to notice too. The immediate appeal of Central Booking's events and The Party in particular is the simple fact that everything they play is accessible, fresh and highly danceable, pulling from a ridiculously wide range of genres to produce sets of music that most people, even those who closely follow trends in electronic music, have probably never heard before. "We don't want to play 4 hours of 80's records, or 4 hours of hip hop, or new wave or bmore or whatever else," says Nature, "its more fun for us to switch things up, and I think that this lets us explore music in ways that other performers or DJs don't get to or have yet to try." On any given night when Central Booking is running the show, audiences will hear old and new pop hits from the likes of The Smiths, Janet Jackson, Shakira, R. Kelly, Keith Sweat, Justin Timberlake, and Al B. Sure, but will also encounter more underground material like CSS, Drop the Lime, Ratatat and Spank Rock, as well as a generous helping of both old school and new hip hop. However, the real selling point is the hearty helping of hard to find international tracks that make up a large portion of the Central Booking sets. African and middle eastern tracks, such as those featured on Nature's excellent new mix CD The African Game, as well as Brazilian funk, Jamaican one drop reggae, and dance tracks from all over South America and the Caribbean are all featured in just about every set. Much of the international music takes cues from American hip hop, but a lot of it expands upon its base, incorporating everything from Kraftwerk inspired minimal elctro to the traditional folk music of the various nations from which the artists originate, creating sounds that are distinctly familiar enough for American crowds to dance to, but also foreign enough to be exciting, interesting, and a bit challenging at times. It should also be noted that these guys aren't the "Dallas version" of whoever in New York doing blah blah blah: Central Booking is the real deal, staying current with so many different scenes from around the world that they are playing many tracks before just about anyone else in the United States get a hold of them, providing the Dallas dance crowd with a chance to hear the newest innovations and changes in dance music before audiences in larger and typically more respected U.S. cities get to. For a quick bit of proof, you can venture over the Central Booking blog and explore their "En La Calle" series, a group of new downloadable tracks that the trio updates each week to spread the word about some of the better songs that they've been listening to and spinning lately. The eclectic backgrounds of the three Central Booking DJs partially explains the diversity found in their sets. All three have been Djs for years, and each of them brings a different set of influences to the table. Nature began his career at Rubber Gloves in the late 90's, earning a very large following amongst the early Rubber Gloves faithful. Soon after establishing himself in Denton, however, Nature journeyed to San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he became highly involved in the developing reggaeton scene. In fact, after an appearance in Fader magazine discussing the emergence of Puerto Rico as a force on the international dance scene, Nature moved to New York, where he was instrumental in bringing some of the new sounds of the Caribbean to influential lower East Side and Brooklyn dance circles, earning him mentions in the same breath as Diplo, and even providing him with the opportunity to work with New York No Wave legend Arto Lindsay. Select and Sober come from Dallas and Ft. Worth, respectively, and both have been a part of various local scenes for years. Select has been DJing and doing urban promotions since he was 15 years old, growing up around punk, 80's metal, motown, soul, hip hop, bagpipe music and percussion. Sober started getting into hip hop in the mid 80s, and is also a visual artist that has worked in several different mediums, including most recently a clothing line called "Decade." Commenting on the wide range of fans that the trio has attracted, Select says that "we (Central Booking) all come from pretty different backgrounds, so that helps. And when we're not together, we sort of run in different circles." BBoys, skateboarders, club scenesters, hipsters, visual artists, rock musicians, filmmakers, graffiti artists and just about anyone else in between can all be found at a typical Central Booking event, and all of them seem to be there for the simple reason that Central Booking is doing something different from everyone else in Dallas, refusing to allow themselves to be strapped down in one type of scene, playing one type of music to one particular group of people. "There are a lot of people that were just tired of going out to the same types of things in Dallas that are coming out and having a good time at our nights," says Sober. "And we're playing a lot of records that haven't even touched the marketplace yet, so for a younger sort of music savvy crowd, this is what they wanted and weren't getting." The trio also raises an interesting point about the attitudes of knowledgeable music fans these days. With most albums and tracks available for free with just a click of a button and a high speed internet connection, singles matter more than ever, and people are more easily able to explore genres and artists that they probably would not have bothered to listen to years ago. As a result, honest music consumers are realizing that genre labels really don't mean a whole lot, and many are rightly throwing them out the door in an effort to connect with sounds that they like, no strings attached. " The fact is that people go out to have a good time and I think Dallas has been conditioned to think that a good time can only mean one thing to one person," Nature says. "Rock shows, hip hop shows, dance clubs. Is that what we boil down to as listeners and artists? A lot of people that would go to an Undoing show probably secretly like UGK. They have Mike Jones on their ipod. Their girlfriends might secretly get wet for Justin Timberlake." The point is that the rockist attitude that many in the metroplex seem to have is dying, and any club, promoter or fan that limits themselves to certain songs, sounds and scenes is probably well on their way to becoming completely irrelevant. Do people that like Rogue Wave only listen to indie pop? Doubtful. Do people that are into house music completely disregard Lightning Bolt? Not likely. The universal inclusiveness that can be found at a Central Booking event is an indicator that things are shifting in Dallas, and the trio is quick to point out that there are many others out there doing new and exciting things around town as well. "Theres definitely a new mix of people doing things in Dallas music right now," Nature says, adding that people such as Prince William, Stephen R, Gorilla vs. Bear, Meat Radio, High Society, Wanz Dover and the Laptop Deathmatch crew are all helping to cause a positive shift with a clearly inviting, anything goes vibe open to anyone that is sick of the norm. And considering the recent popularity of events held by all of these people, there are many music consumers out there that are bored as can be with the Dallas norm. The Central Booking crew doesn't like to overthink things, and it works in their favor. There are a lot of people bitching about Dallas right now, figuring out ways to "save" it, and trying desperately to keep things in order, keep things going, and keep them the same. "Chaos works if its allowed to be chaos," Nature says, and he makes a good point. For the past several decades, Dallas has for the most part failed to attract the kind of attention that a metro area of its size should. Perhaps part of the problem is simply that people are thinking in old and outdated ways, limiting the potential that Dallas might have if people like Central Booking are allowed to thrive. While the Dallas old guard is worrying about Deep Ellum and people not supporting the local scene, DJs Nature, Sober and Select are having a fucking blast with a group of people that have been dying for something new. Perhaps its the elimination of genre boundaries, or the knack for finding new music, or the captivating marketing that has led Central Booking to true local underground success with the potential to possible help put Dallas on the map for the first time. Its hard to predict what will happen in this town from one month to the next, but these guys are obviously doing something right. Nature sees it as a simple matter of people having fun at their parties without all of the pretension and posing that seems to be present at most Dallas rock shows. "The fact that guys are getting lapdances from their girlfriends at (The Party) for the first time doesn't hurt either," he says. And I think the man might have a point. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | it list : thursday | | | | 1. DJ Tiger Bee (Counter Culture in Deep Ellum) Directly from the DJ: "Come out after dinner or work and catch a little art and groovy tunes! Peruse the vintage threads and trip out on the far out work of R. thies. With the pressure off of me to keep the dancefloor bumping I'm going to be spinning all the mental psychedelic, freaky jazz, acid bliss I want! Im talking Dark Magus Miles, Can, Edip Aykbayram, Silver Apples, Aussie psych Executives, Cambodian rock Unknowns, mummified Garagey Pretty Things to brasilian bossa nova cavity inducers! The stuff that would make you throw lollipops at me if I tried to play it at Lollipop Shoppe!" 2. Rogue Wave | Foreign Born | Jason CollettRogue Wave bring their sensitive brand of pop to The Cavern tonight. Their tourmates, Foreign Born, are more joyous and play slick, L.A. glam pop. Broken Social Scene fans will probably want to make it to this show since the band's guitarist, Jason Collett, will be performing a set of songs to open the show. 3. Pinebox Serenade (Club Dada) This busy group of Denton musicians take some time out of their busy touring schedule to make a fairly rare appearance in Dallas tonight. The strength of this band is in the arrangements which are sophisticated without being too busy or thrown in just to have them there. If you're going to have accordion in a song, you better know how to use it. Thankfully, they do. 4. Tuna Helpers | Christian Teenage Runaway | LAZER (Rubber Gloves) The Rubber Gloves website says one of these bands is called White Grrrl but their website says Christian Teenage Runaway. I hadn't heard of this band but I liked their music and I would really like to see them live. They play the kind of bratty female fronted rock that never gets old to me. I can't totally vouch for Austin's Tuna Helpers or Lazer other than I'm sure both bands are more about the live experience than anything else. I would say that even if you didn't like any of above three bands you still wouldn't be bored at this show. | | | | | Defensive Listening | | | | | | | | last week's radio utd charts | | | | 1 TV ON THE RADIO Return To Cookie Mountain 2 THE KNIFE Silent Shout 3 WIRE 154 4 XIU XIU The Air Force 5 JUNIOR BOYS So This Is Goodbye 6 NOW IT'S OVERHEAD Dark Light Daybreak 7 R.E.M. And I Feel Fine... The Best Of The I.R.S. Years 1982-1987 8 OVER THE ATLANTIC Junica 9 MOUNTAIN GOATS Get Lonely 10 GRIZZLY BEAR Yellow House 11 SEBADOH III 12 SLUMBER PARTY Musik 13 IN CIVILIAN CLOTHING We Made A Killing, We Made A Mess 14 MASTODON Blood Mountain 15 TORTOISE A Lazarus Taxon 16 BOB DYLAN Modern Times 17 MEW And The Glass Handed Kites 18 RATATAT Classics 19 SUFJAN STEVENS The Avalanche: Outtakes And Extras From The Illinois Album 20 PINBACK Nautical Antiques 21 AKRON/FAMILY Meek Warrior 22 KAKI KING Until We Felt 23 YO LA TENGO I'm Not Afraid Of You And I Will Beat Your Ass 24 JIM NOIR Tower Of Love 25 CHANNEL Tales From The Two Hill Heart/Sibylline Machine 26 V/A Suicide Squeeze 27 EMILY HAINES Knives Don't Have Your Back 28 RICHARD BUCKNER Meadow 29 INSTRUMENTAL QUARTER Traffic Jam 30 MOHAIR Small Talk
Adds: 1 BONNIE PRINCE BILLY The Letting Go 2 HORSE FEATHERS Words Are Dead 3 DR. DOG Takers And Leavers [EP] 4 LOWS LOWS Fire On The Bright Sky 5 GUTHER Sundet
Anyone interested in hearing some of the new Akron/Family EP? If so, let me know in the comments and I'll post a track or two. | | | | | stonedranger | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | OLDER | | | | | | |
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