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Max Tundra, Junior Boys: April 16th at Bimbos, SF and Glasvegas: April 16th at Great American Music Hall, SF

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Photo courtesy of Max TundraMax Tundra, Junior Boys
April 16th at Bimbo’s 365 Club, San Francisco

The fact that Max Tundra and Junior Boys are touring together seemed pretty peculiar at first, as these artists come at electro-pop from vastly different angles, enough so that it could’ve made for a jarring bill. Their performances at Bimbo’s in San Francisco last Thursday, however, made clear that this was, indeed, a pretty rad pairing—their respective flavors of electro are, in each case, homebrewed and eccentric, yet tightly produced and with striking results.

Max Tundra, also known as Ben Jacobs, is a solo performer and multi-instrumentalist from England, and was here appearing in support of his newest album, last year’s Parallax Error Beheads You. The record took six years to complete, and the intricacy of his songs became immediately clear to all those present—he opened with “Orphaned”, whose hyper-speed, cut-up instrumental intro gradually led to the introduction of his pleasantly lilting voice, the one sane-feeling element in his dizzying musical surroundings. The set included, appropriately, his best pop tunes: “Lysine” (from 2002’s Mastered by Guy at the Exchange), in which he sang what were originally his sister’s vocal parts himself, the happy house-quoting “The Entertainment”, as well as PEBY’s infectious singles: “Which Song” and “Will Get Fooled Again.” Throughout, he employed a table-full of odd instruments, including an Eddie Van Halen model Stratocaster (which he only played for about 30 seconds), a toy microphone, and a Suzuki Andes recorder/keyboard, and he frequently would dart from his array to dance frenetically about the stage by his lonesome. It was all very entertaining, especially his last two songs: An extended “old rave” (as opposed to “nu-rave”) jam and a hilarious rendition of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s “So Long, Farewell.”

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published: April 22, 2009 in column: It Shows

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Junior Boys

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Junior BoysJunior Boys
Begone Dull Care
(Domino, 2009)

My colleague Ian Mathers describes his favorite Junior Boys album, Last Exit, as “hateful.” I wasn’t interested enough to look up the lyrics for that well-regarded debut when I heard it, but now I’m rather curious as to what kinds of uncouth sentiments I’ve been grooving to for the past two months. Scanning the titles of 2006’s So This Is Goodbye, “Like a Child” seemed like an obvious starting point, and from there, Jeremy Greenspan’s graceless dismounts sniffle rather than drink themselves to sleep, one after another. Left alone on his birthday, unable to tell if he’s emptier with or without sex, struggling to apprehend the stake in his heart inscribed “so this is goodbye,” he’d slink like the National or evoke like Interpol if he could piece a sentence together in his condition. With his shaky whisper and barely tonal melodies clutching droll ’80s analog synths like a child with water wings, critics coddled him for years. But even his best melody, “In the Morning”, was pained, a pretty and formless descending scale unshaped into much of a hook. If this band is hateful, it can’t even comport itself to make something from it… angst, aggression, a raised eyebrow. All it can produce is salt down its red face. Naturally, I cringed when I saw the title of their third long-player. Haven’t they learned from bad luck? Or had a decent birthday in three years? I prepared to tag this Bemoan Dull Care if I was going to play it at all.

And then a wonderful thing happened; Greenspan woke up one day, as broken lovers are wont, and moved on. “Dull to Pause” seems to chronicle his newfound ability to go about his business: “All the time spent over nothing / Seems like you’re done / You are,” and more literally, “I was pacing around and just recording it down / I had nothing to say / I’m done for another day.” Here he stops pacing. A good six of the eight new songs can make it home by themselves, portioning healthy funk over another five years of emaciated synths. Claps, traps, simulated horns, even a couple swing moves, countermelodies, losing his mind in riff after riff, co-conspirator Matt Didemus has distracted Greenspan long enough to show his songwriting some love. His singing, too! “Dull to Pause” could vie for Travis or Coldplay’s Brit-croon crown, while the irresistible “Hazel” is a confident, full-belted disco pileup.

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published: April 14, 2009 in column: Reviews

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