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Straight to Video
Rock Art Rock
The Decemberists
September 19, 2009
Terminal 5, New York, NY
By Amanda Hatfield "The Decemberists played a special one night 'lottery show,' where the songs played were picked at random by a master of ceremonies, played by John Wesley Harding..."
Ra Ra Riot
April 4, 2009
Webster Hall, New York City, NY
By Amanda Hatfield "This show was, at the time, the biggest one Ra Ra Riot had sold out as headliners, and it was clear to me after watching it that the band is destined for even bigger and better things..."
Florence and the Machine
October 28, 2009
Bowery Ballroom, New York City, NY
By Amanda Hatfield "Florence Welsh and her backing band delighted and mesmerized a sold-out crowd at Bowery in her first official NY headlining show..."
Dirty Projectors
July 19, 2009
Williamsburg Waterfront (Brooklyn, NY)
By Amanda Hatfield "I was skeptical about how well Dirty Projectors' gorgeous, complex vocal harmonies would carry over outdoors, standing under hot sunshine..."
See more in the Rock Art Rock gallery.
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Search results for: grand
Alex Chilton: 1975-1981
In early 1979, Alex Chilton formed the Panther Burns with Tav Falco. Chilton was nearly a decade removed from his stint as lead singer in the Top 40 band the Box Tops and almost five years from his last recordings with Big Star, the pop band whose work had sparked a legion of dedicated followers. Over those five years, Chilton had begun his definitive move away from everything he’d done before. He made two solo records that had grown deliberately more simple and primal, crossing rockabilly with outrage, and he’d then moved himself behind the scenes to produce the first singles of the band the Cramps, rockabilly revolutionaries of an even more primitive sort. With his next project, the Panther Burns, Chilton found his least refined band to date and again pushed himself seemingly out of the spotlight, this time in the role of the guitar sideman. Yet he appeared to still have a great hand in the band’s direction. The Panther Burns had started almost as an art project, but a year later they had evolved into a rock ‘n’ roll dance band. They were like no other dance band around.
Jim Duckworth, a jazz guitarist who would soon join the band on drums, saw them for the first time in December 1980. “I’m walking down the street, I’m not even at the club yet,” Duckworth says, “and all I can hear—they’re on stage playing, and it’s in between numbers—but all I could hear was this shrieking, screaming feedback. Not your Jeff Beck-style feedback… more the guitar’s too close to an overpowered amp, shrieking feedback. It was that Metal Machine Music [Lou Reed’s 1975 experiment-in-noise record] on crack sort of thing… They had a synthesizer player. He had no conception of what they were doing. He played between tunes, during the tunes; it was all the same to him. They were doing this back-to-basics roots-rock thing and it was hilarious. It was the funniest fuckin’ show you ever saw. It was loose and it was raw and it really worked. When those guys were on, it was a beautiful thing.” read more
Live Show Review: The Pixies at the Fox Theater, Oakland
The Pixies
November 8th at the Fox Theater, Oakland
I was only nine years old when Doolittle came out. So I missed out on the Pixies in their heyday. Once I finally discovered them, they had already broken up. It would have been no surprise if they never found their way back together again, as all four became fully engaged in other side projects, but the ‘00s proved otherwise. They have legions of fans, from every demographic. Few bands have such far-reaching influence. Few bands will ever uphold the credibility of the Pixies.
The Pixies swept through the Bay Area this week to celebrate the 20 year anniversary of Doolittle. The complicity of each band member, as disparate as their respective musical roles may be, is still so palpable, that incongruent chemistry surely fodder for their noise rock but also contributing to the creative differences and struggle for control and direction that ultimately broke them. That disharmony was most present in Black Francis and Kim Deal. But when they feed off each other, when they get along, the result is some of the best, most consistently awesome music that rock has ever seen. For a band so off-kilter and unexpected, circuitous while staying true to the noisy roots that defined them… well, it’s a common story. When all the haphazard elements come together so perfectly, sometimes it’s only fitting that it eventually implodes.
Video of the Day: The Dutchess and the Duke: “Mary” (Perhaps NSFW)
[WARNING: Video potentially NSFW (Not Safe for Work) due to blood and guts, momentary sexuality (no nudity, however).]
Kimberly Morrison and Jesse Lortz are the Dutchess and the Duke, a Seattle-based duo currently on a North American tour in support of their second and new full-length album, Sunset / Sunrise, out on Hardly Art Records. Although this video is for “Mary”, a song off their first album (last year’s fantastic She’s the Dutchess, He’s the Duke, also on Hardly Art), it gives a good, if rather bloody, picture of their sound—rootsy folk-rock with wonderfully melded vocal harmonies and deeply affecting lyrics. More on the Dutchess and the Duke, including tour dates, after the jump.
“Don’t Bring Me Down”
You’ve heard the song and may’ve even used the expression the title was based upon, but despite the many recordings of different songs with the same title, there are just three that are fit to undergo examination of the origin of “Don’t Bring Me Down”, a stand-up song that has endured confusion, the passage of time, and a multitude of complaints and criticisms no matter who sings them. Consider them exhibits A, B, and C.
The basic definition of the bring down might seem obvious and unnecessary to outline, but since over-explaining is a bit of a specialty of mine, I’m going to do it anyway. If it’s too much of a bring down for you, you can skip this part. But the general idea is that a negative person or event come to destroy an otherwise perfectly good situation—an instant depressor and a real bad vibe—is a bring down. Born from ’50s jazz and hipster lingo (look, I’m no William Safire, but it’s my best guess), whether it’s a party, an idea, a person’s lifetime hopes and dreams, or even their delusions—to be told, ‘That’s not gonna fly, Jim,” is a definite bring down. Ruining someone’s high or coming down from one? A bring down. Get off my cloud, and don’t be a downer, a bummer, or a drag—these are all other ways of saying, “Don’t Bring Me Down.” As jazz lingo had a way of finding its way into R&B and rock ‘n’ roll, and into the vocabs of the people who listen to the stuff, the bring down found its way into hundreds of songs, some more memorable than others. Dig?
Trick or Treat with Alice Cooper
New Single and Old Stories from the Shock Rock King
Hard to believe that Alice Cooper’s new single, “Keepin’ Halloween Alive”, packs more punch than any 10 new rock songs combined, especially when you consider the fact that the Shock Rock King has, as the song says, “kept Halloween alive since 1965.” But there you have it.
Of course it helps that here Alice is backed by axemen Piggy D. (of Rob Zombie’s band) and Dave Pino (Powerman 5000), two of the few new(er) jacks who can stand toe-to-toe with Detroit’s original glam-slammer. Still, it is Alice alone who leads this thrashfest. And why wouldn’t he? It’s been his kinda holiday all along.
“At home, my family all gathers around an old, spooky tree decorated with skulls and bones in the living room, and we exchange gifts,” Cooper says. “It’s our holiday. We even all have matching black-and-orange Halloween sweaters! I wanted a theme song for people like me, and for us, Halloween never ends.” read more
Devendra Banhart: What Will We Be
Devendra Banhart
What Will We Be
(Reprise, 2009)
“You show me a sunset overflowing / But who cares where it’s going?” With that snappy two-liner at the end of “Baby”, the jump-off single from Devendra Banhart’s new LP What Will We Be, the former maestro of the freak-folk movement embraces his newest outlet, the unabashed love song, with a dismissive wave of the hand for any context that may have preceded him. He seems to wonder why we might care.
We care where you’re going, Devendra, because we care where you’ve been. We cared about the mostly acoustic, weirdo home recordings you made your name with in this decade’s earlier stretch, and our ears, already scrambled a bit from 2007’s diverse Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon, wondered what curiosities awaited them when they heard the follow-up, which would be your major label debut for Warner Brothers’ Reprise label.
These are not the acoustic strum and sometimes horn-baked sing-alongs of Niño Rojo (see “We All Know”), nor even the studio-polished but still lyrically left-field musings of Cripple Crow (see “Chinese Children”). While no one would confidently claim the 14 cuts on Banhart’s sixth full-length aren’t odd, part of what makes these songs unexpected is that they are earnest exercises in well-established genres.
Singing atop standard rock instrumentation on “Baby”, Banhart lets only the occasional queer sentiment rear its head, recasting what was once his bread and butter as an intermittently stuck-out lyrical sore thumb—love is compared to some everlasting onion and a bow-tied kangaroo—amidst smiling assertions that nothing else matters as long as you’re next to him.
Mid-album track “Rats”, which kicks off with a slow-groove bass line, is a Zeppelin-inspired slab of guitar-rock, and a consequently interesting place for Banhart’s trademark warble to float above. “Mama, ain’t it grand,” he inquires, “that I get to be the fool again?” “Foolin’” is actually the title of the closing cut, a half-reggae pleasantry where the 28 year old finds himself approaching humanity, one day at a time, his love of the world overflowing in tropical splendor. It’s shockingly unobjectionable.
Most of it is unobjectionable, in fact, and this may be a function of an interesting diversity among the songs presented. There are swarthy, Spanish lounge act left turns (“Angelika”), and even an of-the-moment dance-rock track (”16th & Valencia Roxy Music”) that some label exec probably tried to re-title and put forth as the single.
The obvious read on this, of course, is that American/Venezualan Banhart has always been both a contrarian and whimsical outsider, constantly repositioning himself against other’s expectations. As he gains mainstream success for approaching music-making from a singular perspective, he’s also misaligned himself from broader contemporary tastes and trends.
It seems as though Banhart has fully grasped the choice he’s made, knowing even that, while break-up albums hold a special place in the popular music canon, it’s a much finer feat to reassert the dominance of the love song. Contrarians being what they are, perhaps we should have expected nothing less.
Listen: Various Tracks [at myspace.com]
Live Show Review: Sunset Rubdown at the Great American Music Hall, San Francisco

Sunset Rubdown
October 26th at Great American Music Hall
Sunset Rubdown may have sprung from the fertile well that is Wolf Parade in the mid-2000s, but Spencer Krugs’ “side project” should not be relegated as such. The bombastic sound that overtook the Great American Music Hall on Monday night was testament to his work as a unique songwriting force in his own right. Krug has a truly singular vision. When he isn’t sharing directorial duties, as he does with Wolf Parade co-frontman Dan Boeckner (who himself heads lo-fi synth-rock outfit Handsome Furs) to fit within that group’s more urgent, fractured sound, his compositions are vast in scope and ambitiously penned, sprawling and loose and oblique. These songs are just as grand when delivered in a live capacity as they are when captured so purposefully on record. The music is steeped in deep minutiae, with nuances like a blaring trumpet crashing alongside a vigorous dual drum sequence, or brisk vocal harmonies that coincide with a quickening tempo—all intimate and intricate details that shape disparate elements into opuses, at times both epic and surprisingly approachable.


Apart from its sway in presidential elections, I knew very little of Iowa before embarking on Daytrotter’s Barnstormer II tour (aka “Barnstormier”) earlier this month. These dates marked the second incarnation of the live music site’s mini-tour of Wisconsin and Iowa barns, offering compelling new sounds to often passed-over Midwestern communities as well as giving emerging bands the opportunity to play in scenic, unusual spots off the typical rock club circuit.
Radiohead Backlash Coming to a Proverbial Head, “Stupid Lists” Backlash Just Getting Started
by: Jocelyn Hoppa
Flavorwire has an article up titled “The Radiohead Backlash: Why Now?” that explores the boomerang effect (my term, not theirs) of Radiohead’s popularity and supposed “critical acclaim” to the current backlash cropping up lately. This question comes after a recent article in Spin that debunks certain rock myths, most of which are ones we already know, from Ozzy not really biting the head off a bat to Pink Floyd not writing The Dark Side of the Moon as a soundtrack to the Wizard of Oz. Way to crack the case on those things which have been shot out of the same bland cannon for years. However, their #1 rock myth debunked is “Radiohead Can Do No Wrong” with the subtitle “Reality: Radiohead Kind of Blow.”
The Spin article certainly has its points, like this one: “After a two-hour set, with the crowd screaming for more, Yorke retook the stage alone, sat at a grand piano, and played a quiet, minimalist nocturne. For five minutes. Before 20,000 people. The song, “Cymbal Rush,” from his 2006 solo album The Eraser — titled in an apparent gearhead reference to some sonic effect or software patch (probably between “Amp Fuzz” and “Element Isolator”) — amplified the sense that this man was so far up his own formalist ass we might as well have not even been there. It’s a valid outlook, but an odd one for someone making populist gestures in his business life and performing on such a giant stage.”
Sure, but this is coming from the magazine that easily knocks Radiohead while at the same time instinctively knowing that putting them on the cover will sell issues… like the time they put them on their November 2000 cover asking if they were “The World’s Greatest Rock Band?” How’s that for revisionist criticism? read more
by: Jocelyn Hoppa
published: November 19, 2009 in column: What Goes On
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