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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: kill rock stars
Impending Dread from the Copyright Act of 1976, and Other News
The US Copyright Act of 1976 is set to come back and bite some record labels and music publishers in the ass. A statute written into the Act will allow “authors or their heirs to terminate copyright grants—or at the very least renegotiate much sweeter deals by threatening to do so.” The Eagles are just one of the bands planning on filing termination notices, thereby doing away with their need for a label to distribute music instead on their own. (Wired)
Carrie Brownstein hosted a virtual roundtable discussion about record labels with reps from Matador, Saddle Creek, Merge, Kill Rock Stars, and Jagjaguwar. Interesting insight, from the people who know. (NPR)
Paul McCartney sure does write a damn good song, and the Library of Congress agrees, naming the former Beatle the third recipient of the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song. Paul Simon and Stevie Wonder are the other honorees. (NY Times)
Ready for the holidays? Well, no… are you ever? But here’s some news about Bob Dylan’s upcoming Christmas album, which will include some standard holiday favorites. (Sterogum)
An acute case of sciatica has forced Dan Deacon to cancel a string of shows. Deacon, known for his interactive live set, is suffering from back problems as a result of the condition. Bummer. (Pitchfork)
Read more news after the jump.
The Vandals: Peace Thru Vandalism
The Vandals
Peace Thru Vandalism
(Epitaph, 1982)
The story of how I came into possession of my original vinyl copy of Peace Thru Vandalism is perhaps the most interesting record acquisition story of my stupid white life. My friend Drew’s aunt met and started dating this guy from Texas on the internet. Texas Guy came to visit her in Florida (where we all lived at the time) and brought, like, nearly everything he owned. It was kind of a fishy deal. Suspicious, Drew’s aunt hired a private investigator, and it was quickly discovered that Mr. Right (Now) was wanted in his home state for, among other things, possession of child pornography. She confronted Master Criminal and he hightailed it outta her house so fast he ended up leaving the majority of his worldly possessions behind. Amongst the crap this gross dude had were some punk records, so Drew, knowing I was into that kind of thing, called me up.
”I think there are some bands here you like. Come take what you want.”
Come take I did, although not without some trepidation. This stuff had been in the hands of a kiddie porn enthusiast. I almost became nauseous just being in the same room as his stuff. Yet how could I ignore Peace Thru Vandalism, a record that by all outward appearances could have been a hilarious fictional creation used to service the plot of some forgotten 1980s sitcom? Oh no, the kids on Charles in Charge are getting into this wild rock band the Vandals, who sing songs like “Pirate’s Life” and “Anarchy Burger (Hold the Government)!” That latter entry was an endless source of amusement long before I managed to even hear the song once (I didn’t have a turntable at the time and wouldn’t get one for at least six months). It really didn’t even matter, though, if the damn tune was genius or hog shit. Anarchy burger? Hold the government? I’m smiling right now as I type this. There simply cannot be a more stereotypical suburban gutter punk rock song title from the decade when Eddie Murphy was still a hit.
“Anarchy Burger” did not disappoint when it finally assaulted my ears. The raucous two-minute explosion is Peace Thru Vandalism’s true diamond, a wild tribal punk pounding that boasts deliciously inept riffing and comically offensive lyrics delivered in a balls-to-the-wall caterwaul by stocky singer Steve Jensen (the original Stevo). Was SoCal punk ever more cringe-inducing than the opening lines of this song?
“Anarchy, kill a cat! / Shoot James Brady in the back! / Raise an army of rabid rats! / Beat your neighbor with a bat!”
That still stings, and I was only two years old when Reagan was shot.
Years later, “Anarchy Burger” would make an appearance in the most unlikely of places —the 2002 Vin Diesel film xXx. Amidst all the gratuitous explosions, corny one-liners, and Dario Argento’s hot-ass daughter was a scene in which Mr. Diesel and a swarthy piece of Euro Trash trade off lines from the most beloved song in the Vandals’ pre-Dave Quackenbush catalog. Just when you think something’s sacred, the guy from The Chronicles of Riddick comes along and fucks everything up.
But lo, there are five other trashy delights on this Vandals EP, all nearly as much fun as that final shit-kicker. “Wanna Be Manor” utilizes a dark chord progression and a slow increase in tempo to tell a scary tale of not-entirely-voluntary same sexcapades. “Urban Struggle” playfully imitates Morricone’s famous overture from The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly before dealing with Stevo’s punk vs. cowboy identity crisis. “Pirate’s Life” unravels a memorable drug-heavy trip to Disneyland in which the line between reality and Pirates of the Caribbean becomes dangerously blurred (dig that sea shanty breakdown!). I suppose I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention “The Legend of Pat Brown”, a musical tribute to a notoriously drunken friend of the Vandals. That’s one of the few songs from this record that the Vandals still perform today in the version of the band that features original Vandals drummer/recreational bullfighter/former entertainment lawyer Joe Escalante on bass, percussive all-star Josh Freese on the skins, Oingo Boingo graduate Warren Fitzgerald on guitar, and the aforementioned Quackenbush on vocals.
I know what you’re thinking. Gee, a punk band that kept going with only one original member? I’m sure no one had a problem with that! To quote Kevin Spacey as heinous Superman foe Lex Luthor, WRON-GUH! According to founding Vandal axe man Jan Nils Ackermann and the late Jensen (who passed away in 2005), lil’ Joe Escalante falsely credited all the early Vandals tunes to himself circa 1990 and used his legal prowess throughout the decade to keep his one-time dudemeisters from getting any piece of the financial pie. Escalante’s side of the story is that his former band mates agreed to give up their stake in the band so they could play a reunion show as some kind of alternate universe Vandals featuring more than one original member. Not surprisingly, legal mud began flying all over the place; an undisclosed settlement eventually allowed Escalante to retain control of the Vandals catalog while songwriting credits reverted back to the whole group. Moral of this story: There is no such thing as punk brotherhood.
Thankfully, Peace Thru Vandalism lives on in the era of Fake Shemp Vandals Endorsed By Thick-Tongued Action Stars. This record—which today can most easily be found packaged with the band’s sophomore outing When in Rome Do as the Vandals—exists as a relic from a simpler time, a time when none of the Vandals could ever imagine being popular enough to play for US troops overseas (which they did) or the influence of their miniscule label Epitaph Records growing large enough to convince acid-throated troubadour Tom Waits to sign up for distribution (also true). There were no corporate sponsorship deals, precious Warped Tour slots, royalty checks, or Vin Diesel action movies to be lost back in those wild frontier days of 1982. With nothing at stake, the Vandals could be as crude and crazy and reckless as possible; no cow was too sacred (as evidenced by their vile, disgusting cover of Elvis Presley’s “Heartbreak Hotel”). Thus, Peace Thru Vandalism slaughtered as many heifers as it saw, serving up tasty/tasteless Anarchy Burgers to anyone hungry/crazy enough to join the party.
Yet as lowbrow as the original Vandals could be, there’s no arguing with their basic logic. To wit, the very line sold to xXx for some ungodly amount of money the boys like to brag about in concert these days:
“America stands for freedom, but if you think you’re free / Try walking into a deli and urinating on the cheese.”
I have, on numerous occasions, and trust me, none of the arresting officers let me stand behind my First Amendment rights. I can also assure you that the current incarnation of the Vandals hasn’t come close to authoring anything that bitingly honest or sharp since they first slipped on their checkered Vans in the mid-to-late ’80s and recruited a teenage drum whiz from Disneyland to be their drum god.
Listen: “Anarchy Burger” [at youtube.com]
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
NoInsuranceLand: The Health Care Music Scene
Lou Thomas is a great guy. Not just a talented bassist/guitarist/songwriter, but an all-around affable, intelligent dude that cares about his friends and others. Thomas is a part of the thriving music mecca that is Portland, OR. He works in a coffee shop a few days a week and lives paycheck to paycheck in order to devote as much time as possible to the bands he plays in, including the critically acclaimed A Weather, whose hushed, immaculate first album, Cove, was released last year to glowing reviews all over the web and beyond. Thomas also plays in the louder, lesser-known four-piece Chores, which is pretty much Everyband, USA, lauded for being both melodically adventurous yet 100 percent pretension-free in the comparatively small bit of press they’ve gotten so far. Chores also just released their debut LP, The Subtle Politics of the Public Hammock, on Field Hymns Records. Between the two, Thomas experiences a pretty full spectrum of what life is like for the small-time, struggling recording artist that lives for, but doesn’t make a living from, his music.
One of the under-heralded grassroots gems on the Chores LP is a song called “Noinsuranceland”, and you can probably guess what it’s about. A bike accident at age 15 left Thomas with a knee that would continue giving him problems over the years, though it had been years since the last sign of any ailment, up until one fine day in 2007 when he was walking through a Portland park and a little girl asked him for a push on the swings. “I stepped wrong on the mulch,” Thomas recounts in an email exchange, “fell over in pain, and passed out for a few seconds.” Broke and uninsured, he dealt with it as shrewdly as possible. He found a ride to the emergency room, skirting the ambulance fees at least. “This is where the story gets complicated,” Thomas says.
He needed to see a knee specialist who could order an MRI, yet without insurance, this meant Thomas was basically fucked. Fortunately, it turned out that his boss was just about to roll out a health insurance plan at the coffee shop, but not for a couple months. “So I saw the specialist, but then put off getting the MRI until the insurance kicked in.” He managed to get the ER and specialist fees reduced by 75 percent by being broke enough to qualify for government assistance and having the wherewithal to plow through the requisite mounds of paperwork. Even then, “It was expensive, but manageable,” Thomas says.
Various Artists
Various Artists
Woodstock: 40 Years On: Back to Yasgur’s Farm
(Rhino, 2009)
The Woodstock Festival looms large in the cultural imagination of the hippie generation—and every generation that’s come of age since that magical weekend of peace, love, music, and freewheelin’ indulgence. In just over one weekend, a city of half a million people (and that’s just the audience) was spontaneously created and good vibes were the rule, not the exception. Woodstock was the “coming out” party for the hippies, in the old high society meaning of the word, an announcement that there was indeed a counterculture, to use a word that may not have even been coined at the time. The festival lived up to its billing with almost no reported violence or friction in the audience; good vibes abounded, even between the police and the stoned hippies in attendance.
Critics and sociologists are still arguing about the significance of the event and its greater meaning. In the August 9th edition of the San Francisco Chronicle Datebook, Country Joe McDonald, Paul Kantner of the Jefferson Airplane/Starship, and percussionist Michael Carabello, a member of Santana at the time, were still disagreeing about what went on at the festival, and they were there. Still, one thing is evident: The music that brought the crowds to Woodstock sent American culture spinning off in hundreds of unexpected directions, and it’s that music that still holds our collective interest.
Those Darlins: Oh, the Places They’ll Go
“In a nation of frightened dullards, there is always a sorry shortage of outlaws, and those few who make the grade are always welcome.”– Hunter S. Thompson
This is a story about kindred spirits. It’s a story about small-town chicks with big-city dreams, a story about the evolution of a band, about grit and determination. It’s a story about campfire sing-alongs and beer-soaked jamborees. It’s a tale about strangers coming to town, about true believers embarking on a journey. This is an age-old tale with a modern twist… one that takes the grand tradition of country and folk and infuses it with rockabilly blues and backwoods swagger.
This is the story of Those Darlins, and it begins in Murfreesboro, Tennessee—home of the Southern Girls Rock ‘n’ Roll Camp—in the summer of 2003.
1970 Tales of Byrds and Brownies
In 1970, I left Fleetwood Mac to come to America to work with the Byrds. Quite the stranger in a strange land, my first month in California found this Englishman building equipment for the road, moving into a new house in Sherman Oaks with Jimmi Seiter, the Byrds road manager, and meeting all the group’s families. Roger, his wife Ianthe, and his two sons, Patrick and Henry, lived high in the Hollywood Hills. I have fond memories of playing pool there and checking out Roger’s toys, including a huge Moog synthesizer with wires going back and forth in organized chaos.
During the pre-cell phone days of the 1970s, CBs (citizens’ band radios) were kings of the road; everyone who spent any time on America’s highways had a CB for communication. They were an essential road tool—great for speed traps and accident alerts, as well as for finding gas stations and places to eat while traveling. Popular among truck drivers, Roger had a CB base station at home, units in his Porsche and other cars, and a portable one that he carried with him. Clarence had a CB unit too, and he and Roger would talk to each other all the time, using the 10-codes and other CB lingo, and sometimes setting up practical jokes on the other band members.
However, Roger’s most spectacular toy at that time was his low-powered laser. Sometimes at night, Roger would point his laser across the canyon road through a window onto a white wall in the living room of an unsuspecting neighbor watching television. The laser burst would shine a spot of light on the living room wall, freaking out the man who would look everywhere searching for the light source. Roger, of course, used binoculars to watch the man and would turn the laser off just as the man turned toward the window. In those pre-terrorist days, Roger often took the laser on the road, amusing the band as he annoyed bewildered victims with his practical jokes.
Dirty Projectors at the Independent, San Francisco
Dirty Projectors
July 7th at the Independent, San Francisco
Electro beats are rattling the contemporary music scene. From Animal Collective’s dance party-ready Merriweather Post Pavilion (2009) to Major Lazer’s catalytic fanbase following the release of Guns Don’t Kill People-Lazers Do (2009), a familiar cast of indie artists are producing disco-infused tracks faster than the BPMs on their newest records. So, is there a future for traditional, full band arrangements in contemporary music?
“Look around at everyone / Everyone looks alive and waiting / The wind is up, the stars out / The sun is calm, the light is fading / But we are.” The Independent bubbles with experimental enthusiasts, the 400-plus attendees move in unison, the stage glows a green and purple, and mastermind behind the Dirty Projectors, Dave Longstreth, warbles his poetry to the crowd. Longstreth, one of indie music’s most innovative composers—accompanied on stage by a shaggy-haired bassist, a multi-tasking drummer (as he switches off between drums and a tambourine), a fresh-faced female on analog synth, and two dolls whose harmonic melodies are convincing enough to be taken as instruments—jolts the crowd with his moving lyrics and orchestrations. And movement, as in progression, is one of the hottest trends in indie music today.
Music Books of the Last Six Months: Summer Edition

Well, it’s that time of year again where we all collectively attempt to slow down the pace of our roundabout lives, and for good reason. Shit, we all need to partake in some summertime activity, like some going to the beach or pool, or some eating of some hot dogs and drinking of some beers at a baseball game, or, you know, in some being especially lazy. Let the summer breeze blow through the jasmine of your mind, as it were. Record releases come to a proverbial halt, so we’re following their lead, however inanimate they are. What we’re trying to say is that we aren’t publishing for the next week, due to a twice-a-year necessity to hit the reset button and come back refreshed and ready for more rollickin’ rock journalism. The good news is that we’re keeping up the tradition of our bi-annual book review! This summertime edition features music-related books that have come out in the last six months. You should pick up a few and add them to your summer reading list, and really, really focus on taking things down a notch. Enjoy!
Family
Photographs and text by Lauren Dukoff
(Chronicle Books)

Live Show Review: Mission of Burma at the Independent, San Francisco
by: Michael Harkin
November 14th at the Independent, San Francisco
There’s no reunited band in rock more worthwhile than Mission of Burma. At this point, the Boston-based post-punk band has been together in their present form for seven years, quite a bit longer than the four years they were originally together in the late ’70s/early ’80s. They’ve just released their third studio album as a reformed outfit (it’s their fourth overall): The Sound The Speed The Light, which is not only fantastic, but lent speedy, careening set fodder to their show at the Independent on Saturday night.
Saturday’s show was opened by Erase Errata, a mostly San Francisco-based experimental punk band that only occasionally plays shows these days. Led by the now Portland, OR-based singer/guitarist Jenny Hoyston, the band played as a four-piece, drawing several songs from 2006’s terrific Nightlife (Kill Rock Stars), still their most recent album release. One of the most fascinating aspects of their sound is the bass and drums interplay, especially on the couple of songs where bassist Ellie Erickson plays the highest notes on her bass guitar in percussive, bell-like riffs that add a hypnotic, almost disco quality to drummer Bianca Sparta’s beat. Their contemporary take on ZE Records-type grooving, scraping punk is totally captivating, and a more sprightly counterpoint to Burma’s furious onslaught.
read more
by: Michael Harkin
published: November 16, 2009 in column: It Shows, What Goes On
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