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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..."
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Search results for: sonic youth
Alela Diane: All in the Family
Alela Diane Menig grew up in Nevada City, CA, a former gold-rush town in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains. The tight-knit community, anchored by a main street that has changed little since its heyday in the mid-1800s, is a haven for hippies and creative types, and its schools place a heavy emphasis on the arts. Alela spent her youth taking photos and painting, getting good grades, singing in the school choir, and occasionally heading out to see her dad, Tom, perform as the leader of the DeadBeats, a Grateful Dead cover band in which she says he “still shreds on the electric guitar.” But despite musical parents and a father who seemed to have a guitar in his lap at all hours of the day and night, Alela (”a-LEE-la”) was rarely inspired to write songs and play music.
And then her world got turned upside down.
Soon after Alela headed south for college in San Francisco, Tom and Suzanne Menig split up, a heartbreaking event that unleashed a torrent of unforeseen songwriting talent in their daughter. The songs were melancholic, focused primarily on the break-up and its aftermath, with her parents selling the home Alela grew up in and her mom moving to Santa Cruz. The creative outburst turned into 2006’s The Pirate’s Gospel, an album of lingering folk that announced Alela Diane, the name she records and performs under, as a formidable songwriter with a remarkably rangy voice. The album sold well in the US, and unexpectedly took off in France. read more
XTC’s Psych Side Project Gets an Acid Flashback
First, the bad news.
“At this point,” announces Andy Partridge over the phone from his Swindon, England home, “XTC is pretty much a memory, I’m afraid. I don’t think it’s ever going to be a going concern again. I certainly have a dislike of older bands that re-form; they really, really shouldn’t do it.”
For fans of the legendary British post-new wave group—who managed to survive a good 20 years longer than most of their contemporaries, with the possible exception of REM—this news comes not so much as a shock but rather a grim confirmation of the end of an era. Yet, as Partridge continues, it becomes clear that, while XTC the band may be strictly a historical concern, XTC the brand is in the middle of one of its busiest years in quite some time.
Jim O’Rourke
Jim O’Rourke
The Visitor
(Drag City, 2009)
In the liner notes for The Visitor, Jim O’Rourke has one simple request: He asks us to “please listen on speakers, loud.”
A simple enough request it would seem, sure. But it’s actually not so simple if you’ve been trained, as I have, to take music anywhere and skip through anything with wanton abandon. The main reason for his request not being a simple one is that The Visitor is one long track, just three seconds over 38 minutes long. Hearing snippets of the album as you run your errands isn’t exactly gonna cut it. It may not grab everyone’s attention, but O’Rourke probably isn’t so concerned with those people anyway. And therein lays the brilliance of releasing music this way.
The Beatles and the End of the Album
Philip Larkin’s poem “Annus Mirabilis” opens with this: “Sexual intercourse began / In 1963 / (which was rather late for me) / Between the end of the Chatterley ban / And the Beatles’ first LP.”
Like much of Larkin’s work, he’s speaking about his own sexual experience as a metonymy for culture as a whole, and like much of his work, he’s on to something. The British Invasion, the LP Era, the Golden Sixties, was the birth of sexual intercourse as commodity, marketed to anyone with a record player and TV set—the cameraman began shooting below Elvis’ waistline, so to speak. Anyone, youth especially, could now access the previously elusive sexual act through the exchange of goods in the capitalist marketplace. Sex and metaphor transformed into one another. read more
I Lived the Dream (and the Dream Won)
I didn’t want to be scrambling to figure out why my guitar, amplifier, and science project of a pedalboard were collectively silent. We were 20 seconds into our set, opening with “Search Party”, and it sounded like the audience was listening to the song in a car with a blown right speaker. Now I view the technical difficulty as an all-too-fitting metaphor. For months beforehand, there was an odd divide amongst So Many Dynamos, the result of the unwelcome epiphany that I kind-of-sort-of-maybe-really-definitely didn’t want to play in a touring rock band anymore. Now the other three members of the band were hammering through the song while I frantically attempted to fix my own complicated problems. I didn’t want this to be my last show. I didn’t want to quit the band. I didn’t want to not be able to enjoy playing “Search Party” for the last time, but by this point I’d come to terms with the fact that some things are just out of my hands.
On tour, depression is exactly like most other illness. Eventually, everybody catches it. I tried to internalize, but that was impossible in the close quarters of our Ford Econoline. We had embarked on a four-week, counter-clockwise tour of the country, and by the time we hit the West Coast, even the most tightly woven surgical masks wouldn’t keep the anxious germs that I was spreading from floating into the respiratory systems of my bandmates. I was SARS. I was swine flu.
If lying and withholding the truth are synonymous, then the tour was the biggest lie of my life. After every set, I would take the reins of the merch table and occasionally have a conversation with an excited fan. They would vigorously shake my hand and sometimes say things like, “Don’t ever stop playing” or “You’re my favorite band,” as if they were aware of my secret and knew exactly what direction to twist the dagger lodged in my heart for maximum carnage. I wanted to be honest and say, “I appreciate your compliments, but you should be aware that my future as a member of So Many Dynamos is up in the air, not because of any personal or creative differences, but rather due to a combination of changed priorities, increased financial and personal responsibilities, and the internal fear that I’m attempting to pursue an outdated fantasy of mine and, as a result, acting like I’m seven years younger than I actually am,” but I usually just replied, “Thank you.”
The Pixies/Fugazi/Sonic Youth Syndrome
Let me describe myself as a demographic. I am a 25-year-old white male from the Midwestern United States. I attended college and I play guitar in an indie-rock band. I wear thick glasses and I think “Smells Like Teen Spirit” is a pretty good song. Now here’s the shocking part: I don’t really like the Pixies.
This isn’t to say I haven’t tried. I’ve worn through a few burned copies of Surfer Rosa and there is exactly one moment in So Many Dynamos history where the song “Bone Machine” is an influence (the drums on “Artifacts of Sound” from 1:50 to 2:03). But still, I tend to only gravitate towards the band’s singles; I’m a “Where Is My Mind?”/”Here Comes Your Man” kind of guy. When Griffin drove the final shift of our band’s most recent tour and sent the Pixies from his iPod into the cassette tape adapter, I got sort of excited upon hearing the introductory riff to “Debaser.” Alas, I lost interest halfway through “Monkey Gone to Heaven.” Given the implied significance of the Pixies to my demographic, it’s frustrating that Doolittle does so little for me.
I noticed a certain phenomenon when I was younger, which I called “The Fugazi Syndrome.” The 18-year-old version of myself adored Q and Not U and was shocked to hear folks rip on them because they sound too much like a band I’d heard-of-but-never-heard, Fugazi. I checked out the band’s records and I didn’t get it at all. The guitars hit at all of the same angles, but Fugazi just seemed so bleak and lonesome, far from the playfulness that drew me into No Kill No Beep Beep.
Everyday Visuals Ride the Pop/Indie Divide
Christopher Pappas, main songwriter for Boston-based, New Hampshire-bred indie band the Everyday Visuals, is well-aware of just how the indie/mainstream continuum works. In fact, Pappas blogged about this matter in a little entry entitled, “Pop is fucking (aka. Everything to all people? / aka. Coldplay is just as bad as Wavves” posted to his band’s website.
Elsewhere on the band’s pages, Pappas provided a helpful Venn diagram to illustrate exactly where the Visuals merge between pop and indie. Figuring out where their audience is poses a practical dilemma for the Northeastern band, whose recent self-titled and self-produced third album will likely appeal to Fleet Foxes fans for its downbeat, harmony-rich vocal sound while possibly alienating said fans by also veering into poppier, Vampire Weekend (or even Split Enz) territory. This dichotomy clearly weighs heavily on the bearded singer’s mind.
“The indie world,” Pappas explains, “is completely insular and self-satisfying, and the pop world is just as lame and just as self-satisfying. When I was growing up and first listening to music, Nirvana, Sonic Youth, and the Breeders all had this really underground indie-rock aesthetic that critics loved, and yet they were all on MTV, too… and Nirvana was selling out stadiums! Nowadays, there seems to be such a schism between the pop world and the indie world. So the main point I was trying to get at [in the blog] was that often I feel like the Everyday Visuals fall in between the poppy, catchy world and the indie world.”
Nurses
Nurses
Apple’s Acre
(Dead Oceans, 2009)
Here’s an album that is going to create some buzz along with some vitriol. In fact, it already has. Nurses’ post-modern psych-pop doesn’t exactly reinvent the wheel where that genre is concerned, but it does retain interesting elements throughout its 10 tracks. Their sound rides the coattails of the harmonizing and surprising tribal beats to be found on the Beach Boys’ Smiley Smile/Wild Honey, a less sonically challenging Animal Collective (both musically and lyrically), and tinges of electronic beats that call to mind various Björk tracks. It’s a formula with grounds for some rollicking, folky psych-pop fun, yet if you care at all about any of the above artists and beyond, it’s also arguably derivative enough to induce some arrogant eye-rolling.
That Apple’s Acre’s upbeat, mystically-inspired hodgepodge is so rife with familiar sounds is the easiest target for which to take this record down with rock journo verbal-bullets. That, and the lyrics—sometimes indecipherable and/or sophomoric, delivered by singer Aaron Chapman’s high-pitched, nasally bleats—which oftentimes are secondary to the band’s musical explorations. More likely, the vocals are meant to meld with the music in a way where they inherently fade out of any particular significance, existing to add atmosphere and mood. That all being said, it’s also worth noting that Apple’s Acre is a fine listen for the ears, at times downright enchanting, much in the same way Human Highway’s 2008 release Moody Motorcycle was. And with that record, which some labeled an instant classic, it was still (and probably more so) a record full of music that we’ve all heard before. The point, I guess, is that with both records there’s enough of the unexpected that they prevail over their obvious influences.
Rock the Bells at Shoreline Amphitheatre, SF
Rock the Bells
August 9th at Shoreline Amphitheatre, San Francisco
“What you’re about to see… is what we’ve been trying to put together for a while: Peace, love, unity. This is what this music is about.” In an act of unity, a banner falls from the top of the stage as KRS-One, host of Rock the Bells, announces this year’s headliners: Nas and Damian Marley. Representing two segments of hip-hop culture, a portrait of Nas against Brooklyn’s skyline and a snapshot of Marley in front of Kingston’s horizon provided the backdrop for their performance and the final act of Rock the Bells on the final night of the 2009 tour.
“Hip-hop is dead,” Nas chanted as he swaggered onto the main stage for his shared set with Marley, the “Jamrock” prodigy. With a populous band ensemble and a twirling Rastafarian flag, Nas reminded the crowd of an era when the mainstream rejected hip-hop, when the game was about delivering a message instead of an advertisement, when hip-hop spoke for the community instead of the corporations who commission it. “Reminiscin’ when it wasn’t all business / If it got where it started / So we all gather here for the dearly departed.” Spitting rhymes to a crowd of over 10,000 people, Nas berated the “rap culture” hip-hop has become throughout tracks like “One Mic”, “Made You Look”, and “Road to Zion”, his duet with Marley off their new collaborative album, Distant Relatives. While Nas commanded the crowd’s attention for his more popular songs like “The World Is Yours”, Marley got them to move. Covering a slew of his legendary father’s discography, Damian jived with two frenetic vocalists and the Roots’ guitarist, Captain Kirk Douglas, who wailed electric blues throughout his set. Dancing around on stage with meters of bouncing dreadlocks, he finished off the evening with “One Love.” While Nas and Marley’s pleas of unity may have been romantic, their sentiments were echoed by other performers throughout the day.

Stop Rock and Roll: How the Drags Blew Clean Up
by: David Gendelman
On the other side of the stage, Lorca Wood looks down over her bass guitar. She’s wearing a black t-shirt with the sleeves torn off. Blonde streaks mix in with the black hair matted down wet against her forehead. She, too, is locked in concentration on the riff she plays, one every rock ‘n’ roll fan recognizes but can’t name; in her hands, it sounds like a rolling thunder. Keith Herrera sits at the drum kit behind both of them. His kit is small, just a snare drum, bass drum, floor tom, and cymbal—and he probably can hardly see it behind the sunglasses he wears—but he’s getting the most out of each of them, his hands a blur. He, too, is drenched in sweat.
Some 300 people are on the floor of the club in front of them. A few are slam-dancing into each other—after all, some of them use the term “punk rock” to describe the music the band is playing. The rest are dancing in place or standing transfixed, heads bobbing, feet tapping, and sweating. From the back of the room, they make a unified mass, like a hyper-ventilating body moving together in time to the song.
Stritzel hits a chord and lets it ring out and feed back. He grabs the microphone and falls to his knees, torso bent over his guitar, which rests in his lap. He sings, “There’s lots of ways to go / What’s the most appealing? / I could tie a rope around my neck / Swing from the ceiling / I could take a bunch of pills / Get real gone / I could take a bath with the radio on.” Then he hits his guitar again as Wood and Herrera transition with him, and the song explodes into its chorus. “I like to die,” he sings, and repeats until it appears he can’t go on any longer.
The band is called the Drags, and they leave the stage to a storm of clapping, whistling, and shouting. If they had 30 diehard fans before the show began, they’ve just multiplied it by 10. The event is Garage Shock, an annual, four-night festival put together by Estrus Records that brings together the best garage-rock bands the world over—from France, from Brazil, from Tokyo, from Opelika, Alabama. The Drags are smack dab in the middle of the bill, the third of five bands on Saturday night. They have just staked out their own piece of garage turf, establishing themselves as one of the premier bands the genre has to offer. In two years, they’ll headline opening night of the same event, having just released their second record; in four years, they’ll release their third record, filled with sounds and instruments never before heard in the garage-rock genre. In five, they’ll be playing in a bedroom filled with a sampler, three cellos, and an oboe, among other instruments, in a ramshackle Victorian 30 miles outside of Nowhere, California. And in six, they will have taken their music, packed it in a closet, and closed up shop for good.
The story of their rise and fall runs in tandem with the rise and fall of that era’s garage scene altogether. It explodes with flair and passion, and then it crashes and burns, and dies away, hardly to be heard from ever again.
CJ Stritzel grew up in Tucson, Arizona, a city one local calls “a retirement community with a university, no money, and no jobs.” In the early ’90s, he left his hometown for the next city east. In the endless empty stretch of land that is America’s Southwest, he drove from one desert outpost to another and landed in Albuquerque, New Mexico, a town often referred to as “dead,” or, more poetically, by a former resident as “everything you’d imagine and less.” Stritzel came to go to the university there, but he really came to form a band, and when that happened, he quit school altogether, 173 school credits, or about two years’ worth of classes, later.
Lorca Wood grew up in Oklahoma City. She, too, came to Albuquerque for school—in her case, to study art. On her first day in town, she says, “I pulled into Walgreen’s and there was a fight. One guy had a pick axe and the other guy had a baseball bat. That’s Albuquerque.” It’s a town where people will kill your dog to keep him quiet after they’ve broken into your house to steal money to feed their heroin habit, where visiting bands get their gear stolen or get jumped if they walk down the wrong alley at the wrong hour. In the film No Country for Old Men, the shootout scene between the heartless killer played by Javier Bardem and the common man-turned-renegade played by Josh Brolin was shot on Albuquerque’s main drag. In the early morning darkness, the street is dark and desolate, and both of their lives are one wrong move from death. As one future band member tells me, “Every person you run into is talking about how they’re trying to get out of there.” New Mexico’s state slogan is the Land of Enchantment. Albuquerque was known as the Land of Entrapment.
Wood first met Stritzel in 1992, when he and a mutual friend, a drummer, told her they were forming a band. On a lark, she told them she was a bass player, even though she wasn’t. “I played the cello,” she says. “I didn’t own a bass. Had never picked one up in fact.”
“The first time she played it was kind of weird,” Stritzel says. When she picked up the bass, she said, “You hold it this way then, I guess.” “I thought that was really cool,” he says. It makes sense. At that time, he was trying to unlearn how to play the guitar. “He’d say he was so envious of how I played,” Wood says. “He’d been playing guitar for a long time, and he felt he was too good. He longed to go back to this place where it wasn’t how technically good you were, but that you had this spirit, this rawness. He made a concerted effort to recreate that.”
They called the band the Swizzle Sticks. Stritzel describes their initial effort as “a cut-rate Sonic Youth.” But the more they practiced, the more their tastes were refined. “As we started doing it, the thing that turned us on was playing more repetitive and for not that long a time,” he says. What began to emerge was their lo-fi interpretation of ’60s garage rock. This change didn’t please their mutual friend much, and the two of them soon found themselves without a drummer. It wouldn’t be the last time. But in a college town, no band need be without one for long, and soon Keith Herrera, who’d just left the band Big Damn Crazy Weight, joined up.
Herrera was Albuquerque’s man about town. At the time, Big Damn Crazy Weight was the city’s musical success story. They’d released a single on Sub Pop Records, the birthplace of grunge and the biggest independent record label in the country. The band was more metal than the Seattle sound the label would become famous for, mixing into their music Albuquerque’s dark interior. Herrera owned the record label Resin Records. He booked bands. He knew everybody in town and everybody in town knew him. When the Swizzle Sticks decided to take their act public, all the locals knew about it.
The band’s first show was on election night of 1992, the year grunge entered the mainstream as one of its purveyors, Mudhoney, left Sub Pop and released their first record on a major label; the year Nirvana’s Nevermind hit #1 on the Billboard charts; the year the little world of independent music became big business. The show was at the Golden West Saloon, one of Albuquerque’s two main music venues. Not much remains from that show. Not the band name—they soon became known as the Drags, after another band informed them that the name the Swizzle Sticks was already taken; not the memories of it for any of them, save for the nerves beforehand; and not even the club, which burned down last year due to the spontaneous combustion of rags bathed in linseed oil. Fires, it would appear later, seemed to follow the garage scene wherever it went.
The Drags began to play out regularly, and this helped refine Stritzel’s songwriting. “I saw that other stuff didn’t get to the back row in the same way that something really simple did.” They decided they were ready to release a single. When Albuquerque bands needed to record, they went to Gary Hansen’s house in the South Valley. Hansen was the soundman for the Golden West Saloon, and he recorded everyone, from the Drags to the Sammy Hagar cover band. He was in a heavy metal band called Scary Hansen and all the equipment in his house had “Scary Hansen” stenciled on it. His was a home only a musician could love. The mixing board was in the kitchen, the PA stacks were in the living room, and the microphones were in the bathtub. “To this day,” Herrera says, “I have no idea where that guy showered, or if he even showered.”
“I Like to Die” came out on Herrera’s record label. It begins with a primitively plucky Cramps-sounding guitar, and, as Tim Kerr—the leader of the garage bands Jack O’Fire and the Lord High Fixers—later would tell Stritzel when describing his own songs, it was about “cool shit, like death.” It would become the Drags’ show-stopper for the next few years. “We were really fascinated with the line between fun and funny,” Stritzel says. “I wanted to be—it’s not a fuckin’ joke, but at the same time it should be humorous. ‘I Like to Die’ is a good example of that lyrically. It’s funny, but it’s not.”
The band’s shows were the same way. They were full of wild, manic energy. Stritzel would run around the stage like a patient who’d just escaped from the psych ward. He’d spit into the air and catch it. He’d alternately entertain and berate the audience with a barely controlled rap. He’d attack his guitar with a fury that came out of the amplifier sounding primitive and impassioned. One night, the band might show up as dead people, drenched in blood and with faces painted a ghostly white. The next night, they might be in country and western garb. They’d learn new covers for every set—the Pretty Things’ “Rosalyn”, early Fleetwood Mac’s “Somebody’s Gonna Get Their Head Kicked in Tonight.” No two shows were ever the same. “We tried to do as much as we could every night,” Stritzel says. “There are some bands you see and you know they’re never going to be bad. They’re going to sound pretty much like this every night. That really scared me. I knew that if you were never willing to risk being totally shitty and totally suck, you were never going to be really great either. That always struck me. You have to be able to risk being awful.”
by: David Gendelman
published: November 9, 2009 in column: Feature Story
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