advertisement
follow us
Newsletter signup
Get a little Crawdaddy! right in the inbox once a week:
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.
Most Read Articles
- The Smoke-Filled Room: Music and a Woman’s Right to Choose
- What Goes On: Liam Gallagher Reveals Post-Oasis Plans, and Other News
- My Life Is the Road: Clarence White and Jim Morrison Stretch on a 747
- It Shows, What Goes On: Live Show Review: Devo at the Regency Ballroom, San Francisco
- What Goes On: This Just In: Steven Tyler Is the Rainbow
- Reviews: Weezer: Raditude
- Introducing: His Name Is John Michael Rouchell
polls
Loading ...-
Search results for: what is
Beck Comes Out on Top of Ridiculous, Somewhat Imaginary Band Feud
I’ve kinda been watching this one from a distance over the last week or so, trying not to care. But it’s gotten too ridiculous to ignore, and I suppose now is the right time to give you all the recap. Especially since, you know, today’s theme is all about our hungover brains being easily entertained with music people’s shit talkin’. That’s what today’s all about, in case you didn’t know.
SO. Way back in August, before we even had this blog, Radiohead released a one-off charity track called “Harry Patch (In Memory Of).” Patch was the last surviving UK veteran of WWI and died just recently at the age of 111. Proceeds from the single benefit the British Legion. Seems like a nice, sensible thing for a band to do, right?
Well, on November 3rd, the webzine Spinner ran an interview with the Fiery Furnaces in which the brother half of the duo, Matthew Friedberger, upon being told that Radiohead sent out a mass email describing the tribute, went fucking apeshit about it. He said, “F— you! You brand yourself by brazenly and arbitrarily associating yourself with things that you know people consider cool. That is bogus. That’s a put-on. That’s a branding technique and Radiohead have their brand that they’re popular and intelligent. So they have a song about Harry Patch.”
Confused? You should be. While I’m sure Harry Patch was a real cool guy, it’s a rather suspect thing for a band to align themselves with so to appear as thought they are all cool and obscure with their references. As it turns out, Friedberger confused war veteran Harry Patch with American composer Harry PaRtch. D’oh! Good one, dude.
THEN. Then, because he obviously had to answer to what was at least perceived as his giant fuck up, Friedberger issued a statement saying that he knew all along that it was Harry Patch, duh, and he just thought it would be funny to make a joke. Is that even believable though? I dunno…
The story gets better and continues on after the jump. read more
KISS at Arco Arena, Sacramento
KISS
November 19th at Arco Arena, Sacramento
The 1970s solidified hard, crushing rock ‘n’ roll, ushering in a new era of musical passion. Bands like Aerosmith, AC/DC, and Black Sabbath exploded onto the world stage with a loud and proud message of musical decadence. If your ears didn’t ring and your heart didn’t skip a beat, it wasn’t loud enough.
But wait! Don’t forget those kick ass guys from NYC—the ones with the painted faces, duel personas, and a musical approach that is irrefutable rock-solid. Celebrating the 35th anniversary of KISS’ classic album, Alive!, KISS hit the stage at Arco Arena following that well known battle cry, “You Wanted The Best! You Got The Best! The Hottest Band In The World! KISS!” Not since the June 20, 2004 Rock the Nation tour has Northern California been treated with such a rush of ear-splitting adrenaline. The boys from New York City are back and they’ve brought an Army of die-hard soldiers to conquer the masses.
Jim DeRogatis Slams the Pixies, Calls Them a “Hipper Journey”
[via Daily Swarm]
Man, hands up, who’s hungover today? Yeah, srsly. But you know what makes us feel a little better after having killed all those tiny little brain cells in our heads? News of people talking shit on other people. Yay! This time, it’s rock critic Jim DeRogatis taking the Pixies to task for cashing in on more reunion tours than any credible “hard-hearted punks” should. The band’s latest tour is centered around the 20th anniversary of their classic 1989 album, Doolittle, in which they play the album track-by-track.
I mean, I get what he’s saying. Five years since their “reunion” and no sign of new music, just kinda rakin’ it in at the expense of folk’s nostalgia. (Irony alert: The album is titled “doolittle” har har.) But the awesome part is when DeRogatis goes for the jugular by comparing the band to Creedence or Journey. read more
The Day Van Dyke Parks Went Calypso
When 80,000 barrels of oil spilled into the waters of the Santa Barbara Channel in January of 1969, the crude-splattered water, beaches, and birds along the California coast in its aftermath became the symbols of modern eco-disaster. While the ensuing public outcry helped hasten the formalization of the environmental movement as we now know it, for musician Van Dyke Parks, the spill and “the revelation of ecology,” as he calls it, was a very personal, life-altering occasion. “It changed my M.O. and changed my very reason for being,” he says. The Union Oil rig rupture in Santa Barbara made Parks go calypso.
“When I saw the Esso Trinidad Steel band, I saw myself in a Trojan Horse,” he says. “We were going to expose the oil industry. That’s what my agenda was. I felt it was absolutely essential.” From 1970 to 1975, Parks waged awareness of environmental and race matters through the music and culture of the West Indies, though in the end, “You don’t know whether to laugh or cry. That’s what makes Van Gogh go,” he says, “That’s what great art does.” Though Parks is referring directly to Esso Trinidad’s happy/sad steel drum sounds, he could just as easily be talking about his own experience during what we’ll dub the Calypso Years. read more
Superstars Record with Preservation Jazz Hall Band, and Other News
Quite a worthy collaboration between the 48-year old Preservation Jazz Hall Band and some notable artists, including Tom Waits, Andrew Bird, Dr. John, Jim James, Merle Haggard, and more. This benefit album will be due in February on RED records, and is one that you should be sure to pick up. (Pitchfork)
New York’s Jelly Pool Parties, which have gained notoriety for being, well, awesome, are in trouble. The concert series, having moved from Brooklyn to the East River State Park last year, may not have a venue for next summer. You can pledge your support to New York Senator Charles Schumer, who’s leading the fight to save the bashes. (CMJ)
Nick Cave has won a Booker Prize for this year’s Bad Sex in Fiction award, which honors “redundant passages of sexual description.” (Daily Swarm)
Morrissey, oh my god… He told an audience member to fuck himself and had him thrown out of his show in Hamburg the other night. I mean, the dude in the audience had it coming, but Morrissey’s fall tour seems ill-fated, does it not? (NME)
I know we haven’t even gotten to (let alone through) the holidays yet, but the summer festivals will literally be here before you know it. Bonnaroo and Monolith Festivals have some updates for the summer of ’10. (Stereogum)
Read more news after the jump. read more
The King Khan and BBQ Show at the Independent, San Francisco
The King Khan and BBQ Show, Those Darlins
November 18th at the Independent, San Francisco
Sure, it’s kind of a schtick. But when the King Khan and BBQ Show take the stage, King Khan scantily clad in a loin cloth and skimpy, shimmering top, BBQ in a hot pink turban, it’s not like you don’t know that they’re partially there to shock. Appearances aside, they put on one of the most entertaining shows I’ve seen in a while; what sounds like a band of five (or more!) is actually only two dudes.
All I knew about King Khan was that he puts on an eccentric live show. The Shrines, his last touring ensemble, was a large group replete with horns and stage theatrics, quite unlike the minimalist garage-y punk rock that the BBQ show was all about. I was sorta standing in the front/middle of the room, but I’m pretty short so I couldn’t really see what was going on up on stage. I could only see King Khan; he’s a pretty tall guy. I could tell there was a drummer sitting to his right, mostly because when I stood on my tiptoes I could see his turban. But I couldn’t tell where all the noise was coming from. Where was the tambourine? The drummer/multi-instrumentalist, BBQ (aka Mark Sultan), was playing the drums, and the tambourine, with his feet. And he was playing guitar, and singing too! Talk about a one-man show. Before too long his turban came off, a victim of the performance, and next thing I knew he was sporting a checkered cabbie cap. The set began with fuzzy, reverb-y garage rock and at times got pretty psychedelic, an onslaught of sound tinged by hypnotic fuzzy, guitar riffs. But it was mostly a punk rock, doo-wop inspired act. How about that for something different?
Radiohead Backlash Coming to a Proverbial Head, “Stupid Lists” Backlash Just Getting Started
[via Daily Swarm]
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
Robert Plant and Alison Krauss: Raising Sand
Robert Plant and Alison Krauss
Raising Sand
(Rounder, 2007)
In the wider circles of rock ‘n’ roll, the fall of 2007 was preoccupied with an event of global proportions, an event that had the media and marketing machines of the music industry talking about it way more and way longer than necessary: The Led Zeppelin reunion. Remember? Maybe right now, you read that in disbelief, thinking that it barely raised a blip on your own music radar, but really think back and I think you’ll agree with me. Music movers and shakers couldn’t seem to calm their collective excitement about what was going to go down, and it was mostly on the premise that the one-off reunion show set for December 10, 2007 was a mere inkling of what was yet to come, that being a full-scale tour. This, of course, never happened. The reunion show was pretty cool, I guess, if you were connected or rich enough to actually get there. But basically the concert came and went and now, in retrospect, two years later, it seems clear that it didn’t have much lasting significance, or relevance, or well… much of an impact at all.
In the wake of all that frenzy, there was actually news on the Zeppelin front worthy of our time and subsequent allegiance, and that was the release of the Robert Plant/Alison Krauss album, Raising Sand.
This album ended up going platinum and winning Album of the Year at the 2009 Grammy Awards, so it certainly received its critical and commercial due, but for me—and I bet for many who were sick of all the Zeppelin talk and speculation taking over our RSS feeds—I didn’t even listen to it back when it was actually released by Rounder in ’07. Raising Sand hit the market in the midst of the media storm. It was, and is, a collection of music that’s devoid of any hype or expectation, quite unlike that parallel project that brewed just beyond. Two years later, Raising Sand remains refreshingly free and disaffected—a surprise collaboration that was candidly captured and executed. And that innate harmony shines through on the recording.
Raising Sand is essentially a covers album. Producer T-Bone Burnett threaded the record together and gave it a stripped-down shell. Devoid of excessive studio polish or wizardry, Burnett injected warmth throughout by allowing the collection of songs to feed organically on its modest instrumentation and gorgeous vocal harmonies. Each song demands attention, as they revisit and celebrate the original author who penned it. The legend and lore of Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant is undermined by his folky versatility here, and it’s a testament to the truly angelic vocals of bluegrass nymph Alison Krauss. Who ever thought Plant’s signature spiky yowl could soften like this? Krauss could probably coax the devil out of hell with her rich, honeyed voice, and her perfect pitch effectively coerced Plant into melting right along with her.
The swaggering blues of the first track, “Rich Woman”, first recorded in 1955 by Li’l Millet and his Creoles, is a chilly opening to a record that steadily softens as its moves along. The following song is my favorite. “Killing the Blues” (written by Roly Salley) explores some of the duo’s most beautiful vocal harmonies. With softly thumping guitar chords and intermittent pedal steel, this song beckons sleepy afternoons under a weeping willow tree tossing cares to the wind, or a deserted, lonesome walk in a pattering rain shower headed nowhere in particular. They craft a mood for sure, but leave the song open enough for the listener to take it wherever he and she chooses.
Sam Phillips’ “Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us” is next, a sweet, haunting ode by Krauss accompanied by sparse instrumentation and a lackadaisical waltzing tempo. “Polly Come Home”, written by Gene Clark, is stiff and slow, but Plant sounds as gentle as we’ve ever heard him, his near-whispering vocals greeted by Krauss’ heavenly timbre, serving to lift the song to a place of loss and confusion as they incisively sing together, “I searched for you there, and now look for you from within / Polly come home again.”
“Gone Gone Gone (Done Moved On)”, an uptempo, countrified rocker by the Everly Brothers, swoops in to rescue the album from sinking too heavily into dreamy doldrums, and then “Through the Morning, Through the Night” (again by Gene Clark) takes the reins, steering us back to broken-hearted introspection. For a song that is already sad as hell, Plant and Krauss take it to a whole other level as they sing in harmony, “But to know that another man’s holding you tight / Hurts me little darling / Through the morning, through the night.”
“Please Read the Letter” was originally recorded by Plant and Jimmy Page for their ’98 album, Walking into Clarksdale, but this duo has, of course, turned it into yet another lonesome love song, albeit this one is a bit more hopeful and circuitous. Tom Waits and his wife/collaborator Kathleen Brennan wrote “Trampled Rose” (for 2004’s Real Gone album) and the distance between Waits and Krauss is not as far as you may think. Waits sings with rust on his lips and a bite in his growl, while Krauss’ delivery is entirely silky soft, but both of them capture the folky breadth of the song and carry with it their own desolation and desperation.
With “Fortune Teller” by Allen Toussaint (who wrote it under the pseudonym Naomi Neville back in 1962) comes Plant’s turn to take over vocal duties, his famous voice metered; he keeps his range within the limitations of the song. Krauss and Plant take on “Stick with Me Baby” (written by Mel Tillis) together, their harmonies hushed and humble, before Plant takes respectful liberties around Townes Van Zandt’s gritty “Nothin’” as saturated strings and a dark, fuzzy guitar unfurl and wind around his singing. “Let Your Loss Be Your Lesson” (by Little Milton) is an Allman Brothers-like country-rocker with a danceable, jangly rhythm, coming up for air just before the album closes out with the Doc Watson tune, “Your Long Journey.” With autoharp leading the way, this triumphant hymn is exactly the right way to end Raising Sand, tenderly accepting the departure at hand as Plant and Krauss together sing, “My heart breaks as you take your long journey.”
Word on the street is that Krauss and Plant are set to do another album together. This time, I’ll be welcoming it, even in the midst of any other media mayhem that might be happening on the outside.
Listen: “Killing the Blues” [at youtube.com]
Filter’s Excellent Article on the Jesus Lizard
I just got done reading Filter’s article from yesterday on the Jesus Lizard. It’s a necessary read, both for fans of the band and those who maybe don’t quite yet understand their draw or particular significance.
Writer Sam Shiffman recounts the first time he saw the Jesus Lizard, presumably back when they were nobodies, and it’s a real rock-lit treat, full of smelly, low-life patrons, a misery-meets-glory moment full of destruction and mayhem, not to mention David Yow’s manhood. The recount is followed up by a series of questions posed to each band member, mostly talking about why they got back together for a reunion tour. Gah, why did I miss them when they came around this part of town on their tour?!
From the article: “Then, out pops the singer. He looks just like my dad: short, greasy and psychotic, and is as ugly as we are. He rips his shirt off and starts braying about urine running down his legs. He can’t feel his eyes. I can’t feel my eyes…”
More celebratory Jesus Lizard after the jump. read more

Neutral Milk Hotel Live Footage Unearthed, and Other News
by: Angela Zimmerman
Interpol has a new record coming out in ’10 and say it’s more similar to their debut. Good news for fans of the exceptionally well-received Turn On the Bright Lights. (Guardian)
Steven Mason of Beta Band fame has announced that he’s releasing a solo album. (Strange Glue)
Big Pink moodily covers Beyoncé’s “Sweet Dreams.” (Stereogum)
If you’ve been debating getting yourself to ATP next year, this may provoke you to make the jump. The Stooges are doing Raw Power in its entirety. Awesome. (Pitchfork)
Sony is opening an online store to sell digital content. (Hypebot)
Check out this brief but interesting article on the past and future state of online music. (NPR)
Evan Dando from the Lemonheads is hitting Europe and the States for a solo tour this winter. (CMJ)
Read more news after the jump.
read more
by: Angela Zimmerman
published: November 20, 2009 in column: What Goes On
no comments yet