Showing posts with label articles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label articles. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

B.O.M.B. Fest 2011 Review

Snoop Dogg, at B.O.M.B. Fest, 2011. Photo by John Kritzman




Words: Monica Lyons
Pics: John Kritzman Full set of photos for DAY 1 HERE, and for DAY 2 HERE!

Click on the pics to enlarge them!

B.O.M.B. Fest kicked off this past Memorial Day weekend with its third annual festival containing several national and local artists from across the music spectrum. Moved from its original location at Western Connecticut State University to Hartford’s Comcast Theatre, B.O.M.B. Fest, standing for Bring Our Music Back, introduced a two day event first created by Frank Bombaci Jr. in 2009. In addition to bringing both small and large bands to a common ground with equal audiences, 70% all the show's proceeds goes to charities.

"I started B.O.M.B. Fest when I was a senior in high school," Bombaci explained, "Our high school makes us do a senior project, so I thought it would be cool to put on a music festival. Six weeks before our scheduled date, we finally got our stuff together and pulled through with eighteen bands and six touring acts. The Cool Kids and Say Anything headlined, and it was a lot smaller than it is this year, but we had 1200 people, so it was a positive, small first festival. So we said you know what? Let’s give it a go."

B.O.M.B. Fest has truly grown, with this year’s lineup featuring over 40 national acts and more than 25 local artists, including big names such as Weezer and Snoop Dogg. Unfortunately, a few acts backed out of the festival late in the game, with Wiz Kalifa stuck in Chicago due to inclement weather and a member of the Dum Dum Girls experiencing a death in the family.


One of the first bands to start the event over at the Budweiser stage was Distoria, a Queens-based group exploding with the catchy sounds of melodic pop rock. Soon after the group began performing, the sun finally broke through the gloomy overcast and engulfed the positive atmosphere surrounding the non-profit festival. Pianist and front woman, Helena Martin, whom grew up in Connecticut, shared her passion for music and the event. "I’ve been involved in B.O.M.B. festivals for three years now. I’ve played every year and I’ve been the local talent coordinator for two years," told Ms. Martin, "The reason I love playing at B.O.M.B. Fest is because it gives an opportunity for local artists like myself to play on a huge stage, to rub shoulders with some really big acts, and just kind of casually. Not only are we invited to play here, we’re welcome to play here and we’re treated equally. In addition to that, B.O.M.B. Fest also donates its profits to places that either promote healing or education through music. It’s really a win-win for everyone."

"Live Nation Connecticut has been really helpful," told Bombaci, "The charities are the most important part, we don’t take any money. We’ve had a lot of great sponsors but we don’t take any money back, we give it all to charity: the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp, Lyman Allyn, and YPI, which was an art camp that I went to when I was a kid."

Maria Gomez, whom works at the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp, belongs to just one of the organizations benefiting from the proceeds. "It’s a really great organization that brings music to the community but it also funds organizations that have music programming that helps kids go through some healing and express themselves in important ways," explained Ms. Gomez, "We’re glad to be here."

It was difficult to catch all of the overlapping performances of the two day fest, but I tried to experience as many small and live bands as possible. In one of the acts that played early on the first day at the Viva La Bomb stage was Roots of Creation, whom were introduced as being discovered online by Bombaci and invited to play at B.O.M.B. Fest for the past three years in a row. With the crowd moving and grooving to the reggae beats emerging from the five-piece band, smoke billowed across the stage through flashing, multicolored lights. Their smooth, feel-good vibe radiated across the grounds with more and more people attracting to the stage, as lead singer Brett Wilson invited everyone to step forward and fill the gap between crowd and stage. Wilson also expressed his support of the cause and satisfaction of helping others while still putting on an awesome show. "When I was starting out with our band, there wasn’t opportunities like this, to play with a bunch of national bands that are bigger, that you look up to, you can make friends with and establish contacts with," said Wilson, "I think it’s awesome. I’m all about non-profits; we do benefits all the time. As far as music goes, all of the artists that I look up to are trying to make a difference in the world, so we’re just trying to do our part."










Wavves hit the main stage as a large, young crowd gathered in the pit. The rad, rebelious ambiance of the Californian three-piece band certainly held true to their fun, don’t care, never-gonna-grow up songs full of catchy melodies and noise pop. After lead singer and guitarist Nathan Williams publically thanked a group of sixteen-year-olds for getting them high, Wavves went on to play songs such as "King of the Beach" and "No Hope Kids."

Immediately following Wavves on the main stage was The Guru, an indie, funk rock band from small, surrounding towns in Connecticut. With an array of bandanas swinging from the neck of their bass and the drummer adorning a Capitan’s hat, The Guru has such immense style and personality that bursts through their hip, fetching songs, such as "Taste." Representing one of the local bands of B.O.M.B. Fest, they were happy to show their support for other bands. "B.O.M.B. Fest is unique in that it helps all levels of the music scene," explained bassist Dan George, "There’s national acts like Weezer, that people come to see, and it’ll introduce them to smaller national acts like Wavves or Best Coast, that they might not be as familiar with. People can get familiar with smaller local artists and then it benefits the kids at the bottom, so they start new bands. It’s a whole top-down thing." The Guru spills a feel-good atmosphere that you can’t help but get down to, which was obvious by the looks of the crowd.

Another act that played the main stage was the indie punk sound of Titus Andronicus. The New Jersey band came with great vigor as lead singer Patrick Stickles sang with fellow guitarist Amy Klein jumping up and down beside him, an endless smile on her face. Toward the end of their set, Titus Andronicus got the crowd waving their arms in their air to the lyrics "I will always be a loser" from their song "No Future Part III: Escape from No Future."


Later, at the Budweiser stage, Dan Deacon truly stole the show in terms of audience participation and crazy energy. Forming a close contact shell of sweaty hyped-up kids around him at floor level, Dan Deacon busted electronic beats that had everyone at jumping and pushing each other. During his performance, he also had everyone form a circle, in which he gave the a large synopsis of the movie "Big" and gave instructions for individuals in the middle to dance like they were the mother in the film, just finding a grown man in their son’s bed. Once this dance affair was over, everyone ran toward each other to dance in the middle. To end his originally dynamic and spastically hip set, he formed a dancing human tunnel.









With two people forming a tower with their hands, someone would go underneath and stand next to them to form the same stance with another person, and repeat all the way from the Budweiser stage, to the top of the stairs, back down the other, and then some. It was truly ridiculous. Dan Deacon really knows how to get a party started, or at least, moving.

The Cool Kids took to the main stage to bring a hip hop element to B.O.M.B. Fest, in which they bumped the bass so loud I saw a girl in front of me hold her chest and say to her friend, "I can’t breathe."

HEALTH delivered an eerie set full of raw synth, screeching guitar, and heavy drum hits. Playing songs such as "We Are Water," and "Die Slow," bassist/noisemaker John Famiglietti swung his long, black hair gracefully through the air and swayed while hitting a drum in the center of the stage. I thought their performance was something beautiful.

Other bands to perform were the lo-fi folk rock sounds of Woods, which were introduced by Dan Deacon. "We went to college together but I never really see those guys very often so that was really fun," commented Deacon.


Best Coast also performed on the main stage, opening with the dreamy vocals and fuzzy styling of their song "Bratty B." The indie, surf pop three piece also went on to perform songs such as "Crazy for You" and "When I’m With You." Front woman Bethany Cosentino closed the set by dedicating their last song to her dad and cat, Snacks, back in California.

Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros gave a beautiful performance with their large group casting a warm, cozy atmosphere through indie folk and alternative country pop ballads. Finishing out their set with a longer, dramatic rendition of their single "Home," the band had the whole crowd singing along with them, which had then grown quite large.

Finishing out the first day of B.O.M.B. Fest at the main stage was the one of the major headliners,

Weezer. Most to all of the goers of the festival gathered in the pit, lounged in seats, and sprawled out across lawn of the pavilion. As Weezer’s giant glowing logo of a jazzed-up "W" illuminated behind them, the band played an even mixture of songs from across their albums such as "El Scorcho" from Pinkerton all the way to "Pork and Beans" from the Red Album. Fans replicated the logo with their hands and rocked them high toward the stage as singer Rivers Cumo delivered far more energy than I thought he could. In an encore performance, Weezer returned and impressively killed a cover of Radiohead’s "Paranoid Android." They finished out with their popular hit "Buddy Holly," which sent everyone going nuts.

Chalk Talk, an energetic surf band from Massachusetts, was one of the first acts to open the second day of the festival, and showed a positive outlook on B.OM.B. Fest for the CT music scene. "B.O.M.B. Fest is really cool because it really gives local small bands that have no connections at all a real chance to play a real stage with legitimate bands," explained Bryce, guitarist in Chalk Talk, "It’s great, especially for Connecticut, because there’s a ton of bands in Connecticut, a lot of active bands. It’s really good to have something bigger for them to branch out outside of the halls, and from like the normal ten friends that come out."

Mark Nussbaum Talks BOMB Fest, from Manic Productions (his booking and promotional project) has played a huge part in promoting B.O.M.B. Fest. "I think that any time an event happens in Connecticut that wouldn’t normally, it makes people look and go 'Oh, that’s in Connecticut?" told Nussbaum, "I think it’s kind of a big deal, it might make other bands look at Connecticut in a different way, maybe they’ll see Connecticut and say 'Oh we should play there.' It’s kind of like when we’re doing our shows, a lot of the bands that we book will skip over Connecticut and do New York and Boston, of course, every time. They always have that day off in between, so when we grab them, now more and more bands are coming here because of that. I think that with an event this big, maybe some other festivals will pop up."

Against Me!, dressed in all black, played an aggressive set on the main stage earlier in the day. With anarcho-punk songs containing themes such as pro-choice, the band played songs from their album Reinventing Axl Rose through their newest album, White Crosses, as powerfully delivered through the help of front man Tom Gabel’s in-your-face vocals. The angst that emerges through their songs created a pushy mosh pit on the floor, in which one girl later pushed past me covering her bloody nose.

Calming the main stage, State Radio performed with soft, harmonizing vocals and a subtle reggae style. The Massachusetts band played cool, light-hearted songs such as "Doctor Ron the Actor" and "Right Me Up."

Budweiser stage brought the bizarre, funhouse appeal of Man Man, as front man Ryan Kattner, aka Honus Honus, climbed over neon accented instruments while wearing white face paint.

12th Planet later brought hard hitting dubstep to the Fest which sent goers over the top. People were moshing, grinding, jumping, break dancing, punching and going wild to the masterings of Los Angeles' own John Dadzie, whom has been called American Dubstep King.

To close out B.O.M.B. Fest, people quickly packed into the main pavilion and anxiously awaited for Snoop Dogg’s delayed performance. As the crew set up a DJ station, a drum set, amps, and other equipment, I knew this performance was going to be ridiculous. After a long wait, two body guards cornered themselves on either side of the stage. His sound mixer, smoking a blunt, hyped up the crowd by repeatedly asking if we were ready for Snoop Dogg. Finally, the man himself emerged with three scantily-clad backup dancers.

Snoop Dogg gripped a diamond plated microphone as he glided across the stage with total swag. The crowd was completely going crazy, screaming lyrics, and throwing their hands in the air as he rapped "What’s My Name," "Gin and Juice," "Drop it Like it’s Hot," and other classics and new hits. Snoop Dogg even paid homage to Nate Dogg, Tupac, and Biggie Smalls by mastering the deceased rappers' songs and asking everyone to pay their respects. Snoop put so much life and entertainment into his set such as holding a screaming match between the "East" and "West" sides of the crowd and holding his mic toward the audience for lyrical participation. I couldn’t believe how much marijuana Snoop and his crew were smoking on stage, even taking a smoke break in the middle of his set. I still don’t know how they got away with it. I guess laws don't apply when your name is Snoop Dogg.

Overall, B.O.M.B. Fest held two beautiful days of impressive acts from across the music scene. The excitement and gratitude from everyone who took part in the event was strong and the chatter of the next fest is already rising. It proved to be a very successful experience for all.

"I just want to thank everyone for supporting us," said Bombaci, "I want to let people know that we want to grow. Without the support, we can’t grow. We have big ideas for the future; we want people to keep supporting not only us, but also those charities and local music in Connecticut."

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Jukebox The Ghost @ The Space 1/28



This Friday night, the 28th, Philly indie pop band, Jukebox The Ghost will play at The Space in Hamden. The show starts at 7pm and will be supported by CT band The Guru, NJ band Goodman Brown and NY band Great Dane.

During a conversation with Jukebox´s Ben Thornwill he told me that the five week long tour is just starting and a part of it will be on a cruise liner opening up for Barenaked Ladies. Needless to say they´re looking forward to getting away from the cold for a while and who could blame them.

The band has released two records 2008´s Let Live and Let Ghost and Everything Under the Sun that came out on Yep Roc last fall. Their first record was pretty successful by indie standards and Ben credits that to the fact that the band was relentless on the road and played over 300 concerts to promote it. Its highest chart position was #38 on Billboard´s Top Independent Albums. So it´s clear that their hard work paid off and they have been able to give up their daytime jobs.

Everything Under the Sun was recorded here in Connecticut by Peter Katis in his Bridgeport Studio. They didn´t see much of the city since they came here and stayed for about five days at a time. Most of that time was spent working on the record which took them two months in total to make. It was recorded on both tape and hard drive, drums and some guitar were analog and the rest digital.

Last September they were asked to do the David Letterman Show 12 hours in advance. Ben was in Philly when the offer came and the rest of the band in NYC. They jumped on the chance and according to Ben it was an amazing experience to do the show.

So come Friday night put on your snowboots and get yourself to The Space in Hamden and enjoy the show. Admission is $12 or better yet $10 if you buy your ticket in advance.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

The Outer Space Kick Starter campaign


The Outer Space has just launched a Kick Starter campaign. This campaign is for 60 days starting Dec 23; please consider donating as little as $1 to support the cause. http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1645430146/build-the-outer-space-the-spaces-brand-new-sister.

The Outer Space is located in a separate building 130 feet from The Space in the same parking lot. It is a 79 capacity cafe, listening room and lounge. They are working through mountains of complicated paperwork so that The Outer Space will be able to serve Beer and Wine to their patrons who are OVER 21.

The Outer Space is a strong addition to what The Space already offers.

Booking for The Outer Space will begin on Jan 3rd and is available for Private Parties, Rentals, Art Openings, and Film Showings. Bring your ideas to help this venue grow.

The Outer Space will have a soft opening in mid January. The Grand Opening Splash will be held the first two weeks of February. Two full weeks of fundraiser shows with the purpose of helping to cover a portion of the project budget will be held. Various local promoters will be presenting a few of these shows and everyone is excited about the collaborative effort.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Ephemeroptera Quarterly LAUNCH!

Tuesday, January 18 · 7:30pm - 10:00pm:

Location:
Detritus at Project Storefronts
71 Orange Street
New Haven, CT

0+ to refresh, 21+ to imbibe

Celebrate the inaugural edition of "Ephemeroptera Quarterly", a micro edition publication featuring a 10-inch lathe cut record and contributions from crucial artists from New Haven and beyond.

Issue I, Volume I features sounds and pages by Paul Metzger, Stefan Christensen, Mark Geist, and Jon Eriksen; pages by Stephen Ross, Daniel Greene, Gabriella Svenningsen, and Rick Omonte; and covers by Phil Lique. Edition of 30.

Celebrate Ephemeroptera Quarterly with a listening party at Detritus featuring live music by Jon Eriksen, sides by Shaki, and the record. Copies of Ephemeroptera Quarterly will be available.

Refreshments courtesy of BRU Cafe.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Interview with Chris Grosso of The Indie Spiritualist


The Indie Spiritualist is a new website devoted to... well... a whole bunch of stuff. From spirituality to skateboarding, and the music that permeates it all, Connecticut native Chris Grosso is making it his mission to explore his varying interests, and how they intersect, all for our reading pleasure.



CTI: What were your inspirations when you were getting started?

CG: I'm the type of person who has to have some sort of creative outlet or I'll eventually lose my shit. One of my bands had taken a hiatus (and has since broken up), and the other hadn't had much time to work on stuff either due to conflicting schedules. So I was going through the motions of working, going to school, and interning and it began to get really mundane, really fast. I knew I needed to do something, but wasn't sure what. I didn't have time for anything musically, and needed whatever I was going to do to work around my schedule. One day as I was driving, the idea of doing a website just sort of hit me. I was definitely on the fence about it at first. I mean, there's enough people on the web running their mouths about this or that, which got me to thinking...why not run a site about the stuff that I'm into, which is really pretty eclectic, but present it through the eyes, and words of others, via interviews and features etc.

So I got it up and running and wasn't really sure what to expect regarding the response at first. Like I said, it’s pretty eclectic. I have an interview with Jeff from Isis about horror movies, next to a piece on metaphysics, next to an interview with The High Priest from The Church of Satan, next to an interview with Hip Hop artist Benn Grim etc, etc...but that's the stuff I'm into, and it's actually gotten a really positive, strong response in the short time I've been doing it. I had to go into it with the attitude that if people dig it- cool, and if not, that's cool too, just as long as I had some sort of outlet which also contributed to others as well.

CTI: Indie Spiritualist covers very different topics, but they all manage to come together in just the right way. Did you have a theme in mind when you set out, or did you let it develop on its own?

CG: Yeah, I guess I had a very loose idea of where I wanted to go with it, but I’ve intentionally tried not to set a concrete vision. I’d really like for it to grow organically into whatever beast it will. I’m sure it will be different next month as I’m currently focusing on a lot of Halloween features, as it’s my favorite holiday…Plus having guys from Isis, Cable and The Church of Satan on board to contribute has only enabled my self-indulgence.

I’m working on doing an Independent/Counter-Culture Business Feature next month which I’m excited about (it actually began early with your interview Mr Devin). I’ll be talking with Ben from Verellen Amps (Minus The Bear, Sunny Day Real Estate, Botch etc), Darren Walters Co-Owner of Jade Tree Records, Mark and Ben from Manic Productions, Josh at Redscroll Records, and a slew of others. Plus, I have a lot of interesting folks lined up for non-business related subjects.

Then December is going to be focused on skateboarding. So if you take all of that into consideration, you can see how it’d be virtually impossible to try and set a particular theme for the site, and then follow through on it.

CTI: As far as having different topics all under one roof, Arthur Magazine comes to mind, but that publication is, at least superficially, bound to the 1960s. Do you think there is a new counterculture coming together, one that Indie Spiritualist is giving voice to?

CG: Haha, I wish I could say I’m so influential, then again, you never know. I really don’t know if there is a new counter-culture happening. I can definitely say there is a growing trend in spirituality and the indie culture, especially in Buddhism. You have Dharma Punx, which is Noah Levine’s stab at fusing Buddhism with punk rock/indie/hardcore. There’s also author Brad Warner who’s written such books as Hardcore Zen, Sit Down and Shut Up, and Zen Wrapped in Karma Dipped in Chocolate, which are all wonderful because they take the dogma surrounding spirituality and throw it right out window. One can read these books and realize you can be spiritual and swear, and listen to whatever music you want, or watch whatever TV/Movies you want etc.

Spirituality is such a beautiful, sacred thing and unfortunately, it’s had a very dark cloud cast upon it due to humans inept response to fear. For example, say an individual finds solace in Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism, or whatever…which offers them comfort. If it ended there, that would be wonderful. The problem however, is a lot of people identify their belief as the only true reality, thus shutting themselves off to others and creating a false, egoic sense of separation.

What seems to be happening now though is that more people, especially younger people, are really opening up to different ideas. Personal paradigms are beginning to be examined and that’s an amazing thing! So I suppose what I’m trying to do with my site, is create another place, where people can come and read about a lot of different stuff, and possibly find a connection between some of it.

CTI: Music and spirituality get along pretty well, but what about the horror movies? Hatchet II and Buddhism? What's the connection?

CG: You mean to tell me you’re not familiar with the ancient tradition of Zen and the Art of Gratuitous Sex and Violence? I kid. It’s funny because I recently took a Reiki Attunement Level I class, and during the lunch break, the Reiki Master (Craig Gilbert) and I were discussing zombie flicks. I mean, here we are, spending all morning talking about some beautiful, spiritual stuff, followed by doing some really powerful energy work, and then we spend our lunch break with an in-depth conversation on zombies and their brain eating ways.

I think people, especially some "spiritual" people, need to lighten up! It amazes me that folks aren’t dropping dead of heart attacks left and right, you know? The Indie Spiritualist tries to fuse independent culture with spirituality, and sometimes it’s not always there. Sometimes you just need to let cannibals be cannibals and meditators be meditators. I wonder if there are meditating cannibals somewhere out there?

CTI: And you’re covering skateboarding, but not just some local punks tooling around on a curb. What drew you to legend Mike Vallely?

CG: In all fairness, the local punks tooling around on the curb are the true heart of skateboarding, but at the same time, I doubt anyone is going to read an interview with them besides friends and family.

As for Mike V, he’s an icon. I’ve admired him since I was probably about 8 years old, when I was riding the original Tony Hawk Powell Peralta board and watching Animal Chin. And besides his well documented, insane fights, he’s a very stand up guy. He has real heart and integrity. He deserves the status he has in the skateboarding community.

I’m also interviewing another legend, Chuck Treece, who besides being a skateboarding icon, is also a founding member of McRad and has played in Bad Brains…I could go on and on about Chuck. Check his Wiki page for more on him!

I grew up skateboarding and it will always hold a dear place in my heart. I’m 32 and still have a deck in my trunk because sometimes you just need to break it out and have a session.

CTI: There's been a long tradition of skating and underground music going hand in hand. Do you think that still holds true today?

CG: I’d have to assume so. Honestly, I don’t know what a lot of the kids listen to these days. They still wear band shirts like we did when I was younger, I’m just not really familiar with any of those bands. I did an interview with Steve Karp of Yuppicide recently and he was talking about back in the day when you’d flip to the back of Thrasher and see the ad for Suicidal Tendencies shirts, and then you’d write Mike Muir directly and he’d ship it off to you. That was really special for us.

I don’t know if that’s really happening anymore. It may be on some level, but definitely not to the extent of the 80’s/early 90’s. Skateboarding is more socially acceptable now, and that’s great for the kids. When I was in high school, we were looked at as complete fuck ups, not only by the teachers, but the majority of the community. Don’t get me wrong, we certainly did our share of mischief making, but usually the bigger stuff like vandalism etc had nothing to do with us. Actually, that’s not true either. I’m thinking back to a video my friends and I shot over the course of a summer called "Devastation In Me Land," and yeah…next subject please.

CTI: You do a ton of interviews. What have been some of your favorites so far?

CG: Hands down, the interview with We Are Scientists was my favorite so far. Those guys were ridiculous in a really great way! I generally hate transcribing interviews, but I was laughing my ass off on that one. I also really enjoyed the Horror Movie Q and A with Jeff from Isis and Randy and Pete from Cable. I told them to have fun with it and they definitely did! Danielle Harris was also special for me because the Halloween films have always been my favorite horror movies, and to talk to the star of part 4 and 5 was really cool.

I consciously choose to interview people that have impacted my life in some way, shape or form, so I can conduct a really sincere interview, with content that means something…at least to me, but hopefully others too.

CTI: Speaking of Danielle Harris, I've been meaning to ask, do you think you could pass her number on to me? I'd like to, uh, talk music with her sometime.

CG: The best part of that question is you’re not the first person who’s asked me for her number to "talk music" since the interview. Boys and their penises… And with that, I bid ye farewell.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Conversion Party Seeking Practice Space



A message from Matt Clark of Conversion Party:

I'm reaching out to see if you may know of any bands in the greater New Haven area that have a practice space that they'd be willing to share with us (we'd pay, obviously), or if there are any places where spaces are available for rent. Half of the band lives in New York, while the other half lives near New London, and we just lost our midway space, which was in Norwalk, CT, so we're trying to find a new space.

Basically anywhere from New Haven to Bridgeport would be doable for us (the closer to Bridgeport, the better probably, but we're beggars here, not choosers). We'd need a spot where we were guaranteed a dedicated weekend day/night once a week.


Send an email to conversionparty [AT] gmail [DOT] com with any information.

Thanks!

Friday, August 27, 2010

DETRITUS Opens

Friday, August 27, 2010:


Location:
DETRITUS
71 Orange Street
New Haven, CT

RSVP to this event here.

On Friday, August 27, 2010, DETRITUS opens its doors. From 6 pm - 8 pm, words and refreshments, compliments of Bespoke, will be offered.

DETRITUS is a curated bookstore offering chapbooks, artist books, zines, and other editioned and ephemeral print media, opening in downtown New Haven. DETRITUS has been furbished with repurposed industrial materials, and the shelves stocked with an eclectic mix of independent and local print media. Included will be Showpaper (bands take note, as much as Showpaper poopoos the internet, we love and support what they do), the Judges Cave box set, 12 Sun Songs, and Bas Morsch (The Moi Non Plus). Also, along with the ever awesome Redscroll Records, DETRITUS will be another source for tickets to all Manic Productions shows.

For the next few months, DETRITUS will host engaging, interactive events that facilitate collaboration and engage the community. Events like multimedia readings, film screenings, workshops, and book signings, all to meet their goal of bringing our creative community together, and expand its reach beyond New Haven.



There will be an all ages after-party at Popeye's Garage by Shaki Presents featuring Sunburned Hand of Man, Rubber Leather, and Creepoid at 8 pm. RSVP to the event here.


This whole project would be impossible without the generous support of several entities:

DETRITUS is a project of The Dirty Pond, a locally-focused online literary journal. DETRITUS is made possible through the support of Project Storefront, a pilot program of New Haven's Economic Development Corporation, the Departments of Economic Development and Cultural Affairs, and New Haven Festivals, Incorporated. Through the generous support of the Residences at Ninth Square, DETRITUS is located at 71 Orange Street in the heart of downtown New Haven's Ninth Square and granted a lease of 90 days. DETRITUS is also a fiscally sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, and through this organization has been granted temporary 501(c)3 status.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Hostage Calm- S/T; Release Celebration

Saturday, August 21, 2010:


The job of all local music blogs is to exaggerate the greatness of the scene in their particular state. It isn’t uncommon to read that Band A’s latest LP is a classic record that will be shared for generations, or that Band B puts on a live show that is among the best that the reviewer has ever seen. This trait seems to be common in the fans of area music as well, and it’s completely understandable because a truly great local band unites people from all over the region and gives them something to be proud about, not unlike a championship winning sports team. Now Hostage Calm’s self titled album is not one of the best records I’ve ever heard, I’m not going to make any statements that I know are not true and I cannot back up entirely, and giving relentless praise to this band as a truly classic ensemble of musicians isn’t something I can justify. That said, Hostage Calm have put out the best album by a band from this state in 2010.

Hostage Calm used to be a hardcore band, and a damn good one. Lens, their debut full length was a half hour of aggressive punk rock with politically savvy lyrics and a unique spin on a genre that tends to be riddled with cliches. Their self titled sophomore release can be described in a similar manner; aggressive, political and unique, but instead of the band tackling hardcore they chose to try pop music. Yes, that’s right, Hostage Calm is very much a pop album, filled with Latin tinged guitar riffs, layer upon layer of harmonies and grandiose sing-a-long choruses. Lyrically, the album is fantastic. Vocalist Chris Martin, who has greatly improved his singing voice from his previous work, writes songs about revolution (Rebel Fatigues), wasted potential (Wither on the Vine) gay marriage (Ballots/Stones) and the decay of youth (Jerry Rumspringer) all while maintaining a personable and refreshing lyrical tone. Martin is knowledgeable, personal and opinionated, but never pretentious nor banal. Musically, the other 4 members of Hostage Calm have their instruments down to a science. The rhythm section of this band continually blows me away. The drumming is among the most tight and intricate of any band currently making music and the bass lines are constantly groovy and captivating. The guitar riffs are almost always worthy of shaking your hips to and even the chord progressions aren’t predictable and trite.


Now that Hostage Calm has signed to a decent sized label (Run For Cover Records), toured the US a few times, played some of the biggest hardcore and punk festivals in the country, and released two stellar full length albums, it seems that they are poised to get exceptionally bigger. With their stylistic changes, but their ability to remain faithful to their roots in the hardcore and punk scene, it is almost impossible to not envision Hostage Calm becoming more widely appreciated in the music community. And as residents of Connecticut, readers of CT Indie and fans of local music, its clear we have to pull for them and support them in their endeavors. Isn’t that what being involved in this scene is all about? It’s about the pride that we feel when one of our own is recognized nationally. It’s happened before and it seems certain to happen again. Take this as your warning, and don’t jump on the bandwagon too late.

Hostage Calm isn’t having a release show for this album, they are having a release celebration! On Saturday, August 21 at the Cheshire Masonic Temple at 6pm, the band will play a headlining set with support from Pennsylvania Pop Punk band Title Fight, Connecticut emo/indie favorites My Heart to Joy, CT indie pop ensemble Midi and the Modern Dance and CT groovy hardcore band Heavy Breath. The mixed bill has at least one band that nearly everyone likes, and to be quite frank, is a damn good show and is worth coming out early for (and it's for a good cause; see below).

"To celebrate the release of their self-titled record,
Hostage Calm will be joined by their friends in,
My Heart To Joy
Title Fight
Midi & The Modern Dance
and Heavy Breath

Saturday August 21st at the Cheshire Masonic Temple
9 Country Club Road, Cheshire CT
Doors at 5:30, Music at 6 PM sharp
DON'T BE LATE.

$8 Admission, $2 from each ticket will benefit COMMUNITY ENTERPRISE SOLUTIONS, a social entrepreneurship organization focused on providing safe drinking water to poor, rural communities in Central America."


Listen to four songs from the Hostage Calm self titled full length here.

RSVP to the Release Celebration here.

Photo credits to Alan Huck and Future-Breed, respectively.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Get Haunted's Vol. 1


Get Haunted's Volume 1 is a musical anthology of horror stories that loves long shadows and letting our more twisted sides get some needed exercise. Each of the eight songs come with a lyric card that has a different illustration which summarizes the story being told. The images remind me of a cross between Stephen Gammell and the simple Fred Banbery illustrations that were in those old Alfred Hitchcock books such as Ghostly Gallery. I don't think it's a coincidence that the illustrations are making me think of books that are aimed at young readers, either. I think, in a way, the songs are aimed at the kid in us that used to worry that whatever was under our beds was going to feast on our guts. Think about it. What was under the bed as we got older? Dirty laundry, porn mags, a bag of weed, the box your sister kept the sharp shit in that she used to cut herself with? And then you get even older and what is it, that folded up Bowflex you never use? Lame. I'll take an imaginary gut eater over that crap any day.

I like the name Get Haunted. Compare it to being told to get undressed - easily understood because we know what a state of undress is. But a person can become haunted by just about anything. The thing is that Joey and Sarah Macrino deliver their plunking and pounding with a conviction that says they know precisely what best to get haunted by. And I am pretty sure that it is more by what can be sensed than by what can be seen. Escaping the slowly blooming insanity within some small backward American town is very different from being chased by a monster, let's just say.

Then again, Cedar Grove starts out with a bag-headed slasher looking through the woods for Joey. There's Frankenstein too, with that most famous of monsters breaking its chains by the tune's end, leaving Dr. Franky to realize that his experiment was actually a real bad idea. But both songs are actually about staying the hell away from places and things that we have no business messing with. To get haunted is about developing enough sense to take those no trespassing signs dead serious.

Still, the thrill of doing things you know you shouldn't never gets old. Get Haunted is the barn-punk that kids of The Handsome Family would play. All the energy and enthusiasm is there, along with the key attitude of turning shaky proficiency on an instrument into an inventive sound. They sing about old dark houses, inner beasts, and exorcism, but make it fun. Anyone that pretends these themes are just too icky for them forgets that there is a reason why the very real Ed Gein, who was once most happy when wearing a full bodysuit of someone else's skin, is a pop culture perennial to this very day. It's the same reason all you rubberneckers cause traffic jams. The difference is that Get Haunted are drawing from the same traditions that tales such as those by the Brothers Grimm and the American folklore from generations past were rooted in. These are cautionary tales, which is, in my opinion, the right kind of horror to get haunted by.

You can download tracks from Get Haunted's Bandcamp, including their most recent release From the Basement.

And hey you two, congratulations on the birth of Elvis Jude!

Monday, July 19, 2010

Interpol, Kurt Vile, Modest Mouse, Flaming Lips - in One Day

Saturday, July 24, 2010:

This will be a tricky day. You have the Interpol show at Toad's, with the late Kurt Vile Lilly's Pad show happening upstairs. You can definitely catch at least some of Real Estate and all of Kurt Vile if you head straight up there after Interpol. Meanwhile, Modest Mouse is playing at the Oakdale, but the Flaming Lips are playing up in Holyoke at Mountain Park. Anyhow, you have plenty of time between now and July 24th to figure out what you're going to do.


Location:
Toad's Place
300 York Street
New Haven, CT

All Ages - Doors 8:00/Music 9:00 - $30.00 Advance/Day of

Order tickets now

Tickets (w/the exception of etix.com printouts) for the 7/21 date will be honored

No, Interpol's Toad's show is not canceled. Interpol are getting their tour (opening for U2) moving again, which was discombobulated after Bono had to have emergency back surgery. They will again open for U2 come mid-September. In the meantime, Interpol continues as headliner, with Twin Tigers opening, starting here in New Haven at Toad's on July 24. September will also mark the release of Interpol's newest record, which will oddly be self-titled. More interesting is that their bassist Carlos Dengler left the band and was replaced by David Pajo, formerly of the legendary Slint. He's more of a guitarist than a bassist and he's definitely been around the block, having played for the Yeah Yeah Yeahs as a touring multi-instrumentalist, as well as played for Tortoise, Stereolab, and a whole slew of other bands.

Twin Tigers are yet another solid Anthens, GA band. Joel Hatstat of Pegasuses-XL, a sort of elecro-dance-punk project, helped record Curious Faces/Violet Future, Twin Tigers' self-released debut EP. They blend tiny and big with soft and psycho, and keep their poppiness on the darker end of the spectrum.











Interpol current tour:

07-24 New Haven, CT – Toad's Place !
07-25 Baltimore, MD – Ram's Head Live !
07-29 Richmond, VA – The National !
07-30 Norfolk, VA – The NorVA !
07-31 Atlantic City, NJ – House of Blues !
08-04 Montclair, NJ – Wellmont Theatre !
08-05 Boston, MA – House of Blues !
08-06 Clifton Park, NY – Northern Lights !
08-09 Montreal, Quebec – Metropolis !
08-10 Toronto, Ontario – Kool Haus !
08-11 Pontiac, MI – Clutch Cargo !
08-13 Milwaukee, WI – The Rave !
08-14 Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue !
08-15 Chicago, IL – Vic Theatre !
08-18 Charleston, SC – The Music Farm !
08-19 Lake Buena Vista FL – House of Blues !
08-21 Miami Beach, FL - The Fillmore !
09-16 Caen, France - Le Cargo
09-18 Paris, France - Stade De France *
09-21 Lille, France - Aeronef
09-22-23 Brussels, Belgium - Stade Roi Boudoin *
09-25 Bordeaux, France - Le Vigean
09-26 San Sebastian, Spain - Anoeta Stadium *
09-28 Grenada, Spain - La Industrial Copera
09-29 Seville, Spain - Olympic Stadium *
10-01 Santiago, Spain - Santiago De Compostela
10-02-03 Coimbra, Portugal - Estadio Cidade Coimbra *
10-05 Bilbao, Spain - Teatro Campos Eliseos
10-06 Toulouse, France - Li Bikini
10-08 Rome, Italy - Olympic Stadium *
10-08 Rome, Italy - Olympic Stadium *
10-29-31 New Orleans, LA - Voodoo Experience
11-12 Lisbon, Portugal - Campo Pequeño
11-13 Madrid, Spain - Palacio Vistalegre
11-14 Barcelona, Spain - San Jordi Club
11-16 Marseille, France - Dock Du Sud
11-17 Milan, Italy - Palasharp
11-18 Vienna, Austria - Gasometer
11-20 Berlin, Germany - Tempodrom
11-21 Amsterdam, Netherlands - Heineken Music Hall
11-22 Dortmund, Germany - Westfalenhalle 2
11-24 Nottingham, England - Rock City
11-25 Newcastle, England - O2 Academy
11-26 Birmingham, England - O2 Academy
11-27 Edinburgh, Scotland - Corn Exchange
11-29-12-01 Dublin, Ireland - Olympia
12-03 Manchester, England - Apollo
12-04 Liverpool, England - Liverpool University
12-06-07 London, England - O2 Academy Brixton

! with Twin Tigers
* with U2



Saturday, July 24 - Manic Productions presents a LATE unofficial after-party Co-Headline Show:


Location:
Lilly's Pad (Toad's Place Upstairs)
300 York Street Street
New Haven CT

$12 - 10:00PM - All Ages (21+ to drink)

Directions

Buy tickets now or pick them up at Redscroll Records

Facebook event page

Kurt Vile (previously of The War on Drugs) is a guitarist and singer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that makes fucked up, delayed, hazy, psychedelic, “bedroom” pop music in which you might recognize early Tyrannosaurus Rex, Devendra Banhart, and Ariel Pink like sounds. He plays both solo shows as well as shows with a backing band called The Violators. He just released a new EP called Square Shells.



This is Kurt Vile and Sore Eros!

Real Estate waft in on vibes of hazy summers past. The New Jersey quartet of Martin Courtney IV, Matthew Mondanile III, Etienne Pierre Duguay and Alex Bleeker cut the sleeves short and the pop smooth to shade you from the midday heat. Every song works its way to that part of your consciousness that reveled in the fleeting waves of freedom that eked in once classes broke and the sun lingered a little longer over suburban roofs. And with three quarters of the band holding down Garden State roots its no surprise that a bit of Jersey indie-pop heritage sneaks its way into their sound, lifting the most sun streaked moments from The Feelies and Yo La Tengo and filtering them through the kaleidoscope of memories aimless drives through parched neighborhood streets. Mexican Summer/Woodsist



Sore Eros' Robert Robinson used to be a member of Kurt Vile's band. I was told he's from Enfield, CT but is now based with our favorite northern neighbor Northampton, MA. He reminds me of the Supreme Dicks, which used to be based in Northampton, but that was ages ago.
"Robinson's vocals have [a] high, lunar quality...but the way they're recorded often makes them seem as if they're being broadcast from the apartment next door, dislocated by time and space and smeared with heroic levels of FX. The song structures reference classic psych forms - most specifically the freakbeat sound of early Pink Floyd and the roaming bass/drums style of The Red Krayola's first LP - while at the same time avoiding anything that might make them sound like period-piece revivalists. As the album progresses, the form becomes looser and more abstract, with outer structures falling away to reveal sidereal aspects more commonly experienced in altered states or subliminal settings: the sound of a car stereo tracking down the street; late-night pop radio in the trance before sleep. Sore Eros redeem 80s pop modes by conflating them with 'canonical' teenage forms, re-configuring psychedelic pop via refracted autobiography. The result is one of the most original psych/pop records of the year." - WIRE Magazine, May 2009




Kurt Vile tour dates:

Jul-09 New York, NY Le Poisson Rouge w/ Real Estate
Jul-10 Hoboken, NJ Maxwell’s w/ Real Estate
Jul-11 Philadelphia, PA Johnny Brenda’s w/ Real Estate
Jul-12 Baltimore, MD Ottobar w/ Real Estate
Jul-13 Pittsburgh, PA Garfield Artworks w/ Real Estate
Jul-14 Cleveland, OH Beachland Tavern w/ Real Estate
Jul-15 Bloomington, IN The Bishop w/ Real Estate
Jul-17 Chicago, IL Pitchfork Music Festival
Jul-19 Detroit, MI Magic Stick w/ Real Estate
Jul-20 Toronto, ON The Great Hall w/ Real Estate
Jul-21 Ottawa, ON Babylon w/ Real Estate
Jul-22 Montreal, QC Il Motore w/ Real Estate
Jul-23 Boston, MA Harpers Ferry w/ Real Estate
Jul-24 New Haven, CT Lilly Pad w/ Real Estate
Aug-10 Charlottesville, VA Jefferson Theatre w/ Deerhunter
Aug-13 Boston, MA Royale Nightclub w/ Deerhunter
Aug14 Northampton, MA Pearl Street w/ Deerhunter



Saturday, July 24, 2010 - Modest Mouse at the Oakdale:


Location:
Toyota Presents the Oakdale Theatre
95 South Turnpike Rd
Wallingford, CT

Doors 7:30. General Admission only. Tickets $35.


I hear this is Modest Mouse's first time playing here in Connecticut. They have been around for a long time now, and are known for being one of those unlikely bands that broke into the mainstream. Johnny Marr is out now, not sure if Grandaddy guitarist Jim Fairchild is still in. The Moon & Antarctica got a recent vinyl reissue, which you should go buy from Redscroll Records. Isaac Brock's Glacial Pace Recordings is now completely controlled by Brock, allowing him to help up-and-coming bands, such as the opener for this show, Morning Teleportation.



Morning Teleportation is a five-piece psychedelic band based out of Portland, Oregon. They create a high-energy, tripped-out dance-off and sing-along using energetic instrumentation that includes banjo, talkbox, synthesizer, trumpet, and theremin. Their debut album was produced by Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse and is soon to be released on his Glacial Pace Recordings.



Their tour dates:

Jul 1 Royal Oak Music Theater + special guest: Avi Buffalo Royal Oak, MI
Jul 2 Royal Oak Theater + special guest: Avi Buffalo (SOLD OUT) Royal Oak, MI
Jul 3 Summerfest 2010 + special guest: Avi Buffalo Milwaukee, WI, US
Jul 4 80/35 Festival Des Moines, IA, US
Jul 6 Crossroads KC @ Grinders + special guest: Avi Buffalo Kansas City, MO
Jul 8 Twilight Concert Series + special guest: Avi Buffalo Salt Lake City, UT
Jul 9 Paolo Soleri Amphitheatre + special guest: Radar Brothers Santa Fe, MN
Jul 10 1STBANK Center + special guest: Radar Brothers Broomfield, CO
Jul 12 Ramkota Exhibit Hall + special guest: Radar Brothers Sioux Falls, SD
Jul 13 Hub at the Venue + special guest: Radar Brothers Fargo, ND
Jul 14 The Orpheum Theatre + special guest: Radar Brothers Minneapolis, MN
Jul 16 Pitchfork Music Festival Chicago, IL
Jul 17 The Pageant + special guest: Morning Teleportation(SOLD OUT) St. Louis, MO
Jul 18 The Valarium + special guest: Morning Teleportation (SOLD OUT) Knoxville, TN
Jul 19 Orange Peel + special guest: Morning Teleportation (SOLD OUT) Asheville, NC, US
Jul 20 Music Farm + special guest: Morning Teleportation (SOLD OUT) Charleston, SC
Jul 22 Wellmont Theater + special guest: Morning Teleportation (SOLD OUT) Montclair, NJ
Jul 23 Williamsburg Waterfront + special guest: Morning Teleportation Brooklyn, NY, US
Jul 24 The Dome at Oakdale + special guest: Morning Teleportation Wallingford, CT
Jul 25 House of Blues + special guest: Morning Teleportation (SOLD OUT) Boston, MA
Jul 26 House of Blue + special guest: Morning Teleportation Boston, MA
Aug 27 Leeds Festival Leeds, UK
Aug 28 Reading Festival Reading, UK
Aug 29 Edge Festival @ HMV Picture House Edinburgh, UNITED KINGDOM
Aug 31 O2 Academy Newcastle, UK
Sep 1 O2 Academy Liverpool, UK
Sep 2 Arena Parco Nord Bologna, ITALY
Sep 3 Electric Picnic Art and Music Festival Stradbally Hall, Stradbally, County Laois
Sep 5 Into The Great Wide Open Festival Vlieland, NETHERLANDS
Sep 7 Melkweg Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS
Sep 8 Troxy London, UNITED KINGDOM
Sep 9 Open House Festival Belfast, UNITED KINGDOM
Sep 10 End of the Road Festival Dorset, UNITED KINGDOM

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Popeye's Garage Lives

George Henry Durrie Judges Cave with Sudden Walks 7 inch
My dream come true


Nice to hear that Popeye's Garage is not closing. Brushback talked up the recent Judge's Cave release here. There are a few more dates listed on Popeye's MySpace too. And of course there's the Wordpress page here.

Dates to bring your grandmama to:

Saturday July 10 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Caboladies (Chicago Noise)
Radio People (Cleveland synth noise from Sam Goldberg)
Neckhold (Australian Harsh Noisers)
Medication (CT downer punks)
Colorguard (New Haven Noise)

Sunday July 11 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Ana Lola Roman (Brooklyn/Germany)
Polygons (Baltimore weirdness)
If Jesus Had Machine Guns (New Haven Hero’s)

Monday July 12 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Altered States (Baltimore Wham City associated)
Female (New Haven genius)
Supernaturalle (New Haven Noise)

Wednesday July 14 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

EVERYBODY GETS RICH TRAVELING RECORD STORE by Rich from Florida’s Dying
Estrogen Highs (New Haven pukers)
Medication (CT downer punks)
Dead Wives (Danbury indie-pop)

Friday July 16 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Fat History Month
+ more TBA

Saturday July 17 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Pigeon Religion (Arizona weird sludge)
Hell-Kite (Arizona weirdness)
Bellalator (Bella Reese/Escalator Collab)
Reviver (CT Harsh Noiser)
Family Treasures (CT Noise)

Friday July 23 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Body Morph (Detroit 1/2 of Uneven Universe)
Sky Limousine (Drone-y Noise - AKA Josh Burke)
Criminals (Noise)
Jon Eriksen (New Haven Noise via Sweden)

Saturday July 24 7PM $5 Suggested Donation

Sick Llama (Michigan Noiser who runs Fag Tapes)
Weirding Module (Michigan Noise, members of Awesome Color)
Dog Lady (Michigan Noise)
Colorguard (New Haven Noise)

Monday, June 28, 2010

Show Review: Bear In Heaven

Because I am a pathetic hack, I have no photos from the show. All you need know is their mustaches were full, very very full.

Sunday, June 27, 2010 at The Space:

There's nothing like going to a show beat down from a weekend's worth of ass-busting labor, especially when you are fully aware that you'll be getting up for work at the butt crack of dawn Monday morning. Shaki Presents' Sunday night series was one of the rare excuses that could make someone like myself say fuck it and go out anyway. Bear in Heaven happens to be another. Showing up to find out the photographer didn't make it was no fun though. Missing Wess Meets West was not fun either. One of those guys once told me that they are going to open for U2 on the moon in the near future, so maybe I'll catch them then. I'm also guilty of missing the first half of Lobisomem's set, too, since I was loitering outside, joking around with everyone about dickheaded booking agencies, how much moths suck, and stealing The Space's owner's Dodge Dart.

Maybe the heat and humidity kept the show-goers at home. Who knows. But there was around fifty or so heads there at the most. It's tough when an audience is so sparse mainly because it leaves a live band without enough crowd-created energy to feed off of. Maybe this is even more true at The Space, a place that has a reputation for causing awkwardness for the crowds and bands alike. I wonder if it's also the fact that the booze-less-ness of The Space leaves everyone too damn self-conscious to enjoy the show. Us uptight hipsters are socially retarded, remember.

But what hindered Bear in Heaven was not the thin audience, it was that their live sound did not get its due. The room and The Space's PA were the reasons, which seem totally unsuited for bands that, instead of overdriving their amps or are intimate folk acts, rely primarily on running direct. Depending on where you stand in the room, it can be a completely different show. Getting too close to the stage means losing the fuller sound you get at the back of the room. And even then you kinda need to find a sweet spot, which was incidentally found to be closer to the merch table than over by the stairway to the bathroom.

Bear in Heaven live should be felt in your guts. They have a huge sound and are known for putting on intense performances. All limitations aside, they did sound pretty good, especially during the second half of their set. The smaller, more restrained performance turned into an opportunity to pay close attention to the band's musicianship. As a trio, they still achieve what they did as a four piece on Beast Rest Forth Mouth. The drummer is a fucking octopus, and I actually started feeling sorry for the sweat-drenched guy since most every song requires nonstop flailing. Guitarist Adam Wills might be a little underused, but I couldn't tell exactly who was making what sounds since they all intertwine so well to begin with. For all I know he was holding everything together. Jon Philpot uses an interesting setup of midi-interfaced knob tweak-age and a block of stomp boxes at his feet. His vocal tone was straight off the record, and it was great to hear him belt out the coda of Beast in Peace as intensely as it is on the recording. Jon and Adam share guitar and bass duties, switching between songs almost as often as Sebadoh does. It's one of my favorite parts of the band - they use all that electronic gear with the pretty blinking lights, but still use the basics just as much.

The two surprises in their set were an older song that they revamped to play as a three-piece but said they'd likely never play again. I didn't catch the name of it. The second surprise was what they closed with - a cover of the Lindstrøm & Christabelle track Lovesick which is off of Real Life Is No Cool. Short of that, their set was all the best from Beast Rest Forth Mouth.

Even it wasn't the show hoped for, Bear in Heaven impressed.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Procedure Club Doomed Forever out on Slumberland



It's not often that Force Field PR sends us info on one of our very own, but they did today. But first refresh your memory with our Procedure Club post from earlier this year.

Procedure Club is a collaborative "bedroom-pop" project founded by Andrea and Polish emigré Adam Malec in New Haven, Connecticut in 2008. The two began recording as a natural progression from their boredom with living in poverty in New Haven, sharing musical tastes in shoegaze and pop bands of the 80s and 90s, such as Black Tambourine, and The Jesus and Mary Chain, as well as a common admiration for Baroque artists such as Purcell and Bach. Out of this god-forsaken alliance comes Procedure Club, in which Adam and Andrea have combined melodic song structures with heavily reverbed vocals, stuttering mechanical drum beats, dirty bass, synths, and alternately washed-out and jangly guitars.

Following on from a well-received string of tapes and CDRs, they've put together their first "proper" album and it's a corker. Doomed Forever noisy lo-fi pop with the emphasis on NOISE. From the pure synth pop of "Feel Sorry For Me" to the overdriven swoon of "Dead Bird" to the blown-out "Nautical Song," carefully constructed tunes are given a fierce work-over by layers of guitar fuzz and synth scree. Songs like "Vermont" and "Artificial Light" could practically be some lost C86 gems, while "Awfully Managed Pigeons" looks back to early Velvet Underground's garage racket (check the sick Cale-esque bassline) and "Rather" fondly recalls Linton's late Henry's Dress/Aislers Set classics. Throughout, Andrea's vocals are the secret weapon, neatly playing catchy melodies off the drum machine clatter and guitar haze.

What Procedure Club manage to pull off so well on Doomed Forever is striking just the right balance between the songs and the noise, between structure and chaos. Rather than allowing the recording methodology to stand-in for tunes and ideas, they've created a rather amazing record where those parts mesh perfectly and create a unique soundworld that challenges the ear as it coaxes you in with melody.

MP3: "Feel Sorry for Me"

Dates:

June 26 - Popeye's Garage, New Haven CT *
July 9 - Velvet Lounge, Washington DC
July 10 - JR's Bar, Philadelphia PA
July 31 - Weird Exorcism festival at Temple U, Boston MA #
August 4 - Silent Barn, Brooklyn NY &
August 26 - Casa del Popolo, Montreal QC $
August 28 - Parts and Labour, Toronto ON
September 12 - Part Time Punks @ The Echo, Los Angeles CA

* = w/ Estrogen Highs and Home Blitz
# = w/ Kid Romance
$ = w/ The Pink Noise, The O-Voids
& = w/ Birds Names

Click on the image to visit Slumberland's Procedure Club page

Track list:

1. Feel Sorry For Me
2. Vermont
3. Dead Bird
4. Artificial Light
5. Confined
6. Slut Fossil
7. Awfully Managed Pigeons
8. Nautical Song
9. Rather
10. Jupiter
11. Seventh Circle Of Hell