Ronin: The Warrior Princess Benefit Show at Make-Out Room in SF 4/13

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Ronin: The Warrior Princess Benefit Show //
Make-Out Room — San Francisco
Sunday, April 13th: 3pm-close //

This Sunday, local artists, musicians and hospitality industry veterans invite you to come out and celebrate for a great cause at San Francisco’s very own Mission District staple, Make-Out Room! Party with a purpose and help support the toughest little lady in the land, Ronin Bigart, as she continues her combat with leukemia as only a warrior princess can!

The benefit event features a killer line up of local talent including:

Nova Albion

The Pleasure Kills

Jay Nothington (and Sunny Jim Brown)

The Kegels

The Started-It’s

Along with $1000’s of dollars in raffle prizes from:

Cable Car Clothiers
Green Apple Books
NOPA
House of Prime Rib
Tony’s Pizza Napoletana
Q Restaurant
Tacolicious
Beach Chalet
R Bar
Mission Hill Saloon
One Market Restaurant
Bar Tartine
Buckshot Bar and Gameroom
Chapeau!
Park Tavern
StudioNico
Alex Shonkoff Photography
Moxie Parlour
Tee Off Bar and Grill
The San Francisco Giants
Walt Disney Family Museum
Scala’s Bistro
The Warfield
The Bill Graham Civic
The Regency Ballroom

Entry to the show is just a mere $15 and tickets will be available at the door, until the venue reaches capacity. Raffle tickets are being sold on site and custom t-shirts and tote bags (which are already flying off the shelves), can be purchased here.

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To donate directly to our Warrior Princess through the established Ronan’s Journey to Recoveryland Fund contribute via paypal using the email address roninwarriorprincess@gmail.com.

Click here For more info or contact Miki Matsuda at stonetablet@facebook.com.


PHOTOS: Pet Shop Boys at Fox Theater Oakland 4/8

Pet-Shop-Boys_postBy Steve Roby //

Pet Shop Boys with DJ Omar //
Fox Theater Oakland – Oakland
Tuesday April 8th, 2014 //

Pet Shop Boys kicked off a run of live dates Tuesday at the Fox Theater in Oakland as they began the 2014 leg of their “Electric Tour.”

DJ Omar opened the show and was followed by a short film that focused on gay pride. After a brief pause, Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe stepped onstage to perform a variety of songs from Electric as well as their classic hits.

This weekend and next they will be in the desert to perform at Coachella in the Mojave Tent before heading overseas to Spain, the UK and Australia.

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WIN TICKETS: Goat at Slim’s 4/12

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Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Goat with Holy Wave //
Slim’s — San Francisco
April 12, 2014 (Saturday) //

Out of the multitude of Swedish prog-afro-fusion bands playing, Goat has got to be one of the best. All joking aside, Goat is a serious musical project that has been active for almost 40 years, hailing from a small, possibly haunted town in Sweden called Korpilombolo. The largely rotating members are true kindred spirits in an entirely forward-thinking music genre that pushes the limits of hard-edged world-fusion.

They’ll be gracing Slim’s the weekend of their first of two banner Coachella sets for what is sure to be a highly buzzed about psychedelic freakout featuring masks, costumes and a barrage of crazy-ass music. This is also the ‘collectives’ first trek to the Western United States – hope that’s the icing on the cake to get you folks out to Goat.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Saturday, April 12th at Slim’s in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Friday, April 12th at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

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Five Outside Lands trends in 2014

Outside Lands 2014Photos by Marc Fong // Written by Mike Frash & Kevin Quandt //

Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival //
Golden Gate Park – San Francisco
August 8th-10th, 2014 //

The lineup for the seventh annual Outside Lands Music and Arts Festival, taking place August 8th-10th in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, was announced Tuesday. Headliners Kanye West, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers and The Killers were the focus of the many knee-jerk reactions, but what does the lineup say as a whole? Here are five trends we’ve spotted.

Three-day passes for the festival go on sale Thursday, April 10th at 10 a.m.

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1. RAP IS REPRESENTED MORE THAN EVER
Outside Lands missed out on the OutKast nostalgia sweepstakes, but the far more controversial (and relevant), Yeezus has been crowned as the first rap headliner in the festival’s history (see below). Beastie Boys were slotted to headline the festival in 2009, and they sadly had to pull out due to Adam Yauch’s cancer diagnosis. Tenacious D ultimately became the headliner over M.I.A. The Bay Area doesn’t attract an abundance of hip-hop or rap in general, yet many in the SF music community have wondered when Outside Lands, now a top national festival, would get into the game. El-P and Killer Mike, one of most dynamic music duos in years, are working on a follow-up to their incredible Run the Jewels debut and are sure get Golden Gate Park pumped. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis performed at noon in 2011 at Outside Lands, and since then, they own four major singles and seemingly sell out every show they perform. But they are dangerously within the range of overexposure, and since winning “Best Rap Album” at the Grammys over Kendrick Lamar (and Macklemore felt the need to text-apologize to Lamar), some music fans are out for vitriolic blood. That said, Macklemore’s impact on the popular music landscape is undeniable. Atmosphere, Aer and Watsky, also successful suburban-oriented spitters in their own right, are also on the bill this year.

2. KANYE WEST IS AS DIVISIVE A FIGURE AS EVER
Reaction to Kanye West as the top headliner was distinctively negative Tuesday, at least from the loudest people. West is at the peak of his career, releasing two of the most essential albums of the past five years with Yeezus and My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. The mega-narcissistic artist of a generation is already busy working on a follow-up to be produced by Q-Tip and Rick Rubin, and it may be out before Outside Lands in August. Odds are Yeezus will pull back from minimalist trap production and go back to his soul-sampling roots to cast a wider net. West has won over music critics with his recent boundary-pushing efforts, but the question becomes, can he avoid a Kardashian-enhanced mainstream backlash bigger than the “Swifting” he pulled at the MTV Video Music Awards? Our money is on ‘Ye.

3. THE FIRST REPEAT HEADLINER
Now in its seventh year, Outside Lands has finally reached the point when we see our first repeat headliner in the form of classic rock demigod, Tom Petty and his band the Heartbreakers. Having played on the second day of the inaugural year to a healthy-sized crowd, Petty worked through some technical errors with a set heavy on his standout hits from the past decades. A new release and tour recently announced lead us to think that Mr. Charlie T. Wilbury is primed to have a big second half of 2014.

4. A SLIGHT SHIFT IN ELECTRONIC MUSIC CURATION
One thing that Showbams noticed when culling through the lineup was the inclusion of slightly more progressive EDM. What was once a genre more reserved for Treasure Island Music Festival is making its way to Golden Gate Park, hoping to turn some folks onto a newer style of electronic production. This new shift is mainly represented by Disclosure, Flume, SBTRKT and Gold Panda. Each act brings a quality that is slightly out of the “dance music” box, whether it’s Disclosure’s 2-step-garage sound or Gold Panda’s experimental beat production. Even after all these years, Another Planet and Superfly keeps us on our toes.

5. THE MOST ECLECTIC LINEUP YET
Outside Lands has always basked in musical diversity, and this notion is true now more than ever. As our collective access to music becomes easier and more plentiful, so does our acceptance of a greater variety of genres. In one weekend, festivalgoers will bounce to Big Freedia, get rural with Kacey Musgraves and dance with Duck Sauce. Whether it’s folk, EDM, hip-hop, indie rock, country or soul, Outside Lands’ eclectic lineup suits the integrity and character of SF and the Bay Area.

Follow our Outside Lands 2014 playlist on Spotify.

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WIN TICKETS: Aeroplane at Mezzanine 4/10

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Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

HOUSE OF MEZZANINE
Aeroplane with Cherushii, Epicsauce DJs //
Mezzanine — San Francisco
April 10th, 2014 (Thursday) //

Aeroplane, the Italian-Beligian producer and remixing DJ extraordinaire will be setting SOMA a flight this Thursday night for the third installment of House of Mezzanine. Otherwise known as Vito De Luca, Aeroplane has been gracing the European dance floors for the past several years with celestial remakes of nu-disco staples Friendly Fires, Sebastien Tellier and Grace Jones, amongst others. Releasing his debut album We Can’t Fly, chock full of “Moroder-influenced disco” jams and his own melancholic keyboard compositions, Aeroplane aims to expand his sound beyond the club to explore new planes in uncharted audio territories. Celebrating the release of his exclusive Eskimo Recordings compilation In Flight Entertainment, the launch of his very own record label Aeropop and his upcoming gig at the 2014 Coachella Arts and Music Festival, Aeroplane headlines the kick off to the festivities this week with help from San Francisco’s own Cherushii and Epicsauce DJ’s! To reserve your seat on this one way flight to the electronic cosmos, enter to win a pair of free tix below.

Buy Tickets if you know you want to go.


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Thursday, April 10th at Mezzanine in SF.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Thursday, April 10th at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one. 21+ only.

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PHOTOS: Yonder Mountain String Band at Fox Theater Oakland 4/5

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Photos by Steve Roby // Written by Kevin Quandt //

Yonder Mountain String Band with The Brothers Comatose //
Fox Theater Oakland — Oakland, CA
Saturday April 5th, 2014 //

Yonder Mountain String Band’s annual West Coast Spring tour has become highly anticipated by those who live on the left-side of the country. Moving from the more-intimate Fillmore to the grandiosity of the Fox Theater in Oakaland saw the 4-piece playing a more in-depth and technical set. With the venue not quite filled to capacity, it allowed the well-lubed crowd to expand their fancy bluegrass dance-moves while the expanded songs were plucked onstage. Highlights included a massive KOG/Oklahoma/Casualty sandwich to close out the first set, and a “Piece of Mind” that included Talking Head’s classic “Girlfriend Is Better” and Yonder stalwart “Riverside”. Though the days of Yonder at the tiny Connecticut Yankee are long gone, the band still finds a way to create intimacy, even in the Bay’s biggest rooms.

Set 1: Troubled Mind > 20 Eyes > Troubled Mind, Southbound,What You’re Selling, Easy As Pie, Pockets, Ripcord Blues,Keep on Going > If You’re Ever In Oklahoma > Casualty > If You’re Ever In Oklahoma > Keep on Going
Set 2: Going Where They Do Not Know My Name, Romance Blues, Landfall, Althea, Ain’t No Way of Knowing, Black Sheep,Crying Holy Unto My Lord, Hey Bulldog, Peace Of Mind >Girlfriend Is Better > Follow Me Down To The Riverside > Peace Of Mind
Encore: Good Hearted Woman

New Music Tuesday: John Frusciante • The Faint • SOHN • EMA

John Frusciante - Enclosure

Every Tuesday, we focus on new music releases by naming our top tracks, album highlights, lowlights and important takeaways for select albums.


John FruscianteEnclosure

3.5-BamsTop Tracks:
“Crowded”
“Clinch”
“Run”

There’s no better way to put into words just how “out there” former Chili Peppers savior John Frusciante is other than to tell you the way in which he launched (quite literally) his latest album Enclosure.

Frusciante is known for his peculiarity, but took things to another level by sending his album into space on March 29 attached to a satellite called Sat-JF14. Fans could then download a tracking app that would tell them when the album was in their region, when it would then be unlocked.

Album Highlights: Lyrically, Frusciante is as out of control as ever. In the context of his music, it doesn’t manage to matter. His excellent guitar work and the production he tasks himself carries Enclosure along as one of Frusciante’s finest solo masterpieces. His strength as a vocalist is missed by the Chili Peppers, who Frusciante carried a lot of songs behind lead man Anthony Kiedis with his beautiful harmonies. Frusciante’s vocals aren’t as understated on his solo albums and he takes some chances, most of which pay off. Frusciante gives off a bit of an 80’s vibe on this album due to the heavy synth that is featured throughout. The way Frusciante builds up to his guitar solos is pretty brilliant and he does it as good as anyone out there. Check out the song “Stage” to get an idea.

Album Lowlight: A lot of the songs are rather heavy on guitar solos, so you have to be in the right frame of mind for it. Sometimes, they can feel like they drag on a bit too long, as well. As mentioned above, this album features a fair amount of synths. Most times, it sounds pretty good and gels with the rest of the arrangement, but at times it can sound like music that belongs in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for the original Nintendo.

Takeaway: As with all of Frusciante’s solo work, if you came to it from being a Chili Peppers fan first before anything else, it might not suit your needs or expectations. If you are a big appreciator of Frusciante’s multi-faceted chops, Enclosure is something you can enjoy, especially if you recognize it for what it is. The release isn’t as far out there as some of these previous projects, nor is it as close to mainstream.

~Mark E. Ortega


The FaintDoom Abuse

2.5 BamsTop Tracks:
“Help in the Head”
“Dress Code”
“Lesson from the Darkness”

Album Highlights: Not that long ago, there was a point in time when fans of The Faint didn’t know if their beloved band would ever make another record. Yet, the Nebraska quartet reunited in late 2012 following a two-year hiatus not just to start touring again, but also to create new music. As frontman Todd Fink explained to me, The Faint needed to take a different approach for its sixth full-length album after overthinking the writing process when it came to 2008’s Fasciinatiion. But for an outfit that put Omaha’s growing indie scene on the map with electro-punk hits like “Agenda Suicide” in the early 2000s, Doom Abuse doesn’t even come close to touching 2001 paradigm Danse Macabre. Other than the album’s opening single “Help in the Head,” there aren’t many standout tracks for Fink and his bandmates to hang their hat on, unfortunately. While they make a concerted effort to strip things down from start to finish, that only works some of the time on Doom Abuse. The frenetic dance vibe that we get on instrumental cut “Dress Code,” for example, is one of just a few shining moments, even though The Faint save some of its best work — “Lesson from the Darkness” and the ensuing “Unseen Hand” — for last.

Album Lowlight: The Faint have never been known to write albums that extend past the 40-minute mark, so it should be no surprise to see Doom Abuse follow suit on that front. But at just over 39 minutes in length, the 12-track LP undeniably lacks depth — after all, half of its songs span less than three minutes. That’s only part of the problem with The Faint’s latest studio effort, however. Fink, keyboardist Jacob Thiele, guitarist Dapose and drummer Clark Baechle also don’t come off sounding all that imaginative on “Evil Voices,” “Animal Needs” and “Scapegoat,” failing to create distance between most of their songs.

Takeaway: It’s hard to tell what has changed for The Faint from its last release to this one. Longtime followers of the band may not take issue with what they hear on Doom Abuse, but it’s far from the four-piece’s best work. At the same time, it’s sad to see a band come out of hibernation to assemble an album that doesn’t strike the same chord as its previous offerings — because that’s ultimately the reality here. The Faint, though, still know how to put on one hell of a show, so it may just take a live setting for certain tracks on Doom Abuse to come to life.

~Josh Herwitt


SOHNTremors

4-BamsTop Tracks:
“Artifice”
“Paralysed”
“Lights”

Album Highlights: SOHN is a London-born songwriter, producer and musician. He has made some noise in the electronic scene by remixing Disclosure and Lana Del Rey, as well as producing Banks’ “Waiting Game.” His debut album, Tremors, was recorded at night in Vienna. As SOHN states, “Every night I worked finished with a cold sunrise and a walk home … and to me that’s what Tremors sounds like.” And that late-night vibe is definitely captured on this album. The minimalist and intricate production make this a great album for a night drive; this album is a beautifully depressing soundscape. While single “Artifice” is the most radio friendly track, SOHN has created some very interesting and moody songs with “Paralysed” and “Lessons” and “Lights,” which all build slowly and ever so gently from a mellow track to a track with some edge, before coming to an alluring close. In fact, that somewhat describes the way the album itself progresses. The second half contains much of the moodiness and depth, it is almost flawless.

Album Lowlight: This album is a bit much to listen to in one sitting from start to finish. And maybe not many people listen to a record in that way anymore. While there are some surprises along the way, much of the first half blends together. The opener, “Tempest,” takes awhile to build and then is over too quickly. “The Wheel” is too repetitive and jerky for me, but the production is still good. I prefer the depth of SOHN on his subtler songs.

Takeaway: If you listen to this album from start to finish, there is a chance you will begin to wallow in your own misery and forget where you are going or what you were doing before you played the album. But hey, sometimes that’s necessary. And if walking home alone at 4 a.m., Tremors is a great soundtrack to have for that walk. The production of Tremors is so beautifully done. After the opening tracks, it’s easy to find yourself getting lost in some of these songs. This is a promising debut, and it will be interesting to see where SOHN will go from here.

~Krystal Beasley


EMAThe Future’s Void

3.5-BamsTop Tracks:
“Satellites”
“Cthulu”
“Smoulder”

Album Highlights: Future’s Void is the third full-length album from South Dakota native Erika M. Anderson, more commonly known as EMA. This release brings to the table a risky mixture of genre crossing sounds that combine with a spellbinding voice to create a vast, audio experience. This is one of those recordings best heard through a pair of good brain clamps.

“Satellites” begins this journey with radio static and a bass rattle that becomes a recurring theme in some of the thicker sounding tracks featured later in the album. Released as a single, “Satellites” has a very enticing opening beat and a vocal melody that is built to last. Heavy use of distorted synths creates the feeling of a dark, industrial soundscape full of digital noises and electrical sounds that almost suck the listener down the digital rabbit hole. Tracks like “Smoulder” and “Neuromancer” use loads of vocal effects and fuzzed-out screams to further Anderson’s already haunting qualities, serving to pull us further and further into this album. She has one of those voices that is equally comforting as it is frightening which she uses brilliantly in “100 Years.”

Album Lowlight: Future’s Void album is an enjoyable listen but it lacks a consistent amount of energy and overall feel from the beginning to the end. Immediately after a great opening song (“Satellites”), “So Blonde” and “3Jane” shift gears to a more traditional guitar and drums-type track. The same thing happens in the middle of Future’s Void when the best string of tracks is halted by the slow tempoed, and folky “When She Comes.” The rest of the album kind of fizzles out after “Neuromancer,” much like when the air gets sucked out of a balloon and all that is left is a wrinkled piece of rubber. There was a lot of promise to this album, and there are many redeeming qualities that if were focused on, could really make for a more appealing sounding project.

Takeaway: I feel like I might hear this album while catching an Uber ride in cyberspace. During some songs I wanted to smash an acoustic guitar against the wall like Bluto from Animal House. But during others I couldn’t help but hear Nine Inch Nails-influenced space-beats with a wormhole-like rip of industrial fuzz that took hold of me and didn’t let go until it spit me out on the other end of the galaxy. Anderson’s guttural screams and growls are continually distorted and twisted into glitchy echos that had me wanting for more. EMA has a surprisingly fresh sound in a musical world of shifting talents, where music can be more about pushing buttons than plucking strings. If only they could decide between being a folk-based band or a synth-rock band.

~Scotland Miller

WIN TICKETS: Jenny Hval & Mark McGuire at the Chapel 4/9

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Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Jenny Hval & Mark McGuire //
The Chapel — San Francisco
April 9th, 2014 (Wednesday) //

Former gothic metal vocalist Jenny Hval has come a long way since the 90s. Now as a singer-songwriter, Hval unsurprisingly centers her sound around expressive lyricism bathed in mellow musical beds and minimalist drone, the latter of which is a new concept from her 2013 record Innocence Is Kinky. Hval has also worked as a freelance writer, which speaks to the importance of the words she utilizes in her compositions. Jenny Hval’s live performance offers a combination of impactful poetry and suitably subdued instrumentals to let the lyricism shine.

This show at The Chapel on Wednesday is considered a co-headlining venture for good reason. Experimental solo musician Mark McGuire will play first Wednesday, likely playing cuts from his lush, kaleidoscopic 2014 record Along The Way. McGuire’s ambient sound collages are visceral and encompassing, music that could be read as both spiritual and inspirational. Along The Way is a magnificent work that deserves more attention — which you can give in person (for free maybe) by entering your name and email below.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Wednesday, March 9th at The Chapel in SF.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Wednesday, March 9th at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one. All Ages.

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ZZ Ward begins Coachella week on a high at The Independent

ZZ-WardPhotos by Tom Dellinger // Written by Mark E. Ortega //

ZZ Ward with Grizfolk, The O’My’s //
The Independent — San Francisco
Sunday April 6th, 2014 //

Sunday night, in front of a sold-out crowd at The Independent, emerging R&B artist ZZ Ward proved that the old adage “pressure busts pipes” doesn’t always ring true. Ward brought her “A” game as she showcased her pipes both vocally and while breaking things down on the harmonica as she is winding down her tour before heading to Coachella this weekend.

Through the first few songs of her set, it was a bit murky as to where the show was headed. The Los Angeles-based Oregon transplant played a version of her hit “Til The Casket Drops” that was a tad understated, perhaps saving her voice for more difficult vocal endeavors later on in the evening.

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Right from jump, Ward brought an infectious energy, both in the course of her set and in her between song banter. Early in the set, Ward asked if SF was ready to party. “I know it’s Sunday, but I don’t give a fuck,” said Ward to the laughter and applause of the crowd.

By the time Ward kicked into “365 Days”, one of her other gems, she had things in full swing. She went from one side of the stage to the other, posing and serenading each section for moments at a time.

Midway through, Ward played a bluesy sounding cover of Drake’s “Hold On, We’re Going Home” before breaking hearts with her ballad “Last Love Song” (of which a music video shot in SF would be coming out soon according to Ward). That song didn’t seem to fit with the rest of the upbeat set, but lyrically it might be her best work and she brought back the energy right away.

Before “Cryin’ Wolf”, Ward asked the crowd about a time in their life where they met someone under tipsy circumstances, to which few in the crowd volunteered the information.

“You were completely sober and it was magical and I’m happy for you,” said Ward, which got the crowd laughing again.

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Ward’s touring guitarist Erick Walls was absolutely incredible, as he wailed on the guitar all night. His contributions helped bring a more bluesy sound than what is heard on Ward’s studio work. In fact, many of Ward’s songs Sunday night sounded better live than on her studio album, a mark of a great live musician. That she’s been able to adapt her sound to the stage with ease speaks well to her future success.

Ward closed her 16-song set by coming out and performing “Blue Eyes Blind”, which had the crowd jumping up and down and waving their hands back and forth. Ward did a great job of building things up to a crescendo over the final 20 minutes, leaving fans wanting more.

Though it is still early, it is going to be hard to top her performance, which is the best I’ve seen so far in 2014. Anyone who has seen her on tour and is attending Coachella will have her marked down as must-see, and for good reason.

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The War on Drugs are winning

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Photos by Sam Heller // Written by Kevin Quandt //

The War On Drugs with Heron Oblivion //
The Independent — San Francisco
Wednesday April 2, 2014 //

Adam Granduciel has arrived to the next level, as The War on Drugs have broken through the underground in a big way with their latest release entitled, Lost in a Dream. The subsequent, and long awaited, tour has been nothing short of fantastic as an expanded band has led to their most sonically pleasing tour to date. Having sold out nearly their entire run of shows, the anticipation was high for a two-night stand at the Independent. Both evenings were viewed as a treat for longtime fans, but possibly bittersweet as this is sure to be their last time in rooms of this size. However, the capacity crowd on Wednesday was ready to be apart of something special – a sublime evening led by one of our generation’s brightest creators.

The second show of the series featured relatively unknown noise-rockers, Heron Oblivion, playing a blisteringly loud set of feedback-heavy rock with sultry female vocals cooed by their drummer. It was lovely and abrasive at the same time, seeming to meld Jefferson Starship with Sonic Youth in a heavy, heavy way.

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A quick stage changeover led to Granduciel and band taking the stage promptly at 9:30 as the edges of the venue became tighter and tighter. “An Ocean in Between the Waves” was a pleasant, and rare, show opener as the crowd eased into the new, thicker live sound; much fuller compared to their last performance at the Independent over two years ago. Future Weather standout track “Baby Missiles” led into “Under the Pressure”, a wallop of a pairing, as each track was perfectly extended adding extra moments to bask in the aural beauty that Granduciel churns out like no other current musician. It’s not too hard to hear Granduciel’s influences when you listen to his various records as The War on Drugs, but his influence from classic artists like Tom Petty, Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan are represented through appropriation as opposed to imitation. The combination of these classic rock sounds have never sounded so fresh or revitalized.

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At this point in the show, the core 6-piece band expanded by the addition of a pedal steel guitar player for “Suffering”, a pleasant change in sound and tempo had a receptive crowd contently eating out their hands. “I Was There” is always a highlight of any WOD show, and was no different tonight as Granduciel tenderly belted out this classic cut before launching into their latest single. “Red Eyes” had the crowd ‘wooing’ along in jubilee with the man who was front and center. One pleasant surprise for longtime fans was the inclusion of older tracks like “Arms Like Boulders” off of Wagonwheel Blues – featuring a favorite lyric of this writer, “Chasing squirrels around your property / Making sure that they know that this is your kingdom.” As the lengthy set drifted on, heavier ambient jams would take flight, eventually leading to set closer, “In Reverse”.

Few attendees made an early exit on this weeknight, and the faithful were rewarded with a big encore that started off with a newer cover being featured this tour. John Lennon’s “Mind Games” was a serious highlight, delivered in a manner that few current acts can do. “Disappearing” led into a true War on Drugs classic, “Brothers”. This song has had a long life as it first appeared on Future Weather as a stripped down acoustic track nodding to Dylan before morphing into a full-band cut off of Slave Ambient. It now it sounds almost unrecognizable as the vocal phrasing and music has been altered, demonstrating the skill of song-crafting that Granduciel has become so well known for. Expect big things from The War on Drugs as they are rising stock for all the right reasons.

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Fitz and the Tantrums creep closer to headline status at Fox

Fitz-and-the-Tantrums_postPhotos by Steve Roby // Written by Mark E. Ortega //

Fitz And The Tantrums with Bad Suns, Nightmare and the Cat //
Fox Theater Oakland — Oakland CA
Thursday April 3rd, 2014 //

Los Angeles-band Fitz & The Tantrums proved Thursday night at the Fox Theater that they’ve moved into headliner territory — and probably for good. The venue was packed a full hour before they’d go on stage, and their charisma and energy left a major impression on all who attended.

The band played most of their 2013 album More Than Just a Dream while also reaching back for the choice nugs from their 2010 debut Pickin’ Up the Pieces. What made Fitz stand out initially was their original sound, as their debut album featured not a single song with guitar. Their recent release featured guitar, so the concern heading into the show was that their sound wouldn’t be as unique as it sounded when I first heard them at Outside Lands in 2012. Thankfully, the set applied guitar to just one or two tracks and relied on the vocals of Michael Fitzpatrick and Noelle Scaggs, as well as the unbelievable saxophone and flute work from James King and, as one fan yelled out, the “funky bass lines” of Joseph Karnes.

The chemistry between Fitzpatrick and Scaggs is part of what makes their show so enjoyable. They feed off each other and the crowd feeds off of them. During one of the ballads from the new album, the two share an “Endless Love” type moment as they serenaded each other to the crowd’s delight. The flute solo from King during “Tell Me What Ya Here For” had the crowd euphoric, as did “Moneygrabber” in the encore.

Bad Suns

Bad Suns

Bad Suns brought an 80s sound to modern rock, helping fire people up for the headliner with a solid set. Playing to “the biggest show on the biggest stage hands down” in their career according to singer Christo Bowman. Bowman has a memorable vocal style that compares well to early-U2 Bono. Bowman could probably do a killer cover of “New Years Day” if he wanted to. At times his vocals were hard to make out but their songs are catchy and had people moving. They’re definitely a band on the rise and a recommended show.

Nightmare and the Cat (also of Los Angeles) opened things up and had a surprising number of followers out in support who were very up on their music. Singer Django Stewart displayed a memorable stage presence, as he seemed to be a graduate of the George Michael school of hip gyration, which meshed perfectly with their sound, which felt like if INXS had been brought into the 21st century with Michael Hutchence still at the forefront. “Blackbird Smile” was the high point, showcasing how well Django and brother/guitarist Samuel Stewart are at writing hooks. Interestingly, Django’s British accent is only apparent when he talks between songs and not very much so when he sings. For a band that’s been together just four years, they have things well together in a live setting, a promising sign.

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The only downside of the evening was some of the crowd themselves. One guy was severely intoxicated at the outset of the first opener and had to be that guy who seeks attention by yelling at the most inopportune times. Then there was the older couple that shot scowls to everyone in their vicinity, with the man putting his hands on a nearby lady for dancing too close to him and his wife. This was in the early part of Fitz’s set but luckily the wife decided to say it was time to leave, to the high-fives of everyone around who had suffered their intolerable behavior.

The Fox Theater is an excellent venue and served as a perfect stage for a fast-rising band in Fitz & The Tantrums, helping to announce the fact they can sell out well-sized venues away from their home base in SoCal.

Bad Suns shed light on debut LP

Bad-Suns3By Steve Roby //

Bad Suns, an indie four-piece from Los Angeles’ San Fernando Valley, opened for Fitz and the Tantrums on April 3rd at the Fox Theater Oakland, describing the performance as “the biggest theater we’ve ever played.”

Showbams spoke with Christo Bowman (vocals), Gavin Bennett (bass), Ray Libby (guitar) and Miles Morris (drums) before the show about how the band formed, its musical influences, songwriting and touring on the strength of its debut, four-song EP Transpose.


Showbams: How did you guys meet, and how did the band form?

Bowman: It’s a terribly long and boring story, but essentially we met the way bands meet in Southern California, in the San Fernando Valley. We went to school together and eventually got together after a couple of years of doing our own thing. We’ve been doing Bad Suns since January of 2012, and it’s been great.

Showbams: Christo, can you tell me about your father’s record collection and the influence it had on you?

Bowman: I grew up with my parents playing world music, it wasn’t rock ‘n’ roll at all, but at a certain age, when I developed an interest in the guitar, my dad started to pull out records that he was listening to when he was a little bit younger. Elvis Costello, The Clash, The Police — that’s when I started to get excited about music and began playing it.

Showbams: Any particular Elvis Costello album?

Bowman: I’d have to say This Year’s Model.

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Showbams: Describe the band’s songwriting process.

Bowman: It’s fun because it varies. Some of the songs that will be on the album we’re working on right now can be a bunch of pieces of songs that came together and ended up as one song. An example of that would be “Cardiac Arrest”. We constantly change it up and are excited about it. I feel like the quality never changes. We always work on a song until it feels like it’s a Bad Suns song that we’re proud of.

Showbams: Why did you chose to release an EP, comprised of only four songs, and what is like touring behind such a limited amount of material?

Bowman: It’s the business these days. EPs are good way to get yourselves heard first. It’s better then releasing a 15-track album for a group that no one has heard of. It’s a good way for people to start talking about the band and get ready for the full-length album.

Libby: I think an EP is a good way to get some type of interest in the group, and that’s how it works now.

Showbams: How did your EP Transpose come together?

Bennett: We originally recorded five songs in the summer of 2012 and then went back again and did five more the next summer, then picked the four we liked the best to represent the band. It’s a long process. We’ve been working with the same producer since this band started and came up with the Transpose EP.

Bowman: We did this all without a manager, record company or any of that sort of stuff. So between the four of us and our producer, we developed those four songs and then did the second half. I think you’d have a hard time figuring out what was written first. I like that aspect of it.

Showbams: What’s next for the band as far as a release?

Bowman: We’re working on the album right now. We were in the studio yesterday and then drove up here to The Fox. We’re driving back tomorrow, and it’s another day in the studio. Hopefully it will be out in the summer.

Showbams: Can you tell us the title?

Bowman: I feel like if I did, I might get in trouble (laughs).

Showbams: How is the tour going?

Morris: We just got back from South by Southwest a few weeks ago, and this is our first one-off show since then. We have another show at the Hollywood Palladium on Saturday with Fitz and the Tantrums. On April 16th, we leave to go out on the road with The 1975 for two months.

Bowman: This is our warm-up show. It’s the biggest theater we’ve ever played.

Hear the full interview with Bad Suns here and catch them perform live April 8th on “Conan”.

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WKEND MIXTAPE V8

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New mixes this week from a legend who left us this week, the latest from Them Jeans, and a showcase of rap in 2014.

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First up is a mix released last year from house legend Frankie Knuckles, who passed away earlier this week. The mix features classic tracks from Art Department, Chinah Blac, Joey Negro & The Sunburst Band, Eric Morillo, and The Layabouts along with his own remix of Hercules & The Love Affair.

The interview that accompanies this mix is definitely worth a read. Check it out here.


Them-Jeans

Them JeansHigh Tides Mix Series Vol. 2



Next up is the latest mix from Them Jeans as part of the High Tide mix series for spring. This one has been my bus ride soundtrack for the last couple days. Check out tracks from Blood Orange, Tame Impala, Classixx, Grimes, Four Tet, Ciara, Jamie XX, and more.

Them Jeans will be in town on June 14th at Mezzanine playing with Treasure Fingers. Tickets are available here.


DJ-Yoda

DJ YodaRap is Good 2014



Our final mix this week is from UK turntablist DJ Yoda showcasing rap and hip hop in 2014. Yoda says: “I wanted to do a mix to show fans of “classic” or “golden era” rap that there’s still plenty of incredible hip-hop coming out in 2014 – you just have to look at bit deeper than most of the commercial pop stuff!” The mix features tracks from Danny Brown, Kendrick Lamar, Jay Electronica, Action Bronson, Evidence, Roc Marciano, Step Brothers, Q-Tip, Busta Rhymes, and Kanye West. Enjoy!

PHOTOS: The Polish Ambassador feat. Liminus at Mezzanine 3/28

Polish-AmbassadorBy Kory Thibeault //

The Polish Ambassador with Liminus
Mezzanine – San Francisco
March 28th, 2014 //

The Polish Ambassador, as well as the rest of Jumpsuit Records, took over Mezzanine last Friday to an enthusiastic crowd. The night featured music from Ayla Nereo, Saqi, Wildlight (Polish and Ayla’s side project), as well as Polish Ambassador himself. Mezzanine was filled with the beautiful and ever-so-trippy music of Jumpsuit Records, the perfect tunes for the “burner”-heavy crowd.

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PHOTOS: ††† (Crosses) at The Independent 3/31

Crosses

By Marc Fong //

††† (Crosses) with JMSN, Black Map //
The Independent – San Francisco
March 31st, 2014 //

Deftones singer Chino Moreno and his side-project ††† (Crosses) brought their immerse electronic rock to SF for two sold-out nights at The Independent earlier this week. Moreno, as expected, had the crowd in the palm of his hand, and these photos from Marc Fong attest to that notion.

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Cut Copy heat up the dance floor in LA

Cut-Copy1By Josh Herwitt //

Cut Copy //
Hollywood Palladium – Los Angeles
April 1st, 2014 //

Is there a band right now that throws a better dance party than Cut Copy?

In 2014, you’d be hard-pressed to find one that can even come close.

Returning to Los Angeles five months after performing at HARD Day of the Dead, the Australian four-piece played its first proper headlining show in the City of Angels since releasing its fourth full-length album Free Your Mind last November.

Though the record may not live up to the same standard set by 2011’s Zonoscope and 2009’s In Ghost Colours, there are enough winners on 2013’s Free Your Mind for Cut Copy, as a band and not just as a DJ project, to keep their all-encompassing setlists from growing moldy.

At the Hollywood Palladium, the electropop extraordinaires dug into their new material right away, opening with their latest hit “We Are Explorers” before dolling out five other songs from the 14-track LP on Modular Recordings.

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And while it may have been a school night for some, it sure didn’t feel like it inside the historic ballroom.

With fan favorites “Take Me Over” and “Hearts on Fire” coming within the first 30 minutes of its set, Cut Copy had a dance-happy crowd of mostly 20-somethings moving and grooving in a matter of no time.

But what may have been the biggest highlight of the night was how well newer cuts like “Let Me Show You Love” and “Meet Me in a House of Love” on Free Your Mind translated to a live setting. Because even after seeing Cut Copy twice in 2011, I walked out the Palladium’s front doors late Tuesday night feeling just as good as I did those previous two times.

In fact, if there was any drawback to note, it was that we didn’t get a few more songs out of frontman Dan Whitford and his bandmates on the final night of their North American tour. Whitford, all things considered, knows how to energize an audience as well as anyone out there these days, whether it’s with his old-school dance moves or incessant hand clapping.

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Of course, it didn’t hurt that Cut Copy took its encore break right after unleashing “Lights and Music”, the band’s most successful single to date still. So, when Whitford (vocals, keyboards, guitar), Tim Hoey (guitar, sampler, percussion, vocals), Mitchell Scott (drums, vocals) and of course Ben Browning (bass, keyboards, vocals) left the stage for a couple of minutes in what served as an encore break, they instantly had their fans begging to hear more.

The two-song encore that ensued, nevertheless, offered a snapshot of the band’s current disposition, as it left us with one more tune off Free Your Mind — the oscillating, yet also comforting “Walking in the Sky” — before closing things out with the 80’s-laced anthem “Need You Now.”

It was a fitting ending for a band that has come a long way since dropping its debut album Bright Like Neon Love a decade ago, yet isn’t looking to ease off the gas pedal any time soon.

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Setlist:
We Are Explorers
Take Me Over
Free Your Mind
Where I’m Going
In Memory Capsule
So Haunted
Hearts on Fire
Saturdays
Feel the Love
Out There on the Ice
Let Me Show You Love
Meet Me in a House of Love
Lights and Music

Encore:
Walking in the Sky
Need You Now

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WIN TICKETS: Chuck Ragan & The Camaraderie // The White Buffalo 4/3

Chuck-Ragan
Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Chuck Ragan & The Camaraderie / The White Buffalo with Jonny Two Bags //
Slim’s — San Francisco
April 3rd, 2014 (Thurdsay) //

Former guitarist and vocalist of Hot Water Music Chuck Ragan will be headlining at Slim’s SF in celebration of his fourth studio album Till Midnight. Crafting his own blend of punk rock and bluegrass, Ragan has been touring and releasing material as a successful solo artist since 2007. Pulling from a roster of genre-spanning counterparts, he has collaborated with many influential artists to craft several well-received albums and full scale tours. Curating full line ups to join him on the road since 2008, Ragan conceptualized a cooperative acoustic event entitled “The Revival Tour” in which he brought together critically acclaimed names in country, bluegrass, punk rock and more, to join forces on stage as a shared bill. Off stage, Ragan revels in this type of shared music experience in the studio as well. His latest effort, Till Midnight features members of Lucero, Social Distortion, Foo Fighters, The Wallflowers and Blind Melon. To witness this truly exceptional musical troubador in action this Thursday, with co-headliners The White Buffalo, register here via showbams.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Thursday, April 3rd at Slim’s in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Thursday, April 3rd at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

Like Showbams on Facebook and follow Showbams on twitter to be eligible to win.

CONTEST CLOSED

WIN TICKETS: Delta Rae at Great American 4/3

delta_rae

Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Delta Rae with Joshua James //
Great American Music Hall — San Francisco
April 3rd, 2014 (Wednesday) //

Compiled of three siblings and three additional members, Delta Rae began as a four piece in 2009 and fully assembled the following year. Having forged a strong musical bond amongst their family members at a young age, the Holljes siblings always had a passion for songwriting and composition. Both brother’s post-college decided to pursue their musical dreams full throttle, convincing their “lion voiced” younger sister and friend Elizabeth Hopkins to join them in their efforts. Setting up a studio in the woods of Durham, North Carolina the four crafted most of what would become their debut album and by late 2010, brought on the stylings of Mike McKee on drums and bassist Grant Emerson. Releasing Carry the Fire within the same year, the band was well received in the folk rock community and have successfully carved out their space in contemporary Americana. Fresh off the release of their sophomore EP Chasing Twisters, the crew is making their way to the Great American Music Hall this Thursday. Register for your chance to check out their new material in person, here via showbams.

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Thursday, April 3rd at Great American Music Hall in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Thursday, April 3rd at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

Like Showbams on Facebook and follow Showbams on twitter to be eligible to win.

CONTEST CLOSED

New Music Tuesday: Thievery Corporation • Band of Skulls • Nickel Creek • Cloud Nothings • JAMAICA • Mac DeMarco

Thievery-Corp

Every Tuesday, we focus on new music releases by naming our top tracks, album highlights, lowlights and important takeaways for select albums.


Thievery CorporationSaudade

3-BamsTop Tracks:
“Quem Me Leva”
“Sola In Citta”
“Le Couer”

Album Highlights: Saudade is a Portuguese word, difficult to define in English. Thievery’s press release defines it as “a longing for something or someone that is lost, a contented melancholy, or, simply, the presence of absence.” The vocal arrangements are gorgeously sung in Portuguese, French, Italian, Spanish and English. This album features vocals by LouLou Ghelichkhani, former Bitter:Sweet singer Shana Halligan, Elin Melgarejo, Nouvelle Vague singer Karina Zeviani and Natalia Clavier. The tracks featuring LouLou and Elin stand out the most. Longtime Thievery singer LouLou’s sensual vocals are the perfect alluring compliment to the calm and jazzy Brazilian rhythms.

The album is a more conventional homage to bossa nova than previous efforts. This is their seventh full-length album and arguably their most traditional, drawing a considerable amount of influence from classic Brazilian performers, such as Antonio Carlos Jobim and Gal Costa. Clocking in at 42 minutes, the entire album is a beautifully simplistic musical time travel to 1960s Brazil. This is great news for fans of the artists that inspire Rob Garza and Eric Hilton.

Album Lowlight: After listening to a few songs, I find myself wanting to listen to my Elis & Tom album. While the songs are well-structured and the vocals can be quite enticing, the album itself leaves something to be desired. And that something is in the classic Brazilian music of yesteryear. The issue with this album is similar to the issue with defining a word like “saudade”; you can try, and people who don’t speak the language will probably understand. But there will be some aspect of the word that you can’t define, that which gets lost in translation. Many ideas cannot be recreated. This is a great effort by Thievery. But that indescribable thing is missing. Whereas other albums can fill that void with the mixing of musical genres, this album stays in one place. There are some great moments here, but as a whole, it’s a good thing that the album doesn’t go longer than 42 minutes.

Takeaway: If you are a fan of bossa nova or have been a big fan of Thievery Corporation throughout the years, definitely buy the album. If you prefer listening to a “Best Of” album, stick to the choice notes on this one. Rob Garza will be performing a DJ set and signing CDs at Amoeba SF on Friday, April 4th at 6 p.m.

~Krystal Beasley


Band of SkullsHimalayan

4-BamsTop Tracks:
“Asleep at the Wheel”
“I Guess I Know You Fairly Well”
“I Feel Like Ten Men, Nine Dead and One Dying”

Album Highlights: After a successful sophomore effort that earned them the chance to tour with Muse and Queens of the Stone Age last year, these English alt-rockers didn’t waste a lot of time before they decided to jump back into the studio. Only this time, Ian Davenport, who produced both 2009’s Baby Darling Doll Face Honey and 2012’s Sweet Sour, didn’t come along for the ride. Instead, those duties were passed on to Nick Launay, one of the music industry’s most sought-after producers right now. While the change isn’t readily noticeable on Himalayan, Band of Skulls’ third full-length record still boasts plenty of firepower.

It begins in typical BOS fashion, with Russell Marsden’s fuzzed-out blues riff serving as the foundation for the album’s first single “Asleep at the Wheel”. Nevertheless, you won’t find yourself head banging to every track, whether it’s the group’s new hit “Nightmares” or the ensuing “Brothers and Sisters.” Unlike Band of Skulls’ two previous LPs, Himalayan sees it branching out sonically with songs like the surf rock-inspired “I Feel Like Ten Men, Nine Dead and One Dying” and the Spanish-flavored “Toreador” (which means “bullfighter” in English, naturally). There is no doubt there are risks being taken here, but they don’t compromise what Marsden, bassist Emma Richardson and drummer Matt Hayward set out to do from the beginning — and that was to make one badass record. Well, mission accomplished.

Album Lowlight: It’s strange to hear Band of Skulls hold back, but when it does on Himalayan, things start to get a little flimsy for the Southampton power trio. Following three rock-heavy cuts to open the album, “Cold Sweat” features Richardson on lead vocals as the band flirts with balladry for more than four minutes. A few tracks later, “You Are All That I Am Not” follows a similar course, relying on Marsden’s soothing vocals and exquisite guitar work to save the song from being completely forgotten amongst a number of better offerings. While we won’t knock Band of Skulls for exploring different musical avenues on Himalayan, we’d be lying if we said it hit all 12 songs out of the park, too.

Takeaway: The mark of any good band these days is for it to show a steady stream of progress, and that’s certainly what Band of Skulls has done with each album it has released. At the same time, it’s hard to say which record is its best at this point. For some BOS fans, Himalayan will be it. After all, it’s pretty impressive that there is this much sound coming out of only three musicians — a real testament to how in sync Marsden, Richardson and Hayward can be with a little fine tuning thanks to Launay’s highly-coveted production skills. But for a burgeoning band that has yet to reach its ceiling, Himalayan is simply a step in the right direction.

~Josh Herwitt


Nickel CreekA Dotted Line

2.5 BamsTop Tracks:
“Rest of My Life”
“Destination”
“21st of May”

Album Highlights: The musicianship on this album is top-notch Americana bluegrass with a twist of progressive folk. This may seemed a bit too far-fetched for any band, but for this trio from Southern California it’s just second nature. Chris Thile is one of the best mandolin players in the scene, and matched with the brother-sister duo of Sara and Sean Watkins on fiddle and guitar, you’ve got yourself one hell of an acoustic trio. With the band’s sixth studio album and the first since 2005, they started right where they left off, playing deep emotional songs, yet they seems to keep their songs fun and lighthearted.

The first track on the album, “Rest of My Life,” showcases Sean Watkins on vocals, and he seems to have really come into his own during the hiatus. His vocals stand out on this album, and the songs truly come to life with his singing style. The Chris Thile penned folk song “You Don’t Know Whats’s Going On” is the standout track on the album, as it blends pop, folk, Americana, and all things string, which will surely be great in a live setting, as these guys have been known for outstanding live performances.

Album Lowlight: I felt the cover of Mother Mother’s “Hayloft” is an extremely odd choice for this band. Even though it features master drummer Matt Chamberlain laying down a very interesting beat, it falls into the “Why?” category to me. It definitely showcases the lighter side of this band, but I think they could have chosen a way better cover than this one.

Takeaway: Nickel Creek haven’t played together for seven years, and they’ve put out a relatively solid album with A Dotted Line, but I feel there is something lacking from this album. I fell in love with the young, gritty, and virtuoso playing that they had in their early days. They have matured through the years and now have cleaner sound, and that holds them back. These guys can outplay most of the musicians out there, but this album doesn’t fully show that. There are some gems, but overall this album lacks a lot of substance that used to be there.

~Pete Mauch


Cloud NothingsHere and Nowhere Else

4-BamsTop Tracks:
“Now Here In”
“I’m Not Part Of Me”
“Pattern Walks”

Album Highlights: Some of the best albums are the ones that start and finish strong, and that’s what we have here with Cloud Nothings’ fourth LP, not to say that everything in the middle of Here And Nowhere Else is sub par — far from it. Continuing the post-hardcore noise rock Cloud Nothings carved out with their excellent 2012 album Attack on Memory, the bookend tracks, along with the album’s penultimate track, contain the best moments and most strikingly embody the core of the new effort.

Most every song begins with classic punk propulsion, with guitar, bass and drums screaming along while frontman Dylan Baldi delivers songwriting that is bent toward indie sensibilities. Although, the best part of Cloud Nothings’ output comes on the latter third of the tracks, finally breaking from chorus/verse repetition to bridge out into massive, emotive crescendos.

“Now Here In,” the first track, masterfully executes the extended bridge crescendo in the song’s last minute, but right away the song establishes hyper-hooky garage punk that feels somewhat familiar. Channeling adolescent adrenaline, the song is confrontational yet withdrawn with lyrics, “I can’t feel your pain, and I feel alright by this…And now there’s nothing left to say.” “I’m Not Part Of Me,” the last song and album lead single, hits home on the theme of Here And Nowhere Else being a breakup record. “Not telling you everything I’m going through…” opens the doorway to the squashing repetition of “I’m not you, I’m not you, you’re a part of me, you’re a part of me.”

“Pattern Walks,” the second-to-last cut, bucks the typical songwriting form to deliver a thrilling song that’s double the length of all others, while being twice as intense. Dissonant noise extends out midway through until it drops into a thunderous, driving jam, and Baldi’s voice drowns in reverb as the song builds toward a dizzying plateau. Squarely against the concept of change, the extended second and third sections, bathing in noise and Cloud Nothing’s patented outro crescendo, mimic the idea of change by shifting the sections in a quick heartbeat. Change, as it happens, often happens quickly.

Album Lowlight: Low points are rare, but some of the early tracks feel a bit generic. “Quieter Today” almost sounds like a Japandroids song at first, but sure enough it proves to be an intricate cut. It contains a tad of hope with the line “I keep telling myself love is real,” and the positively-toned guitar-led outro keeps it from being anything close to a bad song. “Psychic Trauma” is one big confrontation, and the time signature changes keep this track appealing. The screaming, hardcore singing in this song, along with “Giving Into Seeing” and “No Thoughts,” might be a bit much for some — but hey, you gotta tickle the metal/punk/rage part of your brain sometimes, right?

Takeaway: The lyrics are bitter throughout, yet the overall instrumentals create a sound that is so freeing. The more you listen, the complexity of the angst-filled eight compositions begin to reveal themselves more and more. Mashing gritty aesthetics with mostly accessible singing and guitar work, it’s hard to pigeonhole Cloud Nothings, as they’ve created a record that is progressive, both pushing and blurring the boundaries of rock into new terrain.

~Mike Frash


JAMAICAVentura

3-BamsTop Tracks:
“Turbo”
“Ricky”
“2 on 2”

JAMAICA’s “Ventura” is the second album from the French duo off the independent label Control Freak. Boasting an all-star production team spearheaded by the Grammy award-winning audio engineer/producer Peter Franco (Daft Punk, Justice), the sophomore effort follows suit with contemporary Parisian pop protocol. Although not groundbreaking, the album expands upon their synth-laden rock formula, successfully giving fans of Phoenix, The Wombats and Hot Hot Heat something to satiate their appetites in 2014.

Album Highlights: A pure pop-driven album, each song’s composition is pretty straight forward. Simple sing-along verses, catchy hooks and guitar solos repeat. It’s been a while since there has been a danceable piano rock band in the scene, so it’s nice to hear an experienced key player represented in the group. The songs that are most successful on the album focus heavily on rhythm based sections, demonstrating that this band is more than just a manufactured group altered efficaciously in post-production. Clearly established in the stand out instrumental track “Turbo,” these guys have some serious shredding capability. Advanced musicianship easily bounces back and forth between sing-along pop gems “2 on 2” and “Hello Again,” and on more complicated arrangements like the piano driven “Ricky.”

Album Lowlight: In a way, the tracks that are most effective on the album also serve as a double-edged sword. Whereas they introduce us to a newer, more cutting-edge version of JAMAICA, they cast a negative shadow over the less superior attempts on the album. The isolated ballad “Rushmore”, for instance, is completely lost amidst the steady flow of guitar-driven pop rock. Absent of much creative ingenuity, the track comes across as a half assed effort at including some type of introspective reflection jam. Falling abruptly between two of the most riveting tracks on the album, the song is highly skip-able and ultimately a waste of recording space. Both this lackluster ballad and the band’s proclivity to “play it safe” with radio friendly cuts such as “Ferris Wheeler” and “Golden Times” are a bit disappointing, especially in relation to how far they creatively pushed themselves with the rest of the album.

Takeaway: Ventura has the potential of gaining positive traction in the mainstream market. Riding off of the disco-centric French domination of modern day pop music, JAMAICA can easily coattail the success of their genre’s counterparts into some radio friendly singles and airplay. The band makes a viable effort to expand upon their sound with this second album, however they leave the listener without a clear direction of where they intend to go with their musical advances. A good album to start the summer months off with, the band is definitely club-ready. Currently sticking to solely European dates, anticipate the duo to expand their tour horizons into US territory once the live show is polished enough to jump the pond.

~Molly Kish


Mac DeMarcoSalad Days

4.5-BamsTop Tracks:
“Salad Days”
“Passing Out The Pieces”
“Goodbye Weekend”

Album Highlights: Jangly, poppy guitar licks ring out as soon as you start-up this album. Mac DeMarco’s signature style is here, it’s still fresh, and in ways stronger than ever; it’s more pointed, focused, and accessible. His quirky guitar melodies are still cathartic and gently unsettling. The topics broached are spoken with a nonchalant attitude but deal with love, honesty in relationships, the insignificance of life and his resulting ambivalence, and the hectic solitude of being on the road. DeMarco is able to write in a way that allows the listener to easily empathize with him, as he turns his issues into ones that most of us have dealt with at some point. In “Chamber of Reflection”, it’s easy to really feel a sense of solitude. “Goodbye Weekend” sounds like a stoney Sunday afternoon coming to a soothing end. Every track has a personality of its own while holding up the overall ethos of the album.

Album Lowlight: The first few tracks start strong out of the gates but the album loses some steam after the seventh track, “Passing Out Pieces.” DeMarco has a tendency to be a tad self referential (“Far as I can tell she’s happy / Livin’ with her Maccy”). However, it doesn’t come off as overly pretentious, even leaning toward endearment. Also, it may seem a little strange taking sage advice from a 23-year-old, and some of the love songs may take on a concocted or forged feeling.

Takeaway: This is probably DeMarco’s most accessible work yet, so look out for this increasingly-rising young star. The guy is only 23 and is putting out his third fantastic album, so his future is very bright. This album is lighthearted enough for multiples listens in a row with its breezy beach vibe, but also easily induces deep thoughts with its many lyrical gems. Perfect for a Sunday morning or an afternoon drive.

~Steve Wandrey

WIN TICKETS: Betty Who at Slim’s 4/2

Betty-Who

Enter to win a pair of free tickets to this show below.

Betty Who with Zak Waters, Cardiknox //
Slim’s — San Francisco
April 2nd, 2014 (Wednesday) //

Who is Betty Who? A Synth-Pop starlet about to break out into the mainstream? An Aussie that now lives in New York, whose professed goal, “I’d just like to make people dance”, is becoming a reality as she tours the US? An an energetic twenty-something slated to release her new EP, Slow Dancing, next week? No trick here, all three statements are true, and you have a chance to witness Betty Who perform Wednesday at Slim’s in San Francisco. Even better, enter your name and email below for a chance to win two tickets. No April fools here…

Buy tickets if you know you want to go!


Win-2-Tickets

Enter to win if you can attend this show Wednesday, April 2nd at Slim’s in San Francisco.

Submit your full name and email address below.
Contest ends Wednesday, April 2nd at Noon. Winners will be picked at random & notified by email. Your email will be kept private – we will share your email with no one.

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CONTEST CLOSED