Archive for November, 2009

ruthjump

Nana Grizol built up a fan base quickly in its short lifespan, first as a cult act in Athens, then gaining a much wider following after being asked to join 2008’s Elephant 6 Holiday Surprise Tour.  When I saw them on their tour earlier this year with The Music Tapes and Brian Dewan, I was surprised to find myself pummeled by an impromptu mosh pit.  Thus excitement is high over their second album, Ruth, which comes out January 12th on CD and vinyl from Orange Twin Records, and is available digitally right now from iTunes and Amazon.  “Galaxies,” the second track from Ruth, in three short minutes summarizes so much of the band’s appeal: thoughtful lyrics, appealing vocals from Theo Hilton, bright and blaring horns.

MP3: Nana Grizol – Galaxies

The first James Husband music video has been released, and it’s for “Window,” from his new album A Parallax I naturally, and which I have been spinning quite too often.  Thanks to The Booty Patrol for the link – enjoy!


James Husband – Window

chris-knox1

In June of this year, Chris Knox of the Tall Dwarfs–a major influence upon the Elephant 6 Collective, with selections of their discography reissued via Cloud Recordings–suffered a debilitating stroke.  During the summer it was announced that Jeff Mangum agreed to contribute to the in-the-works tribute album, and one of my sources confirmed that Olivia Tremor Control were likely a “yes” as well.  The Chris Knox blog has now announced the track listing for the 2-CD tribute album, called Stroke – Songs for Chris Knox, and neither a Neutral Milk nor an Olivia Tremor is anywhere in sight.  That’s the bad news.  The good news is that it’s still an excellent lineup.  Check it out here.

The Optical Atlas streaming jukebox, located down the sidebar, has been updated with tracks from Thee American Revolution, James Husband, Nana Grizol, The Music Tapes, Neutral Milk Hotel, and Marshmallow Coast.

buddhaelectrostorm

At the 2007 Athens Popfest, on what festival organizer Mike Turner was informally calling “Elephant 6 Night,” a band took the 40 Watt’s stage with little buzz–”Thee American Revolution? Whuzzat?”–but everyone pulled tighter to the stage when they recognized Robert Schneider, Apples in Stereo frontman, stepping up to the microphone in sunglasses and ceremonial robe. A throne was placed stage right, and a mysterious man known only as “William Shears” (not Ringo Starr), also in sunglasses, claimed his rightful place as master of ceremonies. With brother-in-law Craig Morris (then of Ideal Free Distribution, who’d played a stunning set to a smaller crowd earlier in the evening), they kicked out the jams and almost literally blew out the speakers, and between each song turned to the seated Mr. Wm. Shears, American Revolution mentor, who would issue his silent approval with a royal nod of the head.  His approval is something, as the band’s message and means is 60’s-style psychedelic rock, and Shears is a British musician of 60’s psych pedigree who recently moved to Lexington, where Robert & Craig are located.  His identity is intended to be a mystery, as is the exact role he plays in this outfit.  (Was he controlling them with his presence, like a psychic puppetmaster?  Perhaps.)  We are told the band united under William’s direction, and also out of the new collective that’s solidified after Robert moved his Pet Sounds Studio from Denver to Lexington a long time ago; Craig, too, has a studio, and their enthusiasm for this particular musical genre gives their album Buddha Electrostorm an interesting mix of sincerity and self-parody.  The long, feedback-driven guitar intros are both utterly ridiculous and definitely awesome.  Until now their releases and live appearances have been sporadic and mysterious; an impromptu show in Lexington, or MP3s passed along to this website from Robert, Craig, or William as a 4th of July present.  Still, it wasn’t meant to take this long: a certain indie label was intended to release this record some years ago, so Buddha Electrostorm is far from “brand new.”  After a complicated birth, it’s finally out from Garden Gate Records, the psych-specialty label started by Craig and his sister, Marci Schneider, and which released the superb Laminated Cat record in September.  I’d like to imagine a shop in San Francisco selling medical marijuana, Tarot Cards, X-rated comix, and Garden Gate records.

To those finally getting a chance to hear the Electrostorm, it’s a blast: the band sounds like acne-faced teens starting a band and hitting proms and parties in L.A. circa 1966, too anxious for stardom, playing bigger than they are.  Of course, winking at you, there’s a sophistication beneath this sloppy exterior; it’s a bit too clever to be just what it appears.  The sure-footedness to step between a straightforward, we-will-rock-you, riff-driven anthem like “Power House” and a more melodic, handclapping number like “Blow My Mind” can’t help but display the experience of the minds behind it all.  What does it all mean?  Nothing, thank Christ.  This is anti-intellectual, take-your-pants-off fun.  Like “Grit Magazine,” named after those ads in the back of old comics asking you to waste your childhood acting as their cheap magazine’s door-to-door salesman; that premise is married with great ceremony to Deep Purple’s “Smoke on the Water” monster riff.  Not a similar riff, mind you.  The exact same riff.  What else can you do with this but set aside nitpicking and turn it all the way up?  Granted, this is the most shameless track on the album: you’ll feel less guilty, if any guilt remains, blasting the genuinely very good “She’s Coming Down” and “Haircut,” and dammit if “Electric Flame” wouldn’t do honor to the last Apples in Stereo album, because it even has a little bit of polish to it.  Not that conventional polish is welcome here.  The bursts of between-take dialogue, ear-punching feedback, and random misplaced noise are all deliberately arranged.  It’s like a Jackson Pollock.  E6 fans will be able to easily place it in Robert’s discography, but then, despite all his side-projects, he’s always been barking up the same tree.  The psych of Fun Trick Noisemaker and Her Wallpaper Reverie blossoms here, as do the experiments with harsher, dressed-down live sound in Velocity of Sound and the Ulysses record.  And it’s appropriate that Will Hart (Circulatory System) provides the artwork, as there’s an early E6-tapes vibe here too (”Blow My Mind” in particular).  For Apples in Stereo fans, it’s essential listening, but the appeal should be broader.  The real American revolution was rock and roll, and Thee American Revolution wallow in it, shamelessly, irresistibly.  Hopefully this record won’t stay underground.

Buddha Electrostorm,
by Thee American Revolution

1. She’s Coming Down
2. Grit Magazine
3. Electric Flame
4. Haircut
5. Power House
6. Blow My Mind
7. Shoeshine Blues
8. Little Girl
9. Saturn Daze
10. In Your Dream/Japanese Clone

You can buy it now at Garden Gate Records.

Attention Kentuckians: There will be a Garden Gate Records Showcase on Friday, November 20th at Al’s Bar in Lexington, KY, featuring live performances by Thee American Revolution, Big Fresh, and Laminated Cat.

ruth_lg

Nana Grizol’s much-anticipated second album, Ruth, has a CD and LP release date of January 12th from Orange Twin Records, but it appears that you can download it now from iTunes and Amazon.com, if physical media are not so important to you.  Thanks to Scott for the tip.

You can also read an interview with Nana Grizol’s Theo Hilton at T.O. Snob’s Music.

coast

Marshmallow Coast’s first and third records, Time Square (1997) and Marshmallow Coasting (2000) are now available as “special edition” re-releases from iTunes and eMusic.  Each includes bonus tracks, most of which have never before been released.  Marshmallow Coasting, originally released on Kindercore Records, features of Montreal as Andy Gonzales’ backing band.  Complete track listings are below.  (Incidentally, I don’t know why “The Audience is Listening,” the opening instrumental track from Coasting, is not included; but I haven’t downloaded the new version yet, so for all I know it’s just been merged with “Lilypad” onto a single track.  UPDATE: I have confirmed with HHBTM that the missing track was Andy’s decision.  Frankly, it’s not a big loss – we’re talking, literally, about seconds of an instrumental – and it’s still a terrific album.)  Super Seniors and Juniors, a completely re-recorded version of his sophomore album, will be released in the very near future.

Time Square
1. Intro
2. In the Army Kid
3. Spencer for Hire = Expensive
4. Cosmolac
5. Crooked Dance
6. Bermuda Rectangle
7. I Love Satie
8. Hell Tingles
9. Wedding in Catland
10. Between Love and Puke on the Bus
11. Time to Go to Work
Bonus Tracks
12. Curly Whisper
13. Darker Side of Lightning
14. Instrumental
15. Ceilings Fall a Lot
16. I Hope You Like Rocking
17. Shimmering in a Bulb of Glass 98
18. Squinting Out the Lights
19. So & So’s and Emeralds

Marshmallow Coasting
1. Lilypad
2. Hung Up
3. Golden Harp
4. Oblong Destiny
5. Bizarre Classical V
6. Lonliest Heart in Texas
7. Siddartha
8. Blow My Mind
9. Shimmering in a Bulb of Glass
10. There Will Come a Time
11. Bizarre Classical VI
12. In the Sea
13. Insane
14. The Audience is Deaf
15. Lil’ Fun Machine
Bonus Tracks
16. David and the Giant Crabs
17. Listen to Your Heart Beat

silverandgold

Pittsburgh’s WYEP will be hosting a Holiday Hootenanny at the Pittsburgh Opera on Thursday, December 17, at 7pm, to support the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank.  Live music will be courtesy Silver & Gold, a local “holiday supergroup” which features The Essex Green’s Jeff Baron (thus the mention here) as well as members of Donora, Meeting of Important People, Lohio, Good Night, States, Boca Chica, Blindsider, and more.  The suggested ticket price is $5 plus a non-perishable food item for the food bank, and tickets are available here.  Thanks to Billy for the link.