Thursday, November 13, 2008

A-G-A-I-N

Posted by Dean Fawkes on Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 4:57 PM

Blur - 'Parklife'

Eric makes quite a good point about economic highs and lows having much less to do with the overall quality of the day's music than we're told, and how leisure music fits into it all.

But is Blur's Parklife a good example?

Put out in the spring of 1994, the album was a massive contrast to the music of the time. Where the rest of the world was invested in Seattle grunge or, say, Midlands grebo, Blur made Parklife, the second part of a trilogy, to fight back, for the most part, America.

"Enough," it said.

Not just to the Seattle sound, its dull and masculine working-class chic, but largely to our country's slow cultural and corporate takeover of Britain.

Earlier in the '90s, Damon Albarn would look out the window and couldn't tell what country he lived in anymore. Megastores. Fast food. Shopping centers. The nation as a brand. It looked like America.

This meant that it's absolutely true that Britpop and an album like Parklife had color and frivolity, or a sense of leisure. But it was also an angry and poisonous call-to-arms.

Sailing through a different historical British music genre with nearly every track, Parklife disguised a savage undercurrent and slipped it into the mainstream, offering songs about millennial apathy ("End Of A Century"), fetishizing of the United States ("Magic America"), and universal, stare-at-ourselves depression ("This Is A Low"), while even "Girls & Boys," one of the most joyous songs Blur has ever written, threw back to grunge-unfriendly gender experimentation, which America's music culture has rarely been comfortable with, and classic '80s synth-pop like Pet Shop Boys or Duran Duran, but updated it with cold-water-in-the-face asides of factory accidents and murderous STDs. Holidays were a scam. "Then it's back to work, A-G-A-I-N!" On the sleeve were photographs of a day at the races, but with vicious dogs.



As much as Parklife had the sound of joy, it seethed as much as it celebrated.

I think it comes down to a disparity of timelines. America and Barack Obama in 2008, you could argue, is Britain and Tony Blair in 1994.

If we're to look at Parklife as a sign of anything, it might not be a good one. Helping to run up to a cultural British left-wing renaissance after ages of seemingly unstoppable right-wing Thatcherism, Blur were one of the biggest bands that sounded like hope before New Labour sold everyone out.

The late '90s let-down that followed, Jon Savage, author of "England's Dreaming," has said — where the country watched the heroes become the enemies — somehow felt worse than all the long years on the sidelines. It didn't take long before the government disappointed everyone, the pop scene that Parklife stood for fractured, Britain was a dirty word again, and the world got stuck with fucking Coldplay.

No one, especially after America's latest clean start, wants history to repeat like that.

Buy These Two Albums Today

Posted by Eric Grandy on Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 11:15 AM

At our best, I like to think music journalists/critics do more than just provide a consumer guide to the flood of new and old albums constantly available in stores. We introduce new ideas, participate in the cultural discourse, make fun of crappy bands, etc, etc. But sometimes it is necessary to just suck it up and get all Consumer Reports about shit, so here goes: There are (at least) two albums covered in this issue of the Stranger that you must go out and purchase today. They are:

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The Sight Below - Glider

and

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Max Tundra - Parallax Error Beheads You

Dave Segal discusses the Sight Below in this week's High on the Down Low - The Sight Below's Subliminal Techno Seduction:

The Sight Below's set at this year's Decibel Festival was a highlight for many attendees. His mesmerizingly muffled 4/4 kick drums pumped like an excited hippo's heart beneath gaseous synth tones and spectral guitar spray, while his voluminous bass frequencies seemed to threaten the integrity of the Baltic Room's sound system. To those on the Sight Below's rarefied wavelength, the result was a steady-state, subdued ecstasy similar to that induced by Kompakt Records artists like Gas and the Field.

The Sight Below's debut album, Glider (out November 11 on the respected Michigan label Ghostly International), meticulously re-creates that live experience while also exploring his more ambient proclivities. The Sight Below's deft aptitude on guitar (typically stroked ever so lightly with a viola bow or plectrum) and keyboards glimmers brilliantly on the disc's nine cuts, evoking masters of subtle sonic bliss like My Bloody Valentine, Brian Eno, Harold Budd, and Fennesz.

To which I would only add: Do not be scared off by the use of the word "techno" in the title of this piece. Yes, the Sight Below records and performs his music with a laptop—it's 2008—but he also uses a guitar and a shit ton of effects pedals. This is shoegaze or ambient more than it is techno. About the closest it gets to techno is that several of its songs feature a weak 4/4 heartbeat murmuring through the amniotic fluid of guitar and effects. It's a Gas; buy it.


The Sight Below - "Further Away" from Ghostly International

I attempt to review Max Tundra in this week's Album Reviews:

There's something almost sad about the Jekyll/Hyde schizophrenia of the starry-eyed crooner and the mad studio scientist. It's like Max Tundra keeps trying to make a simple pop song but instead ends up with these wonderfully confounding creations. When he sings, "I was born to entertain," there's something pleading about it—this is all he can or wants to do—but he's not boasting, he's begging. So it's especially satisfying when it all comes together on the romantically confused "Which Song," whose melodic, digitally breathy chorus is the most catchy and affecting pop moment I've heard in a while.

But, really, Parallax Error Beheads You is one of those albums that seems impossible to confine to a mere 300 word review. So here briefly are a few other favorite moments from the album:

-The joyous, busy microsample bounce of "Orphaned," which scatters and coheres around a beat for three and a half minutes before the blissed-out vocals kick in (another note: all of Max Tundra's vocals on this album are as high and thin as ozone but digitally crisp and in tune to the point that I wondered if I was hearing the ghost flutters of some AutoTuning here and there.)

-"Number Our Days," which can be added to the very short list of shiny happy atheist pop songs about death, with its lyrics, "Nothing happens when you die/you don't leave your body or fly off into the sky."

-Speaking of lyrics, the chorus of "Which Song" that I allude to above, goes like this: "My future unfurls untenably/my schemes are cut down like a dying tree/if this one is the tune about you and me/then which song is the one about Kelly B (?)" It sounds way better with the melody added.

Anyway, the album is fantastic (although I lately find myself skipping "Nord Lead 3," but that's just one track); go out and but it today. Also highly recommended are Max Tundra's covers of the KLF's classic "What Time is Love?" and Hot Chip's "Playboy."

Max Tundra - "Which Song"

Tonight in Music: Grayskul, Lucinda Williams

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 11:00 AM

Lucinda Williams performing "Real Love" on Letterman earlier last month

Lucinda Williams, Buick 6
(Showbox at the Market) Want further proof that we're living in a righteous new era? Little Honey, the new record by Lucinda Williams, entered the Billboard Hot 100 album chart in the top 10. Of course, this says more about the sorry state of the music industry than about a sudden widespread hunger for the well-crafted tunes of a perennial critics' darling‖but still, such milestones must be celebrated. Tonight, the mighty Ms. Williams brings the rocking Little Honey to the stage, and if it's anything like the typical "Lucinda live" experience, she'll be odd, a little stiff, and sporadically brilliant (and backed by an astoundingly accomplished collection of musicians). DAVID SCHMADER

Grayskul - "Missing" feat. Andrea Zollo

Grayskul, Strong Killings, D.Black, Elephant Rider
(King Cobra) Hiphop and rock can be a combination as delicious as chocolate and peanut butter or as disgusting as a Juggalo covered in Faygo. Luckily, this evening of music from the far ends of the rap/rock spectrum is the former rather than the latter. Theatrically gloomy duo Grayskul trade in dark rhymes and acerbic deliveries over bass-heavy beats and druggy, disorienting atmospheres; Strong Killings kick out ragged, possibly rabid punk rock‖œmarked pounding drums, battered guitars, and garbled gang vocals that sound like they were sung with the mics inside mouths full of broken teeth. D.Black raps with casual authority, steely determination, and a commanding flow; Elephant Rider, true to their name, aim for a mammoth, heavy sound, bass and drum hits landing like trammeling footfalls, guitar and vocals echoing as though delivered from a dizzying height (their recordings don't yet quite bear this sound out, but it's likely quite crushing live). ERIC GRANDY

And that's just what's in this week's U&Cs... find all the rest of tonight's listings here.

Ya Ho Wha 13 to Play Seattle Dec. 15

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 10:54 AM

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LA improv-psych-rock band Ya Ho Wha 13 make their Seattle debut Dec. 15 at Nectar Lounge. Featuring three original members, YHW 13—who are the musical branch of the Source Family, spearheaded by the late, concupiscient guru Father Yod—will be supporting their new album on Drag City, Songs From the Source (12 songs recorded at a 1973 rehearsal under the name Children of the Sixth Root Race), and angling to lure innocent concert-goers into their nefarious peace-loving, natural-food-eating, New Age cult. (Kidding, kidding.)

YHW 13 haven't toured in 30 years and may never return to our city, so if you have any interest at all in these mystical mofos or are curious to know what Father Yod's disciples are up to in 2008, you might want to make this gig a priority.

YA HO WHA 13 w/ Special Guests, Nectar Lounge, 412 N 36th St, 632-2020, Mon Dec 15, 8pm, $12 adv., 21+. Tickets go on sale at noon today.

30 seconds of Ya Ho Wha 13 live


R.I.P. Mitch Mitchell

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 10:37 AM

Jimi Hendrix Experience drummer Mitch Mitchell passed away Nov. 12 in a Portland hotel room; he had been on tour with a Jimi Hendrix tribute band. Mitchell—who was born in Ealing, England—was 61. Mitchell's death is suspected to be from natural causes, but an autopsy has yet to be conducted.

Mitchell played on JHE’s fantastic triumvirate of LPs—Are You Experienced?, Axis: Bold as Love, and Electric Ladyland—which represents some of the most innovative rock ever. Playing behind perhaps the world's greatest rock guitarist, Mitchell rose to the occasion with his distinctive style, which merged dexterous, intricate jazz fills with mercurial, powerful rock timekeeping. He embodied a fluid combination of John Bonham’s brute force and funkiness, Keith Moon’s manic energy, and Elvin Jones' intuitive knack for nuanced dynamics. After he left the Experience in 1970, Mitchell played with Jeff Beck, Jack Bruce, and Terry Reid, among others.

Last night at the Moore Theatre during their encore, Medeski Martin + Wood paid tribute to Mitchell with a dazzling, abstract rendition of the Experience’s "Crosstown Traffic."

Respect to one of the best sticksmen ever, Mitch Mitchell.

Jimi Hendrix Experience’s "If 6 Was 9"

"You Got Me Floatin'"

"Spanish Castle Magic" live


Poly Octave Orchid Child

Posted by Trent Moorman on Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 9:51 AM

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Guitar player Thomas Hunter continues Pedal Month today talking about his Electro-Harmonix Poly Octave Generator. Thomas has a mustache that invites you in. He plays in Kay Kay and His Weathered Underground, Wild Orchid Children, the Saturday Knights, and Earth, Wind, and Fire. He’s bull riding and full bore. He’s also always smiling:

You have a new pedal. A new toy, the Poly Octave Generator. Where did you get it?
Thomas: Some weird shop. But I'm pretty sure you can get them anywhere. I was just wandering by this little place in Portland and just happened to have four-hundred bucks in my pocket and they were playing some Woody Guthrie record. So I got it.

Why did you get it?
I wasn't really sure at the time. Impulse.

When do you play it?
Too much. It has such a distinct sound I've really got to tone it down. I can get a little trigger happy with new shit sometimes.

What does it do?
It basically gives me the option to make a tone with a mix of my dry output and a bunch of other octaves; one octave down, sub octave, one octave up, one octave up detuned, two octaves up, and two octaves up detuned. Each one has it's own volume so it's really precise. It also has an LP filter and some three way switch that does some shit to the sound.

Why do you like it?
It's really nice for Wild Orchid Children because we don't have a bass player and it really helps free up Kyle's (keyboard player) left hand every once in a while. He's so damn good at holding down the bass on the organ, he really deserves a break every once in a while. Plus, it makes my guitar sound like an organ so we can blend in a really cool ways. It has it's place, if only a small place, in mostly every group of people I play with.

If you could change one thing about it what would it be?
It would be free.

When you solo, what do you think about?
Geysers, roller coasters, oxen, and Alfred Hitchcock.

(picture: andy pixel)

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