Wednesday, November 19, 2008

This Week in Music

Posted by Eric Grandy on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 3:54 PM

Everett True poses 10 Questions for Vivian Girls, and then, of course, proceeds to kind of answer most of them himself:

1. The first pressing of your album earlier this year sold out real fast—do you have tons of friends?

Katy: "Ha ha. We wish!"

Vivian Girls lift their influences from the right direction—the Wipers, Nirvana, the Shangri-Las—but of course sound nothing like... well, the first two. Indeed, Vivian Girls are so naive about their musical heritage—Fizzbombs, Shop Assistants, Talulah Gosh, especially Girls At Our Best!—that they describe their sound as "shoegaze." Um, the Brit shoegazers of the early '90s never jarred. And to call My Bloody Valentine shoegazers is like saying Sonic Youth are a pretty good noise band. True, but missing the point.

Sam McPheeters considers the newness, oldness, and sub-primeness of the New Kids on the Block:

More to the point, what is the current formula for the Middle-Aged Man Band? Who's the Remorseful Guy? Which one is the Gum Disease Guy? Guy Struggling With an Addiction to Online Pornography? Guy Who Lost Money in a Bad Restaurant Investment?

Dave Segal pieces together the puzzle that is Lucky Dragons:

Luke Fischbeck and Sarah Rara move quickly and smartly. The core of the prolific project known as Lucky Dragons, they make music (19 albums and counting) and art (they host a weekly collaborative drawing society called Sumi Ink Club) as if there were no tomorrow; they squeeze the day with their prodigious creative energies. The world—at least the minuscule portion of the populace aware of them—is richer for it. Oh, and Lucky Dragons also run Glaciers of Nice, "a small press and internet community." Feeling lazy yet?

And we help you get shit-faced with the Hold Steady (like you need help):

Plus, there's a ton of Album Reviews, this week's Up & Coming shows, and much, much more.

Re: Unicorns, Kittens, Pitbulls, and Slugs

Posted by Eric Grandy on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 2:31 PM

Really, I just missed the way we used to grade things back at Evergreen. We'll be adding more icons as needed, so if you have any suggestions, feel free to let us know. And remember, music criticism isn't the fucking WASL.

On Relistening to the Shins' Third Album at the Gym Last Night, a Year and Nine Months After Giving It a Negative Review in The Stranger

Posted by Christopher Frizzelle on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:57 PM

The thing that's fucked about lifting weights, a thing that keeps good people out of gyms, is that you aren't doing enough things at once. There is nothing to occupy your mind. You're just supposed to sit there and lift this mass of matter again and again and again and again and again and again and again? And then do that again? And then move to another bench and do that again, with a different thing? Could there be anything more boring? It occurred to me last night at the gym that my happiest few weeks there were the weeks in February 2007 when I was listening to the Shins' third album, Wincing the Night Away, on repeat, not cuz it's a particularly energetic album (it ain't), but cuz I'd agreed to review it for the paper, and listening to an endless loop of it and trying to figure out what there was to say about it gave me something—something other than again and again and again and again and again and again and again—to think about.

I'm notoriously slow on the uptake, new-music-wise, and the newest stuff Grandy has pointed me towards—the Pica Beats (excellent), Vivian Girls (likewise; also Everett True has a longer piece about them in the paper that goes live today)—are not on my iPod owing to some mental block I have about taking the time to synch my iPod to my computer, and so last night at the gym, unable to think of anything better to listen to, I put on Wincing the Night Away. Just to see how it's been doing.

The rest of this writes itself—it was better than I remembered! It was better than I said! In that review I argued that the single "Phantom Limb" was a "weak" and "anemic" and too much like "New Slang" to get excited about, but this winter, as opposed to last year's winter, its anemia seems welcome. In the dark, post-election, layoff-ish anxiety of this winter, "Phantom Limb" seems slow in a pleasant way, like how a diazepam drip is slow in a pleasant way. And "Sea Legs" isn't "tedious" at all, or all that "long," and the janky noise collisions at the end—all the beeps and burps and redirects, which James Mercer once told an interviewer were just leftover scraps of beats and melodies that he let play all on top of each other after he got up to take a leak in the studio or something (don't remember the anecdote exactly)—aren't annoying at all, really, and are a blast of friendly/creative/unexpected air.

The tedium I detected was probably just the tedium of again and again and again and again and again and again and again infecting the way I was listening. A couple weeks ago, an acquaintance mentioned that he'd just listened to Wincing the Night Away for the first time on a road trip. "GREAT road trip album!" he said. He went on and on about it. I thought about what kind of album it would be if you were listening to it on the highway, as stuff outside the car grew bigger and flew by you, as opposed to listening to it while lifting weights in a mirrored basement, and it seemed like an entirely different album.

As for why I gave it two stars back then—two stars!—I, uh, I don't know what to say, except that, though the first two Shins albums are better than the third, giving Wincing the Night Away two stars was (to use Megan Seling's favorite word) retarded. Then again, the whole starring system is retarded. It's a dodge. It tells you so little. To this end, it was startling in a great way to be signing off on pages yesterday and see that Grandy has designed a new scheme for rating albums, a scheme I fully support.

Albumreviews.jpeg

Wincing the Night Away is definitely a slug, though there's an argument to be made for unicorn.

Bye Bye the Pharmacy

Posted by Megan Seling on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 12:53 PM

For awhile there, it seemed like all the cool kids were moving to Portland. Now Seattle's losing a few more familiar faces... to New Orleans.

It is with a wee bit of a sadness (but also a good helping of hope and excitement, we’ll add) that we must announce the departure from our lovely city of one of the scene’s (and our) tried and true favorites, THE PHARMACY, as they prepare to move to New Orleans in early 2009.

But the Pharmacy play a show every week! You know, when they're not on tour for three months at a time. They're a local staple! I've seen 'em at Healthy Times Fun Club, I've seen 'em at the Crocodile, I've seen 'em at the Fusion Cafe, and the Vera Project and the Block Party and in the middle of the street in Ballard... I've seen the Pharmacy more than I've seen almost any band, and I've probably only gone to 2% of their local shows. They play. all. the. time.

And why are they going? Because of the beignets. The goddamn beignets! But can you blame them? Beignets are delicious.

Says singer Scottie:

“We’re totally excited about New Orleans. We took some time off there on this tour during Halloween and election night and it was amazing. During the Day of the Dead celebration some of us covered our faces with powdered sugar from the beignets from Café Dumonde. New Orleans has such an amazing musical heritage: Fats Domino, Wild Tchoupitoulas, Randy Newman… It’s always inspiring to be there and this time we decided that we really want to stay!”

I guess Nirvana, Heart, and the Sonic just aren't good enough anymore.

The move isn't until January, so we have them for another month or so. So hooray for that. They're playing the Comet on New Year's Eve with the Cute Lepers and Wallpaper, and then they'll play their last show as Seattle citizens on January 2nd at Healthy Times Fun Club.

Their last Seattle show (you know, until they tour again) will probably go something like this finale at their CD release show earlier this year (which was also at HTFC, appropriately enough):

The Stranger's Music Department Is Looking for Interns

Posted by Megan Seling on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 11:00 AM

If you love music, love writing, love writing about music, love taking pictures at rock shows, are pretty decent with a computer, nice, and want to experience what it's like to work for The Stranger, then e-mail your resume and a couple writing samples to megan@thestranger.com.

Enthusiasm is more important than experience, in this case. Your writing samples don't have to have been published anywhere—you can just write up a favorite CD or a recent show if you'd like. And if you fancy yourself a photographer, include a link to some of your work (this is not a required skill, but it is a plus—and link to a Flickr page is fine).

For the internship you'll only be required to come to the office a couple times a week, and we're pretty flexible with days. But we're not flexible with flakiness, so only e-mail if you're reliable and not a jerk.

(This internship is unpaid, but if you're a student we will definitely sign whatever you need us to sign in order to get you school credit for your time served. Also, there's often candy in the office, and you are welcome to eat as much of it as you'd like.)

Rodriguez to Play LA & SF (But Not Seattle)

Posted by Dave Segal on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 10:27 AM

Detroit folk singer Rodriguez is playing Los Angeles Nov. 21 and San Francisco Nov. 23. That's great news, as Rodriguez has never played west of his hometown, Detroit.

However! Rodriguez's legendary 1970 LP Cold Fact was reissued by Light in the Attic this year. So, wouldn't it make sense to have Señor Rodriguez play in the city (i.e., Seattle) where the label that so magnanimously rescued his classic opus from oblivion is based? Yes, it would. But it's not happening.

One, two, three: ARGH!

I asked LITA boss Matt Sullivan why there's no Seatown booking. I'll update this post when/if I hear from him. (You can read the press release after the jump.)

UPDATE: Sullivan, who is in LA attending to Rodriguez's transportation needs, responds: "For Seattle, it was too difficult to pull off due to the Thanksgiving holidays. However, in May 2009, we'll be re-releasing Rodriguez's brilliant second album entitled Coming From Reality (originally released in 1971) and hope to bring him to Seattle around the release." Awesome news.

Here's a video of a little-heard Rodriguez track not on Cold Fact, "Climb Up on My Music":

Continue reading »

Coldplay Featuring Jay-Z (Or: Jay-Zeezer Is Better Than Anything Jay-Z Could Ever Do With Coldplay)

Posted by Megan Seling on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 10:00 AM

Coldplay (featuring Jay-Z) - "Lost +"

Eh, whatever. It's not that interesting to me. When it comes to Jay-Z/indie nerd collaborations, frankly I'm partial to the Jay-Zeezer shit that was all over the internet a couple years back. Like... "Buddy Holly" with "99 Problems"?

YES, PLEASE.

Jay-Zeezer - "99 Problems with Buddy Holly"

I will always find this video hilarious.

Tonight in Music: Of Montreal, Apollo Sunshine

Posted by Megan Seling on Wed, Nov 19, 2008 at 9:00 AM

Of Montreal - "Id Engager"

Of Montreal
In support of their brilliantly bizarre new album, Skeletal Lamping, Of Montreal are touring with the most ornate, out-of-this-world indie-rock show this side of the Flaming Lips (and with better songs, too!). At an early tour stop in NYC, the show included: centaurs, satyrs, people in animal masks, simulated nudes, giant roller skates, an evil pope, a sexy nun, some amorphous gold idols, a saloon brawl, a paramilitary raid, a hanging, a resurrection, and a live motherfucking horse. Expect to see more or less everything except the horse. (Showbox Sodo, 1700 First Ave S, 628-0888. 8 pm, $20, all ages.) ERIC GRANDY

Speaking of Of Montreal, be sure to check out Eric Grandy's interview with the band's frontman Kevin Barnes.

Apollo Sunshine - "Singing To The Earth"

Apollo Sunshine, Dead Confederate, Feral Children
(Chop Suey) Apollo Sunshine's Shall Noise Upon spawns from three multi-instrumentalists whose joyous, expansive songcraft channels the spiritual bliss of George Harrison's All Things Must Pass without obviously emulating that landmark LP's Spectorized Krishna rock. Apollo Sunshine—Jesse Gallagher, Sam Cohen, and Jeremy Black—lean toward psychedelia's whimsical end, but not cloyingly so. And they throw a few change-ups, too: "Brotherhood of Death" chugs headlong, like if Canned Heat joined forces with early Meat Puppets; "The Funky Chamberlain (Who Begot Who)" recalls Lothar and the Hand People's "Machines" (always a good thing), but it's funkier; "Green Green Lawns of Outer Space" sounds like Raymond Scott gone Hawaiian. Casual, free-range brilliance lives. DAVE SEGAL

Also tonight: Studio at Havana, Grynch at Nectar, and all the rest.

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