Sunday, January 11, 2009

Here We Fucking Went!

Posted by Eric Grandy on Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 7:44 PM

For whatever reason, I didn’t expect last night’s Glasvegas show at Chop Suey to be sold out. But then, I’m kind of terrible at predicting numbers. Still, some other music fan friends of mine seemed equally surprised, asking, “How did you know about this show?” as if this band were a secret, and all 500 of us there just happened to be in on it.

So, what has Carl Barat been up to since the Libertines? Eh…not much, apparently. His set last night consisted of him playing solo (sensible, given the kind of band-mates he attracts), strumming on an electric guitar and singing mumbly, mopey bar ballads. He wasn’t turned up too loud, and towards the back of the bar he was competing with what seemed like a lot of bar chatter, But up front, fans were cheering, and, towards the end of his set, when he played Libertines song "Can't Stand Me Now," clapping and singing along. Later, some girls posed with him for a cell phone photo, possibly unaware that, in the background of the shot, were Peter Buck and Sean Nelson (Nelson demurely covering his face).

There was a lot of accents in the audience, a handful of Scots in the crowd chanting, “Here we, here we, here we fucking go!” during the silence before and then during the shoegazy opening build-up of Glasvegas’ set. Nobody’s gonna get shot tonight, but the threat of soccer hooliganism looms large. The Allan cousins have kind of a greaser look—leather motorcycle jackets, dark hair oiled back, very teen angelic—and it kind of suited their quasi-vintage Spector by way of J&MC sound. They opened with the first track from their debut, “Flowers and Football Tops,” dramatically lit, colored gels and strobes flashing behind them, and plenty loud enough to overwhelm the crowd. They played “It's My Own Cheating Heart That Makes Me Cry” They pulled a false start on one song, and lead singer James Allan apologized, “Our drummer fucked that up…no that was me [or maybe “mean”?]”—it was the only thing he said for the first half of the band’s set (later, between songs, he pointed out into the crowd).

They played “Geraldine,” and it sounded awesome, despite a little bit too much reverb on the vocals at first. The fairly hulking Rab Allan sang the “oooh-oooh-oooooh” harmonies, and it was kind of funny—such fey singing coming out of such a big bruiser of a guy. More chanting between sets from the crowd. James finally talks a little more, although it’s hard to pull much more than “thanks” and “Seattle” out of his thick accent. They play “Go Square Go,” the crowd’s chants finally getting a chorus to sync up with. More banter: “blurgh blagh blurgh…is for you.” Very touching. They played a song I didn't recognize, and a friend observed, “sound like ‘Just Like Honey’.” I agree and up the ante: “It sounds just like ‘Just Like Honey’.” (We’re nerds.) They play “Daddy's Gone” and the crowd comes back in chanting for the finish. They end their short-ish set with a look of feedback playing on after they leave the stage. Hell of a show.

Apropos of All the Tension in the World

Posted by Dave Segal on Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 7:12 PM

“Delta Rain Dream” by Jon Hassell and Brian Eno is the ultimate chillout track—more so than anything I noted in this post. The song is indescribably beautiful and impossibly subdued, inscrutable yet comforting. Find it on Fourth World, Vol. 1: Possible Musics (I see used vinyl copies going for relatively low prices with some frequency).

Tonight in Music: Free Blood

Posted by Megan Seling on Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 9:00 AM


Free Blood - "The Royal Family"

Free Blood (ex-!!!) play Chop Suey tonight. In this week's paper, Eric Grandy talked to the band about their musical past and present:

After four years of doing Free Blood on the side, Pugh's departure from !!! has allowed the band to become a full-time endeavor. Asked if it's nice to only have one band to work on now, Pugh sighs with relief: "Ohhhhh yeah."

Free Blood's debut collection, The Singles—out on DFA/Rong Music, whose proprietor Ben Cook is a recent transplant to Seattle—gathers six original songs and five remixes (some previously released) to make for either a generous EP or a somewhat shifty full-length. Despite their streamlined core, Free Blood's sound reveals an expansive approach to the studio, where they pile on layers of vocals and instruments, often with help from their friends. On any given track, there are buzzing synths, live and programmed percussion, strutting bass, liquid guitars, strings, and plenty of reverberating room underpinning the dueling vocals.

Read more about the new album, and Pugh's thoughts on !!! here.

Also tonight! AFCGT and PWRFL Power at Neumos:


AFCGT - "Return of the Leper"

AFCGT, PWRFL Power, Linda and Ron's Dad
(Neumos), On their self-titled 180-gram white-vinyl LP for Uzu Audio, Seattle supergroup AFCGT (A Frames + Climax Golden Twins) create a species of antisocial rock that aspires to freedom through a coiled fury. The 10 songs here radiate a rancorous cacophony—thanks largely to at least three scabrous, wiry guitars—that often bleeds into the red, on more than one level. The quintet harbor a no-wave-like disregard for clean production values and conventionally "pretty" melody and the Fall and Flipper's roughshod repetitiveness figures heavily. I don't hear any hit singles. Linda and Ron's Dad favor rugged and playful funk productions tailor-made for adventurous MCs to rap over. PWRFL Power writes whimsical outsider pop songs that inspire mad love and vicious hate in equal measure. DAVE SEGAL

The rest of our listings are here!

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