Thursday, July 2, 2009

(Re-)Return Of White Rabbit

Posted by Dean Fawkes on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 4:13 PM

A couple of months ago, Ash gave a free preview of their upcoming Year Of 26 Consecutive Singles with "Return Of White Rabbit," one of the most unexpected, addictive, and dancetastic songs they've done in ages.

Now there's a nice a video for it.

Enjoy:
1.] Building blocks.
2.] Street-streaks.
3.] 'Sunset Boulevard' by way of The Hulk and Pole Position.



Vroom!

Dance, Dance, Dance...Pants!

Posted by Adrian Ryan on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 4:08 PM

It's fucking Thursday. It's almost, but not quite, The Fourth of July or whatever. You're hotter than Satan's bicycle seat. You're restless. In-the-pants-region mostly. Do this tonight!

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Yes, the event is actually called, "Amerika Fawk Yeah!!!" (with THREE exclamation points!!!), and it features one of my favorite DJs/Seattle nightlife fixtures, Fortune Kiki. What else does one need to know? (Besides that it's free, and the doors are at 9PM, and that Havana is at 1010 East Pike Street, naturally.)

Havana, TONIGHT!

Havana, Tonight!

Posted by Adrian Ryan on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 3:59 PM

It's fucking Thursday. It's hot. You're restless. In the pants-region mostly. Do this tonight!


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Amerika Fawk Yeah!!!
IN-THE-PANTS-DANCE_PARTY

Thursday, July 2
DJs Kippy & Fortune Kiki

Tonight, Havana (1010 East Pike Street)

New Extremes in the Cult of Anti-Personality

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 3:10 PM

Portal: You just know they get more ass than a bidet. Music's fucking amazing, too.

ht: first2letters via Twitter

Where Ya At? In the Middle.

Posted by Charles Mudede on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 2:44 PM

Look...
0d87/1246571164-picture_8.png
...Jay-Z is not a singer. He is a rapper; and rappers don't sing, they rap. That is why they are called rappers. Rapping is the middle point between singing and talking—something like Arnold Schoenberg's sprechgesang. Let the rappers rap and the singers sing.

I'm Not Sure How I Feel About This

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 2:16 PM

Travis Morrison, (sometimes) talented songwriter and (always) fantastically entertaining frontman of the Dismemberment Plan, has retired from music.

Guess that D-Plan reunion I keep hoping for is never gonna happen, huh? Then again, I won't have to be disappointed by another uninteresting solo record either. Travistan was a stinker. But it seemed that things were starting to go back in the right (listenable) direction with the Hellfighters. Oh well, I guess we'll never know.

Sigh.

Summertime Woes

Posted by Eric Grandy on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 2:16 PM

How the fuck did I start to get sick when it just started looking this nice out? Not fair. Kind of makes me feel like that Zomby remix of Animal Collective's "Summertime Clothes" that showed up on hype machine not too long ago. Man, does that mix take a great thing and then just sneeze all the fuck over it. I was hoping for a big, wonky, '92-looking rave-up (I was looking for Zomby's equivalent of Surkin's remix of Juan Maclean's "One Day" if that makes any kind of sense) and instead Zomby just shits and squiggles around with a couple echo-drenched lines, a go-nowhere arpeggio, and then finally an off-beat that sounds like it was made in 10 minutes on an Electribe ER-1. MEHHHH.

Guess it's back to that Dam-Funk remix, which is sounding better and better (and/or, you know, the original cut).

Animal Collective's "Summertime Clothes" single, including remixes, is out July 7th

Last Musical Footage of Michael Jackson?

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 1:42 PM

CNN has a video of Michael Jackson rehearsing with his band on June 23, 2009. He looks fairly (fr)agile.

Today's Music News

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 1:34 PM

Michael Jackson's Public Memorial Service Has Finally Been Confirmed: And for $25, you too can witness history. (T-shirts will also be available.)

Meanwhile...: The DEA is joining Jackson's death investigation.

Are the Get Up Kids Recording New Material?: The band's recent Twitter activity makes it seem likely.

A Lot of Dudes Will Get a Boner Over This One: Dave Grohl, Josh Homme, and John Paul Jones are recording a record together.

Speaking of Cool Collaborations: Jesu + Isis = Greymachine.

Neumos Man of Sound: Evan LaSure

Posted by Trent Moorman on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 12:15 PM

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Neumos head sound engineer Evan LaSure is an amiable and skilled man. He and his beard have become fixtures behind the Neumos board. LaSure has keen ears and nimbleness on the faders and knobs. He’s quiet and in the early stages of sagedom. LaSure knows the room and how to dial a band’s sound in for the room. Most of all though, he’s patient. LaSure lets musicians do what they need to do.

We spoke and thoughts on his science of sound flowed. Then his beard came alive, leapt off his face, and tackled me like a charging black bear:

What is your approach to running live sound?
LaSure: The way I look at it, I'm more of a translator than anything else. I listen to what's coming off of the stage and try to mix it in a way that gets the musicians’ point across. Beyond just being able to hear everything, you have to make a call on what the focal points of the songs should be, and what overall sound the musicians are looking for. For example, if I'm mixing a reggae show, I need to make sure that the hi-hat is more prominent in the mix than it would be for a mellow indie rock band, because that's part of the sound of the genre, and the musicians expect the audience to hear that. Basically, I'm trying to make the band louder in an artistic way.

What makes a band easy to work with?
Nice equipment and good tones are a plus, but honestly, as long as people are friendly and relaxed, the work environment is awesome. Personality has more to do with it than anything else.

What makes a band difficult to work with?
When they're dicks. Or when the band is just plain awful. Neither one of these situations crop up very often. Usually my job is pretty fun.

What's the loudest band you've ever run sound for? How do ridiculously loud bands change the way you run the board?
I did monitors for Dinosaur Jr., which has by far the largest guitar setup I have ever seen. J. Mascis surrounds himself with guitar amps, which basically turns his vocal mic into one giant guitar amp mic. I had to do some pretty fancy things to get his vocal into his wedge, but it ended up being great. A lot of nu-metal bands have some pretty ridiculous stage volumes as well - do you really need to run your Marshall stack that loud? When that happens you just kind of have to work around it, keeping the guitars low in the mix to compensate for the ridiculous levels coming off the stage. There have been nights where I take the bass amp completely out of the mix. Doing some drastic panning can help get some separation out of the instruments as well.

Talk beard for me. You have a great and sturdy beard. Any inspiration behind it? Have you ever gotten an omelet caught in your beard?
Never an omelet, but stuff does have a way of getting caught in there. Rice can get a little tricky. Does laziness count as inspiration?

Is it true that someone barfed on the sound board at a club where you worked? Can you talk about that barfing?
Yeah, it's true. We had a guy come in, get through sound check and immediately start drinking tequila on his dinner break. He showed up on time for the show to start, got halfway through the first band and left. He just went home without telling anybody. I get up to the stage to do the changeover, go up to monitor world, and find a huge pile of puke all over the place, three empty beer bottles, and no monitor engineer. Luckily he managed to miss anything expensive, but it was still really gross. I had to get through the rest of my night by myself, while cleaning up puke. The worst part was, there was a garbage can not three feet from where he did his business. Needless to say, he doesn't work at that place anymore.

Walk us through a night. During sound check, what are you doing? Do you really remember the levels for all the bands?
The first thing I do when I get in is to go through any paperwork to see stage plots and input lists. Then I prep the stage for when the band gets there. When the headliner arrives, we get them set up, put mics in all their gear, and figure out the best way to patch the stage and organize all of our cabling. We create a chart for the patch, and make sure that all of the mics are labeled according to what instrument they go on, so we can get the correct mics back on the instruments when they go on during the show. Essentially, the entire first half of the day is organization, and making sure we don't have any problems during the show.

Next we listen to the P.A. to make sure that all the equipment is working properly. The P.A. is also tuned to make sure the room sounds good to start off with. Then we run through a check instrument by instrument to make sure that A) everything is working properly and B) all the instruments sound good individually. After that, the band plays some songs, both to get a good overall starting point in the room, and to make sure the band is happy on stage and that the monitors aren't feeding back. The worst thing a sound person can do is let mics feed back all night.

While I'm doing this I'm going through all my outboard gear, making sure that my compressors are patched in correctly. I make sure I'm getting good gain reduction while at the same time not pumping the life out of a vocal. Also, I make sure that the levels are staying consistent on my preamps, and not clipping all over the place. I want them to be reading a nice, solid input level.

Next, I set my bus structure, get my effects sends figured out and set to the proper levels, and do any tweaking to the graphic E.Q. that controls the overall sound of the P.A. I'm also listening to the room, and trying to figure out how it's going to change for the show. One thing a lot of people don't realize is that the number of people in a room, the actual temperature of the room, and even the humidity have a huge effect on the way sound travels in a given space. Variances in temperature and humidity actually slightly change the speed of sound of a given frequency, and I have to compensate for that at the desk. An empty room on a cold, dry day is going to sound more quiet and thin than a packed house in the middle of August because of the way certain frequencies travel at a given set of atmospheric conditions.

Pictures by: Blush Photo

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I've Never Heard These Bands...

Posted by Grant Brissey on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 11:38 AM

...but there's something pretty great about how this show lineup reads:

Comet: God, Vitamins, Doo, Electric Tape, 8 pm, $6

More info on the show here.

Death Cab for Cutie - "Little Bribes"

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 11:36 AM

This Death Cab for Cutie video for the song "Little Bribes" is about a month old (centuries in internet years) but I didn't see it until today (thanks for the Twitter tip, Matson), and it's really cool.

To make it, director Ross Ching says:

I pulled out every time lapse, stop motion and live action camera trick that I could think of. It took me about 2 weeks.

Production of this video was fairly simple. I looked around the house for things that could spell out words and then photographed them. Most of the time I would incorporate some kind of motion into the shot to keep it interesting. However, the song has 211 different words in it and I quickly ran out of ideas. This is where things became difficult.

To keep myself sane, I printed out the lyrics and timed each word to the number of frames that I needed to take. The “accents” over each word signified that the word was completed.

Location wise, almost everything was shot in the LA area. A few shots came from my parent’s house in San Jose, but that’s it. For this one I didn’t have to travel all over the country to get unique shots. I just had to create the unique shots.

Read more about how he did it at his website, rossching.com.

Death Cab for Cutie play Marymoor Park July 18-19.

IQU: Priceless

Posted by Terry Miller on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 11:34 AM

Say what you will about selling out, but it's awesome that a local band (an electronic band no less!) can finally make a buck in this stoopid economy!

And outside the consumerist message, there is a nice underlying theme: you are as young/hip/old/cool as music makes you feel.

Congrats IQU!

Truckasauras Enter the Blogosphere, Plot World Domination

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 10:24 AM

In a strategic move implemented to help them leverage greater market share, local electro audiovisual troupe Truckasauras have started a blog. Because being proclaimed "the future of techno" by Pitchfork, getting picked by URB as one of the Next 100 artists to blow up, and being written about weekly on Line Out only go so far.

Read the professionally scripted press release after the cut.

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Continue reading »

Last Night's Grudge Rock Winners Are...

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 10:20 AM

117f/1246554855-grudgerockpatrol.jpgThe Abodox! In the beginning, last night's Grudge Rock match was close—Patrol won a round, then won another, but then the Abodox came in with a couple big wins of their own. By the end of the first half, Patrol was up by only about 100 points. After the band played a great intermission set (have you gotten their new album Zirconium yet?), they came back into the game ready to kick some ass.

It seems the Abodox, though, got their hands on some kind of kick ass potion of their own—the band took a commanding lead after winning the first two questions of the second round, and since all the point values were doubled, Patrol's fate was sealed despite their good efforts.

The Abodox walked away with the door money, and Patrol got some lovely parting gifts from the night's sponsors including free haircuts, books from Fantagraphics, and porn.

Some of last night's questions and a few of their answers (from what I can remember):

Name a musician who is blind...
Ray Charles
Stevie Wonder
Jeff Healy
(And Roy Orbison was not on the list, as he is not blind. That didn't stop Patrol from taking a chance on him, though, much to the crowd's dismay.)

Name a band with siblings in it...
Van Halen
The Jackson 5
Heart
Nelson
And... The Jonas Brothers were NOT on the list, giving the Abodox a big, fat strike, and ensuring that the Disney trio hasn't completely infiltrated every corner of the world.

Name a band known for using an organ...
The Doors
Deep Purple
And Murder City Devils? The defunct seattle act did indeed make the list, but no one guessed that one and the crowd erupted with boos when it was revealed. Apparently, they disagreed about their organ status.

As always, it was a great time and the second half was even better since the crowd got a little more drunk, a little more rowdy, and would cheer and boo for all the answers they liked and didn't like. And who knew we had so many Snow fans in town?

The next Grudge Rock is a special Saturday night edition on August 8th with Thee Emergency and A Gun That Shoots Knives, again at Re-bar.

It's Better

Posted by Charles Mudede on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 9:57 AM

We often hear of this or that film being better than the book, but in the case of the Eurythmic's soundtrack for the movie Nineteen Eighty-Four, 1984 (For the Love of Big Brother)...

...this is a rare instance of the album being better than the book.

Tonight in Music: Triumph of Lethargy Skinned Alive to Death, Reverend Beat-Man

Posted by Chris Govella on Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 9:00 AM

In Up & Coming tonight:

See Me River, Triumph of Lethargy Skinned Alive to Death, Battle Hymns

(Chop Suey) Without a doubt, the personal highlight of this year's Sasquatch! Festival was Triumph of Lethargy Skinned Alive to Death frontman Spencer Moody's amazing, blitzed ranting between (and then during) songs with his old band the Murder City Devils. To paraphrase: Beautiful faggots rule, disgusting jocks drool (and beautiful faggot jocks are presumably very confused). While Of Montreal brought their usual gender-bent spectacle and Monotonix predictably played in the crowd, Moody's inspired outbursts were the only truly unexpected and uncomfortable confrontation in a long weekend of rock and roll as harmless recreation. It was the punk rockers crashing the frat party, it was revenge of the nerds, and it was awesome. The boozy spontaneous combustion looked like it damn near killed Moody as well, but if you're going to sing about wanting to see Iggy bleed, you've got to be willing to make an effigy of yourself onstage. Triumph of Lethargy are kind of like that moment sublimated into one long howl. ERIC GRANDY

Reverend Beat-Man, Delaney Davidson, Atomic Bride, Bill Collectors, Autolite Strike

(Funhouse) Reverend Beat-Man is a swearing and swaggering (and Swiss) evangelist for trashy, garage-punk blues. He croaks froggily about being a hard man in a cruel world and plays his guitar like it's Sun Records all over again—but darker, druggier, and shtick-ier. His tourmate, Delaney Davidson, is a New Zealander whose quiet country-blues has deeper, more gothic depths. Davidson plays Johnny Cash to Beat-Man's Jerry Lee Lewis. They make a nice counterpoint, but we all know who would win in a fight. Brooding beats histrionic any day. About the show, Davidson says: "I reckon I will play a half-hour set and then merge into the band." Don't miss that half hour. BRENDAN KILEY

Also, you can browse our online calendar for a complete listing of bands, DJs and live music.

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