Trixie IS right. Come celebrate Resonator’s second year of being…uh…the thing that it is (nepotistic? Bitchy? What did that guy from that PR company say once, in regards to us and our review policies-”less than forthcoming”?) tonight as two (maybe three, if R. Jamz’ll leave the damn skate rink) of your Res Friends bring it, for the first time ever, with Lismore in Atlanta.
You know how sometimes you’re really busy and you totally forget your child’s birthday? Yes, well, at Resonator, we did that, yesterday. Actually, I didn’t FORGET so much as just not write something, but I think the boys forgot (great fathers they are! JERKS!).
In any case, Resonator turned 2 years old yesterday. Ahhh, the terrible twos. Perhaps this year we will just throw things and cry and run into the sides of tables as we toddle around, learning to walk, and screaming “NO!” at every thing we’re asked to do.
Or maybe we’ll try something different this year.
Anyway– happy birthday to us!
(I promise to write something with music by the White Rabbits sometime after I finish unpacking– my mom is coming tomorrow, and she will so ground me if she sees my room.)
I’m trying to determine what is the what with the new Interpol record. I’m sure I’ll form an opinion at some point soon.
In the meantime, one more call-to-arms (or more like “call-to-kittens”)
Resonator Mag, New Street Gallery and Wordsmiths Books present Lismore, twice, this Friday, June 29th, in the dirty dirty Georgia. At 7 P.M. they’ll be playing a free acoustic in-store at Wordsmiths Books (and our own resident Deejay Hacks will be playing the deepness beforehand), and around 9ish (you know how these things go), for five bucks, you can see them plug in and let go at New Street Gallery.
This is the first-ever Resonator-sponsored show, so, yeah, we’re excited. Tired of hearing about it? Tough.
Closing out their most recent E.P. (well, other than the All That You Are tour release that you can get your lovely paws on at the show before anywhere else), “Cherry Bomb” is the song to hear when you’re curious of the scope of the Lismore sound. I originally dismissed it (and a lot of the It Takes Guts… stuff) as a bit too lo-fi, a 2 A.M. sound being housed in a two-car garage at 4 in the afternoon. More recent listens, though, have proven these songs have amazing subtleties, and “Cherry Bomb”? Apparently I’d never bothered to realize it wasn’t actually two songs. Diving right into steady, driving beat, Penelope works her magic and sound wraps around sound (which is the Lismore trick, really: never leave your feet or your percussion uncovered) and, in the end, what was a poppy little dance tune claws into some rawer stuff. There’s apparently nothing Lismore can’t do.
If you’re anywhere at all, in the world, we’ll see you out Friday night for Lismore.
Fusing dance beats and driving synths with a dusky voice, theSTART delivers to us a dark and refreshing musical experience. My first listen to Ciao, Baby left me haunted by the moody sound of Aimee Echo’s vocals and the slight, almost vengeful tone to the lyrics (in a good way). The depth of sound really impressed me, from some squiggly acid synth lines to stripped down bass waves to driving guitars. It holds up from start to finish; a journey of emotional fluctuation and sound worth every stop along the way.
I’m really interested to hear what theSTART will be doing live. My one qualm with this cd is that, at times, Aimee seems to lack that final peak of energy. I’m really waiting for her to let out this heart wrenching screech as the music builds to an epiphany.. but it doesn’t ever really come (at least not on the cd). The emotion is there, just the energy doesn’t seem to fully build up and break, maybe its just the raver in me sitting and anticipating that last final build up to put me over the edge. I eager to see if the energy of a live show will push me over the and fill in the gaps of what a studio recording has a habit of leaving out.
Here’s there upcoming tour schedule:
Jun 23 - POP ROXX at DNA Lounge SF San Francisco, California
Jun 30 Henry Fonda Theater w/ Moving Units Los Angeles, California
Jul 17 Til Tuesday Riverside, California
Jul 23 Blue Lamp- Sacramento Sacramento, California
Jul 25 Club Underground w/ Monsters are waiting… Reno, Nevada
Jul 26 Burt’s Tiki Lounge Salt Lake City, Utah
Jul 30 Creepy Crawl St.Louis, Missouri
Aug 11 State Theater w/TBM Falls Church, Virginia Aug 14 Masquerade w/TBM Atlanta, Georgia
Aug 16 Jack Rabbit’s w/TBM Jacksonville, Florida
Aug 17 Studio A w/TBM Miami, Florida
Aug 18 State Theater w/ TBM St. Petersburg, Florida
Aug 19 The Social w/ TBM Orlando, Florida
Aug 31 theMUSEBOX PARTY @the orchard bar NYC New York, New York
The first ever Resonator Presents show is coming up very, very soon…
What’s that, you say? You’ve “forgotten”? You need “help remembering”? Howabout a flyer?
I can’t blather, praise or rave (and I’m fully aware of my word choice there) on the music Penelope and Stephen make, and at this point I’m just belaboring my own quotes-”prettydrone”, “lush and gorgeous”, “music for cats to sleep to”-all of the above and more.
It’s tacky (or at least achingly uncool) to cradle, nurture and fall madly in love with cover tunes.
(so, then, what excuses that whole Jose Gonzalez thing last year? Oh, I digress…)
I shirk any and all cool points, then, when I say that this song, a cover of the Smashing Pumpkins’ Melancholy alt-classic, gets as much play in my iTunes as any Lismore original. They know the song inside and out, and Penelope’s voice brings out an ache and a longing that got avalanched over by the Corgan whine.
So, if you’re anywhere at all, you have no excuse to miss this Friday, the 29th. 7 P.M. acoustic at Wordsmiths Books (free), 9 P.M. electric at New Street Gallery (a fiver for cover). It’s worth noting that our own Deejay Hacks will be playing for a bit at Wordsmiths to get you in the proper, chilled and spaced frame of mind.
TrackList:
1) Peter Horrevorts - The Rabbit Hole
2) Dirty Disco Youth - Shall We Dance
3) Quivver - Dancing In Dark Rooms (Original Mix)
4) Ben Camp - The Shuffle
5) Lazaro Casanova - Shorts and Heels
6) Hostage - Sick
7) Dan Le Sac vs Scroobius Pip - Thou Shalt Always Kill (Knifehandchop Remix)
8) Kanye West - Stonger (DIPLO‘S WORK IS NEVER OVER MIX)
9) Roger Sanchez - Another Change (The Toxic Avenger Remix)
10) Surkin - And You Too (DJ Slugo Remix, Edit)
11) Busta Rhymes - Dangerous (DJ Dainjah Remix)
12) Bag Raiders - Fun Punch
13) Riot in Belgium - La Musique (Adam Sky Remix)
14) Chromeo - Fancy Footwork (Guns n’ Bombs Remix)
15) Electroluxe Family - Rock That Shit (Vicarious Bliss Remix)
16) The Black Ghosts - Any Way You Choose to Give It (Fake Blood remix)
17) Cold War Kids - Hang Me Out To Dry (Hostage Remix)
18) Fergie - Glamorous (Space Cowboy Remix)
19) Hijack - Hijackin (Herve Fuck Fuck Mix)
20) Felix Cartal – Parisienne
21) The Bloody Beetroots - Harvest Time
22) Yelle - ACDG (Tepr rmx)
Secondly, Remix!
One of the problems with me only really posting on Fridays is that when I get the hook up on a track, and then sit in it till Friday, people tend to post it up before me. Case and point: The VanShe Tech mix of Feist’s 1234. I came across this yesterday morning, sat on it, and now 4 different blogs have already posted it… ah well. Check it out from one of them, its a good listen.
Here’s a different VanShe Tech remix to make up for it:
My ears have been hungry this year, and hard to satiate. That’s obvious if you’re a longtime Resonator-er (Resonate-er? Something like that. Name yourself, Res fans! We will not repress your devotion with an unwittingly levied title!), as the amount of “ohmahGAWD you gotta hear this†drooling, slobbering gushy attempts at not-journalism. At least, not from me. In fact, I daresay that a good portion of my stuff this year has been cold and clinical at best, an attempt to incite Hacks to breakdancefight me more oft than not.
To my hungry, starved soul, too over-fed on that old new Lismore E.P. and Neon Bible to choke out a word or two on how awesome the new Apparat is, a random review of the new CocoRosie album, a band I’d never listened to but whose new album, Adventures of Ghosthorse and Stillborn, caused Peefork to destroy them and Antony Hegarty to rise like Enkil from his stone slumber and very, very nicely (and probably in a trilling register) take the reviewer apart. This, an album I’d had described to me by a friend as “Psapp on crack†(and that was supposed to be a bad thing), that caused Mr. Nice Muumuu to raise his alabaster hand and firmly slap the shit out of the resident gods of indie rock gush, had to be mine. Apparently the CocoRosie story (two estranged French sisters who found each other via collaborative music)’s now the stuff of legendary truthiness, the sort of story that gets passed around by kids in jeans with haircut to one another in the hushed tones usually reversed for Jack White and, well, any damn thing Patrick Wolf or Lily Allen blog about. Whatever the serious glue between the two girls, the comparison to Psapp in regards to childhood-conjuring found sounds being used to create a mood both nostalgic and disconcerting is pretty spot-on.
That’s where the comparisons end, though. Realize that Ghosthorse is my first CocoRosie album, and I’ve been told it’s the most accessible. However, their jerky use of hip-hop rhythm, samples, programming, and sing/rapping as a counterpoint to the juxtaposition of painful and then childlike lyrical imagery…all of this is just…
It’s fucking beautiful, is what it is.
It’s the sort of album that wouldn’t necessarily be consumable by just anyone (in fact, our friends at Wordsmiths Books, with whom we’re co-sponsoring that Lismore show in Decatur, GA on the 29th of June, compared it, quite fittingly, to a Tao Linn novel), but for those who “get it†(though I loathe the elitism that’ll entice, it’s truly either a all-or-nothing sort of album), it’s an emotional rollercoaster.
The first track on Ghosthorse, and thusly the first CocoRosie song I ever heard (and recently, at that)-it perfectly encapsulates the childlike and the profane that they love so much, behind a highly accessible (and…gasp!…danceable), steady drum machine.
Oh, man…this song. This is the reason for this post. This is a must-listen, if only just once. “Werewolf” is the sort of song that you don’t want to have hypnotize you, because as you hum along it’ll slowly break you apart, and it’s been doing so to me for days now. A steady, fuzzy skip-hop underscores a chorus begging for freedom bookending a song wrapping the loss of childhood, unspeakable paternal abuse and blame transferal:
I don’t mean to close the door
But for the record my heart is sore
You blew through me like bullet holes
Left stains on my sheets and stains on my soul
You left me broke down begging for change
Had to catch a ride with a man who’s deranged
He had your hands and my father’s face
Another western vampire
Different time same place
In short, CocoRosie’s Ghosthorse is nearly too much of an album for me to take-and so it’s what I’ve been begging for. While I await another moment that will incite me to blather, riot, or generally be the hyperactive music freak that, oh, another Knife album would probably bring, I’m going to delve hardcore-style into the CocoRosie back catalog. We’ll see what beauty I unearth.
Kanye West is the Dave Eggers of rap-either you’re instantly enamored with his ability to simultaneously begin every sentence with either “I” or “me” and then efface himself parenthetically moments later to such a cutting extent that any attempt at critical detraction is made null and void or you find him to be the single most annoying thing ever. Either way, he’s impossible to avoid.
Kanye welcomed 2007 with the announcement that his third solo record, the end of his “trilogy”, Graduation, will be released to the world at large. In typical Kanye fashion, he’s seemingly unable to do a damn thing without some sort of jets-cake-girls sort of fanfare. And so, to whet appetites and get tongues wagging for a full-length, he’s decided to throw some Ye on a mix.
The Can’t Tell Me Nothin‘ mixtape is exactly what it should be: about an hour of Kanye’s now-familiar self-servicing, balanced out with self-criticisms and utterly awesome beatcraft.
One of the first singles from Graduation, and a moment of Kanye proving that he can remove the Jenga block of detraction before the haters start hatin’-no, you can’t tell him nothin’, but when he takes himself apart over a slow-burner like this, why would you want to? Let’s face it-maybe Ye knows best.
…or maybe Ye doesn’t know best. If you’re one of the 50% of the public who, every time Kanye opens his mouth to speak, hears a pooping sound followed by a “woosh” of air, I recommend you skip these two.
I’d rather, though, you cue them up back to back, mixtape style, and listen to Kanye warp Peter Bjorn and John into an essay on, amongst other things, himself…himself…and…himself. (Pros: we get to find out what “paraphrase” means! Thanks Kanye! Cons: the missed opportunity for Kanye to change the chorus of the original to “George Bush don’t care about the black folks”. Wait for it. WAIT. FOR. IT….and it never comes.).
The song’s everywhere-and Kanye’s mix (aka THIS ONE) has been fingered by many as “the downfall of modern youth culture”. Um…apparently, those critics have never heard “irony” outside of the context of what would happen if it rained on your wedding day. As Prince would say, it’s in the dictionary-see “i”.
And then…this. The closing moment of Can’t Tell Me Nothing has Kanye sampling himself (of course), turning a tossed-off moment from “Bring Me Down” (one of Late Registration’s most stand-out stand-up tracks) into a mantra that may be the closest to thrown-gauntlet catharsis-and-attack Kanye’s ever come. This is a fucking phenomenal track, and one that I hope is slated for the real album. Funny how Kanye can quiet the haters…by..playing their game.
Our friend Elizabeth from The Swear is putting on a special acoustic set at Word Smith Books in Decatur (our new friendly neighborhood bookstore). She starts @ 6PM, but get there a bit early to check out the brand new store.
Here’s what they have to say:
…then at 6 P.M. (new time) is The Swear’s Elizabeth Elkins. If you’re a fan of local music, you do not want to miss this special acoustic set by one of the best local up-and-coming singer/songwriters. Having won the John Lennon songwriting contest and countless other awards, Elkins’ music and lyrics are infinitely hummable but also highly
Check it out if you’re around town.
Word Smiths Books
141 E. Trinity Place
Decatur, GA
404-378-7166.
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