digital dig site: brave records 001

March 27, 2013 in columns, digital dig site

The information superhighway is essentially a giant archeological digital dig site, artifacts, fossils, and antiquities are being excavated all the time.  Just like the Dinosaurs and the lost city of Pompeii, though they may be gone from sight, they’re still near by, right below our feet.  Nothing really disappears on the internet, somewhere deep in the digital dirt of yesteryear it lays, just waiting to be unearthed and shared with other online entities who are also gradually collecting dust and falling into the endless void of ones and zeros.  In this column I will be bringing you an album, or song, or band who has for all intents and purposes been buried and dug up.

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What made our last Dig Site article, an archeological find, was that PMS Dark Feelings was basically a dead band, member Lindsay Schief confirmed as much when I asked her about it.  Yet, here it was sitting out there on the web, still making beautiful music for all who manage to stumble upon it.  What makes Brave 001 an archeological find is that it appears to be a fairly mysterious release, on what I imagine is a dead record label.

First of all, what is this thing?  It’s the first and only official release from Brave Records.  It’s a four-way-split dual single featuring, Congratulations, The Old Believers, The Red River, and LAKE. What is Brave Records?  I’m not exactly sure, their “about” page gives little more than contact info, but I have managed to deduce that it is a record label (no shit) and that they were based out of Alaska, and that BRAVE is an acronym for Bountiful Righteous And Very Exciting. The last time the website was updated was on January 15th 2012.

The fascinating thing about this album is that it seems that all but one of the four bands (LAKE) are dead.  At least this is what I can determine, since neither The Red River, and The Old Believers have a website, or facebook page, and both have  abandoned myspace sites.  After a slight lineup change, Congratulations became Wild Ones.  And LAKE is still going strong.

So while this album features mostly dead bands, from a mostly dead record label, it’s actually a pretty quirky and wonderful release.  The Congratulations song, Juice and Syrup, is top notch, a true shame that they didn’t release more music before imploding.  The Old Believers’ It’s With You Now, feels like a true companion piece to Juice and Syrup, tonally they’re certainly siblings.

The Red River’s Swallow Song, is the collections most subdued song, somewhat somber, but very pretty.  LAKE’s addition, Good Company, is unique even for LAKE.  At times it feels like a full on Jazz song, but two thirds of the way through, it devolves into the truly absurd and undefinable.

The release date for this set of split singles was 2009, it’s 2013 now and it doesn’t appear that Brave records has done much if anything in the meantime.  But then that’s what makes this archeological, it’s also what makes the internet special.  Were this twenty or thirty years ago, these songs would be lost and forgotten, certainly out of print, and without question elusive.  The internet is permanent, and though those lost websites might be covered by weeks, months, or years worth of digital dust, it’s still there just waiting to be found.

Of course with all of the above said, it is still entirely possible that Brave records is not dead, the same with The Red River and The Old Believers and that soon after I publish this article they’ll update the site and put out something really great.  In fact I hope they do, because in their short life it seems they did do some good work.  If that never happens you can listen to their one and only release here.

LAKE on tour with r. stevie moore

February 20, 2013 in events

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Recent guests on the podcast and all around favorites LAKE are going on a smallish tour with the legendary R. Stevie Moore.  They’ll be hitting all three west coast states including the fine province of British Columbia.  If you’re in Seattle tomorrow, they’ll be playing the Crocodile.  If I didn’t have a big meeting I would be there in a heartbeat.  LAKE has written a lot of new music over the last year and you can bet that you’ll be hearing some of it on this tour.

 

interview with LAKE

February 8, 2013 in interviews, LAKE

LAKE

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I attacked this profile from every  angle, I symbolized, I mythologized, I literalized and still I could not boil the essence of what LAKE is or what LAKE means to me, down to something simple and compact.

By the mid 1990‘s the boom of the Grunge years had begun to decay, and by the late 90‘s we were reading it’s obituary.  The great tradition of music in the Northwest didn’t die, it was simply struggling to find it’s place in a post grunge world.  In the mid 2000‘s a new generation of artists living and working in the PNW emerged, finding their way to a new and hungry audience.

In 2009 I was living in Los Angeles and had been removed from the burgeoning music scene of the PNW.  It was sheer accident that I stumbled upon the song On The Swing, a hauntingly beautiful fantasy of a song by LAKE.  Soon after I took a trip to Amoeba records, and as if placed their by the hand of fate, I found LAKE’s catalog of music waiting for me.  A year and a half later when I decided to move back to Seattle, one of my first thoughts was how much closer to their music I would be.  Who were these people that made this music that so easily destroyed me?

LAKE: Lindsay Schief, Ashley Eriksson, Kenny Tarantino, Eli Moore.  That these disparate artists would find each other in the same city, let alone the same band, is so serendipitous that it sounds like I made it up.  Lindsay was a recent transplant to Los Angeles from Michigan, when through a friend of a friend she met Ashley.  Through Ashley she would meet Kenny, Markly Morrison, and Andrew Dorsett who was a transplant from Florida.  It was on a whim that Lindsay would move to Olympia Washington, where she met and collaborated with Eli Moore who was originally from Whidbey Island.  When Eli took a trip to California to visit an uncle, Lindsay suggested that he meet up with Ashley, and miraculously he did.  Soon after Ashley would move to Olympia, and not long after that, everyone else would follow.

By 2006 LAKE had recorded and self-released their first album the self titled, LAKE.  Recorded by Karl Blau in Anacortes at the now defunct Department of Safety, it would be the first of many albums and collaborations with Karl who is like the Neil Young to Crosby Stills and Nash.  Their second album simply referred to as Cassette (after the fact, because until recently it was available only on cassette) was recorded with members of the Portland band Typhoon.  Originally these recordings were seen as raw demos to be polished and refined later, but in the end they contained too much “spontaneous magic,” and the album was left as is.

Their next album was Oh The Places We’ll Go, originally self-released, before Calvin Johnson founder of the infamous K-Records expressed interest in re-releasing the album under K.  They would release two more albums for K in the coming years, Let’s Build A Roof and Giving and Receiving.  This past year the band recorded two more albums both of which are in the process of being completed.

Magic is a word that I often think of in reference to LAKE, whether it’s their unlikely formation, the sound of their music, or their glaring passion and talent.  I find myself at a loss for words when it comes to meaningfully describing the music of LAKE, one part the jazzy softness of Steely Dan, one part the endlessly addictive melodies of Fleetwood Mac, and one part R. Stevie Moore quirk, the rest?  As banal as it sounds… magic.

If there is a cradle for that magic you could say it’s in the band’s ability to collaborate.   There are no defined roles in LAKE, songs are constructed by exploiting members strongest attributes.  It’s birthed in the writing process and continues all the way through to live performance.  A song could be written, played, and sung by anyone on any instrument.  This can be challenging for live performances, as song beaks become Chinese fire drills, wherein everyone dashes to find the instrument needed for the next song.

LAKE is at their best when they work in conjunction to one another, alone they are all amazing musicians, each of have appeared in other music, Baby Island, Skrill Meadow, Solid Home Life, among others, but something happens when they come together to write music.  I often think of their album titles as being perfect representations of what the band stands for, Oh, The Places We’ll Go, Let’s Build a Roof, Giving and Receiving, it’s obvious.  It’s possible to imagine that the emotions I feel when listening to LAKE pales in comparison to the emotions the band feels when they finish writing a song together.

I originally contacted Eli about an interview back in February of 2012, at the time the band was just beginning to work on the first of the two albums recorded last year, and Lindsay was still a member.  By April the band would have moved on to a second recording in Phil Elverum’s Unknown studio, and Lindsay would step away from the band to attend Evergreen State college.  I interviewed Lindsay in the midst of all this transitioning, it was a bittersweet time for everyone it seemed, the first LAKE album not to feature Lindsay would turn out to be improvisational(esque), thrown together in just a matter of days.  Even in a changing landscape LAKE took their collaborative efforts to new heights.

When finally I caught up with Ashley, Eli, and Markly (Andrew couldn’t make the taping) it was mid November and much had changed since my original email.  I’ve come accustomed to taking the trip down I-5 south to interview artists, coincidentally Ashley and Eli’s house was just blocks from where Lindsay and Angelo Spencer live.

It was a surreal experience to be sitting there talking to a band that just a few years earlier I had only envisioned in my head.  What wonderful and delightful people, I interview artists because I’m fascinated to hear what they have to say about music and get a small peek into their artistic process.  I keep interviewing artists because they have all been such welcoming and generous people.  An enormous thanks to everyone for taking the time to sit down with me and talk about themselves, without question, every artists least favorite topic.

As always, what follows is just a slice of what you’ll hear in the full podcast interview.  So take a listen to the podcast here or in itunes.  And don’t forget to “like” us in facebook and subscribe to us in itunes.

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Brian Snider
When I interviewed Lindsay Schief, she was in the process of playing her last few shows with the band, before moving on to attend Evergreen state college.  What has it been like moving on without her?

Markly Morrison
She’s an element that we miss.  It’s a tough void to fill, but it’s forcing us to think more creatively.

Eli Moore
We did an album without her in Anacortes with Paul Benson (Ever Ending Kicks) filling in.  The feeling was different for a multitude of reasons, but it was more experimental, it was very therapeutic to do something and hear it, and still have it sound like LAKE but be different.

Markly
We Kind of Pulled it all out of thin air.  We went into the studio with next to nothing, and largely made it up as we went along.

Ashley Eriksson
It felt really healing to do it at that time, instead of moping.  It was fun.  They [Eli, Andrew, & Markly] would sometimes just record the songs and I would be outside working on lyrics.

Eli
A third of that album is music that we wrote collaboratively, including lyrics.

Brian
You recorded the first LAKE album in Anacortes with Karl Blau, and at this point you’ve worked with him so often that I see him almost as a member of the band.  What about his process keeps you going back to work with him?

Ashley
We really connect with his aesthetic and admire his openness.  He’s really into finding the beauty in first takes.  He tries to keep this raw element and not over-producing, even though that’s our tendency.  It’s nice to have him to balance that out.

Markly
Karl has a really good ear for spontaneity.  I’m always surprised by the things he singles out and wants to focus on.  He’ll come up with ideas for our songs and he’s back there at the controls.  Captain Karl wants us to try something and we’ll go for it, whether it flies or not.

Eli
It’s real faith based, if there’s a mistake he’ll trust that it was supposed to happen, and rather than try and correct it, he’ll try and bring it out.  There’s one song we did where on the very last note, someone played this note that wasn’t in the key of the song.  We were like, “let’s just punch in that note.”  And he was like, “I think that’s supposed to happen.”  So we ended up all punching in, and the song had this outro that’s in this really bizarre key.

Brian
During live shows it’s fun to watch you all shift instruments.  I assume that has to do with how the song was written, and who played what.  Is there a reason you don’t have defined roles?

Ashley
We’re all multi-instrumentalists and we really enjoy playing different things, and get bored playing the same instrument all the time.

Markly
When we’re working on something new, one person will be like, “I hear a keyboard, or I hear a good bass line.”  And that person does it.

Eli
Sometimes someone will write a part on an instrument and then decide to switch.  It’s also skill, some people can play certain things on guitars that others can’t.  Some people can play a certain funkiness on the bass, some songs Andrew’s better on drums…

Ashley
It takes a long time to switch between songs, so it’s not totally idea from an entertainment aspect.  We’re not doing it as a gimmick.  Sometimes it’s frustrating.

Eli
It gives people a chance to look at their iphones.

Brian
After you finished recording Giving and Receiving you found that the tape it was recorded on began to disintegrate.

Eli
We had to save it, so we transferred all the tracks to the computer.  We ended up adding more tracks because we had more available to us.  It led to the album, maybe being over-produced.  We probably never would have transferred it to the computer.  We would have finished it on tape, and it would have been slightly rawer.  The reason I prefer tape has more to do with process.  I think projects go faster, I like the limits of tape, it’s a creative limit.  But with digital the possibilities.  The first album [the album recorded at K with lindsay in 2012] is all on the computer at this point.  It’s the first album we’ve made where we’ve been able to try every idea we’ve thought of. It’s been a cool freedom.

Brian
After you finished Oh, The Places We’ll Go, you were approached by K-Records about releasing it.  What was it like back then to have a storied label like K want to release your music, and then more of your music in the future?

Markly
I was really excited.  When I moved up here that was a goal I had envisioned.  Wouldn’t it be cool, specifically if K wanted to put this stuff out.

Ashley
When I was first making music in Santa Clarita, I had barely any idea of what indie record labels were.  I knew two, K-records and Saddle Creek.  I moved to Olympia not ever thinking that I would end up having music on K-Records.  That was really cool when that happened.

Eli
When I moved to Olympia in 2002, I was a huge K-Records fan, I felt awkward when I saw people associated with the label at the co-op.  It was a very natural progression for them to ask us.  It wasn’t like it came out of nowhere, because we’d been collaborating with Karl, and we played as the backup band for Adrian Orange.  Not to say that we deserved it, or that we knew it would happen.  K is very community oriented, we were a part of the community at that point.  I think Calvin [Johnson] appreciates people who are a part of the community and not just passing through.

Brian
Did you look at the band different after that, that this wouldn’t just be something you do for a few years, that there was a real vision for the future?

Ashley
It’s hard to end a band and start again.  Once you have a name and an identity, it feels so good to have that and keep going.***

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Oh, The Places We’ll Go, Let’s Build a Roof, Giving and Receiving, as well as some special singles and b-sides are available through k-records.  You can download LAKE’s earliest albums through their bandcamp page, at laketheband.bandcamp.com. They’ll be performing live at The Shakedown in Bellingham Feb. 22, The Waldorf Hotel in Vancouver BC on Feb. 23, and the Treefort Music Fest March 24.  And keep a look out for two new albums later in the year.

Back in mid 2011 when I decided I wanted to conduct podcast interviews I did so with LAKE in mind.  In fact I came up with the website after I did a review of Giving and Receiving, it’s safe to say that without LAKE I wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing now.  There’s so much I could thank them for, but what I thank them for the most is the unending inspiration they have given me.  A big thanks to everyone in LAKE, past and present members.  Don’t forget to listen to the full audio podcast of our interview here or in itunes.

 

LAKE: website/facebook/bandcamp

episode 14. LAKE

February 7, 2013 in the podcast

secretly-importantcast

In episode 14. LAKE, Eli Moore, Ashley Eriksson, and Markly Morrison are my guests.  Since 2006 LAKE has been a fixture in the Northwest music scene.  They’ve released five albums, three on K-Records and this past year they recorded two new albums with release dates expected later in 2013.  LAKE is a truly collaborative band from they way they write and perform songs, right down to their name. Lindsay Ashley Kenny Eli.  You can find LAKE at laketheband.com.

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Play

digital dig site: pms dark feelings ~ get hurt

January 10, 2013 in columns, digital dig site

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The information superhighway is essentially a giant archeological digital dig site, artifacts, fossils, and antiquities are being excavated all the time.  Just like the Dinosaurs and the lost city of Pompeii, though they may be gone from sight, they’re still near by, right below our feet.  Nothing really disappears on the internet, somewhere deep in the digital dirt of yesteryear it lays, just waiting to be unearthed and shared with other online entities who are also gradually collecting dust and falling into the endless void of ones and zeros.  In this column I will be bringing you an album, or song, or band who has for all intents and purposes been buried and dug up.

PMS Dark Feelings Go Live at Mukilteo Coffee on Whidbey Island Part 3 from Cross Grant and Get Crossed on Vimeo.

PMS Dark Feelings ~ Get Hurt

 

In terms of the internet, an antiquity can be as old as a year or two, and that is the case with this album by the pretty much defunct PMS Dark Feelings.  What we know about PMS is that it was formed by Lindsay Schief, Eli Moore, Ashley Eriksson, and Grant Cross, they played a few? more than one, show and in 2010 in various places on Whidby Island recorded eight songs that would make up an album? called Get Hurt.  Further proof of their existence is this video from Mukilteo Coffee recorded in 2009 .

I’ve interviewed 3/4 of this band and never has this project been mentioned, a tag “relationship rock” included with the only available recordings of this band suggest that it was always walking a tight rope of existence.  An unnamed source has since confirmed that this is indeed the case.  Though a brief and beautiful life, this music is amazing, despite a band name that sounds like a pamphlet handed out to 7th grade girls in Sex Ed class.

I don’t want to generalize the music that these collaborators make as being the same (it’s not) but there’s a definite vibe that is similar throughout.   The music is infectiously groovy, simple and savory bass lines courtesy of Lindsay Schief, subtle drum taps from Ashley Eriksson, Eli Moore plays a clean and pop ridden electric guitar, all the while Grant Cross strums acoustic rhythm guitar.

These could almost be LAKE songs, but for one twist.  Grant Cross seems to buck from your expectations of this band at every step.  The acoustic guitar adds a more folky quality to what would ordinarily be skirting the edges of Fleetwood Mac and Steely Dan.  Grant’s voice is also more full and rough like an unshaven face, a stark contrast to the etherial vocals I generally associate with the Eli, Ashley, and Lindsay.

It’s safe to say that these recordings will never find their way onto magnetic tape or vinyl, which is a shame because there is so much to love here.  It starts off perfectly with Just Cuz, impeccably constructed, from the writing, to Lindsay’s vocals, and the stellar accompaniment.  Other notable tracks are Lindsay’s very telling Manchild, and Grant Cross channeling what feels like a Big Star song with Caves, which is probably equally telling.

You can listen to this entire album in just sixteen minutes and when you’re finished you’ll  start it all over again.  Perhaps in another life this band has a long and fruitful life together but not in this one.  The romanic vision of Archeology is that of Indiana Jones, digging up rare antiquities and running from treasure hunters, but the truth is that archeology is mostly conducted under the fluorescent lightbulbs of a basement office where scientists look at shards of the past and conjecture on their lives.  Delving just beneath the surface and it’s not to difficult to see why this band as beautiful as their songs might have been, was doomed from the beginning.

You can download  PMS Dark Feelings ~ Get Hurt songs for free here.  And I would definitely check out the other projects from it’s members.

deep sea diver on tour/ song of the week ~ NWO

November 16, 2012 in song of the week

Whew!  What a week.  It’s been pretty busy around here, putting the final touches on our upcoming interview with She Keeps Bees which will be dropping next week (probably Monday?) as well as conducting an interview this past Tuesday with LAKE, as in my personal obsession LAKE.  As a result besides this article the only other was my recap of Lovers Without Borders, Ever Ending Kicks, and Karl Blau at 20/20 Cycle, which also took some considerable time.  Next week things should be back on a more regular schedule, but for now I’m doing double duty for friend of the show Deep Sea Diver with tour information and a Song of the Week.

Because I’m an obsessive person who never tires of talking about the same things and people over and over again, I’m going to use this brief moment that I have your attention to talk about Deep Sea Diver and Jessica Dobson who previously appeared on the secretly-important podcast (one of my favorite episodes).  After traveling the country and world playing guitar for The Shins, Dobson and DSD are taking some of the best music the PNW has ever heard on tour.

That’s right West Coast, DSD is coming to you… well coming to you if you live in or can get to the following cities:

Nov 25th The Casbah San Diego CA
Nov 26th The Echo Los Angeles CA
Nov 27th Bottom of the Hill San Francisco CA
Nov 29th Doug Fir Portland OR
Nov 30th Neumos Seattle WA
Dec 1st Electric Owl Vancouver BC

They’ll be touring with Chicago’s Wild Belle who I just now found out about and I think you can definitely expect to hear more about in an upcoming article… like maybe next week as our Song of the Week.  The only show Wild Belle won’t be appearing in is San Francisco at Bottom of the Hill.  As much as I love Neumos, perhaps the best show of the tour will be at Doug Fir in Portland, as Deep Sea Diver and Wild Belle will be joined by another past guest and favorite, Lemolo.  Man, that is going to be un-fucking-believable!

 

NWO

NWO from matt wignall on Vimeo.

I could and have talked about Deep Sea Diver and their debut full length History Speaks at length.  If I was to be shallow about it I would simply say that it’s one of the best albums of the year.  If I was  to brave the ocean’s depths I would say that History Speaks is one of the years most complete albums, kicking your teeth in right off the bat with Ships and it’s wattery staccato guitar, and closes out by burring your casket with the epic titular track, it’s almost as if the album disintegrates as one by one the musical elements fall away leaving you all alone.

In between are highs and lows with fast paced danceable tracks and heartfelt ballads.  It has that classic rock feel of David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust.  What’s guaranteed to melt your mind is Jessica Dobson’s voice which it seems can do everything and sound obsessively appealing.

I’ll be honest, History Speaks is nine songs long and anyone of them could have been the song of the week, I made my choice purely based on the fact that NWO comes with a pretty awesome video.  It also happens to be one of my favorite songs.  It begins softly with the light raptaptapping of the drums and is followed by a lonesome and emotional keyboard.  Dobson’s voice follows shortly after and if your heart hasn’t melted it will skip a beat and sync up with the drums.

My favorite artists are those that cut themselves open and leave everything right on the tape.  There’s no armor, no guarded sense of self-preservation, it’s quite literally Blood on the Tracks.  At times you can hear Dobson’s voice wavering ever so slightly, reaching a truly sincere and vulnerable place in time.

recap: lovers without borders, ever ending kicks, karl blau @ 20/20 cycle

November 14, 2012 in event reviews

I just made a joke about a space between two words from three minutes ago.

-paul adam benson (ever ending kicks)

There are shows that look awesome on paper, there are shows that are awesome in practice, then there are shows that are awesome both on paper and in practice.  Friday night at 20/20 Cycle at 2020 Union street in Seattle was one such show.  The lineup, the location, the audience, and the atmosphere were slow roasted to absolute delectable perfection.

By day 20/20 Cycle is a bicycle shop with some delicately handcrafted beauties, but a half dozen or so time a year, when the sun goes down the shop is transformed into a unique and tantalizing music venue.  It’s not a traditional setting for music, but that doesn’t really matter because like all art, it can happen anywhere.  These shows in particular are born out of love.  Love for the music, the love of the musicians, and the people who attend the shows.  Alex, the shops proprietor clearly loves organizing these shows with his friends and their friends, the evidence is woven throughout.

Lovers Without Borders

You probably know Doctors Without Borders, when I lived in LA I adopted my dog from an organization called Dogs Without Borders, thus unequivocally proving that anything without borders gives me the warm fuzzies.  I’ve been wanting to see them live practically since I first heard they existed over a year ago, but they play mostly in the Northern Sound and rarely venture down to us in the Mid-Sound region.  Karl Blau takes the lead with vocals, melodica, saxophone, and the humble breaths of the harmonica.  Jessica Bonin also of The Daffodils does backing vocals, plays the tiniest drum kit I’ve ever seen, and closes out every song with the most sincere giggles that melt your heart.  Then Allen Peril rounds out the band on guitar, which sounds as if the sun was siphoned off into mason jars and handed out to cream cloaked children to light the day.

This is beautiful indie pop at its absolute best.  They clearly were impressed with how clean and perfected their sound was Friday, Karl later expressed to me that this was the tightest they’ve ever been.  It’s hard to imagine these guys not sounding spot on.  Everything they played just seemed right.

Ever Ending Kicks

Previously Paul Adam Benson had been making music as Motorbikes, now he makes music as Ever Ending Kicks.  While similar, EEK sounds more polished, and less experimental than what he was doing with Motorbikes.  If I had to compare it to anything I would say that EEK is like LAKE with a hip hop beat and heavier bass.

I don’t know if I’ve mentioned this here on the website before but I love live loops.  There’s something about seeing a guy playing every part of the band one piece at a time and slowly putting it together that just rolls me flat.  It’s like a primer reader for How to Build a Song.  Benson won extra brownie points from me by forgoing the traditional single snare drum and instead made the drum loops right on his guitar.  His set was absolutely beautiful, sounding just as good as Lovers.

Karl Blau

Look, long before this set I believed that Karl was a Northwest living legend and I thumb my nose at any state that Karl doesn’t live in because we have him and they don’t, he and his band’s performance Friday cemented that belief.  That’s why he was the third ever guest on the podcast.  I’d only heard Karl play his own music solo on the guitar previously.  On this night he’d enlisted the help of a couple “Valley Boys” (Skagit Valley) as well as Paul Adam Benson on drums.  The result was what I felt was Karl Blau at his best.

I mentioned prior to Friday, I had no idea what he would be playing, his catalogue is so vast that it could have been anything.  It ended up being a really incredible mixture of music from all over Karl’s body of work, including a few from his latest albums, Questions for Moon, and Songles.  The highlights where a mid set jam session that included a story about stepping in poop, and an exceptional rendition of A Melody To Wake Us In The Morning off his EP Max.  Karl and his band were equally as tight as Lovers, and EEK.  He was the perfect choice to close out the night, he could have played into the wee hours of the morning without complaint from the audience.

This was one of those nights where I felt extremely lucky to be standing in a room full of so much positive energy.  The music pumped it out at the audience and in turn they beamed it right back, this never ending cycle that was represented in how spot on the music was.

If you missed the show, worry not.  Alex records these shows and posts most of them on the 20/20 website.  Karl also had his trusty boombox there and I’m sure most of it will end up over on the Kelplunacy website.

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Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle 6

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle 7

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle 8

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle 9

Karl Blau @ 20:20 cycle

karl blau, ever ending kicks, and lovers without borders @ 20/20 cycle

November 6, 2012 in events

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About a month ago Lovers Without Borders announced this show on their facebook page and the more I read about it the better it got.  Lovers Without Border! With Karl Blau!!  With Ever Ending Kicks!!!  At 20/20 Cycle!!!!  The exclamation points detail my growing excitement, though it wasn’t necessarily in that order.

Where do I begin with this… Okay first let’s start with Ever Ending Kicks.  Formally known as Motorbikes… I guess I don’t really know but what I do know is that Paul Adam Benson who formally made music as Motorbikes, is now making music as Ever Ending Kicks, and it’s pretty great.  EEK released Notion Free through Bandcamp this past July, it’s good old fashioned soft indie pop, reminiscent of LAKE or Karl Blau and yes Motorbikes, but really it’s a tough one to classify, basically when you hear it you just like it.

Karl Blau, is doing double duty on Friday performing with LWB and a solo set.  If you’re not familiar with Karl’s work you either don’t read this website often or live under a rock.  He’s a man of many, many albums including his periodic album subscription club KLAPS.  Oh and what’s that… former secretly-important podcast guest?  Yes he is.  Who know’w what he’ll be playing Friday, perhaps it will be a collection of his greatest hit’s, maybe cuts from Songles, or perhaps he’ll impart to us his latest collection of songs from Northwest female musicians.  No matter what he does it’s going to be fantastic.

I have been dying to see Lovers Without Borders live since… well, since they were formed.  It’s a cross breading of Karl Blau and the Daffodils, which means only good things.  LWB, is like a slice of sunshine, or if you prefer a more tangible simile, they’re like that thin circular slice of orange on the edge of your lunch plate.  Pure indie pop sweetness that just feels right. Though they’ve played plenty in the North Sound, it seems they rarely appear in the Mid Sound.  This is your chance to see them if you spend the majority of your time in the King County Area.

20/20 Cycle is an unconventional music venue.  A quality and hand built bike shop (some seriously beautiful bikes here) and a few times a year they host a concert, and this is one of them.  As I always say about the weeks featured show, this show is the best thing going on in Seattle on Friday night, if you’re not there I’ll assume that your in the hospital.

20/20 Cycle; 8:30 pm tickets are $5-10 sliding scale (not really sure what that means) be there or find a really good excuse for why you weren’t.

barrage of new releases we didn’t talk about

October 10, 2012 in reviews

Hey did you know I have a kid now?  Alright before you punch me in the face for using my kid as an excuse for the hundredth time, let me throw my hands up and defend my fragile and beautiful face and say that it’s not just the baby that’s taking up my time.  I’ve been working on some really awesome projects that will come to light in the next few months, I’ve also been securing interviews with some really great people as well as finishing up my interview with Shana Cleveland (The Curious Mystery, The Sandcastles, La Luz) for release later this week.

As a result, I’ve found that there were a number of releases that slipped past me, or just didn’t get the full attention they deserve.  Rather than play catch up, I’ve decided to load a shot gun shell into my finger tip and barrage you with a load of new music releases that you should check out and probably buy.

 

Karl Blau ~ Songles 
(Get it, Singles + Songs = Songles) There’s probably no one who I admire and respect more than Karl Blau, it’s no coincidence that he was just our third ever interview at the website.  That being said, Karl is not the greatest when it comes to self promotion.  He should be on the level of a Damien Jurado, standing upon the Olympic Mountains as an elder statesmen of the Northwest music scene.  Songles, just appeared to me one day, many months after it’s release, which is a shame, because anything he does is worth being heard.

Songles, as he describes it, is really a random collection of music he’d been working on, it doesn’t necessarily have a singular vision, although it does have a cohesive sound.  Unlike his recent k-records releases, Songles are mostly recorded in his personal studio and have a lo-fi quality to them.  Expect the same rhythms and lyrics with a more do-it-yourself feel.  And a lot of Jethro(esque) flute).  Songles is available where ever digital music is sold.

La Luz ~ Damp Face EP
After solving The Curious Mystery and calling it quits, front woman Shana Cleveland assembled a band she’d been dreaming of for months and years.  An all girl surf rock band.  Since my interview with Shana will be coming out in just day’s I’ll keep this brief.  Remember 1994 when you bought the Pulp Fiction sound track and fell in love with 1960’s surf rock from The Centurions, Dick Dale, The Tornadoes, and The Lively Ones?

Damp Face is just like listening to that soundtrack.  Filled with amazing original surf rock sounds that are elevated into the stratosphere by Cleveland’s unique and sultry voice.  You can download the EP at laluz.bandcamp.com or purchase it on audio cassette.

Generifus ~ Back In Time
In the time I’ve been talking to and covering artists from K-Records, Generifus has come up a lot, and yet he’s pretty much flown under my radar.  I don’t know why or how but it happened.  When it was brought to my attention that Karl Blau and basically everyone from LAKE play on his most recent album, I had to take notice.

I was more than just a little surprised.  At times it has an 90’s alternative feel to it, but scratch just a bit beneath that superficial surface and you get to some sincere indie pop.  Not the bad kind of indie pop, the good kind.  You can buy Back in Time at generifus.bandcamp.com.

Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band ~ Prehistory
I’ve always had a love/hate relationship with MSHVB- well, more like love/dislike.  I tend to love about every other song, and skip over the rest.  This probably has to do with the bands tendency to throw everything into the pot and come away expecting the music to sound cohesive.  Thus I like the more cohesive songs, the ones that feel like their coming from the same band.

Prehistory is more of an EP really, with just five songs.  But perhaps the time away led them to simplify their sound, make it less of a hodgepodge and find something a bit more sleek.  The whole album just feels right, banging around your ear drums and on your skin.  You can buy it at mt-st-helens-vietnam-band.bandcamp.com.

Lemolo ~ The Kaleidoscope
I’ve talked about this album a fair amount already, including an interview with Meagan Grandall and Kendra Cox back in August, but I didn’t specifically review this insanely good album.  Sometimes dark and moody, sometimes light and pop fueled, sometimes beautiful and atmospheric, The Kaleidoscope has it all.  Just when I think I’ve pegged someone similar to these two down, I change my mind completely.  Originally I saw a lot of Pure Bathing Culture in their sound, and while still true, it’s so much more.

This album works so well on so many levels.  As a quite dinner time jam, or a party pick me up.  Its easily one of the top five albums of the year.  You can buy the album at lemolomusic.bandcamp.com.

 

There you have it, great new music (last five months) that you should check out and listen to.  And if you’re on top of it all here’s some things to look forward to LAKE (two albums), Lonesome Shack, Lovers, Without Borders, Reignwolf.  Then there are a number of bands who are in the studio working on albums or have just finished, Deep Sea Diver, The Moondoggies, The Cave Singers, The Wild Ones.

playlist: one month

September 28, 2012 in playlists

Back when my daughter was still in the womb, before we knew she was a she, before we’d really seen her, I made a playlist of songs for my daughter in the womb.  The concept was a take on the worn out Baby Beethoven theory, where people believe that by playing the classical immortals your baby’s brain will develop into that of a bow tie wearing-vegetable eating-NPR listening-environmentalist-genius.

I have the same reaction to that flawed theory as I did once to a photo book shown to me in college concerning the formation of water crystals exposed to different spoken words… okay, but those words don’t mean anything to a water crystal.  In this case I say, fine, but what does Beethoven have anything to do with anything but music?  The point is that supposedly (there are no scientific studies to prove this) that music directed toward the womb will influence that child outside the womb, whether it comforts them, or cheers them up, or if subconsciously they just gravitate toward similar sounds later in life.

Is it any coincidence that I heard plenty of Stevie Wonder, The Beatles, Steely Dan, and Fleetwood Mac in the womb, and now not only do I love all those artists but current artists who channel those sounds as well?  Again science has proved nothing and thus I chose to play music to my unborn daughter that I love, and with any luck it will appeal to her later.

It’s been one full month since my daughter Jackson Lee was born and while the two playlists might not look all that dissimilar, there are now specific reasons as to why I play certain songs.  In most cases this music has been used to sooth her when she’s fussy, other times I find music that I think will help her drift off to sleep, then occasionally we’ll just dance around the living room to something to occupy the time.

**a few quick notes on the songs listed.

-I only list an artist once but in many cases we listen to a lot more than just one song by them.

-In most cases it helps if I can sing along to the song.

-Softer songs that can sooth, and put to sleep, are played the most.

 

  1. The Cave Singers ~ Beach House
  2. Congratulations ~ Juice & Syrup* (has the same effects on my wife)
  3. Deep Sea Diver ~ The Watchmen
  4. Father John Misty ~ Nancy From Now On
  5. Flight of the Conchords ~ Most Beautiful Girl (in the room)
  6. The Head and the Heart ~ Cats and Dogs
  7. Jenny O. ~ Automechanic
  8. Johnny Cash ~ Jackson (obvious but true)
  9. Karl Blau ~ Tha’ Ole Moon Smile
  10. LAKE ~ Giving and Receiving
  11. Lemolo ~ Whale Song
  12. Lindsay Schief ~ Bet You Don’t Know
  13. Mona Reels ~ Come On Mona
  14. Pure Bathing Culture ~ Lucky One
  15. Shana Cleveland and the Sandcastles ~ Butter and Eggs
  16. Solid Home Life ~ Let’s Go To Bed (over and over, and let’s be honest this entire album back to back to back)

(honorable mention, David Bowie ~ John, I’m Only Dancing, Bill Withers ~ I’m Her Daddy)