Archive for the 'Local' Category

26
May
08

May 21, 2008 – Mindless Self Indulgence @ The Wiltern

Jesus. It’s been so long since I’ve been to a show I had to look up my own header format. Not cool.

For those of you who missed it, I experimented with Twitter at this show. Not a resounding success, because the show kept distracting me from sending updates, but I was pretty diligent through the first half of The Birthday Massacre’s set. This was my first trip to the Wiltern in a while, so there will be a new venue review over on the Venues page.

Yes, so, uh…show. This was almost the geekiest crowd I’ve ever been in, which I found a bit surprising (the geekiest was for a Jonathan Coulton show). The crowd was adorned in WoW shirts and making LOLcat jokes. The geeks were outnumbered, but only just, by the highly theatrical, costumed fans.

I have to admit, this isn’t something I’ve ever understood. I actually danced ballet for seven years as a kid, and I have to tell you – tutus and leotards are not comfortable. In fact, they could double as torture devices. Why you would wear one voluntarily, even ironically, is beyond me. Likewise platforms, stilettos, or shoes that do other odd things to your feet. You’re going to be standing for eight hours, darlings, wear flats.

As advertised, the show started with London After Midnight, and wow are these guys goth. I mean, wow. I haven’t seen that level of goth since I was in high school. Admittedly, it’s not my scene so I might have lost touch a bit, but wow. Long dyed hair, s/M gear, super-anorexic – seriously guys, eat something.

This set caught the crowd off-guard. For all their vampire-chic style London After Midnight is old-school-punk political. The sound may be high-goth, but the lyrics are anti-establishment. The set started with “Your Best Nightmare,” which was when I noticed the screen behind them. At first I thought it was running the music video, which wouldn’t have been a bad strategy, because for a seasoned band, London After Midnight is a bit dull on stage. No movement, not a lot of audience interaction, a ton of sampled music (I hate it when bands do that). The screen flashed lyrics (a bit odd – if the audience doesn’t already know the song, you’re not going to con them into singing with this trick), and your standard goth-horror music video images.

And then we moved into more political songs, and that screen became an amazing prop. The band played a song off their new album, “America’s A Fucking Disease,” and while they played the screen flashed statistics and images of American overseas interventions. For the most part, the information running served to mitigate the song’s lyrics – which were a bit over the top even for me, and they don’t make them more cynically liberal.

The statistics proved that the band had put a bit more thought into the song than taking the measure of American youth and writing a song to pander to their sense of disillusionment. They may have misjudged their audience a bit, though, because at one point the screen flashed, in quick succession, an image of Nazi soldiers goose-stepping, an image of the United States Marine Corps performing full-dress drills, and a series of images of the National Guard breaking up protests. (I have hunted in vain for a video of this – if someone has one please email me a link. You really need to see it understand.) The general reaction wasn’t at all positive, and if that didn’t play well in Los Angeles, I’d hate to see the rest of the country’s reaction. The analogy was a bit of a misstep, because I think the audience was generally with them up to that point.

Next we had The Birthday Massacre. I discovered this band when I saw they were on tour with Mindless Self Indulgence, and they quickly became a bigger favorite for me than MSI. I was a bit worried, though, that they wouldn’t be particularly effective live. Their sound is very constructed – and my favorite live acts tend toward simple music that can easily be reproduced on stage.

I shouldn’t have worried. First, The Birthday Massacre has six members, which gives them a bit of flexibility, and second, their show is so dynamic that you don’t notice the sampling quite as much. Chibi, the lead singer, is wonderfully engaged with the audience. She plays with the audience – calling for heart signs and sing-alongs, playing with the things fans throw up on stage, even putting on one of the gloves someone tossed up there. The band stuck to their faster songs and tracks off Walking With Strangers and was generally awesome.

Finally, Mindless Self Indulgence took the stage. If you haven’t seen this band live, you’re missing out. The energy they put into their albums is only a fraction of the live performances. MSI is easily the most playful band I’ve ever seen on stage. Jimmy, the lead, sings and talks and insults the audience in equal measures. The band stuck to fan favorites and songs off If, the new album.

I had thought that MSI wouldn’t be a sing-along band. The songs are fairly frantic and they frequently refer to the fact that their lyrics aren’t meant to be taken seriously, but the pit was word-perfect on even the most complex songs (even I know the lyrics to “Stupid Motherfucker”).

I could catalog Jimmy’s antics on stage, but retellings wouldn’t do the set justice. Where it’s fun and noteworthy when a lead singer steals a magic wand from a fan and runs around bashing his band members and the audience with it in any other band, that’s standard-issue MSI. It would be shocking for any other lead singer to allow the audience to strip and redress him (and that was a bit of shock even for MSI), it wasn’t really a surprise.

Even if this isn’t your favorite style of music, you need to see MSI live. For serious. I’m not even a real fan of the style, but I will definitely be back in the audience next time they’re in town. You’ll never get a better show.

23
May
08

EP Roundup – What do you mean I only get 5 songs?

Every month, I go on these massive download sprees and somehow end up with a ton of EPs. I’m not quite sure how that happens, because I do my best to limit it to 2 or 3. All those EPs get dumped into a massive playlist and mostly ignored while I hunt for albums to review for this site.

But, every once in a while a song will come up on shuffle and I’ll think, “That’s it. That’s the next album I’m going to review. My work for today is done.” I’ll get all excited and flip over to the album and find out…it’s an EP. And as much as I love EPs, it’s hard to do a full feature on them. So far, only 2 have made the cut.

Today though, I’m calling out 5 EPs that I love because they’re awesome, and hate because they’re short. If you’re in one of these bands, stop reading and go make a full album. Right now.

Aces High, Aces High

Aces High is a Southern California band (yay!) with an eponymous (boo!) EP. Their sound is solid classic rock. The music is high-energy and grounded in truly amazing guitar work. The vocals are melodic and delivered with conviction, but you get the feeling that the band’s focus is elsewhere.

Standout track is “Shattered.”

A Big Yes and a small no, Jesus That Looks Terrible On You

An EP with a name this tongue-in-cheek can only be from a Brooklyn band. A Big Yes And A Small No (I’m sorry, I cannot play your silly capitalization game. I was an English major and my head will explode.) credits 9 members on their website, and I believe it, because this EP has some of the most complex instrumentation I’ve ever heard. Having grown up in California in the 90s, I’m inclined to invoke some ska roots for them, but think there’s just as many big band/jazz influences in here as ska. Their sound is solid indie-ironic pop embroidered with keys and brass.

Standout track is “What A Fucking Mess This Turned Out To Be.”

House & Parish, One, One Thousand

House & Parish is a four-piece band out of Brooklyn that plays melodic, guitar-based indie-rock. One, One Thousand has a lush, relaxed feel to it. The lyrics are intelligent and delivered in an almost conversational style that focuses on simple sing-along melodies. My favorite track on the album is “This Curse,” but you can get “Summer Programme” for free at their website, so you might want to start there.

Mercy Mercedes, Casio Rodeo

I discovered Mercy Mercedes by accident when someone handed me a flyer for them while I was in line for a show a while back. Generally, I don’t like this particular marketing technique. It’s not creative, it’s not entertaining, and it fills my car with little photocopied handbills for bands I probably won’t like. But back in February, readers will remember, I got the flu from hell and had some time on my hands so I went online and hunted down some of the bands I’d gotten flyers for. And Mercy Mercedes was too good to pass up.

Mercy Mercedes plays fluffy, dance rock that’s perfect for driving too fast on PCH. Casio Rodeo incorporates a fair amount of electronic influences without quite crossing the line into full new wave nonsense. The sound is high-energy and full of hooky, sing-along choruses.

Standout track is “Get It Darlin’.”

The Morning Light, The Sounds Of Love

Sometimes, a girl needs to listen to something unashamedly sentimental. The Sounds Of Loveby The Morning Light is perfect for those days. The Morning Light plays piano based emo-pop that is captivating, and wonderfully undemanding, which is not to say that the EP is all slow-dance ballads. With a single exception, The Sounds Of Love is comprised of mid to high-tempo songs that stop just short of dance pop. The focus of the EP is on the lyrics instead of the beat, though, and especially the tight vocal interplay between the two vocalists.

Standout track is “The Love.”

18
May
08

What You’re Listening To: May 11 – 17, 2008

This week’s most viewed albums are:

08
May
08

What I’m Listening To: Future Kings and Queens, The Day The World Died

The Day The World Died was made by one guy named Dickie in his “home environment,” a story that I don’t doubt, but which seems ridiculously implausible given how awesome this album is. And it is freaking awesome. The sound is solidly electro-pop and comes in somewhere between She Wants Revenge moody and Blaqk Audio frenetic. The Day The World Died is definitely heavy on synth elements, which are executed beautifully and would be more than enough to make this album crazy good. Dickie has included enough moments of old-fashioned musicianship, like the retro piano elements in “I Hate You,” to give the album depth and credibility that would otherwise be lacking.

The Day The World Died has incredible range. The songs are all grounded in techno-pop, but each is shaded with enough unique influences to prevent the album from becoming the soundtrack to a 90s rave. “The End That Never Comes” soars like an 80’s theme song without the 80s cheestastic lyrics (although it comes pretty close). “The Day The World Died” is moodily atmospheric with an almost choral quality.

Dude’s also from Los Angeles. Point for the locals.

Standout tracks are “Race The Devil,” “I Hate You” and “The Day The World Died.”

06
May
08

What I’m Listening To: Forcefield ON, Llipspill

I always like it when a band member is credited as playing “etc.” It generally means two things. First, that the band is young and probably wrote the copy themselves without the benefit/annoyance of working with a copy editor. Second, that I don’t have to pretend to understand what’s going on, because they’re not telling anyway.

Forcefield ON is a Long Beach outfit that credits six band members playing everything from the guitar to the french horn (I’m pretty sure that’s a french horn). Llipspill sounds like a bunch of ska fans decided to make a pop album. The opening number, “You’ve Been Had, Part A” has enough piano in it to give it more of a big band feel, but Llipspill’s most prominent instruments are definitely horns and guitars. The album as a relaxed feel to it, and Jesse Wilder’s vocals have a mellow tinge that allow them to slip into the background when the instruments really take over. The lyrics have an intimate, jazz lounge feel to them, and are just a bit too constructed to be truly conversational.

Standout tracks are “Adios Victrolas,” “Quality” and “Mental Notes.”