28
Jun

Watch Noah And The Whale’s Tiny Desk Concert on NPR–Playing Glastonbury Tomorrow

We have been fans of Noah And The Whale from their inception (regardless of Laura Marling’s involvement or lack thereof). Their album The First Days of Spring album remains one of our all-time favorites, and Charlie Fink and the boys have written some of the most honest, affecting songs for the ages.  Check out below the simple beauty of well-crafted songs, dual vocals (led by leader Charlie Fink), guitar and violin.  The band plays Glastonbury tomorrow with, we assume, a beefed up band and sound.  Curious that none of the songs played on the Tiny Desk Concert are from just-released album Heart of Nowhere.

Set List:

L.I.F.E.G.O.E.S.O.N. (off of 2011’s fine Last Night on Earth)
Blue Skies (off of The First Days of Spring)
Waiting For My Chance To Come  (off  of Last Night on Earth)

27
Jun

Listen to New Richard Buckner Song “When You Tell Me How It Is”

in Music

Comments closed Comments

buckner2

As we’ve written before, Richard Buckner has written some of the best songs ever penned in the singer-songwriter canon.  He’s a crafty lyricist who can split you open and patch you up in one fell swoop.  In September Buckner will release new album Surrounded on Merge RecordsBuckner has released the first song from the album entitled When You Tell Me How It Is, which you can listen to below.  The new album is produced by Tucker Martine (The Decemberists, R.E.M., Neko Case), and on the new song one hears a different approach and a broader spectrum of sounds (“Surrounded-Sound“?).

Buckner’s report on the proceedings is, as usual, insightful and hilarious:  “Throwing out the ‘tricks and trades’ of previous efforts, [I] hunkered down at home and chose a few unfamiliar pieces of gear—a Suzuki QChord electronic autoharp and an Electro-Harmonix POG2 pedal—to create basic tracks and open up more sonic possibilities. ‘The best outcomes happen sometimes when I’m unfamiliar with the tool that I’m using (imagine MacGyver wearing a dog cone).'”

The song begins with twisted-electro-carnival sounds that reveal a ventricle rhythm that segues into Buckner’s distinctive vocals and beguiling lyrics.  The song bodes very well for the rest of Surrounded.  You can pre-order the album HERE.

26
Jun

Watch Mavis Staples on Conan and Stream New Album “One True Vine”

in Music

Comments closed Comments

Mavis Staples showed up last night on Conan and, in a bit of a style-shift for her, performed the rocker I Like The Things About Me from her new Jeff Tweedy-produced new album One True Vine.   Check out the fuzz-laden rocker below, and then stream the new album courtesy of Anti Records.

25
Jun

Review of Iron & Wine’s Church Show in LA 6/23–Watch on Last Night’s Jimmy Kimmel

in Music

Comments closed Comments

Iron&WineChurchShow

The great Sam Beam brought his Iron & Wine in all it’s transformed, 13-member glory to Los Angeles to play an intimate show on Sunday at the First Unitarian Church in MacArthur Park and to perform last night on the Jimmy Kimmel Show, all in support of the band’s superb new album, Ghost On Ghost.  Suffice it to say that this incarnation of Iron & Wine is the best yet, and they gave one of the most soulful, rocking concerts we’ve seen in recent memory.  Iron & Wine has dramatically evolved from Beam’s solo guitar origins into a species of a whole different order.  While there are plenty who lament the more intimate side of Beam’s confessional songs, at the Church Show there were hallelujahs all around.

As an intro to our review of the “Church Show” on Sunday, check out last night’s well-captured performances.  Just like they did at the Church Show, Iron & Wine opened on Kimmel with Desert Babbler. The song’s lyrics are obviously apt: “California’s gonna kill you soon…Black houses in the hills and roadside hearts.” Listen to the performance below as Beam sings and exhorts like a Sunday choir leader.  Next up was the graceful call-and-response of Grace For Saints and Sinners.   Both songs’ worthwhile lyrics are at bottom.

The First Unitarian Church was an ideal place to see Iron & Wine in all its manifold glory.  Though the sound took some continuous dialing, the intimate venue was perfect for this band.  The large band consisted of Beam and four threes (three backup singers, string trio, three strutting, scatting horn players, and a rhythm section consisting of bass, drums and keys).  And great joy was had by Beam and the beaming crowd.  The singers and horn players danced most of the night when they weren’t getting serious, and Beam paid tribute to his father by explaining how his dad contributed mightily to the Motown-Stax sounds emanating from the stage.  It’s obviously no coincidence that most of the songs from the new album also reflect the band’s large look and feel, with its big band sound and bountiful production.

Beam and the band opened swinging hard with a superb collection of songs from the new and last albums (including Tree By The River from Kiss Each Other Clean), along with a rapturous rendition of The Postal Service’s Such Great Heights.  Beam was his usual humorous, endearing self throughout, and introduced Monkeys Uptown by stating that God and he had come to an agreement to let him play the song, which contains several f-bombs.   After the full Motown revival opening set, however, Beam smartly had the band take a break and went back in time on solo guitar to gave the more nostalgic crowd members a marvelous five-song “Iron & Wine Medley” (as he dubbed it) featuring Lion’s Mane, Woman King, Jesus the Mexican Boy, the much-loved cover of New Order’s Love Vigilantes, and, best of all, Sodom, South Georgia.  The latter brought goosebumps aplenty.

But these would not be the only older songs Iron & Wine would play.  Beam also employed new arrangements of several of the older Iron & Wine favorites, including rearranged versions of Passing Afternoon (accompanied only by the three horns), Jezebel, Caught in the Briars, and Upward Over the Mountain (accompanied just by the string trio).  The band closed with an absolutely rousing version of a song that, in all honesty, we had not given its proper due–the epic Your Fake Name is Good Enough For Me (from 2011’s Kissing Each Other Clean).  If you, like us, have not focused on this song, now’s the time and particularly live.  It is one for the ages.  At the song’s finish, the crowd was on its feet (for the first time) in appreciation.

After that perfect set-closer, Beam would come out for only one more song, a song many in the crowd (guilty) had loudly requested during his solo medley–The Trapeze Swinger.  This epic song has become one of Iron & Wine’s most beloved songs despite not appearing on any of the studio albums (featured in the film In Good Company and as a part of the fantastic compilation of unreleased tracks entitled All Around the Well).  Beam complained a bit about playing the song, saying that he had taken a break from performing the song after “performing it every night for seven years.”  A quick review of the band’s setlists this year confirmed that Beam had only played the song one time this year until last night, making the Church Show a particularly memorable show.  Employing some of the best wordplay and imagery ever put to song, the song never fails to enthrall us.  And this night it put an end to any early-departers’ ideas of leaving.  You can watch the song below as performed at the Church Show.

It was a perfect way to end a perfect night of live music and song from Iron & Wine.  Do whatever you have to do to catch this band live.  Their remaining tour dates can be found HERE, including a Halloween show at the Orpheum in LA, and at the Fox Theater in Oakland on November 1st.

Listen below to The Trapeze Swinger closer.

Desert Babbler:

It’s New Year’s Eve
And California’s gonna kill you soon
The Barstow boys
Buckeyes in the shadow of the moon

Black houses in the hills and roadside hearts
Dying for a place to fall apart
Who knew what you could learn to live without
Mother Mary’s lying in your mouth

Back home the kitchen’s warm with Christmas wine
And every girl has got an axe to grind
You left to look for heaven
But you’re far from that hard light tonight

So quietly we’ve lost another year
The desert put a babbler in your ear
Mean fireweed and I miss you again
Barstow boys are spit into the wind

Back home the hammer always has to fall
Crosses barely hanging on the wall
Someday I know you’ll never leave me
But we’re far from that hard light tonight

Grace for Saints and Sinners:

But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I

There were banged up heads stealing first base
Underneath the tables so we never said grace
Falling out of bed for the workday week
There was kissing in the cracks of the flashflood street
There were budding blossoms blaring Johnny Rotten
Chewed up and swallowed by the prophet they were trying to follow
Picked too green, and we paid no tax on our quick romantic cul-de-sac

But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I

There were crashed out cars in our bar code clothes
There was rubbing on each other, rubbing ghost on ghost
There were junked up punks and the Jesus freaks
Weaving in and out of trouble, wrapping ’round and ’round a leash
There were sleepless dreamers, doomsday preachers
The message and the messenger, the gun beneath the register
The sweet gum tree by the though drunk tank
We could never give enough to the bad blood bank
There were hopeless sinners, sweepstake winners
They danced with the farmer’s daughter, capered with the corporate lawyers

But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I

There was laughing in the light sugar in the shade
There were backstab handshakes made on faith
We were never out of time and we’d never entertain
Anybody say the habit of the wind was going to change
There were misled misfits, teething biscuits
Fountains full of penny wishes, potties full of pretty fishes
Side by side with the birds and bees
And we never said grace and never ever took a knee
With the saints and ramblers, movie star handlers
High above the aviary, underneath the cemetery
And we never wondered why, because the sun was in our eyes
There was seed for the field, there was grease for the wheel
We were drinking with the luminaries, eaten with the missionaries

But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I
But it all came down to you and I

24
Jun

Watch Josh Rouse On KCRW

in Music

Comments closed Comments

joshrouse

Josh Rouse showed up this morning on KCRW to perform for Morning Becomes Eclectic.  Rouse’s hat-trick of mid-2000s albums, Under The Cold Blue Stars, 1972 and Nashville, remain amongst our all-time favorites.  And now Rouse has a brand new album out entitled The Happiness Waltz, and which you can stream at his site HERE.  Watch below as Rouse performs Simple Pleasure off the new album for KCRW, and go HERE to listen to the entire session.

24
Jun

Watch Yeah Yeah Yeah’s Official “Despair” Video Atop the Empire State Building

in Music

Comments closed Comments

Coming off their desperately fantastic performance of the song on the Jimmy Fallon Show, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs have released the official video for their great new song Despair off of new album Mosquito.  Once again Karen O shows she has a heart of gold.  The video’s juxtaposition of Karen’s ebullience against the Empire State Building’s prevention-barriers is a little chilling, but her joyous smile carries the day.  Turns out those aren’t chills; they’re goosebumps.  This is the first video filmed atop the building (discounting that gorilla film).

23
Jun

On Sunday: Watch John Fullbright Daydreaming

in Music

Comments closed Comments

We discovered John Fullbright back yonder, and today he tore us up.  Check out his song for the ages and all ages, Daydreamer, as performed on a Sleepover Show.  And please, don’t look down when you pray.  Daydreamer can be found on Fullbright’s outstanding album From the Ground Up.   The song’s lyrics follow at bottom. Fullbright is out on tour now and headed to Europe in September.  All tour dates can be found HERE.

Daydreamer:

Daydreamer, lost in dreams
Sewn all together with the magic seams
Daydreamer, lost in a crowd all alone
Daydreamer, thinks he can fly
Sees white pictures in a big blue sky
Daydreamer, dreaming of a world all his own.

Young men spend a lot of time looking down at the ground
Looking down when they pray
Looking down everyday
Dreamers know that the finer things wait up in the air
But young men are proud
Sometimes dreaming aint allowed

Dream me a better world and I’ll find a better way
Dream me a bigger sky and I’ll blow the rain away
I’m a young man today
Thats got nothing left to say about tomorrow.

Young men spend a lot of time watching old men make mistakes
But when the young man falls
Well then the old heart breaks
Theres a fire burning deep inside and its as mad as its mean
Its hungry as its lean
And its as fleeting as a dream

Dream me a better world and I’ll find a better way
Dream me a bigger sky and I’ll blow the rain away
I’m a young man today
Thats got nothing left to say about tomorrow.

22
Jun

Watch Tricky’s New Video for “Hey Love” Featuring Fan Instagram Photos

in Music

Comments closed Comments

Today we have Tricky gettin’ trickier.   In support of his beguiling new album, False Idols, check out the new video for track Hey Love, which features fan Instagram photos culled from over 3000 pictures submitted by Tricky fans.  We love this track, and especially its percussion drops (40+ years after the original innovators, Jamaican dub producers such as Scratch Perry and Yabby U).  Check out Tricky below, standing on the shoulders of giants.

22
Jun

Watch The xx’s New Video for “Fiction”

in Music

Comments closed Comments

Britain’s young wonders The xx solidified their hold on the indie-music world with its superb second album Coexist. The band’s eponymous first album was one of the best of 2009, and Coexist artfully expanded upon their spare sound and romantic mien.  Check out below a just-released second official video for love-song Fiction (lyrics at bottom).  The first “Official Video” for the song follows.

Fiction:

When we’re not together
Mistaken for a vision
Something of my own creation

I wake up alone
With only daylight between us
Last night the world was beneath us
Tonight comes too long

Were we torn apart
By the break of day
You’re more than I can believe
Would ever come my way

Fiction
When we’re not together
Mistaken for a vision
Something of my own creation

Come real life
Why do I refuse you
Cause if my fear’s right
I risk to lose you

And if I just might
Wake up alone
Bring on the night

Fiction
When we’re not together
Mistaken for a vision
Something of my own creation

An uncertain haze
How am I to tell
I know your face all too well
Still I wake up alone

Fiction
When we’re not together

21
Jun

The Late Night Round-Up: Watch Yeah Yeah Yeahs on Fallon and Japandroids on Letterman

in Music

Comments closed Comments

Last night Yeah Yeah Yeahs performed their therapeutic beauty Despair on the Jimmy Fallon Show (from their new album Mosquito).  Karen, O my.  “Through the darkness and the light, some sun has got to rise, your sun is my sun.”  After, watch the Japandroids on Letterman as they continue their assault in support of their (now “ancient”) album Celebration (“Celebrity” according to Letterman) Rock by performing a raging rendition of Adrenaline Nightshift.