10
Apr

Bell X1–Unplugged Sleepover Show

Ireland’s underrated band, Bell X1, has given us some great music over the years (their 2009 single, How Your Heart is Wired, remains amongst our all-time favorites with its U2-meets-Radiohead gestalt).  We hadn’t seen them unplugged until we stumbled upon their recent Sleepover Show.  Check out the separated-at-birth interplay and harmonies of Paul Noonan and David Geraghty on Nightwatchmen and Velcro (with its road regrets/love mien) off of their most recent album, last year’s Bloodless Coup.

9
Apr

Dial Up The Caffeine or Set Your DVRs: Tom Waits To Perform on Letterman and Fallon Shows

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The great Tom Waits’ label, Anti, has announced the following great news about Waits soon-come appearances on the David Letterman and Jimmy Fallon shows:

“Tom Waits is heading to NYC this month to perform on late night television. It remains a mystery as to what gems the iconoclast will chose to perform on those stages…but he will be talking with the hosts as well as playing songs for the very first time live from his latest, Bad As Me, “the best-reviewed major album of 2011,” according to metacritic.com.”

Evidently Waits will perform on Letterman (Letterman has been Waits’ traditional show of choice for the last 30 years–check some of ’em out HERE) on April 24th and on the up-and-coming Jimmy Fallon show on April 25th.

9
Apr

Feist Releases Sweet “Bittersweet Melodies” Video

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The fascinating Feist’s album, Metals, was one of our top albums of 2011.  Check out the newly-released video for her song Bittersweet Melodies via Rolling Stone.  The video showcases the handiwork of Argentinian photographer Irina Werning, and features subjects photographed in the same pose and setting, but with large timespans between the photos.  Check it out below while we review and delete any photos of our daughters posing naked in their youth.

8
Apr

Paster/Easeover–My Brightest Diamond’s “High Low Middle”

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On this day:

“Lord help you when you’re growing old
Lord help you when you’re tired and cold
Lord help you when the dealin’s done
Lord help you when the gettin’s gone

Lord help you when you’re growing old
Lord help you when you’re tired and cold
Lord help you when the dealin’s done
Lord help you when the gettin’s gone”

7
Apr

Cee-Lo For a Day

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It took a while for the musicians to disperse from SXSW and make their way back to Talk Show land, but so they have.  Check out Walk the Moon performing their internet sensation Anna Sun on the Jimmy Fallon Show and Good Old War performing Better Weather on Conan below.  We’ve written about both young bands before so pretend you’re Cee-Lo on The Voice and pick the winner between the two below.

6
Apr

Sharon Van Etten Live in Paris at Le Point FMR–“Don’t Do It”

Filled with all manner of hails and ironies, and heartfelt homages on this good day, check out Sharon Van Etten performing her great instructive song, Don’t Do It, live in Paris at Le Point FMR.

5
Apr

The Head and The Heart Perform New Song for Show Me Shows (KDHX)

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The Head and the Heart have been busy writing and recording new material (and apparently having the “material” to buy brand new Gibsons judging from this video).  Check out below their performance for St. Louis station KDHX 88.1 and the Show Me Shows’ video of the band’s new song, VirginiaVirginia features more of the harmonies and atmospherics loved by their fans.

5
Apr

The Uplift: Givers on La Blogotheque’s “The Switch”

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Seems like there’s been a cloud or two hanging around and disrupting some of our favorite folks’ lives.  So for them and for others in a similar mode, we give you the uplift of the Givers.  Up and coming band, Givers, recently played a secret show in a Brooklyn loft for The Switch.  For a good feel for the band, and some uplifting musical vignettes, first check out the band (and lofty crowd) on Up, Up, Up.  And then check out Givers with Theophilus London, who was playing another secret show upstairs and crashed the Givers show to add some “words” to the Givers’ song Words.  Forget your troubles and dance (at least figuratively).

 

4
Apr

Concert Review: Kathleen Edwards at the Ventura Theater

Canadian singer-songwriter Kathleen Edwards walked onto the Ventura Theater stage last week, sized up the crowd and joked good-naturedly that “there are just as many of you out there as we have up here.”  Sadly, this was only a slight exaggeration.  We’d waited ten years to see the phenomenal Edwards so we weren’t about to miss it.  Edwards has written some of the best alt-country/indie songs of our time, and she and her talented band (Jim Bryson, Gord Tough, opener Hannah Georgas,  John Dinsmore and Lyle Molzan) deserved a much larger audience in Ventura.  Note to booking agents:  unless you rep heavy metal or lame rock-rap bands exclusively, skip the Ventura Theater offramp and motor on to Santa Barbara where there is a burgeoning indie and alt-country music scene supported by a savvy fan-base and several colleges.

To their credit, Edwards and her virtuosic band nonetheless played this night as if the joint was packed full of VIPs.  They played with spirited aplomb throughout, and Edwards’ voice and perfect phrasing were impeccable (despite recent vocal problems and steroid prescriptions alluded to by Edwards).  In sum, Edwards exceeded our high expectations and was more than worth the ten-year wait.  We hope she doesn’t take as long to return to the Central Coast

As seen above, she opened up the set as we would want:  solo and strumming a vintage Gibson (capo-4) and singing her frustration-love song Sure As Shit (“And I cuss because I mean it; and for that, in my heart, I am hopeful; and these words that I chose, I was so careful.”).  Only later would we learn that this was the first time she’s performed this song on this tour.   And despite the crowd-size and scatological surroundings, we sensed we were in for a special, intimate evening to spite the vacuous venue.

Edwards then played several gems off of her splendid recent album, Voyageur, before dropping back to a popcorn-infused read of fan-favorite Asking For Flowers.  In between songs, in the house-concert-esque ambiance, she answered audience questions about a guitar (a uniquely-painted, “found” Telecaster–shown below–that she demanded from her ex-husband), and told of a Dorito-loving “mouse” in the dressing room backstage.

Following Asking for Flowers Edwards broke out her violin (we had forgotten she played it so well) and played a sweet lead-in to the bass-buoyed Goodnight, California (titled appropriately enough, though a tad premature in the proceedings).  Gord Tough took over mid-way through the song with his ever-tasteful, but incendiary guitar (at times taking a page or two out of the Neil Young guitar primer).  Check out a different-night rendering of the song below the picture.  So very good.

After an emphatic rendering of In State, Edwards let on that she had recently met a (rare) industry-insider that she enjoyed.  Over coffee they discovered that they both shared (and who doesn’t?) a love of Whiskeytown’s Strangers Almanac album.  This would turn out to be an intro for Edwards’ stirring read of Houses on the Hill off of the seminal Strangers Almanac.  Check out her performance of the song on another night below.

Edwards and band followed with House Full of Empty Rooms, which included Gord’s evocative tremolo finger-strumming.  While the song’s rooms and the show venue may have been physically empty, the performance on this song made all seem full.  Check an alternate take with Sarah Harmer below.

After a couple of driving, mid-tempo rockers on which she played electric guitar, Edwards came back with Soft Place to Land, and it’s lovely delivery (an example of which can be seen below). Vive la violin!!!

This was followed by the rockin’, desperado-under-the-eaves of 12 Bellevue.  Below is a good vantage of what we saw:

Then came a couple more great, mid-tempo pieces (including Change the Sheets off the new album and Six O’ Clock News) and the slow burn of For The Record off the new album (as a bonus, below the setlist at bottom, check out Justin Vernon’s Neil-esque guitar playing on the song from an Edwards concert in Georgia in January).  Further proof of Edwards’ show-must-go-on ardor came at the end of their set when she returned to the stage for two more songs than planned (see their planned setlist below), adding on an encore of the affecting Hockey Skates and rocker The Mint.  As far as we can tell, she played more songs in Ventura than any other show on her tour.  On this night the audience was the few, the proud, the fortunate.

We look forward to her return to the Central Coast, though hopefully with a deserved full house in a Santa Barbara venue.

All photos by Lefort.

2
Apr

Yellow Ostrich Performs “I Got No Time For You” on the Alternate Side

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Yellow Ostrich has released one of the better albums (Strange Land) of the year so far and has been making the radio and couch-sleepover rounds as a result.  They recently showed up on the Alternate Side (WFUV) to play I Got No Time For You live.  We like the spareness at the start followed by the emphatic bombast later.  This song in particular reminds us of the great Portland band, Hosannas (whose fine set  we caught last night at Muddy Waters in Santa Barbara).  Check out Yellow Ostrich below.