Sunday, December 15, 2013

The Power of Sincerity

            …it looks like this.

I saw The Waterboys touring their most recent album An Appointment with Mr. Yeats. The show was just as amazing as everyone is saying it was [here] [here] [here].

Truth be told, I always thought Mike Scott, the band’s lead man, was a little silly - he whispers, he rolls his r’s, he plays his Irish accent more than his guitar. It’s easy to call it overkill.

But this show brought me around. Scott has world class control over his voice - in a Shakespearean actor sort of way, not an Adele sort of way. Making music to the poetry of Yeats is the perfect outlet for Scott’s talent. His passion, even nerdiness for the poetry is too sincere to be appreciated today – I think we’re all a little afraid to step outside our own irony. Scott forced me out. I knew it was gone for sure when he stepped onto the stage in his three-faced mask (a reference to Yeats’ theory of the mask).

I’m hoping that the horrendous mask will become some sort of icon in musical history. It deserves it. See it below.


The equally literate warm-up act was amazing too. Freddie Stevenson is a Scottish cross between Mike Scott and Bob Dylan. Here he is singing about J.K. Rowling.



What’s Happening? - Commercial Music.



The first time I heard tUnE-yArDs (that’s a pain in the ass to type) was in a Blackberry commercial. In the commercial the song is cut up and people are talking over it. It didn’t matter – what is that song? I wasn’t the only one with the question. People were asking all over the internet.

The album W H O K I L L is one of my favorite ever. My friends used to make fun of me for finding songs through ads, but the fact that I found tUnE-yArDs via Blackberry has always made her angy anti-“buziness” songs sound even sweeter to me.

Lately though, the trend with music in commercials is just gross.




Is there some advertising firm out there with indie robots programmed to write hip songs? I’m afraid.

Tribute: The Fender Rhodes

Divine Blessing! A free 1970’s Fender Rhodes. I’m so giddy.

My girlfriend  just found found me a legendary Fender Rhodes keyboard. For free. She’s the best one ever. (The girlfriend, I mean… not the keyboard.)

The Rhodes is an electro-mechanical keyboard. It gets its sound from vibrating metal tines, and it was the bee’s knees back in the day.

Since then its sound has been the target of plenty of digital emulators. But my Rhodes has personality. Some of the keys buzz, and one of them doesn’t even work. Emulate that!
  
The Rhodes in action with:

         




Bandcamp Dredge: December 2013

I love bandcamp.com. It’s filled with eccentric, (usually horrible) music – experimental BS, high-school garage bands, and lots of banjo-toting women, all working so hard for their quirk. Intermixed are some great musical treasures. Every once and a while I spend the day dredging the site for treasure-albums.

            This album opens with a charango duet. Yes.

Nicole Monique Wray and her band deliver fresh 60’s soul with just a teeny hint of modern hip-hop.
Here’s a video of the duo singing backup for the great soul throwback Lee Fields, who also just released a new album, Faithful Man.

Four subdued tracks replete with singing birds and a pretty voice.

Canadian actor, producer, guitarist for Tropics. A Hound at the Hem takes place in some wonderous lost dimension.
Slim Twig is working with lots of amazing Canadian bands, featured below. Come to think it, they might all hang out together in that same lost dimension.

            Love this album.

Listening to this I can’t figure out if that emotion I’m feeling is musical joy, or fear for my soul. Yeah, it’s that kind of music.

            Twisted, echo-ey pop.

            I want to meet Jessica.

Stumbling through this instrumental album, don’t be surprised when you come across the decaying bodies of jazz, funk, pop, circus music, and rock ‘n’ roll.


Stroh-ify Me!

            Here’s a great oddity from the golden days just before the advent of electrical amplification. In 1900, John Matthias Augustus Stroh was granted a patent on his “Strohviol,” a violin that used a horn to mechanically amplify its sound.

            Since then the instrument has died…except for a few strange, lovely applications of the technology. The instrument’s biggest proponents today are those weird steam punk people.


New Min-ETune from Gibson

            The Future is Shiny, Lazy, and Perfectly Tuned



            The Min-ETune system, new this year from the Gibson Guitar Corporation, is a sexy little robot attached to the back of a guitar’s headstock. With the push of a button, the thing will tune a guitar perfectly. At first I was as angry as my purist friends on the internet. But anger is almost as silly as this invention isn’t it? This thing will probably flop even harder than Gibson’s “robot guitars.” And we can’t expect much from a company that’s dealing in endangered and illegal tonewoods, can we?

Sound Installations

I’m coming around on sound art installations. They’re easy to dismiss – strange men with too much grant money. But lately I can’t stop reading about them and listening to them.

What’s bringing me around? Robert Frobisher, mostly. Frobisher is the visionary (fictional) composer from David Mitchell’s novel Cloud Atlas (if you haven’t read it, stop screwing around here and go get it). Frobisher thinks in music.

In the smoky firelight the two old men nodded off like a pair of ancient kings passing the eons in their tumuli. Made a musical notation of their snores. Elgar is to be played by a bass tuba, Ayrs a bassoon.

Another thing bringing me around: Charles Spearin’s album The Happiness Project. Spearin interviewed his apartment complex neighbors on what happiness means to them, and composed music to their recorded answers. This is an album to make you cry from joy. Spearin shows us beauty in the most mundane speech patterns – a beauty that we ignore all the time.



What a way to experience the world! We swim through a sea of sounds every day. But I won’t stop to appreciate them unless I am informed that they are worth listening to. Seems like I missing out on half of my own existence.

I am no musical genius. But I’m going to try to start appreciating good sounds like a good sunset. And these sound installations – what a great way to explore the world of those sounds around us.

Here are some of my favorites:

Hidden Treasure: Kevin Coyne.

He’s been a musical favorite of mine for a long time. The late Kevin Coyne wasn’t afraid to yell, scream, or howl. He also made frequent use of grunts, groans, squeaks, squelches, and that mean, mean blues guitar.

Here he is doing it all at Hyde Park in 1974.



Guess what. Kevin Coyne was also a painter, poet, and film maker.

The more I read about this guy and the more I listen, the more I fall in love. Kevin Coyne could feel. He worked as a psychiatric nurse and a drug counselor from 1965 to 1968. In 1969 He got his record deal. But you can hear the hospital in that first album, Marjory Razorblade.

Coyne simmers with righteous anger for the treatment of the mentally ill. He’s always on the verge of crying, and screaming, and laughing.

Here are some of my favorites from Coyne’s less appreciated mediums.

SHORT STORY –

PAINTINGS –

POEM –
No Growl
The wolf in my head died
the day you gave me carpet slippers

After that I took to the settee
putting the dog at regular intervals

Listening to apples fall of the tree
in our cluttered backyard

Whispering about sex to myself
in a silly voice I didn't
recognise as my own

Not a growl of anger in me

Not a tooth in my head to bite with

The GbV//Replacements Feud.

Drama at Riot Fest 2013.

Robert Pollard was bumbling on about how his band releases so many records, how they weren’t like some of the reunion bands at Riot Fest - obviously making a jab at The Replacements, playing their first shows in 23 years.
Well, I saw The Replacements later that night, and there’s something to be said for scarcity. They were magnificent. Paul Westerberg and Tommy Stinson came running onto the stage in orange cowboy hats and pink skirts. Punk awesomeness and skirted hijinks ensued. All the dads in the audience had flashbacks and cried (half of them had road tripped from Minnesota, The Replacements’ home state).
And at the end of the show, Westerberg did a spot-on impersonation of Pollard’s mic-spinning gimmicks, then unplugged the mic and threw it to the audience.

We laughed. GbV 0, Replacements 1. That’s what I say.

Guided by Voices...What?

The Band and Their Misguided Cult

As expected, Robert Pollard stumbled onto the stage at “Riot Fest.” It was 5:00 on a summer afternoon, in the middle of a field somewhere near Byers, Colorado. Pollard chugged some tequila straight from the bottle and began his routine – alternately dropkicking the air, swinging his microphone dangerously by the cord, and… more drinking. His lead guitarist Mitch Mitchell was the perfect complement to Pollard’s cartoonish debauchery. At the beginning of the one-hour show, he put two packs of Marlboro reds on top of his Marshall amp. At the end of the show, both packs were empty and lying on the stage floor. This wasn’t a Guided by Voices concert. It was a play.


I came away disenchanted with the band. It’s common for musicians to put on a don’t-give-a-shit air. But these people seem completely sincere - they actually don’t give a shit.
Not even about their own music. Maybe that’s why the band releases three or four albums in a slow year. Pollard seems to slap the first thing that comes across his intoxicated mind on a tape recorder. Once he has a large enough collection he gives it some marvelously meaningless title (The Bears for Lunch, Let’s Go Eat The Factory) and calls it an album.
My first GbV album was Bee Thousand. It’s amazing, and everyone knows it. It’s on just about everyone’s “top indie albums” list. But are we getting played? I think we might be. Pollard and his cohorts have mastered the sexy appeal of angry, affected lo-fi music and accrued a cult following among fans and critics alike.
Just look at this from Eric Carr’s Pitchfork review of Relaxation of the Asshole.

“If more drunks would learn from Robert Pollard, simply accept his teachings, alcoholism wouldn't be treated-- it would be celebrated. An alcoholic risks losing his family and his job, systematically alienating all who would ever respect or care for him; Robert Pollard is loved, adored, and urine-free. Surely this career arc is the very embodiment boozing success, a seminal text on how to drink professionally for more than a decade.
The secret directions to the Bizarro dimension Pollard inhabits, however, have until now been well-concealed, only unearthed from the occasional between-song words of wisdom doled out at GBV gigs, and impossible to accurately assemble into a true life-plan. With the tearful passing of GBV's live act, it seemed as though the teachings would be lost forever, but listen up, drunky, because there's hope: Relaxation of the Asshole, like the Rosetta Stone of Inebriation, is the first step towards making sense of the the Man, the Wisdom, and the ins and outs of a healthy career in alcoholism.”

A drunken pig with a microphone is still a drunken pig, people. I’m all for the tortured artist. But isn’t Robert Pollard just a tortured douchebag? and I’m all for sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll. But drunken rock is an art. And I’ve seen it done much better than GbV. Take The Replacements.



I’m sure Guided by Voices was cool at some point. “I Am a Scientist” was written on a guitar missing a string - classic cool. But whatever cool the band once had has been replaced by silly. And these men aren’t the rebels their followers want them to be. They are walking, dropkicking, mic-swinging advertisements for Marlboro, PatrĂ³n, and human sickness.


Am I missing something here? Tell me I’m wrong. I would love to love GbV again.