Tuesday, December 22, 2009

TVD's Got ThinkIndie's Top Releases for 2009


Andrew from ThinkIndie wraps up his '09 Best Of list this morning and no time too soon. I'm getting more list-averse as we get closer to the end of the year. Is it just me? Anyway, his picks are solid. Onward!

Doom - Born Like This
MF Doom is back, but this time just as Doom. Samples from tv shows and movies are spread all over this album just like any Doom album is. He's smooth with his rhymes and has the mellow beats and such behind em. When it comes to hip hop, Doom has always sold extremely well at indie stores. The thing I love most about Doom is the fact he raps about super villains, comic books and other "nerd" based items.

Shrinebuilder - S/T
I wrote about this before, but can't say enough about it. They have such an awesome lineup with a huge amount of great music that each member has done on their own. You can get a bunch of big name musicians together to make a "super group" but it doesn't mean it's going to work out that great. I mean, look at Audioslave or Velvet Revolver. Yeah they were big sellers but they were never better than the bands the musicians came from. This is not the case with Shrinebuilder. You hear the bits and pieces of Sleep, Saint Vitus and Neurosis mesh together perfectly all the while the sound of the drums is perfect Melvins. It's not that long of an album, but it's still a best buy of the year.

Tom Waits - Glitter And Doom Live
I've never gotten the chance to see Tom Waits live even though he tours all the time, ohhh how rad it would be if he toured more, and I think this album best represents what I've missed out on. The way in which this album was recorded is perfect cause you get to here the natural reverb of the venue. If feels like you're there watching the show. I've seen many videos of Waits performing live so I know how he get's into the performances with his body gestures and facial expressions and In my mind I can kind of see what he would be looking like at the time these songs are being performed. It's nice to hear some of the older "classics" from Rain Dogs and Bone Machine as well as stuff off the Orphans box set that was released a few years ago. Each track was recorded at a different city on the tour yet it sounds like one show. Perfect live album.


Blackroc - S/T
The Black Keys team up with some of the biggest names in Hip Hop. Names such as Raekwon, RZA, Jim Jones of the Diplomats, Mos Def, Pharoahe Monch, Ludacris and Q-tip to name a few. I'm normally not a big fan of bands I like teaming up with artists in different genres, just look at how crappy the Mooney Suzuki has been since they teamed up with the Matrix production team, but this album is awesome. The Black Keys already played a style of music that was perfect for hip hop to sample so why not just have the band play it live. I think that's why I like Mos Def so much cause he uses a live band for his backing tracks. The great thing about this album is that it's an indie store exclusive, with the exception of the digital version, so go down to your local store and pick it up.

Pearl Jam - Backspacer
Pearl Jam was the first concert I ever went to when I was just 14 years old. They will always be my Beatles and they've never let me down with anything they have ever done. This album is their first album they released completely on their own without any label support. Yes they signed a deal with Target and iTunes, but they also demanded that the album be sold to indie retail as well. They know where they are supported and know that if it wasn't for indie retail they might not be where they are today. They even played an instore at Easy Street Records in Seattle to ONLY record store owners for the sole reason of recording it and releasing it as an Indie only release. "Backspacer" is one of the shortest Pearl Jam records, but this doesn't mean it lacks any substance. It's starts off rocking then when you get to the track "Just Breathe" it mellows out a bit and "Supersonic" is just that. It's a driving track that will make you step down just a little harder on the gas pedal if your listening to it in the car. Support the band and indie retail buy buying the album.

Mariachi El Bronx - S/T
I spoke about this before. If you missed it, here it is again. Growing up in SoCal with the Mexican border anywhere from 30-120 minutes (depending on where you live) from your house you get a special appreciation for the Mexican culture. The Bronx, a punk/hardcore band from Los Angeles embraces this culture on their new release as Mariachi El Bronx. When it comes to mariachi music you know you're doing something right when you have David Hidalgo of Los Lobos doing a guest spot on your record. I've been listening to this album a bunch since it came out and it's near the top of my "best of 09" album list for sure.

Obits - I Blame You
Obits were one of the most anticipated artists of 2009 by many people out there. It's funny that a band has such a big following before they've even released any music. Their first ever show was recorded by a fan and posted on the net and it spread like wild fire. Then again, this wild fire was like if there was a field of dead grass covered in gas and then set aflame with a blow torch. Singer/guitarist Rick Froberg was previously in the bands Drive Like Jehu and Hot Snakes which were big names in the indie rock community because they both also featured John Reis of Rocket From The Crypt. People were really looking to see what Rick was doing music wise and the Obits didn't let em down. They released a 7" single for the song "One Cross Apiece" and it sold out extremely fast. They got signed to Sub Pop and the wheels started turning a bit faster. "I Blame You" is a great rock n roll record with 2 guitar parts going their separate ways only to end up in the same place at the end. Solid rhythm section with the bass going off on little fills here and there. To top it all off, they also released a 7" single for the song "I Can't Lose" which was released on Record Store Day and also sold out extremely fast. I'm gonna have to say that I pick Obits for band of the year. But that's just me.

Monday, December 21, 2009

TVD's Got ThinkIndie's Top Releases for 2009


We're fans of reading lists...not so much on compiling them. Thankfully, our pal Andrew over at ThinkIndie has taken the weight off our shoulders and compiled ThinkIndie's best of the year. And the first half commences below:

Behold! The Monolith - S/T
A friend turned me onto these guys by sending me a link to their myspace page. They are a three piece doom metal band out of the Los Angeles area and I really dig this album. One of the great things about working at and with indie record stores is the chance to find bands that aren't signed to a label or anything and get them some exposer. We worked out a direct deal with em to get their content on the digital site cause i feel they are just a good as any of the bigger "doom" bands out there. They have a little bit of a psych feel to them at parts so it's not all "slow and low" as you would think. Besides, you got to love an album with a song like "Battle For Balls Deep" on it.

Big Business - Mind The Drift
Big Business is Coady Willis (Murder City Devils) on drums and Jared Warren (Karp/Tight Bros From Way Back When) on bass and vocals. They also happen to be 2/4 of the current Melvins lineup so you kind of get an idea what they are going to sound like if you know the Melvins at all. This is their third album but first with full time guitarist Toshi Kasai who has helped em in the pas on the production side of things. With the addition of a full time guitarist their sound has only slightly changed. This album has a bit more of a "spooky" feel to it as the layers of sound give it a little bit of mystery. Long time Big Business fans will recognize some of the songs as they had previously shown up on a couple of tour only EPs the band sold in the past.

John Frusciante - The Empyrean
You probably know him from his work with the Red Hot Chili Peppers, but this is John Frusciante's 10th solo album. I bought his first solo album right after it came out, but wasn't a big fan since it's really out there being as though he was strung out at the time he was working on it. Now that he's clean and sober his music is still slightly "weird," but extremely beautiful at the same time. Every time I listen to this album, i can describe in detail where I was, what the weather was like and everything else the first time I heard it. It's been a while since an album has been able to do that for me. The album starts off with a 9 minute instrumental track where Frusciante just wails on the guitar, but he doesn't wank on it all. From start to finish this is an amazing record. Go buy it.

Assjack - S/T
Working at a record store in San Diego, one of the questions I got most often was, "Do you have anything by Assjack?" You might find that a weird question to get asked often, but San Diego is one of the best markets for Hank III aka Hank Williams III. Why does Hank III have to do with Assjack? Assjack is his metal band that plays the second part of his live shows and they've never officially released anything. Hank III's second album he gave to Curb Records was a metal album called "This Ain't Country" and they refused to release it or anything else unless it was another country album. This caused a huge legal battle and in the end, Curb was forced to release a metal album after Hank III turned in a few more country albums. It's a pretty kick ass metal album especially since Hank III recorded everything on the album.

The Love Me Nots - Upsidedown Insideout
Four piece fuzzed out, organ drenched garage rock band out of Phoenix, AZ. This is their third album is three years and again it's produced by Jim Diamond (The Dirtbombs/The Mooney Suzuki/The White Stripes) but this time it was recorded in Phoenix rather than Detroit. Fronted by Nicole Laurenne with her sultry voice that intertwines with her Farfisa organ, fuzzed out guitar work from Michael Johnny Walker that you might find on one of the "Nuggets" box sets and a rhythm section of Kyle Rose Stokes and Bob Hoag holding it down. They are constantly touring the US so if they come to a town near you check em out. While you're there you can pick up their albums on great looking colored vinyl as well.

Naam - S/T
Tee Pee records knows how to pick their bands. Such a great album I can't think of how to describe it, so I'm gonna let the band describe it, "Disgusted by the lack of heavy, psychedelic rock and roll, We deliver our deafening sermon to bring a new dawn for all civilization. The vast seas cannot drown Us, the darkest caverns cannot conceal Us, We will conquer insurmountable foes. We are war, We are peace, We are time and space, We are infinite, We are Naam." Yeah... It's that damn good.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Thursday, December 17, 2009

TVD | Holiday Bullshit


I mean, I dig Dee and the boys, but c'mon. We're not gonna take it is right.

Anyway, I was emailing with Ross from yesterday's 'First Date' and he tells me he's enjoying the 'Bullshit' feature (which really should be a weekly thing, right?) So, he shoots me this:

"I am actually a big fan of Aimee Mann's Christmas show she usually does at Birchmere around Christmas, and her Christmas album. She is my favorite singer/songwriter of all time, and I own all of her albums. But it's the fact that my dad not only owns EVERY Mannheim Steamroller cassette, but he'd dust them off and he would play it in the morning to wake everyone up, play it throughout the morning as we did gift exchanges & stockings, play it over family brunch, play it over dinner, and then turns it up as guests show up and we all got more and more drunk as the night would go on.

That's my only real problem with Christmas... it's almost to the point where drinking eggnog and hearing that shit had the same effect on me that sex, violence, and Beethoven's 9th had on Alex after treatment in a Clockwork Orange. So now I just aim to be slurry with a chance of blackout by the time I get my second plate of Belgium waffles.




Fortunately there is my Aimee Mann Christmas record: "One More Drifter In the Snow" the 24 hour "Christmas Story" marathon, and the fact that I watch "Die Hard" (best holiday film to date) at least twice within the 24 hours of Christmas... those usually keep my head just over drowning in typical holiday bullshit."

I said hey Ross, can I post that? He said fuck no.

"Slurry with a chance of blackout." Now, there's my new mantra.



Starling Electric - The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (Mp3)
Gang Of Four - At Home He's A Tourist (Mp3)
Silver Sun - Nobody (Mp3)
Redd Kross - Teen Competition (Mp3)
The Ramones - We're a Happy Family (Mp3)

A TVD Special Holiday Giveaway | An Ed and Donna Christmas!


Just because I’m not in the holiday spirit (...just yet, anyway) doesn’t mean others aren’t rockin’ the halls with Christmas cheer. On Sunday night (12/20), Galaxy Hut presents “An Ed and Donna Christmas” and we asked ‘Donna’...er, Olivia Mancini, for the low down on what we can expect and some background on that name.

So, uh, Donna?


"Last fall, old music buddies Ed Donohue (Donny Hue & the Colors) and Olivia Mancini (Olivia Mancini & the Mates) packed themselves, two acoustic guitars, and some of their favorite originals and oldies covers into a Volvo station wagon for their first ever tour as an acoustic duo. At a particularly memorable show in Charlottesville, a well-meaning but confused MC introduced them first as "Ed and Donny." And then as "Eddie and Don." And then, finally, serendipitously, as "Ed and Donna." Ed and Donna were born!

Ed and Donna specialize in the kind of harmony-heavy oldies songs they love to listen to, and they've crafted some of their own songs to reflect their appreciation for groups like the Everly Brothers, the Association, and the early Beatles.

For this Christmas-themed show, Ed and Donna invited some of their musical friends from around town to play some of their favorite holiday tunes. Meredith Bragg will appear, as will May Tabol of Pree. Comedic rapper The Randipulator will dazzle audiences, as well as reggae princess Lady Hatchett. Good times groups the Staccattos and the Fond Regards are also set to appear, in addition to Maureen Andary of DC's The Sweater Set. We'll have percussion instruments for those who want to join in and we'll encourage everyone to sing along with popular holiday tunes like, "I Want a Hippopotamus for Christmas."

Tickets are $4 and the show will start at 9."


Yes, the tickets are just $4.00 but we’ve got a pair to give away along with a copy of Olivia Mancini & the Mates’ latest ‘You Can See Mountains From Here.’ Hit is with your seasonal anecdote in the comments to this post (with contact info—important!) and the cheeriest of the lot will get one extra gift this year courtesy of Ed and Donna. We’ll choose our winner by Thursday (12/17) at noon!

Olivia Mancini & The Mates - Graphology (Mp3)
Donny Hue and the Colors - Mr. Red Blues (Mp3)

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

TVD First Date with | Caverns


They're heavy, ...dense, ...crushing, ...then melodic. In addition, DC's Caverns also have a huge fan of vinyl in drummer Ross Hurt:

"The idea of going to a record store in general is very exciting to me... Whether it is a local shop I stop at when playing a show out of town, winning a bidding war on a tough to find record on ebay, or making a day of it in Adams Morgan and the U Street area shops.

When I was in Jr. High, I really began taking my music seriously... I really started studying the theory side of music, and particularly fell in love with the blues. My dad has an massive catalogue of some incredible blues LP's, and I would spend hours flipping through them and listening to Jon Lee Hooker, Muddy Waters, and of course some early Zep records. I fell in love with the music, but more over the tone and emotions captured on the guitar... That sound and tone can only be captured on wax!

I collected a couple 7"s and records in high school, mainly ska, punk, and some hard rock stuff... but cd's were all I cared about. Going to places like Tower and Sam Goody were adventures... Going through the shelves and finding music that I NEEDED to hear; and this was all done not having the ability to preview it or listen to it in the car on the way home. This forced me to rush home, sit down and truly listen to the album start to finish.




That really made me appreciate the idea of "an album" a lot more. I missed out on that in more recent years with ipods and in-car cd players, making it easier to hear music at anytime. But it all came back to me when the band The Bronzed Chorus came touring through needed a place to play and a place to crash; my basement provided both, and they were kind enough to give me their latest record on vinyl as a sign of thanks.

Hearing them talk about it with such pride and excitement made me remember those times when I really appreciated actively listening to a record, listening to the work put into an album as a whole... after that I was on musicstack.com for hours, hitting up Crooked Beat, Smash and so on... but for me, Joe's Record Paradise in Rockville is the store that really brings me back to those days in middle school and high school where I would go through shelf after shelf of whatever the store has, buy a shitload of stuff and then sit in front of the stereo going through box after box of my cds or dad's LPs for hours.

That tone is still there on all those records, just listening to any Terry Reid record on vinyl gives me chills... And odds are Joe's is going to have all that and more buried somewhere in their shelves. Plus EVERY member of Solar Powered Sun Destroyer is obsessed with finding good records on vinyl, so I am comfortably surrounded by it all the time."


Caverns - Dance You Son Of A Bitch (Mp3)
Caverns - Brodown High Noon (Mp3)

TVD | Holiday Bullshit


Methinks Dinah never sat in traffic for hours on 95 North...




The Joy Formidable - My Beerdrunk Soul is Sadder than a Hundred Dead Christmas Trees (Mp3)
The Clientele - Harvest Time (Mp3)
Thin Lizzy - Saga of the Ageing Orphan (Mp3)
Queen - Dear Friends (Mp3)
Phil Spector - Christmas Baby Please Come Home (Mp3)

TVD for the Holidays | It's a Washington, DC Record Store Shopping Spree!


Did you know you can walk to four of Washington, DC’s finest record stores in a span of maybe 15-20 minutes? It’s no joke. I do it often.

The folks who wake up each morning, head downtown, and turn on the lights at Crooked Beat Records, Red Onion Records, Smash! Records, and Som Records would like to remind you this holiday season that vinyl makes THE perfect gift for yourself or some other crate digger on your shopping list.

As a reminder, all four shops are dangling a carrot in the form of $25.00 in store credit for ONE winner to extend the season of giving—right to your turntable. That’s $100.00 to wander from store to store in TVD’s very first DC Record Store Shopping Spree.

Here’s how it’ll work: we invite you to sing the praises of your local scene in the comments to this post with contact info (very important!) and the one that warms our collective spirits will be awarded the shopping spree. You don’t have to be a DC resident to enter and win, but you have to redeem your store credit in person at each of the four shops.

We’re choosing the winner for the DC Record Store Shopping Spree on Wednesday, 12/16, to give you the last weekend before the Christmas holiday to make the 20 minute trek from store to store.

(...best after a Bloody Mary or 5. Trust me on this.)

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

TVD | Holiday Bullshit

IN PASSING
(A.Borland)
These yellow lights are not enough / To illuminate this night / These streets all have a hollow ring / Sounding down inside / This town got our wild years / Now it's quiet here, and still / What good is life without the few / Who lived it to the full? / This yellow glow / Is gonna show me home / Down rivers made of stone / But if you miss old friends tonight / Then you are not alone


Thecocknbullkid - On My Own (Mp3)
Buzzcocks - What Do I Get? (Mp3)
Friends Again - Honey At The Core [Alt. Version] (Mp3)
David Vandervelde - Can't See Your Face No More (Mp3)
Billy Squier - Christmas Is The Time To Say I Love You (Mp3)

TVD Class of '72 | "Brother, Brother, Brother" by the Isley Brothers


We've always had some doubts about our correspondent from the '70s. We hadn't heard from him in a while, not since Rocktober.


Then we started to wonder. Have all those good times way back when started to affect him? The '70s were a long time ago. Was he ...


But then, to our great relief, he checked in from the sweet blue haze of time.
"Sorry, man," he said. "Busy." Then he dropped this on TVD. All the way from 1972. "Brother, Brother, Brother" by the Isley Brothers. Mercy.


The Isleys start with a Carole King cover (no surprise there — they liked putting up the covers back then) and things get progressively funkier from there. By the time you're done with these, you won't associate "lay away" with Christmas shopping any more.

It's out of print but is available digitally.


The Isley Brothers - Sweet Season/Keep On Walkin' (Mp3)
The Isley Brothers - Pop That Thang (Mp3)
The Isley Brothers - Lay Away (Mp3)

Monday, December 14, 2009

TVD | Holiday Bullshit


There’s an old George Carlin bit where he rails on people who tell him to “have a nice day.” “It places the burden on ME to go have a nice day...” he’d joke.

Which pretty much sums up the holiday season for me at present. Sure, sure...the tree's up and Pete the dog has a jaunty new winter coat to sniff around in. But me? I’m not feeling it.

I think back to the past 20 years when at this time, I’d be on a train or in a car going up to see my folks in NJ. The holidays weren’t for kicking back in comfort...they were packing a bag, sitting in traffic, dealing with headaches, touching base to be ‘present and accounted for’, and then doing it again on a return trip. Rest stops, fast food, weight gain. Years checked off from your life span.

I began to resent it frankly—the dog and pony show as ritual. Performing like the trained bear in the graphic above...peddling this way and that and losing yourself in the process.

I resent that I resented it and muddled through these visits with my folks because they’re no longer here. I’m angry that I poured through so much wine at dinners which would have my folks wondering if I had a drinking problem. “I only have a drinking problem during the holidays!” I’d say.

But now they are gone and it’s a hollow victory to not face Amtrak delays or schedule changes. But the dog and pony shows remain. Office parties, awkward gifts, the visits, the absolute burden of holiday cheer. The bullshit.

I mean, I want to feel this rarified holiday ‘spirit’...yet, I’m spiritless.

So, as our friend Ed Hamell sings, “...I’m all alone but I’ve got my [records]/let’s think of some stuff we can smash...”



More bullshit:
40 years after John & Yoko’s X-mas single, we’re fighting two wars. 25 years after Band Aid, people are still struggling with hunger.

(Sheez. Should I be expecting a visit from three ghosts?
)

Rosie Thomas - Why Can't It Be Christmastime All Year? (Mp3)
The Pale Fountains - Benoit's Christmas (Mp3)
Gangway - Violence, Easter And Christmas (Mp3)
Band Aid - Do They Know It's Christmas (Mp3)
John Lennon & Yoko Ono - Happy Xmas (War Is Over) (Mp3)

Thursday, December 10, 2009

TVD Live Tease | Lightfoot, Saturday, December 12, at DC9 w/LIGHTS and We Were Pirates


I’ve missed several callings in life. There’s been no career at Marvel Comics drawing Spider-Man despite my facility with a pencil. My drum teacher “Don the Drum Master” thought I had some of the best hands he’d ever seen, but there’s been no career behind the kit. (And frankly, I think Don was just blowing smoke to keep me coming around for lessons...)

Thankfully, there’s one that doesn’t need a career goal to achieve: I can spot a star in the making. I can tell at note one or two who’s got it and who doesn’t. Who will forever be middling and just hover over the ground versus the ones destined for stratospheric trajectories. No shit. It’s a gift.

A number of months back, a friend of this blog Dave Mann put together a stellar evening of music over at The Black Cat that we hyped all week long—and the evening more than delivered. Beyond the band collectives however, I was struck by Jess, then of Vox Pop. I kept thinking to myself, “Why isn’t she singing EVERYthing?” She’s just that good.

Jess’ new project Lightfoot made is debut last month over at the Hotel and she joins LIGHTS and We Were Pirates this Saturday night (12/12) at DC9—where we encourage you to be.

Because stratospheric trajectories do, for a time, have launching pads.




"What’s especially interesting about [Lightfoot] is their pop-infused melancholy. There’s a searching and sadness to it, but it’s spring like and wistful. Something about acoustic guitar on rhythm–giving it that thick chug, and the lead of a semi-hollow body through a warm Fender tube amp…well, its cheerfully sad. It’s a triumphant sadness really. Also, Dye is a tremendous vocalist. Probably one of the best, earnest local singers I’ve heard. They remind me of Tanya Donnelly’s band Belly (the first album Star)."
—Brightest Young Things


TVD's Simple Aesthetics


I’ve gone on and on about it before. Hell, it’s even inspired a theme week or two. So, I’ll let it go.

TVD’s simple aesthetic #4: Post punk. NOT indie.

And the best of the post punk lot? Not Joy Division, not Gang of Four, et al...but ...The Sound.


The Sound - The Fire [Live] (Mp3)
The Sound - Where The Love Is [Live] (Mp3)
The Sound - Monument [Live] (Mp3)
The Sound - Love Is Not The Ghost [Live] (Mp3)
The Sound - Sense Of Purpose [Live] (Mp3)

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

TVD's Simple Aesthetics


They say there are rarely any ‘re-do’s in life. You live with your decisions and deal with the consequences. Count the losses, grim up, and move on. Fake a smile ‘til you’re not faking any longer.

That is, until ebay.

Back in ‘84 I sold my entire comic collection. Hundreds and hundreds of well worn compatriots were dashed off for what I recall to be a mere $85. Muscle men in colored spandex making way for the fairer sex, I’m guessing. I needed to look sharp, man.



Yet, like the flicking of your tongue over a tooth that’s been extracted, their absence was quite tangible over the years. Absences have shapes, y’see and the chasm was growing deeper and wider.

Fast forward to a glorious ebay rating of 824—chunks of my collection often replaced in one sweet, sweet auction win. (“You’ve been outbid by repressedchildhood751...”)

Actually, I have more comics—thousands more, than I do records. And I have a shit-TON of records.

TVD’s simple aesthetic #3: The scent of ink on paper.



The Libertines - Time For Heroes (Mp3)
John Lennon - Working Class Hero (Mp3)
Rick Springfield - Comic Book Heroes (Mp3)
Suede - Heroine [Live, 2003] (Mp3)
The Stranglers - No More Heroes (Mp3)

TVD First Date with | Bombadil


This summer I received a decorated envelope that gave me that picked for the team feeling. Inside was the latest album, Tarpits in Canyonlands, from a North Carolina-based band called Bombadil. My first listen through the album felt like a hearty four-season long jaunt through a foreign land where men wear fedoras and drive wagons and women spend the days tending fields with their children tied firmly to their backs. Funnily enough, the band claims one of its inspirations came from a trip taken along "the so-called World's Most Dangerous Road in Bolivia." TVD caught up with Bombadil member Bryan recently to get the low down on the band (comprised of members Daniel (bass/piano/saxophone/vocals/songwriter), James (drums/vocals/songwriter), Stuart (piano/trumpet/vocals/songwriter) and Bryan (guitar/vocals/songwriter) and what they're currently up to.

TVD: So first off- how did you get started?
Bryan: Though we didn't realize the irony at the time, one starting point for the band was on a trip down the so-called World's Most Dangerous Road in Bolivia. Daniel and I were debating whether the Rolling Stones or Pink Floyd was a better live band. We decided to start making recordings and one thing led to another. Our first show as 'Bombadil' happened in March 2005 in our university's dining hall.

TVD: How would you describe your sound?
A friend once called it arena folk, and that's probably not too far off. I'd say all of our songs are rooted in folk music, or at least the concept behind folk music -- we start by trying to tell stories about the unusual circumstances we find ourselves in as human beings...about how we relate to each other, about our expectations, about the eccentricities that we all have, about what happens next. At the end of the day, we're just trying to make music we would like to hear.

TVD: Your band is based in North Carolina—what, if any, influence does the Tarheel State have on the music you create and how you perform?
One of the great parts about living in the Triangle [the region of North Carolina that is anchored by the cities of Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill] is that there's a quality local show playing just about every night. There's always someone with good ideas, good songs, good chops, or just good old-fashioned charisma playing practically in your backyard. It's a great place to learn, to get inspired, and to have a good time.



TVD: Your first LP, A Buzz A Buzz, came out two years ago, and your most recent LP, Tarpits in Canyonlands, was released this past summer. I've noticed a more refined and polished sound on Tarpits but you have managed to maintain the dichotomous sounds of playfulness and solemness heard on the first album- do you feel with this new album a need to evolve a little or are you just exploring and expanding on the sounds your fans associate you with?
One big change we were able to make with Tarpits was setting aside a nice chunk of time to work on the thing. When we recorded Buzz we were all juggling day jobs, plus touring on most weekends. When we went into record Tarpits, we had left the dayjobs behind. We carved out a solid month to hone all the arrangements and practice beforehand, and then we had three straight weeks in the studio really focus on making a record.

The extra shows and endless hours in the car since recording the first disc also meant we'd gotten a little better at our instruments and knew better how to communicate with each other. It also helped that Scott Solter is a completely brilliant engineer. I think the playful solemnness you mention will probably always be part of who we are as a band, but musically, we'll always be looking for new alleys or passageways to wander upon.


TVD: I know that Daniel was diagnosed with tendinitis which halted tour plans for a while—any updates?
Back in 2007, Daniel started feeling pain in his wrists after playing. Over the next year and a half, it progressed and became a bigger and bigger problem until he realized in May of this year that he would have to completely stop playing — indefinitely. He's made some progress since then, but it looks like he still has a ways to go before be able to perform. So as of yet, no shows are scheduled. But we're still writing new tunes and plotting out how and when to make the next release.

Although there is no tour in the works yet, the band just recently released a new video for its song So Many Ways To Die , and their albums are all available online to keep your pallate wet until such time when they are able to roll through your town.

Bombadil - Sad Birthday (Mp3)
Bombadil - Honeymoon (Mp3)
Bombadil - Reasons (Mp3)
Bombadil - Oto The Bear (Mp3)

TVD would like to remind you to: Do Different, ThinkIndie


We're back again with another guest blog from our buddies at ThinkIndie.com. This week we're gonna get a little more involved in how ThinkIndie works with the great stores around the US and how we're trying to help bridge the gap between vinyl and digital with a new "format" that we have on the site.


Currently, the digital side of ThinkIndie has 48 stores represented by two store coalitions, CIMS and AIMS. We will be expanding to represent more and more stores as we move into 2010. We wanted to start it off with a tight group of stores until we worked out any kinks, since downloads were uncharted waters for brick and mortar stores. We couldn't just jump in head first without knowing how deep the water really is. We give each store its own page on the site, with a description and photo, as well as letting each store pick albums to feature.

The great part of this is that each store is an "affiliate" of the site so anyone that comes to the ThinkIndie digital site from a link on a store's website or social sites gets locked into that store and a percentage of every purchase they make goes right back to that store. That means buying digital files online now directly benefits your favorite record store. It's something we've been working on for almost 5 years now because we wanted something the customers of the stores would enjoy and make sure the stores were taken care of. Like Tony said in last week's blog, we come from record stores and want to make this digital site just that, a record store. It's how REAL record stores do digital.

Now about that "format" I was talking about earlier. It's something we like to call the Mp33.3 as it's just that, an Mp3 made directly from an LP. Yeah, they have players out there that will plug into your computer via USB, but those players don't cost 70k. You read that right, the turntable we use to make our files cost 70k, the drive alone is 10k. We don't mess around when it comes to quality for our customers—we went with the highest quality Mp3 we could right off the bat. We've only done a few so far (Cheyenne Mize & Bonnie "Prince" Billy, Rachel Grimes, Phantom Family Halo). Each one of these titles were released on limited run vinyl.

Our goal is to get those type of releases that have only been released as vinyl pieces to be done up as Mp33.3 files. Now you may be saying to yourself, "Why not just make Mp3 files from the original masters rather than rip them from vinyl?" Good question, but we feel it's best to keep with the "vinyl only" concept of the release to keep those pops and crackles in the audio of the Mp3. The files just sound warmer when they are recorded off an LP and converted to digital rather than trying to add that warmth in a studio with an audio program. On top of that, the way in which audio is mastered is different for CD/Mp3 than it is for vinyl so the band/producers would have to go back and master a copy for digital. Give one of 'em a listen and see how nice these recordings sound, lughole stimulation is always guaranteed.

So there ya go, a little more info about how ThinkIndie.com and your favorite local indie record stores are working together to not only keep record stores alive and well, but to bring in a new way of shopping for those who do enjoy the digital side of life.


Shrinebuilder - S/T
This band has been talked about for a few years now, but they just released their first album. Band features Wino (Hidden Hand/Saint Vitus/Spirit Caravan/The Obsessed), Al Cisneros (Sleep/Om), Scott Kelly (Neurosis/Tribes Of Neurot) and Dale Crover (Melvins). With a lineup like this, you know it's going to be brutal. Another one of my favorite albums to have come out this year.

Reverend Horton Heat - Laughin & Cryin With The Reverend Horton Heat
It has been five years since the good ol' Reverend graced us with any new music and the wait was well worth it. Laughin & Cryin is a little more country than rock n roll but it's still got the wild feel that ever RHH album has. Song like "Ain't No Saguaro In Texas," "Please Don't Take The Baby To The Liquor Store" and "Just Let Me Hold My Paycheck" are obvious that the Rev and company are still having lots of fun playing music. This is the first album with with "new" drummer Paul Simmons who has played on almost every Legendary Shack Shakers albums. I call em "new" cause he's been playing with the band since around 2006 so he's not so new anymore.

Manchester Orchestra - Mean Everything To Nothing
We have a very special exclusive release that just came out this week. It's the newest Manchester Orchestra album, but it also comes with seven bonus tracks that was recorded at Park Ave in Orlando, FL on June 4th, 2009. This is another example of how Think Indie is working with all the stores out there to provide cool items for fans. If you're not a fan of digital downloads you can always go to one of the stores featured on the digital site and buy the album to get a download card for the bonus tracks.

Various Artists - Warp20 (Chosen) & Warp20 (Recreated)
Warp Records out of the UK just celebrated it's 20th anniversary. One of the ways they celebrated was with 2 compilations from different artists on the label. The first was Warp20 (Chosen) which features 10 songs that were chosen by fans on the Warp website. The next 14 tracks on the release were chosen by Warp co-founder Steve Beckett as his favorite tracks to have been released by Warp Artists. The other comp that was released was Warp20 (Recreated) which features current and past artist from the Warp roster remixing and covering other Warp artists. It's a really cool release and it's quite nice to hear these songs you've know for a while in a completely different way.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

TVD's Simple Aesthetics


I thought it pretty funny for a while that it seemed everywhere I looked, people of a certain age were dressing like Bobby Brady was a legitimate style and fashion icon. I dig the 70’s like the next person (I think?) but the peg-legged Toughskins look with the Chucks just seemed a little...silly to me.

Fast forward an hour or so later and the 80’s have been back (and probably morphing into something else literally as I type this...) which cracks me up too because it’s not the ‘best’ of the ‘80’s look, but the look sported by every douchebag I loathed in high school. (Right – lingering issues.) The Members Only jackets...and the boat shoes...BOAT shoes. I swear if I see lacing on the SIDES of shoes, it’s all I can do to not haul off on someone.

(And while I’m at it, if we’re not at the beach or the pool, gentlemen...I should not be seeing feet. Warm weather does not = f’n feet season.)

TVD’s simple aesthetic #2: Footwear of distinction.


Man...this is liberating.


The Vapors - Spiders (Mp3)
Suburban Studs - I Hate School (Mp3)
Ultravox - Saturday Night In The City Of The Dead (Mp3)
Undertones - True Confessions (Mp3)
Joe Jackson - Look Sharp! [Live '79] (Mp3)