Philadelphia

Come Join The Love Club at North Star Bar Aug. 8

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The Love Club continues the great Philly psych-pop tradition, but not nearly in the way you’ve come to expect. Distant, soothing vocals occupy the same space as bouncy guitars, fuzzy, melodic bass lines and bleating saxophones and theremins, adding up to a looseness that’s just as much 90’s slacker indie as it is old-timey English pyschedelia. And man, if those saxophones don’t sound like the Contortions (which is always a welcome influence). But I suppose you shouldn’t expect anything less from a band that was "birthed from a lesbian cosmonaut". Also filling up the North Star tonight are Sonni Sunshine and the Underwater SoundsLost in Company and Touch. North Star Bar, 2639 Poplar Street, 8pm, $8, 21+ – Joe Poteracki
 

 

Philadelphia

Oh! Pears Headline at KFN Aug. 8

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South Philly’s Oh! Pears is compellingly massive. The brainchild of ex-Pattern Is Movement guitarist Corey Duncan, the experimental collective may vary in size often reaching 13 large, hefting a throng of strings, horns, percussion, vocals and a clutch of claps. And their self-proclaimed chamber pop is just as prolific as its framework – influenced by the likes of Grizzly Bear, Beirut, and Dirty Protectors, the indie opulence of Oh! Pears’ newest three-song EP, Fill Your Lungs, is eerily melodramatic, ambitiously symphonic and brilliantly unrestricted. Like a beautiful, distressing thundershower in the desert. So go get wet tonight at KFN with Oh! Pears and stage mates Jac, Shutters and DJ Cutlery. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 8pm, $5, 21+ – Annamarya Scaccia
 

 

Philadelphia

The Silence Kit Break Their Silence at The Fire Aug. 7

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With dark and dreary post punk indie rock in the vein of Joy Division and Psychedelic Furs, and a strong musical background that has seen them play shows alongside the likes of Gene Loves Jezebel and I Love You But I’ve Chosen Darkness, its only a matter of time before The Silence Kit move on to bigger things. And ever since they released Dislocations back in February on Break Even and Azteca Records, it’s been as bright as melancholy can be. You might feel the burning inside when they play an intimate show at The Fire tonight. Especially since they’ll be joined by Romance Is Born, an electronic outfit who hooks up synth laden beats on top of possessing uncanny similarities to Badly Drawn Boy and having illuminating melodies. The Fire, 412 W. Girard Ave., 9pm, $7, 21+ – Bill McThrill

New England

Deep Heaven Now is This Saturday, 1pm, Union Square

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Starting at 1pm on Saturday, Union Square’s PA’s Lounge and Precinct host Deep Heaven Now’s triumphant return!

The storied festival began in the early 90’s, spotlighting some of the best East coast psychedelic bands of the time.  It was often held in private loft spaces, and was a merging of auditory and visual arts, augmented by projection videos and lights.  It carried with it a strong sense of artistic community – not just by nature of the festival, but, in many ways, inherent to the genre itself.

"I think it’s one of the more charming aspects of the ambient/psych/experimental scene," says Jinsen Liu, singer/guitarist for 28 Degrees Taurus, one of two headliners for this year’s reboot.  "It’s timeless and there’s far less ageism and boundaries within it.  Everyone has something to offer each other."  

Liu attended Deep Heaven Now back in its heyday in the late 90’s.  He was a musician at the time, and the festival was an inspiration for his own music’s direction.  Now, his band is one of the hardest working acts in Boston, self-funding records and tours, playing out constantly in Boston, and, as individuals, reaching out to collaborate with other local acts.  

More than a decade after he bought his first ticket to Deep Heaven Now, he’s reaching back to that golden age of psychedelia and bringing the festival back.

"It all started with a conversation at a bar when the idea hit me," he explains.  "I think it was just a joke at the time, but the more I thought about it, I felt I could actually make it happen."  

"Make it happen" may prove an understatement; the 2010 installment carries the tradition with it, but stands also as a re-imagining.  The all-day event, held in Union Square, is a double-venue spectacle.  Nineteen bands, from as far as Minneapolis, will contribute their voices, their sets strategically staggered at half hour intervals, so the (rightly) ambitious in attendance can hop back and forth and catch music by every band.  One $10 ticket buys you access to both clubs for the entirety of the event, assuring fans get their money’s worth and discover some new music as they go.

"The timing was right," Liu says of bringing the festival back.  "The scene here in Boston is vibrant and electric enough right now and there’s a deep core of talent here within the ambient/psych/experimental genres.  But it’s still very fractured. […] I felt I was in the perfect position to bring back the community that was so exciting and cohesive back then. […] I had trust and familiarity with the veterans and people already established but I also had close ties to the younger kids in Allston coming up.  I felt I could be a good bridge."  

This year’s Deep Heaven Now, with a line-up ranging from days-of-yore psych vets like Abunai! and Bobb Trimble to relatively new acts (did we mention there are nineteen bands?), certainly highlights the overlap between disparate but relevant circles within the scene.  What’s more, it’s also bent on raising awareness of the varied community and bringing new music to new listeners – it’s sponsored by Narragansett, it’s gotten as much press as anything in recent memory, and it coincides with the annual Rock and Roll Yard Sale.

"When most people look at the line-up, they’ll list their top three or four ‘must-sees,’" Liu continues.  "But I am confident that if people hang around they’ll walk away with some favorite ‘new’ bands they like as well."  For those on a schedule, though, Liu points out that a handful of the bands are out-of-towners swinging through for the festival.  "Give them a nice warm Boston welcome.  Show them where the party is. […] I’d say see the Roh Delikat and Abunai reunions, too, as you don’t know when they’ll play again."

Despite all the sex, drugs, and rock and roll, despite the free beer, despite the inevitable after parties – leave it to a psych rocker to get philosophical.  "What are we bringing back?" Liu mulled.  "Bringin’ back some excitement, electricity, community, interesting new and evolving textures, redefining and remaking old established ideas, bringin’ back a universal genre.. we’re doing this for ourselves and for each other but just also hoping that maybe what we do will attract and inspire some new people too.  I was one of those new wide-eyed people back in the late 90’s when I attended my first Deep Heaven 5.  Now look where I am!"

1pm / PA’s Lounge & Precinct, Union Square / $10 / 21+

 Cullen Corley

Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, Aug. 6 – 8

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Man, how do you get a cold in the middle of summer? I feel like ass. I’m not going anywhere this weekend, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t. While I hide out in my place eating 4th Street Deli’s chicken noodle soup with gigantic matzo balls, the rest of The Deli folks will be heading over to Post Post’s EP Release Party at KFN this Saturday night, and you should too. Yes, we love their name almost as much as we love their music. In a generation that uses the word “post” as often as we do when describing music, you can’t help but be slightly amused. So grab a copy of Resident and check out our recent Where Is My Mind? with Post Post’s Michelle Zauner! Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 8pm, $5, 21+
 
More things to do when you’re healthy…
 
Johnny Brenda’s (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) FRI Turning Violet Violet and Gemini Wolf, SAT East Hundred and Steve Goldberg & The Arch Enemies
 
Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) SUN Oh! Pears
 
North Star Bar (2639 Poplar St.) SUN The Love Club
 
The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) SAT The Silence Kit
 
M Room (15 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Unrest
 
Tritone (1508 South St.) SAT The Broken Prayers
 
Danger Danger Gallery (5013 Baltimore Ave.) FRI Snakes Say Hisss and Da Comrade!
 
Tin Angel (20 S. 2nd St.) FRI Joe Jordan and Larry Saklad SAT Absolute Zeros and Pawnshop Roses
 
The Trocadero (1003 Arch St.) FRI (Early) Penrose, (Late) Mikey Galactic and Dani Mari
 
JR’s Bar (2327 S. Croskey St.) SAT The Lopez
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) SAT Infinien
 
The Rotunda (4014 Walnut St.) SAT Philadelphia Brothers Reunion and Shakey Lyman
 
The Ellen Powell Tiberino Museum (3819 Hamilton St.) FRI Radio Eris and Oubliette Ensemble
 

 

Philadelphia

Diplo’s Favela on Blast at International House Aug. 6

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Favela on Blast, the directorial debut of “mad decent” local deejay Diplo (a.k.a. Thomas Wesley Pentz or “Wes”), will be showing tonight at the International House on Penn’s Campus. It’s part of the Perspectivas film series. Diplo (co-director and producer), who once studied filmmaking at Temple University, combined forces with Brazilian director Leandro HBL to create this documentary that delves into the musical genre funk carioca (a.k.a. baile funk), which he is known for championing. Favela on Blast is raw, and it’s real so get some education about the music that has been making you shake your ass for years. International House, 3701 Chestnut St., 7pm, $5 – $7, All Ages

H.M. Kauffman

L.A.

Cali-bred/NYC-repped Local Natives play Governor’s Island

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LA Band Local Natives

The first time I heard the Local Natives, I fell in love.  And when I saw them live, I fell in love all over again. These guys have succeeded because they do things differently, and do it right. Whether fusing three-part, graceful harmonies with swelling instrumentals, or blending Afro beats with sexy/sensual chants, body-slamming guitars, and rhythmic crescendos, they do it with passion and rock-filled beauty. And it’s not just the musicality that defines them – there’s emotionality and meaning behind every single song. Because, unlike some of their West Coast counter parts, the Local Natives don’t talk about everyday shit like weed, partying and being stuck in the middle of nowhere, but about love, loss and seeing life in a different way – intuitively, artistically and philosophically.

Local Natives will be playing with We Barbarians and label mate, Young Man (newly signed to Frenchkiss Records), at Governor’s Island this Saturday, August 7th. Lets send them some good vibes over in New York!

-Alex Daly (The Deli NY)

NYC

Tyondai leaves Battles

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Announced on Battles’ MySpace profile today:

"Battles and Tyondai would like to let their fans know they have chosen to follow their own musical paths. Due to Battles’ ambitions of finishing their second studio album followed by commitments to a full touring schedule in 2011, and Tyondai’s own commitments as a solo artist and his desire not to tour, both Battles and Tyondai have decided to move on without each other. It is a sad but amicable split.
Battles wishes Tyondai all the best"

Austin

The Festival So Nice they Named it Thrice

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It’s back, it’s huge, it’s in triplicate as usual: Fun Fun Fun Fest announced their full line-up, and it includes local fiends Woven Bones (above), Mother Falcon, Royal Forest, Eagle Claw, and perhaps most significantly of all, Black Nasty. Don’t argue with him, he’ll take it farther than you. November 5-7, Waterloo Park. 

FUN FUN FUN FEST 2010 COMPLETE LINE-UP:

ORANGE STAGE:

Weird Al Yankovic
MGMT
Devo
Dirty Projectors
The Hold Steady
Man Man
Cap’n Jazz
Os Mutantes
Deerhunter
Wavves
Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti
Polvo
Kaki King
Dum Dum Girls
Best Coast
Crocodiles
Magic Kids
Indian Jewelry
Appleseed Cast
Margot and the Nuclear So and Sos
Toro Y Moi
Junius
Woven Bones
Royal Forest
Mother Falcon

BLACK STAGE:

Bad Religion
GWAR
The Vandals
Dwarves
The Gories
Municipal Waste
Strike Anywhere
The Casualties
Valient Thorr
Jeff The Brotherhood
The Briggs
Power Trip
Eagle Claw
Mastodon
Suicidal Tendencies
High On Fire
Snapcase
Floor
The Bronx
Ringworm
Kylesa
OFF!
Peelander Z
Hatred Surge
Black Congress

BLUE STAGE:

RJD2
Slick Rick (performing "Great Adventures Of")
Deakin (of Animal Collective)
Delorean
Big Freedia
Designer Drugs
Devin The Dude
Invincible
Butcher Bear and Charlie
League of Extraordinary Gz
DJ Nick Nack
A-trak
Yelle
Pharoahe Monch
Jean Grae
POS
Dam-Funk
Dominique Young Unique
Black Nasty
DJ Bird Peterson
Crew 54

YELLOW STAGE:

Cold Cave (doing a live visual projection show)
Monotonix
Mariachi El Bronx
Live Action Wrestling
Veggie Hot Dog Eating Contest
Punk Rock Story Time with Joe Sib (spoken word)
New Movement (live sketch comedy)
Air Sex Contest (presented by Alamo Draft House)
Live Stunt Show
Video Shows
Stand Up Comedy with: Matt Bearden, Altercation Punk Rock Comedy tour and many more tba

Philadelphia

Snakes Say Hisss Keepin’ Ya Young at DDG Aug. 6

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We can’t stay young forever, but we can try. Philly natives Snakes Say Hisss explore Peter Pan-esque longings between postmodern lines like “I want to grow up to be a black hole” and shout outs to 22nd and Chestnut. “Cosmic Skeleton” plays out precocious and carefree, like The Unicorn’s Who Will Cut Our Hair When We’re Gone? with the genius of electro-weirdo Rafter. “I Control the Wind” is a dance jam and “Dual Motion” rocks hard. Clipped bleeps and backbeats make for deliberately messy pop with vocals delivered with a twinge of indifference seeped in pure caffeine. Since their ’07 LP I’ll Be Lovin’ You was released on Famous Class Records, deets on Snakes Say Hisss’ follow up still remain under wraps. Their tracks are the closest thing to finding the fountain of youth so drink up with Tough Knuckles and Da Comrade! Danger Danger Gallery, 5013 Baltimore Ave., 9pm, $5 – $10, All Ages – Dianca Potts
 

 

NYC

NYC Artist on the rise: The Yes Way, live at Mercury on 08.07

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In their debut EP, “Who’s Better Than You?” The Yes Way infuse their sound with versatility and mood. By incorporating different sonic elements – guitar riffs blended with smooth harmonies, heavy instrumentation carried by emotional vocals – this band has an admirable track list to offer. Songs like “When It Breaks” work for their inherent catchiness, with light, poppy drums, while in “Mets,” fuzzy guitars and a heavier rock sound are integrated in occasional bursts, taking us back the good old days of the loud-quiet-loud thing. The track that stands out for its uniqueness, is the Radiohead circa OK Computer/In Rainbows, “Where Was I,” which well represents that versatility this band is going for. Check them out on 08.07 at The Mercury Lounge. – Alex Daly