San Francisco

Album Review: The Dont’s – Those Delicate Chemicals

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Considering my usual tendencies towards the darker, brooding, far too narcissistic and self-indulgent end of the musical spectrum, The Dont’s Those Delicate Chemicals embraced my ears with a welcome sense of levity. Their third album (and the first one I’ve had the pleasure of delving into), Those Delicate Chemicals really stands out as being able to deliver the practices of a heady and experimental band through the parameters of a delightful pop-like sound. With its layers of charming guitar riffs, delicately placed textural oddities and an overall exuberant atmosphere, Those Delicate Chemicals could very well be the pop anthem for your art school experience… and I mean that in the most sincere way I can muster.

Considering how surprisingly small San Francisco can seem, it comes as no surprise to hear influences from formerly local avant-rock stars 60-Watt Kid throughout this album (no more apparent then in the final two songs “Backtalk” and “The Will of God”). Perhaps they’re friends, perhaps they’ve just seen each others shows on a number of occasions, but the jagged ethereal and heavy tremolo guitar layers that appear throughout the songs of both bands is obviously comparable. Serving as one of the many interesting layers throughout Those Delicate Chemicals, these wonderfully well-placed interruptions serve a vital role to elevate the pop framework to a vast and intricate soundscape.

Opening with their call and response anthem “Which Side You’re On (The Pirate Song)” Those Delicate Chemicals kicks off with a cheeky wink and a smile. You’d love it if its clarion call asking “what side you’re on” was The Dont’s feeling the waters for whose side the listener is on, but lets not mince words; this is a song about pirates, and pirates will “get it done.” Surly as their “piratic oath” would demand, the song leads its crowd in a triumphant bellowing of “ARRRRRRRRR. “ I imagine this is not a moment to miss at their performances.

Leading immediately into one of my favorite songs on the album, “Breakdown,” Those Delicate Chemicals moves on past its initial playfulness to its slightly more serious, but still jubilant, elements. While the songs change somewhat in tonality, listening across Those Delicate Chemicals it’s hard to pigeonhole it with one thematic quality. Not at all to its detriment, Those Delicate Chemicals seems to lack a greater arch to its narrative. There is depth to the individual songs, but short of the fastidiously executed sound, there seems little that ties them together. Favorites certainly pop out (“Regardless, The Goddess,” “Peacetime,” and “Gasoline” come to mind) but there is a certain distance held between the music and any underlying concept for the album.

Perhaps that’s just the point. The Dont’s keep the audience at a distance with their Ramones style surname uniformity, and maybe by withholding just enough the mask serves to direct the listeners attention to the complexities of the sound as opposed to the distraction of a message. The mask is their tool of misdirection.

The Dont’s Those Delicate Chemicals is definitely an album to seek out. Elaborate and boisterous, Those Delicate Chemicals is the type of intelligent and experimental pop sound that is very hard to come by. It carries with it a depth that rivals its avant counterparts, but is delivered with the accessibility many similar sounding artists lack. I encourage you to add it to your collection if for no other reason than to scream “ARRRRR” every time that pirate captain demands.

 

Ada Lann

 

Which Side You’re On (The Pirate Song) by thedonts

 

The Dont’s Those Delicate Chemicals can be purchased here.

NYC

NYC Artists on the Rise: Lacrymosa’s Residency at The Living Room

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Caitlin Pasko just graduated at NYU and plays mellow but somehow eerie orchestral pop under the name Lacrymosa – sounding somewhere between Kate Bush and Joni Mitchel – with a piano. She recorded her debut album "Selah" as her senior project. The first single, entitled "Simple Questions" will be released on September 5th, in occasion of the first date of her September residency at The Living Room. Check out also the live video on her site here. Definitely a new talent to keep an eye on.

San Francisco

The Deli SF’s Weekend Highlights For 8/26-8/28

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As San Francisco’s true summer begins, and the heat descends, hopefully you’ll be making time between your enjoyment of our long overdue nice weather to see some live music.

Thursday night, at the Hemlock, you can catch The Royal Baths playing with Mrcy Hot Sprngs, Outlaw, and Lilac, 9pm.

Friday head out to the East Bay where Burbank International will be playing their first show in far too long. At Mama Buzz, along side Nick Sinetos, this is a show you should definitely check lest it be another year before you can see them again, 8pm.

Lastly, on Saturday head over to the Great American Music Hall for a juggernaut of an instrumental band line-up with From Monument to Masses, Silian Rail and Judgement Day. This will be From Monument to Masses’ final show so see that this event makes itself onto your Saturday night to-do list.

 

Ada Lann

Austin

Yellow Bike Benefit 8/26: The Sour Notes, She Sir, The Boxing Lesson, White Rhino, + Searching for Signal

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While most of Austin is stuck in traffic steeping with road rage as cars start growing moss and Delilah crackles softly with unwitting irritance, there are a few souls that are having fun riding their bikes. Much of the two-wheel insurgence in Austin is due to the Austin Yellow Bike Project, an all-volunteer non-profit community initiative which serves to equip Austinites with bicycles. The Austin YBP recently moved their entire 4500 sq. foot headquarters by “human-power” alone—no moving trucks or even pow-pow-power wheels—in a truly remarkable tour de force. 

The Yellow Bike Project provides a space (1216 Webberville Road) and the equipment for the bikers that bear their sweaty brow to build and repair their bikes. The result is community-focused, beneficial, environmentally kind, and nearly free transportation. Austinites feel the love from YBP with their Bikes to Schools Program and their efforts to keep Austin healthy and clean. Now is Austin’s chance to show some love back. On Thursday, August 26, Austin is invited to turn down all the excess noise of the raging freeway, to shut off the ignition and let Delilah drift away to the nearest Dillard’s and experience the Yellow Bike Benefit Show in support of this really great collaborative. The Sour Notes (above), She Sir, The Boxing Lesson, White Rhino, and Searching for Signal will lay on the bike horns at Red 7 starting at 9pm for a night of music and spinning wheels.

–Lauren Hardy (YBP photo by Blake Gordon, The Sour Notes photo by Eric Morales)

NYC

From The Deli’s Open Blog: Bellevue’s Finest play The Studio on 09.11

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Bellevue’s Finest are an electro-orchestral-pop sextet hailing from New York City. The band had a busy summer, releasing a single track on the 1st of every month during June, July, and August, as a pay-what-you-want download. The 3 tracks will be gathered in a new EP released at the beginning of September. The final August 1st release is the song “Homies On The Block.” . It is a song about the gentricifation of New York City, where the band was born and raised, and how socioeconomic change affects everyone in the ladder, regardless of background. The recording sounds like a cross between modern day indie-pop bands like Passion Pit and Hot Chip, and classic groups such as the Kinks and the Sonics. Bellevue’s Finest’s next show will be on Sept. 11th at the Studio @ Webster Hall with A Million Years.

Philadelphia

FREE DOWNLOAD: “Best of Luck, Never Change” (Part 1) – Science Fiction Fantasy

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The sound is revelatory and calming in a pre-disaster kind of way. It functions on grades of delicate and cavernous vocals and 60’s era folk guitar patterns. This is not meant to box the sound within these references though; they are merely the cornerstones for the ever-evolving, ambitious debut EP Best of Luck, Never Change by Kerry Gilbert’s Science Fiction Fantasy. The sound at times recalls the haunting pop of Grizzly Bear while the sonic pulsing that emerges seems to pay homage (very skillfully) to ambient composer Steven Reich. I have the first part of the gapless three part lone title track “Best of Luck, Never Change” available for FREE download below. It is an emotional traveler that effortlessly flows from melancholy to dreamy contentment both lyrically and musically. The intricate cascading vocals and detailed arrangements along with the thoroughly enjoyable glitch-outs show Science Fiction Fantasy to be a musical chameleon that can flawlessly imitate and thoughtfully create. This is a very promising piece that I am sure will only be expanded upon on his debut EP currently scheduled for release in September. DOWNLOAD “Best of Luck, Never Change” (Part 1) (just click on the arrow pointing down below on the right). – Adam G.

 

L.A.

Love Darling, love indeed!

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Love Darling

Shay Magro, Mike Wolpe, and Christian Jovanny Trujillo are the magic behind indie rock band Love Darling. Sultry vocals and driving guitars draw immediate comparisons to The Yeah Yeah Yeahs, but I promise this band has more to offer. The songs stretch their wings a bit, and Shay isn’t afraid to switch from punk rock to singer/songwriter at a moment’s notice.

Their most recent album (which sits awkwarly between EP and LP at 9 tracks), Sunshine Dust, was crafted with the help of producer Gordon Raphael (The Strokes, Regina Spektor) and it shows; the songs on Sunshine Dust are tighter and more polished than the band’s debut EP. Choice cut off the album goes to the spacier "Close To Me" with its steady drum-machine-like beat, keyboard work, and reverb-laiden vocals but the guitar squealing on "Step Outside" earned it a close second.

If you’re a fan of The Real L Word, you may have heard Love Darling’s song "This Time". If not, you can grab it for free download here.

Portland

The Thermals Release Music Video for New Single, “I Don’t Believe You.”

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In anticipation of the trio’s upcoming release, Personal Life, (out September 7th), The Thermals have released the first single off the new record, "I Don’t Believe You," on 7" and digitally through Kill Rock Stars. The track encompasses the same catchy riffs and "whoa oh ohs" of previous singles released by the delightfully dark power-pop-punk threesome.

And yes, that is Carrie Brownstein (Sleater-Kinney) thrashing her apartment throughout the video and Isaac Brock at the end rocking some striped jammies and matching nightcap.

-Katrina Nattress