San Francisco

Cannons & Clouds Announce EP Release + Tour

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San Francisco six piece Cannons & Clouds have announced the release their latest EP June along with a supporting tour. On the heals of their 2010 debut album After All, this EP marks a change of pace for the band from the likes of indie folk into the more upbeat realm of rock. June marks new ground for the band as they embark on their upcoming West Coast tour and prepare for a new full length album (set to release later this year). They will be celebrating this release tonight at the Cafe Du Nord with Silian Rail and The Lambs. To have a listen to the tracks on June, or for more information on their West Coast tour, check them out here. Otherwise, grab yourself a hard copy of the EP tonight at the Cafe Du Nord.

San Francisco

Live Review: Two Gallants @ The Bottom of the Hill

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The long awaited reunion of Americana/ folk-rock duo Two Gallants (Adam Stephens and Tyson Vogel) finally took place last weekend in their home-city of San Francisco, at the beloved Portero Hill venue, Bottom of the Hill. The venue was completely packed on its second sold out night, and many attendants even flew and drove in for the show. Favorite songs from the duo’s four releases to date (three albums and one EP) such as "Seems Like Home to Me", "Steady Rollin’", "Despite What You’ve Been Told" and especially "Las Cruces Jail" were welcomed by an uproarious crowd. Stephens and Vogel, who have been friends since childhood, were incredibly grateful for the reception of fans, and were as tight in their playing as they were during their last tour in 2008. The two had not played together since their December 2008 performance at The Fillmore. These home shows kick off a North American tour, which will be followed by a string of European dates. With stops in Vienna, Switzerland, Spain, Germany, Holland, Belgium and England, these boys will have quite the busy summer. Their show in Vienna is with Saddle Creek Record label-mates Bright Eyes and Warner Bros. band Jenny and Johnny. (Jenny Lewis and Jonathan Rice both hold ties to the Nebraska-based Saddle Creek Records as well). Another highlight of the tour is a performance in Belgium at a free outdoor festival.

Although Two Gallants are known for Vogel’s intense drumming power, the band is revered for its controlled chaos—they have many songs of quiet profundity. One such song of fierce tranquility is "Crow Jane", from 2004’s The Throes which was performed with the help of Jackie Perez Gratz (from the San Francisco metal-trio Grayceon) on a beautiful electric cello.

Stephens and Vogel have been recording as Two Gallants (named after a James Joyce story in Dubliners) since their mid-20’s, and have been applauded for a sound that authentically hearkens back to the early days of blues music in America. Songs such as "The Deader" (Two Gallants, 2007) were passionately sung along to by fans, with such classic blues sentiments sung by Stephens as "Let the river be my guide, let the desert be my bride". Another audience favorite to sing along to is always "Despite What You’ve Been Told", with lines such as "I’ll take to the hills, savage and free. I don’t need nobody and nobody needs me". The band opened with a cover of the Blind Willie McTell song "Dyin’ Crap Shooter Blues", which was on their 2003 album-length demo By The Grace of God, and sounded as if it could have been written by Stephens himself. The band also performed their controversial song "Long Summer Day" (What the Toll Tells, 2006), which tells the story of an African American man before the civil rights movement, who is driven crazy by hard work in the hot summer days, while a "white man feels lazy" and turned away from voting. Their songs always tell rich narratives, but this stands out as their most political song to date.

Fans were relieved to see Stephens playing with his full force, as he was seriously injured in an accident when returning from his tour of his solo album released this fall We Live on Cliffs (Saddle Creek). When driving through a Wyoming snowstorm with his drummer Omar Cuellar, their van flipped multiple times. Physical therapy sessions have enabled both to be able to play again.

If you missed them on this tour and are eager to check out new material from the two, Vogel’s solo album was released last summer, entitled The Devotionals, and is a mesmerizing instrumental project. Otherwise, stay tuned for the recording of their next album and more home shows to follow.

 

Shauna C. Keddy

NYC

From the NYC Open Blog: Quiet Lights upload new single + play Matchless on May 13

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Brooklyn’s Quiet Lights have posted a new single "Simple Mechanics" on their bandcamp page! The band will be performing at Matchless on May 13th w/ 3 other great bands. It’s a lineup so good they created a compilation around it – listen ti it here.- (as posted in The Deli’s Open Blog – post your band’s entries, videos, and Mp3s here). The Deli’s NYC Open Blog is powered by The Music Building.

Philadelphia

Helena Espvall at The Dauphinium May 3 – CANCELLED!

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Swedish born multi-instrumentalist Helena Espvall will be performing tonight at The Dauphinium. You most likely know her best for her work as the cellist for psychedelic folk outfit Espers. She has also played guitar and cello in several rock bands, a silent movie orchestra, an Arabian music ensemble, and improvisational groups on top of her collaborations with diverse acts like Fursaxa, Masaki Batoh, Samara Lubelski, and many others. This evening will feature Espvall’s hauntingly dark, dissonant solo compositions that should cut through the room of silent on-lookers like a sharp razor in the intimate space. The Dauphinium, (Please contact artist for details.), 8pm, $6, All Ages – Alexis V.
 
Chicago

From Our Open Blog: Chasing Mars

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We’re a fully independent band from Chicago trying to carve out our own little musical world. It’s always odd trying to explain what we do, particularly because we try not to think about it so much as actually do it. When we make music we try our best to put something together that we enjoy and that we can be proud of, if someone else happens to like it as well then thats the icing on the cake. We’ve always done things differently then the bands we’ve been surrounded by. We’ve kept our little project a secret for as long as we’ve been able to but now it looks like the secret is out! We’re homesick for the future. We’re Chasing Mars.


 

Chicago

Chicago Stone Lightning Band

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If you are of the belief that the illusive "Chicago Sound" should consist of bulked-up blues and barroom brawls than Chicago Stone Lightning Band is the band for you. The band is a shinning example of how to take the genre of blue’s and traditional rock to next level and have a great time while doing it. The band just released their self-titled debut album today for free digitally, and the album is filled with fresh takes blues and soul and rock. My favorite track so far is "Oh No", it’s a little ZZ Top and little John Lee Hooker, but still holds it own as a Chicago Stone Lightning Band track.

The band will be performing at The Hideout on May 12th.

NYC

CD Review: Sleepies – new punk from Brooklyn

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Sleepies are a multifaceted Brooklyn trio whose raucous punk quirk and erratic noise rock pulse make this squad’s 13-track eponymous excursion an intriguingly tumultuous affair to get acquainted with. Boasting jagged guitars and chaotic vocals that never miss the chance for a gang chorus moment while terse rhythmic patterns hold everything from running off the rails with the eerie smoothness of Violent Femmes, this band’s road worn and battle-torn sound stealthily apes swagger from the Sex Pistols, draws vitriol from Nirvana, and gets moody like The Replacements to create an efficient and effective 21st century strand of apocalyptic rock straight from the garage to your eardrums. – Mike SOS – This record was submitted for review here.

Chicago

Rabble Rabble New 7″

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Rabble Rabble will be releasing a new 7" single on May 23rd. The single contains two new tracks, "Why Not"/"Long Hook", that were recorded at Gimmie That Sound Studios.

Rabble Rabble will be headlining a free show at @ Empty Bottle on May 23rd with We Are Hex and Distractions.

New England

Local Music Spotlight — Albums we’re digging right now

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sodium lights
Sodium Lights
Album: Transtulit
Released: January 2011
From: Connecticut
Think Nine Inch Nails’ Pretty Hate Machine with a soulful club diva singing vocals. An unexpected but entertaining juxtaposition. Track two, Tunnel, combines Lady Ga Ga-like song-craft with techno beats. The confusing part is that Sodium Lights’ blend of glitchy techno and Top 40 pop hooks has one foot planted firmly in both worlds but doesn’t quite belong in either. I’m not sure if they belong in a dark basement club or on Kiss 108 radio. Whichever of these two worlds wins out, Transtulit is an entertaining listen.

custard paws & mr. frenzy
Custardpaws & Mr. Freezy
Album: The Buffalo
Released: March 2011
From: Portland, ME
I almost wrote this record off without a listen because of the band’s incredibly dumb name. That would have been a mistake. The Buffalo is a thoroughly entertaining album. Mixed in with the kookiness of their schizophrenic song cycle is the serious musicianship of Blair Wells & Jeff Badger. It’s a strange combination of influences—the rhythms of the Talking Heads mixed with the indie-easy-listening of Cake and, oddest of all, a snarky sarcasm and vocal delivery that’s reminiscent of Jello Biafra of the Dead Kennedys minus the hardcore punk delivery. And, as if to validate that hint of punk in their veins, smack in the middle of the album they drop a 15 second blast of straight-up hardcore, "I’m Not Doing Shit Today Except For Writing This Song (And I Hope It Doesn’t Take Too Long)" which, in true punk rock fashion, takes much longer for me to type than it does for them to play.

kick kick
Kick! Kick!
Album: Rising Damp
Released: March 2011
From: North Hampton, MA
Good old garage rock that would be right at home in the seventies dosed with hints of the revivalist, angular instrumentations of The Killers and Interpol. Vocals bounce from Iggy Pop-like croons to Adam Lambert-like super-high shrieks. If their live shows have half the energy of this 6-song EP, they’re a band to head out and see.

sugar snow
Sugar Snow

Album: Sugar Snow
Released: January 2011
From: Boston, MA
Sugar Snow brings dreamy indie-pop that owes much to the psychedelic sixties. Driving rhythms overlaid with trippy guitar solos and the breathy vocals of Simone Berk. Their nine-track self-titled album moves at an ethereal pace as though floating through the fogs of their own dream-state. Listen closely and tell me if Simone’s vocals don’t occasionally make you picture Kurt from Glee fronting a shoe-gaze band.

–George Dow

Portland

Album of the Month: The Ram Project of Dave Depper

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When I heard that someone was going to attempt to cover Paul McCartney’s Ram, I was skeptical, to understate. Ram is one of my favourite non-Beatles albums by a Beatle, in contention alone with All Things Must Pass. To take on such a project, an artist would have to be filled with foolishness or musical zeal – or perhaps a hearty serving of both. In either case, the artist that tried this would have to have a musical background versatile enough to battle just the thought of McCartney’s career.

The gregariously multi-project-bound Dave Depper might be one of Portland’s best bets for such an endeavor. Taking a month to himself and starting with “Heart of The Country”, Dave dove right into The Ram Project. The skill behind Dave’s guitar, piano, drums, and Paulesque vocals were never a question. From the opening tenor-stretch of “Too Many People” to the extended growling end of “Monkberry Moon Delight” and back to the scatting interlude of “Heart of the Country”, Depper is spot on. The biggest question that loomed over listening to this record was the soul behind it. Would Dave, along with the darling Joan Hiller, really be able to transform into Paul & Linda?

As I let The Ram Project play in the background while I went about my days listening to the album, I was (and also, wasn’t) surprised to find that I would get lost in those lulling copies from Ram. I honestly must admit that the echo from another room of Dave’s voice hanging in the air during “Long Haired Lady” sparked such a feeling that made me forget that it wasn’t Paul behind the microphone.

Musical zeal and a lot less foolishness than you’d expect, the well-traveled notes of Ram couple perfectly with Dave’s well carved collection of past projects. It amazes me that it was just a month he took to record every part alone, but after looking at his musical experience it’s not surprising. He just rammed on and did it. And did a damned good job. – Mike Harper (review also featured on Words Cut Open)

L.A.

Y Luv gives away How Chill Can You Let Go for a month

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USC based indie band sensation Y Luv recently had their thumping record release party at Silverlake Lounge. Bassist Luke Hanna entertained the crowd by dancing "Coyote Ugly style" on a table during their song "Milo Greene" according to singer Freddy Janney. The two year old group has their next show May 14th at The 3 of Clubs for the New Limbs residency. Being fans of local favs Foster the People and Superhumaniods gives an inkling of their tastes, but Y Luv kicks out more rootsy grooves that hook you front to back. Currently working on their latest video for their song "All Night", these guys are going to burn up the LA indie scene with their latest EP, How Chill Can You Let Go which is FREE HERE for a limited time.  Michele McManmon