Philadelphia

Satanized Offer Up Their Virginity at KFN July2

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Satanized will be headlining at KFN tonight alongside fellow local noisemakers, Drums Like Machine Guns. The demonic four-piece blurs the lines between metal, hardcore, punk and noise with pounding rhythms, scratching treble-heavy guitars, and growling vocals as they rip through complex song arrangements with such fervor and instrumental dexterity. Satanized just released their latest offering Technical Virginity earlier this week on cassette via Damage Rituals. The vinyl/CD formats of the LP will be available in September from Skin Graft Records. You can check out the track “Arnaud de Verniolle” below from Technical Virginity. Kung Fu Necktie, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 7:30pm, $8, 21+ – Dan Brightcliffe
 
Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, July 1 – 4

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Explore patriotic feelings with ‘seductive…smooth-fi’ by Work Drugs this Sunday at Johnny Brenda’s. Presented by The Roots as part of their Philly Fourth of July Jam weekend festivities, the Philly-based popsmiths’ brand of chill-wave bring to mind the buzzing backbeats of Neon Indian’s debut or Golden Ages’ catchy cover of “Twin Peaks.” Arguably more minimal in their approach, the band’s sound feels airy like vacation, with swirling layers of mellow synth and subtle diction that make cuts like “Golden Sombrero” hypnotic and “Ice Warf” memorable. If Work Drug’s anthems and the red, white, and blue aren’t enough to put you in the mood, blippy tracks by CSLSX reminiscent of VHS sounds transferred to cassette just might do the trick. Provocative and undoubtedly retro, CSLSX will transport you back to the ‘90s or earlier with “Paula Abdul Drinking a Pepsi, October 17th, 1987” and the tribal vibes of “Keep On Shining.” Add in deliciously drowsy rhythms by Wrestling (featuring members of Power Animal) as well as the Smooth Sailing DJs, and you’re set for the chillest Fourth of July that you could ever dream of. Johnny Brenda’s. 1201 N. Frankford Ave. 9pm, $10, 21+ 
 
Too much shit going on…
 
Johnny Brenda’s (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) FRI Goodnight Lights, In Grenada, Levee Drivers, SAT The Roots Present Philly’s Fourth of July Jam w/Work Drugs, CSLSX, Wrestling
 
Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI Mr. Lif, Swift Technique, Citizen Xavier, SAT Satanized and Drums Like Machine Guns, SUN Mean Streets and Small Reaction,
MON Joe Jack Talcum
 
North Star Bar (2639 Poplar St.) SAT Man Like Machine and The Defog
 
The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Harper, SUN Pool of Thorns and Harsh Vibes
 
M Room (15 W. Girard Ave.) SAT Nicole Reynolds and Donovan Rice
 
Tritone (1508 South St.) FRI Early Ape, Toddler Kat, Satellite Hearts, Sleepover Uncle, SAT Ghosts in the Valley and Hey Angel, SUN Mr. Unloved, The Improbables, Blessed Muthas, The Slotcars, Boogie Witch, St James & The Apostles, MON Toxic Sunshine, Wolfie Burns, Kite Party
 
Danger Danger Gallery (5013 Baltimore Ave.) SAT Penrose, El Fuego, The Warhawks, MON 4th Annual INDEPENDENCE DAY BASH!!! w/ BBQ, BANDS, BANGS & BOOMS!!, Pro US-fuckin’-A Movies, + MUCH MUCH MORE!!!!
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) SAT Breakwater
 
The Legendary Dobbs (304 South St.) FRI Starskream and Drop Collective, SAT Leiana, SUN The Roots Present Philly’s Fourth of July Jam w/Da Rezarekt, Spin, The Violet Tone
 
Bookspace (1113 Frankford Ave.) FRI Catnaps and Conversations With Enemies
 
TLA (334 South St.) SUN The Roots Present Philly’s Fourth of July Jam w/Kuf Knotz, Young Gliss, Dosage
 
Voyeur (1221 St. James St.) The Roots Present Philly’s Fourth of July Jam: Philadelphia Sound Konnoisseurs w/Diplo, ?uestlove, DJ Jazzy Jeff
 
Bamboo Bar (927 N. Delaware Ave.) SUN Making Time "You’re Welcome America" Rad-B-Q
 
Wawa Welcome America 2011 (Benjamin Franklin Parkway) MON The Roots Present Philly’s Fourth of July Jam
 
Mercer Street Block Party (219 Mercer St.) SUN Bandname, Tin Horses, Conversations With Enemies, Cheers Elephant, Crills Wilson, Early Ape, Eric n Eric
 
Hope Street Block Party (1800 Block of Hope St.) SAT Seagulls, Lantern, Anal Picnic
 
The Dream Oven (Please contact one of the acts for details.) MON starcircleanatomy and DreamBQ
 
Hong Kong Garden (Please contact one of the acts for details.) FRI Art Show Punk Show III w/The Drunken Mariachis, Bonjour, Very Happy
 
NYC

Weekly Feature: Sam Amidon

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Songwriter Sam Amidon is single-handedly re-defining the boundaries of American folk music. His songs succeed in using grooves and melodies familiar to alt-folk listeners as the backbone that supports all-but-forgotten lyrics from early American folk tunes. Sam’s music gives cultural weight to otherwise outdated, seemingly irrelevant lyrics, bringing new life and accessibility to old American hymns. Not a simple feat, but one that his background uniquely prepares him for. Growing up in a family of folk musicians in Brattleboro, Vermont, Amidon was immersed in a rich musical tradition from a young age. Now based in NY, Amidon, along with his fellow Bedroom Community colleagues, is classing up Brooklyn’s indie scene, one folk tune at a time. With his ambitious new record I See The Sign (Bedroom Community), Amidon furthers his folk revival mission, bringing in guest stars like Beth Orton and Nico Muhlry to help out, as well as adding R. Kelly’s ‘Relief’ to his eclectic Americana catalog. – Read Mike Levine’s Q&A with the artist here.

 

NYC

Weekly Feature: Tanlines – Live at PS1 on August 27

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Tanlines are a hard one to pin down. They’re perfectly suited for Brooklyn though. A place that values pastiche world music acts like Yeasayer and Dirty Projectors is a perfect breeding ground for the crazy imaginative, All-of-Epcot-on-a-Record approach to songwriting this duo has come up with. Songwriters/production team Eric Emm and Jesse Cohen have been working together for awhile, (each with their own impressive resumes as ex-members of The Brothers and Professor Murder respectively) but because of their DIY distribution model that includes releasing singles, remixes, videos and other takeaways at entirely random times, they still feel much like a new band. WIth their last EP about a year old, (and who remembers anything from that long ago?) I’m hoping to hear some new tracks soon. This is a band very hard on themselves, searching out new sounds with every song. So where most bands find themselves placing years of pent-up 7-inches on their eventual LP, I have a feeling we’ll be seeing a lot of brand new material coming from Tanlines for their first full-length, rumored for release later this year. Here’s hoping! – Read Mike Levine’s interview with the band here.

Philadelphia

The Deli’s July Album of the Month: Punishment Cookie – Hair Rocket

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The band from the Philly ‘burbs Hair Rocket has taken a Cheap Trick-gone-to-etiquette-school route in their newly released debut LP Punishment Cookie. Out on collective indie label Mountebank Records, the follow-up to 2009’s Novelty EP is an energized collection of greaser punk glam rock power pop. The threesome, whose band is named after the act of launching locks of hair into the sky for a “subversive enlightenment through cathartic art,” has created an album far easier to grasp than their thought-provoking alias. The 11-track recording is downright catchy without compromising the band’s significant sense of distinctiveness. Hair Rocket tactfully lets loose keyed-up rock inspired by the ghosts of 60s mod (as in clap-ridden, Strokes-inspired, pop-hook laden lead single “OK Alright”), 70s punk, 80s pop and 90s cheese…without rubbing your face in it.
 
Opening track “Eyes” takes classically riffed bluesy rock hitting it with heavy low-end blows and gives it a pinch of reggae punk optimism. “Motorcycle” reminisces combat boot punk with a Tokyo Police Club poppiness where harsh, growling vocals and a shrill, distorted electric guitar make for a satisfying hit-worthy track. Yes, Punishment Cookie rocks, but it is also not void of emotion. The song that started Berklee dropout and mastermind Chris Blassucci down this path of enlightenment, “Hair Rocket,” receives a revamping for the album, but still stabs sharply with its hard-earned life lesson from his real life bizarre love triangle (though I admittedly will always favor the original demo version and its strangely sadistic video). “Home” and the early Beatles-esque “Imagining,” which made their debuts on Novelty, also linger with the emotional remnants from that painful but musically productive time period. With Punishment Cookie, Hair Rocket neatly colors outside the lines of indie pop with an eagerly creative but well thought out approach to rocking your socks off. You can purchase the full-length album HERE.
 
You can download the track “Motorcycle” below and come out to their Philly Release Party next Friday, July 8 at Bookspace with Mammal of Paradise, An American Chinese, Meddlesome Bells and Bambara which The Deli will be presenting. – Jules Friedland
 

Philadelphia

Goodnight Lights, Levee Drivers & In Grenada at JB’s July 1

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Start Fourth of July Weekend off with an eclectic mix of local area acts at Johnny Brenda’s tonight. The sparks will be flying when Goodnight Lights take the stage and unleash an explosion of pop medleys heavily influenced by 90’s alt rock. And since they recently tossed a batch of new tunes on the grill, you might just be treated to a taste this evening. While Bucks County country boys Levee Drivers might sound like their always ready for good ol’ drunken brawl with their southern-tinged rockabilly that would make Johnny Cash proud, the 50’s greaser-looking dudes are actual more of the sensitive artist types than badass drunken rednecks, but let’s just keep that as our little secret. We’re happy to have them back after they recently decided to go down to Nashville to check it out for a bit. Rounding out the bill will be the finely-crafted indie pop tunes of In Grenada. Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 9pm, $10, 21+ – Bill McThrill
 
NYC

NYC Artists on the rise: Celestial Shore play Glasslands with Body Language

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Uuuuuh… we like this combination of words: "playful psych pop with an experimental edge". That’s our attempt at describing the music of Brooklyn based band Celestial Shore. These guys follow on the bizarre and elaborate "avant-pop" steps of acts like Dirty Projector and Deerhoof, with a slightly "mathy-er" approach, and vocal melodies and harmonies that will get Beach Boys fans excited. The way "Pals" – a perfect pop gem – gets truncated and pretty much sacrificed as a "song" to the god of experimentation might irritate the many pop purists out there. Instead, it makes us smile with complicity. Boring song structures are for later in life… 
Check out Celestial Shore with Body Language live at Glasslands on July 1st and at Shea Stadium on July 14.

Philadelphia

The Return of Mr. Lif at KFN July 1

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I’m happy to have Mr. Lif back performing again in Philly, especially on such an intimate stage at KFN. Lif has been active in the underground hip hop community since 1998, when he released his debut single “Elektro”. Since then, the dread-y emcee has released 3 full length albums and 2 solo EPs, working mostly with Definitive Jux label head and producer El-P. Lyrically, Mr. Lif is best known for his intelligent and politically charged rhymes, but he is more than just a political emcee. Aside from his more socially conscience tracks, Mr. Lif has also taken on the concept album with his first solo LP, I Phantom and its’ follow-up Mo’ Mega, which are sagas covering the main character’s birth to the apocalypse. Lif will be joined by Philly’s own Swift Technique, who shared the stage with hip hop legends Wu Tang Clan earlier this year, and Citizen Xavier. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., $16 adv/$18 door, 21+ – Dan Brightcliffe
 

Philadelphia

Catnaps Kicking Off National Tour at Bookspace July 1

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It’s a long weekend, and there are a helluva lot things to do so you should get out before the forecasted rain puts a damper on things. If you’re looking for a heavy dose of cheery indie pop, then you really should swing by Bookspace tonight. Catnaps (formerly When I Was 12) will be kicking off their 6-week national summer tour. It also may or may not be a release party for their latest effort Why Don’t You Whisper. They’re waiting on the physical copies and that seems to be becoming a reoccurring theme for them. You can check out where the tour will be heading HERE, and if you can help them fill in any TBAs on their schedule, then you’ve got some good karma points coming your way. They’ll be sharing the bill with Conversation with Enemies, who will be having a busy weekend since they’ll also be hosting the Mercer St. Block Party this Sunday, as well as Maryland’s Us & Us Only (the moniker of Kinsey Matthews) and acoustic Jersey pop punkers The Front Bottom. Bookspace, 1113 Frankford Ave., 7:30pm, $7, All Ages – H.M. Kauffman