Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, September 21 – 23

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"Blow Up New Jersey and Get Philly a Beach" has been a meme in our otherwise perfectly civil and sophisticated city for some time now. If this act of aggression against our non-gas-pumping neighbors ever comes to pass and the gleeful hordes rush to bask on the charred shore, Dry Feet will be savagely soundtracking the whole thing. This is a given, not just conjecture: After all, they do have an album entitled Philadelphia Beach. The trio plays classic garage-surf-punk propelled by a liberal helping of attitude and some of the cleanest lyrics ever found in the genre. Their brash, sneering jams roar by in under two minutes, packing a dense, huge-sounding arrangement of texture into every second. "So Freakin’ What?" the first song off their April release Highway to Heck, features an fifties-style harmonizing intro, wailing guitars, and sentiments such as "You think I need a job? You think I give a DAMN?" They’re playing Kung Fu Necktie this Sunday night, opening for the notoriously theatrical NOBUNNY and his much sleazier brand of pop-punk weirdness. Prepare to feel slightly violated. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 8pm, $10, 21+ – Alyssa Greenberg
 
More weekend activities…
 
Johnny Brenda’s (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) SUN Mikele Edwards
 
Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI (Downstairs) The Lawsuits, Philaphonix, (Upstairs) The Residuels, SAT Little Big League, The Downtown Club, Ryan Belski, SUN Dry Feet
 
North Star Bar (2639 Poplar St.) FRI A Victim of Good Times, Run to Sandy, SAT Modzilla, New West, SUN The Justin DePaola Band, Mesa Jane, Hippo Love
 
The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Foxhound (Feat. Chris Kasper), Kevin Killen Band, Johnny Miles, Marc Silver Band, Eye To Eye (Feat. Krista Parrish), SAT Andrew Lipke, Griz, Foxhound, Rev. TJ McGlinchey, SUN Catnaps, Heartwell, Cayetano
 
M Room (15 W. Girard Ave.) FRI The Matt Lyons Band, Vilebred, Rob Perna Band
 
Tin Angel (20 S. 2nd St.) SAT Jackie Paper, Lauryn Peacock
 
Fergie’s (1214 Sansom St.) FRI (Early) John Train, (Late) Sunshine Superman, SUN Rusty Cadillac
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) FRI Medea with Matt Sevier Band, SAT Femme Fatale Philly Feat. Teddi Tarnoff, Fig Leaf, Julia Rainer, Starving The Tsunami
 
The Blockley (3801 Chestnut St.) FRI Mic Stewart, SUN Dosage Birthday Party
 
The Legendary Dobbs (304 South St.) FRI Montoj, SAT Stonebaby
 
PhilaMOCA (531 N. 12th St. Philadelphia) SAT The First Annual 12th Street Art & Music Festival Block Party w/S.T.A.R.W.O.O.D., Thom McCarthy, Post Sun Times, The Love Club, SKGB, (((TACO)))
 
Milkboy Philly (1100 Chestnut St.) FRI SËLA, SAT Michael Morrow Band
 
The Grape Room (105 Grape St.) FRI Easy Three, The Fractals, Richie Allen, Dylan Jane
 
Eris Temple Arts (602 S. 52nd St.) SAT Avataria, Radio Eris, Tic-Tac-Oh, Stephanie Noor
 
The Double Deuce (Please contact one of the acts or the venue for more deets.) FRI Norwegian Arms, Laser Background, Ghost Light, Roof Doctor
 
NYC

Interview with M.H. & His Orchestra: DC Deli’s Artist of the Month (September)

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Virginia crooner Max Holiday lends more then just a voice to DC’s music scene… he has a literal big band combining genres like orchestral pop and trip hop to back him up; his orchestra! His debut album The Throes (check it out below) shows off this talented composer’s skills and adds a refreshing new sound to our mostly folk/electro/hardcore scene that’s been dominating. And they were all voted as Band of the Month, so we got a hold of Max to find out more about this ever growing group. Here he tells us about vials of rakia, Patsy Cline’s backyard, and jazz bands in DC. Now onto the interview…

Catch them live at the Velvet Lounge on Oct. 5, as part of the Sweet Tea Pumpkin Pie Festival.

Chicago

Super Hairy “Groomed”

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The duo Super Hairy (aka Jonny Swift and Zack Tomlinson) have released their second ep, Groomed. The ep is available for free download. Super Hairy creates the best kind of dark electro-pop. In case you missed their set at Double Door back on the 12th you can still watch it here.

NYC

Album of the Month: APE! “1991”

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APE! has come from the past to save our future. 1991, their newest release, with a blurb labeling the band as a NASA time travel project gone wrong, is ripe with proto-punk sleaze and grit. In all honesty, 1969 might have been a better title, were it not already taken. Their newest release is self-produced, and available digitally or on 12" vinyl.

Straddling genres can be a messy business, but APE! handles their time-hopping seamlessly, by combining classic rock riffs with hardcore screams and the aforementioned proto-punk attitude. The eponymous title track is a blissed out instrumental nod to psychedelia, while "Vile English," which appears later on the album, is a noisy clamor of aggression, heavy metal guitar work and frenetic drumming.

The conjoining thread of the album is energy and a refusal to take themselves too seriously. Which, in this day and age, is a sentiment that is often hard to come by. -allison

NYC

Taking lessons from The Happy People Band

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Happy People may have just written this year’s Brooklyn anthem. The song of the same name, while encouraging you to find love wherever you can, is really an ode to the kind of love only our city’s residents are really capable of experiencing. The band equally paints this anthemic heart into their latest video for APT’ from their self titled EP. Only this time it’s not so much an ode to the ciyt, but a montage to hard work… and long, drawn-out kisses. Happy People Band is an exciting feast of noise and turbulence, bringing soul to the otherwise challenging experiences of urban life. Check out their latest video below and see what it takes to get the girl. – Mike Levine (@Goldnuggets)

NYC

Fort Lean releases new EP + plays Glasslands 11.1

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Fort Lean’s newest single ‘Sunsick’ comes crashing against you like the mysterious characters confronted on Williamsburg’s beach in the song’s new video. This is a band with all the tell-tale makings of the ‘next big indie thing.’ Surf-ready, psychedelic anthems = check. Renowned producer (Patrick Wemberly of Chairlift) = check. Expertly dyed lead singer hair = check. Lead singer Keenan Mitchell not only has shiny locks, but a soaring tenor to match, and new EP ‘Change Your Name’ should be a good indication of things to come for the still young group. Check out Keenan’s bizarre hangover in the video below, and see them when they come to Glasslands November 1st for the EP release party. – Mike Levine (@Goldnuggets)

Fort Lean – "Sunsick" Video from stereogum on Vimeo.

NYC

Artists on Trial: The Lucky

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Though The Lucky is a relatively new Kansas City band, the group is already working hard to play on larger local bills and begin recording. We sit down with the duo, Jason McKee and Camilla Camille, to find out more about who they are and what they have going.

The Deli
: Gun to your head, 1 sentence to describe your music. What is it?

The Lucky: Indie-garage-punk-pop-riot revival with a beat you can dance to.

The Deli
: Let’s talk about what you have coming up. What can we expect?

The Lucky: Jason McKee: We’re playing with The Sexy Accident at the recordBar this Friday and with Drew Black and Dirty Electric at Coda on Saturday. We’ve added some new songs to our set.

Camilla Camille: We have a Kickstarter campaign starting this Friday and we are going to record a CD with Pat Tomek. And we have a show with Schwervon! on September 28 at The Riot Room; it’s their record release party. They just moved here from New York. And you can expect lots of fun music, laughter, theatrics, maybe some stage drama, some choreography, perhaps, some hoofing, and an all-around good time.

The Deli: What does "supporting local music" mean to you?

The Lucky: Camilla Camille: It means going out to shows and buying local bands’ CDs and t-shirts. Generally banging your head in the audience, screaming "yay!" and "woohoo!" while they’re playing. And talking to them afterwards telling them what you liked about their show.

Jason: Going to shows is important, and a worthwhile investment if you’re a music lover, but I also think if a band puts on a good show, it’s important to tell them afterward that I liked it and what I liked about it. And when I see a band I really like, I try to tell other people about it so they can experience it, too.

The Deli: Who are your favorite "local" musicians right now?

The Lucky: Jason: Jonathan Thatch, our Friday night drummer. Brian Jewell, our Saturday night drummer. Pat Tomek, who’s sitting in on drums for the September 28 show at The Riot Room. I love the show The Beautiful Bodies always put on. Cherokee Rock Rifle. Deco Auto. Drew Black and Dirty Electric. The Cave Girls. The Bad Ideas. Schwervon!.

Camilla Camille: You, Michelle Bacon. And The Cave Girls. Robin Powell Campbell. And The Bad Ideas. And The Beautiful Bodies. And Deco Auto. And Drew Black and Dirty Electric. And The Quivers.

The Deli: Who are your favorite not-so-local musicians right now?

The Lucky: Camilla Camille: Right now I have been listening to Devo, Bad Religion, Spank Rock, The Black Keys, The Cramps, and The Dollyrots.

Jason: I listen to a lot of The Libertines and Babyshambles. The Black Keys, Jack White’s various projects. Lately, I’ve been getting into The Germs. I listen to The Clash a lot, too.

The Deli: What is your ultimate fantasy concert bill to play on?

The Lucky: Jason: Us with Cream, The Sex Pistols, the Libertines. Or, since this is fantasy, maybe letting Mozart, The Beatles and The Rolling Stones open for us.

Camilla Camille: Well that would require that we time travel because I would really like to open up for The Cramps, but since Lux is dead, that’s impossible. Otherwise, The Lucky could open up for the Black Keys or go on tour with Jack White, either The Raconteurs or The Dead Weather, or his solo project, or a reunion with Meg White for a White Stripes tour. But it would be kind of cool to time travel.

The Deli: Would you rather spend the rest of your life on stage or in the recording studio?

The Lucky: Camilla Camille: I would say I would like to spend the rest of my life on stage. However, it would be really neat to sleep in a recording studio, like if my bedroom was a recording studio. I would have a bed in there, a dresser, and a desk, but it would also have a stage area. I could combine both of them and have a stage in the recording studio and just live in there. That would be great. And of course there would be videos of the stage performances in the recording studio, which would be my bedroom.

Jason: It would definitely be on stage because performing for people and interacting with them gives me a rush I don’t get anywhere else. Plus, I have little patience for hearing playback of myself over and over.

The Deli: A music-themed Mount Rushmore. What four faces are you putting up there and why?

The Lucky: Jason: John Lennon because he’s John Lennon.
Eric Clapton: "Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs" made me want to be a guitar player.
Lou Reed for having his own vocal and lyrical style and breaking away from what everyone else was doing.
Kurt Cobain for bringing soul and meaning back to rock music after it had been overtaken by cheesy hair bands.

The Deli: All right, give us the rundown. Where all on this big crazy web can you be found?

The Lucky
: Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Lucky/301095373319237?ref=hl
Reverbnation: http://www.reverbnation.com/CamillaCamille
Bandcamp: http://thelucky.bandcamp.com/

The Deli: Always go out on a high note. Any last words of wisdom for the Deli audience?

The Lucky: Camilla Camille: Face your fears, stand up for yourself, look at the colors, embrace nature, write poetry, eat your vegetables, be grateful what you have, and tell your boyfriend how much you love him.

Jason: As the Butthole Surfers said, "It’s better to regret something you have done than to regret something that you haven’t done." And tell your girlfriend how much you love her.

You’ll have plenty of opportunities to catch The Lucky in the next two weeks. Tonight, the band will be at recordBar with The Sexy Accident, Crush, and John Harrison and The Harrisonics (FB event page). Tomorrow, it’s Coda with Drew Black and Dirty Electric (FB event page). Next Friday, The Lucky will be at The Riot Room for Schwervon!’s record release party with them, Folkicide, and The Conquerors (FB event page). Now you have no excuse but to make it to a show.

–Michelle Bacon

Michelle is editor-in-chief of The Deli – Kansas City. She also has a weekly column with The Kansas City Star and reviews music for Ink. She plays with Deco AutoDrew Black and Dirty Electric, and Dolls on Fire. She played piano for about 8 years straight and can’t seem to remember much of it now. Ho hum.

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Austin

Introducing: hhhhhh

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Listening to hhhhhh will immediately transport you to a cool desert night. Sadly the desert has no wi-fi. My favorite hhhhhh (which is the sound a cactus makes) track so far has to be “there there son”. It starts with a sparse but sexy Latin guitar and shakers. Straight out of the Texan desert (we don’t have deserts) the layering and orchestration of hhhhhh is simple and clever.

Not only are Latin and Texan influences mixed together, but it also draws on a plethora of American aesthetics. Elvis Presley Viva Las Vegas background vocals can be heard in concurrence with a Queens of the Stone Age desert rock feel (perhaps not as aggressive sounding, but nonetheless present; (an Acculturation wet dream)). As the EP progresses we are allowed a glimpse into each of hhhhhh’s voices, none of which seem forced or random and much like the songs themselves, each aspect of this band is neatly sewn together.

Philadelphia

The Residuels Kicking Off a Run of Shows w/The Golden Boys at KFN (Upstairs) Sept. 21

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Fledgling side project of Creepoid’s Pat Troxell and Moon Women’s Justin Pittney, The Residuels, has another performance tonight at Kung Fu Necktie (Upstairs). They’ll be opening for Troxell’s former band The Golden Boys (who they will be hitting the road with after for a run of shows), The Spider Bags and The Limes. It should be a good evening, and you should also check out The Residuels’ cover of “Sex Beat” (below) by The Gun Club, which will appear on the duo’s upcoming self-titled EP due out later this fall, before heading over tonight. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 7:00pm, $8, 21+ – Alexis V.

NYC

Spotlight: Midwestern Audio – A Local Compilation CD Release Party

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This Sunday, Midwest Music Foundation will be presenting a local compilation CD release party at the recordBar, featuring a sampling of Kansas City’s hottest bands.

We sat down with MMF’s Brenton Cook, who compiled the CDs, to find out more about the compilation and the bands he’s excited to highlight in it.

The DeliWhat gave you the idea for making a compilation?

Brenton: I have always appreciated listening to and receiving compilations and mixtapes, particularly if there is a great theme to it or it is targeted to a certain area’s music scene. I always enjoyed getting a really great free local compilation, I can think of a handful of them that have been put out on CD documenting the Kansas City music scene the last decade or so. Some of the KJHK samplers come to mind, as well as the Dandercroft ‘zine CDs, a Kansas City/Cleveland Pabst Blue Ribbon compilation, and earlier Midwest Music Foundation SXSW previews. It had been awhile since anything like this had been put out for free and in CD form and distributed around the city. So many artists are recording or putting out records right now and it seems that the momentum of music in Kansas City is greater than it has ever been.  I wanted to catch a snapshot of this place in time in the Kansas City music scene and present it freely so that everyone could enjoy. I proposed the idea to Midwest Music Foundation and was met with positive feedback about the idea of the project.

The Deli: Were there any bands you thought of immediately when thinking about putting this together?

Brenton: Certainly. Some of Kansas City’s staple bands like Hearts of Darkness, The Grisly Hand, The Beautiful Bodies, Cowboy Indian Bear, Soft Reeds, and The ACBs were no-brainers. I wanted to reach out to the Golden Sound Records and The Record Machine labels because I appreciated a lot of the things that they are doing in this city right now. Basically, I just wanted to get some of the heaviest hitters that I could get that would best represent the quality and diversity of music in Kansas City that would be willing to contribute a track for the compilation and put together the best thing that I could. The response was so overwhelming that it ended up having to become a double CD.

The Deli: Any surprises in here? Bands/songs that we might not be familiar with? Any unreleased material?

Brenton: Part of the idea of this project was to get some material that couldn’t be found anywhere else. I got brand new tracks that have yet to be released by The Blackbird Revue, Diverse, Hammerlord, Expo ’70, Dollar Fox, and Cadillac Flambe. Tiny Horse recorded a new track in studio just for the compilation and The Conquerors submitted a practice space recording.  Monta at Odds and Be/Non submitted unreleased tracks that were recorded years ago and now have a home. I have a demo version of a new Cowboy Indian Bear track that will appear on their next album.  Perhaps my favorite track on the compilation is a reworked version of Hidden Pictures‘ "Something to Eat," that was released on their first album, but this version has whole new accompaniment. I’m really hyping up this band Eyelit.  I stumbled on them from Noisetrade and was surprised to see they were from St. Joseph. Anyway, I really like their Swell Season-like sound and hope they can play more in Kansas City. I had a great experience catching the more experimental acts at the KC Psych Fest this year and wanted to incorporate a few of those bands (Monta at Odds, Expo ’70, Gemini Revolution, Be/Non,The Conquerors, Umberto, Mr. Marco’s V7. These may be a bit off of the radar and I thought this material needed to be shared with those unfamiliar with them.

The Deli: What new local bands are you most excited about?

Brenton: Quiet Corral, Antennas Up, and Schwervon! are all a great listen. Quite a few of the acts on this compilation got me an advanced copy of their latest single or album and I’m very much looking forward to seeing some of these recordings performed live. I like a lot of the stuff that Golden Sound Records is putting out. I’m excited to see what Reach has in store for everybody at the record release show.
 
For more info and a complete track listing, please click on the link here.

The show begins at 7:00 pm at the recordBar this Sunday, September 23. $10 will get you in the door and you’ll be able to take home a free double CD. Gemini Revolution takes the stage first, followed by Reach (with Diverse), then Grand Marquis, Antennas Up, and Everyday/Everynight. 18+. Facebook event page here.

Also sponsored by Ink Magazine.

–Michelle Bacon

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Philadelphia

Mic Stewart Opening for Big K.R.I.T. at The Blockley Sept. 21

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Up-and-coming local emcee, Mic Stewart is opening up for southern rappers Big Sant, Slim Thug and Big K.R.I.T. tonight at The Blockley. The 22-year-old rapper has been working hard at his craft for 10 years now, and is quickly becoming one of the most prominent figures in the Philly hip hop scene. Stewart’s accomplishments include sharing the stage with Inspectah Deck, opening for the Legendary Roots Crew and Earth, Wind & Fire, and receiving regular radio play on 100.3 the Beat and Hot 107.9. Most recently, Mic Stew won the national Red Bull “EmSee Competition” in May, which was judged by headliner Big K.R.I.T., DJ Premier (of Gang Starr) and David Banner. He was also awarded $10,000 and the opportunity to collaborate with the producer of his choice at the Red Bull Studio in Los Angeles as well as some serious bragging rights. So come out and witness Stewart’s energetic live show before he drops his first official album, All Good Things, this spring. The Blockley, 3801 Chestnut St., 9 pm, $20, 21+ (Jeremy Deputat) – Dan Brightcliffe