It’s been interesting to watch Kate Ferencz evolve as she finds her own voice. When we first came across her child-like vocals, she was similar to many singer-songwriters that you’ll come across at open mics and coffee shops toting an acoustic guitar looking rather prim and proper while singing about things like boys and “Lions and Tigers and Bears.” Well, fast forward a few years, and you’ll find that the gal has been drinking from the wudder of Philly’s music freak pool. These days, you’ll find her wailing and flailing about while drawing onlookers at DIY spaces fronting her latest project Evil Sword. You can join the bizarreness tonight at Little Berlin when she opens for avant-folk veterans Hermit Thrushes. Yeah, things are about to get very weird in the Kensington multi-purpose art space. Litte Berlin, 2430 Coral St., 7pm, $5, All Ages – H.M. Kauffman
It’s Happening Tonight: Nashville Pioneers Pep Rally
Fresh off their win in the alleged game against Seoul that we suspect may or may not have actually ever happened, the Nashville Pioneers are holding their post-game pep rally at the Stone Fox for a night of dancing and DJ sets from the likes of Wild Cub, DJ La Force, and Jeremy Todd.
Though we introduced you to the team back in December, this your first opportunity to get out and party with the Pioneers, so put on your dancing gear and head down to the Stone Fox. The party starts at 9 pm.
Proceeds from the event go to the Oasis Center. For more details about the pep rally, go here.
DRGN King Record Release Show at PhilaMOCA Feb. 2
Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow. This actually means there will be a release show for DRGN King’s Paragraph Nights (which is our February Album of the Month and you can read our review HERE) at PhilaMOCA this evening – better than six more weeks of winter, right? DRGN King’s ever-growing member-count is a big part of what makes this new album special, and it is said by vox Dominic Angelella that “there are many stylistic shifts.” With that be told, there is going to be a lot of musical variation in one set, making it a release show that you won’t want to miss. Leading up to the reveal of Paragraph Nights will be performances by the über-dancey Dangerous Ponies, NYC’s Walking Shapes, and pumped-up Philly youngsters Idle Idols. PhilaMOCA, 531 N. 12th St., 8pm, $7 – $10, All Ages – Brandi Lukas
The Great Unknown Vinyl Release Celebration at JB’s Feb. 2
The Great Unknown celebrates the vinyl release of their latest record, So Strange and Loud, tonight at Johnny Brenda’s. The album captures a level of heartfelt intimacy, while still also supplying the freedom of the open air. It’s as though you’re taking a ride in an old horse drawn wagon. At times, the rich vocal harmonies and the twangy guitar hit you like sunlight on an overcast day. However, at others, the sky darkens, and one begins to notice the bumps in the road and the danger in the dark harmonica cries in the distance like animals lying in the brush. The Great Unknown paint a full spectrum of rural Americana from the heart and into the soul. KC Jones, who plays eclectic style of music that touches on electronic/ambient sounds while also demonstrating a rougher rock side, will be joining in the festivities having recently released his first full-length album Sounds From The West, a title inspired by Andrew Wyeth’s painting “Cristina’s World.” The powerful and sultry vocals of Ali Wadsworth will open the evening. Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 9:15pm, $10, 21+ – Michael Colavita
The Deli Portland Presents… 2.8
The Deli Portland has cooked up something special for you this Friday night at the fantastic Mt. Tabor Theater. The Lower 48 will be rocking the concert hall with their captivating harmonies and vintage tones alongside the progressive indie rock compositions of Eidolons, and Bike Thief’s moving post-folk anthems. In the Lounge, The North Wind will be putting on a performance of epic proportions supported by Soft Shadows’ hypnotic brand of shoegaze and the enchanting dream-pop of Appendixes. The show starts at 9pm sharp, come on out and experience some of the most delicious music that Portland has to offer.
Weekend Warrior, February 1 – 3
A.M. Architect releases track from upcoming album Pattern Language/Promo video
The electronic-music duo AM Architect has released a track called ‘Delicatessen’ (apparently a popular name for things) and a short promotional video with some cool editing and a man breakdancing his ass off. The track is a tonal, cacophonous wash of sound with a glitchy hip hop beat in the background. Listen to the track or preorder the album here. – Geoff Noble
Tweet At Us!
We have a Twitter account! You can follow us at @deli_nashville for updates about the Nashville music scene, opportunities to win concert tickets, and general tomfoolery.
The feed is bare for now, but we promise to use it to keep you in the know. There will also opportunities to win a round of whatever we’re drinking if you’re at the shows we’re covering, so follow us closely because the rewards are irrefutable.
The Deli Philly’s February Album of the Month: Paragraph Nights – DRGN King
Somewhere between the first and last tracks on DRGN King‘s Paragraph Nights (Bar None), the album’s spiritual grounding reveals itself with startling clarity. After nearly an album’s worth of psychedelic, maximalist indie-pop, with all the attendant touches of pleasure-loving and Altamont Sunrise-watching you could hope to hear, “Warriors” finds frontman Dominic Angelella asking “We heard about the house you built – did you find your way back home?” This is not the carefree euphoria of teenagers. Rather, Angelella and his bandmates are channeling a more mature, collectively-oriented freedom, one that’s shared by other adults who know what it’s like to create, struggle, triumph and grow through supporting one another. At a time when pop music is so often aggressively self-involved, it feels almost revolutionary to invoke such familial comforts. This is undoubtedly the most emotionally affecting line of his on Paragraph Nights, the question held aloft on a soft background chorus of triumphant whoops and yelps, as if offering the emotional support of a whole gang. Have you made your house a home? Are you at peace? If not, Angelella wants you to know, here we are for you.
As with Angelella’s other projects, DRGN King’s overture is engineered with exceptional confidence and talent, even throughout its spacey interludes and everything-but-the-kitchen-sink tendencies. The sound is so dense that it can seem like DRGN King have always been a full band, with each member contributing a monolith of effects from the get-go. Not so; DRGN King was born a two-piece. Angelella’s songwriting duties often ride sidecar to the encyclopedia of effects, phasers, synths, and atmospherics offered by producer Brent “Ritz” Reynolds and the myriad of performers recruited to asseble this debut.
“Warriors” is a leisurely, beat-inflected strut, and one of the most radio-ready songs on the album. It’s a standout for the band as a whole, and when broken down, for individual members. Its bassline is a thing of sheer delight, and Ritz, who cut his production teeth on the Roots and Peedi Crakk, uses his designation as the hip-hop mind of the group for one of the most exciting parts of Paragraph Nights. “I got a bad, bad feeling they’re gonna take it all away….Warriors, out to play, and no one stay inside/The beautiful, the young, the brave.” Rather than a lament, Angelella’s exhortating people to level with themselves before it’s too late in life.
The moss-covered piano intro gives way to “Wild Night,” childlike wonder personified. After this bit of luminous electro-pop, Angelella slows things down for couple of sultry garage jaunts. “The Cardy Boys” is full of Mercury Rev-style nostalgia, as well as the same sort of lush production values given to Mercury Rev and Flaming Lips by Dave Fridmann. Tame Impala is another, more contemporary touchstone; their folkloric sonic tapestries and easygoing lyrical persona is instructive if you’re hellbent on finding a comparison who have succeeded in the mainstream.
“Barbarians” is a fittingly primal nightlife anthem. “Down in the trenches with barbarians” – who are these barbarians, specifically? Of any alluded-to group on Paragraph Nights, Angellella makes them sound like the most fun, going by hip-thrusting guitars and space-age synths.
The Santana-like guitar howls on “Caught Down,” the album’s penultimate number, are too prominent – and bizarrely perfect – to ignore. But just when this song is powering down, the drums weaken for a seemingly depleted conclusion, and neatly pivots into “Looking at You,” a funky hand-clapper and tambourine-shaker. It’s a total flouting of typical album structure, as if Angelella was determined to have one last moment of wistfulness before ending the album on an upbeat note. For the capstone to an album that feels like it belongs to a collective, this is an excellent way of corralling everyone for one last pump of the fist. Above all, Paragraph Nights is an album of mastery – whether technical, stylistic, or emotional, Angellella somehow knows where he’s headed from start to finish and how to keep people on board. – Alyssa Greenberg
Norwegian Arms Opening for Buke and Gase at Johnny Brenda’s Feb. 1
Percussion as brisk and biting as a Siberian winter cut with mandolin twangs harkens back to days gone by at babushka’s house, sitting over a steaming bowl of homemade borscht. Vocalist Brendan Mulvihill wrote Norwegian Arms’ debut full-length album, Wolf Like A Stray Dog, during his yearlong fellowship in Tomsk, Russia. Rich, multi-layered sounds are woven together with the help of partner in crime Dr. Awkward, a.k.a. Erick Slick (of Dr. Dog), which simultaneously blend and clash with Mulvihill’s vocals. Their quick tracks ink together to paint an icy landscape yearning for discovery, with Mulvihill, Slick and Laser Background’s Andy Molholt forging the path. Norwegian Arms will be opening for Deli NYC favorite and Brooklyn-based Buke and Gase, with Arone Dyer on the “buke” (a self-modified sixstring baritone ukulele) and Aron Sanchez playing “gas” (a guitar-bass hybrid creation). Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frakford Ave., 9:15pm, $12, 21+ – Shaylin O’Connell
Woe Return w/a New Drummer & Material at Golden Tea Haus Feb. 1
Only good things can happen when crust punk and black metal find one another and unite in true goodness. This is the case with Woe, who exude a kind of infernal, baleful aura born of both our city’s ills and the first, primeval wave of black metal. They’ve been on various publications’ radars for a well-deserved reputation of being somehow cerebral and not pretentious, powerful without being in thrall to black metal’s often unbending rules. Even considering their prowess, this is a particularly good night to indulge your need for crusty darkness. It is Woe’s first show since July, and they’ll be returning with a new drummer and material. Ferocious Plague Dogs are also on the bill, as are sludge metal mystics Sadgiqacea, and the poetically named Cape of Bats. Golden Tea Haus, (Please contact one of the acts or venue for me details.) 7:30pm, $5, All Ages (Photo by Greg Cristman) – Alyssa Greenberg
Electro-Pop-Art: Psychobuildings
Anybody out there following the saga of those dot paintings? The ones by Damian Hirst that have the art world running in circles trying to catch its own tail? Yeah, well, that’s kinda what this latest single by Psychobuildings reminds me of. This time Peter LaBier discards his signature warbly vocals for crisp, lean pronunciation and he brings on Amanda Warner of MNDR for some blue-eyed soul vocals. But other than that, it’s business as usual: morbidly indulgent lyrics set to prancy, darkwave rhythms. What is harder to figure out this time ‘round is whether, like Hirst, Psychobuildings is commenting on the “me-me-me” credo of the times, or whether they’re actually compliant. Given the band’s background, I’m gonna guess there’s some outsider declaration here. Either way, I hope they contact Damian Hirst’s agent and find a way to make a music video filled with bouncing dots. – Brian Chidester