NYC

Lola Pistola brings sardonic post-punk to Northside on 06.09 at The Knit

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Lola Pistola – real name Arvelisse Ruby – is a force to be reckoned with. On her most recent release, 2017’s Curfew, Lola’s songs are brash, ballsy and seething, with abounding post-punk vibes. In her video for "Carroll St.," she paints a bleak picture of life in New York through a series of disjointed, vignette-like images of herself in various city locales: a dimly-lit music venue, the docks, a stark apartment inhabited by barely-clad sleeping men, outside a storefront gate. Her knowing smirk and unsettling visage, complete with death-like makeup and hypothermia-blue eyeshadow, pops through each mundane setting like blood seeping from pale skin. However, for all her brash tongue-waggling, Lola Pistola also dabbles in the subtly sardonic. On "Wild, Rich and Loose," she takes aim at idly wealthy lifestyles, croaking, "We’ve come to feed on open wounds/Take all you want/I’m wild, rich and loose." Lola Pistola is playing at Northside Festival on June 9th at The Knit. Watch the video for "Carroll St." below! – Ethan Ames 

 

Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, May 11 – 13

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The tandem of Lauren DeLucca and Rachel Dispenza, a.k.a. Coping Skills, will be celebrating the release of its sophomore album Worst New Music (Citywide Records), with a show tomorrow night at Everybody Hits. The duo delves into the daily ups and downs via episodic songs, providing peeks into the songwriters’ psyches. Unobstructed, personal insights create a genuine connection of shared experience. Whether exploring points of doubt or frustration or finding moments of contagious euphoria, there’s a gritty, unpolished closeness that simultaneously bubbles over into jubilation. On this showcase (which will benefit No More Dysphoria), they’ll be joined by the dreary-romantic, shoegazing daydream of So Totally (whom have a new record in the works), the acoustic-driven, emo-crashing waves of Vivian K., and the raw, riff-rockin’ Big Quig. Also, hailing from Venezuela,  the experimental-punk of Zeta completes this billing. – Michael Colavita

Other places to hit this weekend…

Everybody Hits (529 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Past Life, Whine Moms, Punk Hands, SAT Coping Skills (Record Release), So Totally, Vivian K, Big Quig

Johnny Brenda’s (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) FRI Straw Hats, SAT Grandchildren

Boot & Saddle (1131 S. Broad St.) SAT Goodnight/Goodluck (Record Release), Secret American, Wax Wav 

Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI Sparrow Steeple, Yuzo Iwata/Brother JT, Jo Kusy/Night Drive/OneSixty, SAT Timothy Tebordo, The Bells/Fame Lust, SUN Loafass, Fucksake/Saint Wilde

PhilaMOCA (531 N. 12th St.) FRI FV, Rich People, Moses Mosima, SAT Chris Forsyth & The Solar Motel Band

Underground Arts (1200 Callowhill St.) SAT Dean & Company, Whiskeyhickon Boys

The Trocadero (1003 Arch St.) FRI (Balcony) Black Panther Burlesque, SAT Cosmo Baker

TLA (334 South St.) FRI Varial 

The Foundry (1000 Frankford Ave.) SAT Mo Lowda & The Humble, Kirby & The Vibe Tribe

World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) SAT Monnette Sudler, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Diane Monroe, Lee Smith, Sonny Troy, V. Shayne Frederick, Byron Landham, SUN Minas Mother’s Day Brunch

The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) SAT Dysphoria, Vicious Embrace/Jacopo & The Late Saints.  Zap Goes Pop!, This Way to the Egress

MilkBoy Philly (1100 Chestnust St.) FRI Mike Pinto, Jay D Clark, SAT Stella Ruze, NorthEast Corners  

The Barbary (951 Frankford Ave.) FRI Hetz, Berdmajik, Night Bloom, DCTC/Tiger Castle, Dear Forbidden, I Am Not The Universe, SAT Hallowed Bells, The Russian White, Argyle Rings

Silk City (435 Spring Garden St.) FRI DJ Sylo, Astro 800, SAT DJ Deejay

Fergie’s (1214 Sansom St.) SAT Johnny Moskal, SUN Rusty Cadillac

Bourbon & Branch (705 N. 2ndSt.) FRI Mike Matteson & The Sketchy Freaks, Line Leader, Slomo Sapiens, SAT Tucker Hill Band (Album Release), Miss Cantaloupe, Sitting In Cars, SUN The Ones Group Mixer

Connie’s Ric Rac (1132 S. 9th St.) SAT BrainFest: Stinking Lizaveta, Alright Junior, Camera Thief, The Good Mess, Resilient, Dirty Dollhouse, School of Rock Philadelphia, The Sea Tease, The Cozy

Morgan’s Pier (221 N. Columbus Blvd.) FRI DJ Beatstreet, SAT DJ Pierson

Frankie Bradley’s (1320 Chancellor St.) FRI DJ Royale, SAT Ian Saint Laurent

The Grape Room (105 Grape St.) SAT Alexis Cunningham

Ardmore Music Hall (23 E. Lancaster Ave.) SAT Catullus

 

The Pharmacy (1300 S. 18th St.) FRI In Different Sounds, Kate Dressed Up, Wallace / Grimace Federation, Nakama, Gorgeous Porch, SAT Of The Archive, Echo Lad, Countdown From Ten, SUN Echo Lad

LAVA Space (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) SAT Leadrs, Buster, Spring Onion, SUN Knifeplay, Spellbinder

Tralfamadore (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) SAT Good How Are You Fest: Ntive Flora, Yeenar, Elissa Janelle Velveteen, Honeytiger, Busy Bee Project, Secret Nudist Friends, Mavis the Dog, Overwinter,StateSchoolGirl

Slime Time Live (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) FRI Good How Are You Fest:Puppy Angst, Kat Hamilton, Elaine Rasnake, Erik Kramer, Kelsey Cork & the Swigs, Trash Boy

Planet Phitness (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more information.) FRI Eliza Edens, Brian Hamilton, Sudden Forever

JJ’s Diner (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more information.) SAT Blueroom, James Barrett

The Sound Hole (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) FRI Arthur, Buddie, SAT Dialer, The Invasive Species, Aphid Daughters

Hole Foods (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) SAT Earth Telephone, Party Muscles

Chicago

Judson Clairborne’s New Single

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Chris Salveter (aka Judson Claiborne) surprisingly released a new single, “I Want My Undeveloped Pre Frontal Cortex Back”, last month. This is the first new music from the band since 2013’s We Have Not Doors You Need Not Keys.

Salveter did form a new band back in 2016, The Electric Breastpumps, and released a single, but has been silent since.

It’s unclear if this will lead to more music or not. Judson Claiborne was one of my personal favorites of last decade and it is just great to hear Chris’ voice again.

Philadelphia

The Deli Philly’s Featured Artist Poll Winner: Kate Dressed Up

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Philly singer-songwriter Katie Miller, a.k.a. Kate Dressed Up, first caught our attention when she released a music video for “I Wish” (below), a transatlantic folk-fusion collaboration with London-based Ganda Boys. The wistful nature of the song and its mellifluous harmonies and melodies transported us away from the abrasive sounds of the city, if only for a moment. Miller has been quite active, of late – recently winning our Featured Artist Poll and wrapping up an April residency (hosted by Lost Compass). She’ll also be kicking off her Midwest Tour with Elaine Rasnake this evening at The Pharmacy, backed by a full band. However, before all this takes place, take a moment to get to know Kate Dressed Up HERE.

Philadelphia

New Track: “The Problem Is Us” – Gladie

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Pairing partners Augusta Koch (Cayetana) and Matt Schimelfenig (Three Man Cannon), a new project, Gladie, has emerged. Sean Hallock (Rozwell Kid) and Candice Martello (Hemming) currently round the band into form. With a debut EP Everyone is Talking About You due out on May 17, the band’s first single “The Problem Is Us” has just arrived. Akin to the reverberating buzz of traffic, the song sets an ambient beginning. Then, Koch delivers personal observations, which gather momentum as the instrumentation (keys, percussion, etc.) is further fleshed out, joined vocally by Schimelfenig to create an emotive yet calming discourse. The band is slated to perform at Everybody Hits on Wednesday, May 23, alongside Doll Baby, Bat Boy, and Big Nothing.

Chicago

The Cool Kids “Ripple”

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The Cool Kids dropped a new single called “Ripple” today. It’s a song about the future of the Strip Club economy if Cryptocurrency does take over as the world’s perferred method of payment. “Takin’ BitCoin in the Strip Club” is just a great line, but who hasn’t wanted to make "noise with the Litecoin"?

You can catch The Cool Kids at Temperance Beer in Evanston with Slick Rick on July 21st.

NYC

Glass Slipper rips through fast-paced fuzz punk

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The artwork for Glass Slipper’s 2016 demos is a photo of the band, but only of one pair of feet. It’s fitting, yet not. On one hand, the group’s sound is obscured, guitars hidden in fuzz, vocals distorted in that special, half-busted dive bar sound system sort of way. On the other hand, Glass Slipper is totally in your face. Everything is loud, compressed into a bundle of fiery garage rock with drums banging incessantly and voices never dropping below a snarl. Though the band hasn’t followed up that three track demo, they’ve kept busy and buzzing with bookings including the recent Pizzafest V and the upcoming Northside Festival. Take a listen to Glass Slipper’s demo below. – Cameron Carr

NYC

Single premiere! “Carina” from folk-rockers Handsome Hound

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Handsome Hound will be taking the main stage at Black Cat May 18th to premiere their new album. Supporting acts include Dupont Brass and Lauren Calve.

Urban folk-rock, is that a thing? Probably. The young professionals in Handsome Hound certainly seem committed to making it work. Their latest track, “Carina”, from their upcoming album Mountain on Fire is the latest intentionally rural sound to come from DC’s young professionals. The tune’s wholesome, folksy vibe places it in the category of other DC artists perhaps inspired by the city’s geographical proximity to both the grinding urban centers of the east coast and the somewhat idealized rural population centers that lie not too far south of the DC line.

The song itself is quite well constructed. A lyrically clever song about a failing relationship, the tune drives inexorably towards its end, refusing to get bogged down in the somber tropes which typically define songs on this subject. Twangy guitar arpeggios keep the energy moving through the warm singing on the verses. Bridges and choruses are punctuated by energetic horn stabs and drum fills, with the bass steadily holding it all in place.

In all, an energetic song start to finish. To learn more about the band, and some of its more existential aspects, I spoke with lead singers Cuchulain and Claire.

1. One of the biggest things that appeals to me about your music is the singing. When did you guys first start singing for fun? When did you start to take it more seriously?

Claire and Cuchulain both started singing in organized settings (i.e. outside the shower) for the first time in groups in college. Singing together and writing songs has always been a big part of our relationship, either just the two of us, or with other people in a group. After we had written a handful of tunes that we liked, we decided that we wanted to record them and put them out into the world. That’s how our debut EP, I Guess We’re Doing Alright came to be, and following it’s release, that’s how Handsome Hound became a band. That’s when we started getting serious about singing and producing music.

Many of our favorite musicians use tight vocal harmonies – Johnny Cash and June Carter, Fleetwood Mac, Shovels and Rope, The Head and The Heart, etc. Perhaps you could call us vocal harmony "enthusiasts." In the process of making our forthcoming LP, Mountain on Fire, our album co-producer Chris Freeland said some of the harmonies on this track "Carina" reminded him of barbershop quartets, which might not be surprising because Cuchulain has sung in barbershop quartets in the past.

Beyond singing in harmony, we’ve also learned a lot about singing melody. Singing a song you’ve written over and over again really forces you to figure out how to make form support function, or how to use the way you’re singing underline the message you’re trying to communicate. We think that comes through in a lot of songs on Mountain on Fire, in particular the title track.

2. I’m not sure if it’s the lack of distortion in the guitars, or the subject matter of the songs, but it really seems like you guys are unusually wholesome. Thinking about the groups that are playing around town, most of them seem to be focused on trying achieve an edgier image, at least to a certain degree. And of course when you take a look at who’s dominating the music market more generally, it’s people like Mark Ronson or Cardi B. People who only express vulnerabilities in small doses, and only after they’ve built up pretty substantial credibility as being cool or tough. How do you guys keep focused on the sound you want to make? Do you ever feel a certain pressure to change your sound?

As musicians who have full time day jobs, we’re pretty much constantly struggling to find time, and it would be hard to both make music and create a carefully crafted image for ourselves that’s different from who we actually are. Music is our opportunity to say something important to us, and it would be a waste to put on an act or try to be something we’re not. Plus, a lot of our inspiration also comes from musicians who manage to capture honesty and candidness in their lyrics without self-aggrandizing, and we try to emulate that in our music.

That’s not to say we haven’t felt pressure to be "cooler." We’ve definitely seen a bunch of musicians perform, locally and nationally, and walked away from their concerts thinking "damn we wish we were that cool."

3. Of course there has to be a limit to how vulnerable you want yourselves to be. As songwriters, how do you manage the balance between opening yourselves up and not putting too much out there?

Admittedly it’s a tough balance to strike. Songwriting for us is partially confessional, like we’re getting something out of ourselves that we need to work through. It helps us process. A lot of the songs on this album, Mountain on Fire, deal with serious issues – loss, isolation, anxiety, the difficulties of growing up – but we try to poke fun at those topics by holding them at arms length and laughing at them. We tend to approach serious subjects in our songs with a tongue-in-cheek tone.

This song Carina is a good example: at its core, Carina is a lovesick lament about a breakup. The protagonist has been left by Carina for one reason or another and is proclaiming, rather loudly, how badly they want Carina back. Losing love sucks! This song could’ve been super slow and sappy. But we opted to make it upbeat and danceable with a big brass section and an occasional reference to Greek mythological characters.

Another thing we do with our songwriting is to write someone else’s story as if we were in their shoes. Neither Claire nor Cuchulain were going through a breakup when writing Carina, but by writing about the experience from a third party’s perspective, we’re able to have a little fun with it. Other songs on this album do that even more so, like Austin, which is available on Bandcamp with a pre-order of Mountain on Fire.  

 

 

 

L.A.

Rett Madison unveils a harrowing look into addiction on “Mother’s Girl,” plays Hotel Café on 6/6

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Rett Madison presents a troubling account that is difficult to accept on "Mother’s Girl." Madison, an LA-via-West Virginia transplant, looks back at her past upbringing through a truthful lens, that of a child who had to cope with a parents’ substance abuse. "I look at my mother," she introduces with chilling effect, a stark, yet effective image which evokes so much without uttering a single detail. But Madison is a classic storyteller at heart. She proceeds to recount a drunken stupor that’s all too familiar, as she sees herself through her mother’s eyes, her commanding alto wrapped around a thorny stem. Madison’s spare, folk-laced strum is bone-chillingly somber, yet downright beautiful, where a crescendoing string accompaniment detects an aura of sadness to her words with a striking emotional punch.

Madison is slated to perform at Hotel Café on June 6 alongside Eli Pafumi. Listen to "Mother’s Girl" on Spotify. – Juan Rodríguez