Philadelphia

The Deli Philly’s September Album of the Month: Night Panther – Night Panther

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Night Panther’s Farzad Houshiarnejad and Michael Cammarata first gained notoriety as part of the sadistic, carnival-esque sounding, trashcan-smashing Doylestown, PA psych-pop four-piece Drink Up Buttercup, who released their debut and only LP Born and Thrown on a Hook via Yep Roc Records. After parting ways with bassist Ben “Money” Mazzochetti, the remaining members Housiarnejad, Cammarata and lead vocalist/guitarist James Harvey reemerged as White Birds, a harmonious lo-fi 60’s pop throwback, and were also joined on stage by Drink Up Buttercup’s former manager Chris Radwanski, who had previously co-founded the band France On Fire. The new project seemed to be regaining some of the momentum that Drink Up Buttercup had created. Then, Night Panther’s infectious debut single, “Fever,” emerged from nowhere heating up the blogosphere. It soon became pretty silent in the White Birds camp until the track “I Had a Dream I Did Everything Right” was posted with an apologetic note from Harvey. By that time, Night Panther’s second track “Snudge” was being welcomed with more praise, and word of White Birds officially disbanding was made public the next month. On their self-titled debut full-length album (via Small Plates Records), Night Panther unleashes ferociously dance-friendly synth-based music that the group has quite precisely defined as “sex pop.”

In the opening of “Pleasure to Meet You,” the band, who also now includes Radwanski, casts a momentarily sacred/churchlike feel as the keys mimic an organ. However, after setting a brief ominous tone, the song’s synth emerges providing a transitional lightness that consequently meshes with percussion generating a subtle groove. “Fever” proceeds to bring with it an instantaneously addictive 70’s R&B style head-bobbing/booty-shaking vibe, letting bass and percussion lead the way while a brass feel and well-placed funky guitar licks tattoo themselves on your subconscious colored in by silky-cool falsetto.

“Snudge” shifts the point of emphasis to lyrics amid airy synths that, at times, suggest escape restriction and a yearning desire for independence – “Sneaking out at night, he meets a girl wearing red shoes/Creeping through the door, the wood is cracking and she caught you.” “Queen Bitch” (which isn’t a David Bowie cover) takes a simple piano lead and produces a genuine heartfelt plea – “You were always on my mind/now I’m waiting for our time.” As the piano and synth weave in out of each other, the sorrowful lyrics are elevated to a systematic variable pace in which they are approached and delivered. After the relative simplicity of “Queen Bitch,” “Lioness” cues a heavy, darker tone; synth comes to the forefront capturing a sinister edge that is part medieval and part futuristic. In “Fire,” Houseriarnejad expresses torn conflict – “Things are different when she’s gone and I know why… Now I told her just to lie, and I know why/I know there’s a fire under my nose, but when you’re near me, I let it burn me.” While the narrative unravels, the instrumental components grow in importance and volume before dropping out as a conclusion emerges. “It’s time for me to move on.”

Night Panther demonstrate the versatility of synth pop on their debut self-titled LP, producing songs that don’t merely provide an atmosphere worthy of dance, but rather the synths serve as a bridge or foundation allowing the band to touch on varying emotional/physical relationships. – Michael Colavita

Philadelphia

New Music Video: “Wolf Like A Stray Dog” – Norwegian Arms

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Here’s new music video from Norwegian Arms for the title track to his LP Wolf Like A Stray Dog. It features frontman Brendan Mulvihill’s father and family, and was filmed at historic Rigby Manor by Out Of Town Films. Also below are a few words that Mulvihill (a.k.a. Keith Birthday) had to say about the song and its origin.

Inspired by the stray dogs who would mill about the main square of Tomsk, Russia, Wolf Like a Stray Dog is about feeling an outcast in a society, where one is viewed differently based on origin. In Siberia, songwriter Keith Birthday often felt like an oustider; misunderstood and falsely represented. He instead found himself identifying with the dogs that roamed the streets, who were acknowledged by passersby, but often shunned, looked down upon, or even beaten.

To his surprise, the dogs were often friendly, socialized, and accepting, and on some of his darker days, he would feel more kinship with the dogs than with his fellow humans. As a result, this song formed, a meditation, where he seeks to understand the dogs’ society from their perspective; which he believed to be feral bliss, constant discovery, and a non-stop hunt for food. 

Philadelphia

Hop Along Co-Headline w/The Sidekicks at FUC Sept. 3

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Local indie-rock outfit Hop Along is currently touring North America and Canada with Cleveland, Ohio’s The Sidekicks, who they’ve spent a recent stint in Europe with this past spring. Though they’ve been battling some van problems on the road, Hop Along will be more than ready to get the all-ages crowd into a sweaty frenzy in the basement of the First Unitarian Church tonight. They’ll also be armed with two new songs that they’ve been testing out on the road. Also joining the R5 and The Guild co-presented bill this evening will be Philly’s own Luther and Ma Jolie. First Unitarian Church, 2125 Chestnut St., 7pm, $10 – $12, All Ages – Alexis V. 

Philadelphia

Show Recap: Mac DeMarco, Ape School & Mock Suns at MilkBoy Philly

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I’m not really sure why I don’t end up at Milkboy more often. Maybe it’s because I’m bad at life, but I doubt it. It’s probably because I’m bad at checking out event calendars. But after a dinner consisting of stale crackers, antibiotics and a rum cocktail, I was more than ready to check out Mac DeMarco’s sold-out show this past Thursday. Locals Mock Suns and Ape School opened for everyone’s new favorite Canadian slacker rock babe, and did a swell job of it. I had myself a really good time – infected spider bite and all! 

Mock Suns and their heady, playful revelry and what my discerning male companion described as, “agreeable, good-guy guitar-driven indie rock,” which I’m pretty sure was a compliment. If Phoenix and Real Estate and Lower Dens formed a jam band and afterwards wrote a screenplay in which Arnold Schwarzenegger birthed their unlikely child, you’d be looking at Mock Suns. And I refuse to apologize for that statement, because I have an infected spider bite and I liked Mock Suns, and would be psyched to see them again.

Ape School also ruled it, banging out a set of discerningly anthemic rock and roll that worked way more often than not. It was a more stripped-down Ape School than I’m used to with the band taking the stage as a four-piece. Michael Johnson and his smart, moppy pompadour closed out a fulfilling set with his angst-tinged, celebratory, “Be An Encore.” The audience would’ve been down for one more, at least; however, that luxury isn’t usually provided for an opener. Plus, don’t mess with a sound guy and his set times.

Mac DeMarco and his swaggery maneuvering of fine lines in his dirty skate shoes, shrouding his modus operandi as a not-not prolific musician in a cloud of scum and viceroy smoke. He is your future-ex-boyfriend. He’s the best dude you used to skate with. Demarco and his bandmates clearly give a shit about what they’re doing – just not in front of their audience. They’re simply too busy having fun. You can just tell by their ridiculous facial expressions. They’re preternaturally good-natured, rough, goofy and replete. It was a complete-feeling set of clean, hard-edged translations of his studio recordings that still retained their “stoned-on-a-leaking-waterbed-and-hey-perhaps-it’s-the-80s vibe.” They also pulled off a loud, shrieky cover of the Beatles’ “Blackbird” lead by bassist Pierce McGarry in a string of admirably insincere classic rock covers. All in all, DeMarco proved on Thursday evening that good music can make fun of itself and be better for it. (Ape School Photo by Leslie Burnette) – Leslie Burnette

Philadelphia

Ruin Reunite at Union Transfer Aug. 31

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Younger bands have buckled under lesser endeavors than Ruin, tonight’s reunited heroes of iconoclastic punk. From covering Leonard Cohen to maintaining their mid-nineties web presence to a pungent mixture of Buddhism, anarchism and old-time rock and roll, the Ruin train has made stops in many unpredictable stations over the years. Their original run (1981-1987) came to an end for the best of reasons – they wanted to quit at the top of their game – and perhaps that purity of ethos is why their mark on the Philly punk scene has lasted all these years. They take the stage tonight at Union Transfer like the returning champions they are, joined by a cohort of ascendant bands who can more than hold their weight in weirdness. Mischief Brew, Pagan Babies and Northern Liberties are kindred spirits to Ruin’s freak-flag waving reputation, and this will be a night to remember for Philly’s punk scene. Union Transfer, 1024 Spring Garden St., 8pm, $20, 21+ – Alyssa Greenberg

Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, August 30 – September 2

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While Jay Z (whew…glad that I remembered to leave out the hyphen) and Made in America chose not to include any Philly hip-hop artists on the official bill for this year’s festival, you can still catch a rising star from the city this evening at MilkBoy Philly. Producer/DJ collective Les Professionnels will be bringing out Fools Gold Records signee GrandeMarshall as a special guest for their party this evening. The brash, young buck released another fabulous mixtape earlier this year in Mugga Man, and expectations are high for his upcoming Fools Gold release. Besides appearances at record label and music media showcases, performances have been coming few and far between for the local emcee so tonight will certainly be a treat for all. MilkBoy Philly, 1100 Chestnut St., 10pm, $5, All Ages – H.M. Kauffman

 
Other things to help you forget that it’s the end of summer…
 
MilkBoy Philly (1100 Chestnut St.) SAT Demonstrative Girls, The Pretty Greens
 
Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) SAT Drone Ranger, Gatherings, Air Is Human, Something Like A Monument
 
Bamboo Bar (939 N. Delaware Ave.) SUN Making Time RAD-B-Q
 
Union Transfer (1026 Spring Garden St.) SAT Ruin, Mischeif Brew, Pagan Babies, Northern Liberties
 
Underground Arts (1200 Callowhill St.) SAT Voss Music Video Release Party and Premiere
 
North Star Bar (2639 Poplar St.) FRI The Districts, Rosu Lup, SAT Siamese Showdown, Ballroom Spies, The Mahlors
 
The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Commonwealth Choir, Small Houses, Ron Gallo, SAT Andross, The Jantones, Super Friends Fight Club, Soviet Sleeper Agent
 
Ortlieb’s Lounge (847 N. 3rd St.) FRI Zach and The Outside Eyes, Chris Kolb, Maitland, SAT Gemini Wolf, Diseases of The South
 
Tin Angel (20 S. 2nd St.) FRI Alfred James Band, Dante Bucci, SAT Bees In A Bottle, Mr. Fuzzy and the Barbarian
 
The Blockley (3801 Chestnut St.) SAT Mitis
 
Fergie’s (1214 Sansom St.) SAT Rusty Cadillac, John Byrne
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) FRI Start Making Sense, The Great White Caps, The Rent-A-Cops, SAT the HYPE! Presents: BW10 (The Boy Wonder Ten Year Anniversary Show) w/Boy Wonder, Artificer, Aaron Heil & John Dutton, Absolute Zeros, Parachuting Apostles, Catherine Prewitt, City Line
 
The Legendary Dobbs (304 South St.) SAT Kill Bad Radio, StarSkream, SUN Stardog Champion
 
Connie’s Ric Rac (1132 S. 9th St.) FRI Time Hitler and the Assholes From Space, Sandcastle, Snoozer, The Love Club, SAT cosmicArms
 
The Barbary (951 N. Frankford St.) SUN Bucket Flush
 
Voltage Lounge (421 N. 7th St.) FRI A.M.E.N. (A Mission Ending Never), SAT The Bad Doctors, Bonner
 
The Grape Room (105 Grape St.) SAT Sought After Saints, Tael, High Olives
 
Made in America (Ben Franklin Parkway) SAT Restoration, Balance and Composure
 
LAVA Space (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) FRI Swarm, Nemesisters
 
Philadelphia

An Intimate Night of Leading Men at The Fire Aug. 30

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Tonight, The Fire offers you the opportunity to catch a couple of leading men from rising local acts on their own. Commonwealth Choir appears to be a group that has caught people’s attention from the gate. The Doylestown natives deliver clean, catchy indie rock and frontman Jameson Davis Howley will be doing a solo thing this evening. Hopefully he’ll break out a few songs off their much-anticipated debut EP. As we await the release of Toy Soldiers new album The Maybe Boys, Ron Gallo brings his customary impassioned music, a melting pot of roots rock revival that casts shades of folk, blues, country and soul. Isn’t that just called rock ‘n’ roll? Fitting quite naturally on this bill is Michigan transplant Jeremy Quentin, a.k.a. Small Houses, who performs folky Americana that delivers through thoughtful lyrics and wistful melodies. The Fire 412 W. Girard Ave., 9pm., $8, 21+ – Michael Colavita 

 
Philadelphia

The Outside Eyes Look Inward at Ortlieb’s Aug. 30

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Since debuting in March, The Outside Eyes have delivered a pleasant and vibrant dirge of Americana roots rock. What started out as friends and roommates jamming in an old West Philly Victorian (Todd Erk who also happens to be involved with the likes of Hoots & Hellmouth and Birdie Busch) has emerged into a harmonious undertaking that will soon culminate in the release of their debut album Love Songs & Other Tragedies. Tonight’s show at Ortleib’s will be an opportune time to catch the band before they take a tour of the west throughout September, especially since they’ll be joined by Maitland, who caught our attention earlier this year with their debut EP (from a cabin in the woods). Ortleib’s Lounge, 847 N. 3rd St, 9pm, $7, 21+ – Bill McThrill