Philadelphia

Toy Soldiers’ Ron Gallo Stripped-down at Triumph Brewing Co. Nov. 3

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You may recognize Ron Gallo as the charismatic frontman of soulful roots rockers Toy Soldiers. But he has also recorded a catalogue of solo albums between 2006 and 2009 that show a whole other side of the talented songwriter. When you hear him play a stripped-down, intimate set as part of Triumph Brewing Company’s Live & Local Music Series tonight, you’ll hear his patented Americana folk that you know and love. But you also might here some candid moments thanks to songs such as “C.C. Rag” and “Time Covers House in Vines”. Gallo may be working on rebuilding the lineup for Toy Soldiers again, but you can bet that the determined Temple student will remain a fixture in the local music community. Joining him on the bill will be another young dynamic singer-songwriter in Kevin James Devine. Between his debut album “Through the Fields” and the online mix tape he released in September, he has been able to impress with his honest lyrics and echoes of early Springsteen. Triumph Brewery, 117 Chestnut St., 8pm, Free, 21+ – Bill McThrill
 
Philadelphia

“Philly Sings Philly” Begins November Residency at The Fire Nov. 2

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OK, so we don’t normally cover bands that only do covers, but tonight is a little different as it’s the kickoff to “Philly Sings Philly”. Every Tuesday night in November at The Fire you’ll find a plethora of our local acoustic singer-songwriters covering some of their favorite Philly artists. This evening is anchored by Andrew Lipke. Look out for other Deli favorites like Hezekiah Jones, The Spinning Leaves, Spirit and Dust, and many more throughout this month. Well, you can’t say that the Philly singer-songwriter/folk community doesn’t love their local music scene. The Fire, 412 W. Girard Ave., 8pm, $8, 21+ – H.M. Kauffman
 
Philadelphia

The Deli’s Featured Artist(s) of the Month: When I Was 12

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The band When I Was 12 bring you back to those innocent (and not-so-innocent) times when the world was new and your options seemed limitless (albeit from a more feminine point of view). Well, we had a chance to bounce our get-to-know-you questions off super sweet, candy-licious frontwoman Adrianne Gold as she fills us in on the history of When I Was 12 and dishes the dirt about her bestie bandmates.
 
The Deli: How did When I Was 12 start?
 
Adrianne Gold: It all started when I was 12, and what I really wanted was a heart-shaped guitar. My dad promised if I learned 5 chords he’d get me one…the rest is history!
 
TD: Where did the band name come from?
 
AG: It’s sort of a mystery (stemming from our history). I think I chose this band name because everyone remembers what it’s like to be 12 and yet everyone has unique memories of what it was like.
 
TD: What are your biggest musical influences?
 
AG: Our biggest musical influences INCLUDE (but are not limited to!): The Velvet Underground, Tilly and the Wall, Rilo Kiley, Hellogoodbye, and Saturday Looks Good to Me.
 
TD: What artists (local, national and/or international) are you currently listening to?
 
AG: BEST COAST for certain, I’ve written two new songs very inspired by them. I adore the lo-fi, girly, beachy sound they have! ALSO Midi & The Modern Dance. They’re from Connecticut, and we played with them on our summer tour (2010). If you listen they will melt your heart and with winter on it’s way that’s something so desired! Carolyn: She loves First Aid Kit because they’re from Sweden or something and they have the best harmonies ever. We wanna have harmonies like them. And The Avett Brothers because she just saw them in concert! Ryan: He never stops talking about The Unicorns. I think he’s gonna love them the most forever and for always but right now he especially likes Broken Social Scene. Dan: Truthfully he’s listening to Delorean and Motion City Soundtrack. That Motion City Soundtrack song about make out kids never having a chance to be best friends was totally a good song so I don’t know why he sounds embarrassed!
 
TD: What’s the first concert that you ever attended and first album that you ever bought?
 
AG: I’m not gonna lie. The first concert I EVER attended was a Britney Spears concert for my best friend’s 9th birthday. Britney changed her wardrobe like 9 times. She inspired me. I want to change my wardrobe on stage too. I’m also not gonna let Dan lie. The first concert he’s ever been to was Green Day and the first album he ever bought was probably at that concert ("Dookie" by Green Day). Somehow Carolyn has a really COOL first concert: Thao and the Get Down Stay Down, but a super dorky first ever album she purchased: HANSON!!!! I also think half of us are lying about this because Ryan’s first concert was Peter, Bjorn, and John and his first album was Lifted… by Bright Eyes.
 
TD: What do you love about Philly?
 
AG: I love the sirens that sing me to sleep.
 
TD: What do you hate about Philly?
 
AG: I hate the sirens that sing me to sleep.
 
TD: What are your plans for 2010?
 
AG: We are going to start recording our 2nd full length album very soon! I wish I could tell you the title, but some things are best left unsaid, and secrets are my favorite! I guess you’ll just have to wait and see.
 
TD: What was your most memorable live show?
 
AG: IT’S A TIE! Performance-wise we had so much fun covering Joan Jett’s "Bad Reputation". We put on leather jackets and stuff. It was wildddd! Once we played a show with Des Ark though, and she’s the most fantastic. It was so intimate, and every word she sang sounded so angelic.
 
TD: What’s your favorite thing to get at the deli?
 
AG: I don’t know. But I really like that song by The Blow called "Parentheses", and whenever I’m at the grocery store and I’m in the deli aisle, I start singing it "…if something in the deli aisle makes you cry, you know I’ll put my arm around you and I’ll walk you outside…" and Dan likes Italian hoagies.
 
– The Deli Staff
 
Philadelphia

FREE Show w/Tia & Tamara, Levee Drivers & The Lawsuits at KFN Nov. 2

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There’s a FREE show at KFN tonight that you might want to check out. Headlining will be Tia & Tamara, a new side project from Andy Molholt and Michael Chadwick of psych-pop outfit The Armchairs. No recordings have surfaced yet (that I’ve heard), but if you know The Armchairs, always expect the strange (if you don’t believe me, check out the preview video for their upcoming “Creamsicle Challenge” at The Ox on Nov. 13), and judging by the supposed tongue-in-cheek homage to former child stars and twin sisters Tia and Tamara Mowry, there is nothing to make me believe otherwise. Tia & Tamara will be joined this evening by Levee Drivers, who will be heading down to Nashville for a little while soon to test the waters of its local music scene, and fellow Bucks County mates The Lawsuits. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St., 8pm, FREE, 21+ – Q.D. Tran

CREAMSICLE CHALLENGE! from The Armchairs

Philadelphia

The Deli’s November CD of the Month: Nocturne of Exploded Crystal Chandelier – Sun Airway

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The first image of Nocturne is two snowflakes adrift on the ocean under moonlight, to indirectly quote singer Jon Barthmus. The image of the lone snowflakes is vast while the glow of the moonlight reflected off the water can actually be heard and felt as warmth within this album. The moon orbits these songs with ever-present waves of angelic undertones and glistening chirps of percussion. 
 
The album opens with the distant and dreamy “Infinity”, which builds into a gossamer mural of sound depicting the snowflakes on the ocean. The album flows effortlessly from song to song, picking up speed on “American West”, a song that sounds as if Julian Cassablancas’ electronic experimentation happened while with The Strokes instead of solo. 
 
The highpoint of the album is centered around the interrelated songs “Oh, Naoko” and “Waiting On You” that are both based on the book “Norwegian Wood” by Japanese author Haruki Murakami. The novel has an air of nostalgia that captures a tragic love story involving the “beautiful yet emotionally troubled” Naoko. These songs again manage to evoke emotional complexity by utilizing delicate, bouncing percussion, ethereal melodic atmosphere and declaratory narration by Barthmus. While Nocturne of Exploded Crystal Chandelier manages to retain a comforting feeling throughout, there are songs that distinguish themselves and prevent the record from bleeding together. This is the case with the bombastic “Shared Piano”that is built on a frantic, staccato piano sample and ebbing vocal clip. The lyrics are witty and imagistic and the music is reminiscent of a more sprawling M83. The album comes to a somewhat cacophonous close with “Five Years” which grows into a collage of motifs before drifting away into silence. 
 
Nocturne of Exploded Crystal Chandelier succeeds in its balance. The emotion pulls at heartstrings but never overwhelms with sentimentality. The beautifully constructed melodies avoid pop clichés by wrapping themselves in intricate sonic blankets. Sun Airway created an extremely focused album that harnesses a tranquil harmony of lush atmosphere and directed song crafting. The album delivers and shows more than a bit of promise for this young project. I expect them to be spending plenty of time in the skies in the near future. You can purchase Nocturne of Exploded Crystal Chandelier by Sun Airway via Dead Oceans here. – Adam G.

Put the Days Away by Sun Airway 

Philadelphia

Join Us at TJ Kong’s Halloween Costume Ball Rock & Roll Murdershow!

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We’ll be busy gettin’ our Halloween on tomorrow so we wanted to give you the schedule for TJ Kong’s Halloween Costume Ball Rock and Roll Murdershow. There will be FREE Spaten beer (maybe some Irish whiskey if you’re lucky), food, costume prizes, dancing, visual art, and much, much more so dress to impress! You can purchase discounted advance tix here or from any of the participating bands. Looking forward to seeing some creative costumes and hearing some good tunes! The Ukie Club, 47 N. Franklin St. (Northern Liberties West Between 7th & 8th and Poplar St.), 2pm – whenevs, $10 adv/$15 door, All AgesThe Deli Staff
 
Set Times:
2:30pm – 3:00pm – FLAMINGO
3:15pm – 3:45pm – THE POWDER KEGS
4:00pm – 4:30pm – BUSSES
4:45pm – 5:15pm – PENROSE
5:30pm – 6:00pm – UGH GOD
6:15pm – 6:45pm – CONVERSATIONS WITH ENEMIES
7:00pm – 7:30pm – THE YES WAY
7:45pm – 8:15pm – CHEERS ELEPHANT
8:30pm – 9:15pm – DA COMRADE!
9:30pm – 10:15pm – PROWLER
10:30pm – 11:15pm – TJ KONG AND THE ATOMIC BOMB
11:30pm – 12:15am – THE SPOOKS
12:30am – 1:15am – TOY SOLDIERS
1:30am – ? – ???
 
Philadelphia

The Making Time/R5 Halloween Freak Out – Part III at The Barbary Oct. 30

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It’s Mischief Night so let’s get into some trouble! Making Time/R5 will be taking over all three floors of The Barbary tonight. They’ll be surrounded by plenty of their friends/the usual suspects spinning what’s near and dear to their hearts. Unfortunately, there is no rad video from Klip Collective to get you into the mood this year so let’s flashback to "Making Time’s Thriller 3000” video (below) from last year to get you feelin’ festive. Also swing by The Ox if you are looking for a little change of scenery (or are just under 21) for their Halloween Funn! The Barbary, 951 N. Frankford Ave., 9pm, $10, 21+ – H.M. Kauffman

Making Time’s Thriller 3000 from Klip Collective

Philadelphia

The Haunting of Fursaxa at Highwire Gallery Oct. 30

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Local native Fursaxa (a.k.a. Tara Burke) conjures up cinematic soundscapes that are mystical and strange. Strange like a séance or a foggy moon-filled night. The ancient sounding intro of “Alone in the Dark Wood” feels like a high-register Gregorian chant, notes bending into twangy strums that settle yet linger like ghosts. There’s something hypnotic and calming in the way the track unfolds, in the way it deconstructs as it progresses, isolating each component with focus and haunting emphasis. Similar to Fever Ray nix the overt dramatics, Fursaxa’s sound exists on the same plane as folklore or myths. Whether it’s the swelling rush of “Cle Elum” or the tolling “Bells of Capistrano”, Fursaxa will entrance you at first listen, note by note each time. Burke will be joined tonight at the Highwire Gallery by The New Heaven and The New Earth, Killa and Vincent Fournier-Boisvert. Highwire Gallery, 2040 Frankford Ave., 8pm, $8, All Ages – Dianca Potts
 
Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, October 29 – 31

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It’s motherfuckin’ Halloween weekend – our absolute favorite time of the year! And to prove it we have 2 extra special events that we will be presenting to you. Tonight our buddies Grimace Federation will be kickin’ off the weekend in style when they celebrate the release of their new EP On Velvet at Johnny Brenda’s with West Philadelphia Orchestra and Univox! (Check out our interview for Where Is My Mind? below with Grimace’s Xack Xweig.) But remember that there will be no rest for the wicked this weekend so we’ll be joining TJ Kong and some of your favorite up-and-coming local artists like The Spooks, Cheers Elephant, Toy Soldiers, and much, much more for the Halloween Costume Ball Rock and Roll Murdershow all day and night this Sunday at The Ukie Club! We will also have a very special headliner that will be taking you into the AM. This evening is going to rock, and we are already sitting around in our costumes waiting. The FREE Spaten Beer will be flowing like water, and there will also be food, costume prizes, dancing, fire, virgin sacrifices, and sexy ladies and gents! Tix are $10 in advance and $15 at the door. You can purchase them in advance here or from any of the participating bands. Let’s get ready to get freaky! Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 9pm, $10, 21+; The Ukie Club, 847 N. Franklin St. (Northern Liberties West Between 7th & 8th and Poplar St.), 2pm – whenevs, $10 adv/$15 door, All Ages

Other things to help you get in trouble or laid…

Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI Hot Guts, SAT Mr. Unloved
 
North Star Bar (2639 Poplar St.) SAT Hong Kong Stingray and The Crooks, SUN Ruder Than You
 
The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) FRI The Fractals, SAT Kevin James Devine, SUN Cowmuddy
 
M Room (15 W. Girard Ave.) FRI Goodnight Lights, The Quelle Source, Long Walk Home
 
Tritone (1508 South St.) SAT The Midnight Beat and The Tulanes, SUN The Wallace Brothers Band
 
Millcreek Tavern (4200 Chester Ave.) FRI Conversation with Enemies, The Josh and Pete Band, Eat Your Birthday Cake
 
Tin Angel (20 S. 2nd St.) FRI Victoria Spaeth
 
The Trocadero (1003 Arch St.) FRI Jedi Mind Tricks, Freeway, Reef The Lost Cauze Freeway, SAT CKY
 
The Ox (2nd and Oxford St.) SAT Halloween Funn
 
Highwire Gallery (2040 Frankford Ave.) SAT Fursaxa, The New Heaven and The New Earth, SUN  Tadoma
 
JR’s Bar (2327 S. Croskey St.) SAT McRad
 
World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) SUN (Downstairs) Matt Duke, (Upstairs) Drink Up Buttercup, Screwjack, Levee Drivers
 
The Blockley Pourhouse (3801 Chestnut St.) FRI Illinois, SAT Phillybloco, SUN Sean Hoots, The Spinning Leaves, Hezekiah Jones, Chirs Kaspar
 
Fergie’s (1214 Sansom St.) FRI New Pony
 
Connie’s Ric Rac (1132 S. 9th St.) FRI Dani Mari CD Release Party
 
The Barbary (951 N. Frankford St.) FRI Making Time/R5 Halloween Freak Out!
 
Philadelphia

Where Is My Mind?: Grimace Federation’s Xack Xweig

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When it comes to local post rock outfits, Grimace Federation is certainly a staple in the Philly music community pushing the boundaries in their experimental genre. Tonight at Johnny Brenda’s they’ll be celebrating the release of their latest EP On Velvet. The album is as smooth as its fabric namesake, and those velvety sounds can be largely attributed to the massive vibraphone that multi-instrumentalist Xack Xweig hauls around with a full drum kit, keyboards and his mountain bike sidekick. We had a chance to chat with Grimace vibist Xack Xweig about opening for and meeting the members of Tortoise, how you shouldn’t ask them about getting a singer, plans for a remix EP and all things Grimace. You can check out the interview here.
 
Philadelphia

Jedi Mind Tricks, Freeway and Reef The Lost Cauze at The Troc Oct. 29

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The revolutionary Philly Hip Hop vets Jedi Mind Tricks are coming out of woodwork to storm The Troc tonight. JMT have been working the game since the early 90’s with the dark and evocative beats of Stoupe the Enemy of Mankind and the gruff, socially conscious rhymes of legend Vinnie Paz. His voice is grizzled yet confident and has a sense of urgency that makes you cling to every word. Paz dropped the JMT moniker for his new album Season of The Assassin, but it is essentially a JMT record without the pressure of JMT expectations. That does not mean it doesn’t deliver, instead it shows Paz in a natural and pensive state that may not have been possible as JMT. On this new album Paz teamed up with another Philly legend in Freeway who will also be on the bill tonight. Not only does that make for some rad on stage collaboration opportunities that is nearly inevitable, but also you will be treated to some slick technical wordplay and one of the best beards in Philly. And there are a lot of beards in Philly. In fact, hopefully so many guys will be taken down a notch and get rid of their pathetic whiskers when they get home. Along for the ride is Philly Hip Hop’s “best kept secret” Reef The Lost Cauze who we soon hope will be a secret no more. Don’t miss this night of epic Philly Hip Hop to reaffirm the fact that there is actually an underground rap game still alive. Just wish that there were more venues for it. The Trocadero, 1003 Arch St., $20 adv/$22 door, All Ages  – Adam G.