Greenkeepers make some of the most creative videos in town, and the video for “Lotion” has always been their strangest.
Sleep Out on Daytrotter
It’s been awhile since Daytrotter has featured a Chicago band, but I was pleasantly surprised to find a new session from Sleep Out on the site today. It was the summer of 2008 that Sleep Out released their second album Not Even Dust. This session features two songs from that album, and two previously unreleased songs.
Sleep Out will be performing on December 5th at Beat Kitchen with Field Music and Canasta.
Gilead7 and I.B. Fokuz
ADVENT: A Modern Bible is the new album from emcee Gilead7 (G7) and producer I.B. Fokuz. The album will be released in December by The Secret Life of Sound, but to give you a taste of this epic project DJ Seanile has skillfully arranged a mix of the album. The goal of the ADVENT series is to snatch the ethics of several religious traditions and philosophies and show how they relate to issues of ecology, politics, racial identity, class, and the esoteric practice of spirituality. In other words, ADVENT takes in the way of the modern world as it is, and gives back to you an up to date natural way of life by which one can (they believe) create positive evolution within it. This is a message of hope during a time of need. This one makes a place for all religious or non-religious positions, its creed encompassing the most devout Hindu to the nihilistic atheist. Justice for all creation and responsibility for those other than oneself are the only non-negotiable factors. However, these boys since have fun, and absolutely have some crazy skills. This is a personal journey that these two have chosen to share with the city they love and with the world.
You can grab Seanile’s mix here (mp3) and keep an eye out for the album at TSLOS.
Album Review – Stomacher: Sentimental Education

The San Francisco 5 piece, Stomacher, sounds like they listen to a lot of Radiohead. The first CD under their new moniker (the band was formerly known as In Reverent Fear) plays like what could be a more commercial Radiohead record from a few years ago. Jarrod Taylor’s vocal style sounds like a more angsty Thom Yorke without being a complete rip off. His voice carries the songs with a slow and relaxed delivery, at times layering with itself to create a lush blanket of voices.Sentimental Education has a very diverse 10 songs, constantly varying in tempo and arrangement without making the songs feel out of place.
Stomacher sounds more at home with the slower more sparse songs on Sentimental Education. “The Devil” features a lush organ sound, twinkling electronics, and a bed of strings slowly brewing for three and a half minutes below the high and slow vocal. The album closer “Untitled/Dark Divider” has a consistent acoustic guitar rhythm and a catchy yet relaxing electric guitar melody. The song builds but never becomes overly epic, rather blurring itself into a murky mess, drowning Jarrod’s voice before returning again to its original form.
Sentimental Education may at times sounds a little too much like it’s influences but never the less is still impressive.
-Glenn Jackson
Stomacher play Bottom of the Hill Saturday, December 19th with Mata Leon and Halfway.
Geographer to play Slim’s
Geographer‘s Innocent Ghosts is one of the ear catching gems from 2009. Their latest single Kites, available on vinyl only from Tricycle Records, features a dreamy and angelic cover version of New Order’s Age of Consent as a b-side. Naturally, The Deli SF was excited to hear that Geographer will begin to wind down the year by opening for 25 year rock veterans Poi Dog Pondering at Slim’s on Friday December 4th.
-Nicole
Album Review – Impediments

The Impediments are four young rockers from Berkeley (High School that is). Their debut self-titled CD holds nothing back, furiously pumping their punky garage rock from beginning to end almost sounding like a reissue of a forgotten record from the late 70s punk rock scene, but not quite. Which is a good thing! The production of Greg Ashley fits the music well without sounding like a complete copy of the music that it was influenced by. A heavy bed of murky bass and drums and the occasional piano leave room for a complete onslaught of rock guitar riffs and solos as well as some exceptionally humorous and sometimes crude lyrics.
There is an undeniable and unrelenting energy to the eleven songs found on Impediments. If you don’t find yourself tapping along to every part of “Violence” with its, well, badass guitar solo or the simpleness of “You Want a Square” then you probably have no rock and roll in you. This record is way cooler than the music most of us made in high school and the aesthetic sense and musicianship are rather impressive. A great CD from four young guys with probably the coolest record collections at Berkeley High.
Impediments is out now on Happy Parts Recordings.
-Glenn Jackson
Implodes at The Whistler
Over the summer the local cassette label Plus Tapes released a very popular cassette from noise rockers Implodes. The cassette was so popular that in September the label had to print up a second run. Their brand of rock falls in line with those bands that deal in sonic exploration and developing complex layers of noise and melody. Their songs have this loose structure that lends itself nicely to live sets that turn into fields of white noise and haze. Matt Jencik, Ken Camden, Emily Elhaj, and Justin Rathell all play distinct roles in the band, but when performing or recording everything seems to melt together into a wall of music that is a forceful and seductive as anything I’ve heard this year.
You can feel the noise in person this Monday at The Whistler (just Matt & Ken) or on December 6th at Empty Bottle with Magical Beautiful and Above/Below Sea Level.
Five Questions with: Blisses B

Noah from Blisses B is under the microscope this week. The San Francisco folk rockers fist LP You Should was released earlier this year.
What food item best describes your music?
Macaroni and Cheese. It’s something we can all eat and agree on, random cheeses too please.
What instrument have you wanted to include but have yet to find a way to fit into your sound?
Pedal Steel Guitar. I own one but we haven’t incorporated it into any songs yet. Nick, Ben and I were fiddling with it last practice and it is coming off the bench soon.
Embarrassing childhood memory?
Fracturing my elbow chasing Rod the Ice Cream Man. People get such a kick out of the story, all I got was a scar on my right arm that grew with me into adulthood.
What musical artist would you like to grab a beer with?
Bill Withers. He has been an integral part of my whole life, some of my first memories were bobbing my head to his cassette tapes in the backseat of my parents car.
And finally, time travel or space travel?
Space travel. Any direction/length of time is fine. I get the feeling the take off part would be my favorite part…
If your band has answers to The Deli’s Five Questions forward them to sfeditor@thedelimagazine.com.
-Nicole
Railcars play all ages show at Thee Parkside tomorrow!

The Deli SF has received a transmission from the San Francisco band Railcars. Transmission can be seen below:
railcars has a show @ thee parkside, which is a super rare ALL AGES show @ thee parkside (that hardly ever happens there.) and its on nov 19th. its @ the end of our 8 week US tour.
this will be railcars, ONLY show in san francisco for all of 2009 AND 2010.
::end of transmission::
You heard it here folks, an all ages show and the last one the band will be doing in SF until 2011.Samuelroy, Pregnant and Felt Drawings also play. 6 bucks. Consider your calenders informed.
-Nicole
B and Not B break the law in a rented U-Haul van
San Francisco’s B and Not B hauled themselves all over the Mission playing Led Zeppelin’sImmigrant Song out of a rented van. They documented it and have managed to generate a pretty decent amount of buzz.
B and Not B’s record is due out soon but in the meantime, check out their site, sign up for their mailing list and get a sneek peek with a free Mp3.
Also, on a similar note, they’ve also helped me deal with the PTSD that came after seeing this same song used in the trailer for the 3rd Shrek movie. Thanks guys!
-Nicole
The Deli SF sponsors SFxSD

This Saturday, November 21st at El Rio The Deli SF is proud to sponsor SFxSD!
SFxSD was created to put a spotlight on the indie bands from San Francisco and San Diego that are constantly touring to each others cities. The 2nd annual SFxSD features some of the top bands from both cities playing together all day long at a festival with an outdoor and indoor stage, free BBQ, drink specials, live silkscreening (Studio Nico) with BYOS (bring your own shirt) grab bag give-aways and tons of good music. The lineup features Music For Animals (SF) Transfer (SD) Lilofee (SF)Butterfly Bones (SF) Long Live Logos (SD) Lucky Jesus (SF) and DJ X Boyfriend – Presented by SF Pubcrawl and sponsored by the Deli SF, Littlebook, SF Intercom, Studio Nico, San Franpsycho and Kung Fu Tacos.
See you there!
-Nicole
Album Review – 60-Watt Kid: We Came From the Bright Side

If schizophrenia had a sound it might well be said that 60-Watt Kid’s We Came From the Bright Sidecomes close to capturing it. Perhaps that is too loaded of a term, but listening to the album as it wanders through a soundscape with no clear referents to time and space, ebbing and flowing in erratic changes, the cavernous sound definitely culls a certain sense of madness. This can be a dangerous attribute for music but 60-Watt Kid implores this dissonance very effectively throughout this album.
Music such as this conjures up distinct similarities to the sonic experimentations of bands such as Animal Collective (a band I personally take issue with). Experimentation in this vein can be a precarious place for musicians to stand. On the one hand there is the experimentation that is far to readily granted a band (such as Animal Collective) that ventures into the territory of weird for the sake of being weird; the function being a means to garner credential in a community that desires to define itself as an opposition to a mainstream sound, forsaking musical communication for a chance to be an avant-garde that in reality generates nothing newer than a desire to be an unqualifiable outsider. In the other there is a genuine use of complexity that doesn’t revel in it’s own quirkiness but actually pushes the boundaries of sound while still being able to reach a listener using something of the conventional. The tension between these two really begs the question of how as musicians can we strive towards the avant-garde without the pretension of forsaking association with the audience for the ideologically pure weird?
We Came From the Bright Side sits in a comfortable balance in this spectrum. It embodies it’s own complexity but still holds on to a sense of melody and convention. Divorcing itself certainly from one convention, 60-Watt Kid’s music is mostly not centered around the lyrics. The narrative of the music is conveyed primarily through the feeling and tenor, with the lyrics taking more of a secondary role as yet another instrument and sound. With that in mind it seems more appropriate to discuss and understand We Came From the Bright Side through it’s movements. Opening with “2012,” the album launches itself into its ethereal tonality and lays out what is perhaps one of the likely recurrent themes of the album: the warmth of connection amidst the cold repetitive of the sound of technology… well maybe.
The album continues from here ascending in a scattered meteoric rise into it’s eerie outsider sound with the title track “We Came From the Bright Side.” The driving guitar line and explosive bursts of electronic accents lurch the listener upward and onward on this chaotic voyage.
Following the somewhat glorious sounding ascension, the album takes a disturbing turn into tension with the aptly title track “Pressure.” Whatever levity the beginning of the journey may have had becomes tainted with a tangible amount of awkwardness and the weight of the album’s own madness becomes disconcerting. There is some tenderness in this discomfort but a certain menace lingers about the middle of the album, breaking for it’s inevitable crash with the equally appropriately named “2012 Breakdown.” The frenzied journey comes crashing down like a space ship rapidly descending from orbit, and we are left stranded somewhere tranquil, far from the lunacy that brought us here.
All in all I’d say We Came From the Bright Side is a remarkable success. It’s thoroughly engaging and a real pleasure to listen to from beginning to end. It is engaging enough to engender something of a cosmic and conflicted adventure burdened by the insanity of technology. Take some time to yourself to sit down with this album and listen to the celestial madness of the space it drags you to.
-Ada Lann