Archive for June, 2011

Foxtails Brigade – Live in Studio B

Category: Blog · 0
 

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Foxtails Brigade present an ornate kind of
chamber pop, intricate violin and cello arrangements are anchored by
Laura Weinbach’s intricately played classical guitar and pitch perfect
vocals. But underneath the  simple melodies lie an impeding darkness, a
lyrical landscape populated by shadowy and bizarre characters, rife with
hints of rot, aging, and death.

The Hollywood Hills-born daughter of a cult filmmaker and sister of offbeat stand-up comedian Brent Weinbach,
Laura grew up in a musical household that embraced eccentricity. Her
next-door neighbors were circus contortionists with emus and
fang-toothed monkeys as pets and her childhood activities included snail
hunting and spying on celebrity neighbors like Slash, Ice-T and Larry
from Perfect Strangers. While her mother, an accomplished
pianist, taught the children piano, her father had a more unique
approach to musical education:

“When I’d get in trouble as a kid, my father would punish me with
cassette tapes,” Laura recalls. “He would make me mixes of all his
favorite jazz singers like Billie Holiday, Blossom Dearie, June Kristie
and Edith Piaf and tell me that if I could learn all these songs and
sing them back to him just like they did on the recordings then I could
go out and play with my friends. I’d run to my room and start
memorizing. When I was done, I’d sing them all back to him through a
little Pig Nose amplifier that we got at a garage sale.”

The method paid off. Much later, these same songs would form the core
of Laura’s repertoire as she busked the streets of Paris, her home for
half a year. Eight years of classical guitar training along with
literature and music degrees from UC Santa Cruz were coming to fruition.
Likewise, her off-beat childhood and post-graduate experiences as a
substitute teacher would provide a wealth of ideas for compositions of
her own.

Laura started Foxtails Brigade in 2006 with her friend, violinist
Sivan Sadeh. She moved to San Francisco a year later, playing every club
and street corner and she could find. It wasn’t long before the city
started to notice. She quit her day job as a substitute teacher in 2009
and has been a full-time performer ever since, sharing stages with Faun FablesChris Garneau and Bart Davenport amongst others. She has collaborated with a number of talented musicians in Foxtails Brigade, including cellists Jen Grady (Emily Jane WhiteAdam Stevens), Robin Reynolds and Lewis Patzner (Mates of State, Tim Kasher), and multi-instrumentalist Joshua Pollock (CitayBob Saggeth). Her most recent musical partner is violinist and arranger Anton Patzner of Bright Eyes and Judgement Day.

 

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Moby: “The Day” Music Video

Category: New Releases · 0
 

Anji Bee has Moby’s video for The Day on episode 61 of Chillcast Video.

Richard Mellville “Moby” Hall began playing classical guitar before he was ten years old, moving on to learn piano and drums as well. Although his certainly wasn’t the first electronic music to ever hit the pop charts, he has achieved an international stardom that is rare in any genre, particularly Electronica. His 1999 album Play remains one of the largest-selling Electronica albums ever, and the single South Side made Moby a household name. Through the years, he has remained true to his own musical vision while he has worked tirelessly toward promoting humanitarian causes and animal rights.

His tenth studio album, Destroyed, was released on May 11th. The album art was shot by Moby himself at LaGuardia  Airport during a flight delay.

In an interview with Stereoboard UK, Moby had this to say about the first single released from the album, The Day.

The Day was written in a hotel room in Spain at dawn when I hadn’t slept. I wrote it on an acoustic guitar and recorded it on my phone, brought it home and re-recorded it with old broken down electronics that I have in my studio.

The song has been described as a deeply personal reflection on “the dark night of the soul.”

And as Anji mentions, yes, indeed – that is Heather Graham appearing in the video.

Watch Chillcast Video 61 here.

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Motley Crue Computer Glitch Causes Problems on Stage

Category: Blog, On Tour · 0
 

If you’ve been to a major concert in the past few years you’ve no doubt seen a high tech light show complete with awesome video images projected onto LCD panels.

Most of these performances are controlled by a Macbook computer from either the soundboard or from behind the stage.

Occasionally there can be a glitch on the computer and if, like me, you like to see things go less than perfect at concerts, then last night’s Motley Crue show in San Francisco was a real treat.

Their video guy was having all kinds of problems with his setup last night. I noticed at least 2 kernel panics on the screen.

A kernel panic is an action taken by an operating system upon detecting an internal fatal error from which it cannot safely recover. The term is largely specific to Unix and Unix-like systems; for Microsoft Windows operating systems the equivalent term is “Bug check” (or, colloquially, “Blue Screen of Death“).

On a Mac, you get a message like this one:

Check out Tommy Lee’s otherwise awesome drum solo from last night’s show.

At the 37 second mark, the kernel panic occurs and the video screen displays the kernel panic error message.

 

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The One Am Radio – Live in Studio B

Category: Blog · 0
 

Dangerbird recording artists The One Am Radio perform live in Studio B of Mevio in San Francisco
 

The One AM Radio is a trio based in Los Angeles, where the sun
hasn’t completely thawed their New England roots. They make music about
the feeling you get while driving home, fast, late at night, through
half-empty streets.

The project began in New England, where Hrishikesh Hirway was
studying design and photography at Yale. With a borrowed guitar, a
4-track, and a drum machine, he made cassettes for his friends and his
sister to fall asleep to—instrumental lullabies mixed with staticky
murmurs of talk radio.

Hirway started writing lyrics and singing over his music, and began
performing, using what he’d written on the label on the first cassette —
“The One AM Radio” — as a moniker.

Ted Leo gave Hrishikesh his real start and his first release, after
the two played a show together, inviting him to come record in Boston at
Radium City, Ted’s home recording studio. Those recordings were
released as a split 7-inch with Ted Leo and the Pharmacists.

Because of Hrishikesh’s musical roots, The One AM Radio became an unlikely part of the DIY
hardcore scene, playing and touring alongside screamy punk bands in
sweaty basements. The homemade recordings were released in the form of
EPs and 7”s on a variety of hardcore labels, as well as Hirway’s own DIY imprint, Translucence.

By the time 2004’s A Name Writ In Water was released, people
outside of the hardcore community had started to take notice. Pitchfork
reviewed the album glowingly, giving it an 8.1 rating, noting “Hirway’s
prose is peppered with imagistic bits of landscape. His compositions
simply feel colossal…the maps he draws are beautiful.” Time Out New York
deemed it one of the top ten albums of the year, and called the “dream
mix of vocals, guitars, synths, violins, and ambient beats…both lush and
thoughtful.”

That year, between touring and working odd jobs and freelancing as a
designer, Hirway began a nomadic lifestyle, criss-crossing the country
in his car, with his belongings limited to what could fit in his trunk.
He eventually left the US to spend time in his parents’ home country of
India, and began writing and recording what would become the album This Too Will Pass while living in Mumbai.

Hirway found himself back in Los Angeles, where he had once lived
briefly, but long enough to fall in and collaborate with the likes of
Daedelus and the dublab crew, the online radio collective at the heart
of the LA experimental electronic scene. This time, shedding the
wanderlust that had guided him for so long, he decided to try and make
the city his home.

There, he made the acquaintance of the folks at Dangerbird Records, who signed him to release This Too Will Pass.

Los Angeles proved to be a fertile and fortuitous home base for
Hirway, as a place where he could continue his unique aesthetic among a
collection of luminaries who were like-minded if not exactly
like-sounding. He remixed tracks for Jimmy Tamborello (of Dntel and the
Postal Service) and LA beat-scene breakout star Baths, who had been a
longtime fan of The One AM Radio. He produced two albums for labelmates
Eulogies, and played shows with folks like Juana Molina, El Perro Del
Mar, and Damien Jurado when they came through town.

Hrishikesh started making Heaven Is Attached by a Slender Thread
during sleepless nights. Tony Hoffer, who has produced albums for Beck,
Phoenix, Belle and Sebastian, and Air, ended up hearing demos of some
of the early songs and reached out to get involved with the recording.
Hoffer took an the role of an advisor, and Hirway would send him his
hand-crafted organic electronic songs. Hoffer eventually mixed the
album. Baths and his fellow anticon labelmate alias contributed as well,
to the songs “Ticking Heart” and “Weathering (The News),” respectively.
Hirway’s new bandmates, Fontaine Cole and Scott Leahy, added to the
recordings, as well as Daniel Hart, the violinist for St Vincent.

For Hirway, the new LP is about living on the fumes of dreams and
hopes, which also happen to be what the plastic city of Los Angeles is
built on, and what it is constantly confirming—and betraying. At one
point, Hrishikesh’s idea was to make a dance record, and now, he admits,
that’s not really how it turned out. But the album does make you want
to move, to run, to get in the car and drive fast through the empty city
in the middle of the night — to remember how tenuous the hold is on all
the things you have, and want, and long for.

 

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Artist vs. Poet Interview

Category: Interviews · 0
 

Jackie and Martina interview Tarcy, Austin and Joe of Artist vs. Poet on Emo Girl TV.

Originally conceived by Tarcy Thomason as an acoustic project, the group quickly morphed into a full-on band.

We went into the studio to record some stuff and our producer was like “hey, what if we put some drums in this,” and we said “okay, let’s try something out.” – Tarcy Thomason

The group was formed in late 2007, and has since been named by Alternative Press named as one of “The 100 Bands You Need To Know.”

Artist vs. Poet has released three EPs – Alive Once Again (2007), Artist vs. Poet (2008) and Damn Rough Night (2009). Their first full-length studio album, Favorite Fix, came out last year on Fearless Records. They’ve also recorded a killer version of Lady Gaga’s Bad Romance for the compilation Punk Goes Pop.

Follow Artist vs. Poet on Twitter @ArtistVsPoet.

Watch the full interview here.

 

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