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Monthly Archive for June, 2008

Sitar-Guitar for Sale

Stumbled upon this dude randomly. It’s SOMEHOW a sitar-guitar, sold by Jerry Jones Guitars in Nashville, TN. Known as the Coral, JJ goes into detail concerning this aesthetically unattractive but fascinating instrument: “The Coral Sitar was such a defining sound of the 60s and with our refinements you will feel like you have returned to those days. Our precision made sitar Buzz bridge produces that now familiar whirring sound and provides for accurate string intonation. The 13 sympathetic strings can be tuned in a variety of ways and can be played as accompaniment. Sizzling tone great for stage or studio.”

guitarsitar Sitar-Guitar for Sale

And it can be mine (or yours) or a little over a big one. If only it didn’t look so dorky. I mean, really, the textured design looks like the cover of a Trapper Keeper.

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Pitchfork Music Festival 2K8 Set Times Revealed

pitchfork Pitchfork Music Festival 2K8 Set Times Revealed

The world’s most affordable summer festival, Pitchfork Music Festival right here in Chicago, is certainly a favorite of mine. If I remember correctly, 312s are only, like, $4 (muy bueno). The schedule was just released this morning, so I figured it would be poignant to post the set times for the shows that the Decibel Tolls is stoked/pscyhed/pumped for (a.k.a. relevant to this blog).

For the psych rock and psych pop fan, here is your personalized schedule:

Saturday:

1:25 – A Hawk and a Handsaw – Balance Stage
2:00 – Caribou – Connector Stage
2:20 – Icy Demons – Balance Stage
4:15 – The Ruby Suns – Balance stage
8:25 – No Age – Balance Stage
9:00 – Animal Collective – Aluminum Stage

Sunday

1:30 – Dirty Projectors – Aluminum Stage
2:00 – Boris – Connector Stage
3:00 – The Apples in Stereo – Aluminum Stage
7:00 – Spiritualized – Aluminum Stage
8:00 – Dinosaur Jr – Connector Stage

Obviously, the artist to watch during PMF2K8 is Spiritualized, as it’s been a looong time since we’ve seen the J Spaceman in action, and it’s entirely possibly that he will bring a 30+ member band with him to reproduce some of the nauseatingly thick rock action of Ladies and Gentlemen We are Floating in Space. Though I’m sure, since everyone has shorter set times anyway, that he’ll be focusing more on the equally excellent but more minimal Songs in A & E, I just have a feeling that Pierce & Co. is going to bring something really special to the table on Sunday evening. I’ve seen/booked a number of these bands before, so I’ll offer previews closer to the festival dates.

chirprecordfair Pitchfork Music Festival 2K8 Set Times Revealed

I will be working the CHIRP Record Fair part of the time, so please stop by to see us. Lots of crusty old records sold by even crustier dudes, as well as new jam hives, will be available, and a bunch of reps from Drag City, Thrill Jockey, et al. will be hanging out and slamming their free bottled water privileges. There will be tons of tables, so you can’t miss us (we might be the festival’s largest vendor). Plus, it’ll be nice to get out of the sun (the fair is held under a bunch of open air canopy tents). Proceeds will benefit CHIRP building an LPFM station in Chicago. We’ll have free schwag, too. LPFM is the new movement, so get hip.

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The Black Angels – Directions to See a Ghost

This was originally written for the CHIRP blog when the album came out about a month ago. So, yeah, this is old news, but I’m posting it on here anyway for your consideration and to consolidate all of my writing in one place. Enjoy!

directionsghost The Black Angels - Directions to See a Ghost

The Black Angels are neither original nor inventive. But in this case, it’s a-okay, and I’m gonna do something that rarely happens in a world of snarky blogs: make an argument for why derivative can sometimes be a preferred position and why the Black Angels are, in fact, the bee’s knees.

In Captain Beefhart’s Ten Commandments for Guitarists, he decrees that a guitar “is a divining rod, use it to find spirits in the other world and bring them over.” The Black Angels take this sentiment to heart, as both their efforts bolster a rather sinister grit bouncing about dark soundscapes, perfect for a séance. Light a candle, dude.

The Black Angels‘ latest, Directions to See a Ghost, a poignant title encapsulating their increasingly distinct desert-noir dusty psych grooves, picks up right where 2006’s Passover left off. Tom-heavy percussion intros, tremolo-saturated guitar meltdowns, nasty bass rumbles, and Alex Maas’ throat offerings (vocals that, to me, flutter somewhere between Jim James and Gregorian chant) are all still intact from the Passover days. However, Directions to See a Ghost does mature in two distinct ways. First, there’s a very fluid motion to the album, connecting each windswept canticle to the next. By structuring and composing most of the album in a similar vein with slightly altering moods, the Black Angels have created a whole, cohesive work as opposed to simply a collection of songs they dropped off at the studio on the way to the store. Of course, a good psych rock record should have a consistent ambiance as per the clientele since, you know, Beck albums are not the weapon of choice for the 420 LOL contingent. Secondly, the Black Angels have adopted a deeper sense of melody. Dare I say some catchiness abounds in the major-key call to arms “Doves,” the evil-Beatles sitar raga of “Dee-Ree-Shee,” and the funkadelic first movement of “Snake in the Grass.” This newmelodic slant pushes the Black Angels above some of their LSD theater contemporaries like Dead Meadow and Bardo Pond.

Now, onto why derivative sometimes holds a relevant place. Every critic has already namedropped their extremely obvious influences (they unabashedly wear them on the sleeves of their black, black tunics), so I’m not going to sift through them all. As a serious psych rock lover, many of my favorite bands only made a small number of great albums, or simply have a small catalogue entirely. Some of these groups suffered from their brainchild going batshit crazy (13th Floor Elevators, Syd Barrett/Pink Floyd, Brian Jonestown Massacre). Some of them decided to completely alter their sound to push units (The Jesus and Mary Chain). Some retreated back into their primordial cave (Loop, Flying Saucer Attack, The Left Banke, half of the original shoegazing movement). Some were too drugged out to get off the couch (Blue Cheer). Seriously, pick your Spinal Tap moment. But here we now have The Black Angels who, in some ways, are like the deus ex machina sweeping in (no pun intended) to correct all these wrongs – releasing the album that many of these bands should have but never did. Don’t you want to hear the new 13th Floor Elevators and Jesus and Mary Chain joints? ‘Cause I do.

Ultimately, If you’re going to emulate and lightly interpret bygone music, why not merge the music of the most triumphant groups ever and mold them into one totally epic behemoth? You know, originality often comes at a cost to the listener. Sometimes it works well and makes an urgent statement, but sometimes it doesn’t and is just overly challenging and annoying (Lou Reed and Tony Conrad anyone?). You know exactly what you’re getting with the Black Angels – no frills – just pop on, flip on the iTunes visualizer, take a bong rip, tune in, turn on, and drop out. And honestly, THAT is what I love the most about Directions to See a Ghost. Despite Directions to See a Ghost being released long after the most vital era of psych, it’s essential listening.

MP3 :::
The Black Angels – Dee Shee Ree

blackangelslogo The Black Angels - Directions to See a Ghost

Nice Nico photo, eh? And it’s all up ons with the Brian Jonestown logo. As a matter of fact, the Black Angels are part of the BJM’s Committee to Keep Music Evil, featuring all the neighborhood groups that have either been in the BJM, hang out with the BJM, or are just very big fans. It’s all about community. I can only imagine what their company softball outings are like.

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New and Free Design

New and free design coming soon, as in, this week. Working on it right now. When it’s up, I’ll have a couple of more introductory posts, then jump into some content I’m currently collecting. See you on the other side.

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Wilkommen

Sure, puns are corny, but this is more clever than the last name I thought of. And ya know, everyone names their blog after a song or lyric that gives the author a burnin’ in his or her loins. I wanted this to be different. And if you think the name is dumbtarded, well, so are the namesakes of Echo and the Bunnymen and West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band. Bad names abound, but as far as what’s in a name – not much. It dictates nothing. Regardless…

My name is Michael, and I hope that The Decibel Tolls will become a definitive neo-psych, classic psych, shoegazing, krautrock, baroque pop, no wave, ambient blog. But it also might not. COULD GO EITHER WAY. Regardless, if the jams boast tons of reverb, speak to the bong contingent, and yet still maintain some structure, you’ll find ‘em here hopefully. Combing through the Intarwebz, there’s not a huge arsenal of blogs devoted to these genres, and that is no bueno, mah friennn. You can find tons of indie pop and indie rock blogs, but the weirdos aren’t always getting their due. It’s about time for an up-to-date, comprehensive blog devoted exclusively to this music. Any posts that deviate from this focal point will be noted as such.

I currently live in Chicago, and hope to report on tons of shows and utilize my residence in a music city to post information as it becomes available. Not only do I play music myself, but I also have intimate (but not carnal) knowledge of the music industry, having worked as a booking agent and venue promoter for 2.5 years, and having been involved in college radio for four or so years. If I was smart, I would’ve started this blog a long time ago when I was extremely involved in music and had access to tens of thousands of records. I hope to jump back into it soon, and get my thousand yard stare back.

In the next week, look for my Black Angels review, why the Left Banke’s lack of fame (and publishing) is an utter tragedy, why I’m a moron for neglecting to bringing my camera to the Silver Apples show, and various noise consultations. Also look for a new site design. It’s gonna slam.

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