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Maserati Coming to Louisville, Like, Next Week

l_0c4913b7a1b90da02f7b76c5afea4eac Maserati Coming to Louisville, Like, Next Week

Have ya’llz voted yet in LEO’s Readers Choice? You should. That way, you can vote for this site for best music blog, and you can vote for Joel Hunt for best concert promoter. Jesus Lord, dude just brought the noise and the funk again with a last minute confirmation from the oft-reclusive Maserati!

A lot of so-called “post rock” that came about after its late ’90s heyday is rather boring drivel. Maserati is one of the few that keep the genre intriguing and amazing. While Mogwai sort of fell off after Mr. Beast, Maserati keep things fresh with a driving force by amalgamating everything from kraut and psych, to eastern mysticism, intense rhythms, and just plain well-crafted rock and roll. It’s not just the same tension-and-release song and dance that put instrumental psych rock on the map, Maserati have chops and an entrepreneurial spirit rarely employed these days. Maserati tour in support of their latest compilation Passages.

Louisville-based loud-as-fuck collective and recent Temporary Residence inductees Young Windows and The Gentialmen open.

Maserati with Young Window and The Gentialmen
Tuesday, September 15
Doors 9 p.m. / Show 10 p.m.
Zanzabar, Louisville (map that shizz)
21+

MP3 :::
Maserati – Join Us, Mystic Sister / No More Sages

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Destination Tokyo, Indeed

l_90a042af9d61e0a4ee454047c436ca4c Destination Tokyo, Indeed

These chicks window shopping for guitars happen to belong to a sick new collective known as Nisennenmondai. Well, they’re not new new. They formed ten years ago. But they’re new to us, and their sound is definitely a delightful breath of fresh air.

Nisennenmondai is a three-piece hypnotic post rock group led by three (incidentally attractive) young Japenese women… so it seems a lot of geeks’ prayers were answered, no? But enough with the superficial facets, Sayaka Himeno, Yuri Zaikawa, and Masako Takada have serious chops. Somewhere between no wave, kraut, and funky math rock, strattling the median between Faust and Don Caballero, lies Nisennenmondai. But, and this is important, Nisennenmondai do not sound exactly like any of the aforementioned – they’re still brining something decidedly fresh to the table. Their debut Destination Tokyo was recorded in the fall of 2007, but thanks to megafans like Gang Gang Dance, Battles, No Age, and Hella, the groups is getting their jams released domestically, as well as a lot of exposure.

With full motorik rhythm in tow and mesmeric, snaky, twiling guitar melodies flying gently above the surface, this is serious get shit done music. Pipe the title track through your headphone technology and go for a jog.

Nisennenmondai is on MySpazz of course, and Destination Tokyo is available now via Smalltown Supersound.

For fans of:  Battles, Ciccone Youth, This Heat, Faust

MP3 :::
Nisennenmondai – Mirrorball
Nisennenmondai – Destination Tokyo

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Insane Venezuelan Psychedelic Post Rock for Your Thursday Afternoon

l_885cb61f9cfa484cbc676b754ea23959 Insane Venezuelan Psychedelic Post Rock for Your Thursday Afternoon

It was extremely interesting talking with Mario Anzola of Captan, Obvio over email. Captan, Obvio comes to us from Caracas, Venezuela, where Mario says there is virtually no appreciation for any sort of musical experimentation. In essence, these guys are on their own. This information totally intrigued me to listen to this record. What I found was music that was very similar in sound and approach to the scene in which I currently reside – Louisville, and its historic post-rock period, from 4,000 miles away!

Though the band cites classic psychedelic influences, Wachu Min takes pages out of the books of June of 44 and Rodan. Spastic and angular guitar interplay, moods rife with paranoia, tinty electronic textures, and an improvisational attitude dominate Wachu Min. If the following tracks sound rather cohesive, they should. Captan, Obvio recorded this record in a single day and session, which you don’t hear of too often (Electrelane’s Axes was the last album I can think of produced this way).

Captan, Obvio is on MySpazz right over here.

MP3 :::
Captan, Obvio – Espeis Reis Estartop
Captan, Obvio – De lo anterior salió algo

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Tortoise – Beacons of Ancestorship

41KCRuNhHuL._SS500_ Tortoise - Beacons of Ancestorship

Iconic “post-rock” group Tortoise is set to release their first album in roughly five years this June. I hardly need to explain to our well versed readers the significance of this Chicago bred band that has become a household name in post-rock, experimental, electronic and even jazz circles. [Editor's Note: be sure to peep the sick videos from Tortoise's performance last summer at Louisville's Forecastle Festival here]

When I first read the press release for Beacons of Ancestorship, like many, I scrambled for a pen to mark up June 23rd on my calendar. Sure, press releases are used to create hype and tend to augment the weight of the record and artist, however, conceptually speaking the explanation sounded like Tortoise fans were going to be rewarded.

Like most records in the digital era, Beacons of Ancestorship leaked and the blog wars are well under way. Due to Tortoise’s lack of output and the recent commentary surrounding Beacons, fans and critics have been overwhelmed by the apparent conceptual mystique. Whether you’re a fan, critic or just a Tortoise passerby, Beacons of Ancestorship is likely to leave your brain pulsating to their infectious rhythmic creativity and compositional mastery.

It seems Tortoise tried their best to combine their more recent passion for electronics with the rhythmic variance and jazz influenced riffs most notable on Millions Now Living Will Never Die and TNT. But in case you are one of the few who are tired of the signature Tortoise sound, there is plenty of new imagination on the record: some of it genius, some of it contrived and boring.

tortoise Tortoise - Beacons of Ancestorship

Beacons incorporates a great deal of conceptual development; centered around their loosely jazz inspired riffs and backed by a keen rhythmic consciousness. Subtle world-inspired elements are heard throughout the record, reminding me a bit of Cul De Sac’s China Gate, which fused jazz, world music and prosthetic atonality. Beacons however, is much more approachable than China Gate and lacks the sophisticated manipulation of timbre that experimental groups like Cul De Sac were adept at.

Songs like “Gigantes” and “High Class Slim Came Floatin’ In” are lengthy masterpieces that serve as near perfect examples of Tortoise’s refined conceptual skill. The acute buildup of “Gigantes” layers a brilliantly catchy yet dissonant melody with a minimalist backdrop similar to that of Terry Riley or Steve Reich. The sonic peaks and valleys of “High Class Slim…” eventually mature into a dense, well oiled machine; sounding a lot like Michael Rother on human growth hormones.

After a few listens, reality sets in, and it’s apparent that several of Beacons‘ tracks fail to eclipse the aural magnitude and finesse of the aforementioned tracks. Songs like “Penumbra” and “Northern Something” sound like filler tracks; less layered, less developed and seemingly less thought out. Both of these happen to be short, simple synth led jams. It might just be a personal bias but I’ve always enjoyed Tortoise’s longer jams which have more time to evolve, rather than the shorter, less structurally diverse tunes.

“Yinxianghechengqi” is not only an intriguing name, but it’s also the most atypical (of Tortoise) track on the album. It’s almost like a synth-punk tune, full of Tortoise’s standard melodic mannerisms disguised by grimy synth effects. Towards the end, the edgy synths and rock ‘n roll drums abruptly meet their maker, resulting in an eerie deep space landscape that leads seamlessly into the contemplative “The Fall of Seven Diamonds Plus One.”

Beacons of Ancestorship should give every Tortoise fan a few bits and pieces of post-rocking pleasure, since the record successfully combines and elaborates on their entire discography, while still leaving room for five years of growth. A good deal of the electronic effects and synth samples prove to be a real letdown, however the essence of Tortoise is still present despite a mild surrender to popular novelty devices. Tortoise has accomplished their goals for the record; they created a multi-dimensional album full of both nostalgia and progression, while simultaneously delivering their concept in a distinct fashion. Rest assured, Beacons of Ancestorship manifests Tortoise’s vision and expertise as learned rhythmic and compositional giants.

Beacons of Ancestorship will be available June 23rd via Thrill Jockey and will be touring starting in late May at the following locations:

05.29.09 – Buffalo, NY – Tralf Music Hall
05.30.09 – Brooklyn, NY – The Bell House
05.31.09 – New York, NY – World Financial Center Winter
06.11.09 – Athens, Greece – Synch Festival
07.11.09 – Los Angeles, CA – Troubadour
07.13.09 – San Francisco, CA – Great American Music Hall
07.15.09 – Austin, TX – The Mohawk
07.17.09 – Chicago, IL – Pitchfork Music Festival w/ Jesus Lizard, Built To Spill, Yo La Tengo
07.19.09 – Washington, DC – Black Cat
07.20.09 – Philadelphia, PA – First Unitarian Church
07.24.09 – Tokyo, Japan – Fuji Rock Festival
08.14.09 – St. Malo, France – La Route Du Rock
08.22.09 – Hasselt, Belgium – Pukkelpop

MP3 :::
Tortoise – Gigantes
Tortoise – Yinxianghechengqi

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Meridian Signals Escape Route EP Now Available for Free Download

ms1 Meridian Signals Escape Route EP Now Available for Free Download

Sure, self-promotion might be kinda lame, but I’m excited that I finally got around to releasing this EP. And since I’m giving my jam hive away for free, don’t be hateful.

Meridian Signals is my personal music project that I work on at various intervals – whenever I have some free time and feel productive. Meridian Signals combines three musical ideas I really like – lots of reverb, subtle melodic qualities under thick textures, and odd radio recordings.

The instruments used to create Meridian Signals include my Epiphone electric guitar, a Boss SP-303 sampler, a Digitech RP150 multi-effect guitar processor, a Casio keyboard, and a variety of unusual radios, including a shortwave, a police scanner, and a weather band – all thrown together in an overloud, underproduced, psych shoegaze burgoo.  Other than for the expressed purposed of featuring bizarre broadcast clips (all recorded by holding the radio speaker against the guitar’s pickups, except on “Mountain Propagation” wherein I use a couple of clips from The Conet Project), the music is instrumental not so much out of an artistic statement, but rather due to a lack of confidence in my vocal abilities. That, I believe, will change on future recordings, however.

Four of the six tracks on Escape Route were recorded in our shitty Wicker Park apartment in Chicago during a particularly foul winter circa early 2008 (in the title track, you can hear the semi-apocalyptic NOAA weather advisory for the Chicago area). “Consumer Confidence in Christ is Down” was recorded later that spring in a different and more comfortable apartment in Lakeview/Boystown, and “Mountain Propagation” was recorded just a couple of months ago at the current Bloggins Base Camp here in Louisville’s Highlands after coming home from the bars late one night and feeling inspired (oddly enough).

The vast majority of the guitar arrangements were laid to tape in one take, though some parts were rearranged in production. I don’t currently play live since I’m uncertain how to reproduce most of this on cue as just one person. However, I’ve been chatting with a couple of guys about playing around, so that may happen in the not so distant future.  I consider Escape Route to be sketches of songs rather than, like, a magnum opus or somethin’. As such, I’m giving it away for free for you to enjoy and tell me what you think.  Right now, it’s just a hobby and a time passer, but who knows where this will go.

ms2 Meridian Signals Escape Route EP Now Available for Free Download

The .ZIP package below contains the six songs (all iTunes ready) and the printer-friendly cover art, designed by me. Just burn the disc, print out the cover, fold it in half, and you have a free disc to hit the bong to!

For fans of:  Boards of Canada, My Bloody Valentine, Odd Nosdam, Mogwai, Belong

ZIP :::
Meridian Signals – Escape Route EP (approx. 63 MB)

MP3 :::
Meridian Signals – Mountain Propagation

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Russian Circles, Lichens, and More Coming to Louisville, 4.30.09

april30th2009 Russian Circles, Lichens, and More Coming to Louisville, 4.30.09

Ask and ye shall receive!

A couple of posts ago, I said that Louisville was not hoppin’ in the awesome show department so far this year, and they needed to step up their game (like the Cards should have two weeks ago, but that’s another story). And what do ya know, all ages art space Skull Alley decided to step the fuck up!  Democracy in action, ya’llz.  This makes up for the recently announced, totally bummer Forecastle lineup (two nights of Widespread Panic is two too many nights, ya heard?).

Russian Circles, Sweet Cobra, Lichens, Mountain Asleep
Skull Alley (1017 E. Broadway)
Thursday, April 30
7 p.m. – $10
All Ages

And the rest of the tour:
WED APR 22 – Grand Rapids MI, Mix Tape Cafe
THU APR 23 – Indianapolis IN, Radio Radio
FRI APR 24 – Detroit MI, Magic Stick
SAT APR 25 – Cleveland OH, Grog Shop
SUN APR 26 – Baltimore MD, The Ottobar
MON APR 27 – Hoboken NJ, Maxwell’s
TUE APR 28 – Philadelphia PA, First Unitarian Church
WED APR 29 – Pittsburgh PA, Smiling Moose
THU APR 30 – Louisville KY, Skull Alley
FRI MAY 1 – Chicago IL, The Bottom Lounge
SAT MAY 2 – Milwaukee WI, Cactus Club
SUN MAY 3 – Minneapolis MN, Triple Rock

MP3 :::
Russian Circles – Verses
Lichens – Vevor of Agassou

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The House That Slint Built (Perhaps)

slint2 The House That Slint Built (Perhaps)

When you take the LSAT, many of the questions you answer require you to make inferences and deductions based only what’s on paper, essentially asking you to forget any outside knowledge or understanding you have. Let’s take that approach with Slint’s Spiderland. If you knew nothing else about the group or their seminal album, you wouldn’t have a lot to go by outside the strange bobbing heads staring through your soul on the front. From the music, you could glean the group had interests or training in jazz, classical, psych, punk, and noise, and had a weird thing with pirates and insects. From the imagery and album inset, all you would know about the context of Spiderland is that they had Palace Brother Will Oldham go swimming with them one day at the Utica Quarry in southern Indiana (and took pictures), the band prefers you listen to this on vinyl (as stated on the CD and cassette copies), and they were no longer interested in mumbling narratives by themselves.  The latter is what seems most interesting to a lot of people. That makes sense considering the band melted down either during or shortly after Spiderland’s release and the fact that, other than the track titles, it’s the only real, tangible information included on the album cover.

interested female vocalists write
1864 douglas blvd. louisville, ky 40205

My apartment is about a seven to ten minute bike ride from this address. It was a nice Saturday afternoon, I was listening to the Slint EP, and thought, what the hell? Let’s go on a vision quest to find the Slint house! Continue reading ‘The House That Slint Built (Perhaps)’

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Making Post Rock Cool Again

l_1e6c9e89e4a94ee7b4904f447cd870eb Making Post Rock Cool Again

The two music communities most directly responsible for the American post-rock movement are, without much argument, Chicago and Louisville. Since I used to live in the former and currently live in the latter, I suppose I have a natural inclination toward what we know as post rock. In its heyday, post rock was the dominant form of any experimental rock in the indie world, which has since been replaced with the New Weird America dudes. I like both movements myself, but I’m glad to see post rock is making a comeback (particularly since Mogwai’s latter output hasn’t been cutting the mustard). To that end, it’s good to know we have a guy like Bruce Adams, co-founder of Kranky who now runs a new, very art-centric label called Flingco Sound. Of course it’s out of Chicago, and of course the roster is really good (albeit modest right now).

Interbellum is one of these offerings. Hey, remember Rachel’s? Remember how they ruled? Yeah, me too. Interbellum, the project of jazz drummer Brendan Burke, reproduces that exact sunshine through the covers feel wherein minimal stringed instrumentation is utilized to a massive effect. Sparse electronic flourishes and field recordings evoke GYBE and Set Fire to Flames, but with a more cinematic slant. If hopeful chamber noir isn’t a genre yet, let’s make it for Interbellum. The two tracks below can be found on Over All of Spain the Sky is Clear.

artist_group_005 Making Post Rock Cool Again

Haptic is another group of Windy City weirdo rippers, and man, I like “Patience Worth.”  So don’t look so glum, chums!

Sure, this sort of ambient approach isn’t for everyone, but if aquatic blips and fuzzy, Basinski-style tape loops pique your interest, make no haste in mashing play on the song. Sparse percussion and flapping static make a great soundtrack for flight. I’m pipping this track in on my next parasailing excursion (dude, I’m not kidding).

There are a couple of other artists on the FSS label worth czeching out, and I would encourage you to do so. Between these offerings and massive groups such as Flowers of Hell, post-rock is coming back for more. And I’m excited.

MP3 :::
Interbellum – Gran Canaria
Interbellum – 6EQUJ5
Haptic – Patience Worth

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Things are touch and go for Touch and Go

logo2 Things are touch and go for Touch and Go

First Muzak and now this news; Touch and Go Records is shuttering its distribution arm and laying off staff in response to that economic crisis thing.  Perhaps it’s not surprising given that most labels have been absolutely decimated not only by the economy but by the sea change in music consumers’ purchasing behavior.

The major labels have long operated based on a ’swing for the fences’ business model with the presumption that pouring enough money into a release can somehow strongarm it into being a hit.  But despite the deep pockets, majors have historically released 9 losers for every winner.  Touch and Go, on the other hand, relied on shoe-string budgets and word-of-mouth promotion to goose its releases.  Needless to say, its downfall doesn’t bode well for the state of less robust indie labels.

With that backdrop, let me wax on ya about the sheer volume of music available and the effect it’s having on listening habits.  The other night I found myself on Last.fm until I had to prop my eyelids open with pencils.  It was like diving into a swimming pool full of Oreos with a pint of milk in hand.  Sheer bliss for a while as I reveled in the limitless pleasures available, but ultimately disappointing as I realized the limits to my physical capabilities.

mix-tape Things are touch and go for Touch and GoAt some point in the past 10 years I stopped listening to albums and started listening to songs.  It began innocently enough with mix tapes.  These were purely labors of love with hours spent winding and rewinding tape, scattering CDs across the floor and avoiding the ultimate mix tape sin – having the tape run out in the middle of a song.  But with the constant evolution from CD changers to MP3 players, the ability to instantly call up an obscure cut from your library of thousands of files (formerly known as “songs”) became universally available.

It used to be that buying CDs was a near-religious experience.  Bringing it home, dropping it in the tray and scouring the liner notes while relaxing on the sofa.  It was an event.  More recently I sit at the laptop with earbuds and skim through a limitless amount of streams, samples and downloads.  We’ve gone from a fine dining experience to the Golden Corral buffet.

There’s an upside here.  As consumers we can easily access a massive variety of music from our homes.  Buying music used to mean taking a risk and, at $12 a pop, not a cheap one.  One way of separating the wheat from the shit used to be trust in labels.  SST, Sub Pop, Touch and Go, Creation, what-have-you.  Labels established reputations and reputations created allegiances.  I can’t help but wonder whether the decline of label relevancy has hurt the established names in the biz.

So what say you all?  Is the online distribution and sampling of music making labels less relevant?  Rather than plunking down $12 on a Touch and Go release do you spread your dollars around?

The average listener who consumes major label hits probably isn’t going to stray into Touch and Go territory.  But the avid music fan – Touch and Go’s core audience – is likely to stray elsewhere if given the opportunity at no risk.

Regardless of what precipitated the decline, Touch and Go is an icon in the indie world and its releases will live on long after the label.  Here’s a few gems just to jog your memory a bit (and maybe even spur you to purchase the entire album).

MP3 :::
Brainiac – Kiss Me, You Jacked Up Jerk
The Black Heart Procession – The Old Kind of Summer
Bad Livers – Jesus is on the Mainline

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Storsveit Nix Noltes – Royal Family Divorce

l_904becfa882c797e286b62bfebe38c59 Storsveit Nix Noltes - Royal Family Divorce

Storsveit Nix Noltes play ethnic jams that thankfully sound nothing like the tunes you get ferociously blasted with inside an Epcot gift shop. Although their name suggests they might be the Nordic fan base of this American heart-throb, they’re actually Iceland’s newest(only) Balkan-tinged 11-piece ensemble to sign with FatCat Records. The band was formed in 2004 by classmates at the Iceland Academy of the Arts, and features a few noted players, including Múm veterans like Kría Brekken, and Sigur Rós’ horn section.  Continue reading ‘Storsveit Nix Noltes – Royal Family Divorce’

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