Friday, October 23, 2009

School of Seven Bells at Empty Bottle








School of Seven Bells makes the term "shoe gaze" easy to sell if I may for a moment use that to describe them. They have this mysterious Twin Peaks thing....a little bit in some of the songs, enough to hook you and on we go. Yeah like Julee Cruise with faster cardio...at least for me. This band is something that I believe I will listen to for a long time in part because they evoke and crystalize so much of what I like. Their voices are never over the top, but they calm the storm, or they ride it. They play to my archetypes. They can sound mysterious without seeming pompous about it. They can sound happy, they can sound dark, but the fog is ever present. Still it never bores you. This statement I can perhaps say about all the bands that played that Wednesday night.
Panda Riot I missed but I've seen them a lot, most recently at The Whistler. They are what a goth listens to in the morning. It's happy, feminine shoe gaze, still foggy, urban. They are playing new music now. And they added another singer. Warpaint I did not expect to like. I did no research on them what so ever, and so they hit me over the top when they ended their set with "krimson"(I missed most of it). Hell they are all different embodiments of the same archetype.
I chase after the fleeting moments, even from bands that I have seen before. The Empty Bottle offers an intimacy Bottom Lounge does not have. School Of Seven Bells I've seen previously at Bottom Lounge. Smaller completely enhances the experience. It's really cool when a band that has seen a venue like Bottom Lounge later on play to a smaller place like the Bottle. Every band that played that 14th October, a Wednesday was awesome, Panda Riot....alright so I missed them, but I know they were great. War Paint keeps imprinting on me every day. I absolutely love War Paint. I did not catch them, they caught me with the last two songs from their set and so this impression is more from hearing them on CD rather than seeing them live, but it was clear that War Paint had fans that night. This slow song had everyone kind of hypnotized. I was really praying not to like this, 'cause I save money. If I do...then I don't save money.
I walked in wanting to know if this moment was something I should capture or should I let the sand slip through my fingers. The last song sold me. Depreciation Guild was next and they were great as well but I had to choose what to buy and I got War Paint.. It's nice to anticipate the little things you discovered the first time. Most of the time, that one show you saw is the one iconic moment you frame and you preserve with the CD, with the shirt, with the vinyl that comes with the download code. And you stay broke!

Monday, October 19, 2009

Stella Luce





I just remember it was a Wednesday in October when I saw this band at The Empty Bottle, I did not know Stella Luce existed the day before. I'm glad I did not miss them. It feels as if other performers like Rasputina, Emily Autumn have prepped me for appreciating Stella Luce. There were others that I was going to mention but I can't recall them right now. This is not the same as saying Stella Luce sounds like these other bands. SL I like for how they are different as well as how they are alike. They describe themselves as electro-acoustic, which sounds just about right. I was struggling with how to describe them. It was unfortunate how thin the crowd was for this band, and no one that I would describe as remotely goth. They were quite the thing to witness. Considering the following that Rasputina and EA have now, Stella Luce does certainly deserve the same kind of attention. They all got this same sharp wit like they went to the same Catholic school or something. Well, at the same time smart is what I look for in an artist. In the song "Be Still My Bleeding Heart" Alana Rolfe the lead singer has this rapid fire wit that sometimes sprints across before slowing down and letting the instruments catch up. And there are other songs that deserve attention. "Death March" sounds to me like an Eastern European Waltz. It would be interesting to see how this song makes people move on a gothic night dance floor. It just needs to be expressed and appreciated collectively like that. Nothing here strikes me as sounding formulaic. Each song has it's own gravitational pull. Electro-acoustic is exactly right. I hope to see them again, with a wider audience that I believe goth culture can be. It's a matter of putting the two in the same space.
Zig

Monday, October 12, 2009

Ami Saraiya





This girls music has been in my head ever since seeing her perform at the Empty Bottle. Ms Ami plays the accordion, and guitar. I looked up the Bottle website and decided after hearing a Pretenders cover....at least I think that is who she covered. I liked her voice and how she played the accordion, so off I go to see her. I think the main act that night was a band from France named Cocoon (I think). The way I sometimes research a band, I want to capture as much of the experience live. So, I'll go to the bands' myspace page or something, see a video for maybe a minute or so. I like accordion players. Each band or artist that I like that plays that instrument is a separate reason why I like the accordion sound. Pezzettino plays it differently from Ami Saraiya. A signature of hers is this sad bluesy swagger, a thread that is in a lot of her songs, like "Vegas Moon", "Up, Down, & Charmed", "Archaeologist". This feeling emits from how the songs sound, before the meaning of the words settle. At once you feel nostalgic for the black and white of your own childhood. Well...a nostalgia of some sort. And then the words settle into your mind, words that have been made welcome before the meaning was met. Without the lyrics to read it's just certain phrases that rise out and sink back. So I can't say, "This is what the song says". Her music is not entirely sad sounding. Her swagger is more dominant with songs like "Memphis Train", and "Intaha Ho Gayee". That last one was a Bollywood song. I so love it when an artist so weaves together cultures so vastly apart...but not really. We are all closer than we think. It was a real joy and a privilege to witness this local....I have to repeat this to myself, local artist.
Zig

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Phantogram





I saw these guys again, at Bottom Lounge . I got their entire performance. The last time I saw them, at Subterranean I only got on time for their last song, "When I'm Small". The imprint was not set then. I could have been frugal and not get the ep, but I said fuck it and got it anyway. The imprint started after that first show, when I would play the cd in the car. These guys have that Portishead coolness that is effortless, and natural, yet they are an original creation. It's not the same as saying they sound like them. On "Small", the hip-hop beats feel like they are in their natural state, not in a zoo, at ease with the psychedelic. For a band that uses all kinds of electronic stuff, they sound very....organic. I don't get why the crowd was kind of not as into them. They seem to be more of a college, Q 101 crowd, not really into the street wise, Portishead coolness of these two old high school buddies. Their names are Joshua M Carter and Sarah D Barthel from Saratoga Springs, New York. They are best described as street beat/psych/pop. That describes perfectly "When I'm Small". Really these guys were absolutely awesome and they are just beginning. They barely got an ep out with five songs. They combine live sampling with loops, Joshua's swirling guitar, Sarah's keyboard, voice. During the month of October they will be touring England, and I'm happy that they are.

bliss.city.east




I wanted to write separately about bliss.city.east. I said the band moved to Atlanta, but their myspace page says Boston. They also describe their sound best, shoegaze/indie/disco house. I'm over here trying to write a whole paragraph trying to say exactly that.