A lot of baggage I bestowed on this band that perhaps have nothing to do with the music itself yet still influential on the imprint. There is an influence that has more to do with how I arrange furniture in the head. Pre-Recession was when I was re-discovering the local scene and Empty Bottle. Going to England for the familiar but expensive Whitby Gothic Weekend was now impossible. Fresh from discovering Queen Adreena abroad. I was craving for what I can discover locally....what a novelty. Fresh from the wonder of walking past a threshold I see Walking Bicycles. I saw them three times and every performance was at Empty Bottle. Seeing them was not easy. Each time felt like I stole a much treasured moment from The Man. Or there was something off about when these great performances presented themselves, like on a Free Monday, or a Saturday. How often are Mondays awesome! There was always an obstacle to overcome that made seeing Walking Bicycles so prohibitive and irresistible an accomplishment, almost missed and so iconic to me. The second time was the hardest. The third was for the CD release of GO? in December 2008. They have been around I think since 2004 and here I am barely aware of them in 2007. So even if their music have nothing to do with the then incoming bursting of the great bubble, it felt like they saw it coming. Welcome To The Future was the great announcement. Exactly the dark and bouncy post-punk I needed after knowing Katie Jane Garside abroad. Jocelyn the lead singer was so damn cool off-stage as well. We both know Scary Lady Sarah. That was funny to me. Sarah already knew of them well before my own discovery. Sarah 9.5 out of 10 will know of the music before I do. I would run into Jocelyn at the Bottle on some occasions, and always so cool. I was always afraid she would not remember me. You don't want to just drop from the celling and expect to be recognized....well you do. It's just awkward when it does not work. Now they are recording their 4th album and they got a facebook page. So the band still lives, and I'm very happy about that. Welcome back y'all, to me you never really left. This last picture is one outside the Bottle with the bass player.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Walking Bicycles
A lot of baggage I bestowed on this band that perhaps have nothing to do with the music itself yet still influential on the imprint. There is an influence that has more to do with how I arrange furniture in the head. Pre-Recession was when I was re-discovering the local scene and Empty Bottle. Going to England for the familiar but expensive Whitby Gothic Weekend was now impossible. Fresh from discovering Queen Adreena abroad. I was craving for what I can discover locally....what a novelty. Fresh from the wonder of walking past a threshold I see Walking Bicycles. I saw them three times and every performance was at Empty Bottle. Seeing them was not easy. Each time felt like I stole a much treasured moment from The Man. Or there was something off about when these great performances presented themselves, like on a Free Monday, or a Saturday. How often are Mondays awesome! There was always an obstacle to overcome that made seeing Walking Bicycles so prohibitive and irresistible an accomplishment, almost missed and so iconic to me. The second time was the hardest. The third was for the CD release of GO? in December 2008. They have been around I think since 2004 and here I am barely aware of them in 2007. So even if their music have nothing to do with the then incoming bursting of the great bubble, it felt like they saw it coming. Welcome To The Future was the great announcement. Exactly the dark and bouncy post-punk I needed after knowing Katie Jane Garside abroad. Jocelyn the lead singer was so damn cool off-stage as well. We both know Scary Lady Sarah. That was funny to me. Sarah already knew of them well before my own discovery. Sarah 9.5 out of 10 will know of the music before I do. I would run into Jocelyn at the Bottle on some occasions, and always so cool. I was always afraid she would not remember me. You don't want to just drop from the celling and expect to be recognized....well you do. It's just awkward when it does not work. Now they are recording their 4th album and they got a facebook page. So the band still lives, and I'm very happy about that. Welcome back y'all, to me you never really left. This last picture is one outside the Bottle with the bass player.
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Panda Riot,Magic Key at Hideout
This is from Hideout.
You go see what's familiar in part because the performers change and evolve faster than their output suggests. Believing that each performance is a unique moment that deserves to be remembered, is not just a metaphor. Magic Key was briefly called Aleks/Eva and before that Aleks And The Drummer. I love this band for two reasons, what is on the only CD they got out (May A Lightning Bolt Caress) and for what they perform live that they have yet to put on CD...at least as far as I notice when I take a peak at the merch table. Familiar and mysterious as your interior castle are songs I cannot name but anticipate. Dark and urgent as her recorded work, this two person drama now feels like a full on Ibsen play with more consequential players, and storylines. Sometimes its a whole band, sometimes its Aleks alone with her keyboard representing MK. She's always surprising you and I like that about her. What's on CD is in amber, distant but still tethered to her current evolving work that you can only see live. These things, these moments are noteworthy to the process of knowing their work. I see these things through this fog.
Panda Riot I see a lot as well. They are originally from Philly. Rebecca Scott sings lead as well as play keyboard and guitar. They evolve well within the shoegaze continuum, recently taking paths with darkening clouds. Normally they brighten the day with wonder. Their pace rarely more than a jog in the park. But you don't feel it wear on you, instead you are bombarded by this sense of wonder but of familiar things, little things. Not strictly superficial novelty. And they sell it well. Seriously, wake up on a Monday morning and play Plateau on your way to work. I think old goths of the horse-driven 90's will like this. I include myself among this lot. On this Thursday night I saw them with my cousin and brother-in-law. It's nice to see them go darker on their latest soon to be released work. She Dares All Things is their first CD and I remember it since...2007? Far And Near was released I believe in 2009. It's a 6 song EP.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
Fielded
The voice is another flexible instrument. Her music if ambient....when ambient, is also tense and suspenseful, and apparent when you see her sweat, outstretched hand and closed eyes. This is not something that is delivered casually. So how can this be of interest to goth culture? Well, she's weird and dark, and you can dance to her music. Do you remember how it felt to hear Zola Jesus the first time? Minimally electronic and organic. Her dark choral chants are trance inducing, and she takes her time in doing them. This is music that is not intended for the short attention-span. Yeah, she has her pagan chanting down. I think this is an easy sell to a goth crowd. It's the kind of weirdness we like to dance to. For those that like Zola Jesus, go see Fielded. At the very least you will find better parking I remember once reading about Fielded. They described her music as gospel. I can see that in this passionate delivery. She takes her time in assembling her songs, for this crowd that's OK. They seemed attentive. Her songs that I recall most easily "White Death" and "Another Time". But there is a lot that she plays that I'm familiar with but cannot name. . Lindsey adjusts and tweaks her instruments as she finds that moment when she can just close her eyes and be taken by her performance. Finally, this post is done.
Monday, January 2, 2012
Early January
This Thursday 5th January I'm aiming to see Magic Key play Hideout with Panda Riot. They seem to be at different ends of this faerie world I put them, individual relationships with it. They play a lot. I've seen them both at Empty Bottle and Whistler. They evolve faster than their CD output suggests. Recording costs money. So it's important to see them live. The organic machinery that can keep them going is still going to be the people that see them. P R is mid-tempo dream pop expresses sentiments one can only be felt in relaxed moments. You're gonna stop to take a breath to say you're happy just to exist. So their relaxed but do not just drift. They are the kind of shoegaze we dance to at Latebar. They play a lot locally. They just signed to a new small local label XD Records. Magic Key is dark, and serious as a heart attack dramatic. Keyboard driven dark and colorful and just as worthy of a goth-themed dance floor. They seem to have this heavy serious authority normally expected in classical music. Perhaps it may sound like I'm too much hyping this up, but it's rare to have something that normally just plays in your head suddenly share a real stage.
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