[Repost from Aldora Britain Records; b Tom Hilton, April 10, 2024]
EVENT CALENDAR
Tuesday, April 16, 2024
Suitcase Full of Emotions
[Repost from Aldora Britain Records; b Tom Hilton, April 10, 2024]
Tucson, Arizona is the home to post-rock experimentalists LA CERCA. Combining the disparate worlds of ambient
avant-garde, shoegaze, and spacey psychedelic rock, this Southwestern sonic
collective deliver something undeniably fresh and completely reinvigorating. Their original compositions are brooding and
unfolding soundscapes, pushing boundaries and gloriously disrespecting
borders. Records such as 2018’s Night Bloom and 2020’s A Nice Sweet Getaway are archetypal
snapshots of La Cerca’s delightful approach, stellar adventures through
creative worlds, a never-ending journey of discovery. With the fourth anniversary of A Nice Sweet Getaway fast approaching,
key bandmember Andrew Gardner agreed to chat with Aldora Britain Records about La Cerca’s experimentations so
far. We discuss the coming together of
the group, a selection of their recorded output, their approach to songcraft,
and much, much more. That exclusive
in-depth conversation is published here in full for the very first time.
La Cerca have previously contributed their track ‘Free of Expectation’ to
our independent, underground music sampler ‘We Didn’t Start the Fight’. Listen or download HERE.
If you enjoy this content, please consider
making a small, magazine-sized donation at the following link: https://paypal.me/aldorabritainrecords. Thank
you!
Aldora Britain
Records: Hello Andrew, how are you? I am
excited to be talking with such an experimental musician. I am a big fan of what you do! Let’s start off by rewinding the clocks. What are some of your earliest musical
memories and what was it that first pushed you towards pursuing this passion of
yours?
Andrew Gardner: Hello
Tom, I just got back from a thirteenday West Coast tour with La Cerca. It was eight shows. It rained a lot in Southern California, where
it’s not supposed to rain. We had a lot
of winter weather. In Tucson, spring is
starting, but not so much for the West Coast.
We jokingly called the tour ‘Prolonging the Winter 2024’.
I grew up in a small town in Ohio before we moved to Tucson,
Arizona. Our neighbours had a guest
living in their basement who had an organ.
I would be over at their house asking to go downstairs to watch the
player, but I was denied, so I would put my ear to the floor. Music was always a constant. My mom had a good record collection and I was
taught how to carefully handle albums and turn them over on the turntable at a
young age. Everybody knew that music was
the direction for me. I had opinions on
Jimi Hendrix records, Dark Side of the
Moon, and Sgt. Pepper. I loved the 1980s Top 40, at least up until
1987. The first album I purchased with
my paper route money was David Bowie’s Let’s
Dance. The Fixx, Reach the Beach was my second
album. I was lucky enough to have guitar
lessons. Within a couple of years, I was
drafting the neighbour kids to start a band.
Aldora Britain
Records: And now, let’s take a leap forward to the beginnings of the
brilliant La Cerca. The early days of
the group must have been such an invigorating time. How did it come to be? How did you meet the other members and what
was the initial spark that brought you all together on a musical level?
Andrew Gardner: La
Cerca evolved from my band called Wise Folk Malcontent, which played the
underground rock scene in Tucson from 1992 to early 2000. The musicians wanted a name change because we
had felt that we had arrived on a musical level and they were aspiring to be
permanent musicians. We were fans of
1970s punk rock and art rock, New Order, The Cure, and 90s
American indie rock. Within a year and a
half, those musicians had moved on to other projects only a few months after
the release of our first album Goodbye
Phantom Engineer, 2001 on Unlike Label.
It was again a revolving member band surrounding my songwriting.
Miguel Villarreal was my neighbour who loved La Cerca’s
music so much that he decided to play bass from 2002 to 2012. I decided to be in a band with my neighbours
as much as possible, but that limited us to not being able to tour. That was okay for a while, but touring
aspirations kicked in and I would go out by myself and then grab a friend or
two along the way and we would go play shows sporadically across the States,
then pairing down to just me playing solo shows. Bill Oberdick came onboard as guitarist in
2005. He is still a big part of La
Cerca’s sound. By the time he had
joined, I felt like the real band had started.
Aldora Britain Records: In 2020, you released
a fantastic record in the form of A Nice
Sweet Getaway. This was my
introduction to your work, so I look back on it very fondly. What are your memories from composing,
recording and releasing this set, and is there anything that you would edit or
change with the benefit of hindsight?
Andrew Gardner: In 2013 and early
2014, the band was in a kind of limbo waiting for mastering and pressing of our
third album, Sunrise for Everyone. I was working at a guitar shop and acquiring
better gear. I was learning how to use a
Tascam handheld two-track recorder. I
just got a monster delay pedal, the TC Electronic Flashback X4 Delay, with a
decent fortysecond looper. I was
obsessed with pedals. It used to be that
I had a chorus, fuzz, and delay. Now
there was much more on my palette.
After La Cerca band rehearsals,
I started these recording experiments. I
would place the recorder in different places to see how the room would
sound. I started making these ambient
mood jams. I didn’t think that much of
it, but in the back of my mind, I thought that some of the recordings were
listenable. I started treating them like
‘songs’, but I would improvise.
Sometimes, I had ideas in advance, like ‘Ice Cubes’, other
times, it was made up on the spot, like ‘Walking the Underbelly’. I would have my neighbours over to listen on
our porch while I was in the process. I
would go to our nearby venue, The Flycatcher, RIP, and record the jams in the
lounge, like ‘Gloomy Vista Way’.
Sometimes, the songs were sculpted for an hour before I hit record, like
‘Shimmering Peacock’.
At the time, I was just trying out ideas and creating new
ideas. I wanted to be spontaneous and
keep a performance feel. There were no
overdubs. I gave a burned CD to a couple
of friends and that was about as far as it went. I liked it, but I didn’t think it was good
enough to release. It was just some
ideas for later. By April of 2020, we
had to cancel a tour and the rest of the music world was on pause. I started listening to these lo-fi
recordings. It felt very fresh and it
still had a lot of melody to the noise.
It was interesting to see how I was nowhere near the state of mind, but
that state of mind was perfect for our pandemic world.
It became a soundtrack to strange times. I felt like it wasn’t too far off from the
noise and melody that La Cerca made. It
just wasn’t made with any bandmates. We
already had a project in the works, but I had many more actual songs and there
wasn’t a studio open for us to record. I
had not yet set up my living room with the studio that I have today. I had Jim Waters do some sonic treatments and
EQing. It has a new life and I wanted to
share it with the world.
Aldora Britain
Records: I am fascinated by the way you make these intense, immersive
soundscapes. There is just something
about La Cerca’s songcraft! How do you
approach this part of your creative process?
Is it a case of jamming away and striking gold, or is it a more
methodical and repeatable approach?
Andrew Gardner: For
A Nice Sweet Getaway, about one-third
of the tunes were improvised on the spot with very little or zero
planning. One-third were sculpted in
advance with a loop or two already crafted beforehand or had some editing,
post-recording. The remaining were a
little bit of both. Sometimes, I would
come up with a title first and go with how I was feeling. Other times, I thought about a feeling and
was seeing if I could recreate a sonic version of that feeling. The goal was to keep it ‘live’ as
possible. I had a lot of jams that
didn’t go anywhere, or so I was thinking at the time. By performing them and pressing the record
button, it gave me the pressure to figure out how to finish them.
Aldora Britain
Records: Previously, if we travel back to 2018, you unveiled another
stellar LP called Night Bloom. This is a brilliant earlier snapshot of the
band and your artistry. How do you
reflect on this set as a whole now, and how would you say you have grown and
evolved as a band since its initial release?
Andrew Gardner: Night Bloom is a widescreen version of the band. We started writing those tunes as early as
2012 or before. We were able to play
them at our shows earlier in the songs’ existence. We still play many of those songs in our live
performance. ‘Echolocation’ and
‘Tumbling Boulder’ have a bit of an ambient feel. As for the new material we have been working
on, there is a bit more of an ambient feel.
However, the new material also has older songs or ideas that have been
around since the beginning of the band.
Aldora Britain
Records: As you well know, I am a big fan of the La Cerca sound and your approach
to making music. That psychedelic
shoegaze wall of sound. Brilliance! How would you say this style of yours came
about, what goes into it for you, and who are some of your biggest influences
and inspirations as a band?
Andrew Gardner: In
the late 80s, Top 40 music was becoming boring for me, so I turned the dial
left to the college radio stations and watched MTV’s 120 Minutes. I discovered
bands like Ride, Pale Saints, Spacemen 3, Dinosaur Jr. I am still listening to those bands
today. I can’t speak for the other
guitarist, Bill Oberdick, but I know he had a similar experience with college
radio and discovering bands like Fugazi, R.E.M., and Minutemen. As music went in and out of fashion, I was
still into bands with loud noisy guitars and I made my own versions of that
music. We tend to go for vintage 60s
guitar and amps, but we use modern pedals.
We like our fuzz pedals, chorus and whammy or vibrotos.
Aldora Britain
Records: A broad question to finish.
We have been through such a unique time in history over the last few
years. Both politically and within
society, and that is before you throw in the pandemic. How have the last several years impacted on
you personally and as an artist? How do
you think this time has changed the music industry, both for the good and the
bad?
Andrew Gardner: When the pandemic
hit, I had a bunch of musical projects to explore. I had a bunch of half songs that I wanted to
finish because I felt they were worth finishing. Going through a backlog of material was
frustrating and yet informing me as a reminder of where I’ve been as a person
and where I wanted to go. I also felt
that I was a lazy songwriter. In the
past, I would start songs but not finish them and then the song would get
placed on tapes for later. 2020 was the
time to finish songs, and so I finished forty songs during the summer. And then twenty more a year later. Some of the songs were mostly written, some
were just ideas, others needed new lyrics.
The other issue was that I did not have a way to record the songs
properly. I had my handheld recorder
which worked for the time being. I saved
money and purchased some great mics and the rest of the recording gear, so I
didn’t have to go to an expensive recording studio for all of my songs. Having a session in the living room actually
works well for my lifestyle and the songs are more realised. I am more focussed than I have ever
been. I have been able to create a life
where I can go on tour more often.
As for changes in the music
industry, I feel as though music is not as appreciated as it once was. There is an idea that musicians should
release more frequently. I agree to that,
but I find that if we release something without promoting it properly or not
releasing it on vinyl, it may become lost in a digital haystack. I’m not the best at social media and
self-promoting is not my favourite thing to
do, but it has to be a big part of the promoting platform. So, now I have to be good at social media and
make better artwork for shows, make more videos, and learn how to edit. La Cerca is a touring band, we can’t only
release music, but there might be a future of not touring with the way gas,
food, and hospitality have gone up. It
seems there are less show venues and not enough people supporting live
music. Some of that might also be
generational. Young adults spend more time
on their phone at home with a much shorter attention span. Same can be said about people my age.
Quickfire Round
AB Records: Favourite
artist? Andrew: Too many favourites.
I am still a big fan of The Cure.
AB Records: Favourite
album? Andrew: Too many favourites!
Big Star, Radio City; American
Music Club, Mercury; Bob Dylan, Blonde on Blonde; The Cure, Disintegration. AB Records: Last album you
listened to from start to finish? Andrew: The Go-Betweens, Before Hollywood.
AB Records: First
gig as an audience member? Andrew: The Commodores or Cheap
Trick. AB Records: Loudest gig as an audience member? Andrew:
Tucker B’s. AB Records: Style icon? Andrew:
Skate shoes, flannel, Mark Gonzales.
AB Records: Favourite film? Andrew: River’s Edge. Not the best,
but hilarious and creepy.
AB Records: Favourite
TV show? Andrew: The Young Ones. AB
Records: Favourite up and coming artist?
Andrew: Null State.
Monday, April 15, 2024
Blab School - "Scrolls"
[Repost from If It's Too Loud; by Ken Sears, April 10, 2024]
We were huge fans of Teens in Trouble's album What's Mine when it was released earlier this year. That led me to discover Blab School, which shares Lizzie Killian on guitar and vocals. The North Carolina band just released a new single, "Scrolls," and chances are if you liked Teens in Trouble, you're going to love Blab School. The press release for Blab School's upcoming debut album compares them to bands such as Jawbox, The Jesus Lizard, Drive Like Jehu, Superchunk, and Bad Religion, among others. I can't argue with any of those, but I hear the tuneful early indie rock/emo of Superchunk mixed with the primal power of The Jesus Lizard. If that even remotely interests you (and how could it not?), you're going to need to check out "Scrolls."
Sunday, April 14, 2024
Female Gaze - "Severance"
[Repost from If It's Too Loud; by Ken Sears, April 4, 2024]
Usually I wait for the vocals to kick in before deciding I love a song, but I fell in love with "Severance" from Female Gaze about twenty seconds before Nelene DeGuzman's vocals started. The song starts off with this killer bass line, and then at roughly the seventeen second mark the guitar kicks in, and I was completely won over. The song has this gorgeous blend of psychedelia meets shoegaze that is irresistible. I know I would have balked at "trippy shoegaze," but Female Gaze make it work. All of "Severance" has this warm quality that just draws you in, and you just never want this sound to end. With it's six minute length, there are plenty of times it feels like it's just about to end, and then it just keeps going, and going, and each time you become more and more invested in its beauty.
Friday, April 12, 2024
OUT NOW: Blab School "Never Enough" [Digital Single]
The second single from Blab School’s self-titled debut album is available now on all digital music platforms. "Early indie rock/emo of Superchunk mixed with the primal power of The Jesus Lizard" ~ If It's Too Loud
Thursday, April 4, 2024
OUT NOW: Female Gaze "Severance" [Digital Single]
The first and only single "Severance" from Female Gaze's debut album Tender Futures is out today on all digital music platforms.
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
Blab School
[Repost from 3Hive; by Todd Simmons, March 11, 2024]
Blab School is a rad new band out of North Carolina. The band consists of Ryan Seagrist (Discount, The Kitchen), Elizabeth Killian (Teens In Trouble, Glowing Stars), Dave Cantwell (Analogue, Cold Sides, In the Year of the Pig), and Fikri Yucel (Veronique Diabolique). I found out about these guys when I read “FOR FANS OF: Bad Religion, Buzzcocks, Descendants, Drive Like Jehu, The Faction, The Fucking Champs, Gang of Four, Green Day, The Hives, Hot Snakes, Jawbox, The Jesus Lizard, Les Savy Fav, Lightning Bolt, Meatbodies, Melt-Banana, Metz, Osees, Pipe, Pissed Jeans, Pretty Girls Make Graves, Superchunk, The Thermals” on Fort Lowell’s Instagram page, teasing their debut album. I was able to get my ears on a sneak peek from my friends at Fort Lowell, and I have been hooked ever since.
We are beyond stoked to bring you the premiere of the first single, “Scrolls”, from their incredible debut, self-titled album. “Scrolls” exceeded all my expectations from the list of “for fans of” above. It is a burner from the get-go with punishing drums, chunky bass lines, and razor-sharp guitars, sounding like Pretty Girls Make Graves meets Superchunk!
Friday, March 29, 2024
OUT NOW: Forest Fallows “Saturday Rose” [Digital Single]
The first single "Saturday Rose" from Forest Fallow's sophomore album Palisades is available now on all digital music platforms.
Friday, March 22, 2024
OUT NOW: Naïm Amor "The Start Over" [Digital Single]
The first single "The Start Over" from Naïm Amor's twelfth studio album Stories is out today on all digital music platforms.
Thursday, March 14, 2024
OUT NOW: Blab School "Scrolls" [Digital Single]
The first single from Blab School’s self-titled debut album is available now on all digital music platforms. “It is a burner from the get-go with punishing drums, chunky bass lines, and razor-sharp guitars, sounding like Pretty Girls Make Graves meets Superchunk!” ~ 3hive.com
Also, today is a very special for an entirely other reason: Happy Birthday to Fikri Yucel, bass player of Blab School! w00t!w00t! Let’s eat cake, AND rock out!
Sunday, March 10, 2024
Pre-Order Forest Fallows Sophomore Album
Forest Fallows, the bedroom recording project of Mike Barnett and Alex Morton, has teamed up with John McEntire (Stereolab, Tortoise, Modest Mouse) to produce their sophomore album Palisades, a mellow, vintage-esque indie record. Based in Tucson AZ, their sound is a blend of the production and style of the 60’s and 70’s with the quirks of 90’s indie and post rock. Their influences range widely from pop outliers Steely Dan and Gerry Rafferty to underground visionaries Tortoise and Michael Nau.
For fans of Animal Collective, Ariel Pink, Atlas Sound, The American Analog Set, Beach Boys, Broadcast, Mac DeMarco, Destroyer, Drugdealer, Ducktails, Esquivel, Goth Babe, Richard Hawley, JPW, Lauds, The Ocean Blue, Peel Dream Magazine, The Radio Dept., Radiohead, Real Estate, The Sea & Cake, Stereolab, Sugar Candy Mountain, The Sundays, Kurt Vile, Yo La Tengo, Wild Nothing, and Woods.
Thursday, March 7, 2024
Pre-Order Naïm Amor Twelfth Studio Album
Like many musicians worldwide, Naïm Amor was working on the tracks for a new album when Covid hit and sent the recording and live music worlds into hibernation. And also like many, when he emerged he did with a finished record ready to be released into a music-hungry world. For Stories, his twelfth record since the mid 2000’s, the Parisian born and raised, long time Arizona resident Amor has crafted six instrumentals and three vocal numbers. While Stories may perhaps seem like an offbeat title for a record with several instrumental tracks, it’s also indicates what’s within; it’s raison d’etre is a cinematic approach to music making, one crafted to evoke images and feelings, unlock corners of known and unknown worlds, and yes, to tell stories; with or without the narrative of a human voice.
For fans of The Black Keys, Black Midi, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Nels Cline, Edwyn Collins, The Cramps, The Fleshtones, Richard Hawley, King Krule, La Luz, Los Straightjackets, Man or Astro-man?, JD McPherson, Messer Chups, The Meteors, Roy Orbison, The Shadows, Shannon & The Clams, The Sonics, The Surfrajettes, Surprise Chef, Tijuana Panthers,The Tremolo Beer Gut, Whatitdo Archive Group, Jack White, and Link Wray.
Monday, March 4, 2024
Pre-Order Female Gaze Debut LP
Female Gaze makes immersive art to get lost in. Their debut album, Tender Futures, is an experimental concept record that tracks an endless day/night cycle, exploring meditations on mindless-ness as a coping mechanism.
For fans of The Aislers Set, Ariel Pink, Babe Rainbow, Blonde Redhead, The Brian Jonestown Massacre, Broadcast, Dead Meadow, The Flaming Lips, Galaxie 500, His Name Is Alive, JPW, King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard, Khruangbin, Melody's Echo Chamber, Moses Gunn Collective, No Joy, Papercuts, Pond, Pure X, Spacemen 3, Sugar Candy Mountain, Mary Timony, The Velvet Underground, The Warlocks.
Monday, February 26, 2024
Pre-Order Blab School Debut Vinyl LP
Blab School is a post-punk quartet from North Carolina. Their self-titled debut LP comes out on Fort Lowell Records on June 6, 2024. Taking philosophical cues from American post-punk bands like the Wipers and Talking Heads, also incorporating the goth-adjacent tones of bands like Joy Division and Killing Joke, and adding the often danceable and joyfully nihilistic aesthetic of 21st-century punk, Blab School makes music that is simultaneously urgent and fun, upbeat and crooked, loud and thoughtful.
For fans of Bad Religion, Buzzcocks, Descendants, Drive Like Jehu, The Faction, The Fucking Champs, Gang of Four, Green Day, The Hives, Hot Snakes, Jawbox, The Jesus Lizard, Les Savy Fav, Lightning Bolt, Meatbodies, Melt-Banana, Metz, Osees, Pipe, Pissed Jeans, Pretty Girls Make Graves, Superchunk, and The Thermals.
Saturday, February 24, 2024
SATURDAY EVENTS
[Repost from Port City Daily; Shea Carver, February 22, 2023]
Dead Cool and Tracy Shedd — Great music is being planned for Bourgie Nights this weekend with a little darkwave synthpop from Wilmington’s post-punk darlings Dead Cool and indie stylings of Tracy Shedd. Shedd’s music has been on “Dawson’s Creek,” “One Tree Hill,” and “The Rebound,” and she has shared the stage with Cat Power, The Magnetic Fields and Iron & Wine. She continues releasing music — including last year’s “Let It Ride” — on Fort Lowell Records, which she operates with her husband James Tritten. Dead Cool consists of another husband-and-wife team Johnny and Angie Yeagher, who began in the height of Covid and have grown to international acclaim in a short few years. They’ve been touring, released quite a few tracks, including a catchy dark remake of Scorpion’s “Send Me An Angel,” and will be part of the double bill at Bourgie Nights. Doors are at 9 p.m.
The Pink Stones and Summer Set — A cosmic country outfit out of Athens, Georgia, The Pink Stones, will be joining Wilmington indie rockers Summer Set at Reggies 42nd Street Tavern on Saturday. The Pink Stones combine pedal steel and down-on-your-luck stylings of country with American rock and driving rhythms on their sophomore album “You Know Who.” The band very much gives Flying Burrito Brothers vibes. Summer Set, featuring founding members Brian Weeks and Robert Rogan, are quintessential to Wilmington’s indie scene. They paired up again over the last few years after a decade-long hiatus and are working on new music. It’s their first time playing Reggies, with a new lineup as well (read more about the band and their first album release from last fall, published by Port City Daily here).
Friday, February 23, 2024
17 things to do in the Wilmington area for the final weekend of February
[Repost from StarNews; by John Staton, February 21, 2024]
DEAD COOL & TRACY SHEDD
Feb. 24 at Bourgie Nights: Two of Wilmington's top musical acts team up for what should be an epic, stylistically diverse double bill.
Dead Cool is the Wilmington goth/darkwave/synth pop duo of Johnny and Angela Yeagher, who have attracted an audience for darkly catchy, retro songs about alienation and obsession. And while songs like "The Last Time" might have such lyrics as, "The future's so black I cannot see," there's also a playful side to Dead Cool. It shows up in their videos, with a cute little white fluffball of a dog trying to bite Johnny as he strolls around Greenfield Lake in "Until Death," and in their wickedly dark cover of '80s pop hit "Send Me An Angel."
Wilmington singer and songwriter Tracy Shedd is a veteran of the national indie rock scene who matches sweet, understated vocals with lyrics that can be at once subtle and searching. Shedd's latest single is "Let It Ride," a groovy, moody meditation on patience and trust. 9 p.m. doors, 10 p.m. show, Feb. 24. Tickets are $10 in advance, $15 day of show.
THE PINK STONES, SUMMER SET
Feb. 24 at Reggie's 42nd Street Tavern: Along with Pink Beds and Pink Skull Garden, this is the third "pink" band we've had in Wilmington recently. The Pink Stones hail from Athens, Georgia, and play what they term "cosmic country" or "spacey honky tonk." Good stuff.
Sharing the bill are Wilmington indie-rock stalwarts Summer Set, who last year came out of performance hibernation to drop an excellent new album of classic songs and newer work. With opening act Kit McKay. 7 p.m. Feb. 24, $15.
KICKING BIRD
Feb. 24 at Palate: It's a busy Saturday night for Wilmington label Fort Lowell Records, with three acts on their roster in action. Along with Summer Set and Tracy Shedd, number three is Kicking Bird, which is led by singer-guitarist Shaun Paul and his wife, Shayla, who sings and plays keyboards. They both write hooky songs that rock while often carrying a girl-group sheen, with lyrics about love and life that make both the ups and the downs sound like celebrations. Kicking Bird's live show is a frenzied, sweaty affair, and their 2023 album "Original Motion Picture Soundtrack" ain't too bad either. 7 p.m. Feb. 24, free.
DEAD COOL & TRACY SHEDD
Feb. 24 at Bourgie Nights: Two of Wilmington's top musical acts team up for what should be an epic, stylistically diverse double bill.
Dead Cool is the Wilmington goth/darkwave/synth pop duo of Johnny and Angela Yeagher, who have attracted an audience for darkly catchy, retro songs about alienation and obsession. And while songs like "The Last Time" might have such lyrics as, "The future's so black I cannot see," there's also a playful side to Dead Cool. It shows up in their videos, with a cute little white fluffball of a dog trying to bite Johnny as he strolls around Greenfield Lake in "Until Death," and in their wickedly dark cover of '80s pop hit "Send Me An Angel."
Wilmington singer and songwriter Tracy Shedd is a veteran of the national indie rock scene who matches sweet, understated vocals with lyrics that can be at once subtle and searching. Shedd's latest single is "Let It Ride," a groovy, moody meditation on patience and trust. 9 p.m. doors, 10 p.m. show, Feb. 24. Tickets are $10 in advance, $15 day of show.
THE PINK STONES, SUMMER SET
Feb. 24 at Reggie's 42nd Street Tavern: Along with Pink Beds and Pink Skull Garden, this is the third "pink" band we've had in Wilmington recently. The Pink Stones hail from Athens, Georgia, and play what they term "cosmic country" or "spacey honky tonk." Good stuff.
Sharing the bill are Wilmington indie-rock stalwarts Summer Set, who last year came out of performance hibernation to drop an excellent new album of classic songs and newer work. With opening act Kit McKay. 7 p.m. Feb. 24, $15.
KICKING BIRD
Feb. 24 at Palate: It's a busy Saturday night for Wilmington label Fort Lowell Records, with three acts on their roster in action. Along with Summer Set and Tracy Shedd, number three is Kicking Bird, which is led by singer-guitarist Shaun Paul and his wife, Shayla, who sings and plays keyboards. They both write hooky songs that rock while often carrying a girl-group sheen, with lyrics about love and life that make both the ups and the downs sound like celebrations. Kicking Bird's live show is a frenzied, sweaty affair, and their 2023 album "Original Motion Picture Soundtrack" ain't too bad either. 7 p.m. Feb. 24, free.
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Two Phoenix music stars unite on stellar new album
[Repost from Phoenix New Times; by Tom Reardon, February 16, 2024]
It’s hard not to get sucked in by the poetry of Jon Rauhouse’s music.
Longtime fans of the Valley legend and sideman to the stars know what I’m talking about. Rauhouse has a way of turning a song into a spiritual experience with a single bend of a guitar string. It’s just what he does.
For the unfamiliar, please get acquainted. There's a little something for everyone in the Rauhouse repertoire, except maybe a speed metal record. The guy’s been cranking out good music since the late 1970s, but anyone and everyone is welcome to the party any time.
The last several years have been difficult, to say the least. Rauhouse has been battling the type of cancer diagnosis that would stop many people right in their tracks, but thanks to some new drug therapies, things are at least looking manageable at present. As interesting as that aspect of Rauhouse’s life is, or the years he spent touring with Neko Case, Billy Bob Thornton or as a member of Grievous Angels or Sleepwalker, there's something even more pressing to explore.
Most recently, he’s been collaborating with Blaine Long, a Valley musician with a wealth of talent and charisma. A one-time contestant on television's "The Voice," Long, like Rauhouse, has diligently been carving out a living and career making records here in Phoenix. Together, though, they have made a record. "One Day Will Never Come Back" (Fort Lowell Records) will assuredly be remembered as the finest record to come out of Arizona in 2023.
That’s no shade towards any of the other worthy candidates for this type of accolade, but it’s true. "One Day Will Never Come Back" is only seven tracks and clocks in at less than half an hour, but within these songs, is a love letter from Long and Rauhouse to life in all its glory and pain. If countrified Americana with a tremendous groove and even bigger heart is your thing, "One Day Will Never Come Back" is a perfect record for you.
In fact, on Sunday, Feb. 18, you can hear it for yourself. Long and Rauhouse, as well as some talented friends, will play the record live at The Dirty Drummer in Phoenix at 2 p.m. That’s right, a matinee show, with another of Rauhouse’s outfits, The Sunpunchers, opening up. It’s also free, so there's no excuse to miss it.
To sit and talk with these gentlemen is a distinct pleasure. What you'll find is a friendship based on respect and admiration, but also drive. The kinetic force of their will is palpable, and they often complete each other’s sentences. It’s no wonder they made such a special record.
The two met when Long reached out to Rauhouse to do a New Year’s gig at Tarbell’s in the days before COVID hit.
“I’ve been playing shows forever here and he’s been playing shows forever here. (Long) had done something huge. He had gotten on 'The Voice,' so I knew his name. There was a whole undercurrent of everyone knowing who he was because in music because he had done that. For musicians, that’s a huge grab. I don’t know if it helps that much, but it makes the world think it does,” Rauhouse says.
“I was in the scene, but I wasn’t in the scene. His name was a name, like the upper echelon. They’re the guys. I was scared of him,” Long adds.
The connection gelled, though, from playing some gigs together and talking about what else they could do. During the early days of the pandemic, Rauhouse chose to play it safe and stay close to home due to his considerable health concerns, and the two songwriters forged their friendship and collaborative partnership.
Long and Rauhouse began hosting their podcast, "The Musician’s Guide To Everything," in April 2021. You can find episodes here, if so inclined, to get an inside look at various aspects of musicians' lives and the music world. For Rauhouse, the work with Long was helpful in sustaining his health.
“It was very helpful. The last think I had done with Neko (Case, who Rauhouse has toured and recorded with for over a decade) was a tour cycle we finished in March (2020). We had several tours booked after March that got shitcanned. Because I got so sick, I couldn’t go on tour. Being able to play with Blaine … we get along really well. He’s a great songwriter with really good sensibilities. It was just easy and a no-brainer,” Rauhouse says.
For Long, it was breath of fresh air, as well. After being on "The Voice," things got a little crazy for him.
“I was getting bullshit offers, weird stuff, because of 'The Voice.' To come through the storm of that stuff and band members … everything got really ugly and wild, but everything got settled (with Rauhouse). We were friends who played music together. It was really nice,” says Long, who had one prospective bandmate ask him for $20,000 thinking being on "The Voice" had made him rich.
The perspective Rauhouse and Long bring to "One Day Will Never Come Back" is refreshing. While the subject matter is not always the happiest, the overall tone of the record is one of hope and triumph. The collaboration between Long and Rauhouse really does seem to be one of comfort and openness, which can be difficult in the music world due to egos and agendas driven by the thirst for fame. But there's none of that here.
Long and Rauhouse assembled a veritable all-star team to bring "One Day Will Never Come Back" to life at Darren Baum's Phoenix studio, Sonic Piranha. Longtime Rauhouse compatriots Lindsay Cates (bass/vocals) and Megyn Neff (violin/viola), as well as Rachel Flotard of Visqueen join in here, as well as some truly awesome contributions by drummer Frank Rowland, and Emily Hunt (cello) on multiple tracks.
“Nothing Lasts Forever” opens the record, and it’s just classic Rauhouse. The guitars carry the listener as if on a cloud. Before you know it, though, you are right into “Jerome,” which features some excellent work by Mitski’s Ty Bailie on the Hammond B3 organ and Los Lobos’ Steve Berlin on saxophone.
“I’d worked with Steve Berlin on a couple of projects he was producing, so I knew him. I had been thinking about (him), and another friend called and said, ‘Steve Berlin says hi.’ I was like, ‘Oh, this is synchronicity. Tell him I have a couple songs I want him to play on,’ and he said, ‘I’ll do it.’ So, that’s how that happened,” Rauhouse says.
“Jerome” also boasts some excellent backing vocals from Betsy Ganz, Raquel Denis and Paula Tesoriero. Local fans will recognize those names from groups like The Sunpunchers and Paula T & Company, as well as acclaimed solo work. The song is truly soulful and the vocal harmonies blend wonderfully with Long’s distinctly rich voice and Berlin’s saxophone blasts.
Bailie’s work on the Hammond B3 is also pretty darn fantastic. It’s hard to pick the best track on "One Day Will Never Come Back," but “Jerome” is one of those songs that should be on every radio, everywhere if people still listened to the radio like they did in the days “Jerome” evokes.
Jesse Valenzuela of Gin Blossoms’ fame contributes a guitar track on “Pretty Love Song.” Valenzuela’s solo fits the track perfectly, and Gin Blossoms fans will recognize his deft touch. For Long and Rauhouse, it was a treat to have him join the studio fun.
“It was two passes, see you later, and they were both perfect,” Rauhouse says with a twinkle in his eye.
“It was just cool. Good music wins. The best thing on that song is that we didn’t ask him to do the solo. In my head, I was thinking, ‘Do you want to do the solo?’ but I was just grateful to have him on it and he asked, ‘Do you want me to do the solo?’ and he went at it twice … I think that's my favorite,” Long says.
With friends like these and a strong partnership, there's no telling what Long and Rauhouse can accomplish. As the album title implies, there's really no point in looking toward the past. It is comforting to know these two men are looking steadfastly at what is coming next. And there's something truly poetic about two friends making great music for the rest of us to enjoy.
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Dead Cool + Tracy Shedd at Bourgie Nights in Wilmington NC Saturday, February 24th
FACEBOOK EVENT LINK
From the coastal charm of Wilmington, North Carolina emerges intriguing electronic duo, Dead Cool. Their namesake, drawn from a Chrome Cranks number, resonates with the unique chemistry of Johnny's multifaceted vocal, synthesizer, and guitar prowess, coupled with Angela Yeagher's bass rhythms and harmonizing vocals. Infused with the evocative notes of darkwave, post-punk, and synthpop, Dead Cool's musical offerings, established since 2020, have been garnering an enthusiastic following both domestically and internationally.
Tracy Shedd is an indie rock musician who has released six studio albums with Teen-Beat, New Granada Records, Devil In The Woods, Science Project Records, and Fort Lowell Records, licensed music to Dawson’s Creek, One Tree Hill, The Fosters, and “The Rebound” (ft. Catherine Zeta-Jones), performed at CBGB, The Florida Theatre, plus festivals such as CMJ and SXSW, and has shared the stage with Cyndi Lauper, Cat Power, Iron & Wine, The Magnetic Fields, and David J (Bauhaus, Love & Rockets); not to mention Steve Shelley of Sonic Youth sat in on drums for her during a US tour. In this current era following her time spent performing under the name Band & The Beat, Tracy Shedd has been and continues to focus on releasing individual tracks through Fort Lowell Records as digital singles and on various compilation albums.
Monday, February 12, 2024
'Never gonna get back to normal': Cancer halted his touring. But he's not done making music
[Repost from AZCentral; by Ed Masley, February 8, 2024]
Jon Rauhouse had been hoping to get back out on the road with Neko Case in 2024.
The multi-instrumentalist from Phoenix has played steel guitar, banjo and more in Case’s touring band for more than 20 years, but had to pull out of a summer tour in 2021 while undergoing treatment for the prostate cancer he’d been diagnosed with earlier that year.
When he agreed to the tour set to launch on March 13 in Missoula, Montana, he was “feeling really good,” he says. “And then the bottom dropped out of my adrenal glands.”
Those glands “control your heart rate, your blood pressure, your temperature, your digestion, all this stuff,” he says. “It was, like, literally killing me. Now, I'm OK. I take one pill in the morning, one in the afternoon. I get through it, go to sleep and do the same thing the next day. I'm gonna have to do it forever. So I won’t be able to get back to touring with Neko.”
The pills have helped a lot, he says, but not enough to put his body or his bandmates through another tour.
“I have to take these weird pills twice a day and they have all these side effects and I just can't do it,” he says. “Not on a tour bus. I can still do shows. I'm playing in the Sunpunchers. I'm playing with Blaine Long. I'm playing with Norm Pratt, doing a bunch of studio stuff. I'm making more records. But I'm never gonna get back to the normal of what my life was.”
When Rauhouse said he couldn’t do the tour this year, Case volunteered to build a tour around him.
“She said, 'Look, I'll tell you what. We'll do a short tour that starts in Phoenix, you do as much as you can and then go home when you can't,’” he says. “I think she missed me. I know I miss her.”
Rauhouse has been keeping busy on the music front
That tour isn't happening, but Rauhouse has been doing all he can to get back to some semblance of the life he knew and loved before cancer made so much of what he used to do impossible.
“I have really good days,” Rauhouse says, “and really bad days.”
Last year, Rauhouse recorded a great new album with Long titled “One Day Will Never Come Back," released by Fort Lowell Records in November 2023. He and Long will be playing selections from that album with a 10-piece band in a special matinee performance at the Dirty Drummer on Sunday, Feb. 18.
In January, he recorded eight songs with the other members of Sleepwalker, a band he used to play with in the ‘90s.
Neko Case is tracking part of her next album with Rauhouse in Phoenix
And Case says she’s planning on coming to Phoenix before the tour starts with recording engineer Jeff Gallagher to track Rauhouse’s parts for her next album.
“She's like, 'I'll just have Jeff come in and set up his recording rig with some good mics in your living room and do it,'" Rauhouse says.
"I'm like, 'That'd be great with me. I’ll play in my pajamas.' That's better than sending me to Vermont and getting a hotel room, renting a car and all that stuff. So it's working out. It's just all different. And I do feel guilty that people are making concessions.”
Rauhouse may not be on the open road, but his music is going international
The normal life he once enjoyed included tours with not just Case but Jakob Dylan, Billy Bob Thornton and Iron & Wine with Ben Bridwell.
In addition to playing on albums by Case, Thornton’s Boxmasters, Calexico, Dr. Dog, K.T. Tunstall, the Old 97's and Giant Sand, he's done several albums of his own since he started playing steel guitar in the late ‘70s.
He’s still doing session work. He’s just doing most of it out of Sonic Piranha in the Coronado neighborhood of Phoenix.
“I have a buddy of mine who's a producer out of New York,” Rauhouse says. “Every three or four months, he calls and has some project he wants steel on. So I do it at Sonic Piranha and mail it off to him.”
He’s been doing the same thing with his friend Jim Kaufman, a Phoenix-born producer now residing in Los Angeles.
“He had some country guy from England that ended up with a No. 1 song in Australia, No. 2 song in the U.K., big in Japan on one of the songs I did,” he says. “So that was really cool.”
Recording an album with Blaine Long was 'a great experience'
He’s especially proud of the album he and Long recorded after raising nearly $6,000 in an Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign.
That allowed them to cover the studio time and assemble a stellar assortment of backing musicians, from Steve Berlin of Los Lobos and Rachel Flotard of Visqueen to Jesse Valenzuela of Gin Blossoms, Mitski organist Ty Bailie, and Lindsay Cates and Megyn Neff, who play with Rauhouse in the Sunpunchers.
“It felt really good to just go, ‘OK, this is what we're gonna do and this is how we're gonna do it,” Rauhouse says. “And it was such a great experience. I didn't feel the need to have anybody who wasn't pleasant on the record.”
Long, a singer-songwriter who famously appeared on NBC’s “The Voice” in 2016, has been playing with Rauhouse for four or five years.
“Maybe two years before COVID, just out of the blue, he contacted me on Facebook Messenger and said, 'Hey, I'm doing a New Year's Eve show at Tarbell's. You want to play?'” Rauhouse says. “We did it, had a blast, and I've been playing with him ever since.”
They even started their own podcast, the Musician’s Guide to Everything, with guests including Thornton, Case and Jakob Dylan.
The music on “One Day Will Never Come Back” is a true collaboration, with Rauhouse producing songs they wrote together at Sonic Piranha.
“A lot of it was his meat and I just put some seasoning on it,” Rauhouse says. “But ‘One Day Will Never Come Back,' I wrote that one and he seasoned it a little bit for me. And then he wrote the instrumental because I'm the instrumental guy."
Rauhouse is also recording a solo album of steel guitar instrumentals
Rauhouse says he’s also working on a solo album of steel guitar instrumentals, much of it based of recordings he’s stored on his phone.
“When I come up with a riff, I'll just turn that note recorder on my phone on,” Rauhouse says. “I have (expletive) back to 2012 on there, so I was going through all that stuff and found four or five songs that are really good steel guitar songs. So I'm gonna do those and write a couple new ones.”
He even found a recording he made with Tommy Connell, a longtime friend and musical collaborator who died in 2021.
“I found the last song we were working on,” he says. “I didn't realize we’d run the whole thing, just me and him, on the phone. It’s two guitars doing harmony picking, like Speedy (West) and Jimmy (Bryant). It's not steel guitar. It's two guitars. So I took it to Sonic and had him sweeten that up with EQs. Then I called Tommy's son and got him to play bass on it. And I got John Utter on drums.”
He’s doing his best to release all the music he can.
Releasing new music and 'counting time'
“I think a lot of it has to do with the fact that I feel like I'm counting time here until the end,” he says.
“I don't know that. They're not telling me that. But I don't have a great diagnosis. I'm fine. I just feel like I need to get these things out, for some sort of twisted reason that the cosmos might care. But I don't think the cosmos will care.”
Beyond just documenting his ideas for the cosmos, making music gets him through the tendency to let the darkness get the best of him at times.
“It helps a lot,” he says. “And if it's with other people, it helps even more, because I've come to realize I can sit and noodle and do all this stuff by myself, but it's not near as fun as just having one other person there to bounce stuff off of — you know, trade ideas and stuff like that.”
How to see the Jon Rauhouse and Blaine Long release show
When: 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 18.
Where: The Dirty Drummer, 2303 N. 44th St., Phoenix, Arizona
Admission: Free.
Tuesday, January 23, 2024
Tracy Shedd | Florida Tour
Friday, February 2 | Tavares, FL | Far Reach Farm | w/ Harber Wynn
Saturday, February 3 | Jensen Beach, FL | Tako Tiki w/ Sandman Sleeps, We Are / They Are
Sunday, February 4 | Tampa, FL | Microgroove Record Store
Monday, February 5 | Jacksonville, FL | Jack Rabbit's | w/ Me Like Bees, Blissfund
Saturday, December 16, 2023
Pressing Concerns: Common Thread – Fountain (30th Anniversary)
Release date: December 8th
Record label: Fort Lowell
Genre: Noise rock, shoegaze, 90s indie rock, post-punk
Formats: Vinyl, digital
Pull Track: Template
This year, Wilmington, North Carolina’s Fort Lowell Records have put out new music from a couple of longtime indie rockers in James Sardone and Summer Set, but for their final release of 2023, they’ve gone even further and grabbed a lost southeastern-U.S. indie rock record to hoist from relative obscurity in Common Thread’s Fountain. Common Thread originated in the late 1980s in the suburbs of Jacksonville, Florida, putting out Six Marbles and a Bowl of Mud in 1990 and following it up with Fountain, released only on cassette, in 1993. The band–guitarists Joe Parker and Travis Taylor, bassist Joey Zimmerman, and drummer Craig Parlet–toured the East Coast extensively, making an impression on the co-founders of Fort Lowell Records with their noisy but melodic mix of 1980s post-punk, noise rock, and shoegaze. The label’s James Tritten and Tracy Shedd have made it clear that this reissue campaign is especially personal for them–but, as someone who hadn’t heard of Common Thread at all before this year, I can confidently say that one didn’t have to “be there” at the time to appreciate their sophomore album.
Last month, I wrote about The Veldt, another band who was making loud, layered indie rock at the same time in the same part of the country. It’s enough to suggest that the American Southeast is an underappreciated part of this era of underground music–not the least of which is because Fountain sounds so different from The Veldt’s Cocteau Twins-indebted sound. Common Thread were certainly influenced by Sonic Youth, as they had a similar attitude with regards to wringing noise out of their guitars, but they also brought a British sense of dour melody to their music that Parker, Taylor, and Zimmerman (all singers and songwriters) hid underneath their instruments. At the same time, the prominent, rumbling bass that marks songs like “Sesame” and “Digit” feels very American noise rock–coupled with Parlet’s tireless drumming, Common Thread boasted a rhythm section that a lot of contemporary “amplifier worship” guitar-heavy bands didn’t really have. Fitting of a band with three different leaders, Fountain feels like a lot–it’s absolutely a statement worth shining some more light on after three decades. (Bandcamp link)
Genre: Noise rock, shoegaze, 90s indie rock, post-punk
Formats: Vinyl, digital
Pull Track: Template
This year, Wilmington, North Carolina’s Fort Lowell Records have put out new music from a couple of longtime indie rockers in James Sardone and Summer Set, but for their final release of 2023, they’ve gone even further and grabbed a lost southeastern-U.S. indie rock record to hoist from relative obscurity in Common Thread’s Fountain. Common Thread originated in the late 1980s in the suburbs of Jacksonville, Florida, putting out Six Marbles and a Bowl of Mud in 1990 and following it up with Fountain, released only on cassette, in 1993. The band–guitarists Joe Parker and Travis Taylor, bassist Joey Zimmerman, and drummer Craig Parlet–toured the East Coast extensively, making an impression on the co-founders of Fort Lowell Records with their noisy but melodic mix of 1980s post-punk, noise rock, and shoegaze. The label’s James Tritten and Tracy Shedd have made it clear that this reissue campaign is especially personal for them–but, as someone who hadn’t heard of Common Thread at all before this year, I can confidently say that one didn’t have to “be there” at the time to appreciate their sophomore album.
Last month, I wrote about The Veldt, another band who was making loud, layered indie rock at the same time in the same part of the country. It’s enough to suggest that the American Southeast is an underappreciated part of this era of underground music–not the least of which is because Fountain sounds so different from The Veldt’s Cocteau Twins-indebted sound. Common Thread were certainly influenced by Sonic Youth, as they had a similar attitude with regards to wringing noise out of their guitars, but they also brought a British sense of dour melody to their music that Parker, Taylor, and Zimmerman (all singers and songwriters) hid underneath their instruments. At the same time, the prominent, rumbling bass that marks songs like “Sesame” and “Digit” feels very American noise rock–coupled with Parlet’s tireless drumming, Common Thread boasted a rhythm section that a lot of contemporary “amplifier worship” guitar-heavy bands didn’t really have. Fitting of a band with three different leaders, Fountain feels like a lot–it’s absolutely a statement worth shining some more light on after three decades. (Bandcamp link)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)