Austin City Limits 2016 lineup and dates announced.

ACL16-Website-Lineup-Poster-15616a2-572x800

The annual Austin City Limits Music Festival has announced its dates and lineup.  The festival takes place in downtown Austin, Texas over the course of two weekends, and some bands play both of them.

Headliners this year include Radiohead, Mumford & Sons, Kendrick Lamar, LCD Soundsystem, Willie Nelson, M83, Cage the Elephant, Two Door Cinema Club, LL Cool J, Foals, and Die Antwoord.

Tickets for the first weekend are already sold out, so don’t wait for weekend two tickets if you’re interested.  I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of people who didn’t get to see anyone during Levitation Austin this year go to this festival to make up for it.  Tickets and hotel rooms will go fast.

Keep your mind open.

[We’re here for you all weekend, all week, really, if you subscribe to us.]

Lollapalooza Chicago releases daily schedule.

LOL16_BlogHeader_4thDay

Lollapalooza Chicago has released its daily schedule of bands over the course of the four-day weekend July 28 – 31st.

Four-day and single-day tickets are sold out unless you want and can afford to buy VIP ($2,200 weekend / $650 single day) or Platinum Package ($4,200, no single day tickets) tickets.  Thursday night’s headliners are Lana Del Rey, the Last Shadow Puppets, Flosstradamus, and J. Cole.

Friday night’s headliners: Major Lazer, Ghost, Martin Garrix, and a little band called Radiohead.

Saturday night’s headliners: Disclosure, Vic Mensa, Hardwell, and Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Sunday night’s headliners: Ellie Goulding, ZHU, Die Antwoord, and LCD Soundsystem.

Keep your mind open.

[You’d be a headliner to us if you subscribed.]

Rewind Review: A Place to Bury Strangers – Exploding Head (2009)

a-place-to-bury-strangers-exploding-head-stumm311-560x560

I’ve been meaning to pick up A Place to Bury Strangers’ 2009 album, Exploding Head, for years. I have no excuse other than it was never for sale on CD whenever I’d see them live. I love the band, so shame on me for taking seven years to pick up this fine record.

The opener, “It Is Nothing,” displays Oliver Ackermann’s (vocals and guitar) love of My Bloody Valentine. His guitar sounds like he’s playing it upside-down and backwards while his vocals seem to be coming from the bottom of an empty pool. “In Your Heart” is one of my favorite APTBS tracks. It has the stabbing guitar chords, chugging synth beats, lyrics about screwed-up relationships (“Don’t say you’ll be with me again. There’s nothing there, it’s dead.”), and David J-like bass I love from their songs, and it slays live.

Tribal drumming grounds “Lost Feeling” as Ackermann pleads with his girl to come back to him, but he knows he’s not even on her radar. It’s like a great lost Bauhaus track with even more blaring guitars. “Deadbeat” is nothing but, as it has some of the hardest, slickest beats and bass on the record. It’s an instant mosh pit creator, so be careful where you play it.

“Keep Slipping Away” is like early Cure but with more reverb, heavier amps, and not as much moping. “Ego Death” is heavy goth rock with a chorus that might knock you out of your boots. “Smile When You Smile” is equally heavy and a bit creepier.  “Everything Always Goes Wrong” could be the theme for every Three’s Company episode by the title, but the sound of it is better for a modern Euro-horror film.

You’d think the title track would be loud enough to make your head explode, but APTBS wisely flips it around to make it a catchy industrial track with almost a dance club bass line and vocals free of reverb. The closer is one of their hardest and loudest live tracks – “I Lived My Life to Stand in the Shadow of Your Heart.” As fast as it is on the record, it’s twice the speed live.

Don’t be like me and wait seven years to add this to your collection. It’s essential noise-psych.

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t slip away without subscribing to us.]

DJ set list for May 08, 2016

I’ve returned to WSND for my summer shows.  I’ll be on most Sunday nights at midnight EST until 2am.  I spin a lot of variety, so you’re sure to hear something you’ll like.  The show streams live at the station’s website, or you can hear it on 88.9FM on the dial if you’re in the South Bend, Indiana listening area.

Here’s my set list from last night’s show:

  1. Brujas Del Sol – Ships in the Distance
  2. Bad Religion – Ad Hominem
  3. Helmet – FBLA II
  4. The Kills – Goodnight Bad Morning
  5. WALL – Cuban Cigars
  6. Betty Davis – Is It Love or Desire
  7. Soledad Brothers – Let Me Down
  8. Prince – Baltimore
  9. Beastie Boys – Futterman’s Rule
  10. Elvis Presley – Blue Moon of Kentucky
  11. Shonen Knife – The Perfect World
  12. Shone Knife – Cookie Day
  13. Rustie – Paradise Stone
  14. Case & Slide – Perception (Vocal mix)
  15. Possum Kingdom Ramblers – Godzilla
  16. Vaadat Charigim – Ein Li Makom
  17. Gary Wilson – I Wanna Lose Control
  18. The Night Beats – Rat King
  19. The Night Beats – Power Child
  20. Earthless – Violence of the Red Sea
  21. The Blind Owls – The Girl Is Mine
  22. Klaus Johan Grobe – Ein Guter Tag
  23. Imarhan – Tahabort
  24. Strange Lot – Into the Night
  25. Golden Dawn Arkestra – Sama Chaka

Thanks for listening.  I’m back on the air April 22nd.

Keep your mind open.

[Give us a spin by subscribing to us.]

WALL – self-titled EP

WALL EP

I’m happy to report that fun post-punk music is alive and well thanks to New York’s WALL (Vanessa Gomez, Vince McClelland, Elizabeth Skadden, Samantha York). Their four-song EP is a jolt of lightning to everything drab coming out of your radio right now.

“Cuban Cigars” is a middle finger to rich douchebags full of skronky guitars and visceral lyrics like, “These guys they got the money, only once they’ve been to the laundry.” It’s one of my top singles of the year so far. “Fit the Part” is a great mix of X (sing-along / shout vocals), Buzzcocks (beats and guitar), and Circle Jerks (attitude). “Last Date” could be an early Devo track, but it’s really more of a paranoid freak-out fueled by McClelland’s Gang of Four-influenced guitar. Just when you think they’re all about post-punk madness, along comes “Milk,” which is neo-psychedelic rock (Post-psych? I should trademark that term.) with slightly reverbed vocals and building instrumentation that is perfect for tripping or getting ready for a fight.

This EP is a shot across the bow of modern rock. WALL have put up a metaphoric version of their namesake and dared anyone to scale it. It’s covered in spikes, barbed wire, fuzzy amps, and four New York rockers atop it ready to stomp down anyone who even tries to climb up there. They can’t release a full-length album soon enough for my tastes, and the sake of the world.

Keep your mind open.

[No douchebags here, just good music when you subscribe.]

Rewind Review: Groove Armada – Vertigo (1999)

[Rewind Reviews are reviews of albums over a year old that I haven’t heard until now.]

Groove_Armada_-_Vertigo

Groove Armada’s Vertigo is one of those records that I’ve been meaning to pick up for years but kept forgetting to seek out whenever I was in a wrecka stow or visiting an online music sales site.

It’s a masterpiece of late 1990’s techno, house, and lounge. The opener, “Chicago,” is a perfect anthem for late night clubbing in the Windy City – fat beats, luscious synth grooves, and kinky guitar. “Whatever, Whenever” starts off sounding like something from a grindhouse horror film trailer before rapper M.A.D. slides in with smooth rhymes to save us all from whatever horror was about to pounce on us.

“Dusk, You & Me” is one of the best make-out songs of 1999. If Roddy Lormiar’s trumpet doesn’t get things moved into the naked zone, you only have yourself to blame. I don’t know if the “63” in the title of “Pre 63” refers to the year 1963, but you could put this fly song of heavy bass, playful flute, and crisp beats into any early 1960’s Euro-crime film or sex comedy.

“If Everybody Looked the Same” weaves a great use of a sample from A Tribe Called Quest through a song about bigotry. “Serve Chilled” is perfectly titled, as it’s great for relaxing after late night parties. “I See You Baby” is the opposite, however, and will get the party jumping again as soon as you start it. I mean, the chorus is “I see you, baby, shakin’ that ass.” What more do you need?

“A Private Interlude” has great scratch work from Dominic Betmead. “At the River” is weird, almost sounding backward at some points, and creeps out of the speakers like something from a bad print of a Fellini movie. In other words, I like it. “In My Bones” is a sweet house track about how a good groove gets inside you and can only escape by taking temporary control of you. It has some of the best synth work on the record and probably is one of their best “unknown” hits.

“Your Song” isn’t a cover of the Elton John tune. It’s a funky track with sexy vocals by Sophie Barker. “Inside My Mind (Blue Skies)” is a song you’ve probably heard in dozens of movies, TV shows, and commercials and not realized it. It’s ambient lounge grooves instantly put you in a mellow state of mind. It’s impossible to be depressed during this song. It chills you out like few songs can. The album ends with a saucy remix of “I See You Baby” by Fatboy Slim.

It’s a solid house music record. Pick it up if you’re looking for some good late night grooves for your next party.

Keep your mind open.

[If you’re fond of us, why not subscribe?]

Radiohead to release new album May 8th.

RH

Radiohead, arguably the biggest band in the world (and still one of the few pushing the envelope and daring to not be pigeonholed), have announced their as-yet untitled new album will be released on May 8th in digital formats and in physical formats on June 18th.

The band surprised everyone by erasing their entire Internet presence for two days and then returning with the new single “Burn the Witch.”  Two days later they released the single “Daydreaming,” which has a video directed by film director Paul Thomas Anderson (for whom Radiohead guitarist Johnny Greenwood has scored multiple films).

Radiohead are playing multiple festival dates in the U.S. and around the world starting this summer.  They always put on an excellent show, so don’t miss them if they’re near you.

Keep your mind open.

[We daydream of you subscribing to us.]

Midnight Oil announce 2017 reunion tour.

MO

Aussie legends Midnight Oil announced on May 4th that they are reuniting for a tour in 2017.  In case you don’t know “the Oils” (as they are sometimes called) are one of Australia’s greatest bands and easily one of the most politically charged / Stick-it-to-the-Man bands of the last 30 years.  Lead singer Peter Garrett even went into politics after the band split up to further their causes for Aboriginal Australians, economic equality, and environmental action.

They haven’t announced tour dates or locations yet, but this will be a must-see show.  My wife and I have seen them twice, and both shows were excellent.  We got to meet some of them after a show, and they were all good lads.

They’re offering a free download of a live version of “Forgotten Years” (one of the hits off the classic Blue Sky Mining album) through their website to celebrate the announcement, so grab it while you can.

Keep your mind open.

[Subscribe to us before you split, won’t you?]

Levitation Austin – Day 4: BBQ, Austrian booze, electric shocks

levitationlineup-admat

We began the fourth day of Levitation Austin by heading to Threadgill’s restaurant for their Sunday gospel brunch buffet.  The buffet was average, although the sweet potato pancakes are a delight, but the music by a band whose name I never found was classic country.  I knew we were in for a good show when the lead singer asked, “Any Flatt and Scruggs fans out there?”  My wife and I were the only ones who yelled in the affirmative.  Sigh…

IMG_2647
Who is this band? Does anyone know?

We then went to the famous Museum of the Weird, where I took part in a circus sideshow involving a man immune to AC electricity (getting zapped by him a few times).  We also saw things like this.

IMG_2655

I gave a dollar to a homeless guy we’d seen the night before getting shooed out of a food truck vendor lot by a woman who said, “Move on, Karate Kid!”  We’d seen him three times, so I wanted to give him something.  He asked everyone, “Do you have a dollar?”  I finally had some change for him, so I gave it to him while he rested on a gas meter outside a building.  Austin has a large homeless population, many displaced by the gentrification of downtown.  I hope the city is addressing the issue.

I didn’t miss the irony of helping a homeless man and then grabbing lunch at Terry Black’s BBQ, where I had some of the best smoked turkey I’ve ever eaten.  I liked it better than Stubb’s, which is more famous.  Afterwards, we headed to Symphony Square in time to see the last half of Indrajit Banerjee and Gourisankar‘s set at the river stage.

IMG_2656
Gourisankar and Indrajit Banerjee at the Symphony Square outdoor stage.

“This is my favorite part of the weekend so far,” my wife said.

We chatted with them after their set and gave them some ideas about Indiana theaters that might host them.  They told us they were playing at the Scoot Inn later that night – the same place we had tickets to see Golden Dawn Arkestra.  It was going to be a good evening.

We went to the Scoot Inn right away to get decent parking.  We saw the construction crane upon which many people sat to see over the fence the night before when the Black Angels and the Brian Jonestown Massacre played there.  We met more festival attendees while standing in line.  People complained about scalpers selling tickets for up to $100 each (20x face value apiece) and not getting to see any bands scheduled for the festival.  One couple behind us got to see a pop-up gig by stoner metal masters Sleep.  They wanted to see at least one band from Levitation, even if they didn’t like stoner metal.  Other people hadn’t learned about the makeup shows until they were sold out.  The couple in front of us had gone to MR Fest and saw La Luz perform there.

We got in and saw Blondi’s Salvation had been added to the lineup.  They got the show off to a good start with their French blend of psych rock.

IMG_2657
Blondi’s Salvation

We had seen Puerto Rico’s Fantasmes at the 2014 festival, and we were surprised to hear how much heavier and darker they’d become since then.  They looked and sounded like a Latino version of Interpol.  It was a good set that made me want to seek out their newest material.

IMG_2665
Fantasmes

I was pleased as punch by this point because not only had Fantasmes delivered some fine music, but I discovered the Scoot Inn sold an Austrian radler that I hadn’t had since a trip there almost three years ago.

IMG_2662

Indrajit Banerjee and Gourisankar played a half-hour set after Fantasmes.  We got up front for it.  One of the sound guys walked past and said, “This is going to be bad-ass.”

“He’s right,” my wife said.  He was, and so was she (as usual).  The Indian music masters wowed the crowd and had everyone booming with cheers by the end of their set.

IMG_2667
Gourisankar and Indrajit Banerjee

The night ended with a wild, powerful performance by Golden Dawn Arkestra, who I can best describe as a combination of Goat and Earth, Wind, and Fire.  The band is as big as their Afro-jazz-funk sound.  I counted seventeen people on stage at one point, and there was even a dancing wizard in front of the stage during the whole show to boot.

IMG_2670
One half of Golden Dawn Arkestra
IMG_2677
Another half of Golden Dawn Arkestra

People were bouncing during the whole set.  I heard many raving about it after it was over.  One woman was happy she hadn’t left after Fantasmes as she had planned.  I told her I was glad she stayed.

I was glad everyone stayed for the whole weekend.  I’m sure many turned around and went home when the festival was cancelled, but many toughed it out and either attended the makeup shows, went to other gigs, or had their own parties.

Levitation Austin 2016 will be remembered as “the one that got cancelled,” but it will also be looked upon as a badge of honor if you were there.  Everyone has stories from the other festivals, but this one will have stories that become legends.

I hope to see you next year, Austin.

Keep your mind open.

[We hope to see your e-mail address in our subscription box.]

Radiohead erase Internet presence, return with new single and video.

In case you missed it, music titans Radiohead erased their Facebook, Twitter, website, and pretty much everything else they had on the Internet two days ago.  They were gone.  Fans were puzzled, but not entirely surprised as Radiohead have been Internet renegades for years.  They were the first to release an album (In Rainbows) online and told fans they could pay whatever they wanted for it, even nothing at all if they liked.

Their website and Twitter content was often cryptic, and they’d go for long stretches without posting anything.

They came back yesterday with a new single and video – “Burn the Witch.”  It’s a dissonant, almost frantic song with Thom Yorke’s usual mysterious lyrics.  The video is also a tribute to the unsettling film The Wicker Man.  Don’t bother with the Nicolas Cage version.  Just don’t.  Enjoy the original, this new song, and the upcoming album (whenever that is) instead.

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t get burned by missing a post.  Drop us your e-mail address in the subscription box to your left and get updates sent straight to you.]