Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Live Review: Holograms, Eraas at NYC's Mercury Lounge (9/4)

For a minute, it looked like Holograms were totally fucked. The four young Swedes held several pow-wows onstage while their suddenly and inexplicably defunct Korg keyboard stood on the periphery like the proverbial elephant in the room. 'Yeah, it's going to be a bad show,' guitarist and vocalist Anton Spetz said to synth player and brother Filip, who gamely stood in the audience while the rest of his band played on. 'This thing doesn't work, so we're going to play without it,' he told the audience in a much more audible aside. And, remarkably, play they did.

Swedish proto-punkers and recent CoSign Holograms headlined a late show at New York's Mercury Lounge last night, their stone-cold riffs and dead voices a perfect fit and foil for a humid, gloomy night literally pissing rain. Brooklyn quartet Eraas (pronounced 'eras') opened, and their timeless, tribal synth-punk encapsulated their name. They took the stage in various cuts of black'dress, tank top, crew neck, and collared shirt'and between one and a half drum kits banged out dual-syncopated rhythms conducive enough to the idea of moshing. Everyone perked up when the drum machines kicked in and Eraas really started to sound like Cold Cave, embracing a facet that until then had taken a backseat to the uncannily Liars-like setup.

After aforementioned technical difficulties, Holograms took the stage only about 15 minutes later than they were supposed to. Setz looked like he was going to kill himself for the majority of the set, which I suppose suits the band's ethos. It got to the point where bassist and vocalist Andreas Lagerstrom said, as much to convince his bandmate as the audience (who couldn't have cared less as they head-banged away), 'It's really weird playing without a synthesizer. Sounds okay. Let's go.' He even walked over at one point, one-arm hugged Setz, and ruffled his hair.

Band drama aside, Holograms doesn't seem to need their keyboard. 'Monolith' rang true and stark without the added padding, just the four cornerstones of vox, bass, guitar, and drums. Even 'Chasing My Mind' sounded solid without its opening salvo of trumpeting synths. In surprising contrast to their record, which thumps sometimes too loudly with the kick drum, their set was well-mixed.

It was just on the right side of too loud, and if you closed your eyes you could just barely discern the difference between Setz and Lagerstrom's verses. 'ABC City' was especially anthemic this close to Avenue A, and 'You Are Ancient (Sweden's Pride)' was a string-wrenching closer, hopefully reminding Setz that Swedes are an ancient, proud people. Or, you know: 'It won't be dark forever.' Since they didn't really stick to the setlist verbatim, Holograms didn't play an encore. Perhaps, in this case, it was better to go out with a bang than another potential technical whimper.



of Montreal announce rarities compilation: Daughter of Cloud

of Montreal will follow up February's release of Paralytic Stalks with a new rarities compilation, entitled Daughter of the Cloud The 17-track effort comprises unreleased tracks and rarities recorded between 2007 and 2012. 'Sails, Hermaphroditic' is one of those tracks, and you can stream it below (via Pitchfork). The entire compilation will be released digitally, on CD and 'cyan colored' double LP, and as as a limited edition purple cassette via Polyvinyl/Joyful Noise on October 23rd.

Also below you'll find the itinerary for of Montreal's latest U.S. tour, which kicks off in Gainesville, FL later this month and keeps the band on the road through mid-December.

'Sails, Hermaphroditic':

Daughter of Cloud Tracklist:
01. Our Love Is Senile
02. Obviousatonicnuncio
03. Sails, Hermaphroditic
04. Steppin' Out
05. Hindlopp Stat
06. Partizan Terminus
07. Georgie's Lament
08. Jan Doesn't Like It
09. Feminine Effects
10. Tender Fax
11. Psychotic Feeling
12. Alter Eagle
13. Kristiansand
14. Micro University
15. Subtext Read, Nothing New
16. Noir Blues to Tinnitus
17. Expecting to Fly (Buffalo Springfield cover)

of Montreal 2012 Tour Dates:
09/25 ' Gainesville, FL @ Reitz Union Rion Ballroom
10/06-07 ' Los Angeles, CA @ Culture Collide Festival
10/19 ' Halfiax, NS @ Halifax Pop Explosion
11/27 ' Athens, GA @ Georgia Theatre
11/28 ' Miami, FL @ The Stage
11/29 ' Tallahassee, FL @ The Moon
11/30 ' Orlando, FL @ The Plaza
12/01 ' Mobile, AL @ Alabama Music Box
12/02 ' New Orleans, LA @ Howlin' Wolf
12/03 ' Houston, TX @ Warehouse Live
12/04 ' Austin, TX @ Mohawk
12/05 ' Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater
12/06 ' Oklahoma City, OK @ ACM
12/07 ' Omaha, NE @ Slowdown
12/08 ' Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall
12/09 ' Chicago, IL @ Metro
12/10 ' Cleveland, OH @ Beachland Ballroom
12/11 ' New York, NY @ Webster Hall
12/12 ' Boston, MA @ Paradise
12/13 ' Philadelphia, PA @ The Trocadero
12/14 ' Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
12/15 ' Carrboro, NC @ Cat's Cradle



Video: Ellie Goulding ' 'Anything Could Happen'

Ellie Goulding channels her inner Daenerys Targaryen in her new video for 'Anything Could Happen'. Following a tragic car accident, the UK songwriter awakens on a beach littered with Phantasm-like orbs and other alien geometric shapes. There's a lot of smoke, jagged rocks, and one bloody lover. If this is her idea of a beach day, we'll opt for sunnier afternoons with Katy Perry, but if it's a preview of the afterlife, remind us to pack our dancing shoes come reckoning. Catch the clip below.

Goulding's sophomore record, Halcyon, hits stores October 9th via Polydor.



Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Album Review: Cat Power ' Sun

As George Harrison might have said, it's been a long, cold, lonely winter for Cat Power's Chan Marshall. The tumultuous musician has dealt with more than her fair share bad press, bad habits, and bad relationships over the past decade. But when she sings, 'here comes the sun,' on the title track of her ninth album, Marshall emerges from a long hibernation, casting off the unadulterated guitar parts of her earlier catalogue for a rejuvenating new sound. Beat-friendly (thanks to Beastie Boys' mixer, Philippe Zdar) and production-heavy (thanks to herself), Sun is Marshall's most evolved work. With a little light and a new perspective, Chan Marshall reveals yet another beautiful way she maneuvers in the dark.

Sun's unique direction is expressed in a slew of rebellion songs that are refined with delirious Eastern influences ('Always On My Own') and Dylan-esque pioneering ('Human Being'). Despite the pop-oriented sound, all of Marshall's songs on Sun are imbued with dimensions of debt. The two songs that bookend the album ' 'Cherokee' and 'Peace and Love' ' plait personal conviction with historical guilt.

On 'Cherokee', Marshall's lyrics identify with the fatalism of the native world, just as the muted vocal and heaving synths sound strangely prehistoric. The song gains immediacy in the moments when the word 'buried,' sounds like 'married.' Perhaps, in Marshall's view, that institution is as permanent and polluted as the earth.

At the end of the album, Marshall delivers a bolder history lesson. 'Peace and Love' has the psychotic cowboy anger of Clint Eastwood yelling at an empty chair. Her strident 'na-na-nas' slip into unintelligible words. The guitar fades in and out like a bad signal. But the lyrics, like on 'Cherokee', reveal another disturbing reality: 'Constitution's fine if we choose the school/ So your kid knows who's spinnin' the globe.'

Between the bookends, Marshall probes more world problems that resonate as much with her life as on a dance floor. 'Ruin' is Marshall's 'We Didn't Start The Fire'. She rattles off city names like 'Chile, Meh-hee-co, Great Britain,' while the tick-a-tick loop builds into an anxiety-ridden dance jam railing against global passivity. Or as she puts it: 'bitching.'

Like Joel, she likes to wrestle with the contradictions of 'Manhattan'. Big Apple view from her bleak hotel room includes 'free speech and lipstick in the moonlight' and she is as fascinated as any singer-songwriter with 'dark rooms' and 'secret lives.' But her lyrics are never specific enough to believe she ever actually left the hotel room. In that sense, the song sounds more like an ode to an interloper and the transient harmonies are as appealing and as the lights that inspired them.

Marshall's robust, Georgia-born vocals are proliferated on Sun with enhanced production values. It sounds like she's singing through a kaleidoscope, but the multiplicity never sacrifices her singular vision. This is clearest on 'Real Life', a song about the disappointment of unfulfilled aspirations. Doctors who want to be dancers, mothers who wish to be alone, dogs without bones: the stories sometimes sound generic. But with a help from her synthetic selves, Marshall delivers the lyrics in a round, affecting a childhood rhyme. Elegant and eerie, it seems that for those in Marshall's rowboat, life is anything but a dream.

This yearning for escape returns on '3,6,9', a song that obliquely addresses her struggles with substance abuse. Marshall gently forgives without diminishing the pain of feeling like a 'joke.' Catchy, relentless beats evoke the ease of addiction; like a jump-rope rhyme ready for the A.A. parking lot ('3,6,9 / You drink wine / Monkey on your back / You feel just fine').

Self-forgiveness is at the heart of Sun, and it is anchored in the 11-minute 'Nothin But Time'. 'The world is just beginning,' Marshall intimates to a kid who sits alone in a room, 'just trying to get by.' The 'kid' is unequivocally Marshall, herself. The major key resolves the jilted instrumentation (piano and laser lines), just as Marshall's vocals vanquishes the demons that dominated her life. As it turns out, the angel on Marshall's shoulder is none other than the high holy lust-er of life Iggy Pop, who lends his baritone on the brief duet.

Whatever Chan Marshall has been doing all this time, she certainly wasn't taking a break. Transformed in both sound and spirit, Sun is a passionate pop album of electronic music filtered through a singer-songwriter's soul. In the past, she was known for performing at the mercy of her moods. This time, Marshall decided she was in the mood for a melody. And she's got us feeling alright.

Essential Tracks: '3,6,9', 'Ruin', and 'Peace and Love'

Feature artwork by Dmitri Jackson:



Video: The Cribs ' 'Anna'

What: 'Work #1431' by Turner Prize winner and musician Martin Creed also serves as the video for his tourmates The Cribs' new single, 'Anna'. Photographs shot by the band flash by in quick succession, lasting only long enough to give you an impression. It's like flipping through their Instagram account really fast, only without the lighting filters.

The Cribs' latest release, In the Belly of the Brazen Bull,is out now via Wichita Recordings.

Directed by: Martin Creed



Video: Damon Albarn kicks off Africa Express tour

Over the weekend, the Africa Express departed from North London to begin its six-day trek through England. Aboard the train is an all-star collective of 80 musicians led by Damon Albarn and featuring Amadou & Mariam, Bombay Bicycle Club, The Temper Trap, The Libertines' Carl Barat, Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Nick Zinner, Tony Allen, and more.

Along with their six scheduled performances, the collective will perform pop-up shows at railway stations and schools and pen new material together while en route to their destinations, all with the goal of inspiring new audiences and exploring the UK and Africa's vastly different musical frontiers.

Below, you can watch footage from the tour's launch including Albarn and Rokia Traore performing 'Melancholy Hill' by Gorillaz, Albarn performing 'Down with the Trumpets' with Rizzle Kicks, and a tour of the train shot by BBC News. In addition, Pulp's Jarvis Cocker interviewed Albarn for BBC Radio, which you can listen to below.



Monday, September 3, 2012

Stream: David Byrne & St. Vincent ' Love This Giant

St. Vincent and David Byrne are currently streaming their collaborative album Love This Giant on NPR.org ahead of its September 11th release (via 4AD/Todo Mundo). Spanning 12 tracks, the album was recorded at the Water Music studio in Hoboken, New Jersey with assistance from a brass section that included members of the Dap-Kings and Antibalas.

In support of the release, Annie Clark and Byrne will hit the road together this fall, and you can find their full itinerary mapped out below.

St. Vincent and David Byrne 2012 Tour Dates:
09/15 ' Minneapolis, MN @ State Theater
09/16 ' Milwaukee, WI @ Riverside Theater
09/18 ' Chicago, IL @ Chicago Theatre
09/20 ' Toronto, ON @ Queen Elizabeth Theatre
09/21 ' Montreal, QC @ POP Montreal
09/23 ' Boston, MA @ Orpheum Theatre
09/25 ' New York, NY @ Beacon Theater
09/26 ' New York, NY @ Beacon Theater
09/27 ' Philadelphia, PA @ Tower Theater
09/29 ' Brooklyn, NY @ Williamsburg Park
09/30 ' N. Bethesda MD @ The Music Center at Strathmore
10/02 ' Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium
10/03 ' Atlanta, GA @ Cobb Energy Center
10/05 ' Austin, TX @ Bass Concert Hall
10/06 ' Houston, TX @ Hobby Center
10/07 ' Dallas, TX @ McFarlin Memorial Auditorium
10/10 ' San Diego, CA @ Humphrey's
10/11 ' Santa Barbara, CA @ Arlington Theatre
10/12 ' Costa Mesa, CA @ Segerstrom Theater for the Arts
10/13 ' Los Angeles, CA @ Greek Theater
10/15 ' San Francisco, CA @ Orpheum Theatre
10/17 ' Seattle, WA @ 5th Avenue Theatre
10/18 ' Portland, OR @ Arlene Schnitzer Auditorium
10/20 ' Vancouver, BC @ Centre in Vancouver for the Performing Arts



Video: Green Day ' 'Kill the DJ'

Green Day Kill the DJ

When last we saw Green Day in a music video, they were rehearsing their new single 'Oh Love' in a practice space littered with models. Today, the band returns with visuals for another ¡Uno! track, 'Kill the DJ', and this time the setting is a disco club and the audience isn't afraid of a little blood. There's also a random scene of the band riding dirt bikes through the desert, which doesn't really make sense in the context of the video but seems like a good way to spend an excess video budget.

¡Uno! arrives September 25th via Reprise Records. The band's other two new albums, ¡Dos! and ¡Tré!, will be released on November 13th and January 15th, respectively.



Video: Jay-Z joins Pearl Jam for '99 Problems'

Jay-Z Pearl Jam

On night one of his Made in America festival, Jay-Z closed his own headlining performance by bringing out Kanye West and G.O.O.D. Music for a surprise set. And on night two, Hov himself served as the night's big surprise, joining Pearl Jam for a rendition of '99 Problems'. Watch a clip of the once-in-a-lifetime performance below, and see how it stacks up to another Jay-Z one-off live cover of '99 Problems' with Phish.



Sunday, September 2, 2012

Video: Jay Electronica performs at Made in America

Jay Electronica Made in America

Jay Electronica made a surprise appearance today at Made in America, the music festival curated by his Roc Nation boss, Jay-Z. Below, you can watch footage of Electronica performing 'Exhibit A' and 'Exhibit C'.

During the set, Electronica explained that he wasn't planning to perform live prior to the release of his debut album, but couldn't turn down an invitation from Jay-Z or the chance to take the stage in Philadelphia, where he lived for years.



Webcast: Jay-Z's Made in America festival

The inaugural Made in America music festival will webcast a number of this weekend's performances, including festival curator Jay-Z, Run-DMC, D'Angelo, Janelle Monáe, Miike Snow, Passion Pit, the Rick Ross-led Maybach Music Group, Odd Future, Santigold, DJ Shadow, Gary Clark Jr. and Dirty Projectors.

You can watch live on YouTube, and listen live on Pandora.

Saturday, September 1st:
02:00 ' Gary Clark Jr.
02:45 ' Prince Royce
03:30 ' Maybach Music Group
04: 15 ' Janelle Monáe
05:00 ' D'Angelo
05:45 ' TBD
06:15 ' Passion Pit
07:00 ' Dirty Projectors
07:45 ' Miike Snow
09:30 ' Jay-Z

* = EST



Video: Kanye West's G.O.O.D. Music performs at Made in America

Jay Electronica wasn't the only surprise performance at the Jay-Z-curated Made in America festival. Kanye West and members of his G.O.O.D. Music label (Common, Big Sean, Pusha T) appeared during Jay-Z's headlining set on Saturday night, and performed tracks from their upcoming group album, including 'I Don't Like' remix, 'New God Flow' and 'Mercy', along with Kanye solo cuts 'Can't Tell Me Nothing' and 'Cold' and the Watch the Throne smash hit 'Niggas in Paris'. Watch footage ripped from the webcast below.

The G.O.O.D. Music group album is due to arrive on September 18th.

G.O.O.D. Music Setlist:
I Don't Like remix
Cant Tell Me Nothing
New God Flow
Cold
Ass
The Light
Mercy
Niggas in Paris



Saturday, September 1, 2012

Rock It Out! Blog joins Consequence of Sound

CoS RIOB feat

Consequence of Sound is proud to announce that it will serve as the new home of Rock It Out! Blog beginning Tuesday, September 4th.

Founded by former Fuse TV and Sirius Satellite Radio personality Sami Jarroush in 2008, the Rock It Out! Blog has emerged as one of the most watched and respected video blogs on the Internet. With nearly 50,000 subscribers tuning in each day, Sami reports on the latest rock music news headlines, introduces viewers to new and unsigned bands, and poses rock music queries of the day for viewers to debate. He's also interviewed a wide array of bands and artists, from The Kills' Alison Mosshart to Reggie Watts to Slipknot's Corey Taylor.

New Rock it Out! Blog episodes will be published daily on a brand new section of Consequence of Sound (see the preview below.) In addition, Sami has been made the Video Director of Consequence of Sound, and will be working to create new and original programming.

Make sure to follow Rock It Out! Blog on Twitter and Facebook, and subscribe to its YouTube channel.

Watch Sami discuss the partnership below:

RIOB design



Album Review: Animal Collective ' Centipede Hz

Looking back at their early years, it's hard to believe that Animal Collective would sound so comfortable sitting at the top of the indie music world. At one point, Feels sounded remarkably mainstream for the Baltimore four-piece, but their organic, space amoeba-like growth led to progressively larger audiences without losing any of their weird edge. They migrated all the way from manatee dancing and campfire singalongs to headlining festivals in trippy glory akin to the Grateful Dead. While no one would accuse them of resting on the laurels of Merriweather Post Pavilion ' arguably their most accessible work ' the follow-up, Centipede Hz, explores its own labyrinthine interior rather than take advantage of the intense anticipation generated by Merriweather's newly massive, crossover footprint.

The biggest differences between Centipede Hz and the band's earlier albums lie in tone. This is a band that can draw from gurgling synths and raga rhythms, from obscure Eastern European folk, Latin American psychedelic rock, and from packets of jam served with an airplane breakfast; which is to say, their tonal shifts are vast. While many of Merriweather's most successful songs felt festive to the point of indulgence, the successive, building layers on tracks like Centipede's celestial, Beach Boys-y 'Rosie Oh' seem to push deeper inward, much like Avey Tare's Down There. Their latest album may not be quite as viscerally dark as that record's production (the haunted house bridge on 'Mercury Man' hits closest), but Tare's solo claustrophobic musings still seem to be just as intrinsic, especially since Tare takes a large slice of the vocal spotlight. He doesn't bark as hard as he has in the past, but he still noticeably leaves Panda Bear's gliding, easily digestible moans on the sidelines.

Centipede Hz is upfront about its intentions of difficulty, announcing them with a tone equal parts self-aware and challenging. A mechanized voice opens the album' 'This is the new centipede FM'' followed by bursts of gritty, rhythmic noise. The song that unfolds, 'Moonjock', establishes the ensuing futuristic textures and reflective lyrical themes. Tare's discussion of road trips with his family is exactly the kind of bleary nostalgia for childhood ease that buoyed the band's early material. However, while tracks like Campfire Songs' blissfully eerie 'Doggy' left space for wonder, here synthetic wobbles bounce insistently and distractingly from ear to ear, pushing into discomforting territory.

The bigger hooks on Centipede Hz similarly distinguish themselves with crowded propulsion. The stuttering of the word 'let' in 'Today's Supernatural' is a fluorescent ear-worm backed by twisted versions of Tare's own voice and hand-pumped, organ-like warbles, building to an explosion that decimates everything. On songs like 'My Girls' or 'Derek' from Strawberry Jam, the joys of family and new growth seem to lie at the forefront of the songwriting process, leading to the overwhelming positivity that many felt from Merriweather. Then Tare's life took a dark turn, and it showed on the intensely personal Down There. Centipede, then, attempts to fight past that bleakness, finding a grayer area tinged with interior uncertainty. 'Monkey Riches' perfectly captures that questioning tone: Tare wonders aloud 'how I even wrote this song' as tides of concussive, rhythmic electronics pour over him. He's singing about existential uncertainty so smoothly that the cluttered instrumentation does as much insisting as the question itself.

This blend of musical hyperactivity and worried vocals continues, luring the listener into the album's anxious incertitude. The chilly, amorphous 'New Town Burnout' haunts in its squeak-bloop electronics and blurred backing vocals, Panda Bear's words fading into minor key echoes as the song closes.'Wide Eyed' marks Deakin's debut as a lead vocalist on a proper Animal Collective album, and he sounds similarly comfortable in both the darkness of life and his attempts at getting past it. 'I'm still finding what's sure/ And not getting lost in my mind/ I know I can try,' he croons over heavy bongos, washing away in its repetition before finding an answer, a common trope on Centipede Hz.

It's possible that some will have issues with the lack of a crossover mega-hit on Centipede Hz ' especially after the last album was soaked in that potential ' but that comes from an unfair place. Merriweather merits tons of 'modern masterpiece' discussion, but it's hard to believe that the band felt then (or feel today) that it's anything but the moment they had to make in that specific moment in their lives. And that's precisely how this album feels: another personal moment, another link in a chain leading into an as yet unclear ether. This link happens to be a little less certain, a little darker, but connected to all of the ones before it, and leading ever forward.

Essential Tracks: 'Monkey Riches', 'Wide Eyed', and 'Today's Supernatural'

Feature artwork by Steven Fiche: