Video: Flamingo Báy, Serpentine

Flamingo Báy is: Kris Gies (Lead Bass/Vocals), Vince Rankin (Drums/Vocals), Dillon Henningson (Guitar/Vocals). They are from Hamilton (Ontario) via Edmonton (Alberta), and they play beautifully uncomplicated garage rock.

When I say uncomplicated, I mean it is garage rock at its noisy, messy finest, with dirty basslines and facemelting riffs plus the occasional burst of quasi-psychedelic noodling. Turn it up and let it rattle your bones, it’s good for you.

This is the video for Serpentine, the a-side for their recent two-song single, and it is great. I especially enjoyed the wrestling figurines, the dude rocking out in the Rangers jersey / one boat shoe outfit and the extended sequence with the elevator.
 

Flamingo Báy - Serpentine

Video: [strangers], Sense of Liberty

And now, from NTSIB’s old friends the [strangers], the video for Sense of Liberty, which illustrates the perils of putting all of your eggs in one basket. Or spending all of your energy chasing one balloon, as the case may be.

I like this video specifically because by the time I got to the end I was annoyed and frustrated on the protagonists behalf, and wanted to yell STOP CHASING THAT DAMN BALLOON AND LIVE at him. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is a sign of good visual storytelling.

The song that goes with it is the first in a series of free-for-your-email monthly downloads which will run through December. The second one, No Longer Lost, emerged yesterday.

 
http://youtu.be/DVd6D4q0myw

Heavy Meta: VMAs and Music Videos

It’s that time of year again. Soon, celebrities will be putting on their finest terrible outfits and ridiculous shoes and wobbling into assorted spotlights and parties organized for one of the more anachronistic events on the annual calendar.

Or: MTV’s Video Music Awards turn 29 this year.

I didn’t grow up watching the VMAs. I was either too young or it was too much hassle, or, later, I had opted-out of popular culture and didn’t care about awards shows.

Now that I’ve re-engaged with the world, I think it’s interesting that a channel that no longer regularly plays music videos is still handing out awards for them, and that those awards still mean something to the performers who receive them, largely because they did grow up watching the VMAs.

And as much as the VMAs are something of a hollow spectacle these days, more a contest to see who can be more outrageous than an exercise in recognizing excellence, now I tune in.

Why?

Because I do care about music videos, in the abstract as cultural moments, and in the specific as works of art.

I think music videos are important. They have so many uses: illustrating the song, conveying the band’s attitude and/or artistic sensibilities, telling a story, or just serving as a method of transmission.

What MTV did, when they played videos, was recognized an art form – videos pack a lot into a small amount of time and screen-space – and allowed us, as viewers, to develop a shared visual vocabulary, as well as created shared cultural touchstones.

Arguably you can do the same thing watching videos on the internet, but what you won’t get is the other thing that MTV provided, via the VJs: context and curation.

So what I’m going to do, between now and the end of the month, is what MTV does not do any more: I’m going to post some videos and talk about them.

I’m going to share the old, the new, the interesting, the hilarious (unintentionally and otherwise), the weird, and the wonderful.

Here, to start off, is NIN with Head Like A Hole, from Pretty Hate Machine, from 1989. The video was released in 1990, and I have fond memories of waiting impatiently by the television for it to come up in rotation. It was in the same cycle as Metallica’s One, for a while; I used to mute Metallica while I waited, though eventually did come around to Metallica, too.

I liked it because it was weird and vaguely dangerous and a portal to another world that may as well have been another planet, where furious (and beautiful) dudes howled their defiance, and also because it has that solid industrial beat.

Twenty three years later, Trent Reznor is a married Grammy-winning adult, and I still sing this song in the shower.

 

Nine Inch Nails - Head Like A Hole

bellwire, summEP

IMG_1206

Photo credit: Taylor Maroney

Ladies and gentlemen, meet bellwire. They are: Mike Holland (Guitar), Chris Faulkner (Drums), Tyler Burdwood (Guitar/Vocals), Jack Holland (Bass), Natalie Kovalcik (Miscellaneous, incl. “ghost vocalist”) and Sam Rheaume (Miscellaneous, incl. “ghost vocalist”), and they are collectively from various parts of coastal New Hampshire. They’ve all recently graduated from college and will soon be headed down to Allston, Massachusetts to make more music.

Their description of their sound is so great I’m just going to quote it for you: “Tomboy Rock, meaning to be a soundtrack to a tree-climbing, dress-ripping, frog-catching lifestyle.”

All I can add is that I wish I could have had their tunes to listen to back when I had to try and get pine tar out of my ruffles on a regular basis.

There are only three songs on the ep; I have picked one to share – Leaky Seams – because it is both the shortest and the most lyrically dense, and also because it is possibly the most upbeat song I have ever heard about watching horror movies in the back yard.
 

 

Three Songs From: One Mile An Hour

One Mile an Hour are: Jeff Kightly (guitar/vox), Matt Day (bass/vox) and Dave Goldsmith (drums/keys/vox). They have just released their debut record, with songs influenced by Scandinavian landscapes and stories, but recorded almost entirely near the sea on the southern coast of England.

It’s folk music, I guess, or at least it is mostly folk music. Folk music with subtle muscle and patches of contemplative noodling. It’s dark, it’s light, it’s beautiful. It’s a walk along a windswept shore, with the current tugging at your ankles and treasure shimmering beneath the foamy breakers.

I’m pulling out three songs here to serve as enticements, but I encourage you to sit down with a refreshing beverage and listen to the whole thing all the way through.
 
First up: Sunken Ships, for a number of reasons. It is the first song on the record; it was the first song I listened to, because I like to do these things in order and because I have a weakness for songs about ships; and after I heard it I wanted to hear the rest of the record because I wanted to see where they were going with what they were doing.
 

 
Second: Love You More. I waffled back and forth between this one and Trouble’s Roots but finally picked this one because one of their more purely folk-y tunes. Also it’s a delicate, pretty love song, and I have a weakness for those, too.
 

 
Third and finally, Nine Eight: Live, which is the last song. It’s also a ten minute instrumental which I described to someone yesterday as “quasi-jammy shoegaze.” Here is where the really cut loose and let you listen to them think, musically, for a while. Where they wrap up all of their loose ends and flex the muscles I mentioned at the beginning. It’s also the one song not recorded by the sea; the band had the chance to work in Studio 2 at Abbey Road Studios, and this is the result.
 

The Dirty Nil, Summer Mix Tape Vol. 2: Covers

dirtynil2

The Dirty Nil have a present for you, darlings. It’s an EP of covers and it is pay-what-you-want until the end of the summer, by which they mean the fall solstice. Digital only, though, unless you find yourself at one of their shows, where you might be able to buy it on cassette.

I’ve picked two of the four songs to share with y’all today.

First is Game of Pricks (original by: Guided by Voices), to which they add some fuzzy depth, or maybe warmth, or possibly both depth and warmth. In any case, I liked it.
 

 
And then there is Mama Tried (original by: Merle Haggard) which I listened to and then sent them an email that contained at least eight exclamation points. And even that was not really enough to properly express my joy.

I have, in all seriousness, been longing for a punk cover of this tune for several years, and now, here it is. And it is glorious. Unless you are a country/Merle Haggard purist, in which case stop reading now, because you’re just going to be mad.*

For everyone else: The Dirty Nil have stripped out the twang, goosed the tempo, and amended the first verse slightly, but the spirit – reflective regret – remains the same. And while it may be fast, it isn’t sloppy. They put the pieces together with great precision even at high speed; they way they slam through the chorus is especially magnificent.

It’s like they’ve found a way to distill and record the feeling of being slightly drunk / riding a concert adrenaline high, clinging to the rail and shouting the words of your favorite song at your best friends who are standing next to you. This is the energy that makes the pit sing until they’re hoarse, causes barrier drum lines and leads to multi-city road trips to do it all over again as many nights as possible.
 

 


* I understand, I really do. I mean I’m still (possibly irrationally) annoyed at Hank III for making Bruce Springsteen’s Atlantic City into a honky tonk song.

Video: Rancid, Ruby Soho

This week, an old favorite: Ruby Soho, by Rancid.

This song always seems to pop up in rotation when I’m making decisions – to stay, to go, follow the curve of the highway as I have so many times before, or to get off at the next exit. It is the well worn path from the train to my door, late at night; and it is seeing the sunrise in a new place.
 

Rancid - "Ruby Soho"

The Dead Good: 13 Polaroids

deadgood

The Dead Good is Isabella Knight (Vocals) and Sonny Lanegan (White Pulp)(Guitars/Vocals), a German-Italian duo currently based in Los Angeles. Thirteen Polaroids is their first EP.

Despite the name there are only six songs on the EP, but they are six excellent grimy, bluesy punk rock songs that will wake you up and clear the cobwebs away. The following are three tracks that I thought were especially notable.

First, Junk Nation, which is actually the first song on the EP. The first 15 seconds got my attention – fuzzy, echo-y pulses of electronica are almost always a good sign – and the remaining three and half minutes minutes of what I can only describe as a blues-industrial stew lightly spiced with poppy handclaps convinced me to listen to the whole record.
 

 
Second, Room 106, which is the closest they get to anything that might be described as “mellow.” You could put this on while making yourself a snack after a long night out carousing.
 

 
And finally Through Your Bones, because the ominous fuzzy guitars augmented by spare, delicate percussion resonate on my favorite slightly creepy frequency.
 

Final Notes on a Reader Survey

Our reader survey is closed! The numbers weren’t big enough to draw any serious conclusions, but the following are a few of the notes I’ve made for myself:

– With some exceptions in the Millenial/Boomer ends of the spectrum, our audience – and I say this with deep and abiding (if bemused) affection – is probably best described as “Gen-Xers who seem to enjoy cultural whiplash.”

– Nobody except me uses tags to navigate the site.

– Most popular: reviews (music and books about music-related topics) and “A good read, a good drink . . .” series. Least popular: Video challenges and year-end photo round-ups.

– Most readers connect either via Twitter (reading as stories are posted) OR have us bookmarked and check in periodically.

Thank you to everyone who contributed!

Video: Allman Brown feat. Liz Lawrence, Sons & Daughters

It’s Sunday, it’s hot, I’m pretty sure it’s about to rain. This song, and video, by Allman Brown and Liz Lawrence matches my current state of static anticipation. It’s also sweet, dreamy, and three and half minutes of soft-focus romantic escapism.

The song is from Brown’s upcoming EP of the same name. You can listen to more of his work here, and more of the lovely Liz Lawrence can be found here.

 

Allman Brown & Liz Lawrence - Sons and Daughters // Official Video