Late Night Listening: Ryan Ross demos

These two new demos from Ryan Ross are Late Night Listening because the first time I heard them was at 3 AM today when I had been up for 24 hours. I’ve had some sleep now, and they are still really good, rough demos or not.

Off My Mind: Quasi-surfy instrumental with some muscle on the reverb and electronic highlights. I hope the fuzz remains in the finished version.
 

 
Where I Belong: I’m going to get the fannish flailing out of the way: It’s just really good to hear him singing again. But after my initial OH MY GOD THAT’S REALLY HIM moment, I kept listening to this song because of the way the guitars and the fuzzy electronics are twined together. Yes, fuzzy electronics, not fuzzy guitars. As far as I can tell. I may have to listen to it a bunch more times before I can be sure. The lyrics are sharp, too.
 

 
Verdict: A++, can’t wait to hear the rest.

A Good Read, A Good Listen and a Good Drink: Abby Weitz, Wise Girl

It’s a simple yet sublime pleasure, and just thinking about it can make you feel a little calmer, a little more content. Imagine: You bring out one of the good rocks glasses (or your favorite mug or a special occasion tea cup) and pour a couple fingers of amber liquid (or something dark and strong or just some whole milk). You drop the needle on the jazz platter (or pull up a blues album on your mp3 player or dig out that mixtape from college). Ensconcing yourself in the coziest seat in the house, you crack the spine on a classic (or find your place in that sci-fi paperback or pull up a biography on your e-book reader). And then, you go away for a while. Ah, bliss.

In this series, some of NTSIB’s friends share beloved albums, books and drinks to recommend or inspire.


Wise Girl is Abby Weitz (singer/songwriter/guitar), Chris Fasulo (guitar/producer) and Harry Keithline (drums). They’re from New York, and they make power-pop gems like this one, called Wishful Thinking:
 

 
There’s also this awesome little tune, which is called You’ll Just Have to Wait:
 

 
And now, here is Abby Weitz to share a favorite book, record and drink:


A Good Read: The Artist’s Way, by Julia Cameron

This book literally changed my life. I had started it in May and it changed my life. We had just finished recording the album and I’d just gotten out of being involved with a shitty person. I’d lost myself in the bullshit and realized that besides recording, I’d lost touch with my creativity because I was so consumed by everything going on. This book helped me realize a lot of things about myself and I started writing again. Funny thing though, I usually write about failed relationships but this person was so worthless they got nothin’! Haha.

A Good Listen: Damone, Roll the Dice

Ugh this band is so underrated and I’m so upset that they are no longer around. This album is great for a pick me up at anytime! I love to rock out to this while im getting ready to go out or when I need to get pumped up for a run or if I have to go on a long drive. Love me some Damone!
 

Bored To Death from Damone on Myspace.

A Good Drink: Prosecco

I’m totally a prosecco girl! I can drink a whole bottle by myself without even flinching. One time my friends and I went to the lake by my parent’s vacation house and I brought a kayak and bottle of prosecco and drank the bottle while I kayaked alone while they all tanned. It’s one of my favorite most peaceful memories in the world!

A Good Read, A Good Listen, and a Good Drink: Brianna Lea Pruett

It’s a simple yet sublime pleasure, and just thinking about it can make you feel a little calmer, a little more content. Imagine: You bring out one of the good rocks glasses (or your favorite mug or a special occasion tea cup) and pour a couple fingers of amber liquid (or something dark and strong or just some whole milk). You drop the needle on the jazz platter (or pull up a blues album on your mp3 player or dig out that mixtape from college). Ensconcing yourself in the coziest seat in the house, you crack the spine on a classic (or find your place in that sci-fi paperback or pull up a biography on your e-book reader). And then, you go away for a while. Ah, bliss.

In this series, some of NTSIB’s friends share beloved albums, books and drinks to recommend or inspire.


Brianna Lea Pruett commands a very subtle magic. Her latest record, Gypsy Bells, is the kind of thing you should listen to straight through. You should, in particular, allow yourself to relax and be cocooned in her voice, and her delicate melodies. Let yourself be drawn into her stories.

For example: No Diamond Ring, which is the first song on the record, and also the one I found myself humming under my breath as I moved through the city one recent morning. The drums are a heartbeat; the lyrics are a promise; overall it is a savory antidote to over-sugared love songs.
 

 
New Life is the second song; here the pace picks up a little bit, and lyrics are a love story that is also six miles of hard road. It is simultaneously beautiful and brutal.
 

 
And finally, one song that isn’t on Gypsy Bells, but I am including because it just so very lovely. Pruett is of Cherokee/Choctaw descent, and she’s taught herself to sing in Tsalagi (Cherokee). This is Amazing Grace, in Tsalagi, complete with exquisite harmonies.
 

 

Speaking of stories, here she is to share some of her favorites, as well as a favorite record and drink:


A Good Read

I read voraciously as a kid and now I’m reading again, mostly for school, manuals on film editing and filmmaking mostly. Finally got through most of what I needed to for the semester and now I can get back to what I started in the summer!

I always have a small rotating library going around in my car, my studio, my bedroom, and my bag.

I’ve had an Annie Dillard novel in there, Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, and a writer local to my area of the world that I grew up reading, Gary Snyder, Regarding Wave. After a recent trip to South America I’ve gotten a taste again for poetry in Spanish, which I had a few books of as a teen but after a much-wandering lifestyle all my books found new homes along the way.

Cesar Vallejo’s Poemas Humanos is one I am taking small bites of right now, along with Blanca Varela’s Como Dios en la Nada.

I’m enjoying Alice Walker’s Once: Poems. Alice Walker wrote The Color Purple which is a classic and a great book. Kim Shuck’s Rabbit Stories.

What else? I’m reading Loretta Lynn’s autobiography, I picked it up at her ranch on my last tour, it’s called Coal Miner’s Daughter.

I try to get through a McSweeney’s Quarterly whenever possible, any issue is excellent, number 43 has Charles Baxter, T.C. Boyle, and Catherine Lacey. Recommended. Dave Eggers, a regular favorite. I am usually reading at least four or five different books at a time.

If I really have to choose one, right now, I’d recommend Coal Miner’s Daughter by Loretta Lynn. It’s so straight up, it’s so down to earth. The language and the colloquialisms remind me of my family from Oklahoma and Arkansas a little and so it’s got a familiar pacing and feel for me, but also she’s just a great storyteller.

So this is not a very direct single book recommendation, is it? What’s solid, though, is that I recommend always having a poetry book in your bag or on your nightstand. Poetry is essential to the soul, which craves the backwards, the familiar, the old, the mystical, the unbalanced, the romance. So I think my recommendation from my current reading list is two books – Coal Miner’s Daughter, Loretta Lynn, and Once: Poems, Alice Walker.

A Good Listen
Right now, I am listening non-stop to Vampire Weekend’s Modern Vampires of the City, out earlier this year on XL recordings. Don’t be intimidated by the review articles or their popularity. They’re great. Just buy it, spin it 5 times, and you pretty much have created a mood for yourself and some permanently good times.

It’s an incredible album for lots of reasons, but I like to keep it simple, no need to explain why. It’s just that good. I listen to it on the drive from my warehouse studio to where I live and back, and though I love Manhattan and it’s from there, it’s got permanent Bay Bridge visual memories for me.

A Good Drink
Mexican Hot Chocolate is an all time best drink ever. You can buy the pre-packaged kind but I like chocolate with no soy in it, it tastes 100 times better.

I usually cook without recipes, I just know how to make a lot of things from loving to cook and being able to throw something together in any kitchen. It’s so fun to do the most with the least. So my recipes always vary, almost never do I use a recipe twice – if I’m really lost, I might do the recipe once, from that point on it’s a free for all, ha!

So I might have different things in mine from this recipe – jalapeno’s, or a teeny tiny slice of habanero, or a special other something or other. This is a good basic recipe for tastes suited to American cuisine.

4 cups milk

1/4 cup Dutch-processed unsweetened cocoa powder(or the cocoa powder of your choice) [ed note: such as this stuff, maybe!]

1/4 cup sugar
2 tsp. cornstarch (optional thickener)
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
1/4 tsp. chipotle powder or chili powder
pinch of nutmeg
pinch of cayenne
optional toppings: whipped cream, marshmallows, chocolate syrup, and/or chocolate shavings

Add all ingredients to a medium saucepan. Heat over medium heat until simmering, stirring frequently. Remove from heat and serve with optional toppings.
Drink this listening to Gypsy Bells and Modern Vampires of the City, with a blanket over you in between drawing with color pastels and reading poetry.

Heart-Ships, EP1

Reasons why I am very fond of Heart-Ships:

1. That name! All I can imagine is little heart-shaped ships, or ships with big red heart-shaped sails, navigating rocky channels. Go, brave little ships, go!

2. The hand-claps/drum combo intro on Pin-Hole of Light. It says Here we go! Get ready! Stand up! It is almost time to rock out! Also the glorious little trill at the 1.15 mark that gooses the tempo and adds a frisson of traditional Celtic sound to the proceedings. You can’t really dance the jig to the whole song, but you might want to try, for parts of it.
 

Heart-Ships 'Pinhole of Light'

 
3. Five Forks of Ligtening, which is a slow building, gradually expanding anthem about being chased around the garden by a monster with fire fingers.
 

 
4.There is a robot on the cover of the EP. I love robots. It appears to be shooting lasers out of its eyes at a heart, or parts of heart, which is awesome.

5. Ryan Cooke, their lead singer, has a rich, flexible voice, and even when it is filled with ache and sadness – perhaps especially when it is filled with ache and sadness – it soars, as you can hear below, in Air Balloon:
 

 
6. And also here, in Spray Paint:
 

 
7. This is pop music, but it is majestic, stirring pop music. Majestic, stirring, and a little off-kilter; fight songs and anthems and love songs for the few, the proud, the extremely fond of tiny boats fighting big currents and robots with eye-lasers.

Late Night Listening: Lord & the Liar, Thrill-seekers Pubcrawlers and Shoplifters

Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome once more to my virtual garage. Tonight we’re going to visit with Lord & the Liar, aka PaweÅ‚ Swiernalis, of PoznaÅ„, Poland.

He’s got an interesting vibe going: kind of jazzy, and also kind of creepy. You can listen to the whole record (somewhat choppily) on his YouTube page, but here are some highlights:

First: Prophet’s Fate, which starts with the following tantalizing line: You can find us making magic / near the flower shop / We are open for new stories / from closed doors, and then combines minimal drums and accordion to powerful, menacing effect.
 

Lord & the Liar Prophet's Fate

 
And second: this live version of Glass Full of Cigarettes, wherein the drummer makes excellent use of a glass bottle and a park bench:
 
Lord and the Liar - Glass Full of Cigarettes / On or Off Kolektyw #27 HD

A Good Read, A Good Listen and a Good Drink: Andy Abbott, That Fucking Tank

It’s a simple yet sublime pleasure, and just thinking about it can make you feel a little calmer, a little more content. Imagine: You bring out one of the good rocks glasses (or your favorite mug or a special occasion tea cup) and pour a couple fingers of amber liquid (or something dark and strong or just some whole milk). You drop the needle on the jazz platter (or pull up a blues album on your mp3 player or dig out that mixtape from college). Ensconcing yourself in the coziest seat in the house, you crack the spine on a classic (or find your place in that sci-fi paperback or pull up a biography on your e-book reader). And then, you go away for a while. Ah, bliss.

In this series, some of NTSIB’s friends share beloved albums, books and drinks to recommend or inspire.


My first introduction to That Fucking Tank was the video I posted a couple of weeks ago, for Making A Meal For Beethoven, one of the songs from their 10th Anniversary record A Document of the Last Set.

I watched it a couple of times, boggling, and then, because I’m always into people who are creative with reverb, static and feedback, I asked for more.

You guys, these gentlemen are really good with reverb, static and feedback. Take, for example, Bruce Springstonehenge.

It is, as you might have guessed, their rendition of a Springsteen song. I have a rule, with Springsteen: If you’re going to go there, don’t fuck it up. Do not, for example, try to play Born to Run on the xylophone and casually butcher it.

I’m not going to tell you which song this is, because that will ruin the surprise, but: they did not fuck it up. They took the sturdy bones of the song and made something new, different, and great. This version is from an earlier record, but you’ll get the idea:
 

 
Here’s another one, that’s all them: A Wonderful World Of, which starts out jammy and contemplative and then kicks into gear:
 

 

Anyway, after listening to all these and more, I definitely wanted to know more about them. So today, here is Andy Abbott, the man behind the baritone guitar, to tell us about a favorite book, record and drink. There’s a little bit of a twist to the proceedings this week: I gave him a prompt of “Halloween.” Here is what he had to say:


A Good Book: Riddley Walker by Russell Hoban.
This is a post apocalyptic sci-fi neo-primitivist journey-of-discovery novel set in an unrecordable time in the future. It’s based in Kent and is written in this weird mutation of the South Eastern accent.

It describes a society that has returned to the Iron Age following a nuclear disaster and the protagonist slowly pieces back together the events that led them to their current state. It’s a grim, dirty book and slow reading but has this odd euphoric, hopeful feeling throughout. I’m currently working on a music and film project with my other band Nope and artist Eoin Shea that takes it as a starting point.
 

 
A Good Drink: Most ales by Magic Rock
Magic Rock are a Huddersfield-based brewery that started a few years back. they make exceptionally tasty ales which is saying something given the proliferation of ‘craft breweries’ and the like, especially in Yorkshire. Curious is great, as is High Wire and Human Cannonball. Apparently the brewer is a Tank fan. Their design is also mint.

A Good Album: SAW2 [Selected Ambient Works, Vol. II] by Aphex Twin / No Pussyfooting by Fripp and Eno

I’m assuming that the album is to be chosen to go with the book and the drink in which case I’d want something pretty long and immersive.

I’d probably go for Selected Ambient Works II by Aphex Twin, or No Pussyfooting by Robert Fripp and Brian Eno. They’d allow me to soak up the vibes and relax into an aled-up stupor quite nicely.
 


 
http://youtu.be/elTuRy7OhgQ

Husky Burnette, Tales From East End Blvd

huskyburnette_tales_cd_1024x1024

Tales from East End Blvd is the latest from Husky Burnette, and it is awesome. If you like good stories and sweet dirty rockin’ blues, you need to add this to your collection right now.

Here are two of my favorite tracks:

Beat & Low Down, because if this song doesn’t make you want to either dance or commit indiscretions or both, I don’t know what will:
 

Husky Burnette - Beat & Lowdown

 
On My Way, because it is a sober, sorrowful, prayer of song; the summation of a lifetime of pain and hard work accompanied by spare, delicate picking.
 

Raccoon Fighter, ZIL

racfight

Raccoon Fighter is: Sean Gavigan (vocals, guitar), Zac Ciancaglini (drums), and Gabe Wilhelm (bass), of Brooklyn, and ZIL is their debut record.

It is an extended burst of urgent, aggressive bluesy-surfy noise, and it is glorious. This is music for the true definition of adventure, i.e. “bad idea going to end in bruises.”

Here are some of my favorite tracks:

Santa Tereza combines surfy hooks and a little bit of hypnotic drone:
 

 
Street Urchins will meet all of your crazy-in-love, put-the-pedal-down-and-drive-to-the-sea road trip needs:
 

 
Pyramid Scheme to Heaven, where the drums slow down to a menacing thud-thud and become a dark heart amid droning, distorted guitars:
 

New Yorkers and people coming to town for CMJ: They’re playing a bunch of shows in the next two weeks, including an album release party this Friday, Oct. 4, at Cake Shop, the O+ Festival on Oct. 12 in Kingston, NY and CMJ showscases at the Rock Shop on 10/15 and the Delancey on 10/18. Go and check them out, it will be fun.

A Good Read, A Good Listen, and a Good Drink: Bethany Weimers

It’s a simple yet sublime pleasure, and just thinking about it can make you feel a little calmer, a little more content. Imagine: You bring out one of the good rocks glasses (or your favorite mug or a special occasion tea cup) and pour a couple fingers of amber liquid (or something dark and strong or just some whole milk). You drop the needle on the jazz platter (or pull up a blues album on your mp3 player or dig out that mixtape from college). Ensconcing yourself in the coziest seat in the house, you crack the spine on a classic (or find your place in that sci-fi paperback or pull up a biography on your e-book reader). And then, you go away for a while. Ah, bliss.

In this series, some of NTSIB’s friends share beloved albums, books and drinks to recommend or inspire.


Bethany Weimers’ debut record Harpischord Row came out last year, and was (is still!) an exquisite folk-pop gem. The first song, Silver Moon, remains one of my favorites:
 

 
Also really lovely: this acoustic rendition of Desire:
 

Punt Sessions | Bethany Weimers – Desire from Nick Seagrave on Vimeo.

 
She’s currently hard at work on her next record, which I can’t wait to hear. Meanwhile, here she is to share a favorite book, record, and summer-in-a-bottle drink:


 
Good Read – Paula by Isabelle Allende

Until a few minutes before sitting down to write this, I had been going to sing the praises of my most recent unputdownable read – The Cazalets Chronicles [by Elizabeth Jane Howard] – an epic family saga; a perceptive exploration of character; and a lively portrait of pre- to post-war England. It’s a great story, one which I devoured. I recommend it.

But I happen to be staying at my parents’ house for the weekend and I happen to be standing in my old bedroom, staring at the rows of books that are stored here until one day I once again have enough space in my own home.

On the top shelf, tucked between a book on orchestration and a battered Penguin classic, and half hidden by a box of old Christmas cards, I spy the letters ‘Isa…’ and ‘Alle…’ peaking out. Oh. A surge of warmth rushes through me. Ever since her book ‘Daughter of Fortune’ was recommended to me by a university friend (thanks Greg!), Isabelle Allende has been one of my favourite authors, never failing to captivate and rarely failing to leave me feeling uplifted.

This book however is not one of her straight fiction books. For many years it sat on my shelf unread, fearful that the subject matter would prove too heavy. Yet when I finally felt it was time to delve in, I found one of the most beautiful, loving, life-affirming and brave books that I’ve had the privilege of reading.

Sad and tragic too, how could it not be, but what’s stuck in my mind in the four or so years since I read Paula’s richly woven tapestry of histories, is something – that I can’t quite articulate – something profound to do with humanity, to do with hope, to do with healing and I suppose simply – love.

From the opening page: “In December 1991 my daughter, Paula, fell gravely ill and soon thereafter sank into a coma. These pages were written during the interminable hours spent in the corridors of a Madrid hospital and in the hotel room where I lived for several months, as well as beside her bed in our home in California during the summer and fall of 1992.” Isabelle Allende.

A very special book.

Good Listen – In Puget Sounds by D. Gwalia

D Gwalia was a name I’d heard around the Oxford music scene for a few years before coming across his album In Puget Sounds for the first time last summer. I knew nothing about him and had no idea what to expect. Listening online through headphones it stopped me dead: an unexpected musical epiphany. Wow. I felt like this was the voice my ears had been born to hear.

D Gwalia could sing One Direction and I’d probably love it; he’d imbue the words and tune with a mysterious, ancient, powerful, yearning melancholy. Suffice to say I went straight to Truck Store (my local record shop), bought the CD, then returned home and listened obsessively and incessantly for weeks. Expect something beautifully crafted, dark and wallowing.
 

 
Good Drink – Sparkling Homemade Elderflower Cordial

Strange that an unexpected weekend stay back home has ended up guiding my book selection, as the drink I had already decided upon is also one with close associations.

Outside my parents’ house is an elder tree. Now, in the early days of autumn the berries are starting to droop and even birds seem to have had their fill. But three months ago the view from the front door was thick with white lacy flowers – elderflowers – and the air was intoxicating.

Spring had burst into summer with ferocious intensity and everywhere, both city and countryside, triumphed in vitality after our exceptionally long hard winter.

I must confess that I’ve yet to play the role of elderflower picker or cordial maker, but for many years I’ve performed superbly in the role of elderflower drinker and enthusiast. For me homemade elderflower cordial is one of life’s little pleasures. So what is it I love so much about this simple drink?

Well for starters the flowers have to be picked on a sunny day. Imagine: rainy cloudy weather for days and days and then suddenly… SUN. Harvest time. Elderflowers at their best; the warmth of summer captured in a bottle. Then there’s the fact that the drink’s main ingredient, found in abundance certainly round these parts, can be foraged for free.

And what about the cordial maker? Pretty sure that along with the flowers, sugar, lemon, water and citric acid, whoever makes the drink throws in their own bit of magic – this summer’s was brewed solely by my mum, other years’ concoctions have been a joint effort with my sister.

And lastly: the taste. I find it hard to describe flavour but I’ll go with delicate yet deep, sweet, slightly lemony, summery, aromatic. Diluting the cordial with sparkling water as I usually do gives an added tingly excitement to every sip. Yum.

Every year my family share the majority of the cordial in the weeks after it’s made and there’s a certain sadness when the last drop goes – farewell summer, welcome autumn. But hidden at the back of the freezer in a small ½ litre bottle is one final gift from those summer months to be opened at the halfway point.

On Christmas Day in the depths of winter, we’ll share this treasure, this liquid gold, and remembering that the solstice has now passed, look to spring just around the corner.

A quick internet search will bring up a wealth of information about making Elderflower Cordial and plenty of recipes. Sophie Grigson’s is apparently the one my mum uses, so perhaps that’s a good one to start with. Also please make sure you know what you’re picking and only use if you know it’s safe! The European elder tree native to Britain is the Sambucus Nigra but there are other varieties elsewhere in the world and they might be toxic . . . I don’t know.

[ed. note: Places to get elderflower cordial: Belvoir Fruit Farms or pick one from this collection.]