Suckers & Local Natives at the Beachland Ballroom in Cleveland, OH, 5.11.10

Local Natives (in-store performance at Music Saves)

Playlist
Wide Eyes
Cards & Quarters
Warning Sign
Airplanes

I may be a big puss and a little too easily affected by music, but as soon as Local Natives broke into their trademark harmonizing at the beginning of their Music Saves pre-gig in-store performance, I felt a little moisture trying to escape from my face. I wasn’t crying – just… leaking a little awe.

This was quite a turnaround considering it hadn’t been that long ago that I was finding myself unable to get into the Local Natives groove (it was that backyard SXSW performance captured by Yours Truly that finally got me to tap in). Lucky for me that there’s no expiration date on good music.

It struck me that Local Natives’ performance was almost the antithesis of the Felice Brothers’ performance I had just experienced the night before. I am a big fan of slopping, emotional music, which the Felice Brothers are pros at creating, but there is certainly something to be said for the ability of a band like Local Natives. As a unit, they are so tight and their talents s complement each other so well that it’s easy to tell that some of these guys have been playing together half their lives. Though that’s certainly not to say that Local Natives’ music lacks emotion. Their song subject matter often sprouts from a very personal level and the musical accompaniment can tap straight into the listener’s center. Plus, Kelcey Ayer has a howl that makes you want to give him a hug and ask if he’s okay.

Experiencing the music of Local Natives in the small space of Music Saves, with acoustic instruments and no mics, mere feet from where you stand, accentuating their immaculate vocals and the warm heart of their music, is extraordinary. If you have the chance to hear them this way, jump on it.

Suckers

A guy who looks like he just escaped from a John Hughes movie casting call walks out on stage. He’s wearing a striped shirt with a red tie screen printed on the front, red sneakers, and he has straggly designs markered across his face.

“My name is Brian, and my talent is drumming.”

He sits down behind his kit (also red) and goes to work. After a little showing off, his compatriots take the stage. There is another refugee from the John Hughes extras pool (guitarist Austin Fisher), someone’s dad (bass player Pan) and a spectacularly colorful grunge glam rocker (singer Quinn Walker). This is Suckers, and they’re going to go straight to the good stuff with “Before Your Birthday Ends”.

I had heard Suckers around the ‘net thanks to the likes of Daytrotter and Stereogum and liked what I heard, but by the time I was standing in front of the stage, I had forgotten what they sounded like. I couldn’t have been more happily reminded when they broke into “Birthday” with its bouncing groove and Walker’s falsetto vocals (not to detract from his normal voice, but I almost wish Walker sang in falsetto all the time).

Keeping up the groove through the show, the band members did double- and sometimes triple-duty on vocals, guitar, bass, keyboards, percussion percussion percussion and even a little brass, Fisher being the only one who didn’t seem like he was going to jump out of his skin with ebullience. Even without Walker telling us what a “great space” we had in the Beachland and how much fun he was having, their joy was apparent. The audience felt the joy and returned it, giving the band some of the biggest parting cheers I’ve ever heard for an opening act. If Suckers aren’t headlining their own tour the next time around, it’ll be a surprise.

Other songs played (in lieu of an actual set list): “Black Sheep”, “It Gets Your Body Moving”, “Roman Candles”.

Local Natives

Playlist
Camera Talk
World News
Wide Eyes
Cards & Quarters
Shape Shifter
Warning Sign
Cubism Dream
Stranger Things
Airplanes
Who Knows Who Cares
Sun Hands

After experiencing the beauty of the Music Saves acoustic performance, there was a little part of my mind concerned that the big, plugged-in show would not be as invigorating. But when Local Natives took the Beachland stage, they proceeded to give that little part of my mind a smack in its metaphorical face. Like their tour mates, Local Natives bring a lot of percussion and a lot of joy to the stage. Their amplified performance, while three times more energetic than their acoustic performance, is no less tight and no less affecting.

There was a little instrument switching off between songs, Ryan Hahn putting down the guitar for drums for a little while and Taylor Rice and Kelcey Ayer trading off guitar and keyboard duties (Ayer sometimes playing keys and percussion while singing), while bass player Andy Hamm and drummer Matt Frazier kept mostly to their posts (though Hamm did join Frazier a couple of times to add to the percussion). His time behind the keyboard was the only time Rice stopped bouncing around the stage, sweating all over the place.

While their songs benefit from quieter, stripped down playing, their versatility means they also benefit from big, loud amplification, keeping the crowd bouncing along throughout the show. And you can bet everyone was shouting along to the big chorus on “Sun Hands”.

The drawback of being a headlining band with one album is that you’re left with no songs to encore with, and even though the audience really wanted Local Natives back for some more, there was no more to give. But there was no feeling that we hadn’t been given our money’s worth and then some.

Here’s a video from the Local Natives’ in-store performance of my current favorite from them, “Cards & Quarters”:
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSJEF3nZUFk]

Slackday: Like choosing my favorite limb

This Slackday post has actually caused me to do a lot of mental work. One of NTSIB’s twitter followers, @DtotheChan, asked me a seemingly innocent and simple question the other day: “top 5 black keys songs?”

My brain almost melted out of my ears.

There aren’t many bands I can point to and say, “I can’t pick a favorite song”, but with the Black Keys, I really can’t pick a favorite song. They have produced so much consistently good music, that no one song stands out more than any other to me. And now that I’ve gotten a good listen (several good listens) to Brothers, it’s impossible to quantify.

But here: I’ve done my best. I’ve chosen songs that make me feel something a little deeper than “Damn, that’s a kickass song!” (And I’ve excluded Brothers all together because I can’t even cope with that one yet – every time I listen to it, a new song sneaks up and smacks me in the face with its gem-like quality.) In no particular order…

  • “Oceans and Streams” – from Attack and Release
  • “The Flame” – from Magic Potion
  • “Work Me” – from Chulahoma
  • “When the Lights Go Out” – from Rubber Factory
  • “Things Ain’t Like They Used To Be” – from Attack and Release
  • Honorable Mention: ALL OF THEM

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXcAt3p-n5E]

Notable shows in the greater Cleveland area & the Heartless Bastards are on their way

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Sat, May 8| 8 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Grass Roots Movement
    Red Side Visible
    $5.00
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Sat, May 8| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    SOLD OUT!
    Deer Tick
    The Guile
    $12.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Mon, May 10| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    The Felice Brothers
    Cassette
    $15.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Tue, May 11| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Local Natives
    Suckers / In Association with Music Saves
    $10.00 adv / $12.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages
  • Thu, May 13| 8 PM (7 PM door)
    Wanda Jackson
    The Lustre Kings
    $15.00 adv / $17.00 dos
    Ballroom | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Sun, May 9| 9 PM
    Murder By Death
    Ha Ha Tonka
    Linfinity
    $12 adv
    $14 dos
  • Thurs, May 13| 9 PM
    Plants and Animals
    Elliott Brood
    Lowly, The Tree Ghost
    $8 adv
    $10 dos

Now That’s Class

  • Mon, May 10| 9 PM
    Pride Parade

Akron Civic Theatre

  • POSTPONED – was Tues, May 11 – now Sun, July 18
    Willie Willie Nelson & the Family
    $49.50/$59.50

The House of Blues

  • Weds, May 12| 9 PM (8 PM door)
    RATT
    Byron Nemeth Group
    $23.00 adv
    $27.00 dos
    $38.00 reserved seats

Happy Dog

  • Weds, May 12| 8 PM
    Juston Stens and The Get Real Gang

The Kent Stage

  • Thurs, May 13| 8 PM
    Colin Hay
    $25

Wilbert’s

  • Fri, May 14
    Pat Dinizio
    (acoustic set for Mike Campbell book launch)

The Heartless Bastards signed to Fat Possum Records with help from Patrick Carney of the Black Keys, and the Bastards will be playing the Beachland Ballroom on July 22, just a couple of days before the Keys hit the stage at Nautica. Gonna be an amazing week for live music.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71mt0FcgGI8]

Bits: This Is Jim Jones, Sleigh Bells, Trent’s new joint, Liquid Swords II, Murder by Death & whiskey, litrock, Frank the Funkasaurus Rex wrecks ya

If you have somehow missed the puppet dinosaur craze, please meet Frank the Funkasaurus Rex. Frank loves him some tits ‘n’ tubs, and we love Frank.

Addendum: So, that scroll across the bottom? Not a joke. TBK was seriously pissed about this video. Sorry, guys. Wish I had known before.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_PrT25o8Vs]

Obsess Much? : The Black Keys, Magic Potion

Obsess Much? is a new feature wherein I will do what I do best, the very thing that led me to start this blog in the first place: completely fixate on one artist/album/genre/enclave/whatever and talk on and on and on about it, sharing information and opinions with anyone in shouting distance, whether they like it or not.

You’re loving it already, right?

So whomever/whatever I’m obsessing on, whether a new artist or an act who has been around for a while or a band who aren’t even together anymore, I will share my enthusiasm in unnecessarily great detail.

Regular readers may have noticed that, since the Black Keys posted their new song “Tighten Up” from their forthcoming album Brothers on their MySpace page, I have been hardcore about all things coming from these two, sharp Akron boys. As an Ohioan who seems to be subconsciously drawn to acts from Ohio, I have been listening to and loving the Black Keys for a long time, but it is only with this current wave of fixation that I have nearly completed my Black Keys collection (Brothers is on pre-order in both the vinyl and deluxe CD editions, so I just have to obtain Feel Good Together, the album from Pat Carney’s side project, Drummer). The last album I picked up was Magic Potion.

I had gathered that MP was not a well-received album – at least not with critics – and I let that scare me off of picking it up for a while. Now that I have it and have listened to it repeatedly (approximately 15 times this past weekend – these guys have a knack for making music I want to listen to over and over immediately), I can’t say I understand why. It is hot. In terms of the music, it is the sexiest album they’ve made so far. Lyrically, it was the beginning of a personal rawness that continued on their next album, Attack and Release. “The Flame” may be the best song about being hurt again and again until one’s heart grows numb ever written.

Reading some of the lukewarm reviews from its release, I think the problem reviewers had with it was the classic “Oh no! It’s different from what they’ve done before!” issue because Magic Potion was the album where they began to evolve their sound beyond the blues, the sound that makes Attack and Release my favorite album of theirs so far. And, too, I think critics had a problem with the tempo of MP being slower – there aren’t as man foot-stompers as on the other albums, but I think the evidence within the songs (and backed up by the fact that Dan’s list of thank-yous in the liner notes do not, for the first time, include a certain female name that had been included on all previous albums) points to this being the result of the break-up of a long-term relationship. You’re just not going to make a big-rockin’ album when your years-long relationship has disintegrated.

Of course, there is also the problem that self-proclaimed music critics tend to focus on the wrong aspects of music and/or are dumb. Note this typically what-the-hell-is-wrong-with-you line from Pitchfork’s review: ‘There’s very little spark to early sequenced numbers “Your Touch”[…]’ I’m sorry, what? Are we thinking of the same song here, dude, because, I don’t know about anyone else, but that song has always eaten my head with its awesomocity. (The review also dismisses “Strange Desire” for rhyming “desire” with “fire”. This is not uncommon for a Pitchfork review, but it still amazes me when they pull out that kind of crap.)

So, Magic Potion: don’t believe the anti-hype.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBPGm4Fbo0Q]

Notable shows in the greater Cleveland area & the Felice Brothers, y’all

Shows worth checking out this week in and around Cleveland:

The Beachland Ballroom & Tavern

  • Mon, May 3| 8:30 PM (8 PM door)
    Casiotone For The Painfully Alone
    Magical Beautiful
    Shiny Penny
    $8.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Thu, May 6| 9 PM (8:30 PM door)
    Jesse Dee
    The Big Sweet
    $7.00
    Tavern | All Ages
  • Fri, May 7| 8:30 PM (7:30 PM door)
    Grant-Lee Phillips
    The Winter Pills
    $15.00
    Tavern | All Ages

Grog Shop

  • Wed, May 5| 8 PM
    Frightened Rabbit
    Maps & Atlases
    Our Brother the Native
    $13 adv
    $15 dos

Now That’s Class

  • Mon, May 3| 9 PM
    All Leather
    Sun God
    Lo-Pan
    Music Hates You
  • Wed, May 5 – Sun, May 9
    The Mentors/Shat/Femsickliver/Schnauzer/McShitz/The Mahonies/Lorain Skum
    Timmy’s Organism/Homostupids/Cock ESP/Birds Of Maya/Puffy Areolas/Pop. 1280/Flyin’ Trichecos
    TKO’s/KILSLUG/Bassholes/The Ladies/Mickey/Folded Shirt/Unholy Two

Happy Dog

  • Sat, May 1| 9 PM
    Martin Bisi
    Mr. California
    Uno Lady
  • Fri, May 7| 9 PM
    This Moment in Black History
    Knife the Symphony
    The Buried Wires

NTSIB favorite the Felice Brothers will be playing at the Beachland next week! Happy to be seeing those boys again, especially since I won’t have to travel all over hell’s half-acre to do it for once.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGcwhbqAtRM]

Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog: Michael Runion

Jennifer the Rock ‘n’ Roll Photog is so excited about her featured artist today that she’s not even waiting until she has pictures to tell you all about him.


Michael Runion is an artist I discovered entirely due to Twitter. According to his MySpace, his genre is “Visual/Folk/Pop”. (Tangentially, I really do love MySpace genre descriptions; some of them are generic things like “rock/pop” and some of them are more interesting things like “2-step/experimental/country” and finding out who is accurate with their self-labeling is always a good time.) But getting back to the subject at hand: left to my own devices, I think I’d tell you that Runion specializes in beautiful, delicate melodies wrapped around razor-sharp lyrics. The result is songs that are good company for filing as well as long train rides to the beach. (I’ll let you know how they do with the car stereo test after this summer.) I’m particularly fond of Drunk as I’ve Ever Been and Don’t Let Her Hold You Down, the latter of which would be the perfect tune for dancing a barefoot two-step with a cowboy before sending him back out on the rodeo circuit. If that sounds like something you’d be into, you should check him out.

I don’t have any pictures of him (yet; I’m hoping if he tours this summer he’ll swing through New York), so I’m bringing some videos (that are not mine) to share instead. The first one is him singing The Daylight, with Z Berg of The Like (genreless, for now, but: ’60s glamour/fierce ladies/pop, their songs WILL get stuck in your head). There’s a whole story for this song written in her facial expressions and the set of her shoulders:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LqPBRXVrpA]

Next up: another duet/battle, this time doing Don’t Look Back with Dave Rawlings, who sang with Gillian Welch for many years but has recently reconfigured himself as the Dave Rawlings Machine (genre: alternative/acoustic/industrial)(?!) and struck out on his own:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qm-jKdpGA7I]

And here he is by himself (kind of; the people lounging on the beanbag chair in the background are his friends) on public access tv, with Soft Hands:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUj96fXac8Y]

And then my favorite video, Our Time Will Come, which, fair warning, contains shirtlessness and shaving:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YSwlOHnj1gc]

Michael Runion Official Website – WARNING: PLAYS MUSIC!
Michael Runion Twitter

Bits: Shel Silverstein songs, Alan Moore opera, No Depression fest, save 924 Gilman, produce a Juniper Tar doc, RSD is crafty

  • Did you know that besides the poems that were so dear to many of us in our youth, Shel Silverstein was also responsible for songs like “A Boy Named Sue” and “The Cover of the Rolling Stone”? A cadre of folky and country artists have contributed to an album of Silverstein’s songs, called Twistable, Turnable Man: A Musical Tribute to the Songs of Shel Silverstein, that will be released on June 8. Pitchfork has a couple of songs from contributors My Morning Jacket and Andrew Bird for you to listen to.
  • A favorite of NTSIB, writer Alan Moore is working with Damon Albarn and Gorillaz to produce an opera about magician/mathematician John Dee (if you are familiar with Moore, you know this is completely unsurprising), and Pitchfork has some info on that, too.
  • Another favorite of NTSIB is the venerable magazine-now-community-website No Depression, and they have announced the line-up for their always impressive festival. This year’s festival will include Swell Season, Lucinda Williams, Cave Singers, Punch Brothers, Alejandro Escovedo, Chuck Prophet and Sera Cahoone.
  • Respected punk venue 924 Gilman is in danger of closing down due to a ridiculous rent increase. Here’s what you can do to help keep it going.
  • High Frequency Media is planning a Juniper Tar tour documentary, and you can become a producer.
  • There’s a nice write-up of the Record Store Day activities in Cleveland’s Collinwood neighborhood from a crafter’s perspective at the Jo-Ann Fabrics blog.

Yours Truly shares this video from SXSW of Nathaniel Rateliff playing “Boil & Fight”, but we’re particularly enamored of his rendition of Roger Miller’s “Oo-De-Lally” at the beginning.
http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=11039579&server=vimeo.com&show_title=0&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=b32bed&fullscreen=1

Nathaniel Rateliff “Boil & Fight” from Yours Truly on Vimeo.