Monday Hangover Cure: Video of Aimee Mann in concert…from 1985

News

I promise…this will be the last Aimee Mann post for a while…maybe. @#%*! Smilers (I fucking HATE typing that album name because I can never remember which symbols go where) came out last week.

So in honor of that, and all the Aimee Mann posts we’ve done, here is an old school video of Mann performing “Voices Carry” (oh, you didn’t know Mann was part of Till Tuesday? She had a holy other life pre-Magnolida).

And if you ever curious about the Mann transition from the above video to now, check out this 1995 interview.

Is it me, or has Mann gotten hotter as she’s gotten older?

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News: Who Wants to Sing with Aimee Mann?

News

We’ve been very pro-Aimee Mann, ever since she gave away her single “Thirty-One Today.”

Well, we recently got more Mann news, this time in the form of a contest. From June 4 (which is in the past) to July 7 (in the future) she’s holding a Youtube contest (did you watch the video up there?) to see who has the best video of themselves signing her new song “Freeway”.

I’d like to point out that the it said “whoever makes the best video” wins the top prize and not “whoever sings it the best.”

Oh, the winner will get the chance to sing with Mann at one of her shows. Ten runner ups will get an autograph copy of her new album “@#%&*! Smilers.”

Find lyrics and the instrumental version of the song here.

Mann’s Tour

Jun 6 ‘08 House of Blues Anaheim, CA
Jun 10 ‘08 Largo Los Angeles, CA
Jun 12 ‘08 Minnesota Zoo Mineapolis, MN
Jun 13 ‘08 Pabst Theater Milwaukee, WI
Jun 15 ‘08 Bonnaroo Festival Manchester, TN
Jun 16 ’08 Cains Ballroon Tulsa, OK
Jun 17 ‘08 La Zona Rosa Austin, TX
Jun 18 ‘08 House of Blues Dallas, TX
Jul 9 ‘08 Chautauqua Auditorium Boulder, CO
Jul 11 ‘08 Botanical Gardens Denver, CO
Jul 12 ‘08 Deer Valley Resort Park City, UT
Jul 14 ‘08 Mountain Winery Saratoga, CA
Jul 15 ‘08 Stewart Park Roseburg, OR
Jul 16 ‘08 Woodland Zoo Seattle, WA
Jul 18 ‘08 Vancouver Music Festival Vancouver, BC
Jul 19 ‘08 Aladdin Theater Portland, OR
Jul 24 ‘08 Calgary Music Festival Calgary,AB
Jul 26 ‘08 Berklee Performance Center Boston, MA
Jul 28 ‘08 Washington Park Albany, NY
Jul 30 ‘08 Highline Ballroom New York, NY
Aug 1 ‘08 Music Hall of Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY
Aug 2 ‘08 9:30 Club Washington, DC
Aug 4 ‘08 World Cafe Live Philadelphia, PA
Aug 5 ‘08 World Cafe Live Philadelphia, PA
Aug 7 ‘08 Edmonton Folk Festival Edmonton, AB
Aug 28 ‘08 Koolhaus Toronto, ON
Aug 29 ‘08 Royal Oak Music Theatre Royal Oak, MI
Aug 31 ‘08 Ravina Highland Park, IL
Sep 2 ‘08 The Pageant St Louis, MO
Sep 3 ‘08 Ryman Auditorium Nashville, TN
Sep 4 ‘08 Bama Theatre Tuscaloosa, AL

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Reader Request: Cameras at Concerts

Reader Request

The other day I read an interesting article in the Dallas Morning News with the headline “Are Cellphones Ruining the Concert Experience?

I immediately read it and found artists like Feist, Roger Waters, Steve Earle, and Ice Cube all bitching about playing a show and seeing a sea of cell phone/digital cameras in the audience instead of faces. Yup, you read that right. They are pissed that you’re taking a picture or video of them. Maybe it’s because they believe part of their soul gets taken away. Or maybe they just don’t want their fans to document their experience.

I’m sorry, but I barely feel any pity for musicians who don’t want their picture taken at a concert, especially when fans are paying more for tickets these days. If you really don’t like it, pull a Kanye West and put on a show with an insane light show that makes picture taking impossible, even for the New York Times.

The article also had Michael Stipe saying “It’s a really interesting trend – instead of clapping, they’re blogging.” You know what’s more interesting than that? REM joining the trend by allowing their fans to post pictures/reviews/video of their shows directly on their website.

As one of the many who suffers from a “strange archiving addiction” (thanks Feist), I took immediate offense to the comments these artists made in the article.

I am not “micro-bored” at shows. Nor am I there to take a video so I can have the highest views on my Youtube account. A concert is about an experience and people want to share that experience with others.

Is there harm with taking a video of a Led Zeppelin concert, especially when most of the world won’t be able to see it?

Or what about Pink Floyd? Do you not want fans to see little snippets of your show that may inspire them to buy some merchandise from you?

Or is a concert now a closed-off thing, that only the elite who can afford to pay the rising ticket prices can see?

If so, that’s bullshit. This site is about sharing that concert experience with our fellow drunkards, bloggers, fans, musicians and writers.

Though, I’ll be honest. When someone is taking a video, my eyes do tend to wander over to their tiny screen, lit up in the darkness with the tiny images and, at times, it can be a bit annoying. But, at the end of the night, I’m thankful for that person because 9 times out of 10, the moment I loved from the concert will be up on Youtube the following week.

Thankfully, the article wasn’t all one-sided. Billy Bragg, who is now a hero to this site, stuck up for music fans and their documentary tendencies.

My bottom line is communication,” says English rocker Billy Bragg. “If they want to capture a photo of me and send it to a friend who can’t be at the gig, I don’t have a problem with that.”

So, readers of 52 shows, what are your thoughts? Are you using your camera or phone at show because you’re bored or cause you care? And any words for the artists who don’t want to look into a sea of cameras/phones?

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Tours of Note: Kimya Dawson

Indie, News, Tours

Yes, remember this movie homeslice? The high school story about geeky love in suburbia with a teenager making up her own slang almost at will? Then you no doubt became obsessed with the music behind all those frames of dramedy. And the reason for that is Kimya Dawson, a leader in the revolution that is anti-folk (they find folk artists and beat the shit out of them…ok not really).

But then why did I put a picture of “Juno” on the front of this post? Because if put this picture up, you’d be taking my anti-folk joke seriously and wonder how many folk artists this person trapped in her closet.

Right, the news. Dawson is releasing a new album on Sept. 9 called “Alphabutt,” which is a collection of children’s songs she wrote with friends and their kids (if you’ve heard her music before, then you know this is a perfect fit).

And why is this tour a big deal? Because the dates with the “*” next to it means she’ll be opening for none other than Ani DiFranco, queen of the anti-folk massacre of 1999 (it’s too easy…and too much fun).

Get your tickets early. Ani sells out lightning quick.

July 2nd        Music Hall of Williamsburg        Brooklyn, NY
July 11th       The National                             Richmond, VA *
July 12th       Pines Theater                           Florence, MA *
July 13th       Cape Cod Melody Tent             Hyannis, MA *
July 15th       Ives Concert Park                     Danbury, CT *
July 16th       United Palace                           New York, NY *
July 25th       Capitol Hill Block Party             Seattle, WA

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Jam on the River 2008 Festival - Penn’s Landing, Philly - Memorial Day weekend

Festivals, Philly, Reviews, Shows


See the epic mustache?

Ah summer time…what a fine season. The sleepy drone of lawnmowers filling the neighborhoods, diffusing the sweet smell of fresh-cut grass. Birds singing playfully. Bees dancing whimsically through their aimless choreography. Flowers vibrant, trees verdant. The nostalgic scent of chlorine and sunscreen. Long days, warm nights. And of course, that one thing that keeps summer in our heads all year long: outdoor music festivals.

This year, on a picture-perfect Memorial Day weekend, I kicked-off what promises to be a great summer of music at Philadelphia’s Jam on the River. As always, it was a great time. But there were a few differences from previous years, some for better and some for worse.

First, due to some kind of scheduling fiasco, the event had to be moved from the Great Plaza of Penn’s Landing to the Festival Pier. This was a shame. In fact, one of my favorite aspects of previous JOTR’s was the location. Picture standing on stadium-style steps looking past the stage out over the Delaware River, boats and jet skis skipping by. That’s the Great Plaza. It’s fairly small and there isn’t a bad viewing spot in the whole joint. There are fountains, shade trees and a gorgeous view of Camden (if there is such a thing) from across the river. It is a chill spot for a concert, and I missed it very much this year.

The Festival Pier, a much larger venue, was not bad, but it lacks the charm of the Great Plaza. With a giant stage, a circus-sized tent of vendors, and no view whatsoever, it’s a pretty lackluster scene.

Another striking difference this year was a rather weak line-up. Well, it wasn’t terrible, but there were only two acts I was really excited about: The Flaming Lips and the Disco Biscuits (more about them later.) I usually like to hit up both days of the festival, but this year I only felt the need to check out Saturday’s line-up.

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Los Campesinos! @ the Bowery Ballroom

Genre, Indie, Location, NYC, Reviews, Rock, Shows

Los Campesinos!

It gives me a warm, happy feeling inside to see headlining bands in the audience during opening acts. It shows me that they genuinely care about music and are probably nice people.

The members of Los Campesinos! not only watched both of their opening bands, but stood in the front, cheering and sometimes even singing along. In this way, Los Campesinos! forever endeared themselves to me before they even started playing.

Aleks (lead vocals/keyboard/melody horn), Ellen (bass/vocals), Gareth (lead vocals/glockenspiel/keyboard), Harriet (violin/keyboard/vocals), Neil (guitar/vocals), Ollie (drums/vocals), and Tom (guitar/vocals) Campesinos! (their adopted last name) met at Cardiff University. They have since graduated college (all but Aleks, who had to take a leave from medical school). Their debut album, Hold On Now, Youngster, was released in the U.S. on April 1 of this year. The band played at the Bowery Ballroom on Monday, May 19, for its fifth stop on its U.S. and Canada tour, continuing until the middle of June.

The first band, Flying, a trio from Brooklyn, did little for me, especially vocally. The three alternated on vocals and while a good voice is obviously not a requirement in rock ‘n’ roll, they did not make up for it with style, conviction, or stage presence, the way the other two bands did. They just sounded very shy and awkward and it was a little uncomfortable to watch. I’d like to give them the benefit of the doubt and say that they were probably nervous and maybe will get better as they become more comfortable around an audience.

The Jersey-based Titus Andronicus gets points for being named after an underrated Shakespeare play. I probably wouldn’t listen to this band at home–the music was a little too repetitive and, well, loud for my taste–but their energy was a relief after the previous set. There was a large group of friends or fans (I couldn’t tell which) in the audience who already knew the lyrics. During the band’s self-titled song, the lyrics evolved into an outcry of, “Your life is over.” There was something both disturbing and gratifying about a room full of people repeating this as lead singer Patrick Stickles jumped off an amp and mimed pointing a gun to his head. The power of rock does have a way of bringing people together.

This proved to be true during the final set by the band that made me allow the exclamation point as an acceptable form of punctuation. It was a good size crowd for a Monday night, maybe sold out, but I’m not sure. Everybody was cheerful and dancing (then again, how can you not dance to Los Campesinos!), and the crowd was one of the most polite I have ever witnessed. Everyone gave each other room and I saw no pushing or shoving. At one point, someone actually apologized for accidentally bumping into me.

Starting with the hyperactive screams of “One, two, three, four!” of “Broken Heartbeats Sound Like Breakbeats,” the band launched into a set as joyous as the album. One of the best things about seeing a band with only one album is that they are pretty much gauranteed to play the song that you’ve been listening to on repeat all week (for me, that song was “We Are All Accelerated Readers”).

We are All Accelerated Readers

I barely noticed the issues with Gareth’s mic, or mics (at one point he was using two). The band members are all between the ages of 21 and 23 and their songs have a juvenile ADHD-like quality, yet there is a sophistication in the clever lyrics and arrangements. The band was as interesting to watch as to listen to, especially Gareth, who looked like a little boy (no disrespect intended) with his horse shirt and charade-like hand motions. In any case, they were having fun with each other (I’m pretty sure Gareth licked Neil at one point) and the audience.

They closed appropriately with “Sweet Dreams Sweet Cheeks” (not to sound old, but at close to midnight, it was past my bedtime) before coming back for an encore, “2007, The Year Punk Rock Broke (My Heart).” In 2008, though, punk rock shouldn’t break the hearts of anyone listening to Los Campesinos!

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News: Touring Bands are Getting Screwed at the Pump

News

Woman Screams

It’s true. High gas prices have inspired people to bike, bring car pooling back in the mix and have forced touring bands to wonder if they will ever make it in the music industry.

According to the Chicago Tribune, bands are finding their gas bills doubling and making it almost impossible to make a living as an unknown to medium-sized band on the road (panhandling and whoring are still acceptable ways to make a living in rock).

How do you offset this? Higher ticket prices? Traveling festivals. With Donkey rides. More exposure on 52shows. Dancing monkeys. Taco night (huh?).

In the end, it’s the musicians and fans who will suffer the most (and probably the dancing monkey who is unlucky enough to have a horrible agent and suggest they go on tour with a band).

I’m on the verge of biking it to a show this summer. I’ve only done it once before and it was when I lived in Arizona. My editor and i were trashed after a Distillers show and rammed our bikes into trees. Hilarious.

So that’s what we have to look forward to…and maybe it’ll mean a better world, one where Vinyl outsells the CD and where people crash into each other’s bikes instead of each other’s cars, all the while with that drunken ringing in their ears from the show they just saw.

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Ingrid Michaelson @ the Berklee Performance Center

Boston, MP3, Pianist, Reviews, Shows

Ingrid Michaelson

*I did not take this picture…and I love her rabbit too.

Aside from her creepy video about clown love, (it’s probably the only song you know from her. It’s “The Way I Am”) I didn’t know much about Ingrid Michaelson and, to be honest, the girlfriend and I were going to see Ari Hest (NYC singer/songwriter who’s in the middle of a project called “52″ where he writes one song a week for a year).

So I was ill-equipped with information and assumed I was going to see a piano-driven show filled with songs about love. Like every experience i have in my life, I found I was totally wrong.

From the onset, Michaelson approached the mic on stage as her own personal therapist, talking about past relationships, her problems with drooling on planes and even testing out the various sounds on her keyboard that turned into an impromptu sing-a-long of Richard Marx’s “Right Here Waiting” (it’s true…you totally had to be there…oh wait, now you can).

When she wasn’t crooning along on stage, she was entertaining the audience with her personality and talking about her secret hobby of searching Youtube for fan videos of her songs.

So not only is the “Grid” a pretty girl with glasses, but she’s hilarious…making her my new music crush (for those who are keeping up, my previous one was with the girl in the Office…the band not the show).

This is the third time I’ve been surprised at a musician’s stage presence, straddling that line between singer and stand-up comedian. In Ingrid’s case (or her hip-hop name which she revealed was “Grid”) this worked in her favor.

Piano-driven songs are nice, but I can’t listen to it for an entire evening without wanting to nap. In Grid’s case, it was great to have these songs coupled with hilarious stories about her life, like this one about the time she fell asleep on a plane.

Drooling Story

I know. It’s hilarious and I want to give her a hug. The last time I experienced what Grid called “frivolous frivolity” at a concert was at Tegan & Sara, who have elevated the act of bantering with the audience to an art form.

Ingrid admitted that it was a strange night for her and that she was talking about things she normally doesn’t (like her ex-boyfriend). It’ s funny what a little comedy and audience interaction can do for a singer. And in Grid’s case, makes her stick out in a world that seems to be constantly churning out female singer-songwriters who write emotional ballads for Grey’s Anatomy.

Before, she was just another female singer/songwriter that seemed to be jumping on the I-wear-glasses bandwagon, but now whenever I hear her songs, all I remember is the comedy and laughing about her silliness. Maybe the future of albums should be adding little personality bits from the artist. Kind of like the skits on hip-hop albums, only funnier. Eh maybe not.

The girlfriend enjoyed her, even though it was past her bedtime (she’s a teacher) and, like me, only knew one song. Now we listen to album all the time and wonder if she’s still drooling on herself on airplanes (seriously, listen to that track. It’s a hilarious).

For now, I’ll leave you with the funniest moment of the night. It happened right after she sang “The Chain,” a song only available on her Myspace page.

(and hey, someone took video of it. I was told to put my camera away, mostly because the ushers at Berklee let people in the front section do whatever they want).

There’s a lyric in there that has her go “Glide away on soapy heels” and apparently people on Youtube have been covering it, but saying “Glide away and so be healed” (I think this is the video she was talking about).

Ingrid thought it was hilarious and, with one of her band members, did a song with the new lyrics in an epic, religious sort of way. After that, she went into a remix version of her hit “The Way I Am.” Again, both worth your time.

“The Chain” discussion and intro to “The Way I Am”

The Live Remix of “The Way I Am

Ingrid Michaelson, I don’t care that you had creepy clowns in your video…I think I love you.

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Tours of Note: Mike Edison

News

Who is Mike Edison? He’s the former High Times editor. He’s a musician. And now he’s an author thanks to the book “I Have Fun Everywhere I Go: Savage Tales of Pot, Porn, Punk Rock, Pro Wrestling, Talking Apes, Evil Bosses, Dirty Blues, American Heroes, and the Most Notorious Magazines in the World.”

But, more importantly, Edison is my hero because he has created the ChroniCaster, an electric guitar that is also a usable bong (see video above if you haven’t yet).

He also has a CD that Jon Spencer produced that bears the same insanely long name as his book. I can only imagine what his shows are like and what that ChroniCaster is like to use/play.

05/22- 7:30 PM Portland, OR @ Powell’s Books
06/04- 9:30 PM Philadelphia, PA @ Tritone
06/16- 7:00 PM New York, NY @ Half King Reading Series
06/19- 7:30 PM Brooklyn, NY @ Pete’s Candy Store
09/30- 7:00 PM New York, NY @ KGB Reading Series

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Apocalyptica @ The Majestic Ventura Theatre

News

Apocalyptica

When I explained the Apocalyptica concept to my girlfriend, “four cellos and a drummer doing Metallica covers and stuff,” she was a bit skeptical. “Meh,” were her exact words I think. As we drove to Ventura for the show, I tried to convince her that it was going to be an awesome, unique, live music experience. She seemed more interested in visiting the Camarillo Outlet Mall, going shelling at Leo Carillo, looking at cute craftsman houses in Ventura, and having me take her out to dinner.

While enjoying the latter, we discussed our expectations for the show. Would there be a mosh pit? Would we get beaten up? What exactly happens at a metal show? You see, we were both metal virgins and more than a little nervous that our cherry-popping would be a loud, painful experience. And we weren’t entirely wrong.

Upon entering the aptly titled Majestic Theatre, most of our initial concerns were swept aside. We walked past elderly couples in flannel, parents toting small children, a man in a kilt, and a woman belly dancing by herself in some lonely corner of the room. The hardcore metal fans were pushed up front on the first landing in front of the stage. The older, more cautious in attendance, Christine and I included, sat in white plastic chairs well back of any potential mosh pit hot spots. The stage was dressed with two pairs of thrones, built to look like skulls, surrounding a huge drum set, all in front of a massive winged skull cello backdrop. I thought to myself, “so this is a metal show.”

After it was clear the halfway empty theater wasn’t going to get any fuller, the house music, The Who’s “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” climaxed in long, high screeching note, and then segued into some unholy, beastly sounds. It was a bit cheesy, but had a surprising affect. Christine dragged me down to the front landing for “the real experience” of rocking out right in front of the band.

The lights went down and Apocalyptica appeared on stage urged on by a raucous applause from the hardcore fans on the floor. Their music is dark, wonderfully layered, complex, textured strings, punctuated by machine-gun-fire drums. And it’s loud. Really really loud. I can’t stress that enough. They began playing seated in their skull thrones, but quickly got up and began marching around the stage, cellos in hand, long Finnish hair swirling hypnotically as they began to head-bang.

The crowd was into it too, at least those who were there for a metal show. The older people in the back rows who showed up for cello quartet clapped politely after each song, but seemed a bit uneasy.

During “Race” a mosh pit broke out next to Christine and I. It was probably the pussiest mosh pit in the history of metal, three teens with long hair and tight pants smashing into the crowd and one another. Like little gnats, they were easily batted aside but still quite annoying, so Christine and I moved closer to the speakers to avoid being swallowed up in a teeny-bop whirlpool of hormonal angst.

About halfway through the set, Toryn Green (new singer for Fuel as of last year) joined the band to provide vocals on a couple of songs, including David Bowie’s “Heroes.” The less said about his time on stage, the better. His presence there not only greatly diminished my pleasure of the music, but had me wondering for the first time whether or not this was just a novelty show.

If “This is Spinal Tap” didn’t already exist, Apocalyptica would be the perfect candidate for a mocumentary. In between hardcore songs with titles like “Betrayal” and “Somewhere Around Nothing” the band adoringly addressed the crowd with sweet Finnish accents and broken English. They giggled and discussed the national sports of Finland (hockey and head-banging), the beauty of California, how much they love metal, and offered several apologies for not speaking better English.

Whenever they spoke, they came across as cute. Cute like, I wanted to take them home to meet my mom and have a big bowl of matzah ball soup, cute. I can’t imagine there are many metal bands who would appreciate that type of invitation or label.

The only thing that kept them from becoming a bad SNL sketch, was the sheer quality of their music. I laughed every time they spoke, but as soon as they started playing, I was instantly nodding my head and totally into it. They combined incredible orchestration, with precise execution, and I couldn’t help but get fired up. That was, until my ears stopped working.

Christine was also suffering. Her ears were destroyed and she was getting upset, so we ventured to the back of the room to escape the speakers. From our new perch, we both enjoyed covers of “Enter Sandman,” “Nothing Else Matters,” and the epic “Hall of the Mountain King.” The later proved to be both playful and cathartic, two adjectives I would’ve thought were nearly mutually exclusive.

After a (somewhat undeserved) double encore, Christine and I returned to my car for our drive back to LA. She hates metal and instrumental music, but I managed to get her to admit, the show was not only interesting but truly impressive. The quality and complexity of the music we had witnessed was unlike anything either of us had ever seen. It was our first metal show and a pretty incredible experience. She did have a few complaints, mostly about the songs with vocals and how much her ears hurt. Fortunately, I was at the same rip-roaring, head-banging, incredibly awesome and loud show, and her complaints fell on largely deaf ears.

(From Eddie: Check out a video Apocalyptica made for 52 Shows a couple of weeks ago)

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