Tuesday, November 18th, 2008
Review of Oh No Forest Fires' The War On Geometry

Kyle HuttonOh No Forest Fires are having a good time. That much is obvious, listening to The War On Geometry, the debut mini-album from the Toronto four-piece that follows up an excellent demo EP that has been kicking around for a while. Even though adding those four tracks to the seven on Geometry would have made for a more traditional-length album, their omission – as excellent as those songs were – is a sensible one. Compared to the new recordings, the songs from the EP were equally if not even more immediately and indelibly catchy, but the execution was more well-mannered and polite.
Geometry, on the other hand, is the sound of that band hepped up on pixie sticks, volume and nostalgia for how distortion pedals sounded in the ’90s. It’s bigger, louder and more abrasive-sounding, though the extra grit also helps those hooks stick just that much harder. Bursting with energy and ideas, it knows when a musical tangent is called for and when its best to simply take the shortest distance between two points to get the point across, particularly by means of big, loud power chords. It takes a skeleton of tempo shifts and melodic complexity that could only have been built by people who really know their way around their instruments, and decorates it in party hats, funny sloganed t-shirts and oversized sunglasses. It’s math-rock if math were singalongable and the most exhilarating subject in school.
A lot of bands spend their careers trying to capture the energy of their live shows on record, and while Geometry doesn’t quite catch the full experience – I’ve listened to the album a good deal and haven’t yet had any of my musical equipment in the vicinity spontaneously demolish itself or find myself soaked in beer/sweat/other fluids – it does a good job of conveying just how… trying not to use the word “energy” again… animated the band can be whilst performing. I’ve seen them twice now and both times have been wonderful bouts of anarchy. And when they play the Horseshoe tomorrow night with Hey Rosetta! and Museum Pieces, both visiting from the Maritimes, I expect nothing less. Cover is $8, ONFF are on first at 9.
Chart has an interview with the band.
MP3: Oh No Forest Fires – “It’s Not Fun And Games Until Someone Loses An Eye”
The Tennessean talks to Broken Social Scene’s Brendan Canning. They’re at the Sound Academy on November 27 and 28.
Though hard at work at the next Great Lake Swimmers record, Tony Dekker also crafted the score to Song Sung Blue, a forthcoming documentary about a Neil Diamond tribute act. Hear a couple of the pieces below and for clips from the film, hit up their YouTube channel.
MP3: Tony Dekker – “Old Milwaukee”
MP3: Tony Dekker – “Encore”
Final Fantasy has released another video from his Spectrum, 14th Century EP.
Video: Final Fantasy – “Blue Imelda”
Chad Van Gaalen is offering up a new MP3 from Soft Airplane. The Calgary Herald has an interview.
MP3: Chad VanGaalen – “City Of Electric Light”
Neil Young floats some ideas for saving the automotive industry at The Huffington Post.
The Thermals will return on April 7 with a new label – Kill Rock Stars – and album, in Now We Can See.
mel.opho.be interviews the boys from Wheat about small successes and the link between their music and visual art endeavours. They’ve completed a new album entitled Black Ink and are aiming to release it in Spring 2009. Via Bradley’s Almanac.
The December 9 Noah & The Whale show at the Rivoli has been cancelled, as has the entire North American tour. As they explain in a MySpace blog entry, between their European tour commitments and working on their second record, they just couldn’t make it over. But they promise to return in March of next year, presumably scheduled around an appearance at SxSW.
The Star-Tribune talks to Patterson Hood and Craig Finn, frontmen of tourmates Drive-By Truckers and The Hold Steady. The Seattle Times settles for talking to just Finn.
The Chicago Sun-Times contemplates the fates of the Chicagoan bands set to conquer the alt.rock world way back in 1993.
Monday, November 17th, 2008
Grammatics and Drowned In Sound's tips for 2009

grammatics.co.ukDrowned In Sound continues to peek ahead to the new year with a list of ten acts that their writers think the world will be all agog about in 2009. I can personally endorse Mumford & Sons, whom I saw in October, and Sky Larkin, whom I’ve not seen but like what I’ve heard. Presumably there’s an album in the works for the former and The Golden Spike, the debut from the latter, is due out in February.
I also quite like what I’m hearing from fresh-faced, Leeds-based moppets Grammatics, though I’ll want to hear more before committing to any kind of endorsement. After all, the last time I was won over by a first listen to a band fronted by a skinny dude with a high voice from that part of the world, I ended up with a JJ72 album in my collection. My first impressions can’t always be trusted. But full-time cellist? You have my attention. Their three singles released thus far do tickle my fancy, when their debut album comes out in the first part of next year, I’ll be checking it out and hoping that I don’t regret too much not going to see them for free when I was in London back in May. You can get an MP3 of latest single “New Franchise” for frees on their website by signing up for their mailing list.
Video: Grammatics – “The Vague Archive”
Video: Grammatics – “D.I.L.E.M.M.A.”
Video: Grammatics – “New Franchise”
MySpace: Grammatics
I also checked out DiS-approved Catherine A.D. over the weekend, and while the first song streaming on her MySpace, “Carry Your Heart”, has promise, the debut EP The Bedroom Sessions is a snooze.
Not on their list but obviously high on mine is Emmy The Great, whose debut First Love finally has a release date. It’ll be out on February 2, and I thank For Folk’s Sake for the best news I had all Friday.
Varsity profiles Noah & The Whale, paying us a visit at the Rivoli on December 9. For Folk’s Sake (them again!) report that the band will be releasing a Christmas mini-album on December 22.
Laura Marling talks to Scotland On Sunday.
The Times invites British Sea Power to put both Rock Band and Guitar Hero through their paces.
Lykke Li is charting out another North American tour and will be returning to Toronto again for a show at the Phoenix on February 6. Javno and SF Weekly have interviews.
Washington Square News and The Charlotte Observer interview M83 mastermind Anthony Gonzalez. He and his band are at the Opera House on Thursday night, and are running a video contest for next single “We Own The Sky” – details at Pitchfork.
Tourmates for M83 this go-around are School Of Seven Bells, whose Ben Curtis talks to Exclaim about his new band and his old band. There’s a new remix of a song from Alpinisms by Cocteau Twin Robin Guthrie available for grabsies.
MP3: School Of Seven Bells – “My Cabal” (Robin Guthrie mix)
Anna-Lynne Williams of Trespassers William talks to Roots & Resonance about her songwriting process and juggling different projects. There’ll be a new Trespassers William EP due out sometime in the new year. The band released a video from their last album Having a little while back.
Video: Trespassers William – “Weakening”
NPR has a Tiny Desk Concert with Shearwater.
PitchforkTV is currently streaming the whole of Silver Jew, the documentary about Silver Jews frontman David Berman.
I don’t know if this is new or old or just not previously widely circulated, but there’s a video for The Decemberists’ 2004 epic-single “The Tain” up for viewing at PitchforkTV – all 18 minutes of it. This video is the same length as an episode of The Office with the commercials cut out. Spin has a video interview with Colin Meloy as well as a stream of one of the b-sides from their ongoing Always The Bridesmaid single series. Their new album Hazards Of Love is due out in April.
Video: The Decemberists – “The Tain”
Saturday, November 15th, 2008
Chromeo remixes aplenty

Angela BoatwrightI don’t really know how things work in the dance/electronic music worlds, but when Fool’s Gold Records elected to celebrate the fact that their fellow Montrealers Chromeo were going to be playing the B-Live stage at this past Summer’s Pemberton Festival up in the Rocky Mountains with a set of remixes by their artists, who am I to argue? Maybe remixes are like high-fives or fist-bumps for the DJ set. Or maybe their mom (Fool’s Gold founder A-Trak and Chromeo’s Dave 1 are brothers… in the literal sense) insisted they play nice together.
And so it is that I’m able to offer you three remixes of “100%”, the final track from Chromeo’s 2007 album Fancy Footwork, by Treasure Fingers, Trackademicks and Nacho Lovers. “100%” showed off the duo’s sexy, seductive flipside to their goofier, good-time persona.
The band released a fancy, deluxe edition of Fancy Footwork this Summer and aim to have a new record out in the new year. RWD has an interview with both Dave 1 and P-Thugg.
MP3: Chromeo – “100%” (Treasure Fingers B-Live Pemberton Mix)
MP3: Chromeo – “100%” (Trackademicks B-Live Pemberton Mix)
MP3: Chromeo – “100%” (Nacho Lovers B-Live Pemberton Mix)
MySpace: Chromeo
Friday, November 14th, 2008
Human Highway home for the holidays

Jaime HoggeI don’t know if a duo can really be called a “supergroup”, but if so then the combined resumes of Nick Thorburn and Jim Guthrie, they who go by Human Highway, would certainly qualify them. Guthrie cut his teeth in the dearly departed and wholly underappreciated Royal City before a fruitful solo career that included a stint in Thorburn’s Islands, the band which followed his first outfit – the much beloved by people other than me Unicorns.
Though I reserve the right to be entirely wrong about this, I don’t believe that Guthrie’s stint in Islands went beyond live duties. So Moody Motorcycle, the debut album from Human Highway released back in August, constitutes the first recorded collaboration between these two artists. And fittingly, it sounds exactly as you’d think a collaboration between the two – and named for a Neil Young film – should. It’s simple and homespun-sounding, unsurprising considering it was knocked off in a week, rich in melody and harmony and faithful to the pair’s folk and pop roots. It’s a bit understated in delivery, but there’s a definite bounce to it.
While most humans of Canadian persuasion know that traversing the country’s highways in December can be a bit risky, Human Highway are setting out on a short Canadian tour in the middle of next month. Only four dates, though, including a December 16 date at the Tranzac – tickets $10 in advance, $12 at the door, though I am guessing there won’t be too many of the latter. Chart and Exclaim! talk to Guthrie about the project’s origins, while NPR declares Moody Motorcycle one of the year’s “overlooked gems”.
MP3: Human Highway – “Sleep Talking”
Exclaim has details on the next Handsome Furs record Take Control, out February 3.
Asobi Seksu’s next album has a release date to go with the previously announced title. Look for Hush on February 17.
The Quietus speculates about the possibility of a Condo Fucks record entitled Fuckbook appearing on the Matador release calendar as really being a new Yo La Tengo record. Because goodness knows that Matador/Beggars have no record of signing bands with “Fuck” in their name (though Condo Fucks don’t appear to hail from Toronto, so that’s a strike against).
The Rice Thresher talks to Matt Berninger from The National.
am/fm and Metro talk New Jersey with Nicole Atkins.
There’s much Calexico in the newswires – check out features on the band at Express Night Out, Metro, The Montreal Gazette, Chart and eye. They’re at the Phoenix on Tuesday, and congratulations go out to Fotis and Marius for winning passes to the show.
Wayne Coyne of The Flaming Lips chats with PopMatters and JAM.
The best part of this two–part video interview with Nick Cave at PitchforkTV is the “I will eviscerate you” look on Nick’s face at the very beginning. Though I suspect he always looks like that.
Pitchfork reports that The Pipettes are once again down a Pipette.
Bloc Party’s Kele Okereke talks to The Sun, complains about John Lydon being a meanie.
Drowned In Sound gets a new album status report from Maximo Park’s Paul Smith.
Pitchfork has got an MP3 from Los Campesinos’ new record We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed
MP3: Los Campesinos! – “Miserabilia”
Paste offers up the complete transcript of their recent interview with Of Montreal mastermind Kevin Barnes.
MySpace Transmissions offers up a downloadable session with Bon Iver.
Le Blogotheque takes away a show with Fleet Foxes.
Daytrotter sessions up with The Dutchess & The Duke.
PopMatters interviews The Secret Machines.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette catches up with Robyn Hitchcock.
The Santa Barbara Independent sees how Jason Isbell is doing out on his own.
Mates Of State discuss the balance between rocking out and bringing up baby with Nashville Scene.
Drowned In Sound prognosticates about what 2009 will bring for music.