Search Results - "Howe Gelb "

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

Pop Goes The World – Day 3

To my fellow Pop Montreal-ers: I don’t know where you were on Saturday night, but if you weren’t at the Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire, then I guarantee you I saw a better show than you. For serious. Like the previous night, there was no club hopping this eve – everything I wanted to see was in one spot and it was way too far from the rest of the main drag to even try to get around… and anyway, it was right next to my hotel. I could see the entrance from my window.

Mike O’Brien @ Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire – I didn’t expect too much from Montrealer Mike O’Brien and his band the Ideal Lovers – judging from the samples on his website, I assumed it’d be fairly rote singer-songwriter stuff. Well-played, but not especially inspiring. Happily, I was making an ass of not so much you, just me, as O’Brien and company kicked things off with a very entertaining (and well-played) set that you could also have filed under country, jazz, folk, roots or pop. O’Brien was a personable frontman, offering anecdotes behind many of his songs (“this one’s also about a girl”) and generally making me glad I didn’t decide to stay in my hotel and watch the first half of the Battlestar Galactica season premiere. Shut up.

Photos: Mike O’Brien @ Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire – October 7, 2006
MP3: Mike O’Brien – “Movie Star”
MP3: Mike O’Brien – “Dirt Road Blue”

Under Byen @ Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire – As I mentioned last week, this was the set that I was most looking forward at Pop Montreal and I was not disappointed. While most every other act I’ve seen fell pretty well within the jurisdiction defined by the festival name (some sort of pop performed in Montreal), this Danish outfit were the proverbial “and now for something completely different”. Boasting an elaborate and expansive stage setup, Under Byen dazzled with a show that was both angelic and gutteral, delicate and hulking. By performing the dense and complex arrangements on Af Samme Stof Som Stof completely live and with mostly acoustic albeit amplified and heavily processed instruments (the distorted kalimba sounded amazing), the band was able to bring the occasional haziness of the album into sharp, stark and totally affecting focus. Shrouded either in shadows or silhouetted by a a lightshow and even hiding their supermodel-looking singer further back on the stage, often crouched down by the floor, the band didn’t say a word to the audience, preferring to let the music do the talking – and that it did, in mysterious booming tones. I am actually glad I can’t understand Danish because I think that being able to process the lyrics on anything but a strictly non-phonetic level would take away some of the overall effect. It’s always nice when something manages to meet high expectations, but to have them blown away – as I and many others in the audience were – is even better.

Photos: Under Byen @ Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire – October 7, 2006
MP3: Under Byen – “Af Samme Stof Som Stof”
MP3: Under Byen – “Den Her Sang Handler Om At Fa Det Bedste Ud Af Det”
Video: Under Byen – “Af Samme Stof Som Stof” (YouTube)
MySpace: Under Byen

Giant Sand @ Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire – And yet somehow, with as good a show as Under Byen put on, a very strong case could be made for Giant Sand stealing the show back. I’d never heard any of Howe Gelb’s prodigious output – not any of his many projects – but after last night that’s certainly going to change. Gelb’s work is lazily described as desert rock, along the same lines as Calexico and such, but that doesn’t nearly do the breadth of his talent and vision justice. Over the course of his set and moving between guitar and piano, he turned out cosmic country, cabaret jazz torch songs and gloriously ragged rockers – often all within the same song. There was even a short operetta duet with Henrietta Sennenvaldt of Under Byen, with whom Gelb has worked in the past – hence the otherwise incongruous bill. Gelb himself was also incredibly personable onstage, coming across like the visiting, vagabond uncle with a twinkle in his eye. Judging from his casual manner and the way his band watched him intently for cues, I’d say that Gelb had no set list and even no set plan before heading on stage, but even so, they didn’t miss a beat and put on a superb, superb show start to finish.

Photos: Giant Sand @ Cabaret du Musee Juste Pour Rire – October 7, 2006
MP3: Giant Sand – “Occupy (live 1995)”
MySpace: Giant Sand

I know I said that if Giant Sand and Under Byen blew me away, I’d catch them again Monday night at the Horseshoe back home… while the necessary condition is obviously true, I expect to be way too tired/burnt out to keep my promise. But then, stranger things have happened. Like seeing the best show of the festival (for me) in a comedy club. Actually it was a fantastic venue with great sound, lights and sightlines, but still – comedy club.

Prefix and BlogTO report back on their Friday night (much of it spent next to me at Les Saints).

Thursday, January 19th, 2006

You Don't Belong

Los Angeles’ Cerulean isn’t a band that’s gotten a lot of profile in any of the internet circles I travel in, but they have gotten a lot of love amongst devotees of The Big Takeover mailing list, where I first heard of them, thanks in no small part to their sonic similarity to BTO faves Catherine Wheel. Singer/guitarist Rick Bolander’s pipes are definitely reminiscent of Rob Dickinson’s, though with less of that uniquely British sense of drama. There’s parallels to be drawn musically, as well – they deftly combine gentler, atmospheric moments with driving, anthemic rock action and while it’s not the most fashionable sound right now, but it’s not that far removed. And I know there are those for whom this sound is like manna from heaven (do you have original LP pressings of Heaven Up Here and Script Of The Bridge?) and am pretty sure some of them read this site, so for them – check it out. They released their third full-length album No Sense In Waiting last year, and have generously posted a couple tracks from it online to check out. They’ve also got the requisite MySpace page if you want to be friends.

MP3: Cerulean – “Quiet Release”
MP3: Cerulean – “Here Is Hoping”

IndieInterviews has a podcast interview with Chris Hrasky of Explosions In The Sky – I don’t usually listen to podcasts (for reasons dull and uninteresting), but this is one I will probably have to take the time out for.

Fountains Of Wayne tell Billboard they’re going back into the studio to record the follow-up to Welcome Interstate Managers. Adam Schlesinger will also be teaming up with fellow Scratchie Records cohort James Iha to try and make America cool. Good luck, guys. And it’s interesting how Iha isn’t mentioned in this report about a Smashing Pumpkins reunion… Oversight? Or conspiracy?

The Stranger talks literature and music with Colin Meloy on the eve of his solo tour. And if he’s not coming near your town, You Ain’t No Picasso has his in-studio performance at KEXP yesterday all ripped and zipped for you to download.

Coming to town – Howe Gelb at the Horseshoe on March 5 and Liars at Lee’s on June 21.

I was asked to contribute to this/last year’s eye music critics poll. the final results of which are now up here, with commentary here and here. I don’t think a whole lot of my picks really made it in there, but that’s okay. I got my name in the big list and that’s what really matters. And if you’d like to be a music journalist and have your opinion polled, PopMatters has a quick test to see if you have what it takes. Hey, Tommy LaSorda did it – maybe you can too!

Newsarama talks to the brain trust behind Justice League Unlimited, which is still frustratingly in limbo. However Comic Book Resources reports that new episodes will begin airing on YTV up here in Canada starting February 1. And don’t forget that the complete first season will be out on DVD on March 21.

I don’t care what the zookeepers say, this will all end in tears. I bet they’ve got a pool going.

np – Bedhead / Transaction De Novo