Image

Live Show Reviews

B3SCI Presents: Miner with Vertical Scratchers, Olin And The Moon, Guardian Ghost @ Bootleg Bar L.A. 7/15/2013

July15Bootleg

LA based folk-rock band Miner is taking stage at the Bootleg Bar in Silver Lake on Monday nights this July as the club’s monthly artist in residence. More than just a celebration of the band’s indie folk style fusion, the residency stint will also be “multi-art” themed, with a variety of arts, food and fashion installations present throughout the month.

On this coming Monday, July 15th B3SCI is pleased to present Miner on Visual Media Night with a bill of stellar buzzing talent that includes Vertical Scratchers, Olin And The Moon, and Guardian Ghost. As if that weren’t enough, Writer / Actor and longtime B3SCI family Chris Geddy will be spinning OBG, Post-Punk, and Jangly goodness between the evening’s sets. Entry for the residency night is FREE (21+) and you can get more information on the show HERE. We’ll see you there!

Bootleg Theater (Info) (Facebook Invite)
Miner california (Facebook)

reviewed by
07-12-13

Review: Designer Drugs @ Saint Rocke in Los Angeles (6/14/2013)

Designer Drugs at Saint Rocke

Often I find myself in the South Bay of Los Angeles at what seems to be the standout venue of the area, Saint Rocke… and more often then not it’s for night caps and live music. This past Friday (6/14), I capped off the busy week with a couple of whiskeys and a fantastic set from NYC electro duo Designer Drugs.

The set was streamed live by iRocke, a great new start up that enables you to view endless live shows straight from your computer screen. Shaking the very brick foundation of Sainte Rocke, the UItra Records signee signaled their arrival with massive bass. The air in the venue was dense with smoke and layers of lights. DD fired off Wolfgang Gartner’s “Nuke” and GTA’s “Booty Bounce” while mixing in remixes and originals. One of those originals, “Space Based”, has a new music video out via Noisey (here) and Ultra records where some guy gets the old NSFW switch-a-roo in Bangkok.

The music alone that night, left everyone leaving the club partied out and with different genres of EDM stuck ringing in their ears. Emerging combo Designer Drugs are one to check out.

Words By Brian Litwin
Photos By Brittany Rogy

Deigner Drugs newyork: (Facebook)

reviewed by
06-21-13

Giveaway: She & Him w/ Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell, Matthew White @ Hollywood Bowl in LA this Sunday (6/23/13)

shehim-685x250_0

We’ve got a surprise giveaway for y’all today! This Sunday (6/23) Zooey Deschanel and M. Ward, aka She & Him, will take to the stage at the legendary Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles to kick off ‘The Bowl’s’ always stellar Summer Concert Series. The duo will be performing fan favorites as well as new material from their recent Old Yellow Moon release, and they will be receiving support that night from Emmylou Harris & Rodney Crowell, and Matthew White. We’ve got one pair of tickets to giveaway to this special summer evening for one lucky reader!

For your chance to win the pair of tickets, just email us here and let us know you’d like to go… and we’ll enter you to win in our drawing to take place this afternoon! Our winner will be picked at random from the pool of submissions (one entry per person), so keep an eye on your inbox. You can get additional details on the show, as well as purchase tickets for the show at the Hollywood Bowl website. Good luck!

Hollywood Bowl california (Tickets and Info)
She & Him (Official)

reviewed by
06-19-13

Looking Back: The Great Escape 2013

The Great Escape 2013

By Bruce Rave

For years, the UK has had smaller versions of Austin’s SXSW. Several continue to thrive, and none more so than The Great Escape. It takes place in Brighton every May. 300 bands play in this charming party town, which is located on the English Channel. The event is more of a regional European festival with attendees and bands arriving from far and wide: Australians came to play even US bands like The Orwells, Phosphorescent and Parquet Courts, not only showed up, but blew people away in the process. A few established Brits such as Billy Bragg and Everything Everything played for those willing to shell out extra pounds to see them. For me, it was all about the up and coming peeps… just as it is at SXSW.

I saw about two dozen bands over the course of three days. If I were to give you one group that hit the biggest home run for me, it was The Strypes. These Irish mid-teens hammer out an intense R&B/garage blend of early Stones and Yardbirds. If you like this kind of music as much as I do, their live show is a “10” and it will be impossible not to have a smile on your face. They have amazing poise for their age, on and offstage. I interviewed them during the weekend, and that chat will soon be posted on B3SCI – stay tuned. Strypes hope to hit America next March for SXSW 2014. Another band that I interviewed was Tribes, who are also great live. Look for that post in the near future. This London band borrows more from the 70’s glam period and just released a new album in the UK. It follows up their top ten debut. They had the misfortune of following The 1975, who flashing-back had dazzled us at the B3SCI SXSW party in March. With two serious UK hits now under their belts, The 1975 drew such a huge throng that many Tribes fans gave up waiting in line. Temples matched the keen expectations I had for them, of which were mostly based on their first single “Shelter Song”. Their set contained several more songs with hit potential, and Temples absolutely deliver live. All four guys in the band ooze stardom, and front man James Bagshaw sports a perfect Tommy Bolan hairdo (bonus points). Temples played two unannounced shows, one being a few hours in advance of the also secret 2am set from Palma Violets. I didn’t see PV that night, but I recall they killed at SXSW.

Some other highlights among a slew of strong artists: Catfish and the Bottlemen came highly recommended to me by BBC honchos, and I loved their melodic, guitar-driven energy. Echotape are up and comers with huge potential that remind me a bit of The Horrors and even Temples. The Family Rain are three brothers, including two twins, who play like Wolfmother’s second album should have sounded. Owen McGarry is a promising Irish singer-songwriter with a crystal clear voice and lots of potential. Merchandise hail from Tampa and have become NME darlings with their dark and dirty post-punk power. An added bonus for me was at one point winding up in a private courtyard where Little Green Cars were taping a beautiful cover of Neil Young’s “Philadelphia” for VEVO. A major buzz artist was London Grammar. Her sweet voice attracted a huge outside line. I got in and can see why people are excited, even if her softer, slower style isn’t quite my glass of white wine.

While TGE is smaller than SXSW, it’s still impossible to cover everything due to schedule conflicts. One US band I hated to miss was electropop band Feathers from Austin. They definitely cut through the clutter and were on lots of lips. For SXSW, 6th Street in Austin has become such a shitshow that attendees avoid the street at all costs at night. Not the case in Brighton. Sidewalks, bars, and cafes were filled with college types and other mellow locals who seemed unfazed by the festival, so walking between venues was a real pleasure. We really lucked out with the weather. Brighton had endured ten consecutive stormy days, but not a drop of rain fell during the festival. One downside shared by both TGE and SXSW: As both events grow, there are more and more lines that make it impossible to gain admittance to certain showcases. Both festivals now have the task of trying to grow without being too big for their own good. I hope TGE can retain the casual intimacy that it still has at this point. I highly recommend it to anyone who can attend, but I’d do it within the next couple of years.

The Great Escape england (Official)

* Links and playlists from Rave’s weekly new music show can be found on his blog and be sure follow Bruce on Twitter too!

reviewed by
06-01-13

Preview: Neon Indian, Yacht, Ladyhawke @ LURE in Hollywood this Friday 5/31

lure neon indian

In what has to be the best way to start off the weekends in summertime LA, Hollywood premiere club, Lure has showcased an impressive DJ lineup for its recent Private Label series. Putting together big and on-the-rise talent on the same bill is not easy to do week-in and week-out, but the powers that be have done just that. Having Bag Raiders, Chris Malinchak, Fred Falke and Azari & III all headline in the month of May is pretty incredible, and closing the series out this Friday with Ladyhawke, Yacht and Neon Indian… is just plain sick.

The Kiwi, Ladyhawke, will get things started for the night. The Modular/Island Records signee has been recording a third studio alum and it is possible she can drop a new song in her mix. YACHT, the brainchild of Jona Bechtolt with the expansion of Claire L. Evans will follow suit. Having toured Asia and Australia for the past month, the DFA Records duo plan to make their welcome home show a big one. Capping the evening off will be Neon Indian. Alan Palomo will head the DJ set and this set may be more house if anything, so expect to dance. By Brian Litwin

Lure (Facebook)

reviewed by
05-31-13

Preview: Lightning In A Bottle Festival 2013 @ Lake Skinner in Temecula, CA July 11th – 15th

Lightening In A Bottle 2013

As June approaches, the heart of festival season slowly creeps closer. Music and art lovers will flock to parks and open fields to experience the massive movement that is the new age music festival. What was once just a rotation of bands on one stage in an open field, has now turned into a multiple day experience of music, art, culture, food, etc. Just think, fans all over the country can literally plan a cross country road trip and incorporate a music festival into almost every major city if they like!

For us here in Southern California, we are blessed with both great land and weather making it practical for an abundance of festivals. One festival that stand outs for us this year has to be Lightning In A Bottle at Lake Skinner in Temecula, CA. The experience begins July 11th and will end July 15th, and with so much going on during this eco-friendly music and arts festival, I have already started mapping out a game plan.

Here are my top 5 acts (in no particular order) to not miss and my top 5 activities (non-music) that make this festival a unique and don’t miss experience.

TOP 5 ACTS:

Tycho – This festival seems almost like what Tycho, Scott Hanson, would throw himself. Meaning Tycho’s heavy reliance in rolling the whole aesthetic of music and art into one beautiful object. Fans swear by Tycho’s live performance and the 2011 release Dive is a go-to album for any new fan of ambient, downtempo, electronic music. Needless to say I am excited.

Giraffage – Charlie Yin will arrive at Lake Skinner after coming off some pretty incredible tours throughout Europe and the US. Don’t fret, no matter how many gigs he plays, he will always throw down. Having seen Giraffage play the B3SCI showcase at SXSW this year and from checking out the videos of his recent shows in Europe, I can attest that he is one not to be missed.

ODESZA – The combination of Catacombkid and BeachesBeaches = pretty incredible music. This well kept secret from the Pacific Northwest will show those who have a thirst for new music that they need to be a topic of discussion before, during, and after Lightning In A Bottle.

Purity Ring – These guys are a well-called last minute addition to the festival line up! The Edmonton duo of Megan James and Corin Roddick will be all over the United States for the festival season this summer, but it’s this stop near San Diego that we’re most excited about. The 2012 head turner Shrines exploded all over the internet and when releasing their cover of Soulja Boy’s “Grammy”, the site with the download link crashed. Another great characteristic fit with the festival, Purity Ring’s use of lights is mainstay of the duo, more specifially with Corin’s drums.

Nicolas Jaar – There is too much talent at Lightning In A Bottle, and these are all my top 5, but Bronx born Nicolas Jaar should be on everyone’s list. The 23 year old producer has an incredible rap sheet of remixes, singles and buzz from all over the globe. I still can’t get “The Ego” out of my head since it was released this past November.

TOP 5 THINGS NON-MUSIC:

Greeniest Festival – Lightning In A Bottle prides itself in a lot of things, but being one of the most green festivals in the world is something to be proud of. Every time I leave a show, I always look around at all the trash everywhere and it reminds me of the end of Wayne’s World 2. While Lightning In A Bottle is not only like Wayne and Garth helping out their naked Native-American friend, it is also an educator on how to help keep the Earth clean.

Free Filtered Water – If I may vent for a moment; Why is this so hard for other festivals to do? Is the $5 bottled water mark-up too sexy to pass up? Lightning In A Bottle doesn’t care, they have feelings for their patrons and understand their need to be taken care. Is this genius or should I just say common sense?

Interactive Art and Installations – Music incorporates art already and Lightning In A Bottle plays an even heavier role in the visual arts (The Do Lab puts on the festival, and should you expect anything less?). These interactive and massive art installations are a big pull for some attendees, and icing on the cake for others.

Lake Skinner – The park itself is awe inspiring. Lake Skinner is a very popular camping stop in Southern California. It is home to the Solar Cup (eco-boating competition) and the Temecula Valley Balloon and Wine Festival. The festival location was recently moved here, and I think for the better.

The Temple – A designated area to do yoga, drink tea, meditate, listen to worldly music and eat incredible organic food in the midst of a music festival. If free water wasn’t a great idea already, this is brilliant.

Event preview by Brian Litwin

Lightning In A Bottle Festival california (Info and Tickets)

reviewed by
05-24-13

Preview: Phil Beaudreau w/ Dawaun Parker @ The Bootleg in L.A. this FRIDAY 5/24/13

beaudreau

One of the most exciting new artists in R&B right now Phil Beaudreau, makes his Los Angeles debut this Friday night at The Bootleg Bar. Rolling alongside AoE reigns-man and Grammy Award Winning producer Dawaun Parker, Phil will be performing tracks from his much anticipated Ether debut. Phil is a serious talent and Friday’s L.A. debut peformance is one you absolutely don’t want to miss. Details on the show and info on tickets can be found here. We’ll see you soon!

Phill Beaudreau – This Is Why (Feat. Dawaun Parker)

Phil Beaudreau california (Soundcloud)
The Bootleg (Info and Tickets)

reviewed by
05-23-13

Review: Black Rebel Motorcycle Club @ Vic Theatre. Chicago, IL. 5/17/13

brmc vic chicago copy

On Friday, fans gathered at Chicago’s Vic Theatre to see Black Rebel Motorcycle Club hit the city for an epic 22 song set as they promoted their seventh album, Specter At The Feast released on March 18th.

Thenewno2 (pronounced “the new number two”) opened with a performance worthy of their Rolling Stone endorsement as one of The 10 Must-See Acts at Lollapalooza in 2012. The band, best known as the brainchild of Dhani Harrison (son of the late George Harrison), opened the night promptly at 8 pm. Their music is a multi-layered amalgamation of genres: indie, rock and psychedelia mixed with synthesizers, hip hop, electronica, and pretty much anything else you can think of. Reminiscent of Radiohead at times, thenewno2 has a distinctive sound all their own and live, oozes hard rock. Their set culminates with the shirtless, mohawk-sporting drummer, Frank Zummo, giving the audience the bird, as he stands behind the drumset before walking off stage.

Harrison spoke only twice, once mentioning the warmth of Chicago’s welcome inspiring a night of musical experimentation. There were no pauses as sprawling music covered the audience the entire set. Harrison preceded their last song saying, “We’ve got only one song left, but we’ll see you again soon. Probably at Lalapaloo-ta or some-ting.” Gotta love the cheerful mood that inspires end-ting word-ts in t’s.

After half an hour’s break, the venue blacks out. Slowly, dim lights shine on the drums and the audience cheers loudly as Leah Shapiro descends behind the kit. With production in full swing, Peter Hayes and Robert Levan Been walk on stage with badass aloofness reminiscent of James Dean.

Keeping in line with their role models, Been wears a black leather jacket over black t-shirt and ripped jeans. Hayes wears a button-down long sleeved shirt–black, of course. His hair is slicked back, exposing his long sideburns. Been’s hair has been dishevelled to stand voluminously on end. His sideburns also scream of another era. Both men wear leather boots. Drummer Shapiro wears a short sleeved gray shirt.

Named after Marlon Brando’s motorcycle gang in 1953’s The Wild One, the trio does Brando proud as they stand solidly on stage, seeming to contain their emotion before it explodes into chorus. Opening with the track “Let the Day Begin” from their new album, the band either close their eyes or stare at their instruments as they play, seeming to focus on the music itself and ignore audience interruption. They ooze the rock spirit, touching the essence of badassness and showing a seasoned skill that comes with years of touring and music-making.

The consistent percussives leaves Shapiro’s drums perpetually active; Hayes works the strings of his guitar expertly while looking like the rebel your mom warned you about. But Been; Been steals all attention. One moment he’s stationary, sipping water; the next, he’s throwing himself into his bass, propelling himself vivaciously across the stage. His silhouette shows sweat drip from his hair as he propels into a rift.

BRMC lyrics and persona encompass the rebellious spirit. With their leather boots, classic haircuts and emotionless faces singing, “We’re not the righteous, we’re not the innocent, we’re just a sign it’s all gone wrong” as they rock passionately across stage, they’re the rebels your mom warned you about. They revel in their status as the spiritually damned, the morally debased. There’s just something about lack of facial expression, black clothes and aloofness that draws you in every time.

Forty minutes into the two hour set, Hayes and Been swop instruments and stage placement for one song, giving each side of the crowd a little love. Been’s presence is constantly known on stage, while Hayes sinks into the background unless singing. Midway through the set a spotlight shines on Been and an acoustic guitar, encompassing the stage in darkness as the band disappears for a well deserved break. With the expressionless face he’s worn all evening, Been approaches the mic, “I wanted to play a song I usually don’t, but Chicago is especially welcoming. So, this is for you.”

Been strums the chords to The Call’s “You Run,” in honor of his late father, a member of the popular 80’s band. However, two lines in, Been stalls to a halt. For the first time that night there’s a crack in the aloof shell, revealing the deeper humanity behind. He smiles as he steps back from the guitar. “Sorry, it’s been a few weeks,” he jokes as he continues to strum and remember the lyrics. After an interlude he returns to sing.

Hayes returns to perform “The Fault Line” from the band’s 2005 album Howl, as Been escapes the stage for a moment’s break. He plays harmonica as he strums the guitar, resurrecting memories of their blues inspired roots, something the band has wandered away from. A stillness falls over the room as they listen to the lone singer on stage. As Shapiro and Been rejoin him for “Fire Walker,” anticipation awakens for the livelier songs which subsist within BRMC.

The middle of the two hour set served almost as an intermission as the audience listened to the band play through their slower, contemplative songs “Returning,” “Love Burns,” “You Run,” “Fault Line,” “Fire Walker” and “Windows.” The hungry crowd bears with it only so long, becoming somewhat disgruntled as they wait for the band’s characteristic hi-temp rock to return.

Yet, life and experience have reshaped the band since their last record, clearly seen in the pensive, slower pace of Specter at the Feast. The album is a more contemplative record in remembrance of Michael Been, Robert’s father, who was so integrally involved in BRMC that he was deemed the unofficial fourth member of the band, filling roles from co-producing to running sound on tour. Been died backstage of a heart attack at Belgium’s Pukkelpop Music Festival in 2010. The new album clearly reflects the band’s emotion as they work through their pain and memorialize someone so important in their lives.

After this emotional interlude (and, more practically speaking, a jogging break for their marathon set), BRMC broke the sombre mood with “Conscience Killer.” Hayes and Been look at each other as they began the first chords, smiling mischievously. A happy crowd responds with fists in the air and head bangs as Been theatrically points his guitar out to the audience like a gun looking for consciences to kill. Scary, scary.

As the show breaks the hour and a half mark, Hayes pulls out a cigarette between vocals. The red embers shine through the darkness and production, hanging from his mouth as he plays. The badass spirit deepens.

“Well, goddamn,” Been says after the song “Six Barrel Shot Gun.” “How about another one?”

Fans scream as the band launch wildly into their close, playing “Spread Your Love,” with sensual intensity and ferocity that reverberates through the crowd. The strobe lights flicker so much that all you can see is Been’s silhouette as he propels himself from stage left to right. While lights settle, he returns to his mic and with the third smile of the night, dramatically presses his hand through his hair and reaches out for an invisible vixen. Strobe lights make a resurgence, and he walks to the edge of the stage, throwing himself into his guitar–fingers flying, head pumping. As the lights calm, Been huddles over the crowd with his head on his bass, almost caressing it to sleep before waking it violently for the close. And then he walks away, without looking back.

As lights blacken and tech’s return to stage to prepare for the encore, a fan exhales a “god damn!” seeming to release the emotion of the entire room.

For encore they play, “Sell It,” a song which retains the high momentum fans so much hoped would be their go-home gift. And yet, as their final goodbye BRMC ended with the pensieve lyrics and melodies of their new album’s concluding song “Lose Yourself.” With it’s epic sweep, the song conveys the spirit of a band transformed by life and shows BRMC as they are now, not as they were five years ago.

Overall, the night was a BRMC statement of rock n’ roll. The aging men (with young lady Shapiro in the background), continue a persona, a spirit, a culture of an age gone by. The classic leather-wearing rockers, so often subject of fantasy, inspire a well-needed nostalgia for the rock that needs a re-emergence. And if it also inspires me to watch Sons of Anarchy, I’m ok with that too.

Review and Photo by Jessica Greene

The badass trio are are on tour with thenewno2 for the next two weeks in the US before venturing abroad:

May 20 – Gothic Theatre, Englewood, CO
May 21 – Belly Up Aspen, Aspen, CO
May 24 – Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver, BC
May 25 – Sasquatch Festival, Sasquatch Festival
May 26 – Wonder Ballroom, Portland, OR
May 27 – Knitting Factory, Reno, NV
May 29 – Marquee Theatre, Tempe, AZ
May 30 – The Rialto Theatre, Tucson, AZ
May 31 – Vinyl at Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas, NV
June 1 – The Wiltern, Los Angeles, CA
June 2 – The Observatory, Santa Ana, CA

Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (Official)

reviewed by
05-20-13

Review: Daughter w/ Wilsen @ Lincoln Hall in Chicago, IL. 5/9/2013

daughterchicago

The buzz has slowly been building for UK band Daughter, who’s devoted fans gathered in Chicago’s Lincoln Hall on Friday night to hear the trio play new material from their debut album If You Leave, released on April 30th.

New York based WILSEN opened the evening charming the usually chatty crowd with their epic scope, creative instrumentation and dream-like melodies. Using everything from nail files to empty coffee cans to create the perfect sounds, WILSEN showed the utmost skill, giving beautiful layers to music that touches the sublime. This was their last show on tour with Daughter and they played their hearts out, priming the crowd for the treat to come.

Listening to Daughter for the first time feels like hearing the diary of a girl on the verge of pulling a Sylvia Plath. The band’s raw lyrics reverberate the universal chords of torment, stinging like a blunt razor across a partially healed wound. And yet, the sheepish girl that fronts the band is anything but. After being greeted with cheers and “I love you’s”, Daughter’s Elena Tonra whispers a bashful “Thank you” back to the crowd. With her pixie bowl haircut and black French inspired clothes, Elena moves to the mic with unexpected hesitancy and shyness.

Based on Daughter’s self-described depressive music, you’d expect an aloof singer with Daria-like monotone adhering to customary hello’s only. Instead that night Chicagoans met a timid, slightly awkward girl with a sweetness reminiscent of The Office’s Erin Hannon–only Elena Tonra is clearly cool. Over-excited fans squeal, “She’s so cuuuuuuuute!” in a way usually unseen outside of teen girl and boy bands. As Tonra periodically went to the mic, she’d smile sheepishly, making short quips before stepping away almost blushing. From first sight, you really just want to carry her around in your pocket.

However, as the band opens with “Shallows,” Tonra transforms into the forlorn author of her dark lyrics. The contemplative side of her emerges as she sings openly about thoughts usually reserved for diaries. The things you share in the utmost confidence to your bestest friend (if you’re lucky enough to have one), she uncovers for all. Lyrics range from depression, despair, heartache, break-ups and bitterness. In “Smother,” Tonra sings “I sometimes wish I had stayed inside my mother never to come out.” With mesmerizing melody and beats, enhanced occasionally by Jonsi-like violin-bowing to the guitar, Daughter’s music has a texture and ferocity which reverberates through your whole being.

Tonra exudes a type of “love-lorn yearning” as she almost revels in painful heartbreak and relational anger. The chorus to “Landfill” reads “This is torturous the electricity between both of us and this is dangerous because I want you so much but I hate your guts. I hate you.” Ironically enough, she sings this next to her long-time boyfriend, guitarist Igor Haefeli. Let’s hope the song’s about a previous relationship… Either way, the girl’s got balls.

As songs end, Tonra switches back to display her polar-opposite cheerful self. A silent crowd watches noiselessly trying to adjust between these personality extremes while the band (Tonra, Haefeli and drummer Remi Aguilella) tunes between songs. At one point Haefeli remarks smartly, “This is the quietest show we’ve had in a while. Thanks for making us feel nervous.” One fan responded summarizing the sentiment of the entire room: “It’s because we’re overwhelmed!”

Between songs, Tonra easily converses with the crowd, buying time as she tells the horror story of their last trip in Chicago–their car accident on the way to the show, running to the venue in the rain, arriving drenched and late, having to do their soundcheck in front of a full audience and ending with Haefeli breaking the neck of his guitar. “So,” she finishes, “it’s good to be back with you with all of our limbs intact.” “Although, we did bring the weather. Sorry about that,” Haefeli added, referring to the surprising English-like cold and rainy weather after the previous day’s warmth and sunshine. Later, Tonra almost knocks over her acoustic guitar and catches the neck just in time. Shortly after, her pick breaks mid-song and she manages to finish with the fragile pieces. “As I hold on to the remnants of my pick,” showing the crowd. To which Igor adds a comedic, “It’s happening again!”

Post set, Daughter return to the stage for an encore cover of their own creation using Bon Iver’s “Perth” and Hot Chip’s “Ready For The Floor.” Fans cheer and then wait several minutes as the band sorts themselves. Smiling slightly, Tunra breaks the silence with a jovial “Anticliiiiiiiiiiiimax,” before returning to tune the guitar.

Tonra’s performance and personality seem a contradiction in terms, and yet that’s exactly the depth needed to add potency to Daughter’s music. The band’s magic lies in this dichotomy. Tonra is a cheerful and quirky girl while Haefeli shows dry humor (though Aguilella remains silent), and they are all hugely relatable. You want to hang out with them. And yet, they share all of the depressing and secret thoughts we’ve all had.

The show had the most peculiar take-away. I left reflecting pensively and yet smiling as I remembered the entertaining moments. I never thought I’d define a show as overwhelming, depressing and…. cute. Weird but true.

Daughter finishes up their first North American stop over next week, visiting Seattle, Portland, Vancouver, San Francisco and LA before going back across the pond. Don’t worry, though. They’ll be back in the US in August.

*Review and Photos By Jessica Greene

Tour Dates:

16 May Seattle, Neumo’s
17 May Vancouver, Commodore
18 May Portland, Doug Fir Lounge
20 May San Francisco, Amoeba Music (in-store performance)
21 May LA, Troubadour
22 May Hollywood, Amoeba Music (in-store performance)

***More info on Daughter’s tour dates here.

Daughter (Facebook) (Label)
Wilsen newyork (Facebook)

wilsenchicago

reviewed by
05-16-13

Listening Party: Daft Punk – Random Access Memories @ the Bootleg Gallery in L.A. this Tuesday 5/21/13

daftpunk

This coming Tuesday night, the Bootleg Gallery in Los Angeles is celebrating the release of Daft Punk’s eagerly awaited, and fourth studio album, Random Access Memories. On this night of album’s release, the club will be hosting a special listening party for electronic music fans and disco revivalists alike. So come get your dance on and get lucky at one of the best clubs in the city as you jam to your favorite album of the summer. We’ll see you there… with a drink in hand! The event is free, begins at 11:00 PM and is 21+.

DAFT PUNK – RANDOM ACCESS MEMORIES TRACKLIST
1. “Give Life Back to Music” (featuring Nile Rodgers)
2. “The Game of Love”
3. “Giorgio by Moroder” (featuring Giorgio Moroder)
4. “Within” (featuring Chilly Gonzales)
5. “Instant Crush” (featuring Julian Casablancas)
6. “Lose Yourself to Dance” (featuring Pharrell Williams and Nile Rodgers)
7. “Touch” (featuring Paul Williams)
8. “Get Lucky” (featuring Pharrell Williams and Nile Rodgers)
9. “Beyond”
10. “Motherboard”
11. “Fragments of Time” (featuring Todd Edwards)
12. “Doin’ It Right” (featuring Panda Bear)
13. “Contact” (featuring DJ Falcon)

The Bootleg (Party Info) (Purchase Random Access Memories)

reviewed by
05-16-13

B3SCI Presents: Rainbow Jackson w/ LEVELS, Burning Jet Black, Act As If + DJ sets by Immigre! THIS TUESDAY 5/14/13

B3SCI Presents Rainbow Jackson

Join us in Santa Monica this Tuesday night as B3SCI Presents team up with the Central S.A.P.C. for a great night of local music with this month’s artist in residence, L.A. based rock band Rainbow Jackson. And just like the band’s single “Flamingo Starr” suggests, their live show is gonna ‘take you over for a supernova.’ Trust us! Rainbow Jackson will joined that night by a stellar bill of buzzing talent that includes LEVELS, Burning Jet Black, Act As If and DJ sets by Immigre. Entry for the residency night is FREE (21+) and you can get additional details on the show here. We’ll see y’all there!

The Central S.A.P.C. california (Gig Info)
Rainbow Jackson (Facebook)

reviewed by
05-10-13

Review: Tom Odell @ The Troubadour in Los Angeles, CA 5/7/2013

Tom Odell Troubadour LA

Suffice to say Tom Odell’s recent trip to the States has been nothing short of successful. For a bit of a recap, there was Tom’s US television debut on David Letterman last week (so good Letterman basically mentioned he’d manage him), there was the filming of a new music video, and a stint of sold out shows including this one at the world famous Troubadour in West Hollywood. The young Odell is definitely doing all of the things to make it right on this side of the pond. Along with his three-piece band, Tom Odell took to the Troubadour’s stage on Tuesday night with a little more strut than his debut in LA at Bardot earlier this year in January.

After a crowd warming stage intro from KCRW’s Jason Kramer, and getting a cover of Randy Newman’s “I Love LA” off his chest, Odell and his band ripped into “Hold Me” (from his Songs From Another Love EP) with an almost unexpected tenacity, a dynamic that would carry on as the theme for the evening. We were at a rock show and Tom Odell was like some sort of musical Jedi, wielding ‘the force’ as he pleased. More present in his performance were the roots and blues influence that have inspired British rock and roll since the days of Stones vs Beatles. Less present were any preconceived inclinations towards the likes of, most notably, Chris Martin. Don’t get us wrong, the influence is there, but imagine if Chris Martin had put together an entirely different band and went down a completely different path after Parachutes. Throughout the set, the classic blues and soul emphasis continued, so much so that Odell even performed a stunning cover of “Oh! Darling” from The Beatles’ later ‘return to their roots’ years.

Performing new songs from his anticipated debut LP, Long way Down (expected this summer), and even with a guitar at times, Tom Odell ran through new tracks like “Sirens” and “Grow Old with Me.” There is a distinct quality and limit to Odell’s vocal tone and range, and like every great vocalist he is comfortable enough with these boundaries to deliver any challenging line with instinct, natural diction and power. In good spirits that night, Odell made light of a small equipment snafu and shared commentary before rolling into songs. “Another Love” closed the set with an interesting approach to the bridge. Jedi captain Tom Odell was in control, perched in attack at his piano and preparing the world for the storm of Long Way Down about to land on June 23rd.

Tom Odell england (Facebook)

Tom Odell at the Troubadour LA

reviewed by
05-10-13