All posts by Kevin

5 O’Clock Shadowboxers: Weak Stomach (video)

shadowboxers

I’m embarrassed to admit it’s been almost two months since Weiss, an A&R man disguised as one of my favorite bloggers, sent out an e-mail to promote The Slow Twilight, the new release from 5 O’Clock Shadowboxers – a collaboration between Zilla Rocca and Fresh Cherries From Yakima’s Douglas Martin. (You may remember Zilla and Douglas as past contributors to the I Used to Love H.E.R. series, both of them loyal Wu-Tang devotees.)

Why embarrassed? Because after one spin of The Slow Twilight – available as a free download at Zilla’s Clap Cowards – it’s evident I’ve slept on one of the more enticing hip-hop releases of the year (and here I’ve been complaining about what a slow year for hip-hop it’s been). As I let my thoughts fully form on the album, I point you in the direction of Zilla’s insights on the creation of The Slow Twilight, a creative and technological marvel birthed by two talented dudes who have never met. (I can tell you this: No Resolution is an absolute banger.)

Check the video for Weak Stomach below:

Frank Turner: The Road

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Credit: www.gregorynolan.com

Already a bit of a cult hero in his native England, Frank Turner has a chance to make inroads in the U.S. when he releases new album, Poetry of the Deed, on Sept. 8 on Epitaph. Hey, don’t blame me – I tried telling you before.

Turner, who will be opening for The Gaslight Anthem on a fall tour, is a folk-punk hellraiser, a dangerous man with an acoustic guitar. His candid and honest observations inspire spirited (sometimes drunken) singalongs: “I’m bored of this town, I’m bored of this scene, I’m bored of these fuckers, yeah” (This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the One of Me).

On The Road, the first single from Poetry of the Deed, Turner finds strange comfort in a life on the run – “Driven by the irony that only being shackled to the road could ever I be free.”

That said, Turner will be in Tempe at the Sets on Nov. 10 as part of the Revival Tour, featuring Chuck Ragan (Hot Water Music), Jim Ward (Sparta) and Joey Cape (Lagwagon). Tickets ($15) for the show – a Psyko Steve production – will be available at TicketWeb on Saturday.

Related:
Frank Turner: Reasons Not to Be an Idiot (video)
Frank Turner: Campfire Punkrock EP

Incoming: Sea Wolf, Oct. 30

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If I was smart, I would have kept the information about Sea Wolf coming to Modified on Oct. 30 from my wife, who has developed what you might call a little crush on Alex Brown Church. And I might hate the guy for it, if, well, I didn’t interview him last fall and find him to be quite pleasant – never mind his talents as a songwriter. Damn you, Alex Brown Church!

And though my wife’s obsession with his debut LP Leaves in the River has not waned, Church is releasing a new album, White Water, White Bloom, on Sept. 22 (Dangerbird Records). The record can be pre-ordered here, and while you’re there, you can listen to and download a bonus track, Stanislaus, for the small cost of your e-mail address.

Tickets ($10) for the Phoenix show can be had here. Port O’Brien and Sara Lov, who earlier this year covered Silversun PIckups, are the openers.

Incoming: Mayer Hawthorne and the County, Oct. 14

Stones Throw soul revivalist, Mayer Hawthorne, is coming to Chaser’s in Scottsdale on Oct. 14 – the second-to-last date on his first U.S. tour.

The tour will come on the heels of his debut release, A Strange Arrangement (due out Sept. 8). A limited-edition CD/LP package comes bundled with a 4-inch vinyl single containing two non-album tracks.

Elbow on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic

On Sunday, we returned from Los Angeles, where we saw Elbow perform at the Wiltern on Wednesday night in what I don’t hesitate to call the best show I’ve seen this year. (It’s just a shame we had to leave Phoenix to do it.)

Besides dodging an equipment nightmare – singer Guy Garvey informed the crowd that the band’s gear never made it from England, forcing the crew to scramble in L.A. – Elbow showed the poise and polish of a band willing to embrace the recognition it deserves, starting with last year’s Mercury Prize victory. There are fewer frontmen more endearing and genuine than Garvey, whose Storytellers-like chatter between songs engages fans, bringing a man of immense talent down to our size – he’s just a guy you want to have a drink with.

Though the set obviously leaned heavily on the Mercury-winning The Seldom Seen Kid – I have a newfound appreciation for Weather to Fly and The Loneliness of a Tower Crane Driver – the band plucked some choice gems from the back catalog: Newborn and Mexican Standoff among them (a setlist is posted here).

But as isolated moments go, I’m not ashamed to admit to a serious case of chills during the pre-encore finale of One Day Like This, a song whose overpowering positivity won even me over in 2008. Garvey outdid himself at the Wiltern, pulling two youngsters on stage to help him sing and conduct the feel-good singalong, draping his arms over their shoulders like they were old pals. Nobody would have complained if the song’s enduring chorus – Throw those curtains wide / one day like this a year would see me right – rode out for another hour.

Here’s some great video of the moment:

The next day, Elbow went on KCRW to perform a session for Morning Becomes Eclectic, repeating a few tracks from the Wiltern but adding some new ones (Fugitive Motel!).

KCRW set list: 1. Mirrorball; 2. Great Expectations; 3. Grounds for Divorce; 4. Fugitive Motel; 5. Scattered Black and Whites; 6. Puncture Repair; 7. One Day Like This.

Wednesday night: Starlight Mints + Source Victoria

It figures that the night Source Victoria unveils a new lineup – well, drummer Scott Hessel (Let Go, Gloritone) and bassist Justin Entsminger (Limbeck) are new – I’m going to be out of town. But I have a good excuse: We’re going to Los Angeles to see Elbow at the Wiltern. My brother can’t be too mad at me.

In any event, Source Victoria is one of two openers for Starlight Mints at Rhythm Room on Wednesday night. (JP Inc. is the other.) Tickets are $12 day of show and can be purchased right here.

Our pals at the Phoenix New Times blog Up on the Sun had some words about Source Victoria, too.

If you haven’t already, you can still cop SV’s The Fast Escape at no charge at www.sourcevictoria.net in one handy zip file. Starlight Mints are touring in support of their new release, Change Remains (Barsuk).

Beastie Boys feat. Nas: Too Many Rappers

(Note: I prepared this post on Sunday night. By Monday, I think most music fans heard the news that Adam Yauch (aka MCA) has been diagnosed with cancer of a salivary gland, forcing the Beasties to cancel tour dates and push back their album release. Yauch will need surgery, but the cancer apparently is treatable. So here’s hoping for a speedy and full recovery.)

Thanks to Spine Magazine for offering up what I still contend to be one of the more unlikely collaborations – and, yet, Beastie Boys and Nas pull this off rather splendidly.

Nobody will ever crown the Beasties the best lyricists around, but MCA, especially, sounds somewhat revitalized: “I ought to charge a tax for every weak rap.” (Hey, it’s good for the Beastie Boys.)

Too Many Rappers will be on the forthcoming Beastie Boys album Hot Sauce Committee Part 1, due out Sept. 15.

Yauch’s announcement about his cancer diagnosis:

Alvin Band: Temple Pressure (video, mp3)

Rick Shaier is the mustachioed, polyester shorts-wearing drummer of Phoenix band Miniature Tigers. He’s also the brains behind Alvin Band, a solo project he’s been working on for the past five years. On Sept. 22, his work will see a national release with the debut album Mantis Preying coming out on Intelligent Noise Records.

Part of the official press release reads thusly: “Rick holed up in a friend’s bathroom with a microphone and a Powerbook and went to town. The end result is the 9 song ‘vocal composition’ coined ‘Mantis Preying.’ … Bjork’s ‘Medulla’ served as the predominant inspiration behind Rick’s writing and layering vocals without the use of instruments.”

A more recent comparison for the work – at least from the small bits I’ve heard – would fall under the Animal Collective/Panda Bear school of vocal harmonizing. If you’ve seen Miniature Tigers in the past year or so, chances are you’ve heard an Alvin Band song. The last time I saw them they opened with Glowing Tree (stream it at MySpace).

The Mantis Preying release will include a six-song bonus EP called Lady Portrait, which Schaier had made available as a free download via MySpace a few months ago.