Category Archives: arizona

Stream new Miniature Tigers demo

Phoenix’s Miniature Tigers, who played our Oct. 13 show with Birdmonster, are streaming a new demo on MySpace called Japanese Woman Living in My Closet.

The song, even in its infant stages, sounds like a logical extension of the group’s catchy-as-hell 2008 album Tell it to the Volcano. Highly recommended.

[STREAM]: Miniature Tigers | Japanese Woman Living in My Closet

If you missed it the first time, here’s the video for the group’s lead single Cannibal Queen:

Jimmy Eat World: Clarity x 10 tour

In an odd stroke of coincidence, Jimmy Eat World has announced a 10-date tour to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Clarity, an album to which I was just listening last week and discussing with Eric.

The band will play the album in its entirety – can you imagine going out on the 16-minute Goodbye Sky Harbor? – and the tour appropriately ends in JEW’s (and my) home state, Arizona, on March 7.

Can it get better? … Yes. A reunited No Knife (more coincidence?) will support March 5-7. Arizona’s own Reubens Accomplice is the support from Feb. 23-March 4.

Tickets ($25) for the March 7 show at Marquee Theatre go on sale Saturday, Nov. 15.

All dates:
Feb 23 Terminal 5 New York NY
Feb 24 930 Club Washington DC
Feb 25 Trocadero Theater Philadelphia PA
Feb 26 House of Blues Boston MA
Feb 28 Metro Chicago IL
Mar 2 Ogden Theatre Denver CO
Mar 4 The Fillmore San Francisco CA
Mar 5 Club Nokia Los Angeles CA
Mar 6 House of Blues San Diego CA
Mar 7 Marquee Theatre Tempe AZ

Clarity got the reissue treatment last year, perhaps Capitol’s sad attempt at making money on the album years after ignoring it in the first place.

Personally, Clarity is my favorite of JEW’s albums, if only because I clung to it during one of those odd transitional stages – end of college, leaving home, etc. I also had the fortune of seeing the band at small-ish venues in the Valley (Nita’s Hideaway and the Green Room, in particular).

So of the success of Bleed American overshadowed the group’s early catalog, it’s nice to see the appreciation for Clarity grow with time. Maybe it’s time someone writes a book about it.

Elsewhere: August Brown has some interesting insight about Clarity and its staying power via the L.A. Times’ Pop & Hiss blog.

(From Sweetness CD single.)

Changes in store for The Via Maris

One of my favorite local bands, The Via Maris, is playing its final show Friday night in its current/original incarnation. (If you’re interested in going, the free show is at Livinghead Audio Recording on 2746 W. Thomas Road.)

In a MySpace/Facebook blast, singer Chad Sundin — the founder of The Via Maris — had this to say:

“The Via Maris is not dead, just so you know, merely the current manifestation of it. In fact I’m currently working on a whole set of demos to be recorded with Ryan Breen (Back Ted N-Ted) in the near future. So keep an ear out.”

That should make for a unique pairing. Excited to hear the results.

Related:
The Via Maris: Song for Will (Love)
New Times review: Zachary James Dodds

Calexico on LiveDaily Sessions

If there’s one album I haven’t given the full attention it most likely deserves, it has to be Calexico’s Carried to Dust. I’ve really only listened in parts or used it as companion music while I work.

Mostly, I’ve been waiting to get it on vinyl (Stinkweeds was sold out when I went for it, which is great news for the band).

The band – well, frontman Joey Burns, anyway – stopped in for a session at LiveDaily and played three songs off the new album, including Writer’s Minor Holiday, which has stood out as an early favorite.

Subscribe to the LiveDaily podcast at iTunes.

Miniature Tigers: Cannibal Queen (video)

If you haven’t seen that flyer over there on the right, I’m really happy to have added Miniature Tigers to the Oct. 13 Birdmonster and Kinch show at Yucca Tap Room.

The group (from Phoenix!) is getting some airtime on Sirius’ Left of Center, and the band just released a new video for the single Cannibal Queen, directed by JD Ryznar, one of the co-creators of the Yacht Rock series.

Check out the video and then come out Monday. No cover!

Guest post: Catfish Vegas on Howe Gelb/Giant Sand

Howe Gelb’s Giant Sand plays Friday night at Modified in Phoenix. Given Gelb’s roots in Tucson, I asked Catfish Vegas (also based in the Old Pueblo) for his thoughts on the show and Gelb’s new album, proVISIONS – a sort of primer, if you will. He responded with a wonderfully written piece that I’m almost sure I could never return in kind.

Howe Gelb is undeniably a creature of the desert. A fantastic mix of things thorny, creepy and strange exist together under this great expanse of sky and rugged, towering mountains. Everything is baked by the heat and the weather is either dry or a deluge, seldom anything in the middle. It’s one of the few places in the world where “close enough” counts as sane. Howe may be a transplant, but he fits here.

There’s a reason Howe’s own term for his music is “erosion rock.” You can imagine nature working away at the songs, shaping them with wind and rain, just as centuries of blowing dust wears grooves in boulders.

Howe has a revolving set of projects, each uniquely named to tell one from another. But Howe is probably the only person on Earth who knows exactly why one record is Giant Sand while another is a Howe Gelb solo. He calls Giant Sand “a mood,” but pretty much leaves it at that.

Most of his songs fall into one of three rough categories – shuffling acoustic tunes that drag along his trademark dusty drawl; full-on noise rockers that explode and roll over you like a thunderstorm; and the ghostly, spooky incantations that sound like Tom Waits traded in the Tropicana for a century-old adobe, drawing inspiration not from the Skid Row neon, but the geographical and mental “out here.”

That’s these days at least – dig back into the Giant Sand records of the 1980s and you’ll a punk-rock carnival, psychedelic wall-of-noise tunes, some tight drums-and-guitar garage-blues rock and occasionally what sounds like a more direct Neil Young influence.

Howe’s latest Giant Sand album, proVISIONS, is a natural extension of the last Giant Sand album, 2004’s Is All Over the Map. It combines road music with late night music, pairs the off-kilter with the straight-ahead, and like most of Howe Gelb’s music, turns on a dime from being vaguely unsettling to feeling like you’ve just settled into an easy chair. It sets tunes up like bottles on a rickety wooden fence, and shoots ’em down. I think Howe sees songs as playthings as much as creations, and never fails to find a way to shove a square peg through a round hole.

Howe doesn’t make bad records, but it must be said from the outset that proVISIONS is easily among his best. The songs only meander when they ought to, the guitars float in on the wind, the piano trickles along, the percussion is a tight and watchful presence and throughout, Howe’s vocals sound like the cryptic musings of some mountain-top sage.

The songs fit together as a whole package remarkably well – and on a number of levels. First off, if you’ve never heard Giant Sand, this latest record is a tremendous introduction to his whole unique style, that arid and mad sound that he’s developed over nearly 30 years. Next, it’s a record of marvelous consistency, a shimmering and excellently produced work that leaves enough open space for all the varied instrumentation to really breathe. And as we run down the end of this crazy 2008, it’s a welcome and necessary step back from the Too Much society.

Howe is a songwriter who likes using words like “retrograde” and “molecule” and “out here” and “chromosome” in his lyrics, twisting rhymes out of the air and soldering them together until what otherwise might’ve been nonsense starts taking the shape of something else all together.

Now playing primarily with a tight band of Danish imports, Howe also brings in plenty of guests for this one. Neko Case adds her own layer of atmospheric mystery to “Without A Word.” M. Ward shows up on “Can Do,” a sort of aimlessly-cruising-in-an-open-convertible song.

“Increment of Love” rides along with a spooky and twisting lead guitar, while “Desperate Kingdom of Love” (PJ Harvey cover) is Howe’s own version of a late-period Tom Waits-style ballad. “Saturated Beyond Repair” arrived with an extra jaunt, a sort of caffeinated boost, courtesy of a new drum tempo and some saucy horns.

Feedback washes all over “World’s End State Park,” which sounds like the cinematic accompaniment to a journey gone wrong as amateur sleuths find themselves in over their heads in the sharp late-afternoon sunlight of a deserted amusement park. The album closes with “Well Enough Alone,” this set’s closest song to the sort of mid-tempo country-rocker that Howe could’ve built ridden to a much more lucrative career. It’s the sort of tune you can catch a good hold of and just ride for a while.

While listening to this record, I checked out Howe’s website and found a sort of tour diary that’s revelatory at times. On a recent meeting with his friend Robert Plant, Howe has this to write: “When you get to be my age, the planet gets a whole lot darker and colder from the grand lack of elders that have left this existence for the next.”

A large share of that sentiment is rooted in what’s obviously the still-difficult death almost 11 years ago of his best friend and longtime bandmate Rainer Ptacek.

But from the outside looking in, it’s certainly worth telling Howe that he’s undoubtably one of those elders himself, making this world lighter and warmer, with a beat-up guitar at the center of a musical eccentricity that grows more captivating with each successive record.

The Via Maris: Song for Will (Love)

Chad Sundin, singer/writer for one of my favorite local bands, The Via Maris, is kindly offering up a free download of a song off the band’s excellent 2008 album The Bicentennial at MySpace. (UPDATE: Get the download below, at least until this new MySpace Music works itself out.)

Sundin explains in a blog post:

“In celebration of my son Willem’s first birthday this past Sunday, September 21, I put up the song I wrote just after he was born. It was written to convey the quiet joy of new life in our lives. Find a peaceful place and listen, if you like.”

It’s a gorgeous, selfless song – one that is deeply personal yet capable of touching anybody, I’m sure, parents or not.

If you’re in the Valley, you can check out the Via Maris at a bunch of upcoming shows, including Wednesday night at the Last Exit in Tempe.

New Birdmonster video: The Iditarod

Well, how’s that for timing? Right on the heels of an announcement of Birdmonster’s Oct. 13 show at Yucca Tap Room in Tempe comes a new video from the group. Check it out below. Keep Dramamine close at hand.

Also, about that Yucca show. I’m excited to say that local support will come from Kinch (on tour now) and two of my very favorite musicians from Phoenix – one happens to be my brother – performing an acoustic-type set together: Chad Sundin of the Via Maris and Brendan Murphy of Source Victoria. I’m told Brendan and Chad will perform each other’s songs and a couple covers. (Related: Source Victoria won the best rock category for the Phoenix New Times’ Summer of Sound series.)

And, now, on with the Birdmonster:

Incoming: Reubens Accomplice, Sept. 13

Well, “incoming” is a misnomer, considering Reubens Accomplice is from here (all except drummer John O’Reilly, that is).

However, Reubens has been holed up for quite some time now, recording the follow-up to the great 2004 album The Bull, the Balloon, and the Family. From what I hear, finishing touches are being applied. So my guess is, this Sept. 13 show at Modified is going to feature plenty of a new material.

Nothing new, really, on the MySpace page save for an outtake and an unreleased track. Not sure if either will show up on the new record. On an outdated Live Journal post, Reubens said in 2005 that the record would be called Mammal Music.

Until then, a taste of The Bull.