Category Archives: general

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.)

Thursday: Frightened Rabbit in Phoenix

If you missed Frightened Rabbit the last time, then I fully expect you to get out to the Rhythm Room on Thursday night for the band’s return to Phoenix with Spinto Band and Phoenix’s own Miniature Tigers.

As an added bonus, Frightened Rabbit is playing an in-store session at Stinkweeds at 5:30 p.m.

And, surely, you’ve picked up the live, acoustic album, Liver! Lung! FR! at eMusic.

Tonight: Magnetic Morning at Rhythm Room

I haven’t heard much about Magnetic Morning, which is surprising considering the group’s pedigree. It’s principal members are Sam Fogarino (drummer for Interpol) and Adam Franklin (singer/guitarist of Swervedriver). Jimmy LaValle of the Album Leaf and Josh Stoddard of the Still Out round out the group (at least for recording purposes … not sure what the live show entails).

If the band is something of a secret, it’s doing a good job at keeping a low-ish profile. MM’s MySpace page doesn’t even list tonight’s show at Rhythm Room. (Get tickets.)

The band’s full-length debut, A.M., was released digitally on Oct. 21 and is due for a physical release on Jan. 27 via Friend or Faux Recordings. I’ve only been able to give it one spin so far, but if I were to say something poetic about it, I’d tell you about the album’s vast sonic landscapes. Its openness defies so much of the claustrophobia that strangles indie rock.

For more, check out an interview with Franklin at Wired’s Listening Post.

Obama: “Change has come to America”

Via Crumbler

For Christmas/Hanukkah (I’m a half-Jew, after all) in 2005, my parents gave me Barack Obama’s memoir, Dreams from My Father. In it, my mom (she’s the Jewish one), who was born and raised in Chicago, wrote on the title page with clear prescience:

Dear Kevin … Hope you enjoy this. He might be the next US president from Illinois.

And so it is. I don’t really know what to say. We spent most of the evening at my brother’s, surrounded by friends and family. I’ve never felt so invested in politics, and there I was, pretending not to cry (thanks to my brother for turning down the lights). My mom said she’d never felt so hopeful for a candidate since John F. Kennedy. It was a transcendent moment that needed no explanation. Everyone was cheering without shame; like when people clap at the end of a movie, only this time you felt like joining them. This was a time to be proud and grateful. Did you see Jesse Jackson cry? Did that not move you? Have you a soul?

Credit to John McCain, whose concession speech was classy as they come – the best speech he’s given on this campaign (prepared well in advance, I presume). But Obama … there is a confidence not just in what he says but how he says it. His diction is graceful, delivery flawless. He exudes strength. I could watch his speech on mute and feel the power. What an amazing speech, full of hope, promise and humility.

(My favorite part of the day, actually, is that Obama played some pickup ball earlier in the day … f*cked around and got a triple-double!)

I was really a part of something historic. Something to remember. I got to watch my 5-year-old niece, Quinn, stay up with us (she didn’t go to bed until 10 p.m.!). This won’t make sense to her now, but it will soon, and I hope she can remember staying up so late to watch this.

Then, my wife – so reserved and soft spoken – sent me an e-mail in the aftermath; I was still out while she responsibly called it a night. For as much as Obama’s speech inspired and moved me – moved all of us – Annie uncharacteristically spilled her heart on paper. As I fight to express how I feel, no words could have touched me more than hers:

“I always cry. Anyone that knows me knows that I cry. I mean anything from cotton commercials to watching ‘Intervention,’ I cry all the time lately. Maybe it’s stress, maybe it’s the diet, maybe it’s ‘that time of the month,’ but truly, I cry all the time. Tonight I think it was valid. I started the day like anyone else, excited to vote. I got up at 5:15 this morning so I could get to polls early and still make it to work on time. I got to the polls right around 6 am and waited, like all other good citizens, for about a little over an hour. It was well worth it.

“Being a female minority from Arizona, I’m used to being a little different. Not a huge difference exists, I admit. I’ve never had any problems where I grew up or how I grew up. But you can never forget where you’re from, but that’s another topic. My point is, I work and live around some outstanding people in Phoenix, AZ. Many of my best friends are conservative. But I have always felt differently. But never until tonight have I felt so strong and courageous about my future and the future of my family. So many conservatives are speaking negatively, and I feel like it’s all coming from a place of fear. They are so afraid of a new beginning, a possibility of a clean slate.

“The best part about tonight was looking at my 5-year-old niece and thinking, this is all for you, Quinn. You will remember all of this and it will be the one of the most memorable parts of the rest of your life. And then I thought about how my first presidential election that I was ready to vote in when I was 18; I voted for Bill Clinton. I was ecstatic. I think I even registered at an R.E.M. concert on their “Monster” tour. I wanted that experience for Quinn, to remember this moment in history when democracy was what it was meant to be, powered by people like us.

“So I cried. Not sobbed, mind you. But I shed a tear because I’m an adult now and I made a choice that is going to drive the future of my nieces and nephew and possibly my own future children. A tear fell because the speech that my future president made was full of modesty and humility, things that I try to model myself to. I shed a tear mostly because I am excited for what the future holds. I am not scared or hiding in a place of fear, but I am hopeful and ready for where the next day takes me.”

Stream Travis’ Ode to J. Smith

Travis’ new album, Ode to J. Smith, has been out since late September in the United Kingdom, but it gets a U.S. release on Tuesday – which will be a pretty big day, if you ask me.

As a little incentive, the band is offering a full stream of the album at its MySpace page. It’s possible you’ve heard a small chunk of the album, thanks to the three videos the band already has released for Song to Self, Something Anything and J. Smith. And let’s not forget singer Fran Healy’s coming to my aid in a spot of copyright entanglement.

Lastly, the band is playing one U.S. date for the rest of 2008 – Nov. 11 at the Troubadour in Los Angeles. Get tickets (really wish I could go).

Stream Ode to J. Smith here.

The Whigs: Like a Vibration (video)

I never properly recapped last month’s San Diego Street Scene, though it would be easy to sum up briefly the highlights (the National, Del, Vampire Weekend), disappointments (GZA … half-hour late) and WTFs (DEVO … really?).

One of the great surprises had to be the Whigs, who had the misfortune of playing at 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, the opening time slot. No matter. We took advantage of the late-arriving crowd and got close for their set – a move that made me think, hey, earplugs might just be a good idea the next time I decide to do this.

Yes, the Whigs are loud. Not overbearing loud. But powerful loud. You-can-feel-your-stomach-shaking-afterward loud. (Also, it’s the kind of loud that blasts to hell your digital camera playback sound if you tried to take a little video of the show … but nevermind that.) It’s all the more impressive that it comes from a trio, without the added benefit of a second guitar.

Check out the video for Like a Vibration, the leadoff track on the well-received Mission Control. (Still, this remains my favorite Mission Control.)

azcentral.com preview: Born Ruffians

Born Ruffians return to Phoenix for a show on Saturday at Modified. I interviewed singer/guitarist Luke LaLonde. Thus, the resulting story.

Plants and Animals and Nurses open the show. Buy tickets ($11).

If you’re already a Born Ruffians fan, you’ll wanna hit the show because the band will be selling the new Little Garcon EP, which is available in a variety of formats and includes remixes from Four Tet (I Need a Life) and White Williams (Red, Yellow and Blue).

REMINDER: Enter the Jaguar Love contest to see them on Oct. 21.