Blitzen Trapper: Wild Mountain Nation

Note: He’s too modest to say it, so please welcome Casey to the fold. Casey is a long-time podcaster, first-time blogger. He’s a co-worker, but I met Casey at a Shins concert, so I knew I could coax him into this tangled mp3 Web. His tastes are matched by his quality writing. So I’m hoping this is just the first of many posts from him.

Wild Mountain Nation by Blitzen Trapper

As venues go, the northeast corner of Stinkweeds poses certain challenges to the modern indie rock band. For starters, the amplification is iffy. The audience, while vaguely appreciative, will spend a significant portion of your set browsing used CDs. And then there’s the space issue: Any band bigger than the White Stripes will find itself spilling into the aisles, competing for attention with displays for new albums by Bright Eyes and Spoon.

Fortunately, Portland sextet Blitzen Trapper made the most of things this weekend during an in-store performance at Stinkweeds. With 25 or so skinny white dudes looking on, the band dived into a series of crowd pleasers off their new record, Wild Mountain Nation. Frontman Eric Earley warmed the crowd up with a VH1 Storytellers take on JJ Cale’s “Cocaine,” after which the band began distributing a handful of maracas into the crowd. (Web 2.0 meets the rhythm section!) I would have grabbed one but found myself too far back in the crowd, so I settled for stomping my foot.

It’s worth mentioning what a weird record this Wild Mountain Nation is – the erratic, rambunctious opener, “Devil’s A Go-Go,” transitions into the polished country-rock of the title track, and then into the Shins-like indie pop of “Futures and Folly.” This continues throughout the record: Lengthy, raucous bursts of noise give way to sparkling AM country radio ballads. It’s easy to name-check the band’s influences – Neil Young, Johnny Cash, Sonic Youth, Pavement – but harder to describe the way those disparate forces come together on Wild Mountain Nation. The record manages to feel familiar and disorienting all at once.

But back to Stinkweeds. The six Blitzen Trappers are refreshingly uncool in person, looking uniformly like extras on some great lost season of That 70s Show. They apologized that they would only be able to play a handful of songs, on account of being down a keyboard or two, and that they wouldn’t be as loud as they were a few weeks back opening for the Hold Steady at the Brickhouse. But by the time Earley launched into the gorgeous Americana of “Country Caravan,” no one much seemed to mind.

Eventually, word came down that the evening’s headliner, David Vandervelde, had broken down in the desert and would not be appearing. This was fantastic news, I thought: Blitzen Trapper could play some more songs! The band looked actually looked a bit worried upon learning of the Vandervelde breakdown – minus those extra keyboards, they said, their repertoire was rather limited. So I politely suggested “Futures and Folly,” and the band quickly agreed and began playing it. It was great.

After 45 minutes or so, the band played its last song. I wondered about the economics of sending six guys from Portland to Phoenix to play nine or 10 songs for 25 people who had paid $5 apiece. But Blitzen Trapper seemed to be enjoying themselves – Pitchfork had just anointed Wild Mountain Nation with its Best New Music crown, and last week Sub Pop announced they had just signed the band.

Look for them soon at a tiny record store near you. (Tour dates from Pitchfork.)

07-19 Hattiesburg, MS – Thirsty Hippo $
07-20 Atlanta, GA – Drunken Unicorn $
07-21 Wilmington, NC – Bella Festa $
07-22 Washington, DC – Rock and Roll Hotel $
07-23 Philadelphia, PA – Johnny Brenda’s $
07-24 Allston, MA – Great Scott $
07-25 New York, NY – Mercury Lounge $
07-26 Buffalo, NY – The Icon $
07-27 Ann Arbor, MI – Blind Pig $
07-28 Chicago, IL – Empty Bottle
07-29 Minneapolis, MN – Triple Rock
07-30 Omaha, NE – The Slowdown !
07-31 Denver, CO – Hi-Dive %
08-01 Salt Lake City, UT – Kilby Court
08-03 Seattle, WA – Crocodile Cafe ^

$ with David Vandervelde
! with Coyote Bones
% with Smoosh, Aqueduct
^ with Jennifer Gentle

Aesop Rock coming to Tempe

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Mark your calendars: October 13, Aesop Rock is hitting the Clubhouse in Tempe, the same spot fellow Definitive Jux labelmate El-P just played in May.

Aesop’s forthcoming LP, None Shall Pass, drops Aug. 28. A guest spot from John Darnielle of the Mountain Goats should be worth the price of admission alone, but you know Aesop is coming with so much more. I’ve only seen him at last year’s Pitchfork Festival, and I was about two football fields away, so this is rising on my list of concert priorities. October. Damn, that’s like still three months away.

Get a taste of the first single, None Shall Pass, if you haven’t already. Instrumental also because, well, I love you.

  • Aesop Rock | None Shall Pass
  • Aesop Rock | None Shall Pass (instrumental)

Weekend wrap-up: City of Angels

Just got back from a weekend in Los Angeles. Two things are certain if I ever moved there: 1. My blood pressure would rise tremendously from traffic (seriously, traffic jam at 11:30 pm, WTF?); 2. I’d go broke buying vinyl at Amoeba.

Luckily, we made it in time to the Echo on Saturday night to check out the Aquarium Drunkard-sponsored Howlin’ Rain show. Not only did I get to catch up with the Drunkard, but I also finally met in person Jeff Weiss, he of the Passion of the Weiss. Both great guys, but you wouldn’t expect anything less.

To top it off, friggin’ Rick Rubin was at the show. We’re talking about the man responsible for producing some of the finest hip-hop records in my collection: Run-DMC’s Raising Hell and Tougher Than Leather and LL Cool J’s Radio. He was rockin’ out in the back, beard all bushy and what not. If I had a set, I’d have gone up and shook his hand and thanked him for Tougher Than Leather, one my favorite hip-hop albums of all-time.

Needless to say, world-famous record producers do not show up all that often at shows in Phoenix. So I was a little star-struck. Major kudos to Aquarium Drunkard. This one is to, well, Rick Rubin.

  • Spank Rock | Rick Rubin

As for that (somewhat rushed) trip to Amoeba, here was my haul:

Run-DMC, Tougher Than Leather on vinyl (sigh, awesome. $11.99).

… Trail of Dead, Source Tags and Codes on vinyl ($4.99).

The Roots, Game Theory on vinyl ($5.99).

Panther, Yourself on vinyl ($2.99).

Rage Against the Machine, No Shelter 7-inch (red vinyl, $2.99).

Wilco, What Light 7-inch (b/w unreleased Let’s Not Get Carried Away, $4.99).

Samples: Turtles/D-Nice

Many eons ago – OK, like a year-and-a-half ago – I started what I wanted to turn into a regular feature, posting a hip-hop song with its original sample source. Well, for whatever reason, I lost steam, maybe because the boys at Palms Out Sounds have done a great job with the same idea.

But I recently got to thinking about 1960s band the Turtles for a couple reasons: 1. Because I’m cataloging my 45 collection (it’s taking forever, pretty much) and three Turtles records are in there; 2. This kid. (Come on, everybody, “I like tuuuh-tles”.)

Turtles, the band, are responsible for the track that is the main hook in one of my all-time favorite hip-hop joints: D-Nice’s Call Me D-Nice. The original track is Buzzsaw, a fuzzed-out organ orgy that sounds like it moves slooooowly underwater after you hear the way D-Nice kicked up the tempo.

It’s hard to top D-Nice’s combination of that sped-up organ and the rumbling bass line underneath. “Takin’ out you suckas and you don’t know how I did it.”

(via d-nice.com)

King Krash: Coke & Wet (remix)

It’s pretty inevitable that if my man Royce and I have been out tipping back a few drinks and we end up cranking some tunes, one of two albums – if not both – will undoubtedly be played: Clipse’s Hell Hath No Fury or Spank Rock’s YoYoYoYoYo (not to be confused with Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga).

Why, just last week we were driving home (designated driver at the wheel, mind you) and Spank Rock’s Coke & Wet magically came on. Seriously, such a great song.

Anyway, I was pretty happy to find a remix by King Krash, who , besides having a MySpace URL (myspace.com/kingshit) that makes me laugh like Beavis and Butt-head, has done remix work for Plastic Little (read up). (EDIT: New MySpace is myspace.com/kingkrash.)

Both versions of Coke & Wet are great. Krash gives the remix a more daunting presence – think the beats/bass of West Coast G-funk – while keeping Spank Rock’s charming delivery at the forefront: “Look, Britney Spears, oops! / nutted on your dimple” … pure poetry, my friends.

  • Spank Rock | Coke & Wet (King Krash remix)

(Fair warning: low bit rate … so sue me.)

Edan: Sagittarius Rapp

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Whenever I’m feeling like I’m lacking some quality stuff to post, it seems Stones Throw is there to save me. It was just a few weeks ago I posted about the Guilty Simpson track Man’s World.

Now, from the Stones Throw podcast, we’ve got Edan’s Sagittarius Rapp, off Now-Again Re:Sounds Vol. 1, which is due out July 17. The compilation features remixes of songs from the Now-Again catalog, an affiliate funk label under Stones Throw.

I’m sorta drooling over this box set release of the compilation, which includes seven 7-inch singles along with the CD. That’s at least a week’s worth of posts at Circa 45.

Sagittarius Rapp is a remix of Timothy McNealy’s Sagittarius Black from the album Texas Funk: 1968-1975. It’s quite possible Edan sets some sort of record here for how many times he can say “sex” in one song. (He likes it and does it a lot.)

I’ve become familiar with Edan only in the past year or so by picking up his great Beauty and the Beat, on which Sagittarius Rapp, with its loose rhymes and trippy production, wouldn’t sound out of place.

  • Edan | Sagittarius Rapp

Queens of the Stone Age cover White Wedding

Thanks to my man Dusty, who posted this Queens of the Stone Age cover of Billy Idol’s White Wedding that apparently comes on the Best Buy version of Era Vulgaris.

This falls in the I-like-the-cover-better-than-the-original category. Although, it could be because of my immense man-crush on Josh Homme. If you read this story on Homme and aren’t convinced of his coolness, then I don’t know what to say.

Some samples:

With a little prodding, Homme (rhymes with “mommy”) will admit he is still on probation after pleading no contest to two counts of battery against Blag Dahlia, the lead singer of a punk outfit called the Dwarves. It happened at the Dragonfly club in Hollywood three years ago; an incident Homme regrets not one iota. “I went there to attack and humiliate him,” he said. “That’s what I did.”

But what Homme, 34, who has the imposing physique of a longshoreman, standing nearly 6 feet 7 inches in his motorcycle boots, really wants to talk about is his new hobby. “Sewing is the best thing!” he exclaimed. “I can feel my heart rate going down when I do it. I forget everything else. It’s great when you’re on the tour bus.”

About his confrontation with Dahlia: “Everyone in this world deserves to be slapped – not too hard – and I hope they are, because it’s a great teaching tool.”

  • Queens of the Stone Age | White Wedding

New Q-Tip: Work It Out

My early- to mid-90s self is ecstatic: Q-Tip resurfaces and offers a free download on his MySpace page. My 2007 self is wary of letting nostalgia cloud judgment.

I’ll say this: Q-Tip has done better. Much, much better. However, this track, from a forthcoming album apparently – and appropriately – called The Renaissance, isn’t terrible. According to the Billboard story, the album features a live band, which sounds fairly tight on this track. I just pray this doesn’t turn into another Amplified, reducing Q-Tip to just a dance-floor novelty to a new generation. The kids deserve to know his proper place in hip-hop history.

  • Q-Tip | Work It Out