Pigeon John/Busdriver, Chaser’s, 10/8/06

It’s probably not a good sign when you pull up to a venue and the first thing you see is a drunken rowdy getting pepper-sprayed by a security guard outside the front door. Thankfully, the vibe was significantly more upbeat inside Chaser’s, a grungy little place in a south Scottsdale strip mall that used to host punk bands under its former name, the Atomic Cafe.

By the time I got out of work, we were able to catch a little less than half of Busdriver’s set (thank you, hip-hop shows, for always starting late). This is a man everyone should hear rap on record at least once. To see his fast-rapping dexterity live is pretty mind-boggling. Backed by a DJ who employs one of those trigger-pad devices, Busdriver cranked out rhymes at a dizzying pace. It makes you wonder how the hell he remembers all his own lyrics and never trips over his own tongue. At his speed, one verse of rhymes for him has to equal at least two for all the emcees in the slow lane.

And it’s not just that Busdriver spits out an abundance of words, but that he actually uses them well. Clearly this is a man who is more concerned about syntax than he is filling dead space with meaningless words. (Check the verses on Imaginary Places, off Temporary Forever.)

If the transition from Busdriver’s hyper-literate style to Pigeon John’s laid-back party vibe was a concern, PJ pretty much squashed that from the get-go. This guy was meant to entertain. Yeah, there was the laundry list of usual hip-hop show demands: throw ya hands up, say hoooo, say ho-ho, now screeeeam. It wouldn’t be a live show without ’em. But Pigeon John never threatened to reduce himself to a hip-hop cliche. After all, we’re talking about a man who takes the stage wearing pleated jeans.

Pigeon John’s honest, self-deprecating approach – which comes through on stage – makes him seem, you know, like a normal human being, unlike a lot of rappers who inevitably become caricatures of themselves. Honestly, he seems like a nerd, but he embraces it, which makes him more real than any rapper claiming to be real could ever be. When he asked the crowd to “gimme some skin” it felt like he was mocking some image or idea of what people expect a rapper to do.

On stage, PJ’s songs, backed by a DJ and a drummer, are vibrant. One of his new tracks, Freaks! Freaks! – with its catchy chorus – inspired all sorts of fist-pumping and awkward white-boy dancing. Emily showcases Pigeon’s storytelling style, even if its somewhat dark lyrics don’t quite fit the fun spirit of a live show. But fear not, PJ was all about levity, doing his “Pigeon Dance” and even breaking out a guitar on one track, for which he strummed all of one string. And let’s not forget the drunk guy who came on stage to rap out a chorus, which PJ encouraged by handing over the microphone as he danced laps around this total stranger.

I hate to get corny, but it’s shows like this that pretty much reaffirm why hip-hop is fun, or at least should be. Pigeon John plucking that one guitar string and singing “Be yourself” seemed so ludicrous, but it somehow transposed itself into a message from which we could all learn a little something.

Pigeon John | Money Back Guarantee
From Pigeon John … And the Summertime Pool Party (Quannum, 2006)
Available at eMusic.

Related:
I Used to Love H.E.R.: Pigeon John (De La Soul is Dead).
New Busdriver: Kill Your Employer.

Scissors for Lefty

Just spent some time catching up on the TiVo, which included this past week’s episode of CSI (we only watch the Vegas version in this household). In the episode, one of the deaths involved a left-hander using a chainsaw and actually killing himself from the kickback because the chainsaw was designed for right-handers. Gil Grissom, the Mr. Miyagi of the CSIs, tells visiting students to the crime lab that 2,500 left-handers die every year due to accidents related to mishandling of instruments made for right-handers.

Pretty scary statistic if you’re left-handed, which I happen to be. (Note to self: Don’t use chainsaw.) You righties just don’t get it. You don’t get pencil/pen smeared on your hand when you write. When I was young, I couldn’t use all the scissors the others kids used. No, I had “special” scissors. They had green rubbery material where you put your fingers; they said “lefty” on them. Branded for life. Those college desks attached to chairs? What side does the desk accommodate? Yeah, the right side. It’s a lonely existence. As this Wikipedia entry states: “Left-handed people are placed at a constant disadvantage by society.” (I bolded that for emphasis.)

Finally, a band comes along and empathizes. Names itself Scissors for Lefty. How can I not like them? They’re from San Francisco and have a four-song EP available in the U.S. and a full-length, Underhanded Romance, out in the U.K., which is sorta fitting because there’s a pretty heavy Brit-dance-pop feel going on here. They also just played a few dates with So Much Silence favorite Baby Dayliner, so you know it’s hot.

Scissors for Lefty | Ghetto Ways

Go Vote 2006: Jimmy Eat World/the Format

Whatever you think of Jimmy Eat World (dude, I know, Clarity was totally their best album), you have to appreciate the group’s generous track record of musical philanthropy.

In August, JEW played Scotti-Stock III, a benefit for a former owner of a popular Tempe club/venue who is in need of a liver transplant. This time on Oct. 19, our hometown boys are headlining Go Vote 2006 (via Stateside Presents), which is serving as a fund-raiser to support Harry Mitchell for U.S. Congress in District 5 of Arizona. Mitchell, a former Tempe mayor and councilman and member of the Arizona senate, is running against 12-year Republican incumbent (and former sportscaster … seriously) J.D. Hayworth, who, among other things, is caught up in the Jack Abramoff mess because he accepted more than $100,000 in gifts from Indian tribes once represented by Abramoff. (Hayworth sadly attempts to defend his own honor.)

District 5 includes Tempe so, naturally, the show will be held at the Clubhouse in Tempe. Also on the bill: the Format, Stiletto Formal and Monique Reagan. Just a wild guess: It will be freaking packed. Get your tickets.

Jimmy Eat World | You
(An “exclusive track” off a Grand Rapids, Mich., radio station compilation.)

Related: Jimmy Eat World plays Scotti-Stock III.

Mat Weddle covers OutKast’s “Hey Ya”

A story in Monday’s edition of The Arizona Republic featured local musician Mat Weddle (of local group Obadiah Parker; he’s on the left in the photo), who concocted an acoustic cover of OutKast’s Hey Ya. A performance of the song was videotaped at an open-mic night at a coffeehouse (*cringe*). It found its way to YouTube, and now it’s a smashing success, or so we’re told. Weddle told Spin.com, “It’s all been a big accident.”

This bothers me a little bit, though not as much as the Republic writer calling the original Hey Ya “little more than get-out-of-your-seat melodic fluff” (more on that in a sec). I don’t want to be too much of a naysayer here because Weddle’s version is pretty nice and the video – edited to mix the original video and Weddle’s performance – is clever and fun. (The original video apparently was slowed to 80 percent of normal speed to match Weddle’s tempo.) Hell, this is the first time I – and possibly a lot of other people – have heard of Obadiah Parker, which I’m guessing might be a small part of the motivation to do this cover. If we’ve learned anything from OK Go’s treadmill stunt, it’s that gimmicks bring publicity.

I’m mostly annoyed by the perpetuation of this trend of indie/folk rockers covering hip-hop songs, which, next to trucker hats, is just the pinnacle of irony. Off the top of my head, I can think of Ben Folds’ cover of Dr. Dre’s Bitches Ain’t Shit, Nina Gordon’s cover of N.W.A.’s Straight Outta Compton (mp3) and Dynamite Hack’s cover of Eazy-E’s Boyz-N-The-Hood.

I admit: That Ben Folds cover is pretty funny. But even my own reaction is part of the problem. Hip-hop songs that were conceptual and meant something in their original form are taken out of that context and reduced to parody because, hey, it’s funny to hear a square white dude say “bitch” or an adult-pop songstress sing “crazy motherfucker.”

Back to the Republic article, written by a guy I know who is in his mid-40s and white, which, sorry, has to be a little relevant to this conversation. He says of Weddle’s take on Hey Ya: ” … his graceful voice adding measure to a song that was little more than get-out-of-your-seat melodic fluff.” Just a tad patronizing to a song that was voted best single for 2003 by the Village Voice Pazz & Jop poll, no? You can’t tell me that Weddle’s voice is what unearths the greatness of Hey Ya. I’m really disturbed by the comments on the video at YouTube, including this one: “oh man!… such a better version of that song!!!” … or this one: “I love this! No offense to anyone but the original is crap compared to this” … or this one: “…You made Hey Ya bearable to listen.” … or this one: “Go white boy!”


I suppose this conversation could head in different directions: talk of appropriation by white artists (“Go white boy!”) or maybe a discussion of what makes a good cover. Regardless, this whole concept seems to mock the originals and maybe, by extension, hip-hop culture as a whole. Do these covers exist to promote the art of rap and hip-hop or to prey on the convenience of irony (and publicity)?Mat Weddle | Hey Ya (OutKast cover)

Video on YouTube.

UPDATE: I was sent another acoustic version of Hey Ya, this one by an artist from Iceland who goes by the name My Summer as a Salvation Soldier. I’m posting, if only to help prove my point that these covers are becoming a) unoriginal and b) tired.

My Summer as a Salvation Soldier | Hey Ya (OutKast cover)

¡Mayday! feat. Cee-Lo: “Groundhog Day”

Ah, the monotony of work. Sitting in a cubicle right now? This track, by Miami-based duo ¡Mayday!, is for you.

I couldn’t have found this track at a better time, as I’m about to embark on eight straight days of work until my next day off. It’s not that I dislike my actual job (newspaper copy editor); it’s that I dislike the routine – shower at the same time, drive the same route, deal with the same people, walk to the same sub shop for dinner. After awhile, you question the point of it all.

Clearly influenced by the genius of Office Space – ¡Mayday! even drops the phrase “TPS reports” in there – Groundhog Day asks: Just what the hell are we doing in these sterile offices anyway? Cee-Lo (of that one group you might have heard of) drops the verse:

“It’s just the same shit, different day /
We pretend to work /
While they pretend to pay”

I like to know that, even though Cee-Lo isn’t anywhere near a desk, someone is empathizing with us out there. “Mmmmmm, yeeeeeeah.”

¡Mayday! feat. Cee-Lo | Groundhog Day

Video: Groundhog Day

(If you were wondering: option+1 on a Mac for the upside down exclamation point.)

Calexico: “Lucky Dime” (alternate version)

Is it just me or did Calexico’s Garden Ruin seem to come and pass without much excitement? The reviews have been pretty favorable, despite (or maybe because of?) the band losing a bit of its mariachi stylings for a more streamlined sound.

Even if you don’t like a band or musician’s shift in style, you have to at least appreciate a willingness to push their bounds of what’s comfortable. Ultimately, it would be pretty boring if a band ended up copying itself over and over. Besides, I think Garden Ruin takes a little patience, especially if you’ve built any preconceived notions of Calexico (and we probably all have).

This alternate version of Lucky Dime is the B-side of a 7″ from City Slang, the group’s European label. (Bisbee Blue is the A-side.) The 7″ version pushes the tempo of the original and brightens the sound with electric guitar accents. As for the song’s lyrics, I can’t but help think of Jimmy Eat World’s Lucky Denver Mint – this theme of hoping/wishing about the unknown or assigning luck to an inanimate object. Are these things really lucky or do we just want to believe so bad they are that we’re willing to convince ourselves of it? When Joey Burns sings on Lucky Dime, “Hoping to see a sign or a lucky dime,” it feels like he’s forcing himself to believe something that doesn’t exist. Just like on Lucky Denver Mint, when Jim Adkins sings, “A dollar underwater keeps on dreaming for me.” It feels a little hopeless and out of their hands.

Calexico | Lucky Dime (alternate version)

Also, City Slang has an acoustic version of the powerful Garden Ruin closer, All Systems Red.

Calexico | All Systems Red (acoustic)

Lastly, Garden Ruin is available at eMusic. And iTunes has a live session EP (released Sept. 12) with four songs.

Silversun Pickups/Viva Voce, Modified, 10/1/06

God bless Modified, Phoenix’s modest and ambitious art/music space, a venue that welcomes so many indie artists when other places won’t. But if there’s one downside to Modified, it’s the size – no bigger than a small, two-bedroom home. With its plank-wood floors and standard drywall structure, Modified wasn’t meant to contain the sound coming from Silversun Pickups and Viva Voce on Sunday night.

Put simply: It was loud. Not in a shrilly, obnoxious way. Just in that feel-it-in-your-throat kind of way. I expected that from Silversun, but Viva Voce’s aggression on the volume knob was a little more surprising, though not at all a deterrent to the set.

Silversun played after local openers LetDownRight, which created an unfortunate and awkward dynamic with the crowd size. We guessed about 80-100 were there for Silversun. By the time Viva Voce came up, the size dwindled by at least a quarter. It’s too bad because anyone who came for Silversun and left would appreciate what Viva Voce was doing. Oh, well. Their loss.

I ditched my earplugs about three songs into Silversun’s set for the full effect, not that it really mattered. Hell, you could see how loud it was: The main speakers were tipping back and forth like trees giving way in a thunderstorm. At times, the sound squealed off the ceiling, probably looking for a place to escape. But I’m not complaining. Silversun’s thick fuzz is a rush, a kind of empowering charge at those levels.

Songs like Well Thought Out Twinkles, Lazy Eye and Kissing Families translate better live than I could have hoped and leave an almost surreal hangover. And Brian Aubert is acutely aware of when to push his voice and when to pull it back – and it all holds up surprisingly well.

MP3: Silversun Pickups | Well Thought Out Twinkles

I made the mistake of saying to a friend: “I’d hate to be the band to follow that.” Because before I could write off Viva Voce, husband and wife Kevin and Anita Robinson had my full attention at the first thwack of his snare drum. I’m not sure I’ve seen somone attack a drum set like that; he doesn’t wow you with technical wizardry, but his aggression would be hard to match. And it manages to complement – not overpower – Anita’s soft-ish vocals. (There’s also a bass player on stage.)

Something very Incredible Hulk-like happens to Viva Voce from CD to live show. I’ve been listening to Get Yr Blood Sucked Out (Barsuk) for the past couple weeks, and I wouldn’t have expected the sort of raw and stripped-down punch that accompanies the live set. The heavy riffs reminded me of the stoner rock of Kyuss, but how do you account for those compelling hand claps? It was like taking part in a fuzzed-out, psychedelic Kumbaya campfire circle.

All I know is, my money’s on Viva Voce over Mates of State in the Barsuk Husband-Wife Indie-Rock Celebrity Deathmatch.

MP3: Viva Voce | We Do Not Fuck Around

Trunk Federation: “History of Dead Ends”

I haven’t converted nearly enough tracks from my constantly growing vinyl collection around here in recent months. My recent jaunt to LA, where I scored a load of 7″ gems, is reason to get back in the habit.

This selection from a 7″ by Trunk Federation counts as a great find in a depressing sort of way: I plucked it from the massive 7″ sale bin at Amoeba Records. Nothing would seem so humbling to a musician as those clearance bins – records upon records reduced to nothing more than a store’s effort to get them the hell out of its way. Of course, I’m happy to oblige.

Like so many great bands never to be heard from, Trunk Federation should have been big. The group emerged from that fertile Tempe, Ariz., music scene in the ’90s but preferred a sound that colored outside the lines a bit more than the somewhat sterile pop-rock that seemed to rule.

This 7″, Hi-Fi for Small Fry, was one of the first products Trunk Federation put out. But I can’t help but think that, after listening to History of Dead Ends on the A-side, the group already was making some statement about the scene:

“This city’s pitiful/
Been talkin’ to myself/
Up here you look so small/
This city makes you ill.”

Trunk Federation released three records, including the great The Curse of Miss Kitty, which recently found new life in Tim Fite’s Gone Ain’t Gone (available at eMusic). Fite constructed samples for his album only from CDs in which he found in the dollar bins. The Curse of Miss Kitty happened to be one of them.

Trunk singer Jim Andreas and drummer Chris Kennedy are now in relatively new Phoenix band LetDownRight, which is opening for Silversun Pickups and Viva Voce at Modified on Sunday.

Trunk Federation | History of Dead Ends
(From Hi-Fi for Small Fry 7″, 1995)

Related:
Tim Fite resuscitates Trunk Federation.

Backyard Bangers: “New Math”

For the past four years, the hottest hip-hop night in the Valley apparently has been at the Blunt Club (hosted by Hollywood Alley in Mesa). I say “apparently” because I’ve yet to drag my sorry butt down there. That’s gonna change soon (I swear), especially if they keep lining up great indie hip-hop artists; Jeru the Damaja, Crown City Rockers, Abstract Rude and Souls of Mischief are just a few of the guests to come through.

I’m really regretting missing last night’s set, which featured Troublemaker, one-half of the hip-hop/electronic production team (along with E. Moss) known as Backyard Bangers. The term “turntablism” – probably passe, anyway – doesn’t do justice to the duo’s debut LP, New Math (on their self-created Hollyrock label). Drum-heavy rhythms and skewed time signatures suggest DJ Shadow’s Endtroducing might have been an influence, and the carefully crafted samples surrounding them means someone spent lots of long hours splicing and dicing digital waveforms.

It probably sounds as if I’m contradicting myself, if you paid any attention to my review of the Ratatat live show. But in terms of instrumental composition, I’m always drawn to drums. Ratatat’s focus – both live and on record – seems scattered and unkempt. On an album like New Math, drums ground everything; the beats are the common denominator among all songs, the baseline. It never strays from the drums, and that’s enough to keep my attention.

And, oh yeah, Backyard Bangers have toured and recorded with DJ Z-Trip, always a plus in my book.

The guys keep a generous catalog of mp3s available for download, including remixes for the Flaming Lips, Beastie Boys and Super Furry Animals.

Backyard Bangers | Perception (from New Math)
Backyard Bangers | Fight Test remix (the Flaming Lips)

Buy New Math through Backyard Bangers’ MySpace page.

Pete Yorn “You & Me” in-store acoustic CDs

Before we left for the Pitchfork Festival in July, I had Aug. 2 circled on my calendar because Pete Yorn was playing a show in Scottsdale. Somewhat surpisingly, that sold out weeks before the date (and before we got tickets), a rare occurrence in the Valley. Anyway, he also was slated to play an in-store at Zia Records in Chandler, which, if you live in Phoenix like I do, is a bit out of the way.

Because we had just returned from the festival, we decided we were too tired and music-weary to hike over to Chandler. Figured I’d catch him the next time around. But, ah, as fate would have it, I don’t have to regret missing it anymore. I was perusing my local Zia yesterday when I found an official CD release of that session. Apparently, Yorn recorded each of the in-store shows for a series in which individual CDs would be sold at the location at which it was performed (Lawrence Journal-World). The Arizona disc was a bargain at $2.98 with about five songs.

Pretty excellent marketing strategy, to boot. My guess is die-hard Yorn fans (hello, Heather) will want to collect all of these. But I have no clue how many are in the series. (Didn’t Pearl Jam do something like this with a string of live CD releases?) But aside from that, it’s a great way for Yorn to reach out to fans on a personal level and make them feel a part of these performances.

Here’s the track listing for the Zia Chandler CD from Aug. 2, 2006:
1. Intro
2. Undercover
3. For Nancy (Cos it Already Is)
4. Don’t Mean Nothing
5. Vampyre
6. When You See the Light

If anyone is really dying to get their hands on this, I’d be willing to go snap up a few at Zia. (Heather, you’re already spoken for.) So just holler at me.

In the meantime, here’s an acoustic taste of one of my favorite Yorn songs.

Pete Yorn | For Nancy (Cos it Already Is)
Acoustic, live at Zia Records (Chandler), 8/2/06

Related:
Pete Yorn tour dates (Oct. 23 at Rialto Theatre in Tucson).