Sundays with A Tribe Called Quest: Vol. 16

Well, the 2K Sports Bounce Tour – featuring Q-Tip, the Cool Kids and the Knux – hits Tempe (get your tickets).

According to Tip’s site, he’ll be performing with a live band. In light of that news, Q-Tip shared a mobile video of a rehearsal. The sound is for shit, but you can hear right off the bat the band practicing Tribe’s God Lives Through (!). (You have to click the “shows” tab and click the far left thumbnail.)

In other Tribe-related news, an artist signed to Phife’s independent label, Smokin’ Needles Records, passed away.

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.)

I Used to Love H.E.R.: Birdmonster (Justin Tenuto)

The 39th installment of I Used to Love H.E.R., a series in which artists/bloggers/writers discuss their most essential or favorite hip-hop albums and songs, comes from Justin Tenuto, bassist/wordsmith for San Francisco’s Birdmonster, which released its sophomore album, From the Mountain to the Sea, this fall.

Read more of the group’s musings at its blog.

When Kevin asked me to do this here post, part of his continuing I Used To Love H.E.R. series, I honestly found it a little incongruous. After all, I’m a scrawny, banjo-playing white boy who feels uncomfortable when he accidentally forms a rhyming couplet in an email. My formative years were spent playing Iron Maiden on a Japanese Washburn whilst hipper suburban crackers were discovering Dr. Dre. I thought Slick Rick was a pirate. If Kevin wanted to ask my opinion on, say, the best Kurt Russell movie, he would have received a fifteen page thesis, arguing the merits of “Tombstone,” “Tango & Cash,” “The Thing,” and “Captain Ron” and none of our lives would ever have been the same again.

Unfortunately, you will not be reading about the thespian prowess of a man whose face is ninety percent chin. Instead, you will be getting done learned about some rap music, or, rather, hearing about some hip-hop you already know, through the eyes of a man wearing a shirt with a unicorn on it. I apologize.

the hall of gameE-40
The Hall of Game (Jive, 1996)

Listening to E-40 is like reading “Clockwork Orange” without using the glossary. By which I mean, in the grand tradition of Anthony Burgess and the septuagenarian virgin who created the Klingon Dialect, E-40 lives in a world where the Queen’s English is merely a jumping off point for all manner of hallucinated verbiage. Crackulating? Hoe cake? Penelopes? Bootch? Undefinable really. It’s like that Lewis Carroll poem about the Frumious Bandersnatch: you don’t really have to understand it if sounds totally kickass.

Of course, there’s more to Forty Water than just an entire lexicon of slanguage and nonsensicality. Take, for instance, “The Hall of Game.” Just don’t take mine. That wasn’t a Benny Youngman joke.

Because, really, what other CD starts off with Rasheed Wallace saying the maker of said CD sucks? None, with the possible exception of Darko Milicic’s debut “I’m an Oaffish Fraud of a Billionaire,” which, coincidentally, barely missed the cut for this post.

You might not be impressed with the inclusion of Jail Blazers-era Rasheed Wallace-ness. I’m not sure why, but I’ll play along. See, when E-40 isn’t defending himself against roundballers with perplexing skunk spots, he’s laying down hyperspeed, genuinely goofy verses over beats made on twenty dollar, Salvation Army Yamahas. Too Short, Tupac, and other indefatigable Californian rap Gods guest here and there, but the disc is definitely E-40’s, which is to say, he’s not one of those guys who seems outshined by his guest rappers; rather, his bizarre originality pops out in extreme relief.

(Highlights include the surprisingly dusty “The Story,” the not-quite-a-hit-single “Rapper’s Ball,” the dated pager-related rhyming on “Ring It,” and the inspired use of that Bruce Horsnby jam “The Way It Is,” recorded the same year as Tupac’s “Changes,” in case you’re curious.)

Missy Elliott
Under Construction
(Goldmind/Elektra, 2002)

At the risk of sounding like a misogynist, I never really enjoyed female rapping. Sure, I thought, there were the Lauren Hills, Roxanne Shantes, and Queen Latifahs of the world (although Latifah’s career is now notable more for her horrendous post-Living Singles roles in Bringing Down the House and other nefarious poppycock), but largely, feminine rapping was a world I avoided with aggressive diligence. Sure, I’ll listen to “No Diggity,” with it’s brilliant Bill Withers sample, but I’m pressing fast forward when Queen Pen comes on. Sorry Queen Pen, but that verse is sorry.

Then, Missy Elliot entered my life. It was an innocuous moment, really, sitting in my old high school buddy’s car, listening to his vast collection of CDs I didn’t own, when “Under Construction” found its way into the CD changer. I listened, I smiled, and then I jetsammed my bias like an atheist who saw Jesus on a tortilla.

The simplest answer for this abrupt conversion is the pure and unadulterated awesomeness of Missy Elliot. In a way, she’s kind of like a female E-40: she’s gifted but she doesn’t take herself seriously; she’s genuinely bizarre without it feeling like some weirder-than-thou posture; she’s hilarious. Sure, she starts every song with “This…is a Missy Elliot…ex-clusive” but in time, even that becomes completely endearing. Plus, it’s probably the only album that uses a meowing kitty and trumpeting elephant as euphemistic stand-ins for a vagina and a dick. Respectively. Obviously.

Anyway, if you don’t own this: buy it. Or download it. Or whatever it is you kids are doing nowadays. It’s a perfect party LP: bouncy, dirty, and devoid of the bogus attempts at sketch comedy that wouldn’t make the cut on American Dad. You’ll thank me for it, even though you don’t know who I am.

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

The Cool Kids: Delivery Man (9th Wonder remix)

Just a quickie here as we soak in the awesomeness that was Thursday night’s Frightened Rabbit show.

9th Wonder, who a few months ago with Murs came out with Sweet Lord, remixed the Cool Kids’ Delivery Man (via Green Label Sound).

Remember: The Cool Kids open for Q-Tip on Nov. 17 at Marquee Theatre. The Knux is also on the bill. Dope.

Get the original version of Delivery Man and the remix right here.

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.