Monthly Archives: July 2010

An intense mix.

For one night, and one night only (lies), the No Fun House presents Analecta, Northwest Indiana’s finest (and perhaps only?) post rock ensemble coupled with Texas’s own noisy and spastic troupe, Sohns. Left field local support is being provided by Kalamazoo’s brand new Forget The Times.

Pictures are most definitely worth a thousands words, and a quick browse of Sohns’ myspace album will tell you that these guys put on one hell of a show. Those images, plus the fact that they cite their only influence as Small Brown Bike, should spark interest.

Analecta position themselves on the opposite end of the spectrum with a more Explosions In The Sky-esque sound. Quoted as being “a great blend of agression and restraint”, this group will lull you into a calm state one moment, then will progress into a deeper and more powerful sound the next.

Forget The Times has never played a show and has no internet presence at all. However, it can be cited that they are a new project featuring Sean & Benji from Rotten Wood Moon and Peter from The Philly Crawlers. Three guitars + vocals that may or may not be run through a PA. Not for the faint of heart.

Missing a mix like this would be detrimental to your health. This wednesday, July 7th. No Fun House. Show starts 9pm. $2. Be there.

A Busy Weekend (Boiling Pot Boiling Pot Boiling Pot)

It was a hot, sweaty, humid, good music sort of weekend, which is probably one of the best sorts of weekends, really. The Strutt and the IDEA Association played host to a most excellent display of Michigan’s modernist culture in art, clothing, beer, and – most importantly – music. That’s right, Kalamazoo’s Boiling Pot Festival was the order of the day for a large group of people this Saturday and Sunday, with a variety of local artists sporting their wares, and a variety of mostly Michigan-based musical groups rocking the entirety of Downtown.

I spent my Sunday not only getting the chance to play what, in many people’s opinions, is the Festival of the summer so far in town, but also enjoying the atmosphere of great music, good food, and a sea of friendly faces who were all sweating together (my personal favorite band Sunday being Prussia. They have free albums to download, so check it). If you missed it, then know that you missed something special. If you didn’t miss it, count yourself lucky, and spread the word, as I know the powers that be are already looking towards next year.

The rest of the week is similarly packed, with flavors enough to appeal to any and every person’s particular sort of palate. Tomorrow night, the No Fun House is playing host to Sohns and Analecta, which is right up your alley if you dig on anything math or post rock.

Thursday there’s a bit of a competing event thing happening, with No Fun’s Emilio Festivez coexisting with Nathan K., Fiona Dickinson, and Jeremey Ruggles‘ new project, the Mind Death Quintet at The Strutt.

Friday night, local jazzers the William Wengers will be rocking out at the Craftsman Chop Co. in Portage on Sears Drive, so if you feel like kicking back and enjoying a bit of live jazz, come on down and kick.

Paleo, Cold Mountain Child, Gitis Baggs Cool It At the Strutt

On July 5, the Strutt was full of warmth. A handful of inspiring and calming musicians played some music that made the thick humidity of the evening seem almost magical.

Gitis Baggs and friends plucked and puckered a few alt country and rock n roll numbers with gusto and wit, nailing those harmonies too.

Paleo has been a touring musician for the past five years nonstop. My friend John Van Hattum summed up the sound this way: “bedtime stories for older children.” It was great and I accidentally bought a whole bunch of music.

Cold Mountain Child brought home their blankets of soft guitars and pastoral vocals. We’ve missed you guys here in Kalamazoo. Thanks for being such a centering expression of peace for me.

The Universe and Dr. Kaiser do the Cosmic American Music dance

Produced by Andy Catlin of Strutt Studios and released on the Strutt Records label, The Universe and Dr. Kaiser is a highly decorated affair featuring a wide cast of Kalamazoo musicians contributing a vast array of instrumentation to the focused and concisely written songs of Grant Littler (whether he is Dr. Kaiser or the Universe or something else altogether is unclear), making this record both catchy and trippy, never muddled by the high quantity of sounds surrounding the tunes.

The record opens with the titular track, fading in with a thick but gentle sheet of breezy sonic wash which comes and goes in various shapes and sizes throughout the entire record.  This smoothly transitions into a mellow song with a pleading melody and metaphysical, perhaps even cosmic, lyrics.  The following number, “Whirrings,” follows in similar fashion to the opener, but a big curve ball is thrown with the distorted country rock riffs and down home, done wrong lyrics of “Tight as a Can”, with a scorching electric “geetar” solo to boot!

“Sales Convention ’88” goes further into unpredictability with a creepy, manipulated spoken word intro, only to shift into a pretty song with lyrics that, while cryptic, are sang very personally and passionately, injected with a genuine sense of loss and longing.

Julia Toro steps up to the mic on “When You Hold Me” with a pop melody for the ages.  Prominent pedal steel pushes things further into the country western leanings that are present throughout the record.  The next piece, “Georgia Honey Roll”, is the most stripped down and subdued moment, staying almost entirely in acoustic guitar territory with cello and synth occasionally joining. It is here that Littler finds a simple but slightly haunting melodic vocal hook that feels as though it’s been waiting to be discovered for a long time.

The album ends with “Chain”, a piece which fully blossoms into the highly drawn out, spacious ambience that the entire record has threatened to do all along yet was always reined back in by Littler staying song-focused.  At this point, it’s a welcome trip-out to conclude a strongly crafted and executed batch of ditties brought to us by some of Kalamazoo’s finest.

Musicians appearing on The Universe and Dr. Kaiser:

Grant Littler – guitar, voice

Andy Catlin – keyboards, clarinet, voice, drums

Graham Parsons – voice, lap steel

Julia Toro – voice

Adam Danis – voice

Tod Klosterman – bass

Bill Winks – pedal steel

MW – moog, BirdWind tape

Fiona Dickinson – cello

Matt Maier – electric guitar

Mike Savina – tambourine

More Boiling Pot Boiling Pot Boiling Pot Boiling Pot

Sam gig as yesterday: different bands, live music from noon until the cows come home. Check it out ladies and gentlemen.

See all you folks down there. Let’s kick it.

Boiling Pot Boiling Pot Boiling Pot Boiling Pot

Here’s the offical Roster for the first day (Saturday) of the first ever BOILING POT FESTIVAL here in Kalamazoo, sponsored by the IDEA group and The Strutt. Not sure you want to go? Well now you can be. Check it.

Ten bucks a day for an absolute awesome stack of bands, so it’s cheap. There’s a link to all of ’em, so you aren’t going in blind. It’s gonna be a hell of a good time, I can almost guarantee it. See all you cats there. No Excuses.

Quiet on the Eastern Front, or the calm before the storm.

The Kalamazoo music scene will be taking tonight to breathe, and that’s just fine considering the slew of most excellent shows that have rocked our little city (All reports from the mewithoutYou/David Bazan show come in as ‘Amazing’). It will surely prove to be a nice opportunity to rest, relax, and and get ready for this weekend’s Boiling Pot Fest. I don’t know about you, but I’m going to be celebrating America’s birthday the right way: With lots of live music.

Oh, one more thing. DIT Kalamazoo would like to extend it’s congratulations to Joshua Tabbia and Tori Blade, who at the time of this post, have been married for no more than an hour. Good luck on this, the first day of the rest of your lives.

Although, I suppose that last line goes for all of us.

Infirmary “Necropenetrator”: a payoff of patience and endurance

Infirmary’s “Necropenetrator,”  recently released on the Kalamazoo-based label SNSE, was placed in my hands described as “harsh noise,” which prepared me for an unmelodic, non-traditional listening experience. However, I hadn’t the foggiest notion just how extreme and unrelenting Infirmary’s sound would be, so much so that upon initially dropping the needle, I was convinced the grooves of the record had been damaged.

Out of nothing, an avalanche of crackling cacophony burst from the speakers as though the needle were dragging through gravel. The sound had nowhere to rest, continually pouring out, unsettled and unbridled.

After a few minutes of enduring the havoc, I skipped around on the record in search of a moment of relief, only to find the same mess catapulting forth from every “song”. Convinced this couldn’t be right and that my copy was damaged (the vinyl had been slightly warped), I went to SNSE’s website to sample clips of the record. I was relieved to find that the record was not damaged as the clips sounded identical to my vinyl copy.

Wait. WHAT!?! My relief did a complete 180 to utter horror. How could I possibly review this uncompromising onslaught of chopped up sludge? I had heard some edgy albums in my time, but this one unquestionably pushed the inaccessibility of noise far beyond anything I had previously experienced, this coming from someone who loves the second half of Can’s “Tago Mago” and is familiar with Merzbow! Every piece was completely drenched in a near-identical-sounding destructo clutter with only slight hints of sonic variation coming up from underneath for air. Occasionally very distorted vocals entered the mix but they were merely another instrument of chaos within the madness.

Speaking of instruments, I didn’t even know how Infirmary were achieving these sounds. The liner notes listed the equipment employed as “junk, electronics, analog 8-track”. I could definitely detect the junk.

Regardless of my trepidations with taking on such a beast, I put on my most open mind and dove in headfirst, and at the behest of my housemates. “How can you honestly review this bullshit?” I explained that I had written A+ papers in high school where I had understood about as much on the topic as I did this record.

After several spins, sitting in the thin darkness of my home, it began to dawn on me that listening to this caterwauling sonance was not unlike watching snow on a television set when I was but a wee lad. When I stared into the static-soaked screen long enough, I would begin to see shapes, patterns, objects, all dancing and swimming about, a drug-free hallucination. The same was the case with “Necropenetrator.” The more I stayed as a tourist in this menacing land of sonic turbulence, the more individual sounds and rhythms became present in the mix. One piece had a catchy little groove, in Infirmary’s own unique way, and was aptly titled “Fuck Dancing”.

Surely this was a result of my starved and bored mind feeding me those ornaments, textures, and pulses of noise to thwart Infirmary’s attempt to drive me completely out of society. Yet, upon next listen, those same creatures were still frolicking in the mire, along with some new friends. With each spin, it became clear to me that this was not an impenetrable wall of opaque pretense, this was a prime example of beneficial repeated listens as there were the oddest textural hooks buried under layers of intense madness.

Either these guys are masters of this art or just got lucky; either way, lovers of challenging but rewarding listening experiences will find “Necropenetrator” a worthwhile journey.