Tuesday
Jan112011

The Low Anthem: Live at Lily Pads 1.8.11, preview new songs


Just a few short weeks away from releasing their highly-anticipated follow-up to 2008 breakthrough Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, and fresh off a tour with Emmylou Harris, The Low Anthem played an intimate show in the rural Rhode Island town of Peace Dale on Saturday night.  I was lucky enough to be there as the band gave a sneak peek at much of the upcoming Smart Flesh.

Lost on the back roads of Rhode Island, I thought I had made some kind of mistake -- this couldn't be where The Low Anthem was playing, could it?  Once I found the tiny church that would serve as venue for the night, I soon realized that it was going to be a special night.  Joe Fletcher & The Wrong Reasons took the stage first, bringing an acoustic version of their outlaw country, rock and folk.  Joe Fletcher's booming voice filled the room and brought the crowd to their feet.  The band's recently-released album White Lighter has been in constant rotation for me (look for a full review soon) and the songs took on even more power in live form as Fletcher's lyrics jumped to life, complimented by mandolin, fiddle, percussion and upright bass.  Singalong set closer "Too Many Doors" featured The Low Anthem and forced the packed crowd to bring Fletcher and company out for an encore.  A brilliant set from a band you need to know.

After a brief intermission that gave attendees a chance to grab some homemade baked goods, cider and merch, The Low Anthem took the stage.  After starting with a couple of favorites off of OMGCD, "Ticket Taker" and "To The Ghosts Who Write History Books", the band began to showcase some of the new songs.  "Apothecary Love" and first single "Ghost Woman Blues" have been mainstays in the set for the better part of a year - the former a lilting song of love found over the drugstore counter, the latter showcasing the band's gorgeous four-part harmonies alongside a simply-strummed acoustic guitar and clarinet.  "I'll Take Out Your Ashes" a solemn meditation on loss that is probably as affecting of a song as I have ever heard.  

While I had become familiar with a few of the "new" songs over the past few months, for a number of the songs this was my first listen.  Whisper-soft "Burn" (I believe the only true "premiere" of the night) was gorgeous, featuring a simple melody accompanied by banjo and glockenspiel.  Ben Knox Miller described "Matter of Time" as "the laziest love song", but its beauty lie in the simplicity and honesty of the lyrics, a beautiful song.  As on OMGCD, there are a number of upbeat songs to balance the slower ballads -- "Hey, All You Hippies!" comes rambling "o'er the Hollywood hills" calling out entitled so-called-"hippies" and "Boeing 737" is a stomping rocker that rides a descending bassline. The centerpiece of the show and a stunning highlight from my perspective was the title-track from the upcoming album, "Smart Flesh" - a deeply personal rumination on the mortality we all share and a simply beautiful song.

It's clear that the band is gaining confidence as performers and reaching maturity as songwriters.  Ben Knox Miller has an incredible gift.  He writes songs that can make you smile and cry in the same moment; songs that are deeply personal yet universal.  In my eyes he is leading the pack in a new generation of songwriters.  The Low Anthem were already my favorite band, and they're only getting better.  Based solely on this sneak peek, Smart Flesh is going to be hard to top as my album of 2011. 

The full show is available for stream below - sound is generally excellent.  Thanks to The Low Anthem for their taper-friendly policies -- please support the band by preordering Smart Flesh here.

The Low Anthem
Lily Pads - Peace Dale, RI
January 8, 2011

Ticket Taker
To The Ghosts Who Write History Books
Apothecary Love
Hey, All You Hippies!
Burn
Ghost Woman Blues
I'll Take Out Your Ashes
Matter Of Time
Home I'll Never Be
Cigarettes and Whiskey
Smart Flesh
The God Damn House
Snake and Lightning Rod
Boeing 737
The Auld Triangle
Love and Altar
Charlie Darwin

Full set download:  mp3 zip

Keep an eye out for details about what sounds like it will be a special CD release show in Providence.  Other area dates:

March 4 - Boston MA, Old South Church
March 5 - N. Adams MA, Mass MoCa
March 7 - Portland ME, SPACE Gallery

Previous recordings from The Low Anthem:

Boston MA, Paradise Rock Club - 4.20.10
Portland ME, SPACE Gallery -4.23.10

Friday
Jan072011

New music: Lonesome Lake - Tributaries EP


New Hampshire's Lonesome Lake make lovingly crafted folk music that reflects chilly and rugged landscapes in which it was created.  The songs that comprise their new Tributaries EP feature fingerpicked acoustic guitar and sparse percussion - with the occasional accordion, fiddle or horn taking turns in the spotlight.  These are songs of struggle and pain, but the end result is simply beautiful - for every whispered, reflective lyric there is a soaring melody or fiddle line to lessen the weight of the words.

The gorgeous Tributaries EP deserves attention - keep an eye on Lonesome Lake.  Get the full EP here.

Lonesome Lake - Between the Lines

Check out another song from Tributaries on our Winter Mixtape.

 

Friday
Jan072011

Visible Voice Winter 2011 Mixtape


So, this is the first of what will be a quarterly thing on Visible Voice...the seasonal mixtape.  I plan to use these mixtapes as an opportunity to share some of my favorite new music.  Great tunes by local or not-so-local bands that you should know and, in many cases, tracks that have not been officially or widely released yet.  For this inaugural winter mix a cold, snowy Boston is my (our) backdrop and, fittingly for this time of year, many of the songs here evoke themes of reflection.  During the cold winter months I find that the music I listen to becomes increasingly spare, unadorned, raw.  These songs fit that mold; gritty and uncompromising, yet intensely beautiful.  I'm sharing this as two "sides" (think cassettes, vinyl), instead of individual mp3s, so that this might be listened to as a cohesive whole.  There will also be a limited number of physical copies available with individual tracks, please email if you'd like one.  

A huge thanks goes out to all of the bands that agreed to take part.  Please support them by buying their music and going to shows.  I hope you enjoy this as much as I have putting it together -- and please share!

Side A
1. You Are Not My Love - Wooden Dinosaur
2. I'll Be Fooled Again - Twain
3. Great Move North - Faces On Film
4. Wither on the Vine, pt. 2 - The Old Ceremony
5. Wolves of Winter - Lonesome Lake

 

Side B
1. Dancing On Your Tears - Hands and Knees
2. Long Time - Guards
3. Sweeties Babies - Push Pals
4. Say What You Will - Joe Fletcher & The Wrong Reasons
5. Crooked Road Blues - Mount Peru

 

 

Monday
Jan032011

The Capulets - Classics


Stu McLamb's backstory reads a bit like an episode of Behind The Music - failed relationships and jail time contributed to the sloppy garage-pop debut record from The Love Language.  That record got the band signed to Merge Records, but before The Love Language, there was The Capulets (and more drama).

The Capulets were a four-piece band from Raleigh NC comprised of McLamb, Josh Pope (Guitar/Vocals), Tom Simpson (Drums) and Alex Clarke (Bass).  The band's sound is a scrappy mix of garage, punk and sugary pop - a rougher, more energetic precursor to the sounds that The Love Language have refined over their past two albums.  As the story goes (from the band's label):

"Silent Uproar Records approached the band in 2006 about releasing some demos as a debut full-length. Shortly after signing a deal with the label, the band kicked out Stu McLamb. Now the stuff of legend, McLamb had broken into the band's practice space to teach a girl to play drums and ended up damaging his wrist and trashing some of the band's gear. Needless to say, that was the breaking point for the band itself. Josh, Tom and Alex quickly formed another band, Cocoon, but it didn't last. In late 2006, Stu started The Love Language and eventually tapped Josh and Tom to join him."

A few years later, Silent Uproar decided to finally release a remastered set of Capulets demos - a ragged collection of garage rock that clearly demonstrate the traits that have launched The Love Language to wider audiences.  Check out catchy-as-hell jam "Robots" below and grab the full album for just $5 here.

The Capulets - Robots

 

Wednesday
Dec292010

New music: Chalk and Numbers - He Knew EP


   

Chalk and Numbers is a Brooklyn duo that make 60s-style surf-lounge-pop - the kind of stuff you picture providing the soundtrack to some obscure surfer B-movie.  Surf guitars, simple, catchy rythms and sugary sweet female vocals - in the same vein as Best Coast, but with less haze.  Perfect tunes for hot summer nights, but they seem to be doing the trick on this snowy day too.

Listen to "I Really Wanna Work This Out", one of my favorites from the 6 song He Knew EP below, then head to the band's bandcamp page where you can get the entire EP for free.

Chalk and Numbers - I Really Wanna Work This Out

 

Tuesday
Dec282010

New music: Guards - Resolution Of One 7"

I hadn't written about Guards yet, so this post is way overdue.  Let's get up to speed...  Richie James Follin is a pretty prolific dude.  He formed Willowz when he was 19, plays guitar in Cults and has a number of side projects.  The story goes that Follin returned from Europe, wrote a handful of songs and recorded them with the help of members of MGMT, Willowz and his sister (Madeline Follin of Cults).

The songs are kind of a perfect marriage of the ethereal sound of Cults married to the heavier guitar-driven sound of Willowz.  For the most parts the songs are catchy and upbeat, though Follin allows things to meander when appropriate, at times finding a sound similar to some of Deerhunter's purest pop moments.

Now, a few months after releasing their fantastic EP (which you can still download for free here), a 7" is available featuring 3 of my favorite tracks from the album.  Listen to the fantastic, slow-burning, blue-eyed soul b-side "Crystal Truth" below, and order your copy of the 7" quickly - only 500 are being pressed.

Guards - Crystal Truth

Monday
Dec272010

New music: Summer Fiction - "Chandeliers"


Philadelphia's Bill Ricchini performs under the name Summer Fiction, making gorgeous music that ranges from upbeat folk-pop to delicate ballads.  The songs, which Ricchini self-recorded at home, feature varied instrumentation such as harpsichord, horns and lush strings alongside piano, acoustic and electric guitars.  Highly recommended for fans of Belle & Sebastian of pretty, melancholy folk-pop in general.

Stream/download "Chandeliers", one of the more upbeat songs on the album, below and get the rest at the band's bandcamp page.

Summer Fiction - Chandeliers

Saturday
Dec252010

New music: Middle Brother - "Me Me Me"


As promised, Middle Brother - the joint side-project of Matt Vasquez (Delta Spirit), John McCauley (Deer Tick) and Taylor Goldsmith (Dawes) - has released their first single from their highly-anticipated debut.  It's Christmas, so I'm not going to take the time to analyze and pick this apart yet but on first listen it sounds exactly like the ragged folk-rock I was expecting - complete with messy, Neil Young-esque lead guitar.  Enjoy and happy holidays!

Middle Brother - Me Me Me

(Thanks to Matt Dyson of the fantastic dysonsound for hooking me up with the track when the Middle Brother email eluded me!)

Wednesday
Dec222010

21 Favorite Albums of 2010:  1-11


1.
Frontier Ruckus - Deadmalls and Nightfalls

So this is it, our favorite album of 2010.  Since it's July release I've kept coming back to this beautiful, affecting album by Michigan's Frontier Ruckus time and time again.  On Deadmalls and Nightfalls Matthew Milia's songwriting is at the forefront as he eulogizes forgotten places, people and memories of a suburban wasteland.  There's a certain nostalgia in abandoned stripmalls that I can relate to - maybe it's something about being a product of early-90s suburbia myself. 

Milia masters the Dylanesque feat of cramming a seemingly impossible number of words into each song, while still making each one count.  The words act not only as a vehicle for the stories that form the album's core, but in many cases act as an another instrument altogether, each syllable a note plucked from Matt Milia's quivering vocal chords; dancing with banjo strings, fighting for space alongside acoustic guitars. 

Musically, the album is as rich as anything I've heard this year - a distinctly midwestern blend of folk, bluegrass and southwest horns.  Banjo, trumpets, the occasional singing saw or fiddle, strummed and picked acoustic guitar and various percussion.  You get the feeling that these songs were truly composed, not your average verse-chorus songwriting-by-numbers - tempos change mid-song, instruments make appearances then disappear; truly a complete, fully-realized piece of art.  There were other albums that I loved this year, but none that spoke to me in quite the same way as Deadmalls and Nightfalls.  I came back to it throughout the year in various moods and situations, and each time it gave me exactly what I was looking for, and often revealed something new.

Frontier Ruckus - The Upper Room


2. Titus Andronicus - The Monitor

Titus Andronicus' 2009 debut The Airing of Grievances was a ragged album of Jersey bar-band-punk that only hinted at the potential they fully relized on The Monitor.  I remember a fully intoxicated listening party the weekend after the album came out, blasting at full-volume as a small group of revelers sat around exchanging "whatthefuck" looks of amazement.  The album's spot on this list was probably cemented that night, but this album reveals more and more over time.  It is the definition of ambitious - a loose concept album based on the Civil War that quotes both Springsteen and Walt Whitman.  It is epic - a punk album with 8 songs over 5 minutes long.  And it works.  It's a masterpiece of literary punk-rock that's neither pretentious nor naive.

Titus Andronicus - Four Score And Seven

 

3. The National - High Violet

The National are one of the most consistent bands in indie-rock today.  While their early albums show flashes of brilliance but are somewhat inconsistent, they found their groove with 2006's Alligator and haven't looked back.  2007's Boxer topped many year-end lists, so the expectations were even higher for High Violet.  It doesn't disappoint on any level as the band returns to the well of dark, boozy, often obtuse ruminations on love and relationships.  The trademarks are there, moody ("Lemonworld", "Sorrow") pretty ("Runaway", "Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks") and anthemic ("Bloodbuzz Ohio") and even though The National have done it well before, it just doesn't get old.

The National - Afraid Of Everyone

 

 

 4. The Walkmen - Lisbon

As I wrote earlier in the year, The Walkmen have taken a strange path to becoming one of my favorite bands.  For years I knew that they should be my favorite band, but for some reason I never really let myself fall in love with them.  This was the year that changed.  Truthfully, You & Me was the album that changed my mind, but Lisbon was the first time I embraced a Walkmen release as an event.  The album does not disappoint.  Where their earlier albums felt to me like New York City on a cold, windy, drunken night - this one feels warmer, sunnier, laid back.  There is a comfort where there was once abrasion.  "Juveniles", "Stranded", and "Lisbon" are among the most beautiful songs the band has recorded - this is the sound of a band that has found their place.

The Walkmen - Stranded

 

 5. The Love Language - Libraries

I have a soft spot in my music that incorporates equal parts soul, early rock n' roll and garage rock.  That pretty much defines The Love Language, and as you'd expect, they have been one of my favorite bands since their fantastic self-titled debut was released last year.  Truth be told, though, I was a bit nervous about follow-up and Merge debut Libraries before it was released.  Rumors had me worried that the band's sound would be sterilized - afterall, the lo-fi production was one of the previous albums' charms.  No need to worry.  Libraries sees Stuart McLamb and company clean up their sound without losing the ragged edge, and takes their garage-soul blend to epic new levels.  To these ears, this is pretty much perfect music.

The Love Language - Heart To Tell

 

6. Josh Ritter - So Runs The World Away

Josh Ritter has already established himself as one of the most important songwriters making music today.  Five albums in, one could forgive Josh Ritter if he were to play things safe, settle into a groove and coast.  On the contrary, So Runs The World Away is full of risks.  A song about the complicated relationship between a mummy and his archeologist/lover (in waltz time) could be a horrific disaster in lesser hands.  Here it's beautiful and believable.  "Another New World" is an epic tale of adventure and loss.  A stunning piece of prose set to a sweet, soft tune.  There are still the traditional folk moments you'd expect, but the willingness to take chances and the songwriting chops to pull them off put Josh Ritter head and shoulders above most of his contemporaries.

Josh Ritter - Change Of Time

 7. Spoon - Transference

Following an album like Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga is no easy task, I would imagine.  Rather than try to one-up the ragged pop and grand statements of their breakthrough, Spoon took a different route with Transference and delivered a more challenging record - one that hides its charms deeper, below the surface.  Gone are the glockenspiels and horns - replaced with disorienting rythms and backwards tape-looped keysboards.  It's like they took pop music and turned it upside down - still recognizable, but not the same.  That isn't to say that there aren't windows-down singalong rock songs - "Trouble Comes Running" is as straightforward of a song as there is, and its a ton of fun.  Overall, Transference is a welcome curveball and a fantastic album.

Spoon - I Saw The Light

 

8. Local Natives - Gorilla Manor

The hype surrounding Local Natives' debut Gorilla Manor preceded it, but the record rose above the buzz and achieved something much, much bigger.  Pounding rhythms + soaring harmonies, often-obtuse subject matter, a Talking Heads cover - the album seemed almost too audacious at times, yet it worked.  The album captured wide-eyed wonder of youth better than any album in recent memory.  The band took the songs to the road for nearly a year of constant touring - winning more converts with each stop.  Seeing the band at a packed Great Scott and then, just a few months later, an overflowing stage at Sasquatch it's impossible to ignore the reach of Gorilla Manor.  An amazing triumph for a young band from L.A. and hands-down best debut of 2010.

Local Natives - Shape Shifter

 

9. Arcade Fire - The Suburbs

The biggest indie band in the world got a lot bigger in 2010 - debuting at #1 on the Billboard 200 chart and collecting a Grammy nod for Rock Album Of The Year.  So how did the Arcade Fire maintain their indie cred alongside such monumental mainstream success?  They put out a brilliant record of varied, complex music that references disillusionment while never getting weighed down by it.  They turned a two-night stand at Madison Square Garden into a worldwide event by asking Terry Gilliam to direct a live internet webcast.  Their Spike Jonze-directed video for "The Suburbs" was another art-meets-accessibility success.  As for the music, it's the most fun Arcade Fire album to-date, touching on genres from art-rock to disco and addressing serious themes in an often-playful way.  Brilliant stuff.

Arcade Fire - The Suburbs


10. The Morning Benders - Big Echo

"Excuses" exploded out of nowhere in early 2010 like a blinding ray of summer sun cutting through the cold winter.  It is without question my song of the year - a huge pop song swathed in reverb, 60s R&B and big, dense Phil Spector-esque production.  Oh, and the rest of Big Echo is damn good too.  Operating somewhere between the layered creations of Grizzly Bear and the laid-back pop of Real Estate, The Morning Benders stepped-out in a huge way this year.  I enjoyed the band's debut Talking Through Tin Cans, but it barely hints at the level of songwriting, arrangement and maturity that Big Echos.  This was my feel good record of the year - it's impossible for me to listen to these 10 songs and not feel warm and fuzzy.

The Morning Benders - Excuses

 

11. Blake Mills - Break Mirrors

I'll be honest - I hadn't heard of Blake Mills until earlier this year when a friend tipped me off to his music shortly before the release of Break Mirrors.  I soon found that he had contributed to some of my favorite albums of the past few years, toured with Band Of Horses, Jenny Lewis and many more - oh, and he's only 23.  You could see the fantastic Break Mirrors as a man stepping into the spotlight.  Many sidemen and session musicians are relegated to the shadows for a reason - not so with Blake Mills.  He demonstrates songwriting, musicianship and confidence far beyond his years.  From catchy pop to understated folk, Break Mirrors is a varied, complex and just plain phenomenal album that hints at an exciting future for Blake Mills.

Blake Mills - Wintersong



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