Muzzle of Bees & 91.7 WMSE Present :: AA Bondy

Posted on Thursday 16 April 2009

We’re once again partnering with our friends at 91.7 WMSE to bring AA Bondy to Club Garibaldi on Friday, June 19th.

Tickets: $10
On Sale: Friday, April 17th (Brown Paper Tickets + Rushmor Records)

Previously: From The Crowd: AA Bondy – “Black Rain, “Black Rain”
Previously: From The Crowd: AA Bondy – “You Got To Die”
Previously: Photos: Bon Iver/AA Bondy – The Pabst, Milwaukee
Previously: A.A. Bondy: American Hearts

Buy: American Hearts
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Myspace: A.A. Bondy
MP3: A.A. Bondy – There’s A Reason

uwmryan @ 7:03 am
Filed under: Concerts andMP3s andNews
Review: Wilco – Pabst Theater, Milwaukee

Posted on Wednesday 15 April 2009

wilcopabst

Normally I’d refrain from reviewing shows at the Pabst, seeing that I work there. That being said, I think the name of this site, countless previous reviews, and paying for my ticket removes any sort of guilt I would normally feel in delivering you a few highlights from last night’s performance.

10 Highlights/Reflections/Remembrances of Wilco at the Pabst Theater | Night 1

Set List – The set list was a heavy draw from Yankee Hotel Foxtrot and A Ghost Is Born. After a good number of shows it was nice to hear a lot of those songs after being well acquainted with Sky Blue Sky material for the past couple years.

New Songs – We didn’t get any new songs that a savvy internet user hasn’t seen or heard before. The show started off with “Wilco The Song” and “Conscript (aka I’ll Fight).” Both sounded great, with my preference leaning towards the latter.

At Least That’s What You Said” – One of my favorite Wilco tunes, period. I was actually stunned that they played it.

I have no idea how this happens” – This line culled from “You Are My Face,” one of my favorites of Sky Blue Sky always gets me live. Lots of people around me were definitely singing along at that point.

Ashes of American Flags” – One of my favorite tunes, sounded gorgeous last night.

Mostacolli Schnapps – We all know Jeff Tweedy threw out the first pitch at Miller Park on Monday. He joked about racing sausages and throwing the first pitch. He also complained that his jean jacket still smelled of condiments from the game and likened its smell to Mostacolli Schnapps.

Poster – I love when bands make special event posters and Wilco has always done it right. If you haven’t seen the beer + Milwaukee skyline one for their two-night run in Milwaukee you can check it out here.

“Hemispheres” or “Diver Down” – A few (false) hints were dropped from stage about the title of the upcoming LP7 from Wilco. Jeff threw out “Hemispheres” (twice) and “Diver Down.” I’d say it’s safe to assume that unless “Tom Sawyer” or “Jump” make their way into their catalog that we’re still in the dark as to the title.

One By One – The more I think about it, the more I realize how cool it is that Wilco was granted permission to work on Woody Guthrie material with Billy Bragg. Their collaboration yielded two Mermaid Avenue volumes that are absolutely essential listening (and often overlooked). This track was a surprise (to me) and reminded me that it’s time to spend some serious time with Mermaid Avenue again soon.

Brewers Hat – Ok, there were some boo’s. It’s no surprise hosted plenty of our friends from the windy city last night. When Jeff Tweedy appeared on stage with a Brewers hat atop his head for the encore the place pretty much erupted with glee (sans those Cubs fans). It was a fun gesture from a Cardinals fan who stated from stage he doesn’t really understand the whole rooting for one team thing. This almost closes the wounds remaining from the 1982 world series – almost.

Discuss: What did you think of the show? Please leave your thoughts/reviews in the comments. See yall tonight!

Elsewhere: “Looking, as always, as though he’d just been roused from a couch nap, then dragged over a hedge backwards, Tweedy sang, as always, as though his soul needed water.” (Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel)
Elsewhere: Milwaukee Decider Review

Photo: CJ Foeckler
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Myspace: Wilco

uwmryan @ 8:17 am
Filed under: Concerts andNews
Pink Mountaintops :: Outside Love

Posted on Tuesday 14 April 2009

pinkmtntops

I can say with confidence that Pink Mountaintops Outside Love is one of the best releases I’ve heard this year. I’ve long been a fan of Stephen McBean’s Black Mountain outlet, blend equal parts Pink Floyd and black metal. His Pink Mountaintops moniker however is a little more subdued, more late-night zone out session, yet still owing a hat-tip in the Floyd direction.

“The ten songs on Outside Love are about or influenced by weddings in Montreal, winter, Pink Floyd’s The Final Cut, Christmas albums, that one Exile song and that one Echo and the Bunnymen song, the Bermuda Triangle, being depressed in the sunshine, people who haven’t made out yet but will in the future, The Everly Brothers, clowns in the ceilings, and bedrooms where skinheads used to live. They are songs of love and hate that read like a Danielle Steele romance novel but that would probably make for bad television.”

Outside Love arrives May 5th via Jagjaguwar. Catch Pink Mountaintops at the Empty Bottle in Chicago on Wednesday, June 10th.

Previously: Catfish Haven & Pink Mountaintops in Philadelphia

Pre-Order: Pink Mountaintops – Outside Love
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Myspace: Pink Mountaintops
MP3: Pink Mountaintops – “Vampire”

uwmryan @ 9:24 am
Filed under: Albums andConcerts andMP3s andNews andWe Like
Photos: Jeff Tweedy :: 1st Pitch, Miller Park, Milwaukee

Posted on Monday 13 April 2009

tweedy-brewers-4

Tonight two of my favorite things merged on Monday night: Wilco and the Milwaukee Brewers. Jeff Tweedy took the mound at Milwaukee’s Miller Park to toss out the ceremonial first pitch. It was a high heater, probably a ball, but I’m no umpire. While the Brewers couldn’t keep a lead, the night was a great way to kick off Wilco’s two-night stint at the Pabst Theater.

uwmryan @ 10:43 pm
Filed under: Concerts andMisc andNews
5 Questions with YACHT

Posted on Monday 13 April 2009

yacht

By Jodi Root

Last March was a CRAZY month packed full of new music. Two of my biggest nights involved Jona and Claire from YACHT; particularly their super fun dance party at Schuba’s, and then of course, getting my groove on coincidently alongside the duo during Kanye at SXSW. Way too much fun—noticing a trend here? I think so—the fly beats and visual experience that make up YACHT are undeniable. I cannot wait for their upcoming release, “See Mystery Lights,” which, according to their press release is due out soon (“late spring”). Jona Bechtolt was kind enough to answer some Q’s for our reoccuring 5 Questions feature.

Could you lend some information on the recording process of the See Mystery Lights? Where and how was it recorded, and were there any lessons learned that you’ll apply towards future recording sessions?

We recorded most of the album in Marfa, Texas, a small town in the Far West Texas desert home to an unexplained optical phenomenon called the “Marfa Lights,” extensive rare minimal art collections, and, most recently, the setting for both There Will Be Blood and No Country For Old Men. It’s an incredibly special and rare place with wide open skies and blinding light. Marfa was a huge influence on our lives and our work, and has largely changed the way we approach not just recording music, but the world at large.

We recorded the album in a casita connected to a small house we rented and lived in for two months at the beginning of 2008. We used an electric guitar, electric bass guitar, two keyboards, a small drum set we purchased on Craigslist, various percussion instruments, a single condenser microphone, and an iMac computer. We feel that our process and production technique is very high fidelity setup at low fidelity prices. We pride ourselves in doing most things completely on our own.

At your Chicago set this past weekend (questions submitted last month), you mentioned that you will be heading down to SXSW next week. What are your plans for the fest–forgive me if my memory does not recall correctly, but you mentioned you weren’t actually playing but just attending, correct? Have you played the fest in the past? Are there any bands you’re looking forward to checking as a fan?

We had a really fruitful SXSW experience this year; although we’ve played the festival in the past, we decided to cancel all of our planned performances and focus on what really matters to us, which is one-on-one experiences. With location-based Twitter updates, we managed to meet with hundreds of people over the week, talk honestly with them, and hand out our pamphlets to those seekers who were curious. This was an experiment in using the social as part of our medium, but, honestly, it was a relief to get away from the intense corporatization of music that the festival represents and have some real encounters.

Your stage setup includes a very extensive audiovisual presentation. What is your inspiration/motivation for the imagery? How were the different visuals created?

The visual element of YACHT shows is just as important as the music. We consider the video and audio to be two sides of the same coin. All the material comes from the same place of research, the same deep love of symbolic imagery, the same core experiences, and works together to tell a complete story. We collaborate on the video material using various animation softwares, still cameras with “movie mode,” and present them live with Apple Keynote and a wireless remote with laser pointer.

We’re perpetually thankful that we have the tools to present ourselves this way.

We’re always looking to uncover new favorite artists, are there any band(s)/record(s) that you could recommend to our readers?

We feel very fortunate to belong to an inclusive community in the physical and digital realms that has produced some of our favorite contemporary works. We feel that you should learn these artists if you haven’t been fortunate enough already.

White Rainbow
The-Dream
Idol Fodder
Telepathe
Hedford Vachal
Lloyd & Michael
Hawnay Troof
Planningtorock

The internet has dramatically altered the way artists can reach an audience. With things like blogs/myspace/etc, what are your thoughts on the power of the internet in terms of helping (or hurting) your music?

We would not be where we are or who we are without the Internet. That is without a doubt. We use the Internet for everything from direct communication with fans, hiring interns for various tasks, running our business, laying out our ideas in an open and comprehensible way, to a pure abstraction of manipulating data and form for aesthetic purposes. The Internet is our primary medium, it’s the substrate from which everything else comes. This is why we’re not particularly afraid of the Internet somehow hurting the salability of our music, which is something that a lot of artists currently worry about. When music becomes openly available to the people who seek it, illicitly or otherwise, it becomes much larger than the people who made it in the first place. Everyone owns a piece of it.

We think of it this way: the pieces are already in place, the current has already taken hold, and the battle of “intellectual property” is unwinnable. In the end, it’s not about being upset if someone buys our records or downloads them, and it doesn’t even matter how we feel about it, because we have no real control over the dissemination of our music. We have to be satisfied with allowing the future to take its course, and we’ll continue to use whichever tools are available to us to make the best work we can.

jodifer @ 7:05 pm
Filed under: 5 Questions w/MoB andNews
Steve Earle :: Townes

Posted on Monday 13 April 2009

steveearletownescoverart

I have been enjoying Steve Earle’s tribute/take on Townes Van Zandt songs, Townes for a couple weeks now. Out on the always reliable New West Records, I now have a free and legal download of one of the best tracks from the record, “To Live Is To Fly.

The album includes guest appearances by Tom Morello, Allison Moorer, and Justin Townes Earle, who appears on record with his old man for the first time. “Earle and Van Zandt first met when Van Zandt heckled an Earle show in 1972, the sort of thing that must be a total nightmare for most singer-songwriters. But the two stayed tight until Van Zandt’s death in 1997.” Earle says, “This may be one of the best records I’ve ever made. That hurts a singer-songwriter’s feelings. Then again, it’s some consolation that I cherry picked through the career of one of the best songwriters that ever lived.”

Steve Earle releases Townes on May 12th via New West Records.

Townes:

01 Pancho and Lefty
02 White Freightliner Blues
03 Colorado Girl
04 Where I Lead Me
05 Lungs
06 No Place to Fall
07 Loretta
08 Brand New Companion
09 Rake
10 Delta Momma Blues
11 Marie
12 Don’t Take It Too Bad
13 Mr. Mudd and Mr. Gold
14 (Quicksilver Daydreams of) Maria
15 To Live Is to Fly

Myspace: Steve Earle
MP3: Steve Earle – “To Live Is To Fly”

uwmryan @ 1:44 pm
Filed under: Albums andMP3s andNews