Review: Land of Talk – Cloak and Cipher

Posted on Wednesday 25 August 2010

By Jon Stone | @jwstone

In the mid 90s a little-known band called that dog. was touring as a Geffen label-mate with Weezer. I first saw them in that context and became, quite possibly, their biggest fan. They were eclectic and raw, especially on their eponymous release, but they also wrote beautiful pop songs with with soaring (if occasionally intentionally dissonant) three-part female vocal harmonies. They managed to mix dirty, post-punk guitars with bright pop melodies in ways that allowed a little more success with each subsequent release — and just as they were at the height of that success, they vanished.

I have this bad habit of trying to find new substitutes for my old favorites. So, as I begin this review of Land of Talk’s new record Cloak and Cipher (which dropped yesterday) it is with the admission that when I heard the song “The Hate I Won’t Commit,” my favorite on the album, I thought: that dog! But, Land of Talk deserves more than to just be a nostalgic place-holder, especially for a band that up and left me hanging. A lot more.

Here are a few other admissions: I’m not really that into this year’s chillwave/dream pop/sun-bleached (whatever you want to call them) releases from the likes of Beach House and Best Coast, and (to further alienate myself from popular culture at large) after seeing Sleigh Bells at Pitchfork, I’m still scratching my head over their seemingly universal appeal. Really? A dude playing guitar riffs over canned beats and karaoke vocals? I digress. Land of Talk, however, seems related genre-wise to these other bands. So while thinking about reviewing Cloak and Cipher, I’ve been hung up on the implicit question I’ve been mulling over above: How can my love for Land of Talk’s new release be justified against my not being blown over by Beach House and Best Coast?

So again (anticipating the flames), all I’m saying is that I’m not that into them and not that they’re not good. Indeed, Beach House and Best Coast have managed on their records to do one thing very well. I understand their appeal. (To illustrate — I just gave my wife a first sample of both bands and she said in perfect unironic seriousness –”It sounds like I’m at the Gap.” Precisely.) But I think they suffer from the She & Him syndrome: decent songs, especially on their own, but fill an album with them and you’re left without much sonic variety. Land of Talk offer that variety on Cloak and Cipher. We hear it in the instrumentation, in the dynamics, and, perhaps where it matters most, in the songwriting. It takes a few songs to build on Cloak and Cipher, but it starts in earnest four tracks in on “Swift Coin,” builds on the amazingly titled “Color Me Badd,” and by the time you get to that watershed track I mention above (“The Hate I Won’t Commit”), its clear that this is a band capable of making all kinds of noises, all of them good.

I don’t think it’s a mistake that a lot of it reminds me of my favorite female-led 90s records. I hear Kim and Kelly Deal’s influence on Cloak and Cipher and something else elusive… maybe Sonic Youth or My Bloody Valentine. Land of Talk also move in and out of territory covered by Beach House and Best Coast, but do it with more veracity and vigor. Most of all, this is a band that nurtures listener interest. I listen and want to know more: I get on the internet and read about them. I learn that Elizabeth Powell who leads the band is a member of Broken Social Scene (evidence of this crystallizes on Cloak and Cipher’s “Handburg, Noon” which sounds like it could have been on a BSS or Stars record). Not surprisingly, I also learn that members of Stars and Arcade Fire make appearances on the record. Also, Powell recently recovered from vocal-chord surgery, but you’d never know it. Her voice is clean and makes for a lovely contrast to the often crunchy guitars and rhythms.

To sum up, I like Land of Talk. I think they are better than Beach House or Best Coast because of reasons I mention above, but also because I’m on a bit of a search. I’m tired of bands that seem like fads. I want to invest. And I want records that give me a reason to invest. I want some kind of indication in what I hear of that potential equity. Cloak and Cipher is a small record, but I hear on it a band with that potential — with that spark. Most importantly, I hear a band unlikely to vanish after a few years of fad success.

MySpace: Land of Talk
MP3: Land Of Talk – “Quarry Hymns”
++
Buy: Land of Talk – Cloak and Cipher (only $5.99 digital Amazon download!)

jwstone @ 9:23 am
Filed under: Albums andMP3s andNews
Review: The Black Crowes – LC Pavilion (Columbus, OH)

Posted on Tuesday 24 August 2010

By Jeff Kollath

Nostalgia is one hell of a word. It basically means a “yearning for the past,” which in and of itself can be an unpleasant. Things are never what they used to be, and nostalgia pretty much assumes that the past was better than today. When it comes to bands, however, nostalgia can be a very good thing – a moneymaker. One hit wonders, classic rock stalwarts, and hair metal bands can all have lengthy careers, playing the county and state fair circuits. Some even book weeklong Caribbean cruises so fans can have access to the bass player from Styx.

One band unfairly stuck flush in the middle of a nostalgia trip is the Black Crowes. Breaking big at the height of the hair metal early 90s, the Black Crowes were a band with a metal look, but a Rolling Stones sound – brash, Southern, raucous, but with a soul sensibility vacant in the hedonistic music of their contemporaries. “Hard to Handle” and “She Talks to Angels” were EVERYWHERE in 1990-91; “Remedy” was EVERYWHERE in 1992-93. They had videos on MTV; they had controversy that kept them in the press (getting kicked off the ZZ Top tour, for example); and they had the sibling rivalry that provided the creative fire. Now, some twenty years later, they still are out on the road playing the three songs mentioned above, but also doing so much more that gets swept under the rug. Therein lies the conundrum for the Black Crowes.

Sunday night in Columbus, the Black Crowes burned down the LC Pavilion. A two-set, three-hour journey from the early days to the present and all points in the between, the band stretched beyond anyplace I’ve ever seen them go before. Billed as their twentieth anniversary, “farewell tour,” the band is doing a mix of two-hour, one-set shows and three-hour, two-set shows, with an acoustic set paying homage to their new record, Croweology. While the record is a bit of a disappointment (mainly a rework of their most popular tracks), the acoustic treatment is great live, with old songs like “Jealous Again” and “My Morning Song” finding a new energy. The acoustic set also gives the band a chance to explore the quieter regions of its catalog, as downbeat tracks like the heart-wrenching “Wyoming and Me” and Dillard and Clark’s obscure “Polly” were perfect outdoor Sunday evening listening. The interplay between guitarists Rich Robinson and Luther Dickinson was a sight/sound to behold. It was entertaining to keep track of the number of guitars each used – at one point, Robinson had used FIVE different guitars on FOUR songs! The final six songs of the electric set were perhaps the best single hour of music I’ve seen the Crowes perform in the fifteen odd years I’ve been seeing them live. After a countrified version of the Velvet Underground’s “Oh, Sweet Nuthin,” the band played “How Much For Your Wings” and “Bring On, Bring On,” both of which the band stretched far beyond their original five-minute length and built towards the pinnacle of the set, “Thorn In My Pride.” Another old warhorse, the band has taken this song and made it the freeform centerpiece of nearly every show they play it. The track showcases the band’s true improvisational prowess, and how far the band has come in the past two decades.

Does this sound like nostalgia act to you? It sure doesn’t to me, but therein lies the aforementioned Black Crowes Conundrum. Here is a band that is currently playing better than it ever has with the best personnel it has ever had. Chris Robinson’s voice is as good as it was twenty years, and in some ways, maturity (both the aged and spiritual kind) has made it better. He and his brother Rich continue to crank out excellent songs, surpassing much of what they did in the late 90s/early 00s. While some long for former lead guitarist Marc Ford, current guitarist Dickinson has added so much to the band, bringing a diversity of sounds and techniques to the band that Ford simply could not. Not only have the Black Crowes added some of the country blues sensibilities of Dickinson’s North Mississippi All Stars, but his ability to play soul, R&B, and funk, pushed the Robinsons to write “I Ain’t Hiding,” a splendid dance-rock track from last year’s “Before the Frost…” and to bring the soulful “Ozone Mama” out of retirement. This is a band that is now PUSHING itself, but they still cannot escape their early, overplayed hits. The regular show ended without “Hard to Handle” or “Remedy,” but the encore gave us both, with the Crowes throwing the masses the nugget of nostalgia that so many desired. It was a fitting end for a show on the “farewell tour,” but for me, it left me a little cold knowing what else the band has in its repertoire.

Acoustic Set: Welcome to the Goodtimes / Jealous Again / Ballad in Urgency / Wiser Time / Garden Gate / Polly / Cold Boy Smile / Downtown Money Waster / Wyoming and Me / My Morning Song
Electric Set: Blackberry / I Ain’t Hiding / Ozone Mama / Oh Sweet Nuthin’ / How Much For Your Wings? / Bring On, Bring On / Thorn’s Progress > Thorn In My Pride / (Only) Halfway to Everywhere
Encore: Hard to Handle / Remedy

Discuss: Have you seen the Black Crowes on this tour? Drop a comment and let us know what you’ve thought of the shows!

Buy: The Black Crowes – Croweology

uwmryan @ 1:28 pm
Filed under: Concerts andNews
Best of 2010 (So Far)

Posted on Monday 23 August 2010

I realize that we’re well beyond the halfway point of 2010, and that other blogs have already chimed in with the record’s they’re loving this year, but I was thinking about my favorite albums of the year today and decided to put them out here for everyone to see. There’s plenty of year left, so it will be interesting to see which albums stick with me until the end of December. So here goes, in no particular order, my favorite releases (thus far) from 2010.

Frontier Ruckus | Deadmalls and Nightfalls (buy)
Video: Frontier Ruckus – “How Could I Abandon?”

Strand of Oaks | Pope Killdragon (buy)
MP3: Strand of Oaks – “Bonfire”

Breathe Owl Breathe | Magic Central (buy)
MP3: Breathe Owl Breathe – “Own Stunts”

Titus Andronicus | The Monitor (buy)
MP3: Titus Andronicus – “Four Score And Seven” (Part One)
MP3: Titus Andronicus – “Four Score And Seven” (Part Two)

The National | High Violet (buy)
MP3: The National – “Bloodbuzz Ohio”

Juniper Tar | The Howl Street EP (buy)
MP3: Juniper Tar – “Birds In Trees”

Arcade Fire | The Suburbs (buy)
Video: Arcade Fire: “Ready to Start”

Sam Quinn | The Fake That Sunk A Thousand Ships (buy)
MP3: Sam Quinn – “Suite Motown”
MP3: Sam Quinn – “Gun”

Phosphorescent | Here’s To Taking It Easy (buy)
MP3: Phosphorescent – “The Mermaid Parade”
MP3: Phosphorescent – “It’s Hard To Be Humble (When You’re From Alabama)”

Conrad Plymouth | Conrad Plymouth EP (buy)
Free Download: Conrad Plymouth EP

Delta Spirit | History From Below (buy)
Video: Delta Spirit – “White Table”

Damien Jurado | St. Bartlett (buy)
MP3: Damien Jurado – “Arkansas”

Broken Social Scene | Forgiveness Rock Record (buy)
Video: Broken Social Scene – “Love Sick”

Nathaniel Rateliff | In Memory Of Loss (buy)
Video: Nathaniel Rateliff – “Shroud”

Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy & The Cairo Gang | The Wonder Show of the World (buy)
Video: Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy – “The Sounds Are Always Begging”

The Tallest Man On Earth | The Wild Hunt (buy)
MP3: The Tallest Man On Earth – “Burden of Tomorrow”
MP3: The Tallest Man On Earth – “King of Spain”

Roadside Graves | You Won’t Be Happy With Me (buy)
MP3: Roadside Graves – “Liv Tyler”

Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore | Dear Companion (buy)
MP3: Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore – “Something, Somewhere, Sometime”

Common Loon | The Long Dream Of Birds (buy)
MP3: Common Loon – “Dinosaur vs. Early Man”

Discuss: What are your favorite releases of 2010? What’s yet to be released that you’re anticipating? How does this year’s releases stack up against 2009?

uwmryan @ 9:12 pm
Filed under: Albums andNews
This Week: Concerts We Recommend + Announcements

Posted on Monday 23 August 2010

Here are the Wisconsin and Illinois shows we recommend you take in this week. Check them out below and let us know which ones you’ll be attending or ones you think should really make our list.

Upcoming Shows:

8/23 – Roadside Graves – Showboat Saloon (WISCONSIN DELLS)
8/23 – Big Head Todd & The Monsters – Capitol Theater (MADISON)
8/24 – Lou Barlow + Wye Oak – The Frequency (MADISON)
8/24 – The Wooden Birds – Schubas (CHICAGO)
8/24 – Wye Oak – The Frequency (MADISON)
8/25 – Dave Alvin And The Guilty Women – Shank Hall (MILWAUKEE)
8/25 – David Gray + Ray LaMontagne – Millennium Park (CHICAGO)
8/26 – Trampled By Turtles – High Dive (CHAMPAIGN)
8/26 – Wye Oak + Lou Barlow – Schubas Tavern (CHICAGO)
8/27 – Twin Sister – Canopy Club (CHAMPAIGN)
8/27 – Tapes ‘N Tapes – The Rave Bar (MILWAUKEE)
8/27 – Fruit Bats – Old Town School Of Folk Music (CHICAGO)
8/28 – Mighty Mighty Bosstones + Flatliners + The Bottle Rockets – The Rave (MILWAUKEE)
8/28 -The Rural Alberta Advantage – Schubas (CHICAGO)
8/28 -Trampled By Turtles + The Daredevil Christopher Wright – Turner Hall (MILWAUKEE)

Just Announced:

9/29 – Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk – Majestic Theatre (MADISON)
10/11 – Miike Snow – Riviera Theatre (CHICAGO)
10/13 – Iron & Wine – Pabst Theater (MILWAUKEE)
10/16 – Joe Pug – Metro (CHICAGO)
10/27 – Tristan Prettyman – Shank Hall (MILWAUKEE)
10/29 – The Morning Benders – Turner Hall Ballroom (MILWAUKEE)
10/29 – Woven Bones – The Frequency (MADISON)
10/30 – Gogol Bordello- Turner Hall Ballroom (MILWAUKEE)
11/26 – John Mellencamp – Chicago Theatre (CHICAGO)
11/27 – John Mellencamp – Chicago Theatre (CHICAGO)

+Bookmark our upcoming shows page for all your concert announcements+

uwmryan @ 7:57 am
Filed under: Concerts andNews
Tonight: Roadside Graves + Jeremiah Nelson (Milwaukee)

Posted on Saturday 21 August 2010

Thanks to everyone who came out for the Ten Atoms/Conrad Plymouth vinyl release party last night. We had a blast and hope you enjoy the record. Keep the good times going tonight at the Cactus Club in Milwaukee with the Roadside Graves and Jeremiah Nelson. $10, show starts at 10pm.

MP3: Roadside Graves – “Far and Wide”
MP3: Roadside Graves – “Liv Tyler”
MP3: Roadside Graves – “Ruby”
Video: Jeremiah Nelson – “Skin To Touch”

uwmryan @ 10:59 am
Filed under: Concerts andMP3s andNews andVideo
Ten Atoms

Posted on Friday 20 August 2010

I have started a label with Kyle Matteson called Ten Atoms (follow us on Twitter). We are thrilled to be releasing a limited edition, 300 copy, 4-song vinyl EP from Conrad Plymouth. In this digital age why bother, right? I enjoy the portability of music as much as the next person. It’s convenient and easy, but has relegated art to background music on computer speakers. Music deserves more. It warrants the attention of holding a physical product in your hands, soaking up the great big album art, reading the lyrics and of course the physical act of turning it over to Side B.

The music of Conrad Plymouth cuts to the bone of what it feels like to call this part of the Midwest home. There are stories in these songs.

I remember the first time I met Christopher Porterfield. I remember where we sat and him sending me home with a CD of songs he’d recorded. I never told him, but I listened to that disc a lot. Then I heard him play a studio session 91.7 WMSE. They posted that session online and I’m not exaggerating when I say I’ve played it over a hundred times. “Fergus Falls” instantly became one of my favorite songs. I’m not talking about just a fleeting favorite either. I never tire of it. I still get chills when I hear it live. Over time each of the songs appearing on this special four song collection have become favorites.

I cannot think of anything more worthy of being the first release on our label.

Purchase: Conrad Plymouth 10″ Clear Vinyl (Limited Edition, 300 copies only)

uwmryan @ 3:28 pm
Filed under: Albums andNews andVinyl