Video/Photos: Strand of Oaks & Joe Pug – Urbana, IL

Posted on Friday 29 April 2011

Wednesday night at Urbana’s Canopy Club, Timothy Showalter of Strand of Oaks warmed the crowd for Joe Pug as part of the pair’s epic 44-date tour. Though his face was shadowed under the brim of his snug Lionshead cap, his voice and subtle humor charmed. Check out his performance of “Alex Kona” above from the amazing Pope Killdragon.

I snapped some photos of both performers as well. If you’re lucky you’ll see them tonight at the sold out Chicago show at Lincoln Hall. They’ll aslo be at the High Noon Saloon in Madison on May 1st.


-jon stone

jwstone @ 2:14 pm
Filed under: Concerts andNews andPhotos andVideo
Sad Songs & Waltzes :: The Black Swans

Posted on Friday 29 April 2011

(Sad Songs & Waltzes is a recurring feature on Muzzle of Bees, where artists share their favorite sad songs. Previous contributors include Megafaun, Delta Spirit, Damien Jurado, Sharon Van Etten, Over The Rhine, Conrad Plymouth, Frontier Ruckus, Strand of Oaks, and Roadside Graves.)

Not long ago The Black Swans came through Milwaukee for a show at Linnemans. I spent a good amount of time chatting with Jerry DeCicca over coffee in my kitchen the following morning on a variety of topics. If they didn’t have another city and gig to get to I’m sure we would have talked all through that day. Good times. The Black Swans will release Don’t Blame the Stars on May 31st via Misra Records. Jerry was kind enough to send through some of his favorite sad songs below.

By Jerry DeCicca

There’s few songs, it seems to me, outside of “Old Shep,” that I like that I’d want to slap the sad tag on. Most good songs have more depth, more gray, than that one emotion and label. Then, there’s the ones who’s sadness is all art and punches you in the stomach and leaves you exhausted. Here’s some of those.

Iris Dement – “Easy’s Getting Harder Everyday” (Listen)
Making coffee’s a drag, flowers die, her husband falls asleep after sex and she doesn’t care because they have nothing to talk about. Lots of deep depression here. No hope outside the sound of her voice.

Paul Siebel – “Louise” (Listen)
Not much could be sadder than a song about a dead prostitute who everyone slept with but nobody loved.

Elmore James – “It Hurts Me Too” (Listen)
100s of versions of this song, but this is my favorite. Sadness in empathy, lack of control.

Richard Buckner – “Surprise, AZ” (Listen)
A one-sided conversation, son speaking to mother, from inside their caskets about his girlfriend and his father leaving them. Few words and a lot of mystery.

Larry Jon Wilson – “Bertrand My Son” (Listen)
About wishing his son happiness and health because he can’t play with the other children since he was born with a disability. Gut wrenching.

John Prine – “Sam Stone” (Listen)
This is how war can kill you after you return home.

Carole King – “It’s Too Late” (Listen)
Any song that begins with being so sad that you can’t get out of bed is alright with me. “Still I’m glad for what we had/ And how I once loved you”. All good people love Tapestry.

Dwight Yoakam – “Two Doors Down” (Listen)
One of the saddest song ever. A pathetic and broken man. There should be a statue of Dwight here in Columbus, Ohio, his hometown.

Related: Aquarium Drunkard Diversions :: The Black Swans on Larry Jon Wilson

MP3: The Black Swans – “Joe Tex”
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Pre-Order: The Black Swans – Don’t Blame the Stars

uwmryan @ 9:11 am
Filed under: Albums andMP3s andNews
Review: Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues

Posted on Thursday 28 April 2011

By Jon Stone | @jwstone

Cosmic Tones for Mental Therapy

On the self-titled debut by the Fleet Foxes, the band captured wide attention by releasing, arguably, the most well-crafted, vocal harmony-based folk-rock record we’ve heard since the heyday of Crosby, Stills & Nash. Those harmonies, led by the combination of Robin Pecknold’s striking voice and intensely catchy and singable melodies on songs like “White Winter Hymnal,” “Ragged Wood,” and (one of my favorite songs of the last decade) “Blue Ridge Mountains,” secured the band’s spot on the top of critics’ favorite lists, on sold-out tours, and as the headliners at a number of festivals all between its release in early 2008 and late 2009 when they finally packed things in. Two short years and the band went from relative obscurity to becoming one of the biggest acts in indie rock.

I saw the Fleet Foxes at the Newport Folk Festival at the end of summer ’09 and was impressed by how well, even in that large, outdoor setting, they recreated the sound and aesthetic of the record. And so, for the last several years I’ve been waiting with trepidation – hoping that the band can do it again. That expectation, as I’ve written before, is probably not fair, but it’s what we do with our darlings – we hold out hope that the years haven’t changed us and that our reunion will be as sweet in spite of the now-fading memories of time spent together. Nevertheless, with a record and love like Fleet Foxes, it’s difficult not to hold the band to a high standard. Admittedly however, reports of delays due to illness, nit-picking perfecting, and at least one back-to-the-drawing-board report caused those expectations to deflate, if just a little.

It’s tough, then, to describe my reaction to Helplessness Blues (out May 3rd on Sub Pop) without sounding heart-struck. The new record is being released at the best possible moment. I started listening to it a few weeks ago just as winter was releasing its unrelenting grip on central Illinois, so the warmth of Helplessness Blues seemed to be responsible for the budding trees and singing birds rather than the rotation of the earth. As summer comes, and judging from the reactions I’m starting to see from folks listening to early streams, others are likely to have the same dissociative experience. The Fleet Foxes will bring sunshine to the masses this year.

The opening track, “Montezuma,” is the perfect example of this. In some sort of animated alternate reality, the song would burst from the clouds as a sunrise, gently casting its rays into cold corners and waking up yawning wildlife. Man, that’s corny, but that may be the secret to this record: It is a musical act of shameless sincerity. When some artists make the attempt, sincerity comes off as disingenuous and cheesy — like a peck on the cheek of your mother-in-law. But Helplessness Blues is art without irony, which, given the saturated irony market, is an achievement in and of itself.

It just grows from there. Nearly every song is wonderful and positive, but I especially like the second track, “Bedouin Dress,” which shifts from that sunrise into an up-tempo midmorning jaunt toward optimism. “Sim Sala Bim,” which follows, has such a lovely lyric/melody pairing:

He was so kind, such a gentleman, tied to the oceanside
Lighting a match on the suitcase’s latch in the fading of night
Ruffled the fur of the collie ‘neath the table
Ran out the door through the dark
Carved out his initials in the bark

Pastoral? To be sure. Try listening more than twice without joining in (and considering the purchase of a collie).

The record’s centerpiece, touchstone, and namesake is “Helplessness Blues.” In addition to being musically anthemic, its message is fascinating. The song argues for a revision of American Dream thinking — one that deemphasizes the mythic American Individual in favor of useful anonymity. The functioning cog and sore orchard farmer metaphors hint toward a new collective good, “something beyond me,” that still emphasizes hard work and toil, but with different results that mere individual prosperity. Indeed, that song may be a socialist masterpiece.

As you can tell, I could go on, but I’ll just mention a few more details to be listening for: I love the flute on “The Plains / Bitter Dancer” – it’s straight off of an old Nick Drake record (see “The Thoughts of Mary Jane”). “The Shrine /An Argument” is an exercise in contrast: The vocal power of Pecknold’s line “Sunlight over me, no matter what I do” gets me every time and I find the weird horn counterpoint thing at the end (which you’re sure to hear about) utterly cool. There are glimmers of Simon and Garfunkel’s Bookends all over this record. Finally, and as a 30-something getting used to the paradoxes of activist ambitions/intensions matched against the temptation of ever-encroaching easy ambivalence, “Someone You’d Admire” seems to speak directly to me as does the hopeful message of “Grown Ocean.” Indeed, among other successes Helplessness Blues has a keen sense of audience.

One fascinating residual effect of the new album’s affect is the shadow that it casts over the debut. Helplessness Blues is so strong from beginning to end, that the first album, despite its undisputed goodness and success, feels like a “Baroque pop” relic. Many of the old songs sound now like mere exercises or warm-ups for the real thing which we now, happily, possess.

Buy: Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues

jwstone @ 10:08 am
Filed under: Albums andNews
The National – “Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks” (Milwaukee)

Posted on Wednesday 27 April 2011

The National returned to Milwaukee for an encore performance at the Riverside Theater in support of their fantastic album, High Violet. Before the show the band spent time with John Axford at Miller Park where the Brewers played host to their hometown Cincinnati Reds. That visit carried through the rest of the night where members of the band donned Brewers hats and mentioned Axford from stage.

Above, check out a gorgeous version of “Vanderlyle Crybaby Geeks” delivered acoustically and sans microphone to the Milwaukee crowd to end the show.

Discuss: What did you think of the show? Thoughts on Twin Shadow and The Pains of Being Pure at Heart? Drop a comment with your thoughts/reviews of last night’s show.

uwmryan @ 11:51 am
Filed under: Concerts andNews andVideo
Review: Arcade Fire – UIC Pavilion, Chicago

Posted on Tuesday 26 April 2011

By Jon Stone |@jwstone

My relationship with Arcade Fire has, for years, been a conflicted one: The hype. The swagger. The spectacle. The brilliance. All of it has fascinated, confused, and at times chaffed at my music sensibilities. Perhaps it is because if Funeral had come out in 1994 instead of 2004, it would have been precisely the kind of record I would have been hopeless for: room plastered with posters, hand-drawn reproductions of the current “Arcade Fire” font on my notebooks, matching Win Butler haircut. In 2004, though, I was reevaluating my obsessions with bands and artists — like Win, my older heart had grown colder. So, instead of adulation I hung back, like a cynical, aging, hipster-in-denial. “Mtv, what have you done to me?”

Truth be told, Arcade Fire kind of frighten me. Like many, I find their menacing steampunk appearance and the stark cultural critique on all three records eerily prophetic and often bitingly so. But the critic in me is tempted to downplay prescience and focus instead on posturing. Confidence, especially in a large, mulit-membered band, usually plays publicly as hubris. It’s been hard not to see Arcade Fire through that lens.

My perspective, though, is shifting. Since The Suburbs was released last year I’ve been watching and listening more closely to the band. Somewhere between Win and Will’s goofy but upbeat interview on NPR last May when “Month of May” and “The Suburbs” were premiered, Richard Reed Perry’s smiley appearance on stage with the National at the pre-Lolla show at the House of Blues, and, most of all, the band’s devotion to Haiti through organizations like Kanpe and Partners in Health, I’ve become convinced that they aren’t obsessively self-centered. They may even possess humility, which among arena rock stars, is a rare and precious gem. Humble confidence, it turns out, may be the perfect paradox for summing up a band like Arcade Fire.

Last night, Arcade Fire closed out their three-day residency at the UIC Pavilion in Chicago. The National opened the show with a short but intense set (see set list below). And while anyone who is a fan of The National would agree that we’d rather see them with the freedom of the headliner, they were gracious. They kept what could have been a show-stealing performance within respectful bounds. In other words, Matt (sadly) didn’t come unglued. Both Richie and Win joined them on stage during their set, the latter for some lovely harmonies on “Start a War.”

Without expecting it, Arcade Fire came out and blew me away. It’s that simple. Maybe it was the fact that I spent the first three songs of the show in the photo pit two feet away and snapping as many pictures as I could. Those first three songs, “Ready to Start,” “Keep the Car Running,” and “Haiti” will be seared in my memory. It was one of the most thrilling moments of my concert-going career. Post photo-pit, I had to move out to my more conservative (but still great) seat in the bleachers where I enjoyed the rest of the show. I quite like that perspective. Watching the crowd go all dance-party when “Wake Up” shifts from anthem into “You-can’t-hurry-love” sock hop was a priceless thing to witness.

I’m also finding that it’s the moments — the details –  that make a live performance: The white pants and unrelenting energy of Will Butler; the extended phone-off-the-hook piano intro on “We Used to Wait”; the moment when I looked around fruitlessly for the horn section during “No Cars Go” only to realize it was Régine Chassagne’s accordion(!). They closed the main set with Funeral‘s “Rebellion (Lies)” and my favorite moment of the night, perhaps, was when, after the band left the stage, the crowd continued to sing the little violin melody that closes that song. The stage was dark, the band absent, but the audience was unified by a single stirring little melody. Loved it.

The whole show, really, was one of the best in recent memory.

Additional hi-res photos from the show can be found here.

I’ve been looking at the set lists from all three nights, and while the order shifted around a bit, there were only small deviations. Monday we got “Empty Room” and “Suburban War”, Sunday’s set included “City With No Children” and “My Body is a Cage” (two of my favorites. darn!), and on Friday they played “Sprawl I (Flatland)”, which, I believe, was its live debut.

Arcade Fire’s setlist: Ready to Start / Keep the Car Running / Haïti / Rococo / Empty Room / Suburban War / The Suburbs / The Suburbs (Continued) / Month of May / Neighborhood #2 (Laika) / No Cars Go / Neighborhood #1 (Tunnels) / We Used to Wait / Neighborhood #3 (Power Out) / Rebellion (Lies) Encore: Intervention / Wake Up / Sprawl II (Mountains Beyond Mountains)

The National’s setlist: Anyone’s Ghost / Secret Meeting / Bloodbuzz Ohio / Slow Show / Squalor Victoria / Afraid Of Everyone / Conversation 16 / Apartment Story / Driver, Surprise Me / Fake Empire / Start A War / Mr. November/ Terrible Love

jwstone @ 2:34 pm
Filed under: Concerts andNews andPhotos
Okkervil River

Posted on Tuesday 26 April 2011

I made my way to The Scoot Inn last night for the Okkervil River show that was announced over the weekend. I had lost touch with the band over their past few releases, in fact, I’m quite certain I’ve never heard The Stage Names or The Stand Ins. I have absolutely no reason for this falling out, I just stopped.

Last night’s show reminded me what I’ve always loved about the band – their live show. The show allowed the band to showcase in full their forthcoming album, I Am Very Far. You could sense the band’s excitement to get these songs out in front of people. The reaction was great as the band plowed through the entire new album plus a hearty mix of old favorites.

It’s safe to say they won me over last night as did opener Dana Falconberry, who was absolutely fantastic during her opening set.

MP3: Okkervil River – “Wake and Be Fine”
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Pre-Order: Okkervil River – I Am Very Far

uwmryan @ 8:54 am
Filed under: Albums andConcerts andMP3s andNews