Live Pics: El Vez @ Subterranean 12/9/06
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Is it worth the import?? We think so. This week's Friday 8-Track consists of 8 UK artists whose LPs won't see a release here in the US until 2007, if at all. But for those of us who just can't wait, here's a little preview of some records you may want to drop a few extra quid for. Check out tracks from Lily Allen, The Veils, The Fratellis, Jarvis, and more...
FYI: The Artist name is linked to their homepage. The Track Name is linked to the MP3 file.
Program 1:
1. Lily Allen - "Alfie"
(from Alright, Still LP)
2. The Veils - "Calliope!"
(from Nux Vomica LP)
3. Jarvis Cocker - "Black Magic"
(from Jarvis LP)
4. Larrikin Love - "Forever Untitled"
(from Freedom Spark LP)
Program 2:
5. The Fratellis - "Creepin' Up The Backstairs"
(from Costello Music LP)
6. Fujiya & Miyagi - "Collarbone"
(from Transparent Things LP)
7. The Ordinary Boys - "Nine2Five"
(from How to Get Everything You Wanted in Ten Easy Steps LP)
8. The Long Blondes - "Weekend Without Makeup"
(from Someone To Drive You Home LP)
MP3s are for preview purposes, support your musicians. Go pick up or special order their IMPORTS from your favorite record store.
Now a new RFC weekly feature: The Friday 8-Track, which will ordinarily consist of a mix of 8 recommended MP3 tracks for your download enjoyment.
PROGRAM 1: RAP ELECTROCLASH - [Click Here For The Download] - Time 16:16File Size 18.6MB
1.)"Hypnotize" - Notorious B.I.G.
I think the bass line and the samples say it all, but if this song doesn't get your booty shakin' you're probably dead. -Jim
2.)"Tir Aux Pigeons" - Prototypes
This shit is so damn HOT! French-electro-garage at it's absolute finest. If you haven't heard these guys yet, do it before everyone does! -Jim
3.) "New Jack Hustler" - Ice-T
I still remember riding my BMX around listening to the OG, and this song still gets me so hyped up that I feel like I can take out any middle-school-aged kid around, maybe even two of them. -Derek
4.) "Lovertits" - Peaches
What do you do if you plan a party and nobody comes?
You pour a PBR down you pants, smear your lipstick, dust of that strobe light from your college dorm and start humping your furniture. You may want a get out a good cry while doing so. Loser. -Adam
PROGRAM 2: LO-FI FUNK SOUL - [Click Here For The Download] - Time 12:18File Size 14.1MB
5.)"Down to the Nightclub" - Tower of Power
Great drumbeat that fits perfectly with an impeccable horn composition. One of my favorite funk songs. Also, Bump City might be one of the greatest album titles ever. -Derek
6.)"Legal Man" - Belle and Sebastian
It's got that perfect swingin' 60s sound . . . like when you're out dancing with somebody and you already know you're gonna have sex later. -Jim
7.) "After The Dance" - Marvin Gaye
This song is like spanish fly. That quiet cutie sipping 7-UP all night long, sitting by the veggie platter, will soon be quivering and writhing against your back. The instrumental version will come on and she will lead you into the closet. The MOOG solo will make her beg you to sodomize her on your grandmothers fur coat. Luckily she passed on sometime ago and you won't have to explain those stains anytime soon. -Adam
Ready to take the BANDWIDTH stage by storm on Friday (12/08), Chicago's own PORNADO!, a newly annointed 3-piece who revel in the British new wave goodness that the The Faint bathe in. Reaching back far enough to sound comfortably familiar, but stamping their own signature touch and lustful moans on the style, PORNADO! create very delectable and danceable music. They are determined to get someone some action Friday night. We posed a few questions to Trout Blood of PORNADO! via email this past weekend.
Can you introduce the band?
Trout Blood (keys, lead vocals). H.Carl Lowendorf (guitar, vocals). Amy Day (vocals,other keys).
When not playing as Pornado!, how do you busy yourself?
H.Carl is a carpenter. Amy is a grad student in some sort of performance artsy-fartsy type thing. Trout gets by on his good looks and undeniable charm.
How do you approach the songwriting process?
Usually, I hear a song I like on the way home. I come home and try real hard to steal it. I'm not very good at playing music so it ends up sounding completely different. A song is born.
Do you have any influences?
We like all sorts of stuff. Mostly late 70s/early 80s soft rock. H.Carl likes stuff with guitars in it. I don't know what the hell Amy likes. *(an undercover conversation with Amy later uncovered she "likes musicals" -CG)
With Amy being a new addition to the lineup, how will this affect the band creatively?
I make Amy write the vocal melodies and lyrics to the songs she sings. She's not me, so...it's different. And now there's another keyboard.
What is Pornado's plan for the future?
More shows. Another record. World peace.
What can we expect from your set on Friday?
You can expect to be unwittingly, inexplicably compelled to grab whomever it is next to you and make sweet, sweet love all night long. And probably to get a bit drunk.
What is you favorite part about Chicago?
Ummm...standing around waiting for buses and trains in the winter.
Who are you listening to right now?
The Carpenters.
WORD ASSOCIATION!
Paint - clowns
Lips - clowns
Rock - clowns
Rain - Jimi Hendrix
Thanks for your time, Trout!
PORNADO! will inject Friday night with just the right amount of sex, sweat, and dance beats to make you overheat in the dead of winter. Be sure not to miss their raucous set!
Download: PORNADO! - "Leaving Me"
They are fun, dancey, energetic, and the perfect headliner for December's BANDWIDTH. Flying in from the bustling metropolis of DeKalb, IL, Inspector Owl is a fanciful five-piece guaranteed to induce non-stop body shaking with their enthusiastic live performances and their delicate brand of electro-indie-pop akin to Polyphonic Spree, The Faint, and Modest Mouse. Inspector Owl's 2005 EP release Patterns of Nerve-Cell Action is an exciting taste of the great things to come and from what we gather we can expect that new album very soon. We took the opportunity to bounce some questions off of singer-guitarist Corey Wills (who also moonlights in Kid You'll Move Mountains).
I love the history of names, where does Inspector Owl come from?
The name came from my friend Chi Chi. We at one point were called IO. There are the same number of bands named IO as there are atoms in your finger nail. So we decided to change it, we couldn't come to a consesus on the name so we decided to make IO actualy mean something. We had a contest on our website, fans and friends submited their ideas, the winner was to get tacos courtesy of the band. Thankfully Chi Chi won, saving us from having an awkward meal with a stranger.
When writing songs, where do you find the inspiration?
Song inspirations come from alot of places, sleep, lack of sleep, sometimes airplanes. Songwriting is different now. I used to write the songs and programing and then bring almost complete songs to the band. Now writing is more organic. I don't even bring finished songs to the band. We all work off of general structures and develop the songs from there.
Are you guys working on a new recording?
We have a new record, it is pretty much done. It will be out in very early 2007. We should be announcing the CD release show very soon. Very soon indeed.
Who are your musical and/or non-musically influences?
Radiohead, Jarvis Cocker, Tim Burton, Terry Gilliam, Danny Elfman, Oingo Boingo and Waffles.
Oooo. What do you think of the new Jarvis Cocker?
The Jarvis Cocker album is fantastic, I think they are some of the best songs he has written since Pulp's Different Class.
So, who else have you been listening to these days?
I have been listening to the new Shins, Bloc Party, and Damien Rice.
Lightning ROUND!
Clouseau or Gadget?
Clouseau, but the Peter Sellers Closeau, not the Steve Martin one.
The Faint or Bright Eyes?
For me, the Faint.
Nocturnal or Diurnal?
Nocturnal
Thank you very much for your time, Corey!!
Indulge yourself in all that Inspector Owl has to offer on Friday night (12/08) when they headline BANDWIDTH.
Download: Inspector Owl - "Spaceman Spliff"
Rock out with your Glock out! Thanks to a tip from our friends at Subterranean, we were turned on to Darling, a young 4-piece from Chicago that play an intelligent, melancholic pop loaded with lush harmonies and moving soundscapes. Their sound touches upon the blissfully, sorrowful notes of Jeff Buckley mixed with the deeply layered textures of Television. Like the calm before a storm, Darling will get you in the mood for aural pleasures when they grace the SubT stage on Friday (12/08) as a part of BANDWIDTH. We spoke with Jeff Schneider, Nick Voss, Christi Frazier of Darling in between study sessions for their semester finals.
So, who's who? and what do you all do?
Jeff: The band is Nick Voss who is a mechanical engineer, Ray Klemchuck a contract worker at the Museum of Science and Industry, Cristi Frazier a graduate student in neuroscience, and I'm (Jeff Schneider) a graduate student as well in pathology. Cristi and I met at the University of Chicago during orientation and I asked her if she'd like to add some vocals/keys to some of the songs and the rest is history. Ray I've known off and on since high school. He's the baby in the band and only 22 but makes up for in musical intuition(more than the rest of us have). Finally there's Nick, the oldest member of Darling and a friend of mine since the fourth grade where we used to play saxophones together. We released an album in the summer of '05 but two members left the band last november and started The Kinzie House.
You mention in your myspace profile that this project was created to balance chakras, how has it been working thus far?What's your approach to songwriting?
Jeff: I approach songwriting as if I'm pushing 50 and balding. I write songs from a standpoint that time slips away whether you want to or not. But more importantly, I write songs in a feeble attempt to get my mind to work for me.
Nick: and I throw the toupee back on "Old Man Schneider's" balding head to remind him that time only slips away when he looks back. He's the man with the tunes, but I like to shape them into forms that his original music communicates to me.
Where are you all at in terms of recording an album?
Jeff: We had a recording session September 1st where we layed down 7 new songs but are in the works of dubbing vocals and mixing. Making an album is a lot like having a hobby. There is always more you can learn and it begins to really get inside your head
Who are the major influences on your music?
Jeff: As far as musical influences go I usually go with the standard Jeff Tweedy/Velvet Underground answer since that is what I listened to as I was growing up. Then I have to throw my brother as someone that helped personally guide me through the progression of becoming a musician
To the casual listener, how would you describe your sound?
Jeff: That is the hardest question of this whole interview. It is so hard to nail down your sound but I'll just go with what people describe us as. Television meets Pavement with Neil Young-esque vocals. I hate making up those strange musician morphs but I guess its better than saying we sound poppy which is what I was going to go with.
What can the Bandwidth audience expect from your set on Friday?
Jeff: Vocal Harmonies, Handclaps, and Glock!