Pavement in 2010!

17 09 2009

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As you may have heard by now, the blogosphere got word of a rumor last night that the seminal indie band Pavement was getting back together. Now we have conformation.

Via an interview with Rolling Stone, Guitarist Scott Kannberg said the reunion “happened naturally” and the group will most likely head out onto the road. They are currently scheduled for only one show at Central Park Summerstage on September 21, 2010. Yep that’s right, a year from next monday. For one, we expect to be there with our impending graduation. It is strange news to the blog since we have been listening to a lot of Pavement recently. Some great Karma I guess.

Just to keep the hype going, Matador Records announced today that pre-sale tickets will be available tomorrow morning and general admission will go on sale on September 25th.

The link for the tickets. Password: ZOWEE





A look at: Washed Out

17 09 2009

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Ernest Greene never expected his solo music project Washed Out to gain recognition. 

After graduating with masters in library sciences last year, Greene, 26, moved back to Macon, Ga, proposed to his fiancé Blair Sexton and was content making respectable bedroom pop while searching for a job at university libraries around the South.

But then the blogosphere came knocking. 

“Chaz [Bundick of Toro Y Moi] started getting a lot of attention and the guys from Nopaininpop.com sent me an e-mail, said they liked the song, asked me if I had any other new stuff,” Greene said. “So I sent them some new songs, they put it up and its kind of snowballed from there.” 

However, Greene’s prominence in the scene didn’t really take off until he sent the leading lo-fi blog “Gorilla Vs. Bear” a sample song and they decided to post it to the site. In the following months, noted blogs Pitchfork, Hipster Runoff and Stereogum followed suit and posted Washed Out songs including a remix of his track “Feel It All Around” from Bundick.

Greene has been recording music in Columbia for around three years but only recently found an interest in the fuzzed-out drones of what he now calls Washed Out. He said the name really doesn’t mean anything but if it does, it describes the overall sound of the project.

Initially, Greene’s musical endeavors were slanted more towards the hip-hop end of the spectrum. 

But working with local group Bedroom pushed Green in the direction of a more lo-fi pop and dance sound of bands like Emil and Friends and Neon Indian.

“They were really into doing aggressive dance stuff, like Crystal Castles-sounding,” he said. “It was the last month or so that is was in town and it was a natural progression.” 

His goal was to combine the lo-fi rock sound with a more danceable melody. But writing pop hooks is new territory for Greene and he doubts if he can create the intricate layers involved in certain dance pop. Instead, he decided to head in a simpler direction, incorporating subdued hooks. 

“It’s just bringing that lo-fi rock sound and marrying it with just more straight ahead dance stuff,” he said. 

For Greene and his music, it is about keeping the production simple.

On his songs, Greene plays the role of multi-instrumentalist. He relies on a studio he constructed in his bedroom and utilizes the software Reason for synth layering and programming. To add texture, samples from old records are introduced and his vocals are recorded on a simple microphone.

The uptick in Greene’s popularity even surprised Mexican Summer, the label he has been working with. Originally, the plan was to limit his releases with only 1,000-record pressings and 300 cassettes but high demand has led the label to plan a release of his album “Life of Leisure” into stores.

“I had no idea it would build to this scale,” he said. “At the time I was talking to Mexican Summer, I was thinking to myself ‘there’s no way 1,000 people would want to buy this.’”

Even with the demand, Greene still doesn’t know if he will bring his music on the road. With getting married this month, he is apprehensive about the idea of being away from home for long periods of time.

Greene has talked about doing one-off shows every once in a while and currently has plans to return to Columbia to perform at the Whig. The label he is working with currently is asking him to possibly do a showcase at the South by Southwest festival in Austin. 

“I’m into the idea of doing shows here or there but as of right now there is nothing long term planned,” 

And even though he currently lives in Macon, Greene feels a kinship to Columbia and its scene and could see moving back to the city.

“I definitely claim Columbia,” he said. 

Either way, Greene wants to continue making music in some shape or form, even if that means a record deal. But he is still guarded about the industry.

“It would be certainly nice to just make music,” he said. “I just don’t feel that nowadays with independent music it is hard to make money unless you tour a lot.”





Review: Yo La Tengo: Popular Songs

9 09 2009

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From The Daily Gamecock

Hoboken, N.J.-based Yo La Tengo is a difficult band to categorize. 

With 12 studio albums, four compilation albums and one film score under its belt, the group is difficult, if not arduous, for new listeners to enjoy. Each successive album appears to jump from genre to genre like some chaotic game of musical hopscotch. From folk to noise pop to pure indie rock, husband and wife duo of guitarist Ira Kaplan and drummer Georgia Hubley, along with bassist James McNew, have a love for the new and different in their songs.

However, it isn’t about consistency; it’s about keeping the art fresh and surprising as a whole. 

For instance, the members recently convened for a garage band side project under the alias “Condo F**ks” and released a collection of garage covers on an album titled “F**kbook.” They even created a convoluted back story for the fictional band to add to the illusion. In a way, Yo La Tengo’s mantra as a band should be “conventionality be damned” because it seems that they just don’t care what anyone thinks. Essentially, it’s their music and they are going to make it how they want.

But while Yo La Tengo has never been known for uniformity of style, it has been consistent with professionalism and aptitude when it comes to the music as a whole.

With that in mind, the group’s 12th studio album, “Popular Songs,” continues the trend of changing the sound in each song, but it displays itself as a good inlet to the band and its 25-year career.

The garage sounds of “F**kbook” have bled into this collection and combined with the standard eclectic nature of the group. On the opener, “Here To Fall,” a fuzzed-out bass drones over a string composition reminiscent of a seventies pop opus. 

There is a sensed sloppiness to the songs, such as the upbeat “Nothing To Hide” with its scratch guitars and organ lead, and the noise pop closer “And The Glitter Is Gone.” But you can tell the love and care that Kaplan and Hubley have for the songs.

Like their relationship, they have bonded over a collective eccentricity. It’s this strangeness that permeates their songs and makes something beautiful out of them. The band is able to shift from song to song in seamless fashion. 

As genres combine into a sublime concoction, the soft Latin jazz sounds of “I’m On My Way” appear to congeal with the countrified chords of the follower “When It’s Dark.”

In another point on “Popular Songs,” the crunchiness and pop grit of “Nothing To Hide” glides into the dreamy funk influenced “Periodically Triple or Double.” Kaplan’s voice has a soft reluctance to it as if he’s almost afraid to sing the lyrics. It’s these combinations, empty of shock or care, which marks the band and its discography. 

But there is nothing reluctant about Yo La Tengo as a whole. They are not afraid of testing their abilities as musicians and the conventional wisdom about music as a whole.

As long as Yo La Tengo continues to create music, it will be this stubbornness and disregard of definition that will keep it ahead in terms of creativity and risk.








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