Silkworm reissue; Remembering Ebert (in the column); Steve Bartolomei & Friends (Mal Madrigal), Acid Mothers Temple tonight…

Category: Blog — @ 1:04 pm April 11, 2013

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Couple a things…

Silkworm, Libertine (2013 Comedy Minus One)

Silkworm, Libertine (2013 Comedy Minus One)

Silkworm’s long out of print ’94 LP Libertine is being re-released by Comedy Minus One Records. “This is a double 12″ pressing with a supplementary CD including ‘The Marco Collins Sessions’ as well as two additional recordings from the band’s time at Pachyderm Studio,” says the press release. “Includes all-new artwork throughout plus a full-color insert with liner notes by Silkworm’s Tim Midgett. Mastered from the original 1/2″ tapes by Bob Weston at Chicago Mastering Service.”

I always loved Silkworm and look forward to this reissue, which is expected in July. More info here.

* * *

When did Queens of the Stone Age sign to Matador? Their new album, Like Clockwork, is being released by the label June 4.

* * *

In this week’s column, a remembrance of film critic Roger Ebert, who passed away last week. You can read it in this weeks issue of The Reader or online right here.

* * *

Tonight at Slowdown Jr. our old pal Steve Bartolomei returns. Steve is living in the Big Apple these days, but when he lived here he fronted a little folk-rock band called Mal Madrigal whose members have included Ben Brodin, Chris Esterbrooks, Mike Saklar, John Kotchian, Dan McCarthy, Ryan Fox, Eric Ernst, Matt Baum, Casey Scott and Orenda Fink. No idea who will be backing Steve tonight, though the openers are Kevin Pike/John Kotchian Duo and the Mike Saklar Trio, so there’s a clue. $8, 9 p.m.

Also tonight, Japanese psych band Acid Mothers Temple plays at The Waiting Room with Tjutjuna. $12, 9 p.m.

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2013 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

 

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80-35 Festival (Byrne/St. Vincent, Wu Tang, is that it?), Digital Leather touring with Cursive; Statistics’ Peninsula; Pitchfork streams Thermals…

Category: Blog — Tags: , , , — @ 1:02 pm April 9, 2013

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

News…

Des Moines’ 80-35 Music Festival announced what I assume is just part of their line-up for their July 5-6 gig. David Byrne/St. Vincent is good, so is Wu-Tang Clan, but I can’t believe that’s it for big names. They also announced Deerhunter, Yeasayer, Wavves, and old-school Iowa band House of Large Sizes, along with a handful more. Seems rather light for a festival that’s been around for 7 or 8 years… Keep watching their website.

* * *

Digital Leather announced on its website that it will be opening a handful of Cursive dates in June, including a June 23 gig at The Waiting Room. DL also is listed as playing The Holland Center June 7 — wait ’til you see who else is on that gig’s line-up.

* * *

Denver Dalley and his Mac, together again...

Denver Dalley and his Mac, together again…

Denver Dalley, who you know from Desaparecidos, Har Mar Superstar and years of hanging around Omaha bars, announced yesterday that there’s a new Statistics album coming out June 25. It’s called Peninsula and is being released by Afternoon Records. Check out the release page and the first single from the album, below:

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Finally, everyone’s favorite touchstone of indie rock pretension, Pitchfork, is hosting a full stream of the new Thermals album Desperate Ground right here. Can an 8.0 rating be far behind? (When it comes to the history between Pitchfork and Saddle Creek, don’t hold your breath…)

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2013 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

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The other kind of ‘lost weekend’; Mystic Valley Band dates…

Category: Blog — Tags: — @ 12:39 pm April 8, 2013

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

Throughout the last half of the year I’ve been quietly smug as person after person came down with some sort of plague-like upper respiratory illness that waylaid them for days. Not me, I said. Good living. Wash your hands. Don’t take part in the community treat feeding barrel. And so on.

Well, this past Friday, the chickens came home to roost and I found myself flat on my ass coughing up warm gobs of green pudding and wishing I was dead as my body temperature switched from teeth-chattering cold to burning hell.

Needless to say, to avoid giving all of you this same malaise, I stayed home this weekend. No PUJOL. No Touch People. No nothing. I’m just well enough on Monday to go back to work. This is what the phrase “lost weekend” is all about.

* * *

Briefly…

Conor Oberst announced last week via conoroberst.com that The Mystic Valley Band will do a two-night stand at The Slowdown July 31 and Aug. 1. The post says its the band’s only shows this year. The $25 tickets are on sale now, here. I’m sure there’s a good reason why he’s only playing two shows this summer, but he’s the only one that knows it. To local journalists, Conor is a riddle wrapped in an enigma as he no longer communicates with the local press. Oh whoa is us.

* * *

Looks like a quiet week show-wise. Steve Bartolomei rolls back into town Thursday for a show at Slowdown Jr. with a whole posse of familiar faces. But that’s all I’m seeing…

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2013 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

 

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Live Review: White Lung, Digital Leather; Interview: Touch People (at TWR Saturday); PUJOL tonight…

Category: Blog — Tags: , , , — @ 1:10 pm April 5, 2013
White Lung at Slowdown Jr. April 2, 2103.

White Lung at Slowdown Jr. April 2, 2103.

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

So the move is over, my interweb is running and I’m back.

Briefly catching up on a few things: I had heard nary a note of White Lung prior to Tuesday night’s show at Slowdown Jr. The band had that very day driven from Winnipeg to make the show — a questionable tour schedule to say the least — but you wouldn’t have known it by the metal-infused punk they laid down during their relatively short set. Impressive power behind lead vocalist Mish Way — huge rhythm section, intricate layered guitar that bordered on dark metal. Nice stuff indeed.

Digital Leather at Slowdown Jr., April 2, 2013.

Digital Leather at Slowdown Jr., April 2, 2013.

Opening band Digital Leather did their usual superb set, though they sounded more restrained than when they play their home field of O’Leaver’s, which is understandable. I still don’t know the future of this line-up, which includes Todd Fink of The Faint. Will Todd record with DL? Time will tell. It’s good to hear those synth parts on these songs again, and Fink fits right in with the band’s overall style.

On hand, about 100 people. Not bad.

* * *

Touch People a.k.a. Darren Keen celebrates the release of his new album, Brain Massage, at The Waiting Room Saturday night with openers m34n str33t, Killer Blow and the inimitable Solid Goldberg. Leading up to the show, I asked Darren a few questions about his new project (which you can check out here) and new direction. This is what he had to say:

I still don’t understand why you pulled the plug on TSITR. Is it because you no longer want to play that music or no longer have to react when people ask you to play that music? Now you can say ‘TSITR is dead. I’m Touch People’ and can shut them up, but you’re still Darren Keen and it’s still your music.

I pulled the plug on TSITR for a lot of reasons, but the easiest way to sum it up is…I had lost all of my momentum, and I was going to have to start all over making all new fans anyway, and I just wasn’t interested in doing that again with TSITR. A lot of TSITR’s energy was tied up in this false “I’m the best” pride, and having to once again go through the process of trying to appeal to a bunch of college kids makes me feel the exact opposite. I was faced with dragging a comedy hip-hop project back through the trenches, which would suck, where as, with Touch People, it’s a more real, honest, musical endeavor, so I don’t mind doing it.

It’s hard to explain. I guess I just didn’t feel like moving backwards with TSITR after 10 years of kicking ass.

Did you start Touch People to provide a clear line of demarcation in terms of your musical style? Why couldn’t you simply do this kind of music as TSITR?

I never make music to “provide” anything for the audience. I started Touch People because I was interested in studying minimalism, and I was really itching to start thinking more like a “composer” and less like a “rapper”.

What freedom does Touch People provide you as an artist?

As an artist, and as a human, I am free to do or say anything I want. The band doesn’t really provide me with any additional freedoms, except sometimes I get to shout into vocoders in front of large groups of people.

Explain the process of making Brain Massage. How would you describe the style of music? What does it mean?

Brain Massage was awesome to make. It was literally the only album I’ve ever made, where I thought about the sound and process before hand, and everything went just as I planned from creation to studio to mastering to live show.

I would describe it as minimalist composer influenced electronic music. I tell people that it has a lot of really fast notes, and odd time signatures. I use four guitar amps, a bass amp, and two vocoders, all controlled by an Akai Apc 40 and Ableton Live.

Brain Massage is lyrically not very diverse…most of the songs are about the human brain, and about feeding your brain with knowledge. The anti-intellectualism movement in America is disgusting to me, and when I hear someone talking about “biblical truth” or “intelligent design” I just want to puke my fucking guts out and stuff their mouth full of my pubic hair. People need to wake up, we aren’t dumb, illiterate cro mags wondering around the desert anymore. Science is not a conspiracy, teachers aren’t poisoning your children’s minds. We live in a real, scientific world, and that tribal mumbo jumbo is a dead scene.

What role did/does drugs/grass play in creating your music?

I have really cut back on my drug use, and either way, I never compose while on drugs, unless you consider weed a drug. I am always stoned. I don’t think it has anything to do with my process though. My talents and creativity are my own.

Are you satisfied or bitter about your career? Has it turned out as you expected or hoped?

I’m neither. I’m not bitter, although, when I was in TSITR I sometimes was. It has more or less turned out as I expected, but I HAD hoped that I would have gone further by now. I would love to be able to quit my jobs and just focus on my craft, but that’s just not a reality for me right now. Sometimes I see some of these bands that are packing out shows locally, and I realize that I have nothing in common with them. The things they think are “cool,” I think are lame, and visa versa. It’s not a right / wrong thing, it’s just a very deep divide in how we handle our bands and our business.

Please be careful not to take me out of context here, I do not want to be thought of as “shit talking” but for example, take Icky Blossoms or Universe Contest…both bands full of my friends. They are very good at what they do, which is making very fun, wild music that makes kids want to dance and make out. Its not “selling out” when they do it, because they are honestly into that sort of art / presence and that’s why they are so successful. If I were to do what they do, it would be terrible and I would be a poseur, because to me, music ISN’T this surface level, fun party time thing. Music is the ultimate healer, music is the way that I communicate myself the most clearly, and my whole life is wrapped up in it, thus my whole life is sort of my true art. I guess it’s another reason I quit TSITR…it just didn’t go deep enough for me. Does that make sense? Again, those bands are fine, and I don’t think of them as “selling out” (although they do sell out most of their shows), I feel like I personally WOULD be selling out by doing that, and like I said the first time when you interviewed me, I want to have my own path, where my success is my own.

What are your plans for getting Brain Massage heard? What are your hopes for this recording?

I am releasing the album March 29. I am playing that night in Lincoln at the Bourbon, and playing a release show in Omaha on April 6 at The Waiting Room. It’ll be up on Bandcamp and SoundCloud. I am just going to start touring a ton like I did with TSITR, and try to get out there at a very grassroots, local level. That’s all I know how to do. I’d love to find a label that was interested in my art, but I don’t really care or need that in my life at this point.

My hopes for this recording is that people will give it a listen, and that they will be inspired by it somehow.

* * *

So that’s one hot show for the weekend.

Another is tonight at fabulous O’Leaver’s, where Saddle Creek band PUJOL will make its first-ever stage appearance in Omaha (unless one of their gigs slipped under my radar). Openers are local band The Seen. This one if just $5 and will very likely be a capacity show, so get there early. Starts at 9:30.

Benson First Friday also is happening tonight. Details here. Of note for the kinky set is this here show at Sweat Shop Gallery. Find out more.

Finally tonight is Lincoln band Kill County’s album release show at The Sydney, brought to you by Hear Nebraska. Outlaw Con Bandana opens along with Electric Chamber Music (ex-Gus & Call). $5, 9 p.m. More info here.

Tomorrow night is the aforementioned Touch People show at TWR.

Also tomorrow night (Saturday) Water Liars play at O’Leaver’s with Twinsmith and Field Club. $5, 9:30 p.m.

That’s all for now…

* * *

Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2013 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

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Reception spotty…; Maha announces an announcement; Stir’s summer snores; Ted Stevens tonight; White Lung, DL Tuesday…

Category: Blog — Tags: , — @ 8:17 am April 1, 2013
Ravine at The Junction, April 24, 2000, posted for no apparent reason...

Ravine at The Junction, April 24, 2000, posted for no apparent reason…

by Tim McMahan, Lazy-i.com

A head’s up that transmissions from Lazy-i Central may be spotty over the next few days as The World Headquarters is moving…but only a few blocks from its current location. Still, access to the World Wide Web could be difficult if not impossible. So here are a few parting shots since I don’t know when I’ll be back online.

Maha Music Festival logoThe Maha Music Festival people yesterday announced that it’s going to announce its line-up April 28 at 8 p.m. I guess they felt they needed to announce the fact that they’re going to make an announcement in the shadow of Stir Cove announcing its season last week. Or maybe they’re just really excited.

The announcement: Tickets to this year’s Maha Music Festival go on sale April 15, nearly two weeks before you’ll know who you’ll be paying to see. The local stage line-up will be announced April 21; the main stage line-up will be announced April 28. What they forgot to mention in their announcement (via Facebook) is that the actual festival is August 17 at Stinson Park.

Stir Concert Cover logoBack to that Stir announcement… You can read their full summer line-up at the Stir website, but for me, the highlights are… fuck, there aren’t any. Of the 14 acts, Cheap Trick is always fun, but I just saw them play Memorial Park a couple years ago. There’s the “Kings of the Mic” tour — a cavalcade of ’90s-era hip-hop acts. I guess Ice Cube could be interesting. And then what? She & Him? They come through here every year. Avett Brothers (the only other indie act).  Zzzzz. The rest is the usual county fair circuit. If you’re Stir, those county fair acts are always a sure bet (get it?) — just think who butters their bread. Put your money on Billy Idol and Alice Cooper, and let it ride…

The other big announcement — Stir shows are now “all ages.” Why weren’t they before?

* * *

Speaking of festivals, who’s going to the Mission Creek Festival in Iowa City? Grizzly Bear, Divine Fits, Deerhoof, Iris Dement, Pujol, No Coast, White Lung, about 20 more. It friggin’ starts tomorrow…

* * *

Speaking of White Lung, they’re playing at Slowdown Jr. Tuesday night with Digital Leather, Video Ranger and Sister Kisser. Show of the Week. $8, 9 p.m.

Yes, I know Cold War Kids is Thursday at The Slowdown.

And I know that Local H is Thursday at The Waiting Room.

But I overlooked the fact that Ted frickin’ Stevens is playing at Pageturners tonight (Monday) with Vic Padios, so maybe that’s the show of the week.

What’s that? PUJOL is this Friday night at O’Leaver’s? Freakin’ PUJOL?

And BTW, Touch People’s Omaha album release show is Saturday at The Waiting Room.

Hmmm… I better rethink this whole “Show of the Week” thing.

BTW, it’s April Fools Day, and all of this is true.

See you when I see you…

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Read Tim McMahan’s blog daily at Lazy-i.com — an online music magazine that includes feature interviews, reviews and news. The focus is on the national indie music scene with a special emphasis on the best original bands in the Omaha area. Copyright © 2013 Tim McMahan. All rights reserved.

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