Oct 122010
 

pharoahe-monch_the-social_orlando_kisses-and-noiseHip hop mainstay Pharoahe Monch will be rockin’ The Social tonight as Rock(rap)tober rolls on. “Simon Says” was a mainstay on my WPRK show way back and Pharoahe Monch has continued to put out solid music ever since. Apparently his name is derived from a bad haircut that left him looking like a monchichi (remember them?). I can sympathize as my thick hair, when shaved, looks the same after a few days and earned the same comparison. My lyrical stylings never garnered any cool monikers though. Pharoahe is held as one of the premiere lyricists in hip hop and Kool Moe Dee actually regards him as one of the best, #26 on his list of all time MC’s. This is certain be a killer and probably late show at the Soash.

Oct 112010
 

beach-house-band_orlando-music-blog -kisses-and-noiseVampire Weekend continues to tour behind the well-received Contra. I’ve seen Vampire Weekend and I’m not sure how they will translate in a much bigger venue, so they aren’t a draw for me really. Beach House is the band to see tonight. The funny thing about Googling them here is in an effort to find out about the band you will end up booking a weekend in New Smyrna. This dream pop duo has close ties to Grizzly Bear lending vocals to a handful of songs while Grizzly Bear members helped to engineer their latest album, Teen Dream. The indie meets The Lion King sounds of The Very Best could be interesting too.

I’m not sure if this is an official video or not, but this is a great song. It is so simple, but it builds so gracefully and sounds so big by the end.

This definitely isn’t the official video (can’t embed it), but it’s fuckin’ weird. This song features vocals from Vampire’s Ezra Koenig, which would be pretty cool if he performed this with them tonight.

Oct 082010
 
Portland's Blitzen Trapper

Portland's Blitzen Trapper

Northwestern beard-y folks will be stopping by The Social this evening in the form of Blitzen Trapper. These guys are in the same vein as other northwesterners like Modest Mouse and Built to Spill, but embrace a slightly more country or rustic feel in their brand of indie-alternative. Blitzen’s been here several times, but I’ve missed them all. Avi Buffalo is a band of 19 year-old wunderkinds with surprising penchant for catchy, heartfelt pop rock. They were here a few months back with Rogue Wave and revealed a slightly space-y, psychedelic side to their sound.

Oct 072010
 
trip-pop

trip-pop

Too much rock (and / or pop)! My brain is shutting down, but just because I’m a pussy doesn’t mean you should miss a pretty cool show. The 80′s tinged psychedelic pop of Yeasayer and the low-fi electronic chill wave of Washed Out should make for a great evening. My hipster-o-meter is literally exploding into flames as we speak!

The cooler, non boxing muscle guys, version with the naked people can be found here.

This is the first Yeasayer song I ever heard. I was going to include their latest video for “Madder Red” – the one with the cute-y from Forgetting Sarah Marshall, but it so fucking unsettling I decided to forgo it. It reminds of the Tool videos. I love scary, gross, and weird, but there was this sort of disturbing tone about them and the Yeasayer video that made me ill.

This is a great song. i think it is a fan-made video. The others are cool too. So is the Toro Y Moi remix.

Oct 062010
 
the-national_kisses-AND-NOISE

Matt Berninger - Crooner and Songwriter for The National

OK, so I am not a huge fan of  The National, but legitimate sources will not shut up about how great they are – especially live. I will have to admit that the assortment of tunes I’ve heard from their acclaimed High Violet continue to grow on me, so I’m waiting to be “blown away” by their performance at HOB. I missed them close Anti*Pop 2006 (I think) with John Vanderslice in favor of seeing Danzig that same night.

The preceding statement for The National also applies to Owen Pallet for me. So this should be an interesting show. Just about any artist that shoots a “Take Away Show” for La Blogoteque (above) walks away with a gem.

Oct 042010
 

James and Pat of LCD Soundsystem

James and Pat of LCD Soundsystem

LCD Soundsystem embarked on what could be their last tour. The latest album, This is Happening, is critically acclaimed to say the least and enjoying accolades at a rare confluence of commercial success and hipster cred. So why would James Murphy and company choose now to hold back the reigns and end the journey?

Drummer, percussionist, DJ, and James Murphy collaborator, Pat Mahoney, took a little time after soundcheck in Philidelphia to speak with me about drums, touring behind such a well received body of work, and hinted at yearning for simpler things …

K&N: Now Wikipedia states that you were a sergeant in the 1st Madras European Fusiliers (later The Royal Dublin Fusiliers), during the Indian Mutiny. Is that true?

Pat: It is

K&N: OK, then I’m talking to the right guy

Pat: I am also a rabid anti-abortionist apparently. The Reverend Pat Mahoney.

K&N: So, for the record, who are you and what do you do?

Pat: My name is Patrick Mahoney and I play drums with LCD Soundsystem. I also DJ with James Murphy as Special Disco Version and I am a visual artist as well.

K&N: Now, speaking of drums, I’ve always been interested on how a drummer with an organic kit works with music like LCD? Working in what seems like a mostly electronic environment – mixing in rock with a little dance pop. Are you playing with tracks? Are real drums being used to add an element of live rock? Do you use special triggers on the drums or something to create a more dance-y, drum machine sound?

Pat: We play a few songs to rhythm tracks that come out of an NPC, but we – as a rule – in order to keep it feeling live, and letting it breathe as a performance, um, we have a bunch of rules as to what can come out of the NPC.

Generally, only things that would be totally synthetic sounds, like 606 drum machine beat, but we would never sample congas or something like that. If there are congas on the track, then there is someone playing congas on stage.

Typically when James records, he’ll record a drum machine, then play live drums over it. If there are live drums in the song then there are live drums on the stage. That’s generally how it works so it doesn’t sound too canned.

For the majority of the songs, I am the timekeeper – there is no backing or click tracks.

K&N: OK, so there is that sense of the songs being “alive,” and taking on new forms in concert?

Pat: Yeah, if things are exciting, it could be 5bpm faster or we could slow it down if the need arises. If there is a step-up in energy, I can step up a few bpm’s, capture the moment, and really propel the song forward.

K&N: So you can kind of orchestrate the song based on the moment? You can speed it up and everyone else can jump in with you? They’re not anchored to any kind of pre-sets or tracks?

Pat: Yeah. That’s the other thing. Another rule we have is that no one on stage can hear anything the crowd can’t hear. No one is playing with a click or anything. Sure sometimes things can go wrong, but that is live music.

[media id=50] “Dance Yourself Clean”

 

K&N: How is the tour going? How are the crowds? How is it playing from night to night?

Pat: It’s been a great – really great response. We just did a 5-week run of festivals in Europe and we are heading back in November. And we just kicked off the American leg of the tour last night in New Jersey.

K&N: Now have you been to central Florida before? I don’t think I’ve ever seen LCD come through.

Pat: We played south Florida. We played Miami for the Winter Music Conference a few years back.

K&N: So this your first trip here?

Pat: Yeah, pretty much. My mom’s family is from central Florida so there is some, I don’t know, sulfur water running through these veins.

K&N: How does it feel to tour behind such acclaimed material? Is there pressure or is just great to deliver this stuff?

Pat: What’s really nice is we’ve existed thus far, kind of in a funny place where we never had to compromise anything we do. We’ve always done this thing that is unique to us and somehow we have a public that has trusted us and come along with us for that. It’s really good and it just feels like everything is firing on all cylinders.

For a long time on this tour we weren’t playing much of this new record, which I think was frustrating for the fans and for us. One of the reasons is that we simply didn’t have enough time to rehearse, but now we are playing most of the new record and good selections from the previous two. It’s really working beautifully.

K&N: What is your favorite thing to do in each city? Do you have to hit some local food places or record stores or something like that?

Pat: Yeah, that’s part of the pleasure of touring is getting to know a bunch of cities in an intimate way. We arrive and it’s not a 9 to 5 type job or anything so we have time to wander around and explore.

pat-mahoney_james-murphy_lcd-soundsystem_kisses-and-noise

Pat with James as Special Disco Version

Record stores are high on the agenda. Finding a restaurant you really love … one that feels like a little bit of home is really important. We’re always on thelookout for good food – we like to eat. And if you’re away from home as long as we are – (wow) it’s gonna be a year and a half when it’s done – any little bit of home comfort is extremely welcome.

K&N: Yeah, I bet those deli trays [I stammer and think of the most hackneyed and storied element in the life of the performer – the deli tray] backstage get a little old.

Pat: There are only so many sandwiches a man can eat.

K&N: Ha, I haven’t found that number yet? [the fat guy in me is screaming to break free – and wants a sandwich]

Pat: Right? After I’m home a few days, I’m craving a sandwich.

K&N: You being a long-time DJ yourself, are you excited about coming to Orlando – the House music capital of the world? Any DJ’s in the area you listen to?

Pat: I don’t know right now. I actually played in Orlando – last year … with Andy Butler. It was really close to WMC so the crowds in town were smaller, but we met a lot of nice people.

I’m actually excited to go back to south Florida and shop for records. I used to live there so it is nice to go back.

K&N: What do you do to stay connected to the outside world while you are in this tour bubble?

Pat: Well, you end up getting pretty disconnected when you’re away for so long.

K&N: Are you a big fan of social media? Is that a way to stay connected to home?

Pat: I am not. I’ve been a bit, I mean, living a public life to a certain extent – we end up valuing our privacy, you know? Also, I have a 9 year-old child so I try to keep a low profile.

I tend to think if I’m not calling somebody directly, texting them or sending them an email, then I don’t really need to be in touch with them.

Also, I think I’m just old enough to not be a part of it – it’s not really a part of my life, it’s almost alien to me.

K&N: So there is not a device that you’re anchored to like an iPhone or Blackberry or something?

Pat: Ha. All that being said – I have an iPhone and I love it. I have a girlfriend that lives in Paris and I stay in touch with her through an app that allows us to stay in touch.

K&N: Skype?

Pat: It’s called WhatsApp.

K&N: What medium do you think is the biggest push for your music? Social media, blogs, satellite radio?

Pat: As you know, we were a little late coming to the whole social media thing. When James (Murphy) said we were promoting our party in New York we were still sending out emails and mass texts. Then he was like, “whoa, we could just Facebook this.” No one pays attention to anything but that anyway. So that was like a realization for us … four years too late.

K&N: It’s funny because the vibe I get from LCD is so current, it’s like future pop or something.

Pat: Yeah, I mean it’s funny. The history of electronic music is filled with all these machines that are failures – at least in terms with what their designers intended. They were trying to replicate acoustic instruments and they ended up making other weird sounds. Then other people sort of developed a kind of music using those weird sounds.

We (the band) use a lot of technology, but some of it is quite old. We are kind of caught between a bunch of things. I think it is pretty special. We don’t sound like other bands.

So yeah, I think everyone is a little ambivalent toward social technologies. People use them in the band, but it is not really “where we live.”

I’m always searching for records and one of the resources I use constantly is YouTube. There’s any number of songs you can’t find anywhere else and some weirdo collector will put a recording up with a still of the center label on the record or something. A lot of our performances and videos are there, but I’m not really sure how people are finding us.

K&N: From what I’ve seen, there is tremendous buzz about the album and band on the “blogosphere” and plenty of reviews and video from the shows.

Pat: I’m really proud of our live shows. Especially, playing festivals where a lot of people are unfamiliar with our music. The see it, they like it, then they evangelize about the live show. Then, occasionally, somebody buys a record.

K&N: How do compare festival shows to the theater shows? I can see you guys sounding great in a theater, but really being able to amp up a large festival crowd with the music.

Pat: It’s a really different experience playing to 40,000 people than it is to 5,000 people. When you’re doing a festival people aren’t there to see you. I mean there are some people there to see you, but there are a lot of people just walking by or hearing buzz about you and you have to deliver to them. And that’s a really exciting challenge.

K&N: What are you listening to right now?

Pat: Right now I’m trying to give my ears a fucking break. (laughs) I’m listening to the 3-dozen things I bought at a record store last month- basically semi-obscure disco and house music.

K&N: There is talk of LCD calling it quits, or at least taking a break from the big stuff like albums and touring and putting out random EP’s and 12 inches. So what’s next for you?

Pat: I’m going to continue to DJ. I have a music project with Nancy Whang from the band, so I want to work on some of my own music, continue working on LCD stuff, DJ with James, make some art work , so, yeah – there is no shortage of stuff for me to do.

What Pat will do in the short term is shake up the Hard Rock Live in Orlando on Tuesday, October 5th with James Murphy, Nancy Whang, Phil Mossman, Tyler Pope, and Gavin Russom and the rest of LCD Soundsystem. Brooklyn noise pop band, Sleigh Bells, is set to open the show ensuring that your hipster-o-meter will burst into flames.

Interview appeared in REAX Online 10.5.10

Oct 022010
 
Slayer-god-kissesandnoise_orlando-music-blog

Slay-Er! Slay-Er! Amen.

Assemble the “Ghosts of War,” get “Caught in a Mosh” and “Take no Prisoners!” The legendary godfathers of metal stop at the Hard Rock Live tonight to melt faces and crush skulls. Not since the Clash of the Titans Tour (1992 maybe?) stop at the Lakeland Civic Center have these bands toured together. Anyone who saw that show – the same one that Slayer recorded their double-live Decade of Aggression album – might remember a very new Alice in Chains getting booed off stage. The irony is that AIC represented the new hard rock and probably half the people booing became fans within a year. The other half never strayed from thrash and will probably be at the HRL tonight. As a special treat, Slayer is playing the entire Seasons in the Abyss album in honor of its 20th anniversary (Holy flirking schnit – 20 years!). I would have liked to hear South of Heaven (maybe they already did that) after hearing them play Reign in Blood in its entirety a few years back. Megadeth will be playing the entire Rust in Peace and singer, Joey Belladonna, is back with Anthrax. Fuck yes.

Late Belladonna era (first era) Anthrax. “Got the Time” is a fast, vicious cruncher that ushered n a more heavy groove riff type of metal.

New York metal pioneers were maybe the first people to merge rap and rock (besides Blondie) in 1987′s “I’m the Man.” They surely regretted their pioneer status as bands like Gimp Biscuit capitalized on the merger. These guys were probably the first to break away from the traditional leather and tight, peg-leg girl jeans that was the thrash uniform and wear shorts.

View some Kisses & Noise concert video from Slayer’s 2007 tour

Oct 012010
 

phantogram-orlando-music-blog-kisses-and-noiseThe first show of a completely packed October is tonight. Phantogram is at BackBooth this evening. I don’t know a whole hell-of-a-lot about this Saratoga Springs duo, but I love the first single (below)  from their album, Eyelid Movies. It will be interesting to see how they pull off the lush, shoegaze-y dream pop live. Check out images and video from the show later.

“Mouthful of Diamonds”

“Running from the Cops”

Sep 222010
 

Fuck! I’m either completely out of the loop (impossible!) or The Crowes did nothing to promote this show at HOB. I just learned about it yesterday and, sadly, cannot attend. But you kisseandnoise_concert-preview_black-crowesshould! The BC’s are relentless rock n roll machines and can arguably be noted as one of the greatest American rock bands of the last 20 years. To me, they are a “jam band” with the jangle of the Allman Brothers, the sweep of the Dead, and the heavy swagger of Zeppelin. It’s fun to hear them jam because they have great songs at the core, some funky, some sweet, some rock, but nearly all deliver and they have the power and authority to drive them nearly anywhere they want.

The songs are catchy and powerful on their own, but you add the rock crunch of drummer Steve Gorman, possibly the best rhythm guitarist (a lost art) in the biz with Rich Robinson, southern / blues style lead guitar mastery of Luther Dickinson (who replaced virtuoso, Marc Ford), the golden pipes and panache of Chris Robinson and you have a real rock n roll band. A band that can expand and contract, swell and surge with more power and rock glory than most “jam” bands – real rockers, not sandal shaking noodlers.

Some live video I found. The following are not Kisses and Noise concert video

A new dixie-land style version of Southern Harmony’s “Hotel Illness”

“Non-Fiction” from Amorica

“Descending” a sweet ballad that ends Amorica. I can’t believe they are playing this now.

A pretty, sauntering version of Three Snakes and One Charm’s “Bring On, Bring On.” Kind of an experimental ballad on the album, the live version brings this winding, elegant intro and build straight into the song. Nice.

Aug 062010
 
So much rock I'm sick - bbbblaaaaahhhh!

So much rock I'm sick - bbbblaaaaahhhh!*

The music gods have blessed central Florida for the month of October as a slew of bands, old and new, are pushing through the area:

10.1 - Phantogram – BackBooth – Saratoga Springs indie duo with dark, catchy, atmospheric pop and cute sweaters. (Phantogram song was The Coolest Song Ever! … Right Now in June)

10.2 – Anthrax, Megadeth, Slayer … sorry, SLAYER!!! – Hard Rock Live – Guaranteed face melter. Check out K&N exclusive concert video

10.5 – LCD Soundsystem with (OMG!) Sleigh Bells - Hard Rock – With blogs raving about the LCD Soundsystem’s latest work, this will be a hot show. (Sleigh Bells album review and Sleigh Bells Music)

10.6 – Owen Pallet and The National – House of Blues – Another awesome band touring on a critically acclaimed album

10.7 – Yeasayer – Firestone – Psychedelic 80′s pop and hipster delight

10.7 – Margot and the Nuclear So and So’s – Backbooth – Like a more subdued Edward Sharpe

10.8 – Blitzen Trapper – The Social – Country tinged northwestern rock, somewhere between Built to Spill and Fleet Foxes

10.9G.W.A.R – Firestone – Blood drenched awesomeness! (Concert video and review of GWAR)

10.10 – Born Ruffians – BackBooth – I like the song “Soul Brother”

10.10Bob Dylan, yes thee Bib Dizzle – UCF Arena

10.11 – Vampire Weekend, Beach House, The Very Best – Hard Rock – Beach House is the band to see. (Vampire Weekend album review) (Vampire Weekend concert review and video)

10.12 – Pharoahe Monche – The Social – Everybody say, “Hip!” “Hop!”

10.13 – Ted Leo & The Pharmacists - The Social

10.14 – Built to Spill – The Social – Band with near legendary indie cred at our storied club

10.14 – Flaming Lips - HOB – They will also be at the St. Augustine Amphitheater which would be amazing, especially if the weather is nice.

10.15 – School of Seven Bells, Active Child, Sleazy McQueen – The Social – check out the Active Child album review

10.16 – D.R.I – Firestone – Dirty Rotten Imbeciles – hardcore punkers turned thrash metalists back from a long hiatus and ready to smash

10.17 – Edward Sharpe and The Magnetic Zeros – The Social | 10.18 – The Ritz, Ybor – Cool video clip from “Home” – Looks like a great show!

10.17 – Daniel Tosh – Tampa – Along with Louis C.K, Daniel Tosh is the funniest person on TV right now.

10.18 - Caribou – BackBooth – A “do not miss” concert

10.21 – Xiu Xiu – BackBooth

10.24 – Frightened Rabbit – The Social

10.25 – MGMT - Hard Rock – Hip, fun, but might suck live.

10.26 – Phoenix – HOB – This is huge. French rockers, excuse me, Freedom rockers in Orlando!

10.27 – Thievery Corporation – Hard Rock – A killer live show and Massive Attack is there too! (Concert video from the HOB 2009, Review of the Houston HOB and VooDoo Fest shows, Concert video from VooDoo Fest 2008)

Thanks to Jess for the image!