Give a Glimpse of What You Got: A Night with Dinosaur Jr.

dinosaur jr.

The distance from Amherst to Cambridge is less than 100 miles, but the road that led Dinosaur Jr. to the Sinclair on Wednesday has been much longer. Their journey spans 30 years and includes a name change, acrimony that is the stuff of legends, a founding member being fired, and an against-all-odds reconciliation.

Dinosaur Jr. formed in 1984 at UMass Amherst and quickly shaped the landscape of indie/college rock. Their second effort, You’re Living All Over Me, is a perfect representation of the band’s strengths. J Mascis shows why he’s one of the greatest guitarists of all time, Lou Barlow frays the edges to give their sound some needed grime, and Murphthe linchpin of the bandkeeps the two in check with perfect drumming. If you need to understand Dinosaur Jr. for all their highs and lows, You’re Living All Over Me is the band’s thesis.

Mascis is the band’s super-ego, with his reserved demeanor yet obvious brilliance and deep emotional core that he only lets shine through his music. Barlow is the band’s id as he strives to add rawness and grit to Mascis’ stoicism. Murph is the ego as he balances the two, never letting one get too much control.

During their set at the Sinclair, it looked as though both nothing and everything had changed in the 30 years they’ve been together. There were no hints of below-the-surface resentment or anger. Barlow’s anti-Mascis missive “The Freed Pig” is now just a faint memory. The two have long since buried the hatchet, but it’s entirely clear that these are two incredibly talented people who can only maintain a working relationship and not a friendship.

Mascis is famously reserved and that doesn’t change when he’s on stage. You could have counted the words he said on one hand and had fingers left over. Barlow made a few overtures  toward the crowd but in the end, Dinosaur Jr. was here for one thing onlythe only reason the band has ever had to existto shred.

The trio came prepared to blow out as many eardrums as possible. Both Mascis and Barlow had stacks of at least 6 amps each behind them, like they were trying to build an impromptu Wall of Sound. Murph’s drumkit was placed between the two rather than the typical rear positioning for a drummer. Whether this was designed to provide more sound or to literally keep him between Mascis and Barlow is open to interpretation.

The set was career-spanning and included greatest hits, deep cuts, covers, and a couple of tracks from last year’s great Give a Glimpse of What Yer Not. The decades of partnership and the traits of each member shined through the brightest. If an audience member had never heard of the band they could have gleaned the personalities and history of the band just from the performances.

Mascis was practically entombed by his amps, barely moving around the stage, and most impressively, not breaking a sweat while he laid down devastating solo after solo. “Start Choppin’” was a clinic of guitar work and Mascis’s pulse probably registered the same as if he were reading a particularly dull book.

On the other side of the stage, Barlow thrashed his bass and looked like he was beating at the walls of a cage to break free. His long hair and beard covered his face and he was barely visible, but he made his stage presence known as he throttled his instrument.

In the end, Dinosaur Jr. are a product of their environment. They are New England writ large. Outwardly they are the ideal picture of professionalism and sustained success. But their past includes plenty of turmoil and issues that simmered too long before spilling over. They are human nature in a band: messy, brilliant, and trying to keep it all together. Their set at the Sinclair was a homecoming with no emotional fanfare, but it doesn’t change the fact that they’re the greatest band Massachusetts has ever produced.

REVIEW: The National (Wang Theatre 10/5)

Consistency is good.

There’s a scene in a Broad City webisode (lost to the impermanent hole of the internet) in which Abbi Jacobson’s character speaks of Laura Linney, the four-time Emmy and two-time Golden Globe winner, as a bankable star. Abbi says “Laura is consistently consistent.”

I would offer up the same appraisal of The National, a brilliant, consistently consistent rock band from Brooklyn you probably know a thing or two about. At the Wang Theatre on Thursday night, the band kicked off its first proper North American tour in support of Sleep Well Beast with a rollicking two-hour set.

You could measure palpable energy from a band that’s taken some time between album releases. Singer Matt Berninger stalked the stage drinking wine (with ice) and fired not-quite-empty Solo cups into the crowd, trying to reach the balcony. He also jumped in the crowd to deliver his lines face-to-face with fans.

It feels as if he is possessed by the performance. On studio albums, Berninger delivers many lines with a demure approach. Live, the words themselves seem to escape with force. That sometimes came back to haunt him – he restarted the barnstormer “Turtleneck” because he flubbed the chorus. (He later compared the song’s lyrics to the game Chutes and Ladders. And, during the encore, he skipped a chorus of “Lemonworld.”)

The backing band itself was operating on another level. Nowhere was that more apparent than on Aaron Dessner’s guitar solo on “The System Only Dreams In Total Darkness.” The set was full of nostalgic surprises, including a seemingly rare performance of “Secret Meeting” off Alligator and “Son” from The National’s debut record.

Plus, the stage techs basically were eighth and ninth members of The National, running on stage every 90 seconds or so to untangle cables, or to make sure when Berninger ran out into the crowd that he’d have enough slack. They were the real MVPs.

The National isn’t just a great band to hear live, the visuals and lighting were also amazing. When the band walked out to the stage, the large screen on stage showed a backstage view of the band getting ready – a neat touch.

The National is a band often derided for being boring. I suspect it has to do with the subject matter – many songs are sad. But this perception feels misguided, after all, the band’s live show is engaging and strong. Having seen them three times, I could even say they’re consistent. Consistently consistent.

Adia Victoria opened the show with a set of blues-infused songs. The artist, currently based in Nashville, leans into slow-burn tracks. She is slated to play Afropunk in New York this weekend.

REVIEW: together PANGEA w/ Tall Juan & Daddy Issues at Sonia (10/1)

Less than a week after releasing their latest album, Bulls and Roosters, together PANGEA kicked off October by playing one of Boston’s newest venues, Sonia, alongside Tall Juan and Daddy Issues. Being just the fifth stop, Boston fans were treated to a rare sweet spot along the band’s tour. They benefitted from all the best perks of a new record, as the band had several nights under their belt, but were still far from worn out. Needless to say, it was a great show.

With doors at 7:00pm, Sonia was still curiously empty when Daddy Issues began setting up on stage. At 7:30pm, with still almost no one there, Tall Juan stuck out even more than usual, towering over the meager pool of fans in his red windbreaker and long, long, red patterned pants–––even when sitting down. By 8:00pm, the floor had filled in some (but not much), and Daddy Issues took to the stage.

Despite the poor showing, the trio of grunge-pop Nashville musicians commanded a strong stage presence, filling the gaps in the crowd with their charisma and cool vibes. And when drummer Emily Maxwell ran into problems with her floor tom after the second song, “Locked Out,” vocalist/guitarist Jenna Moynihan and bassist Jenna Mitchell didn’t miss a beat, introducing the next song while Tall Juan’s drummer lent Maxwell a helping hand. When the tom was fixed, the crowd clapped and cheered, and Daddy Issues introduced their next song about “breaking up and flipping out.” Throughout the set, Moynihan continued her quirky and comical introductions, following up with “another one about being single,” and a second about “not wanting to do anything–––ever.” Daddy Issues finished around 8:30pm, walking off stage to an encore call for “Dog Years,” which they shyly yet proudly declined, having already unplugged with no expectations for an encore response.

As Daddy Issues cleared the stage, Tall Juan began setting up, pulling their drum kit and amplifiers right to the edge of the stage. Juan checked his microphone, revealing his heavy Argentinian accent, and his band mates poked fun at the rip in the cheek of his pants as they tested their instruments with beats and riffs from “Iron Man.” At 9:00pm, Juan picked up his beat up old acoustic guitar and began to strum, playing a showy Spanish riff. But after just one song, he announced that he was “so tired,” and needed someone to come on stage and help him out on the drums. After a moment of awkward prodding and backwards glances, a sleepy looking kid sporting a blue tee shirt emblazoned with the Garelick Farms milk logo climbed up and sat behind the kit. Craning his neck back, he looked up at a grinning Juan for guidance and asked, “So, do I just play anything?” to which he replied, “Just follow me!” The two played a surprisingly cohesive few songs, after which Juan offered his temporary drummer a warm thanks and handshake. He then invited his drummer, Dante, and bassist, Pat, to join him for the remainder of the set. As the night went on, Juan continued to indulge the crowd in his quirky and spontaneous personality, ripping through a cover of “Breed,” pulling off his tee shirt, and rolling around on the floor licking the microphone stand. Every song was played at breakneck speed, and when combined with his height and flashy style, Juan sounded and looked like an Argentinian Joey Ramone. In an all too short set, Tall Juan finished around 9:30, with Juan hugging both of his band mates before walking off stage.

With the crowd still roaring from Tall Juan’s performance, together PANGEA wasted no time, jumping on stage and preparing their gear. At 9:30pm, the band picked up their instruments and vocalist William Keegan launched into the one-two punch of “Alive,” and “Looked In Too.” Next, they finally cracked into their new material with “Kenmore,” receiving a positive response from members of the crowd, many of which had already memorized the lyrics. After “Kenmore,” the flood gates were left wide open, and the band jumped freely between songs from their now impressively extensive discography. Highlights included “Badillac,” and “Is It Real?,” both led by the lively and powerful drumming of Erik Jimenez and wonderfully polished guitar of Roland Cosio. Feeding off of Jimenez’s raw energy, bassist Danny Bengston danced around the stage, swinging his bass to songs like “The Cold,” a new track that sounds like a Black Lips song written after a movie marathon of Spaghetti Westerns.

Halfway through the set, the band paused for a bit of banter with the crowd. Keegan commented that he’d never played a venue that didn’t serve alcohol (Sonia does not have its liquor licence yet), to which Bengston responded by cheerfully taking a swig from his can of Polar Seltzer. To end the set, together PANGEA played three of their strongest tracks: the always uproarious “Too Drunk to Cum,” the fast-paced and upbeat “River,” and the heavy mosh-friendly “Sick Shit.” But after a quick flick of the house lights, together PANGEA returned to the stage for a fantastic two-song encore. Unexpectedly, Keegan began by handing the microphone over to Bengston for “Alison,” the last track on Bulls and Roosters and undoubtedly one of the album’s most catchy ones. Sung by Bengston, “Alison” is a slower yet steady love song, driven by persistent tambourine shakes from Jimenez, overdriven guitars from Cosio and Keegan, and a catchy bass groove from Bengston. To close the night, together PANGEA shifted back to their darker more grungy roots with “Night of the Living Dummy.” By the end of the song, Keegan was howling the lyrics with everything he had, but just as their instruments began to fade out, the band dove into the chorus of The Cranberries’ “Zombie,” ending the night on a strange yet perfectly fitting high note.

PHOTOS: Manchester Orchestra w/ Tigers Jaw and Foxing at The Palladium (9/30)

To promote their latest album, A Black Mile to the Surface, Manchester Orchestra hit the road with Tigers Jaw and Foxing for an incredible show at the Palladium on Saturday, September 30th. Foxing opened the event with songs from both of their heartfelt albums and had the crowd screaming along. The lead singer alternated between belting the lyrics and playing the trumpet. Their set was full of emotion and was an interesting contrast to the next performers. Next up was Tigers Jaw, who was more upbeat and pop-punk. They played multiple songs from their newer albums and refrained from playing too many throwbacks. That didn’t stop them from throwing in a song or two from their debut. The audience was dancing and crowd-surfing throughout the set and it was a good warm-up for the headliner. As soon as Manchester Orchestra took the stage, the crowd lost it. They opened with a song off of their new album but didn’t hesitate to play fan favorites. Within the first 5 songs, they played songs like “Pensacola”, “Shake It Out”, and “I’ve Got Friends”, throwing it back to their most popular albums. Andy Hull put on an amazing performance, as well as the rest of the band.

WATCH: Loone Live at Studio 52

Montague Massachusetts’ Loone stopped by Studio 52 in Allston before their show with Told Slant in Cambridge on August 22, 2017 to play some songs for us. We were excited to hear new songs and to see them play in such an intimate environment, and we’re equally excited to share this session.

Many of the songs performed will be appearing on Loone’s debut LP, A Bright Hollow, set to be released in 2018. The record is engineered by Will Kennedy (Ampere, Orchid, Longings) at Dead Air, produced by Felix Walworth (Told Slant) and mastered by Cameron Boucher (Sorority Noise). We couldn’t be MORE excited to hear the rest of the record.

Catch Loone on October 5th (this Thursday) at the Middle East Upstairs with LVL UP and Littlefoot!

Facebook event | Tickets

INTERVIEW: Rex Mac Talks Depression, Self-Love & ABLOOM

 
Rex Mac is a Boston-based Asian American who can be seen sporting his many artistic hats all throughout the city. His versatility overflows into what’s most important to him: his music. It’s not often, especially in hip-hop, when someone is able to effortlessly dominate 16 bars like a monster and seamlessly show that they are a real person, with real emotions, which are just as important to talk about as they are to acknowledge. 
 
We spoke with Rex Mac about his new album, his dad, and his feelings ahead of Boston Hassle Fest 9 coming up in November.
 
Allston Pudding: What was the process like getting to this point in your career as a musician? What purpose has your discography served in getting you to this point? 
 
Rex Mac: The process thus far has been dynamic. Many high highs and low lows. I’ve been making beats with MIDI keyboards since age 12, and for a while, that was just me messing around to get a reaction from my father. He really dug that I could replicate the melody on keys from Ludacris’ “Roll Out” back in 2001 or the saxophone riff from Mystikal’s “Bouncin’ Back.” Pops was my first fan. 
 
And gradually, the process became more self-serving. It was therapeutic, cathartic, especially through my teens. Rapping over those beats naturally followed suit. I’ve never received any formal training and can’t really read music, but I’d like to think my ears have gotten smarter or that I know what I want out of a song, sonically and thematically, a bit better than a few years back.
 
Over the past five years, I’ve made it a goal to position myself in Boston’s hip hop community as a very present figure, to offer relatable, accessible content of value in a way that feels refreshing to listeners. I’ve tried different styles over time. Big, braggadocio, stadium songs with Kingdom Power Glory. Minimal, ambient songs with How To Be Alone. Funky, bright melodies on Meditating in the Moshpit. I just hit a year’s mark of organizing hip hop showcases at Cambridge’s Out of the Blue Too Gallery, and now I’m writing articles for Know Your Scene and Boston Hassle. All of these things in symphony have given me greater access to a local music community that is thriving–that you’re a part of as much as me–and the confidence to know I can do way more.
 
AP: You unpack some serious topics on your project, including mental health. What was the personal connection for you to these subject matters? Was there any difficulty in being able to open up about subjects like these?
 
RM: My output as a songwriter has always been spiritually and emotionally pointed. So, all of the works mentioned above had to do with mental health in some respect, but Abloom is that big, open flower that owns up to all of its emotional spectrum..shamelessly. 
 

 

Its early stages of recording were subject to drinking, depression, idleness, just pure stagnancy, but its latter phase was about the rise out of that dirt. I had to cut through some bad habits, develop some good ones, and repair some relationships including the one with myself in order to finish the record. So yeah, there was some difficulty. Sharing semi-confessional songs with the world was the easy part. Self-admission took a bit of time though.
 
Songs on the record that sound overly happy were actually made in moments I felt pretty down about myself and my lack of movement in life. In those moments, now that I look back, I think those songs materialized because I was writing love songs to myself in a time when I needed encouragement. 
 
Lines like “you are meant to be loved,” “I believe that we will win,” and “y’all better believe I’ma come back stronger,” populate the choruses in Abloom and ended up being mantras that I felt were worth sharing with the world. I just want people to hear these songs in the morning on their way to work and get enough energy from them to get through their day. Abloom‘s an espresso, and the content absolutely speaks to the culture now with younger Youtubers creating videos on self-care rituals. I really dig that shit. Loving yourself is mad attractive.
 
AP: Seems like you have a good relationship with your father. What role did he play in the blooming of that flower from the “dirt” (drinking, depression, etc.)?
 
RM: Pops is just a simple, practical dude, not to say he doesn’t have his quirks. He’s always taking his car to the dealership because it made an obscure, and usually non-threatening, noise – to the point where I feel he annoys the employees there, haha. 
 
What I’ve gathered from this is that if something’s of concern to you, make it known and hold yourself accountable to fix it. There has to be a parallel to self-care in there somewhere.
My mother is his equal opposite. His yang. For all of his simplicity and sensitivity to detail, my mother believes in being a micromanager. She’s a get shit done, no time for details kinda gal, which is evident given the successful trajectory of her career from finance, to real estate, to everything else in between. She always tells me I need to be the “master of my own universe,” which is why “The World Is Not Enough” exists as a song.
 
Navigating between these polar personalities has been confusing at times in growing up, which often has led me to form my own solutions when I hit the bottom of my mood. When it comes to self-betterment, I’ve always found it best to remain mindful that your loved ones always want what’s best for you. It’s just communicated in different ways. You fill in the blanks. Do whatever you like.

AP: As a man of color that is an artist, why do you think it is important for other artists that are also men of color to take that step of self-admission that you took? What role do you think that admission should play?
 
RM: Self awareness is absolutely key. It’s necessary to live effectively. If you need to set some personal truths straight with yourself and people close in orbit in order to move forward and get shit done in your life, do it. Whether or not you identify as an artist, that shit is an art. 
 
I had to deal with the recent passing of a very close friend that reminded me how intentional your day-to-day living must be. What fulfills you? Is it art? Are you making time for it? Are you sharing it enough? Are you an agent of service, or is your work self serving? If you’re a songwriter, are you just talking about yourself at people? Is your content pointed to help the world?
 
You can’t wear a cape and watch the world burn. It doesn’t work that way. Oddly enough, the world sometimes doesn’t want to admit its heroes and saints are people of color. It all returns to that cliche that you need to do everything for yourself first. Harness your strengths. Then, when you hit your stride, help those who need it. I believe in that. 
 

Check out Rex Mac out at the Boston Hassle Fest on November 10th, doors at 5pm, tickets are $25. 

INTERVIEW: Single Mothers Talk College Towns & Yelling At Yourself

Single Mothers

Courtesy of Single Mothers

The music of Single Mothers has earned comparisons to pub-centric rock like The Hold Steady and The Replacements. Shaped by the heavy drinking culture of London, Ontario — a college town in the greater Toronto area — their music, and the lyrics of frontman Drew Thomson, show a sharp eye for detail, setting and character, balanced with a self-critical wit. Touring on the heels of the band’s most recent album, Our Pleasure –– released back in June via Dine Alone Records — Thomson took the time to speak to Allston Pudding. 

Allston Pudding: Hi Drew, thanks for taking the time to talk. How’s the tour been so far?

Drew Thomson: It’s been good. We’re about two and a half weeks into it now. 

AP: Congratulations on the new album. What was on your mind while making this record?

Thomson: At the time, I wasn’t sure if there was going to be another Single Mothers album at all. I got a moment of motivation and checked out this studio that a friend of mine told me about. I went and booked the time and hoped it would come together, and it did.

AP: This is your second full-length album. You’ve managed to avoid that dreaded “sophomore slump.” The album’s got great lyrics and a lot of energy. But since you were in this place of uncertainty about the band’s future, how did you combat those issues to still manage to make a great record? 

Thomson: The band has always been kind of volatile. It’s broken up a few times. It’s never been a big break-up, we’ve just taken breaks here and there. I had been doing other projects, other things, and I just wasn’t sure if Single Mothers would still work, if I wanted to keep going. But then I got a little taste of it, and it just takes one little taste. Just talking about it with Brandon, our drummer, was enough to relight that fire. We decided, fuck it, might as well. Nothing in a band is ever very well-planned or sorted. It just sort of fell into tempo. We didn’t have any songs written, we didn’t have a guitar player. We just figured it out on the way, and it turned out okay. 

AP: A very day-by-day mindset. The band’s featured something like 16 different members at different times? 

Thomson: Probably more like 20. But most of those guys are still guys that we call up and are like, “Hey, do you want to play a show?” I’ve got five guitar players I like to write with. “Hey, Justis [Krar], do you want to write any songs?” Or somebody else that’s still in the band. So most of those are still good terms, we still plays shows with them. We just have a big pool.

AP: During the songwriting process, then, do you write songs on your own and take them to band members, or do you work with the other members and kind of jam it out? 

Thomson: There’s definitely no template. Some of the songs, I’ll come in and I’ll just have most of it ready. Other times, it’ll be a collaborative process. I’ll have been jamming with one or two guys. We’ll throw stuff together. And other times, one of the other members will have something written and bring it in like, “Hey, I want people to work on this.” It could be a hundred different options, and that’s what I like about the band. That’s what I think keeps it fresh and interesting. We’ve never tried to stick to a template. I try to keep an open mind and just kind of go with the flow of things and hope it works out. Generally it does. I like being collaborative. I like working with a bunch of different people. That’s one of the main reasons I think the band works really well.

AP: Lyrically, in your delivery, you’re kind of a shouter. Who’s that directed towards, and how’d you develop that style? 

Thomson: I think lyrically, most of the songs are kind of just about one side of me yelling at the other side. I don’t really have an audience in mind when I write lyrics. I write whatever comes. I try not to edit anything, since I’m working with so many musicians. We get a lot of ideas. If I feel it, I’ll just write the lyrics right there on the spot. I won’t generally look back. A lot of the stuff gets written in the studio. I feel like if you have to work too hard on a song, you’re not doing it right and it’s not going to work out. So I try not to overthink it. 

AP: Your lyrics are very descriptive in terms of setting and character. Where do those descriptions come from? Do you sort of take in your environment and turn it back out with your own words? 

Thomson: Yeah, most of the time. It’s easy to write when you’re young and go out a lot. I try and write what my friends would relate to. 

AP: You’re playing in Boston on 10/1. How have your past experiences in the area been? When was the last time you played around here? 

Thomson: I love Boston a lot. I don’t remember the last time we played. It was probably in 2014. I don’t remember the place, but I just remember it being a really good time. I used to drink a lot. I don’t anymore, but Boston’s a really good place to get drunk in. 

AP: Like London, Ontario, where you’re from, Boston has a large college population. Have you noticed similarities between here and there? Do you meet similar character types?

Thomson: On tour, you only get to stop over in a city for the time you play, so I haven’t hung out a ton in Boston. But I think all university areas are going to have a big influx of music with a population that never gets any older. And there’s always a market that caters to those student populations a lot of the time, bars and food, and it’s always a real party culture. I think it keeps the city vibrant and contained, but it also is a way to kind of push out the people who live there year-round and grow up around it. So I think that’s definitely the way to entrap a certain type of youth culture. I don’t think it’s necessarily bad, it’s just…different. 

AP: So what were your experiences growing up in a place like that? 

Thomson: In London, downtown is completely dictated by the school population. The city’s population drops by almost half after the school year. So you kind of feel like an outsider in your own town if you’re not in school at that point. I think the biggest thing is just the drinking culture. I didn’t realize that not all cities are so driven by downtown nightlife and don’t have these big universities. We just grew up in it. We thought getting blackout drunk and going out five nights a week was normal. That’s just what everybody did. Every year, you have 80,000 new first-year students who are just going out and getting wasted. That was normalized for me and a lot of my friends. It wasn’t until I moved out of London that I found out that not all places are like that. The downtown area is like a huge dorm. 

AP: Anywhere else you enjoy playing a lot? 

Thomson: On this tour, we played in Austin. It was great, it sold out. A couple shows have sold out. I hope Boston sell out. There are a few places we haven’t been in a few years, so it’s always a treat to go back. 

Catch Single Mothers at The Sinclair tonight for $15, tickets here. The show is all ages, doors are at 7 pm.

PHOTOS: Jay Som w/ Stef Chura and Soccer Mommy at The Sinclair (9/19)

Last week, Oakland-based bedroom pop band Jay Som came through to The Sinclair in support of their newest record, Everybody Works. Though songwriter Melina Duterte plays every instrument in the album, her touring band helped fill out the live sound playing crowd favorites from the latest album such as “The Bus Song” and “Baybee” along with a couple tunes from previous album Turn Into.

Support for the show included Soccer Mommy, New York-based band led by vocalist/guitarist Sophie Allison, who kicked off the show with their self-proclaimed “chill but kinda sad bedroom-pop jams” which proved to be the perfect pairing to Jay Som’s music. Also opening the show was Detriot indie rocker Stef Chura whose debut album Messes came out earlier this year. Her unique but captivating deadpan voice coupled with the band’s fuzzy indie rock sound rounded out what proved to be a stacked bill.

PREVIEW: Boston Fuzzstival 2017

(Photo from Illegally Blind’s Facebook)

Fuzzstival, the brainchild of Jason Trefts of Illegally Blind, is one of Boston’s greatest annual music festivals. It’s three separate days that bring people closer to the awesome local and regional music that we might miss on our Spotify radios and Pandora stations. It expands the breadth of our community by getting us all together to connect around homespun musical acts. There are many talented local bands within the helix of the psychedelic-garage-noise-folk-rock genres, and they will be the cardinal sound of the weekend daze. We can also look forward to the spotlight (and on Saturday, the sun, hopefully) shining on a myriad of kickass female-led bands.

Boston Fuzzstival 2017 is going on September 28-30, this coming Thursday through Saturday. Tonight kicks off at Massasoit Elk’s Lodge in Central Square. Friday night, Fuzzstival will move on over to ONCE lounge in Somerville and Saturday it will close out at the Somerville ARTfarm for Social Innovation. This is the first time in years that it hasn’t been held at the Middle East in Cambridge. Trefts announced last year that he would no longer be booking shows there, but it also just feels so right that Fuzzstival will take place in the community-centered Somerville.

The first night, Dazey and the Scouts are getting things started at the the Elk’s Lodge. Dazey and the Scouts describe themselves as queer rock and weird pop. They are led by a vocalist who knows how to manipulate her beautiful voice to create a rock n’ roll vibrato, get a crowd moving, and on top of that, they’re hilarious. Check out the video for their song, “Wet”.

Second to last that eve, Birthing Hips will be playing. Birthing Hips are known for their noisey catchiness and for subconsciously encouraging audiences to embrace their inner freak.  Don’t be afraid to move during their set.

Dent will round things off, adding some hardcore punk and metal vibes to the end of the evening.

The madness will continue on Friday, September 29th, at ONCE Ballroom with sets from the likes of Mint Green, BABY!, Horse Jumper of Love, and will be headlined by Ovlov. Mint Green and Baby! are both nominated for the Boston Music Awards’ New Artist of the Year, so if you haven’t seen either of the house show darlings, this is your chance. Mint Green starts things off at 7pm so be sure to roll with the punk vibes rather than punk time. Stick around to hear Horse Jumper of Love – the trio’s Audiotree session demonstrates their ability to deliver sparse yet fluid arrangements in the best recording conditions of their career all while doling out a whopping dose of hometown pride.

Power through for Saturday’s 2-7:30pm stretch at ARTFarm. Sandwiched between some of the fuzzier acts is powerhouse rapper and producer Sammus. She’s a PhD student at Cornell with all of the expected nerdiness that entails – here’s hoping we get to see a return of her arm cannon. Mini Dresses will also be in attendance on Saturday to bring more low key, dreamy vibes later in the night. This has been a fantastic year for newcomers and while Boston’s unsigned scene flourishes, our Joy Void signings should absolutely not be missed.

To see the complete list of bands playing visit Illegally Blind’s website.

 

TICKET GIVEAWAY: Margaret Glaspy / Slow Dancer / Sidney Gish at The Sinclair

Art by Alyssa Alarcón Santo

Last time we brought Margaret Glaspy through town was an eye-opening experience. Her stage presence is unlike many others and with Palehound and Adrianne Lenker of Big Thief starting the night off, it was one that will go down in the theoretical Allston Pudding history book. This time, Glaspy has brought her friend Slow Dancer on tour, and we’re looking forward to it. One of our favorite locals (and Boston Music Awards New Artist of the Year nominee!) Sidney Gish will be kicking it off Thursday night as well. You can join us for the low price of free dollars by entering our ticket giveaway below! Winners will be selected Thursday at 2:00pm, so good luck!

Watch Margaret Glaspy answer some of our silly questions from her last time in town at The Sinclair

Allston Pudding presents
Margaret Glaspy, Slow Dancer, and Sidney Gish
Thursday September 21, 2017

The Sinclair
52 Church St.
Cambridge, MA 02138

doors 8pm | all ages | $17 adv, $20 dos

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