INTERVIEW: The Pains of Being Pure at Heart

“It’s really hard to explain these ideas because a lot of them sound like platitudes,” Kip Berman says bluntly, interrupting his own thoughts on becoming a father. “Like, if I were to read someone else saying half these things, I’d probably make some sort of gesture with my hand and be, like, ‘whatever’ about it.”

It may come with little surprise considering the fact that we’re talking about the singer/songwriter of jangle pop lifers The Pains of Being Pure at Heart, but Kip Berman occasionally finds himself at odds with his own sincerity.

Before we even began talking about The Echo of Pleasure, his upcoming fourth album under the Pains moniker, Berman spent the first ten minutes of our call discussing Kate Bush, the public acceptance of Pete Wentz as the “leader” of Fall Out Boy over Patrick Stump, poptimism, and his defense of Noel and Liam Gallagher of Oasis (which, according to Twitter, is something he seems to do fairly often.)

“If it were an ideal thing, I’d just write music and do interviews with someone that wants to talk about music,” he adds. “That’s what I did all throughout high school anyway.”

Frenetic musical references are as much a genuine part of Berman’s conversation as they are a common rallying point behind Pains. Their self-titled debut in 2009 was so joyously studied in C86-worshipping pop, it couldn’t have been released by anyone other than venerated indie pop label Slumberland. Their follow-up, 2011’s Belong, managed the bigger feat of sustaining the heart-on-sleeve bookishness of their debut while allowing glossier production and deeper treads into Smashing Pumpkins-loving grunge to seep in. For Berman though, being in a band of referential music lovers doubly served as a defense mechanism.

“When I started the band, I wanted the perception of the band to be four people living in one room,” Berman says. “I don’t like being the focus, like, the Pete Wentz thing. I’m not like some reclusive weirdo that’s unknowable, but frankly, I don’t think it’s interesting to be like, ‘let’s get to know Kip Berman more.’ I like hiding behind the idea of a band.”

“Achieving something in music has no value if it comes at the expense of people that you love.”

The idea hit a snag in the wake of Belong: after three-fourths of the band amicably left between albums to pursue their careers, Berman chose to continue Pains with a cast of studio collaborators, including Jen Goma of A Sunny Day in Glasgow. The aptly titled third album, Days of Abandon, doubled down on the band’s sugariest pop tendencies while finding some acceptance in the fact that Pains has always been, in Berman’s words, “Kip sitting in his fuckin’ bedroom writing a song about how he feels, then bringing it to band practice.” Still, a more confident sense of ownership had to come about for The Echo of Pleasure.

“I have a daughter now, she’s one years old,” Berman states, “I think I was more worried because I never had a baby before, so I didn’t know if I was gonna be a good enough dad. When you’re making a record, you always have an eye on what you hope the record can accomplish. Like, bigger shows, playing in Japan… I just wanted to do something on this record that was better than this band could be. A part of that was becoming a parent and knowing personally I had to be better than I was. I really had to do something of worth because I didn’t know if I was going to get to do something again.”

Where The Pains have thrived on hyper-specific odes to sex in libraries or women named Anne (with an ‘e’ at the end, crucially), The Echo of Pleasure revels in the sometimes obvious, earnest work of writing simply about love. Opener “My Only” breaks down in an angelic wash of synths and a choir of Jen Gomas harmonizing as Berman coos affirmations like, “I won’t find another love like I found you” and “I breathe for you.” The album is stuffed with seemingly wholesale expressions of affection; a line like “I couldn’t take anymore, I wanted to die with you” on the single “Anymore” could find its romantically macabre place on any past Pains singles, but the sentiments take on a certain weight when it becomes clear Berman’s has stopped singing about literary muses or idealized notions of love.

“I sometimes read interviews where artists talk about the struggle in making art and how hard they worked on something. Like, ‘I went to the mountain top for 40 days and 40 nights and came back with the word of God etched in tablets’ stuff,” Berman says. “It’s like, ‘cool, Moses’, but I’d say the best songs I’ve ever written are the ones that happen the fastest and probably have the least words.”

He specifically cites “When I Dance With You” in his quest for fast simplicity in songwriting. A pogoing anthem that attempts to sound, as Berman puts it, “like The Strokes if I was in The Strokes… but I’m not in The Strokes,” “Dance” tries to solve the anxieties of love in the span of a pop song.

“All the verses are the worries and the choruses are the balm to those worries. Like, ‘I don’t know how I’ll make money’, ‘you get so down and I try to comfort you, but sometimes my words don’t really help the situation,’ ‘I don’t know what we’ll be in thirty years’… but the chorus is the solution and it’s just ‘when I dance with you, I feel okay.’ You can get more complicated than that; you can go into the reasons you feel okay or the type of dancing you mean, but at some level, when you’re with someone you love, the problems can disappear for a moment. That’s probably a sign you should be with them.”

Pleasure is perhaps fast and simple in approach, but not in results; it’s merely stripped of Berman’s face-saving one-liners, replaced with a kind of all-consuming collage of imagery that has the power to evoke simple, but profound memories of friendship and companionship. If anything, Berman’s unabashed sincerity has already found approval in the crucial “infant to toddler” demographic.

“When we were picking out the singles, I’d play my daughter the album and whatever songs she bounced along to or smiled to the most, those were the ones we picked,” Berman recalls. “She really liked ‘Anymore’, ‘When I Dance With You’, and ‘So True’. When she’s an adult, she might not like Pains, but I will say that right now, my one year old thinks Pains is right up there with The Beatles and Raffi.”


An unspoken theme of our conversation seemed to be how Berman is perceived both as a musician and a father in the wake of an album like Pleasure. He still apologizes regularly for sarcastically “denigrating the quality of [his] work as a band” and fits references to bands like Black Tambourine and Titus Andronicus in whenever possible, but now, it’s not uncommon for him to compare the drums on his song “Kelly” to Raffi’s “Bananaphone” or worry over whether he’ll miss his daughter’s ‘firsts’ because of work.

“We just went on our first tour in a while,” he says. “Like, just 10 days; everyone laughs like that’s nothing considering I used to go on tour for six weeks or, like, all summer into fall. But the day before tour, she took her first tentative steps and I was so glad I could be there. When I came home, she was just walking around the house like it was no big deal. Ten days is a lot of life for a baby when they’re changing so fast.”

At the crux of it, what might give Kip Berman the pass to express a few fatherly platitudes is his commitment to loving music and his family with the same unabashed, but thoughtful care as both age with him.

“Music has always been the thing I’ve loved most in life,” Berman concludes. “But now I have human beings that, if push comes to shove, are even more important than whether I do a good album promo cycle. Achieving something in music has no value if it comes at the expense of people that you love.”

The Pains of Being Pure At Heart perform tonight at The Sinclair with Frankie Rose and Ablebody. The Echo of Pleasure will be available on September 1st via Painbow Records.

PREVIEW: Eaux Claires Music & Arts Festival

For its third and quite possibly biggest year yet, Eaux Claires Music & Arts Festival is returning this upcoming Friday June 16 and Saturday June 17. The festival boasts an almost surreal setting within the forest along the Chippewa River in the heart of good ol’ Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Curated by Justin Vernon of Bon Iver and his close pal Aaron Dessner of The National, Eaux Claires offers a fresh take within the world of music festivals today, as it brings together both local and international musicians and artists to showcase their talents. Creative Director Michael Brown also shines a light on interactive art installations and mixed media throughout the festival, which brings a certain curiosity and wonder to festival-goers as they explore the grounds.

The past two years of Eaux Claires have brought surprise collaborations between artists on multiple, and some even secret, stages. On Friday, Bon Iver will be honoring and playing with John Prine, as they present a one-of-a-kind set by Prine titled “The American Songbook.” Saturday will see an exciting musical collaboration from the great Paul Simon with chamber ensemble yMusic and Big Red Machine, the side project of festival curators Vernon and Dessner. Local Chicago hero and 2017 Grammy’s Best New Artist Chance the Rapper will also return this year as a headliner (as we just experienced thanks to Boston Calling), instead of just a surprise cameo that ended last year’s festival on a very high note. Francis and the Lights and Sylvan Esso will both return again this year, as well as a rare performance by folk trio Mountain Man headed by Sylvan Esso’s Amelia Meath. Their first gig in five years!

Other notable bands playing the festival include Wilco, Feist, s-t-a-r-g-a-z-e, Velvet Negroni, Danny Brown, Perfume Genius, Spank Rock, Tweedy, Julieta Venegas, Cup, and many more.

So, if you’re still on the fence on whether or not to buy tickets to this rather dope festival and hop a plane, let me just remind you that Wisconsin is America’s Dairyland so the cheese curds will be plentiful. (My sincere apologies to all my dairy-free friends, maybe this isn’t your thing.) Come join us on this very Midwestern adventure.

TRACK PREMIERE: “Variations on an Aria”- People Like You

It’s been three years since Boston-based/beloved People Like You put out the experimental post-punk music it’s known for. But the band’s new single, “Variations on an Aria,” along with the announcement of an LP called VERSE, definitely justifies the wait.

Out on July 28, VERSE will be the band’s first release since signing with Topshelf, and second full-length record. Expect more of their finely-honed jazzy/math-y sound, but don’t assume that you know what to expect. With the addition of vocalist/pianist Michi Tassey, trumpet player Matt Hull, and Animal Flag guitarist Sai Boddupalli, VERSE defies genre. While Tassey’s soft & empathetic vocals will sometimes take the lead, Chris Lee’s punk roots also transform songs unexpectedly. And just as their hooks become easy to absorb, drummer Sander Bryce sneaks in a beat that’s completely different, or Hull sprinkles an extra layer of depth with his horn.

photo by Elle DioGuardi

Thus, “Variations” works perfectly as their first new single to highlight these improvisations in sound and perspective. People Like You, who formed in 2014 out of the ashes of I Kill Giants, are themselves just another variation. And that’s what makes them unlike any other.

Listen to “Variations on an Aria” streaming below, and sign up here to get notified when pre-sale orders are up! A portion of the proceeds from this album’s pre-order sales will be divided equally and go directly to The Trevor Project, The NAACP Legal Defense Fund and Planned Parenthood.

PREVIEW: !!!’s Defiance Through Dance

With everything that has changed in the world over the past year, it has become so important for people to take an active interest in their own self-care.

The stresses of everyday life, topped with the unthinkable and absurd political/social developments, are leading people to seek out forms of pleasure and release. If dancing is your preferred way to let off steam, dance punk veterans !!! (pronounced chk-chk-chk) are here for you.

Shake the Shudder, Nic Offer and his !!! crew’s latest album of funky breaks and infectious hooks, maintains their simple approach to songwriting. “We jam and jam and jam and jam and jam, record all of it to the computer, and then go through and cut the best bits into loops,” the singer explains to us over email. “[Then] we start chopping those up and write the songs over those…relearn them as a band, road test them, take them straight into the studio and knock them out.”

With songs such as “Dancing Is The Best Revenge,” it’s difficult to separate Shudder from this era of unrest. “I think we work well in this climate in that we’ve always done what we do through tough times and we will [probably] continue to dance our way through this,” Offer says. “I think in any oppressive society, music can be a true form of release and, in some instances, even rebellion. But it is most important that people are able to get away from that bullshit, and celebrate the life that they do have. I know our show is good for that.”

!!! play Brighton Music Hall tonight with Bearstronaut at 7 PM. Shake the Shudder is available now via Warp Records.

Gutterbug Film Launches Indie Go Go Campaign

Photo Courtesy of Andrew Gibson

Have you ever been walking around Allston and thought, “This place would be the perfect setting for a gritty drama about young, homeless street punks trying to find their place in the world, resisting the tedium of a forced 9-5 careerist lifestyle and simply surviving in a harsh world?” Well, so did Andrew Gibson, who’s gearing up to direct Gutterbug, a film that explores those themes listed above. Gibson is also the former head of video for Allston Pudding, so we’re excited to see him develop a full feature! The project’s synopsis, quoted from the film’s Indie GoGo  description, reads as follows: 

Stephen Bugsby, known by his street name “Bug,” left home on his 18th birthday. GUTTERBUG picks up three years later at his rock bottom. When the punk rock shows end and the drugs wear off, things feel quiet on his dirty mattress under the overpass. The suffocating atmosphere of the homeless environment and its toxic characters spark something in him he forgot he had… Before choosing death as the answer, Bug makes a choice even he didn’t see coming.

Gibson also says that the project will explore the DIY basement punk scene that is prevalent around Allston. As is stated on the Indie GoGo page, “the basement music scene and some of the more grimy parts of the Boston neighborhood helped to further inspire our protagonist.” Many local acts, like Nice Guys and Black Beach, will feature on the soundtrack, while James Fraser and Ben Berners-Lee  of The Symptoms will create the score. 

Shooting for the film will take place entirely in Allston, especially at abandoned locales in the area, “such as decrepit buildings, under highway overpasses, in deserted train cars, among overgrown railroad tracks and forgotten factories.” Despite the shooting location, one of the goals of the project if to craft a narrative that could take place at any time, in any city. 

While the production crew have a good contingent of supplies already, they still need some help when it comes to funding to book certain locations and other areas. To donate to the project, visit Gutterbug‘s Indie GoGo page. For any aspiring actors reading this who would be interested in adding their talents to the project, there will be an open casting call on June 11th at Red Sky Studios from 12-6pm. 

REVIEW: The Orwells w/ The Walters at The Sinclair (6/2)

After testing the waters at The Middle East Upstairs last November during their Underplay tour, The Orwells returned to Boston to promote their latest album, Terrible Human Beings, at The Sinclair. Swapping out November’s opening act The Symposium for The Walters, The Orwells continued to support their fellow Chicago musicians.

The venue opened its doors right on time at 8:00pm, ushering in long line of fans headed straight to the bar and merch table. Holding a beer in one hand and a tour tee in the other, listeners soon began filling in the floor, pooling around the stage to reserve a front row spot. With eyes fixed forward, few noticed as members of the bands intermingled with the crowd. Mario Cuomo of The Orwells made a brief appearance around 8:30pm, gliding past the back of the crowd and behind the stage, while Luke Olsen of The Walters joined his parents on the Mezzanine.

At 9:00pm, the venue made a quick announcement, and The Walters walked on stage. After opening with “Goodbye Baby,” Olsen gave his bandmates colorful introductions, describing bass player Danny Wells as the one with “long skinny legs.” By the time they finished playing “I Haven’t Been True,” the Walters had brought the crowd to its feet. Olsen danced barefoot across the stage, dressed in a cardigan with suspenders and round colored glasses, looking like a cross between Bilbo Baggins and John Lennon, while the rest of the band jammed all around him. Other highlights from the set included “I Love You So,” which Olsen ended with a sip from his mug of tea, and emotional performances of “Life,” and “Sweet Marie.”

The Orwells surprised the crowd with an uncharacteristically timely appearance, taking to the stage just after 10:00pm. Glowing in white bell bottom jeans and a white tank top emblazoned with “USA,” Cuomo immediately asked the venue to turn up everything on his monitor before charging into “Black Francis.” After further pumping up the crowd with “Dirty Sheets,” the band played a long block of material from Terrible Human Beings including “Body in the Bayou,” “Fry,” and “Creature.”

Throughout the night Cuomo was as wild as ever, throwing back a handful of bud lights in between songs and putting his spare energy to good use with a dozen side crunches against drummer Henry Brinner’s bass drum. Following a rowdy performance of “Vacation,” someone yelled out “The Orwells!” to which Cuomo replied, “That’s our name, man” before carrying with party anthem “Southern Comfort.” More than halfway through the set, the band still hadn’t played their best known song. But to the crowd’s delight, guitarist Dominic Corso yelled out, “We wrote this song five years ago,” and blasted into the opening riff of “Who Needs You.”

Towards the end of show, The Orwells added a twist to “The Righteous One,” splicing in chorus of The Raconteurs’ “Steady, As She Goes” to make an already fantastic song even better. Bass player Grant Brinner showed off his latest bass groove with Terrible Human Beings’ longest track, “Double Feature.” By the time the song hit its seven minute mark, the band began to disappear behind stage one at a time, starting with Cuomo and ending with with guitarist Matt O’Keefe slinging his guitar around the still jamming Grant Brinner. To end the night, The Orwells returned to the stage at 11:00pm for a rare one song encore, leaving the crowd in chaos after yet another unforgettable performance.

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SHOW PREVIEW: I Wish I Could Skateboard @ O’Brien’S 6/11

Wistfulness has more to do with I Wish I Could Skateboard than their name. The Boston-based band faced stagnation for a while due to the distance between band members — formed originally in Texas, the quartet has found it difficult to produce music when they’ve spread so far apart (half in Texas, half in Massachusetts). Taking on some new members for live performances, I Wish I Could Skateboard is heading on a mini-tour in support of their new EP, Alternative Lifestyle, featuring a stop at O’Brien’s  on 6/11.

Bassist Hannah Fletcher and vocalist Patrick McPherson have spent time exploring the impressive music scene in Boston, citing bands like Horse Jumper of Love, Funeral Advantage, and Strange Mangers as their favorites. The live music culture in Boston has impressed them, but it’s also left Fletcher and McPherson hurting for more: “Every show we went to was also a reminder of our own musical inactivity,” McPherson told Allston Pudding in an email.

I Wish I Could Skateboard’s 2014 EP I Appreciate Your Lack of Confidence dabbles in the same flavors of post-hardcore that bands like American Football and — in a nod toward using sentences as names — The World Is A Beautiful Place & I Am No Longer Afraid To Die. Sweeping, cycling guitar riffs and McPherson’s mournful vocals, particularly on “The Blood That Came From My Skin Was Dark Red” suggest a complex confidence in pain. “My scratches and scars/don’t indicate that life’s been hard/just that I made/some stupid mistakes,” McPherson sings matter-of-factly. The narrative quality of the lyrics creates a current that propels the instrumentation forward in calculated riffs.
Great White Tourist and We Can All Be Sorry are supporting I Wish I Could Skateboard on the bill on the 11th. And that’s certainly no random pairing — McPherson told Allston Pudding that Great White Tourist’s guitarist messaged IWICS on Spotify, asking if they were still a band. Upon learning that the two bands were based close to one another, a friendship developed and McPherson said Great White Tourist has been instrumental in helping IWICS find gigs around New England.

I Wish I Could Skateboard is playing a handful of shows around New England in June to support the release of their EP Alternative LifestyleAlternative Lifestyle shows that the band has sharpened their edges since I Appreciate… “#willyipcome,” the second track on the EP, bursts open way more aggressively than the easing in of their other songs. “I haven’t changed, I’m still the same,” McPherson wails over fuzzy guitar and crashing drums. The EP shows growth from the band and promises a great, guitar-driven show.

You can grab tickets for $8 here, and stay up to date on the show on the Facebook event page here. I Wish I Could Skateboard plays an 18+ show at O’Brien’s on 6/11.

 

PHOTOS: Royal Blood w/ the Shelters at Paradise Rock Club (6/2)

British duo Royal Blood kicked off their U.S tour with a sold out show at Paradise Rock Club on June 2nd. The floor was already packed, and the line was still well outside at around 9pm, when L.A band The Shelters opened the show. Their energetic set was short but kept the crowd engaged and ready for more. Their heavy sound and presence set the stage for the headliners.

You wouldn’t know it’s just two band members by listening to Royal Blood’s recorded material. They started off strong with Where Are You Now, and the intensity never dropped. Their setlist was short, but massive, including singles like “Lights Out” and “Hook, Line and Sinker,” from their upcoming album How Did We Get So Dark?. Fans were yelling and singing along up until the very end, with an extended rendition of “Out Of The Black,” from their first album. Bassist Mike Kerr and drummer Ben Thatcher made sure to let everyone know that Royal Blood is most definitely back, and they’re bringing back raw, sexy rock and roll.

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PHOTOS: Portugal. The Man w/ Electric Guest at House of Blues (6/1)

Portugal. The Man kicked off their tour last Thursday (6/1) by blowing the top off of the House of Blues.

Electric Guest opened the show. With a sound enjoyably similar to the headliner, the band revved up an already antsy crowd.

Portugal. The Man took the stage with an all music, no bullshit attitude. And with 7 studio albums under their belt, and an 8th on the way, what other kind of set could you ask for? While the only new material that made it in to their setlist was “Feel It Still”, the lineup was littered with favorites like “Purple Yellow Red and Blue”, “Modern Jesus”, and “So American”.

Woodstock debuts June 16th.

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Bonus – It looks like the band sat in with 92.9 when they were in town for an acoustic session:

PHOTOS: The Suitcase Junket w/ Caroline Rose at The Sinclair (5/31)

The Suitcase Junket (Matt Lorenz) came through town last week touring on his new album Pile Driver (out on Signature Sounds now) in front of an excited crowd at the Sinclair. In keeping with the minimalist approach, Caroline Rose of Burlington, VT opened the show with a lovely solo performance.

The Suitcase Junket is a one-man band using found, repurposed, and rebuilt objects who also has a unique way of singing that he uses to supplement his normal voice. He’s wildly inventive and the live show is something to behold.

The full length’s material he showed off at The Sinclair is a mix of rock anthems, mountain ballads, blues manifestos and dance-hall festivity. The material is laid out on instruments built of broken bottles, thrift store forks, dried bones, gas cans, shoes, saw blades, a toy keyboard, salvaged instruments, and an overhead compartment’s worth of luggage.

A member of our talented photo staff was on hand to capture the sights.

The Suitcase Junket Slideshow:

Caroline Rose Slideshow: