Claire Cottrill- “Sis” (Acoustic Session)

Boston native, Claire Cottrill, is by far the youngest musician we’ve featured in a video session and it’s really a testament to her talent. While just starting her senior year of high school school, Claire has recently gained quite a following on our beloved Bandcamp.

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Though she already has a plethora of songs online (a lot of them simply recorded through iPhone voice memos), after talking to Claire for a bit it was clear that she hasn’t allowed her interest in songwriting take over her personal life. This outlook has been recipe for some genuinely warm and naturally crafted songs as seen below:

 

FESTIVAL REVIEW: The Copenhagen Beer Festival

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I think one of the best memories I have of my father is somewhere in the haze of the first few weeks of college.

I was being driven home for a weekend, illness deeply sleep-deprived from a particularly debaucherous Thursday night (which, at that point, just took an embarrassingly small amount of light beer and sneaking into the college station to DJ with friends) Somewhere in the hour and a half long drive home, I let slip that I had been drinking the night before and met an uncomfortable pause that probably only lasted half a second. It wasn’t that I was scared he’d be thrown by this revelation of his 18-year old son touching alcohol upon entering college, but more so the cavalierness of me just openly discussing beer, this totem of the proverbial adult table, like we were suddenly equals.

“What kind of beer?”, he asked casually. “Budweiser,” I sheepishly answered. Another pause. This one was definitely longer. “Well, I’m a little disappointed,” he began. “I thought I raised you around better beer than Budweiser…”

I feel like we shared a lot about ourselves when we used to write the Father & Son Review Co. column, but I guess one thing that slipped through the cracks was how much my dad and I bond over brewing beer. The beer we’ve made has served as an apology to Ben Katzman for making fun of his ‘stache (sorry again, Ben), a form of payment for a Sheer Mag 7”, and a decent ice breaker at house shows, so I felt it was fitting to somewhat revive the ol’ Father and Son team to tackle Boston’s newest festival, the Copenhagen Beer Festival. Hopefully for this one last Father & Son go-around on AP, we accurately combined the two things we review best: beer and bands I like that my dad doesn’t get.

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AP: We counted almost sixty breweries present… did you hit them all?

Tim: We covered a good amount of ground. I’m tired. Dad, you’re not sauced, right?

Dad: Nah, I’m probably a 2/10 after walking. I’m ready to fall asleep though.

AP: Let’s go over your list of favorite beers before nap time. 

Dad: Well, I stopped writing after a while…

Tim: [laughs] What kind of dad-journalist are you?

Dad: I was in the moment, taking it all in! I liked Magic Rock; they had one called The Bearded Lady that was this caramel-y chocolate porter.

Tim: Yeah, one of my highlights of the day was their Special Relationship bourbon barrel-aged ale… I kind of wanted to ask how they landed on “Special Relationship” as a name, but I chickened out.

Dad: You asked one of the breweries how they got their name though!

Tim: Yeah, there was a brewery called Angry Chair and I asked the guy working their booth why the chair was angry. He seemed a little taken off guard; I’m pretty sure he was a volunteer, so he didn’t know. Kinda dorky on my part. Their Chocolate Cupcake Stout was super good though!

AP: Any other questionable beer/brewer names?

Tim: War Pigs had a stout called “OhmyfuckinggodIcan’tbelieveyoufuckedmeup” or something.

Dad: Yeah, the one they couldn’t sell in America!

Tim: Good marketing.

Dad: Really? You’d call that good marketing?

Tim: I mean, we came over for the “fuckmeup” beer, so word-of-mouth worked.

Dad: Wait, I found some notes! I can’t even pronounce this brewer: Brow-er-wee-zrr-urr-rah-hrrrr…

Tim: Wanna run that one by me again?

Dad: [laughs] Nope.

AP: Were there any surprises?

Dad: I wasn’t sure about that Spanish beer.

Tim: Do you mean the alcoholic kombucha? Casita Cervecita?

Dad: Yep, whatever you said. [laughs] There were so many sour beers too.

“Yo la what? Yolo Froyo? There was frozen yogurt?”

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AP: Are you guys fans of sour beers?

Dad: Not really. I prefer malty, hearty beers like porters, stouts, and ales.

Tim: And no IPAs.

Dad: Yep, no IPAs for me.

Tim: I feel like most dads hate IPAs, but it was kinda tough avoiding those today. I also had no idea how popular sour beers are right now. They’re kinda hit or miss for me. One of my favorites of the whole festival was Beavertown Brewery’s Earl Phantom, which was brewed with Earl Grey tea. I think that tea aspect of it sold the sourness for me.

Dad: Yeah, that was a little sour, a little different. There was just a lot of beers to please everyone’s palette, especially the European ones.

Tim: The most interesting surprise for me was the slushie beer.

Dad: That was a unique one. They had a Chocolate and Raspberry beer brewed, but then they filtered it into a slushie machine to make like an alcoholic slush. Unique taste, but I don’t think I’d get in line for it again.

Tim: Yeah, easily the biggest line of the festival… glad we tried it though.

AP: Any last beer shoutouts before we cover the music?

Dad: Wormtown and Idle Hands were good too! The one you got from Cigar City, the habanero cider! That was a very unique flavor, like “oh my god, I’ve never had that taste experience before.”

Tim: Yeah, I really dug that one too. I also want to shout out Beavertown x Boneyard’s Blood Orange IPA, Evil Twin’s Liquid Double Fudge Porter…

Dad: Oh yeah, the Evil Twin one was decadent! We went for a lot of decadent porters, but that one was the best.

Tim: Yep. Oh, and Gigantic’s Pipewrench Gin-Barrel IPA…

Dad: Which wasn’t that big, actually…

Tim: [groans] You’re terrible.

AP: Okay, let’s cover your usual beat: review the bands.

Tim: I was there last night too, so I got to see our dear friends in Vundabar

Dad: Ah, that’s vunda-ful! [laughs] Big shout out to those guys! Hope they took dance lessons.

Tim: [laughs] I thought they were very good, dance moves and all.

Dad: Were they in all black with the chains on?

Tim: Nah, different color shirts, no religious paraphernalia-eating…

Dad: Well hey, they’re branching out, that’s good! Who else played last night? Yo la what? Yolo Froyo? There was frozen yogurt?

Tim: [laughs] So close. They’re called Yo La Tengo. Do you even know what YOLO stands for?

Dad: Yeah, I did. Hold on… still processing. Uh, is it “you only live once?”

Tim: YEAH! I didn’t think you’d get it.

Dad: Isn’t that a website?

Tim: Uh, you mean Yahoo?

Dad: No, Yahoo got hacked by Russians. But anyway, you said Yo La Tengo were my age, they had a following, but they had a couple of kids or something and now they’re coming back?

Tim: No. Well, sorta… the members of Yo La Tengo are around your age, but they’ve steadily kept their fanbase. They’re sort of like a mellow cult band of the ‘90s… is that weird? Like, a band that’s your age, but is relevant to people young enough to be your kids?

Dad: Music transcends generations if it’s good. You said it was mellow though? Can’t imagine that being good for Friday night drinking music.

Tim: I mean, most people were diehard fans that stayed. The rest were too drunk to leave.

AP: How about today’s bands?

Dad: The band that closed it down this afternoon was great…

Tim: Yeah, Mariachi El Bronx!

Dad: They were pretty upbeat, good music to send you off. They weren’t mellow, that’s for sure.

beerfest-50Tim: Would you say that one was your favorite?

Dad: I love horns, so that sold me. Bruce Springsteen, Southside Johnny, Tower of Power… I just love a band with horns. I definitely know I didn’t like the first one.

Tim: Tigerman WOAH!, they’re called.

Dad: Yeah, that guy’s voice… definitely deserves a “woah.”

Tim: To be honest, they remind me of a rockabilly band meets Dropkick Murphys, who I’m definitely not a fan of, but you like them. I’ve seen Tigerman twice at festivals and they seem likable enough!

Dad: Yeah, definitely Dropkick Murphys in there. His voice was just so low, so gravely… sounded like a couple scotches and cigarettes got him on stage.

Tim: I think Tremolo Beer Gut was both my favorite name of the festival and favorite band today.

Dad: Yeah, I was just thinking, “I kinda liked that surf band that played in the middle of the crowd.” No vocals, good musicians, just good chillin’ music.

Tim: Gotta love a surf rock from Denmark of all places.

AP: Any last notes?

Dad: It was fun, it was a great day…

Tim: It was weird getting recognized by a few AP readers out and about.

Dad: Yeah, that was bizarre! You gotta write about that; this guy comes up to us, shows us our photo on Instagram, and started talking to us about our reviews and beers.

Tim: Yeah, we’re low key famous now. I’ve only encountered that at shows with, like, bands we assumed we pissed off.

Dad: [laughs] Well yeah, cheers to that guy!

Tim: Yeah, cheers, man! Good fest! I think I have a tremolo beer gut now.

For photos from the festival, check out the gallery below.

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TICKET GIVEAWAY: Roosevelt at Great Scott (9/26)

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Up and coming dance maestro Roosevelt (real name Marius Lauber) has been making waves of late. Having just released his self-titled debut album on City Slang and Greco-Roman (the acclaimed label of Hot Chip’s Joe Goddard), the Cologne-based producer is further championing the throwback sound that has taken alternative electronic music by storm over the past few years. The album’s groovy, driving synth riffs are immediately accessible but give way to impressive depth, supported by Lauber’s simple but incisive vocals. While the influence of disco, early electro and Balearic house music are heavy throughout things never drift into pastiche, holding onto a winning vitality.

Roosevelt is hitting Great Scott on Monday with opener Shallou, and we have a pair of tickets that need a home! Enter below for a chance to come dance.

Boston Music Awards 2016 Nominees

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The Boston Music Awards have announced their nominees for 2016. The awards, founded in 1987, have been honoring outstanding members of the Boston music scene for nearly three decades. This year’s Awards will take place December 8th at the House Of Blues. Four new categories have been added, in addition to the original 28. One of the original categories is Best Music Blog, which Allston Pudding has won three times. The new categories are: Live Production Engineer of the Year, Best Music Photo of the Year, Best Live Intimate Music Venue, and Session Musician of the Year. The award has a new design as well.

The new design for the award.

The new design for the award.

Tickets are available from $25, which you can purchase here. The Awards will feature live performances from artists, to be announced in October. Who will win? You’ll have to come to the show to find out! You can vote for your choices — including your choice for Best Music Blog, for which Allston Pudding happens to be nominated — here.  You can only choose one per category, so choose (Allston Pudding) wisely, especially when voting for Best (Allston Pudding) Music Blog. Nominees include:

Artist of the Year:
Cousin Stizz
 Marissa Nadler
Michael Christmas
Palehound
PVRIS
The Ballroom Thieves

Album/EP of the Year:
Bearstronaut – Telecoast
Cousin Stizz – Monda
Julie Rhodes – Bound to Meet the Devil
Reks – The Greatest X
The Hotelier – Goodness
Worshipper – Shadow Hymns

Song of the Year:
Air Traffic Controller – “On The Wire”
Contact – “Never Stop”
Cousin Stizz – “Where I Came From”
Marissa Nadler – “Janie In Love”
PVRIS – “You And I”
Speedy Ortiz – “Death Note”

New Artist of the Year:
Animal Flag
Julie Rhodes
Lady Pills
Salem Wolves
Token
Weakened Friends

Live Artist of the Year:
Cousin Stizz
The Ballroom Thieves
The Devil’s Twins
Tigerman WOAH
Walter Sickert & The Army of Broken Toys
Worshipper

Video of the Year:
Air Traffic Controller – “The House”
Kyle Bent – “Supplier”
Palehound – “Molly”
PVRIS – “You And I”
Ruby Rose Fox – “Dance Of Frankenstein”
Slaine – “Pusher”

Female Vocalist of the Year:
Abbie Barrett
Casey Sullivan (Air Traffic Controller)
Julie Rhodes
Lyndsey Gunnulfsen (PVRIS)
Ruby Rose Fox
Sadie Dupuis (Speedy Ortiz)

Male Vocalist of the Year:
Chris Cote
Dietrich Strause
Evan Kenney
Louie Bello
Walter Sickert
Will Dailey

Americana Artist of the Year:
Honeysuckle
Julie Rhodes
Session Americana
The Ballroom Thieves
These Wild Plains
Tigerman WOAH

Blues Artist of the Year:
Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Matthew Stubbs & the Antiguas
Peter Parcek
Shor’ty Billups
The Silks
Willie J. Laws Band

DJ/Producer of the Year:
DJ Knife
DJ Slipwax
Frank White
Joe Bermudez
Kon
Leah V

Electronic Artist of the Year:
Bearstronaut
CMB
Contact
Freezepop
Party Bois
Radclyffe Hall

Folk Artist of the Year:
Dan Blakeslee
Darlingside
Honeysuckle
Tall Heights
The Ballroom Thieves
The Novel Ideas

Hip Hop Artist of the Year:
Cousin Stizz
Dutch ReBelle
Michael Christmas
REKS
Slaine
STL GLD

International Artist of the Year:
Debo Band
Dub Apocalypse
Rebecca Zama
Roberto Morbioli
Shun Ng
Ubuntu Band

Jazz Artist of the Year:
Alison Keslow
Amanda Carr
Esperanza Spalding
Grace Kelly
La Vie en Rose
Yoko Miwa

Metal Artist of the Year:
Converge
GOZU
I Am Become Death
Protean Collective
Revocation
Worshipper

Pop Artist of the Year:
Clinton Sparks
Contact
JoJo
Meghan Trainor
PVRIS
Rachel Platten

Punk/Hardcore Artist of the Year:
Actor|Observer
Ascend/Descend
Choke Up
Rebuilder
Somos
The Hotelier

R&B Artist of the Year:
Bad Rabbits
Barrence Whitfield & The Savages
Jesse Dee
Marcela Cruz
Nancia Shea Rose

Rock/Indie Artist of the Year:
Black Beach
Palehound
Pile
Speedy Ortiz
The Devil’s Twins
Vundabar

Singer-Songwriter of the Year:
Abbie Barrett
Lori McKenna
Marissa Nadler
Nate Leavitt
Ruby Rose Fox
Will Dailey

Studio Producer of the Year:
Benny Grotto
Brian Charles
Dave Brophy
Ed Valauskas
Sean McLaughlin
The Arcitype (Janos Fulop)

Live Production Engineer of the Year:
Benjamin Stoppelman
Brendon Downey
Chris Johnson
Dan Gonzales
David Hughes
Reid Calkin

Best Live Music Photographer:
Ben Stas (Pal & Staff Photographer)
Coleman Rogers
Eddy Leiva
Johnny Anguish
Joshua Pickering
Rich Gastwirt

Best Promoter:
Aaron Gray – Grayskull Booking
Alyssa Spector – Lysten Boston
Jason Trefts – Illegally Blind
Lisa Finelli – Xperience Creative
Randi Millman – Atwood’s Tavern
Ryan Agate – RTT Presents

Best Music Night:
Corrosion at Brighton Music Hall
Emo Night at The Sinclair
Fresh Produce at Good Life
Heroes at Middle East
Soulelujah at ZuZu
The Workout KBX at Laugh Boston

Best Live Music Venue:
Brighton Music Hall
House of Blues
Paradise Rock Club
Royale
The Middle East Downstairs
The Sinclair

Best Live Intimate Music Venue:
Club Passim
Great Scott
Lizard Lounge
O’Brien’s Pub
ONCE Ballroom
TOAD

Best Live Ongoing Residency:
Baker Thomas Band at TOAD
Dennis Brennan at the Lizard Lounge
OldJack’s Last Saturdays at the Lizard Lounge
The Blue Ribbons at TOAD
The White Owls at TOAD
Tim Gearan at Atwood’s

Session Musician of the Year:
Dave Brophy
Duke Levine
Jonathan Ulman
Lyle Brewer
Matthew Girard
Paul Ahlstrand

Best Music Blog:
!*> Allston Pudding <*!

Boston Hassle
Guestlisted with Jed Gottlieb
Killer Boom Box
Red Line Roots
Vanyaland

Now go on and VOTE!

—From your friends at Allston Pudding Music Blog.

PREVIEW: Live From Nowhere Release Show

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Live From Nowhere, a series that features Massachusetts-based artists performing live in various abandoned locations across the state, is proud to announce that it will present a showcase of performances at the Rockwell (formerly the Davis Square Theatre) in Somerville on Thursday, September 22nd at 7PM. The show will include performances by Bent Knee, Latrell James, American Echoes and more, as well as some video premiers from a few others like Air Traffic Controller.

LFN has previously released videos for Latrell James’ “Prayer Emoji” and Bent Knee’s “Leak Water.” The other performers are Molly Pinto-Madigan, Kate Diaz and Nico Rivers. With such a solid spread of acts, there’s sure to be something for everyone to enjoy, and you’ll get the chance to hear some great tracks from local acts you haven’t heard yet.

Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door. To purchase in advance, you can head over to Brown Paper Tickets. Check out Bent Knee’s video below and come check out the release show!

PREMIERE: Cloud Cover’s Mirror Me

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Over winter breaks in high school and college, I got into this cycle of staying up until 4 AM and sleeping until noon every day.

I was car-less for most of the high school years and the threat of snow drifts hindered most opportunities to leave when I did get a car, so I just stayed up, waiting for something to happen. I baked cakes. I watched every season of Scrubs. I read The Virgin Suicides twice in one break. I put on Cocteau Twins records and synced them up with old home videos on mute.

In short… yeah, I was kind of a strange kid, but there’s something deeply nostalgic about the music and things I clung to when everyone else was asleep. Dirty Dishes‘ frontwoman and multi-instrumentalist Jenny Tuite’s music has always seemed like an ideal soundtrack for night driving, but her full-length debut as Cloud Cover rests firmly in that beautifully cerebral, early morning haze of half-lucidity. Touching on the most ominous reaches of dream pop (“Cannibalism”), glitchy experimentation (“Cake Bath”), and ambient music (“Cloud Cave”), Mirror Me deserves your ears now, but with the promise of repeat listens in those crucial early hours of restlessness.

Recorded “in glimpses over the past year” according to Tuite, Mirror Me will finally see release on Disposable America tomorrow along with a release show in Allston. To stream the album in full, scroll below. To order it digitally, on cassette, or on limited edition vinyl, check out the DA Bandcamp.

INTERVIEW: Latrell James

Photo by Lee Delulio of Downlow Productions

Latrell James ‘Breaks Rules’ while valuing community.

With a constantly shifting, confusing and often times detrimental [for the artist] music industry, there has been a major rise in the number of artists willing to go the independent route. We are seeing artist clench onto their autonomy much more frequently, especially in the Hip Hop scene, as exemplified by artists like Tyler the Creator, Chance the Rapper. It’s exciting and empowering to see musicians holding strong to their independence and not signing with major labels, but what’s even more exciting to see is artists from our city making a significant imprint in the independent Hip-Hop world.

Latrell James is a Dorchester born rapper who has been making a significantly large imprint on Boston’s Hip Hop scene for some time now. Latrell has been making a lot of noise recently with features on the recent projects of Cousin Stizz, KharyAce Hashimoto & Max Wonders. One of his most recent singles, “Break the Rules” is a perfect introduction to who Latrell James is as an artist, although there is much more to him then just rebellion and nonconformity. Latrell’s latest cut “Prayer Emoji” comes in the form of a video in collaboration with Live From Nowhere. LFN is a video series that features videos of MA-based artists playing live in abandoned locations throughout the state.

Latrell touches on some of the roots of his rebellious nature and his general defiance in pursuit of his own satisfaction in our conversation. That video can be seen at the Rockwell this Thursday for their premier show this Thursday. The show will also feature performances from Bent Knee, American Echoes and more. We recently got a chance to sit with Latrell to talk about life post-Twelve [His latest full length project], negative experiences with college, and what rule breaking within societal standards means to him.


Allston Pudding: What does ‘breaking the rules’ mean to you? Plan on breaking any more in the future?

Latrell James: Breaking rules means to not conform and doing things your own way. I’m not relying on anyone else to do what I need to do. If I need to mix this record down, or I need to get this beat, or I need to record these vocals, I’m willing to do it on my own and still be able to get it out at the same quality as someone who is really shelling out cash as opposed to being their own resource. That’s me breaking rules, is me being my own resource. Recently I’ve been creating music with people that I want to create music with, creating the music with that I want to create without feeling uncomfortable. One of my biggest fears honestly is making any major commitments to a record label and losing the control that I have over what I do now and what I sound like.

 

AP: Rumor has it you deleted yourself from the internet before Twelve? Why’d you do that?

LJ: Not a rumor at all. I definitely removed my prior work from the internet. The main reason behind is because the music quality was so poor. I recorded and engineered everything myself with little knowledge of the field. I just wanted whatever body of work I have out to be professional. I feel Twelve represents that well. My first project was called Lemonade Stand. Definitely ties into it all. I hate ‘traditional’ ways of doing things, so I made the project disappear.

AP: So is there any chance fans will ever have no access to Twelve again?

LJ: I think Twelve is here to stay. I think it represents the beginning well. If you want to know who Latrell James is and why, that project is a great introduction.

AP: So the ‘theory’ is that you [as an artist] need to be spending a certain amount of money, and collaborating with ‘A’ list producers/artists in order to put out high quality music.

LJ: Exactly. You don’t need it. There’s no rules to creating and I want to push the boundaries on how we consume and promote music. Planning on taking my live show the next step. I have a few ideas I’ll be bringing to fruition over the next few months.

AP: Seems like you’ve helping out with a lot of music other than your own as of recently, what’s more important to you, remaining independent, or building great collaborations?

LJ: I believe that the community is the most important. I want to be as successful as the next person, but I also know that I would be equally content if I ended up inspiring the next person to be even more successful. I’m a musician. I create music for others to put their thoughts on as much as I do myself. I feel contributing to other creatives work is just as important as building your own. As far as remaining independent, I just want to have supporters. I feel like that can be done on both sides of the spectrum.

AP: In the hook of “Prayer Emoji”, there seems to be a similar theme of breaking the rules. “Is this the end? Jump in my casket and do it again / all on my lonely, I don’t need no new friends / say what I feel, ain’t no need to pretend, fuck all the student loans, fuck all the rent, gimmie one more chance and I’ll sin again”… on paper, it seems bleak, but the song is generally upbeat. Any reason for the juxtaposition?

The reason for the bleak lyrics on such an uptempo track is that it’s a representation of life. There’s beauty in everything, even death. The production brings a feeling of happiness and the lyrics bring brute honesty. It’s a contrast I think people will unknowingly gravitate to. Plus, I want people to dance while I’m telling them the truth. I’m still technically breaking the rules and finding the need for prayer. My parents know that they can tell what’s right from wrong all they want, but they also know I’m not going to listen to them until I experience it myself. All they can do is pray I don’t do anything that will significantly change my life in a negative way. 

REVIEW: Cymbals Eat Guitars, Field Mouse, and Wildhoney (9/16)

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I understand one review cannot effectively retire a tired narrative, but still, can we do away with Cymbals Eat Guitars being merely pastiche-loving sons of ‘90s college rock?

Yes, singer Joseph D’Agostino came out of the gate in 2009 with the meandering voice of Black Francis and Modest Mouse’s penchant for the shambolic, but we’re the better part of a decade apart from their debut, Why There Are Mountains. Between then and now rests a critically misunderstood second album, a third album that could be accurately described as either their unabashed rock n’ roll record or darkest record, and finally, this month’s Pretty Years, their most anthemic work to date.

Inick-dinatale_cymbals-eat-guitars_field-mouse_wildhoney-6n terms of openers for their release show this past Friday, Cymbals Eat Guitars couldn’t have picked a duo that remain reverent to their influences without resting on them better than Wildhoney and Field Mouse. Perennially doused in psychedelic projections and guitar pedals, Baltimore’s Wildhoney are the best active dream pop band that avoid being labeled as such. Their social media presence does a pretty solid job at making their pop intentions known while scrubbing out any descriptors starting with “dream” or ending with “-gaze”. Beyond the internet though, their set was a winning showcase of the delirious catchiness underneath deafening waves of distortion.

Similarly, New York’s Field Mouse can’t help but write unstoppably catchy guitar hooks, but the five piece deserve a far more conscious descriptor than “dream pop”. Leading off with “The Mirror”, the opening song off of this year’s Episodic LP, singer Rachel Browne quips “what a way to say fuck off” before dismantling some fool’s overblown ego with smirking lyricism. Matched with the band’s piercing guitar work and the funniest pins I’ve seen a band offer in a long while, Browne and co. added some lucidity to the tropes of dream pop.

One would assume Cymbals wouldn’t have to cater to anyone but devoted fans on the night of their album release show, but D’Agostino seemed armed and ready to defend Pretty Years.

“That was kinda fun!”, a wayward crowdgoer barked two songs deep into the new material. “They’re all kinda fun… fancy that,” D’Agostino immediately shot back in his steely deadpan.

The slight surprise is justified; Years is packed with the band’s fuzziest riffs and the kind of immediate choruses that would make even the most sober attendee consider a fist pump. The “fun” song in question, “4th of July, Philadelphia (Sandy)”, played out live like Cymbals’ best attempt at a Killers song on overblown amps. “Have A Heart” subtly mirrors Patti Smith’s “Because the Night”, which is a totally reasonable influence for any band’s mid-career big single attempt, but the reaction to its opening chords was the loudest of the night.

Admittedly, some longing for the band’s earlier material was to be expected. The sole inclusion from Mountains, “…And The Hazy Sea”, made new song “Well” feel a bit stiff after all six minutes of its haywire glory, but the career-spanning set as a whole felt natural amongst a crowd of devotees. After a decade of trying to evade the hype of the late ‘00s college rock revival, Cymbals seem content in distortion-heavy heartland rock with the band’s trademark wackiness still intact. Maybe the pretty years are still to come after all…

For photos from the show, check out our gallery below.

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INTERVIEW: LVL UP

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LVL UP is a few weeks away from dropping Return to Love, shop arguably their most thoughtful record thus far, but guitarists Nick Corbo and Dave Benton are already contemplating how to rebrand.

“We could’ve done the number 2. Like, Return 2 Love,” Benton suggests, eying early ‘90s R&B records as inspiration.

The sentimental nature of a title like Love was acknowledged all the way back to when co-guitarist Mike Caridi brought a demo of the same title to band practice, but the name stuck long after the demo was cut from the album’s shortlist. It’s the kind of statement a band would’ve painted on their tour van underneath a wizard and unicorn forty years ago (and yes, we spitballed van designs too), but in a year of other maximalist slogans like ‘Make America Great Again’ or ‘Stronger Together’, Return to Love feels like a friendly alternative were the band considering a political run in their next lives.

“It is kinda funny,” Corbo acknowledges. “Almost classic rock-y,” Benton adds. “It’s not a full-on tongue-in-cheek title, but we’re not taking it too seriously.”

A surface layer of “not taking it too seriously” has been a winning characteristic of the New York four-piece’s persona since their beginnings at SUNY Purchase, but the trait feels more necessary than ever now that a national level of attention has been placed on Love, their first full-length record with venerated indie label Sub Pop. Luckily for them, Love completely delivers, expanding on the hooky guitar rock that won them a devoted fanbase with 2014’s Hoodwink’d while expanding their standard lyrical wheelhouse of anxiety and relationship strife to include debates on religion and the afterlife. It’s certainly the band’s most ambitious record conceptually, but at the same time, Love is the kind of smirking “coming-of-age” album only Corbo, Benton, and Caridi could’ve written, no rebranding required.

“We didn’t really think about it. Like, we weren’t trying to make the mature record and it wasn’t like anyone was saying ‘I have a theme or vision’ with this album,” Corbo admits. “I mean, the band’s called LVL UP, so we’re not as deep, religious or spiritual as you might think.”

“[Return to Love] is about feeling deep and heavy stuff in normal life, but trying to make it sound interesting, so you end up talk about magic instead,” Benton adds jokingly.

This isn’t even close to the first time either songwriter has been asked to expand on Return to Love’s lyrics. And, for better or worse, it’s not going to be the last.

“If big, crazy things start happening to you, you’re just going to want some normalcy [and] to write songs about watching Netflix original series.”

screen-shot-2016-09-19-at-5-44-38-pmIt’s not that LVL UP have never been a “mature” band. If maturity in a band is measurable by transparency and self-realization in its lyrics, LVL UP has been delivering maturity pretty much their entire existence. Sure, images of witches, hexes, and roman candles populate their lyrics and titles like “Bro Chillers” or “Stoned Alone” give some indication to their sense of humor, but what happens when the jokey titles are replaced for songs about being naked with God?

“I think we went into recording this record being like ‘oh, we have all this time in a studio with our good friend [Mike Ditrio] as producer, so let’s try the wackiest stuff we have.’ I think Nick has wanted to do a song like [“Naked In The River With the Creator”] for a long time,” Benton said.

“Creator” is the 7-minute closer that will almost assuredly earn a prominent place in LVL UP’s canon based on its length alone (almost every LVL UP song up to this point wraps up in under three minutes), but its organ-led ascension into four minutes of guitar dirge heaven is the case-in-point of LVL UP’s growth as a band fearlessly teasing out each songwriter’s wackiest impulses.

“When the drums come in, that’s actually five partial drum kits set up in a star pattern around a Leslie speaker that was playing a drone from the keyboard,” Benton says. “We all listened to the song at the same time and slammed on the drums. It took a really long time to set up, but it sounds like the Universal Studios intro.”

“I listen to a lot of really repetitive, borderline-boring ambient music, so sometimes I get this idea like, wondering what it would be like to be in that kind of band or, like, a doom metal band or a nice band with strings and shit,” Corbo adds. “There’s a certain sense though when you have three songwriters in a band that you can try that stuff if you want.”

Love is filled with classic LVL UP songwriting like the high school nostalgia that blasts through “Blur” or the affirmations of loneliness on “I”, but our conversation kept going back to the realizations of mortality via garden-watching on “Cut From the Vine” and finding traces of God on “Hidden Driver”.

“We’ve had interviews lately where a lot of the questions have been about our intentions and thought process going into this thing. And, not to say there isn’t any thought process going into things, but a lot of things just happen without us worrying or thinking too much about it,” Benton says.

The title of “Driver” itself came tangentially from the book The People’s Platform by Astra Taylor, which Benton cites as “an academic look into internet and culture”, but its appearance in the songwriting is prime “not thinking too much about it” decision-making. “I wound up getting the title from the author’s website, hiddendriver.com… I just really liked those words.”

Specifically, The People’s Platform questions, as Harper’s Magazine suggested in their review, “the notion that the Internet has brought us into an age of cultural democracy. Largely, the argument is that the Goliaths of online culture beat out the Davids, specifically that “content is sensationalist and powered by advertisements, quality work is underfunded, and corporate giants like Google and Facebook rule.” While the notion is certainly not unfounded, fellow SUNY Purchase bands, many of whom are assembled on Benton and Caridi’s label Double Double Whammy, have built their own rapid online legitimacy alongside LVL UP’s due to this overarching ethos of caring, but not over-worrying the process.

“In terms of Double Double Whammy, we’ve just been observing [Sub Pop] in way they manage us and our expectations. We’ve kind of taken some of their methods like how they handle artists and creating a positive experience,” Benton says.

“I think we’re pretty honest about not knowing what’s going on pretty much ever.”

lvlupnickChanging the Double Double Whammy formula even beyond that would be risky with the two incredible years the label has had in 2014 and 2015. As artists like Mitski, Porches, and Frankie Cosmos graduated to other labels after finding success on DDW, Benton and Caridi have just recently let another small label assist them in mail orders so they can continue doing what they do best: cultivating a roster of friends and beloved artists like Florist, Free Cake For Every Creature, and Told Slant.

The basic, uncluttered approach to their label is similarly why an album title like Return to Love just makes perfect sense for LVL UP at this stage of their game.

“If big, crazy things start happening to you, you’re just going to want some normalcy [and] to write songs about watching Netflix original series,” Benton says. “Deep down, some of the songs are mundane, but if someone can interpret that as something special or beautiful to them, then that’s really cool.”

As far as how they anticipate their new album and campaign of Love will take them from here, Corbo reverts to the band’s trademark brand of self-deprecation.

“I think we’re pretty honest about not knowing what’s going on pretty much ever,” he concludes with a laugh.

Return To Love will be out on September 23rd via Sub Pop. LVL UP will be at Great Scott tonight with Black Beach and Funeral Advantage. For tickets and further information, check out the Facebook page here.

Hip Hop Wunderkind: An Interview With Token

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There’s no question that North Shore rapper Token has a rare talent. His unique exposure to the Hip-hop genre at a young age combined with his unfathomable work ethic put in towards mastering the craft only leaves debate on whether or not the seventeen-year-old deserves the often overused but rarely deserving label of prodigy, and whether or not that label would end up being a blessing or a curse.

If we were to break down his hip hop career in Gladwellian perspectives, Token, whose given name is Ben Goldberg, certainly fits the outlier mold for future stardom. From an elementary school experience that quickly turned poems about isolation and confusion into raps behind Youtube beats, to producing his own mix tapes, videos and touring with his own bus, Token has been racking up a serious amount of credentials mastering all aspects of what it takes to be a successful hip-hop artist.

His biggest obstacle now isn’t so much a test of his skill but perhaps the acceptance of the genre itself along with its diverse fans.  After all, the mainstream Hip-hop world still churns out success stories for artists whose ‘street cred’ and often inaudible geographical slang overshadow anything resembling talent. The flip side of the coin is a thriving underground scene of true hip-hop revivalists who have long since moved on from the facade of glamorized misogyny and dumbed down perceived ways of urban culture. Goldberg, whose raps already take on a social consciousness seems to be moving in that artistic direction in hopes of cultivating a lasting impression rather than one of a mainstream flash in the pan.

Perhaps more importantly, Token seems to have an overall sense of gratitude in the discovery of his talent that permeates his character and perspective. He carries himself with an air of confidence and swagger that you’d expect from a young man that just plainly knows he’s got something but also with a light-heartedness and smile that lets you know that he feels lucky that he’s found it. Even when there are hints of emulation, Token’s confidence assures listeners that he’s just scratching the surface of his creative impulses.  We were lucky enough to catch up with Token himself before his Eraser Shavings mixtape release show this Friday night at Once Ballroom in Somerville. We got the chance to talk about his famous freestyle cipher with Sway, the thriving Boston hip hop scene, and why he’s more than just another rapper walking down the street. 

Allston Pudding: There is a duality to your name Token, can you describe how and when you came up with it?

Ben Goldberg: I came up with it when I was really young, I think like 5th grade. It was before I started calling myself Token as a rapper. I had a different name, but I just liked the idea of it. Basically the idea of it is that I always felt real different when I was in school and I was out of the loop on a lot things. Even with my family I always felt that I was just different. Token can also mean different, like the token ‘black kid’ at an all white school- he’s the only one. But it can also means something that’s worth something, like a token of gratitude. The first poem that I ever wrote was about being different and it turned out that me being different turned out to be my gift, so that’s how it sort of fell into place. I started calling myself Token and that was when I was in the 8th grade.

AP: The connection to T. Pain and the freestyle on Sway’s show are probably you’re biggest claims to fame so far. The freestyle is super long I think they cut the beat out on you, would you describe your experience from that day and would you have kept going if they didn’t cut you off?

BG: The T. Pain thing is something completely different. I kind of even forgot that happened. T. Pain shared my first video I ever did as Token when I was 14 and he just tweeted it.

The Sway video was something I prepared for for a really long time. The story behind it is that I actually did have way more material to put into that verse. I actually had prepared over 250 bars. Being on that show was always a dream of mine. I used to watch it religiously. When I heard about it I thought I was getting my own segment so I just went crazy with writing. It took up most of my time for close to a month, writing over 250 bars. The day before I go to New York, literally the day before we get the official invitation, we found out it was a part of Fire Cypher Friday or something like that, meaning there were going to be other dudes there. You can’t be spitting 250 bars with other dudes there and I didn’t know what beat they were gonna give.

Basically I only had a few choices. I could back out and hope to get my own segment, which would have been the easiest thing to do but I knew that Sway would look at it like “who is this kid thinking he’s too good for the cypher?” and that’s not what I felt but I just prepared so hard for something completely different. Then another option was to take old verses that were 12 or 16 or 24’s that were old but kind of average, and I didn’t really want to do that either. My third option was just try to trim it and rearrange what I prepared and take the most potent parts of the original verses and put it together, and that’s what I did. 

AP: Freestyle is a unique craft different from writing songs, how much time goes into learning and practicing that before you start to get out in front of people?

“Like, saying that you practice is an insult? But this is all I do, I got too much of a big goal. I want to be a famous rapper. I look like an idiot when I say that so it’s like, who would I be if I didn’t work my ass off every single day? It just wouldn’t add up.”

BG: The Sway verse wasn’t really an off the top freestyle. Practicing in general? I practice and write everyday. A lot of rappers pretend like “oh, this just happened”, calling stuff a freestyle and not talking about the practice and I never really understood that. Like, saying that you practice is an insult? But this is all I do, I got too much of a big goal. I want to be a famous rapper. I look like an idiot when I say that so it’s like, who would I be if I didn’t work my ass off every single day? It just wouldn’t add up. And thats how I look at it, I don’t think its gonna happen if I’m slacking off.

AP: When was the moment you realized you were good enough for it to be a real thing?

BG: I always thought I was the shit. Music was the outlet for me to feel like the shit when I wasn’t feeling like it. Ever since I was young I was really prolific with it because it became something that I relied on rather than I just did as a hobby. I was writing poems everyday when I was in second grade, so I’ve been doing it a while. I even go back sometimes to my first recordings when I was ten or eleven and there was stuff in there…I’ll still take lines of stuff that I said when I was in 4th or 5th grade that never got released that Ill put into my songs today. Obviously I have a lot to work on and I had a lot to work on then, but there were elements that I still feel are kind of dope.

AP: You look back and you’re proud of them?

BG: Yeah, I remember being in 7th grade and thinking, “man I’m gonna be one the greatest ever.” I remember thinking that, I’m gonna put these lyrics together and I’m gonna be one of the greatest ever.

AP: Coming from the North Shore and only being 17, how would describe your approach to Hip Hop when so much respect is given to artists based on where they’re from and their life experiences?

“Now I’m at the point where I feel like I’ve built everything up and it’s time that I need to talk again about certain things in my life”

BG: It’s interesting because my perspective is definitely unique and a lot of the music I’ve put out thus far hasn’t really touched upon the things that I’ve gone through or the stuff that I’ve seen or been around. It was kind of a plan because of where I’m from, because of the way I look, I had to prove myself lyrically before I did anything else. My very first songs were about my life, but nobody really gravitated towards those because they didn’t want to hear an eleven-year-old talking about his life. I made a decision that I was just going to show people that I can rap my ass off. Thats the first thing I’m gonna do. Now I’m at the point where I feel like I’ve built everything up and it’s time that I need to talk again about certain things in my life. That’s really what this project is. Its an introduction to what my fans are fans of. They’re fans of my skill, but I don’t think they’re fans of the person yet. I’m going to touch upon subjects that I haven’t approached yet.

AP: Your songs do tell stories of people around you though, like “Happiness”. Where did the inspiration to write a song like that come from? Did you have any fear that you’d get backlash from your classmates or family for using them for inspiration?

BG: The inspiration for “Happiness” came from my experience in public school in Marblehead. I noticed that a lot of kids in that town appeared to have these really fortunate lifestyles- money, family, good school, stuff that appeared to be for them an awesome life. But then I would get to know some of them and find out they’d be on medication for depression, or they have a history of cutting themselves. That was the original inspiration for the girl in the song. Then I just linked it back to the person who you would expect to be unhappy and kind of told my story a little bit. That song is just opening up the door to let people know that Token is more than just walking down the street rapping. Thats something that I’ve always believed, that happiness isn’t dictated by one specific thing-money. It’s about your self worth.

AP: You’re still in high school now, how do you balance being an artist with your academics? Do you have a typical high school life, is there a traditional college plan in the works? Do your teachers and classmates treat you differently?

BG: I take online classes now. Last year I started the second semester of my Junior year. I did that for multiple reasons, the most obvious being when I’m on the road I can go around my schedule with school.

Definitely as the music took off people began acting differently and trying to get on the boat. I do my best not to surround myself with “yes men.” I just noticed that I was a kid who no one really knew when I was younger and when I was quiet. And now I feel like I haven’t even really changed that much but everyone is more interested obviously because of the music. I don’t knock those people though, I would be interested in some dude who had his own career at my age and want to learn about it too. But I just don’t like to surround myself with that energy.

I don’t plan to go to college next year, but it’s definitely not something I’m writing off. I’ve always been about school. I’ve never done just hip-hop and not cared about school.

AP: I read you have overcome a language disability to do something that obviously requires a strong grasp of language. Do you think working through the disability played into the development of your rhyme and flow?

BG: I don’t think so but it’s interesting. When I was younger I was getting tested a lot and going to different therapists and I didn’t know what was going on until later, like kind of recently. I just remember one of the classes I used to go to was all about the way I comprehended words and broke words down and how I didn’t understand bigger words and having to go there all the time after school and I hated it so much. I was already rapping at that time too and it just didn’t add up to me. But I really didn’t understand it until now, so I feel like that didn’t effect anything at all. Its just kind of interesting that you pay this money to get tested and they tell you what you have wrong with yourself and its just ironic that for me its literally what I do. And they told me that I can’t do it.

AP:  That leads me into my next question, I watched a little of your AMA the other day and a lot of people are really inspired by you and ask you for advice. Is that a little overwhelming?

Token: It’s definitely overwhelming, but inspiring is my biggest inspiration because it’s just crazy what music can do . It’s insane. I’m still young and a lot of times it’s a lot to handle. But that comes from putting yourself in the music. When you’re talking about things like depression people can relate and want to hear your story. I can’t be talking to fans all the time but I try to talk to as many as possible and hear them out. The power you have with the music is insane and I never would have thought about it. I also think it’s because I’m young because there a lot of young people out there that think that they don’t have the respect that they should have. People think that they’re thinking on a younger level and they haven’t gone through certain stuff and they see what I’ve done at this age and they’re inspired by that. It’s awesome because I know so many people that are my age or even younger that are so mature for their age and could do so much for the world if they were just given a little more credit.

AP: You do swear in some of your songs but generally you’re a clean rapper. Is that conscious effort to stay accessible to all listeners and demographics or is that something you don’t really think about?

BG: I definitely didn’t think about it in the past. I think about it a little bit more now but I really don’t censor myself. If it adds emotion to it and it’s really what I’m feeling. I really go by how I feel and not how people are going to react to it. There are specific songs like “Happiness” that I want everyone to hear. I want the kids to hear it, I want the parents to hear it, so that song specifically doesn’t have any swears in it.


AP: How would you describe the Boston hip hop scene? Has it embraced you? Is there anyone that you’ve connected with?

“To me that’s what the local scene is: people doing it for the love. That’s who I really wanted to earn the respect of more than these rappers who are touring all over the world.”

BG: When I was 13 I got introduced to the scene because my dude Jon Glass was taking me around to local cyphers and I got introduced to this group called Wreckshop Movement. They kind of showed me a lot about hip hop and performing on the spot and really built my courage up. That introduced me to a lot of the locals that didn’t necessarily have a ton of fans or were touring the world but to me that’s what the local scene is: people doing it for the love. That’s who I really wanted to earn the respect of more than these rappers who are touring all over the world. I’d love to get respect from them too but I still talk to dudes I met when I was thirteen and ask them what they ‘think of this song.’

But there’s a lot of cats… specifically I’m a fan of Joyner Lucas. That’s my dude, he’s from Worcester. I mean Mass is coming up. You got Cousin Stizz, Michael Christmas. I think it’s coming. I really feel like there hasn’t been this amount of buzz coming from Mass hip hop in a while and I feel like its just a matter of time before it becomes known as a main hub for hip hop.

Leeds Edutainment presents Token at Once Ballroom in Somerville this Friday, Tickets $13 advance, $15 day of show