AP Asks: Who/What Are You Excited For at Together 2016?

Although AP is no stranger to Together Boston, we understand some hesitation one might have going into our city’s annual week of electronic worship.

Sure, diving from basement shows into a club can be a bit jarring, but we can assure you that Together has proven yearly that it can generate a lineup that both serves as a comprehensive look into electronic today and a welcoming introduction for newcomers interested in the scene. Keeping with the spirit of… uh, togetherness, we went to some of our favorite local electronic musicians/fans to ask which sets and events they’re excited for (or, alternatively, aren’t) at this year’s fest:

Skip Mathew Dear. See Jon Hopkins if you haven’t already. But don’t miss NAAFI. If that name is new to you, NAAFI is an incredible label from Mexico that is giving voice to the stumble driven grooves of Latin America. Unsure? Read this article and keep in mind that the co-founder is spinning at the show so, like, don’t mess this one up.

Jacob Rosati, Skinny Bones and TOR

Analogue Heaven North East Synthfest at Berklee looks amazing. I think I will go to that.

Joss Bordelon, JOSS

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AP FUN FACT: The Mmmmaven Recharge Lounge will also be hosting a similar kind of interactive synthesizer event with the adorably titled “Synthesizer Petting Zoo” from 12:00 PM – 4:00 PM on Sunday. For fans of getting a hands-on look at synthesizers or having a more easy-going Sunday afternoon, we recommend checking out both events!

The Black Madonna and Byoosik on the same bill (fuck, I’m not ready…), Bicep and Optimo for my house fix (the latter set is ALL NIGHT LONG), Jon Hopkins and Floating Points to simultaneously tickle/confuse strange parts of my brain stem. If I could be everywhere at once though, I would.

— Andrew Perrin, Strange Mangers

I’m always excited about music festivals that include some sort of educational, daytime element – I love opportunities to see members of the community outside of a noisy club, and at past Together Festivals, that’s always where I end up meeting the most new people. It’s been fun watching the Together daytime programming evolve over the years – I have really great memories of lounging on Yogibos in the old Blockbuster space in Central Square a couple years ago. There are some really cool art and tech projects being highlighted this year, and I’m especially excited about the Sonic Beating workshop on reinforcing sound for event spaces. This is a topic I’ve been very curious about and Sonic Beating does the best sound I’ve experienced in and around this city.

As far as music programming, I’m probably most excited to make it to the Scanners event at Zuzu! I’ve been out of town or otherwise unable to make this night since its inception, but the Together edition is looking sweet with Shawn O’Sullivan alongside some of my favorite locals.

Alyce Currier/Lychee, columnist at Earmilk

Strange Mangers. They’re doing a special thing at the Lilypad where they’re reinterpreting their music through synthesizers, electrifying their typically more rock/noise oriented programming. We love those guys; they’re special.

For national and international stuff, the Saturday night show with Matthew Dear and J.Phlip from Dirtybird and Axel Boman. Axel Boman is actually beloved by Pitchfork. He’s one of these house guys who has cracked the code to get written up on! That’s three talents that are out of the sky good.

— David Day, founder of Together Boston

For more information on artists/events at this year’s Together, check out their website or keep tabs on AP as we cover the festival throughout the week!

PHOTO REVIEW: Ought, Priests and Ursula at The Sinclair (5/4)

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When choosing what to show, many respected artists opt for the heart, like Elliot Smith or the likes of Angel Olsen and those who came before. They’ve lain out their souls into map-like songs showing exact feelings that we may adopt as our own for a couple minutes at a time. Listening is heavy even through falsetto voices, and, to quote the band this post is really about, “Doesn’t it just bring a tear to your eye?”

However, as reminded to us last week, bands like Ought take a different approach and hold different importance. Listening to Ought is like hearing frontman Tim Beeler’s train of consciousness, collected and fueled by the rest of his Montréal-made quartet. Happiness and trying to get that feeling are mentioned in the context of train rides and grocery trips, not breakups and get-back-togethers. The post-punk outfit prefers shouting the word “together” to describing a particular instance of it. Life lessons come not in metaphors but in head-on mantras of “everything’s gonna be okay,” and “I am no longer afraid to die, ’cause that is all I have left.” One live set makes this clear. Ought presents stuff from the headspace, not the heart, and that’s just as tear-inducing as any love song.

Last Wednesday, The Sinclair filled with the band’s tiny details and larger-than-life thoughts to the tune of crashing guitars and talk-singing. Through songs off last year’s Sun Coming Down and the year prior’s More Than Any Other DayBeeler rolled his eyes back into his brain. Followed by a wag of the finger, it was like he repeatedly reported what he saw back there, music for thought, thought for music. Openers Priests and Ursula continued the theme with their own clear-worded testimonies to everything from “prom night” to visiting the doctor’s office.

It was a cluster of artists showing off the kind of songwriting we often take for granted: the less-than-painstaking, straight-out-of-mind kind. We came, we jumped and we heard every word, leaving us somewhat at a loss for our own thoughts. Regardless, here’s photo evidence.

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PREMIERE: Gauntly’s “Caustic”

In any social circle, tadalafil no one walks the line between “totally admirable” and “total asshole that forgot to text me back” more than the multi-tasker.

Promising to attend three shows, pills two band practices, link and a dinner meet-up in one night is… well, status quo in any music scene, but few actually do it all as joyfully (and without looking like a “before” image in an informercial for erasing bags under eyes) as Mateo Garcia.

While capping off his final year at Berklee, Garcia joined the pedal worshippers in Leaner, released an album with screamo revivalists Hit Home, ran social media for local non-profit Fitz Ross, and whittled away at a solo LP as Gauntly. Mire, which we’re premiering a song from today, is a markedly more hushed affair than Leaner or Hit Home, putting his softly strummed angst at the forefront in place of distortion or screaming. Of course, a Gauntly song like “Caustic” wouldn’t be complete a cathartic gang chant (which, in this case, is the slightly horrifying line, “cut my head off and get a new one!”), but who’s going to fault a bit of headless release when there’s the weight of playing/attending pretty much every local show on his shoulders?

Garcia will be on a full US tour this summer with Du Vide alongside Sports Coach, but the rest of Mire will be out shortly via Bandcamp. In the meantime, check out “Caustic” below:

Looking Up From A Ball Of Jokes: A Q&A With Eskimeaux

A solo four hour drive and an unexpected Champlain Lake ferry suggested by Google Maps, left Gabby Smith of Eskimeaux, giddy at the chance to share a song that she crafted along the way. Although she missed her band, she saw the small alter of Winooski, Vermont’s Methodist Church as this challenge to get more physical with her performance and offer the unlikely material of this freestyle jam. Ending the set with a dynamic, occasionally one-kneed, “ I Admit I’m Scared”, Smith beamed.

Optimism surrounds Smith’s entire being. Her songwriting explores the darkest of places, but we’re always directed to the underlying theme of beauty in detail and the friendship that pulls through. Songs like “Power” off of her latest six-song album, Year Of The Rabbit, feel like more of a compass to easiness than anything. She cites her strongly seeded sources of relief as the inspiration from her friend and occasional bandmate, Greta Kline of Frankie Cosmos and her dear dog , Frankie.

It was only right that Smith directed me to a rainbow during this interview.


Allston Pudding: How did you meet Frankie?

Gabby Smith: I was on the first Eskimeaux tour in 2012 and I was in Athens, Ohio. I played this set and was feeling really chatty that night on stage. I was like, “yeah I went to a pet store today and it was really hard. I think that I’m going to go back tomorrow even though I don’t agree with pet stores. There was this really beautiful dog and we just bonded really hard.” So I was saying all of this stuff and this person came up to me right after our set and was like, “hey, so I have this puppy and I’m moving to L.A., so I’m going to have to give him away. Do you want him?” I was like, “Oh my god, no. That’s amazing and such a bad idea.” She then told me to come over for breakfast and that everyone needs time to play with a puppy and it will be fine. It was totally a trick because she knew that I wouldn’t be able to say no to a homeless puppy. What the hell!

So I went over to her house, she made me chilaquiles, it was amazing, and then I walked out with a dog. He was the size of a tetherball. He was really

By Andrew Piccone

By Andrew Piccone

amazing. We took him on the rest of the tour and he was really good. He’s going to be four soon. I assume that he was about two months old when I got him. He is way smaller than I thought. I assumed he would be huge like a boxer, but he just turned out to be not a boxer and definitely not huge.

AP: So he travels well on tour?

GS: He did, but the shows have been really different lately. The way that people interact with us is really different. On the first tours we could just be in the car and hang out with him and have time to take walks with him because it was mostly house shows where we could put him in the car during our set or have him hang out in the house if it was hot.

He does have these hunting, shotgun earmuffs, so that he doesn’t go deaf, but he also refuses to eat. He’s a picky prince. He’s gotten worse with it on tour.

AP: Frankie has been in press photos and he’s on the cover of O.K. with you. How does Frankie influence your lyrics?

GS: Frankie is the center of my domestic relationship. Whenever my partner and I don’t see eye to eye, we have this common dude who we look at and laugh at, and everything is fine. He’s definitely the sense of calm in my life, which is a place where I try to draw emotions from most often.

I talk about him quite a bit, especially in newer songs. In “Drunk”, he’s the source of my anxiety in my dreams. Also “You And Frankie And Me” is about this ball of jokes that you can look at whenever you’re sad and look up from him and see that everything is fine.

AP: You tend to use a lot of metaphors including animals and nature. What do you think is the importance of having a deep relationship with nature?

GS: Oh my god, it’s so important. I grew up in Manhattan and there’s not really any nature. You can go to Central Park, but it’s a little scary sometimes. Now, I know about Prospect Park and it’s really changed my world because it’s so beautiful and huge. Every morning before nine is “off-leash hours” and there’s hundreds of dogs everywhere in the park. It’s so magical. When I discovered that, I realized how important it is to get to know nature. I mean I grew up in a Jewish family and there’s a stereotype that every Jewish family in New York sends their kids off to summer camp to enjoy nature. I totally did that. I was a horse girl.

I feel like it’s just such a special thing.

AP: Did you get to do anything on Year Of The Rabbit that you didn’t get to do on O.K.?

1GS: It’s almost live which I definitely did not do on O.K. It was just the complete opposite, where it’s me sitting in my room and adding keyboards to everything. With this we were trying to figure out how we could perform it almost exactly the same live. In some ways it’s better than live because it has Emily [Sprague] and Henry’s [Crawford] amazing guitar stuff that I don’t know how to do. It was really sick. I got all of my friends to do little cameos on it.

AP: You have said that one of the biggest pushes for you to make music was Greta Kline and Frankie Cosmos. What is your favorite Frankie Cosmos song?

GS: There’s this song called “Skinny” on Daddy Cool. It’s so sick. She has a couple of songs that are very nineties in the chord progressions and they’re very muddy. She usually writes with these bright, ringing chords, but these songs are very like “Shing ca dang dang”, very Liz Phair. Oh my god, the song is so angry and so sick!

Also, “cow meeting” is amazing. The first Frankie Cosmos song that I ever really heard was “Havin A House”. I’ve always wanted to cover it, but there’s nowhere for it to go. It’s perfect.

 

Catch Eskimeaux at the Allston Pudding Presents show on Thursday, May 12th with Free Cake For Every Creature, Claire Cottril, and Lady Pills at Once Ballroom. Tickets are $12.00 in advance and $15.00 at the door.

INTERVIEW: Fruit Bats

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A year ago Eric D. Johnson was sitting on the edge of the Brighton Music Hall stage, feet dangling and singing songs unplugged that spanned his sixteen year career with nothing but an acoustic guitar and his Roger Hodgson-Supertramp-esque voice. Not on purpose, the impromptu unplugged-nearly all request set was the result of an unbearable buzz coming from his keyboard and guitar set up. He was billed as the opener for fellow Pacific Northwesterner Vetiver, simply as EDJ, a departure from the Fruit Bats moniker he’d used since he first recorded music onto a four track recorder back in early 2000. The mysterious shift to EDJ was accompanied by an L.P. of the same name and whose songs we can only guess would have made up much of that opening set before he reluctantly surrendered to playing the bare bones set.  What was so endearing about that particular performance was not the humility and improvisation that Johnson displayed from his sudden decision to grab his acoustic, but how the forty or so attendees there all started calling out their favorite Fruit Bats songs. For me it was “Feather Bed,” for others it was “When You Love Somebody,” “You’re Too Weird,” “Ruminant Band”…the list went on and on. You could tell by the way people gathered around Johnson that those songs meant something special to them, and perhaps in that moment Johnson might have came to that realization as well. 

Fast forward to a year later, Johnson has reformed Fruit Bats and released a new record titled Absolute Loser that might give those long time fans a glimpse into the struggles that the otherwise uplifting singer-songwriter had been dealing with during the hiatus of Fruit Bats. Grief from the result of his wife’s miscarriage set Johnson into a whirlwind of existential confusion influencing a confessional record that perhaps didn’t quite fit the mold or spirit of Fruit Bats. With Absolute Loser and the return of  Fruit Bats there is a reconnection not only with the name but also the strong melodic folk-pop sound that passionate fans fell in love with.

We got to hear the large chunks of the new record for the first time along with a slew of familiar favorites as Fruit Bats embark on a national tour that started here in the northeast and rolled through the Once Ballroom in Somerville this Saturday night. We also caught up with Johnson before the show to chat with him about the new record, his passion for scoring films, and his love of the Grateful Dead.



Allston Pudding: Fruit Bats as your fronted solo project disbanded for a few years. How did you come to the decision to bring them/it back to life?

Eric D. Johnson: I’ve been getting that (reasonable) question a lot. There’s a lot to it, but the simple answer is that I realized that whether I like it or not, the name is “me” at this point. It’s always been me and a revolving cast of characters. I have a boring first name and it was way easier back in the day to just come up with a band name. When I was touring as “EDJ” it took so much effort to explain “This is the dude from Fruit Bats” that it just made more sense to start using the name again. A lot of bands are coming back together as some sort of money grab in order to headline Coachella or whatever, but that’s not the case here. There was never any money! Nor are we headlining Coachella, for that matter. Still waiting on that call. I dunno –  I’m happy to be back getting paid to sing songs, and if it really just takes me changing a couple of words around, I’m cool with that.

AP: You emerged in an era that got defined as “freak folk.” Would you still describe your music this way today or at all?

E.J. Not at all, no. And although a lot of my best friends were in bands that were kind of lumped in with that scene, we never were so much. I’m quite certain none of those guys came up with the term “freak folk,” nor did they like it much. That seemed to be a product of the press as much as anything, as is often the case with those “movements.” I’ve always kind of thought of myself more as a pop dude at heart, anyway. But I love folk music, freaky or otherwise. If you’re basically nice and cool and want to buy my records and come to my shows, and my music means something to you or does something to you – you can call me anything, I don’t care.

AP: You’ve scored a couple films. Where did the idea of scoring films come from or how did these opportunities get presented to you?

E.J. Through touring and meeting people and living in LA, I was lucky enough to befriend a few different young buck directors and made it clear to them that if they ever needed a composer that I was their guy. And then even luckier that they ended up making movies and hiring me. I’ve always wanted to be a filmmaker. That was my first career choice and obsession growing up, I just devoured it constantly. I fell into music a bit by accident and just took to it. So composing scores feels very full circle to me. It uses very, very different muscles than making records with a band. Working to picture is so, so fun.

AP: You’re quite the collaborator, how have all these collaborations shaped your evolution as a musician? Which one(s) do you look back upon as the most meaningful?

E.J. If you’re creating anything, community is super key. Everyone I’ve worked with has been important to me. My relationship with Califone in early on was really huge because before that I had no idea how idea how anything worked. Through those guys I toured for the first time, met the world and saw how all the gears moved. It made me go “I think I can do this.” And those guys were like “yeah, you can do this.” I’m honestly not even sure what I’d be doing if they hadn’t invited me aboard. That was a watershed. But so was Shins, so was Vetiver, and I learned so much from all those dudes. And they learned from me too.

AP: You’ve worked on the Last Waltz recreation, did you get asked to be a part of the Day of the Dead project? Feel snubbed?

E.J. Ha! Snubbed, no. I’m actually on Day of the Dead singing harmonies on “Playing in the Band.” My buddy Josh Kaufman was one of the producers and tried to give me a shot singing lead but no dice. But I don’t feel snubbed. I did get picked on by indie people for a long-ass time for being a Dead fan, so it’s both nice and weird to see this modern embrace. I dunno. I have no sense of ownership though.

AP: It seems sort of well known that you’re a dead head. What is your favorite Grateful Dead song and why? Or your fondest Grateful Dead memory (maybe first show or playing with Bob Weir?)

E.J. I have lots of hallucinogenic memories at actual Grateful Dead shows, too long and mystical to recount. I’m probably from the last generation to have been able to tour and see lots of Jerry-era shows. But to be honest, listening back to bootlegs of shows I’d been to, they were hit and miss at that time. Certainly with moments of transcendence. All the recent 50th-anniversary punditry about the Dead fulfilling this promise of what America should be – the road, the freedom – that’s pretty accurate and it kind of changed my life seeing them when I was like fifteen. Just kind of a portal into a different world, even though I’m well aware now that it was way over the hill at that point, too. But nonetheless was special for my young mind. I discovered indie rock in Chicago shortly thereafter and that was as or more huge – so much more graspable. It was those two things crossfading at that strange moment that really shaped me. Oh, and Bobby Weir still kills it – he’s still got the voice and everything. Yeah, playing with him was insane. I actually teared up a little bit, it was kind of a “how far I’ve come” moment. Never could have dreamed it.

AP: I just watched the video for “Humbug Mountain Song” and I always loved “You’re too Weird.” Some of your videos seem to have an element of humor in them. Do you have visions for what songs you want to make videos for and  ideas on how you’ll act them out?

E.J. I think most funny videos are a result of low budgets – it’s easier to go for laughs when you don’t have a lot of dough. Plus I’m a forty-year old dude at this point. My videos better be funny, at least if I’m gonna be in them. If I had the money I’d do a video for every song, I love doing videos. Goes back to my film thing I guess.

AP; You’re newest album is titled Absolute Loser I know you’ve released the song for it, but how did you come to this title and/or what is this song about that made you want to pen it as the name of the album?

E.J. Well, this album has some pretty heavy subject matter in that it’s about my wife having a miscarriage. So “Absolute Loser” really refers to someone feeling an absolute loss as in “one who loses everything.” Not really loser in the sense of a person who is a dork or something! There was just something evocative about it to me.

AP: How would describe the writing and recording process for getting Absolute Loser made?

E.J. I wrote and got the recordings started at my studio in Portland, which is kind of a small space I’ve really set up more for film scoring but is great for demoing and small projects too. I usually use the studio as a writing tool but I consciously tried to write with acoustic guitar and Iphone this time around just to make things a little more immediate because of the intense subject matter. But I also tracked some basics in Portland after that. Then, like my last few records, I went to LA and did pretty much everything else with my producer/soulmate Thom Monahan. He and I have a shorthand language for record making. We record for a bit, take a break and eat tacos, talk about records or movies for three hours, forget we were recording, then record more until we need to sleep. I spent a fair amount of it drunk and/or stoned and didn’t put on shoes for weeks on end. It’s how I like it.

Fruit Bats are out on tour now and check out a few pics from this past Saturday’s show at Once Ballroom in Somerville.

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TICKET GIVEAWAY: Boston Calling Spring 2016

BOSTON CALLING GIVEAWAY

We’re giving away 6 pairs of tickets to this spring’s Boston Calling (5 pairs of GA tickets, and one pair of ~VIP~ tickets). That’s a lot of tickets. This year’s Boston Calling has a diverse powerhouse of big names including Sia, Sufjan Stevens, Disclosure, Haim, Courtney Barnett, The Front Bottoms, Charles Bradley and his Extrordinaires, Vince Staples, Battles, Unknown Mortal Orchestra, Palehound and Michael Christmas. Plus, there is a new third stage with an all local lineup featuring some AP faves (Lady Pills, Black Beach, Nemes and These Wild Plains) and some comedy to round it out.

We are giving you several ways to enter to win these tickets, so read up on the below, and get to entering! Giveaway runs from 5/8/16-5/21/16.

1) REQUIRED Fill out the form below for 2 entries (if you can’t see the form down there, fill it out here) (do this only once!)

2) Sign up for Mailing Lists (sign up for these and get 6 entries each, if you’re already signed up, don’t worry, just click yes): Boston Calling list (6 entries), AP Ticket Giveaway list (6 entries)

3) “Like” and comment on the post associated with this on Facebook for an additional 8 entries

4) Tweet at @allstonpudding with something to the effect of “I entered to win @Boston_Calling tickets via @allstonpudding  #APBostonCallingGiveaway http://bit.ly/APBostonCalling16”
You can do this once a day until the end of the giveaway (5/21/16) = 14 entries (one for each day)

5) Instagram: – tag @allstonpudding and #APBostonCallingGiveaway in the caption of an Instagram photo / video showing us why you really deserve the tickets for an additional 14 entries!

Complicated, we know.

Full Lineup

  • FRIDAY, MAY 27
    • SIA
    • SUFJAN STEVENS
    • LISA HANNIGAN AND
      AARON DESSNER
  • SATURDAY, MAY 28
    • ROBYN
    • ODESZA
    • MIIKE SNOW
    • CITY AND COLOUR
    • COURTNEY BARNETT
    • BØRNS
    • THE VACCINES
    • BATTLES
    • LIZZO
    • PALEHOUND
  • SUNDAY, MAY 29
    • DISCLOSURE
    • HAIM
    • JANELLE MONÁE
    • ELLE KING
    • THE FRONT BOTTOMS
    • CHARLES BRADLEY AND
      HIS EXTRAORDINAIRES
    • VINCE STAPLES
    • UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA
    • CHRISTINE AND THE QUEENS
    • MICHAEL CHRISTMAS
  • SATURDAY, MAY 28
    VERIZON / COMEDY
    • LAMONT PRICE
    • KEN REID
    • SEAN SULLIVAN
    • ORLANDO BAXTER
    • KELLY MACFARLAND
  • MUSIC
    • NEMES
    • LADY PILLS
  • SUNDAY, MAY 29 VERIZON / COMEDY
    • LAMONT PRICE
    • KEN REID
    • SEAN SULLIVAN
    • ORLANDO BAXTER
    • KELLY MACFARLAND
  • MUSIC
    • THESE WILD PLAINS
    • BLACK BEACH

 

WATCH: Black Beach Practice Space Session

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For our latest practice space invasion, we crashed the sound museum to pay a visit to local punk rockers Black Beach. At one point during the session, after we finished one of the songs, a random dude knocked on the door of the practice space and said he walked by and was so blown away by the sound that he ended up listening to the whole song from outside the doorway. I was fortunate enough to go on tour with the band earlier this year, and remember having a similar reaction during one of the first shows, I was shlepping around taking photos, and then at one point I just stopped and was frozen for a few songs in a row, just completely locked into the music, thats the thing for me that really makes Black Beach special, how tight they are, “Youth Is Out There” (a personal favorite) is a prime example of this. It came as no surprise to me a few days later when I learned the band had been playing together for nearly a decade in one form or another.

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We filmed three songs off the bands debut LP (Check it Here) which dropped last month via Basement Sounds, and the audio from the session (which turned out amazing) is available via cassette at their show this Sunday with Protomartyr!

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The session also includes a few interview questions, which I wish we did more of honestly, as it’s always cool learning a little bit about the band. We actually had to re-shoot the interview a few weeks later because we all had a few to many Modelos during the session and f’d up the interview audio lol. Huge thanks to local rock photographers Madison McConkey and Nick Raygun for hooking up some sweet pics as well! Anyway, check the session below, its a long one, but well worth it! We also have the individual songs on our youtube channel.

Catch Black Beach live his sunday 5/8 at Great Scott w Protomartyr (Tix Here), and then at Boston Calling on May 29th.

Ought Premiere “Beautiful Blue Sky” Video

Canadian origins be damned, Toronto post-punk act Ought is the saving grace America needs right about now.

Besides the allure of emigrating to our Northern neighbors during this Trump-led shitshow/bloodbath combo deal of an election season, nothing encapsulated the domesticated hell of new condos, lifeless water cooler conversations, and desperation of middle America better than Ought’s “Beautiful Blue Sky” from last year’s Sun Coming Down.

Now outfitted with a beautifully minimalist video directed by Bobby McHugh, Ought’s sprawling opus somehow resonates more fiercely with elegant modern dance competing against singer Tim Darcy’s barked repetitions. Whether Darcy’s shouts are hopeful calls for change or little confirmations of a societal apocalypse, at least “Sky” still makes for a uniting soundtrack for the concerned optimists and pillow-screaming pessimists in all of us.

If this makes you feel like putting your arms in the air as the generally accepted sign for not having a care (or, you know, having many cares), Ought will be playing tonight at The Sinclair with Priests and local duo Ursula. For more information, check the Facebook page here.

Hold Me Mom, Never Let Go: Mothers, Palm & Vundabar at Great Scott (4/30)

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The room was warm, physician 21+ and the first words I heard while hanging my coat marked the start of a story. “I was coming back from a Bernie rally when she texted me, decease ” said a dude from his bar stool. His friend released a sigh embedded with the drawn out “shit,” of concern. Saturday night was all feeling from there, a sensory overload of the ear and heart.

Vundabar started the show as I skirted around the perimeter like a kid balancing soup across a cafeteria. My beer was the price of your average sandwich and up until this point, I had associated the art-schooled outfit with rowdier than Allston-average crowds. That said, the trio’s 2015 release Gawk rips in the live setting for reasons more than volume. Perhaps I’ve been away too long or just inattentive, but Vundabar is expert at making every sound heard. Funny grips on guitar and bass allowed heavy chords to hit without hiding the songwriting that went in.

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“Fuzzy” is an overused term in my tackle box of ill-defined music words, and one I couldn’t hook onto Vundabar this time around. Brandon Hagen’s voice was clean in falsetto and unburied by noise, which was loud without distortion. Good emotion without bad audio. Songs about lying sounded true, something everyone seemed to rock to and appreciate. Alongside New York’s Palm and Mothers from Athens, Hagen humbly described his band as a “couple cicadas buzzing into a microphone.” Like bug sounds in summer, I’d say that buzzing provided a special kind of contentment.

Palm broke the genre down from there with a set unlike any I’ve ever experienced live. Then again, the Philly-by-way-of-New-York group is unlike any band I’ve recently tried on recording too. Disjoint rhythms of guitar shards, Palm’s fall release Trading Basics hardly feels like handing down boring, yet practical cotton shirts. It’s easy to appreciate but hard to understand…that is, until heard in-person.

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Palm’s songs are projects, best taken in while watching the band make them. One string at a time, down and back up, even the strums sounded a sum of parts. As guitarist and founding member Eve Alpert jerked her arms and floated vocals overtop, I heard what I had been missing, which was becoming the night’s theme. The rush of irregular rhythms was surprisingly powerful. With no consistent beat to bob to, members of the crowd were relatively still, challenged to figure out these songs alone. It sounded underwater, like Celestial Shore or the vibes of learning how to doggie paddle. By the end, I was inspired and officially done with my beer.

Then came the maternal, warm and heartfelt reason I arranged my ticket in the first place. Mothers from Athens, Georgia took the stage to a large crowd of emotionals like me and played through a set with slightly more edge than expected. The folk-punk band’s recent release When You Walk a Long Distance You Are Tired was my own personal reentry into crying over music, not necessarily because of sadness but because of comfort. I expected the exact softness I’d been reflecting to for months but ended up hearing much, much more.

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Mothers started off with “Copper Mines,” a bright song that tumbled into travelling speed, like the overture for a car trip zooming temporarily away from trouble. New notes rang through on guitar, which distorted at points and pulled back too. No violin made room for the group’s punk inspiration during a mix of unfamiliar songs and tracks from the album. Many mouthed along to “It Hurts Until it Doesn’t,” and “Lockjaw” had a newfound swing from loud to soft that came with the experience of seeing the band motion from tip toes to bent knees.

“I cut out my tongue, seeing yours would speak for the both of us.”

And somehow, Kristine Leschper’s voice managed even more wholesomeness live than on recording. She sang smoothly but also took the liberty of speaking the ends of her lyrical sentences, sounding protester-like behind a megaphone and letting words fly with confidence. Her lyrics, whether humbly concerning the weight of an ego or directly mentioning the control we often give to others, are assertive and nuzzled up against truth. I have a feeling our belief in her lines lay at the core of why we all gathered to Great Scott in the first place. After all, I almost cried upon hearing my favorites: “I cut out my tongue, seeing yours would speak for the both of us.”

There’s nothing more hopeful than pulling off your calloused toe mask in a roomful of people trying to do the same so finding a smart conclusion here is hard. I honestly just adored this show to the point of attachment. I was sad to leave and, if possible, would have preferred to bottle the whole thing up and keep it on my windowsill for the lonely nights. Feelings exceeded an already high bar thanks to Vundabar, Palm and especially Mothers. Going in, I knew the band from Athens possessed something more than just heartfelt honestly. Walking away, I realize it’s the sound of coming home.

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Adult Jazz Releases Video for Second Single, “Earrings Off!”

adult jazz band photo (Sam Travis)

band photo by Sam Travis

Adult Jazz has released the second, link eponymous single off their new album Earrings Off! The song, released in tandem with a video directed by Sam Travis, follows in the same uncanny vein as their first single, “Eggshell.”

In a statement on their Facebook, the band claimed the song is “about how femininity is witch-hunted out of men and boys,” just one of the concepts on gender and identity the band explores on the new album. The video itself both embodies maleness while also exposing the unnerving containment it creates around the psyche. Watch it below, via NPR.

Earrings Off! will be out May 20 via Tri Angle Records.