Teen Suicide Re-Release LPs Via Run For Cover

12080196_888845011202815_4839548199139795995_oAfter a string of “reunion” dates with Alex G earlier this year and the generally amorphous state most of Sam Ray’s projects exist in, order price it doesn’t seem too farfetched to hope for a new Teen Suicide LP as of late.

Although the beloved act has (for now) nixed any plans of adding new material onto their prolific 2011-2013 run, a vinyl reissue of their full-length I Will Be My Own Hell Because There Is A Devil Inside My Body is officially up for pre-order alongside a pressing of EPs DC Snuff Film and Waste Yrself. Both albums received re-mastering and re-release from local label Run For Cover, who have expressed interest in pressing all of Teen Suicide’s releases in the past.

Preorders are available via the Run For Cover store. Teen Suicide will be playing next at the label’s CMJ showcase, which includes sets from Pity Sex, Spencer Radcliffe, Crying, LVL UP, and others.

VIDEO PREMIERE: The Fawns – “High School Party”

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HEY! We’re stoked to bring you the exclusive premiere of The Fawns new music video “High School Party” directed by Jason Mazzotta. The song is off their forthcoming album Goodnight, Spacegirl and was recorded at Rub Wrongways Records in Northampton, MA. Lead singer Lesa Bezo snaps photos (with a Holga!!) of party goers, and sings along with her band in this twangy rocker thats got us feeling all nostalgic about those good ole high school parties. Wouldn’t it be weird to go back to a high school party rn, knowing all you know now??? The video features many cameos from Western Mass musicians, and many of the band members have played in various projects including our favorites, Polaris! Check the video below, it sure looks like they had fun making this one!

Stove Streams New Track, “Wet Food”

 

By Karen Muller

It’s better to have Ovloved and lost than to never have Ovloved at all– and thankfully, Steve Hartlett is back in action with a new single from his solo project Stove.  Get a taste of upcoming album Is Stupider with the raw riffage of “Wet Food”, streaming below, then check it out live at The Middle East (upstairs) on November 24th.

 

INTERVIEW: Beauty Pill

Photo Credit: Brian Libby

bpillBeauty Pill is a band that simply refuses to go quietly into the dark. Led by frontman Chad Clark, the D.C. outfit is making a huge comeback from a seven year hiatus marked by Clark’s contraction of a serious heart illness that brought him near death on several occasions.

This year alone, the band has released an album, scored a local production of Hamlet, reissued their first EP, and are now embarking on a brief East Coast tour.

Their new album, Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are, continues where they left off. It’s a poignant statement about, well, most everything. There are songs about social equality, drowning in a car with your lover, and there’s even a tribute to Clark’s late, beloved dog Lucy.

The band’s signature experimental DIY pop sound is set to maximum, and is as confident as it is innovative. It’s an immense soundscape, one that fires information at you around every corner. Yet it still manages to be hooky and just downright fun. Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are has a grace that only comes from veterans like themselves.

The album was recorded and released as a three-part experiment called Beauty Pill’s Immersive Ideal at the Artisphere in Arlington, Virginia. The Immersive Ideal was an experiment on dissolving the distance between audience and band. It sought to break down the sort of alienation between fans and artists.

We caught up with Clark on the phone before the band departs on their tour. They’ll be at O’Brien’s this Thursday with Dirty Dishes, Soft Fangs, and Rachel Hael.

 

AP: 2015 has been a busy year for Beauty Pill—How are you feeling about it all? What’s it like to be back at full speed?

Clark: You know, I feel like the work we’ve been doing is more visible. But I feel like I’m always active with Beauty Pill music. It’s just not always visible to people. But I’ve been very encouraged by the response to the record. I honestly didn’t expect it.

I thought people would receive this music as difficult or challenging. I didn’t expect people to get into it immediately, as they seem to have gotten into it. Maybe I overestimated how complex it is, or whatever, but it’s been really positive and encouraging.

Were you trying to make the record a little more heady than usual?

No, it’s one of those things where when we were done with it, I was like wow, this is a lot for people to take in. I would never deliberately craft music to be more difficult for people, or more challenging on purpose. I’m always interested in being understood. I’m always interested in reaching people.

But sometimes, you know, you end up in a zone where the music leads you to a place that may not be as acceptable to everyone else, and then you’re kind of just like “Well, that’s what happens!”

And so I misgauged this record. It’s a more popular record than I expected. I just thought people would see it as weird or something. I don’t know. But people are really into it. There are seven minute long songs on this record, and there are Japanese instruments and all this stuff and people were just like “thumbs up!”

Yeah, I would’ve been a weirdo if I had made this record and thought, “Oh yeah, this is a fucking hit.”

There’s definitely a lot happening in it.

It’s very dense.

It is. I really enjoyed the transparency you had going with the whole Immersive Ideal and recording in an art space where people got to view you.

Yeah it seemed like an idea worth exploring. My first thought about that was that people would think it’s cool. I thought that people would enjoy it. A lot of my friends who aren’t musicians sometimes think that an album takes as long to make as it takes to listen to. A lot of non-musicians don’t know what goes into making an album and they don’t understand the extent of trial and error and also the idea of overdubbing.

It’s like when you learn that movies are shot out of sequence. You know, when you learn that with some movies they film the last scene first. And music is kind of like that. Or records are kind of like that. And in our case, the very first song on the album is not the very first song that we recorded. But you know that’s how some people think that albums are recorded, in a linear kind of way, and I wanted to show people the process. And also show them that it’s not that exciting. And watching a band make an album is not the same thing as a concert where they’re presenting to you in real time. So yeah it seemed like a worthwhile exercise. People seemed to enjoy it.

There’s three parts to the whole Immersive Ideal, correct?

Yes. The Immersive Ideal Number One was the band recording the album in Artisphere as basically an art exhibit that people could visit. Kind of like going to see a construction site where you can see people at work making the buildings. That’s essentially what number one was.

Number Two was a surround sound presentation of the finished record. And also there was a multimedia interactive thing where people could sort of look at certain photos of the process and interact and select the photos with a monome… which is basically a box of buttons that you can program to do whatever you want it to do. The buttons and lights can mean whatever you want it to mean.

In our case, we used it as a way for people to interface with the photos which were put on screens. And people could come into the exhibit and select which photos they wanted to look at with the monome, which has an intrinsic mystery to it, because all the buttons are white. It’s not like it’s color-coded or anything. You kind of have to figure out where you are and what each button does. But anyway that was Immersive Number Two.

Immersive Number Three, which we did this spring, was a live performance of the band with the band actually surrounding the audience. The band was in the corners of the room facing inward, and the audience was in the center of the room. I enjoyed that quite a bit… All these ideas, well I think people will be into it and maybe it will be cool, and they seem to keep taking off. It’s just been a very encouraging year.

From what I know of the response you’ve been getting, it’s been very positive.

Yeah, and it’s not all obvious. Like you said, the record is very dense. I mean, if you’ve seen some of the reviews some of of the people see the density as being exciting and stimulating. I was expecting someone to say “oh this record is totally packed with information, it’s overwhelming, I hate it,” you know? Something like that. So far there’s not been any of that response at all. And you know, anything we’ve done at Artisphere, people could have perceived as pretentious, or I don’t know there’s a lot of things that people could have criticized but the reception has been really really positive.

Does that positive reception make you consider following it up with any similar experiments?

I definitely want to keep messing around with music and art. I’m not someone who plans ahead a lot. I kind of improvise a lot. For example, the album, I don’t know if you knew this but we didn’t rehearse. We didn’t practice at all before we went in to make the record. In fact, most of the band had not heard the songs before we started working on them. So we did one song each day, and the way that we worked was in the morning we would listen to some of my home demos and sit around with cups of coffee and just listen. And then they’d select a song that they liked, and then we’d spend the day learning that song, and then in the evening we’d have figured out an arrangement, and then we’d record.

And so every day was a new song. It was one song per day, but totally flowing by the seat of our pants. And that’s often the way I approach things. I don’t have a kind of overarching design. I’m pretty impulsive, you know, I don’t plan a lot. So basically my thing is messing around and people let me do it… so I’m just going to keep doing what I’m doing I guess.

So would you say you view your art as more focused on the process itself?

I don’t know that I’m more process oriented than other artists. I don’t talk to other artists about how they feel about this. I will tell you this: I don’t like, and that comes from some extent my inculturation in the D.C. punk scene, I don’t like bullshit. And I don’t like people trying to cultivate mystique by being aloof. As you can tell, in this conversation, I’m not a deliberately mysterious person. I will tell you anything you want to know. If I have an answer I’ll give it to you. I’m never going to be evasive and I’m never going to be deliberately shrouded in mystery.

So my wanting to make our process transparent is somewhat of a punk thing. We have nothing to hide. And it’s also, I have to say, a statement of basically intrinsic confidence and that the music can withstand that kind of scrutiny. That people can see us put it together, and that it won’t lose it’s magic, is what I believe. I believe in the intrinsic magic of the song and I don’t think that they need to be shrouded in any kind of mystery in order for that magic to exist.

So that’s the nature of the transparency. It’s kind of a confrontational thing. It comes from a punk energy. My band no longer sounds like we have anything to do with punk music. Obviously now our music almost sounds like soundtrack music these days but I feel like D.C. Punk inculturation is just ingrained in me at this point.

I definitely still hear that sort of DIY punk ethos coming out in the music.

That’s great. A lot of people started making Bjork comparisons and all that kind of stuff. And I like Bjork, and that’s no dis to Bjork I like Bjork a lot, but I feel like culturally we’re coming from a different place than that.

I hear talk of a new album. Are you working on that already?

Yeah, I want to make something that is the opposite of this record, in some ways. You know, this record is stylistically all over the place. There’s a Japanese sounding song, there’s a kind of funky Mingus sounding song, there’s all these different style the record tries on, in a very Sgt. Pepper’s kind of way. Or White Album… kind of a sprawling, each song is different, kind of colorful mural.

And that’s cool, I’m glad people like it, but I have never made a record that has a feeling all the way through—that is consistent. And that’s something I would like to do now. I don’t know if I’m going to be able to pull it off. I may totally fail. Or you may talk to me again in 6 months and I may have totally abandoned this mission. But I want to make a record that has a vibe all the way through, that you can rely on. Similar to the way Miles Davis’ Kind of Blue or Beck’s Sea Change, or a Swans or a Ramones record where you look at the cover and you know what you’re getting into and it gives you that drug consistently.

You look at the cover of a Ramones record, or A Tribe Called Quest record, or band’s that have a consistent mission and a consistent sound that goes all the way through and that’s what they’re celebrated for. That’s what people love about them. I would like to make something like that. We’ll see if I pull it off.

I know on Beauty Pill Describes Things As They Are, you had a couple special guest contributors, namely Colin Stetson and Zeena Parkins. Are you planning on doing that for the next one?

In general, and this is a record producer cliché, but I just try to give the song what it wants. I’m sorry that that’s such a damn cliché but it’s really true. If the song seems to be calling out for a certain texture, we will seek out that texture. In the case of Colin and Zeena, they played the instruments that the songs seemed to be wanting, and their contributions were really extraordinary and went beyond what were were initially trying to do.

So I’m open to having depth. I’m pretty excited about the band. They are really extraordinary, and versatile and gifted musicians and arrangers. People often react to Beauty Pill as if it’s a solo project

on my part, and I understand why because I’m the person that tends to speak for the band. And obviously I write the songs and I’m the producer. I understand why people think that I am Beauty Pill but anyone that comes to see the show would see that I’m the least interesting part of the band. They’re really a living thing, this band. So that’s something I want to continue to amplify.

I think that’s why the record sounds good, even though we learned all the songs on the days we recorded them. I mean technically, that should sound like shit. A lot of bands in the situation of like, “Hey, learn and practice and record the song all in one day,” you might get a mess.

Review: Oberhofer, Honduras @ Great Scott 10/5

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Brad Oberhofer, lead singer and songwriter for the indie rock band Oberhofer, wrote the first version of their new album, Chronovision (out 10/9 on Glassnote Records) in Seattle. But then he scrapped the whole thing. What the audience heard last night at Great Scott and what you’ll hear on his new album later this week is the result of rewriting everything in Tacoma, LA, NYC, and on tour over the past couple of years. In a quick conversation before his show last night, Brad said, “I’ve always felt that I’m relatively unaffected by the place that I’m living in but I think I’m affected by the culture.”

When I think of Oberhofer’s first album, Time Capsules II, I immediately think of a heavy dose of glockenspiel, coupled with a copious amount of “Ooohs.” Brad says there are definitely “weird sounds and weird ideas” on Chronovision, but also that, “this record is more composed and fully formulated ideas. This album needed to be this way.”

After writing a completely new album, Brad still felt like he had a lot more to give. He started writing short songs for people, anyone who would ask him to really. So far he’s written about 400 short songs and theme tunes, which he uploads to soundcloud and posts to instagram when he can. “I have like 1400 more I need to write,” he said. “Some of those ideas will probably make it [into full songs].”

Last night’s show at Great Scott was more than I was hoping for. It’s been a while since Oberhofer’s last show in Boston, and they really put on a great one. Openers Honduras, a rock group from Brooklyn, put on an energetic set with really fresh songs with maybe a hint of The Strokes and power chords with a punk edge. Their new album, Rituals (Black Bell Records), was just released, and has a lot to offer. They’re full of energy and it’s easy to tell that their recorded music is really meant to be heard live.

Oberhofer and Honduras have been on tour for the past couple of weeks, which means their acts are really solid by the time they got to Boston. There’s a DIY ethos to Oberhofer, easy to pick up visually with their hand-painted drum head (which is missing a vowel at the end of OBERHOFER–could it be because of poor spacial planning or artistic license?) or the miniature animal figurines glued to Brad’s pedal board. But you can also sense it in their music. Before the show, Brad mentioned that the theme of their first album, Time Capsules II, was “improvise everything.” And while that still may not be the case, you can tell that that spirit of improvisation and living in the moment make their performances so unmistakable and unmissable.

Oberhofer’s new songs, like “Memory Remains,” sounded like a natural next level up from their classics like “Away Frm U” and “Haus.” Their intro to “Haus” really mixed up with set, with primal yelps and quick bursts of sound to shake up the crowd. Brad started to tear down the house in the middle of the set by performing a song from the middle of the crowd, and then again at the end of their set, by bringing the drum kit to the front of the stage to stand on and swing from the lighting rig to bid us adieu.

For a Monday night, this was a great show. And for any day of the week, this was still a great show. Nothing ever felt like it was dragging, and it definitely felt like it was over way too soon. But at midnight, the house lights came on and Brad Oberhofer took his wireless guitar and weaved through the crowd to make his way to the merch table, resuming his humble off-stage persona.

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PREVIEW: Saving The Silent Barn (Middle East, 10/7)

Silent Barn benefit Middle East lineup

Hop off the elevated JMZ train at Myrtle Ave. in Brooklyn, look and it all looks like a wasteland of industry—the tracks flanked by a Popeyes, KFC, Dunkin Donuts, and what seems like hundreds of bodegas and delis, their neon color palettes lighting the street, each indistinguishable from the next. You walk further down Bushwick Avenue until you hear the din, a cluster of voices and chords and feedback emanating from what is not, in fact, an abandoned gas station, but Brooklyn cultural hub and renowned music venue, The Silent Barn. You know that any band you see there could be everywhere by next year. You know that you will fit in here, maybe by virtue of the fact that you usually don’t. You know that The Silent Barn will be a safe space for you and yours. You know that, whatever happens, it’ll be a good night.

The seminal New York venue has been around in some form since 2006, and has managed to nurture an ever-growing community of artists and musicians amidst a city that has become decidedly less welcoming for young creatives in recent years.

Now, though, The Silent Barn is under threat. After a serious fire during a show there on the night of the 25th, the venue’s organizers, inhabitants, and community members are faced with mounting reconstruction costs, uncertain living situations, and a sizeable loss of expected revenue from shows that have been booked there.

In what is perhaps a testament to the power of Silent Barn’s community, their call for help has rallied the Boston music scene around their cause. One community member, Sonam Parikh, who also plays drums in local punk duo Ursula, has booked a benefit show at The Middle East Upstairs on Wednesday with her band, Discipline, Blood Club, and a new band whose name is not yet determined but is composed of members Shannon Thompson of Nervous Nelly Records (responsible for the G.L.O.S.S. release), Ryan Berry of Curmudgeon, and Lucy Nadeau of Discipline. The proceeds will be donated to Silent Barn’s recovery efforts.

In a phone interview with Allston Pudding, Parikh emphasized how instrumental Silent Barn has been in creating a safer space and a more engaged community within music in New York, and how that same ethos of inclusiveness has reached our own city as a result.

“I only asked bands that have exemplified the values of The Silent Barn and have played at The Silent Barn a lot,” she explained. She made sure the bill represented the same visibility that the Silent Barn offers a lot of marginalized groups—namely, people under the age of 21, people of color, and queer people.

The Silent Barn has always embodied the inclusive spirit of DIY, although it is itself a formalized institution. Parikh muses that one of the reasons the Boston music scene is so connected to a venue four hours south is for its commitment to community in a way that no formal Boston venue has quite managed to accomplish.

“It’s very clear when you step in there what kind of space it is—there’s no bullying or grossness,” Parikh said. “There’s a huge absence of isms that are just inherent in so many music spaces due to the kind of people that dominate them. That’s why Silent Barn is such a breath of fresh air to so many people.”

In a way, Parikh muses, hosting this benefit show for The Silent Barn at The Middle East is an attempt to bring that breath of fresh air to Boston. We may not be able to congregate around a venue like The Silent Barn in our own city, but we as a community can come together in support of a more inclusive scene through the venues, show houses, and platforms we have available to us.

“I think what can be learned [from The Silent Barn] is that working together as a community can create a far more palpable and effective result than trying to do small good,” Parkih said. “It’s important to coordinate and work with other people and reach out, and try to create as big and expansive of a community as possible.”

And maybe, after all the years of work The Silent Barn, Parikh, and others like them have put into inclusion in music, a new kind of scene will soon have its day in the sun. We can already see the beginnings of the shift in the bands that are on the rise in this year alone— PWR BTTM, Aye Nako, G.L.O.S.S., and Speedy Ortiz, to name a few. But it’s up to us to stand up for the type of community we want, and to preserve everything we’ve built. Keeping the doors open at The Silent Barn seems like a pretty good place to start.

See Ursula, along with Discipline, Blood Club, and another as-yet-nameless band at The Middle East tomorrow night. Tickets are $10, show is all ages, and all proceeds will be donated to The Silent Barn’s recovery efforts. If you can’t make it to the show but still want to give to the cause, you can contribute here.

The Cure Announces North American Tour

The Cure

Looks like the boys are back and they sure aren’t crying. Robert Smith and the gang (more commonly known as The Cure) announced today that they are going on tour in North America next summer. And they are bringing friends in the form of The Twilight Sad. Only details for their shows at LA, Chicago, and NYC have been discussed, but they have promised more details for their full tour to come by January 2016. Here’s hoping there’s a Boston date somewhere in the mix. You can catch details for the LA, Chicago, and NYC dates below.

The Cure Tour Dates:

May 22nd – The Hollywood Bowl – Los Angeles

Presale: October 7th, 10AM http://bit.ly/1KWrXA0

Presale Code: CUREBOWL

June 10th – UIC Pavilion – Chicago

Presale: October 8th, 10AM http://bit.ly/1MUtiIc

Presale Code: thecure2016

June 18th – Madison Square Garden – NYC

Presale: October 8th, 10AM http://bit.ly/1FSSmzF

Presale Code: DISINTEGRATION

New Alex G, ‘Beach Music’ Streaming on Hypemachine

ALEX G NEWS POST

Lo-fi songwriter Alex G has been gathering a cult fanbase for a while, releasing records on Bandcamp and   small label Orchid Tapes. With his new album “Beach Music” he is emerging from his DIY roots with a big label release on Domino Records, which is streaming today on Hypemachine. Have no fear old fans, as his status on the label hasn’t compromised his lo-fi vibe. The album stays true to his bedroom recording roots, with a lot of the same simple structures and styles that he has claimed as his own. It is, however, a bit more psychedelic, no doubt under the influence of producer Jacob Portrait of Unknown Mortal Orchestra.

The album will be formally released on October 9th, and we can all hope that a Boston date will be added Alex G’s post-release tour.

Play New Dilly Dally Album + Video Game

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It’s like a cereal box prize but with more purpose. This manic Monday, fans of Toronto’s Dilly Dally can press play on the new album Sore AND fight the power alongside it. CUE THE HYPE.

It’s true. Sore is now available for stream on Spotify, and a retro, 3-trick video game is now available on the grunge group’s website. Featuring the four members of Dilly Dally as nick-named characters, the game is set in an apocalyptic Toronto “slathered in blood and flames and pizza crusts and ice cream cones.” There’s a bomb involved somewhere, but the main motive is to K-O a purple mutant who controls the world and is “being a dick in general.” That’s all according to Dilly Dally’s on-site disclaimer.

So…why not sit back, throw some punches and listen to pre-released Canadian rock? After checking out both, we think Sore and it’s corresponding game are worth playing.

Sore is out October 9th via Partisan and Buzz Records.

Ex Hex Premieres Their Cover Of “All Kindsa Girls”

By Lauren Moquin 

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When Ex Hex delivered that incredibly blood pumping set at Great Scott last October, they played a cover of “All Kindsa Girls” by Boston’s own, The Real Kids. Guitarist/vocalist, Mary Timony sported a great enthusiasm in the opportunity to play the song within The Real Kids’ hometown. Today, NME is offering the power to relive the spirit of that night with a stream of Ex Hex’s cover.