PREVIEW: Palm, Warehouse, Krill, Pile @ Cuisine en Locale (9/18)

PILE KRILL SHOW

In light of recent events, it is now absolutely imperative that you get yourself to Cuisine en Locale this Friday, September 18th to see Palm, Warehouse, Krill, and Pile. When Boston Hassle compiles a show this packed with local classics and up and coming talent, it’s best to take full advantage. After all, not all good music lasts forever. Sometimes even the best bands ever have to call it quits, and how will you reminisce unless you make some real memories at their last shows? Yes, I am so totally fine with Krill breaking up, and no, of course those aren’t tears running down my face.

Early in the night will be Hudson, New York’s Palm. Their noisy rock is the perfect primer for some of the local classics, all dissonant chords and whirling vocals. The band also has an album due out in early November, so this show is the perfect chance to catch a sneak preview.


Warehouse will also be there, and when they take the stage the night will take a turn for the jangly. Hailing from Atlanta, the band’s rock is largely driven by the perfectly hoarse, throaty vocals. They infuse their music with some unexpected influences, and will hopefully be playing some tunes off their debut Tesseract.

Krill, Krill, Krill until October when they will cease to exist. If you haven’t heard the sad news, Krill have announced they are at the end of their run as a band, and though their music will forever live on in our hearts, this is one of their last shows. There will only be so many chances to hear the classics from Lucky Leaves to A Distant Fist Unclenching live. Don’t miss out on the final, historical performances. No, I’m definitely not crying again!


The great bands are piling up (sorry), so it’s no surprise local staple Pile is topping off this show. Hear the band play new songs off their latest release You’re Better Than This, and take this time to reflect on the way that Boston bands inspire each other as well as us. Though these bands may not be forever and ever, we can still get out to shows and appreciate them now.

Bad News: Krill Calls it Quits, Also World Collectively Ends

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So Krill posted this today on their Facebook….

hello friends of krill ~~ there is news: we have decided to stop doing/being krill. we have a trillion people to thank…

Posted by Krill on Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Yup. Just going to let that sink in for a minute…

Happy hump day everyone! Now it’s time for everyone to waste away in a dark, dank corner while mumbling to ourselves “I thought Krill was supposed to be forever…”

ps. On the plus side, we got some excellent goodbye shows to look forward to with one being right here at Great Scott on October 15th. Better make all your arrangements now.

pps. :((((((

 

Good News: Guerilla Toss Signs to DFA Records, Streams New EP

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Today is a day for joyous exuberance. Our friends over at Guerilla Toss has just announced they’ve stepped up their game and signed to DFA Records. They’ve also put up their upcoming EP Flood Dosed in its entirety on their Bandcamp to be streamed and available for pre-order by all. Hallelujah! (Also, tour dates! Below!)

GUERILLA TOSS TOUR DATES:
Fri. Sept. 11 – Brooklyn NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg w/ The Juan Maclean)
Sat. Sept. 12 – Hudson NY @ Bard College
Thu. Sept. 17 – Philadelphia PA @ Everybody Hits
Fri. Sept. 18 – Philadelphia PA @ Haverford College
Sat. Sept. 19 – Long Island NY @ Huntington Rd. Beach Club
Sat. Sept. 26 – Queens NY @ Riis Park Beach Bazar
Sun. Sept. 27 – Brooklyn NY @ Shea Stadium
Mon. Sept. 28 – Providence RI @ Aurora (FREE SHOW!!)
Sat. Oct. 3 – Chicago IL @ Hyde Park Free Theater
Fri. Oct. 9 – Brooklyn NY @ Palisades
Sat. Oct. 10 – Portland ME @ Waking Windows fest
Tue. Oct. 13 – Harrisonburg VA @ Golden Pony w/ BUCK GOOTER
Wed. Oct. 14 – Athens OH @ House Show w/ BUCK GOOTER
Thu. Oct. 15 – Chicago IL @ Secret Location w/ BUCK GOOTER
Fri. Oct. 16 – Toronto ON @ 8-11 Dungeon w/ BUCK GOOTER
Sat. Oct. 17 – Montreal QC @ Drones w/ BUCK GOOTER
Sun. Oct. 18 – Burlington VT @ The Sink w/ BUCK GOOTER
Mon. Oct. 19 – Boston MA @ Gay Gardens (TBA) w/ BUCK GOOTER
Thu. Oct. 22 – Poughkeepsie NY @ Vassar College
Fri. Oct. 23 – Amherst MA @ Hampshire College
Sat. Oct. 24 – Amherst MA @ Amherst College
Sun. Oct. 31 – Brooklyn NY @ Palisades

PREVIEW: Oh Malô @ Middle East (9/16)

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Local boys Oh Malô are excited to headline at the Middle East Upstairs tomorrow night. Bent Shapes, Bay Faction, and The Colonnade will join for a well rounded high energy mix of that Boston Indie Sound. Doors are at 8:00 and the music starts at 8:30.

Oh Malô are friends Brandon Hafetz, Jack McLoughlin, Jordan Lagana, and James Knoerl. They present a rhythmic and melodic range that swirls between sleepy dreams and monstrous ragers. It seems their music reflects the members own lives. The vocalist Hafetz has been busy juggling his band duties with being president of the entertainment production company, Fitz Ross Productions (known for their Spare Room Sessions). With such formidable operations, how Hafetz manages to maintain his composure is anyone’s guess. Adrenaline must be pulsating in his veins for tomorrow’s show.

It promises to be an engaging night. Free compilations of Oh Malô’s music will be available for old fans and new converts alike. Oh Malô‘s dynamism should be matched by the supporting acts, all local bands who are ready to pounce and seize the night. Give their Bandcamps a listen and join them for the rumbling party in Cambridge tomorrow night.

COLUMN: Father & Son Review Co. – Vundabar

The crowd is chanting cake pop!at her in one-two rhythmic fashion and she looks down at it, the last pop sweating in her hand underneath the stage lights. Two cake pops have already been consumed and this last one stands in the way of her going home with a free LP. The band looks in anticipation as she takes a breath and knocks the last pop back, celebrating with a double fist pump and a crowd surf assisted ride over to her friends.

The Vundabar LP release was two weeks ago now and Im still not sure if the cake pop incident mid-show was part of the set or a covert shoot for a UHF remake sans Weird Al. To be fair, if any band within city limits would pull something like that, itd be Vundabar. On a basic level, their brand of fuzzy surf pop operates in a grey area between the Exploding In Sound-worshipping and basement-dwelling fuzz rock camps that currently dominate Allston, but Gawk, their newest LP, is the furthest thing from excluding. The fact that anyone from bright-eyed Freshmen to young professionals getting too drunk for a weeknight jump around to obtuse anthems like Holy Toledoand Oulalais a testament to their strange, but charming, nature. This week, we discuss Gawks leadoff single, Chop, the limits to Vundabars charm, and whether theyre serious about being gothor not.

#11 – “Chop” by Vundabar

Dad: Ive been thinking about this one and, when you put it in the blog and they see it, I dont wanna say stuff that theyre going to say, oh, what an assholeor anything like that.

Tim: Oh, so it’s going to be one of those weeks. I don’t know if they’d say that… I think this has all been in good fun. I think most bands I show you know that you’re not their target demographic. And you’re not, like, insulting them as humans per se. I would hope any band we talk about takes it in good fun! But was it really that bad for you?

Dad: I didn’t think anyone could do worse than Matt DeMayo or whatever the hell his name was, but this one here was one of the worst ones.

Tim: Okay, break it down for me: what was so bad about this?

Dad: It’s very redundant. I keep saying “melody” each week, but this did not have a nice and smooth melody or flow. They had a stop and go tempo; the song kept stopping and picking up again. The distorted guitars didn’t work for me in this case. And then there was some “ping”-ing noises every so often and I was like, “what the heck is that?” I do want to say that he is a good singer, don’t get me wrong, but his falsetto voice was…it was nah. It was kinda grating on me; I couldn’t understand what he was saying!

Tim: I figured that’d be your #1 complaint out of the gate actually. His voice is pretty unique and you’re the kind of listener that always want to hear lyrics, so that’s a double whammy of things you don’t like.

Dad: Yeah, I guess. And then the chorus was kinda weird. It was, like, 1960’s style surf movies or something like that. It was different, but I can see why you like these guys with how much you like that surf music. I listened to it no less than five times and…

Tim: You listened to it five times?!

Dad: I did because I kept trying to find out what you see in this. Your mother said to me, ‘Listen to his perspective, maybe he’ll point out something you didn’t realize.’ It might be like a piece of art, but you can’t see it until somebody says, ‘Look at how the colors mingle,’ and you’re like, ‘Oh, now I see it!’ I dunno, it just sounds like a roommate’s garage band.

Tim: [laughs] You know what? You bring up a great point there. They kinda sounds like they could be my roommate’s or my roommate’s buddy band in terms of being a little eccentric, but I feel like they’re at a point with this album that they could transcend our local scene and get more popular without relinquishing their uniqueness. Their songs are insanely catchy to me, but not in a very obvious way. They’re almost like a big party band around here, like a lot of college kids go to their shows.

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“The lead guy in the dark glasses can’t dance for shit. See how he moves! He’s amazing; he just doesn’t do anything.”

Dad: Well they’re certainly not conforming to the typical pop recipe, that’s for sure. Like that one part where he’s singing like, “ay-yi-yi-yi-yi-yi…” over and over. Listen to it! Now that I’m telling you, you’re going to listen to it and say, “aw shit, that is annoying!” And then the “boo-wee-ooh-wee-ooh-wee-ooh” part… it’s like the monkeys in the Wizard of Oz. [laughs] I’m tearing them apart and I’m sorry, but it’s not my cup of tea!

Tim: I’m sorry!

Dad: It’s okay, it probably means they’re going to make it big with kids. But… let’s talk about that video.

Tim: Oh, boy. You liked it?

Dad: To their credit, it was professionally done. It wasn’t your roommate’s handheld camera. But, when it started, it was like a horror flick! It’s an abandoned house that’s all beat up and they’re in there doing their thing. I was like, “What the heck is going on here?” I gotta tell you though… their dancing? That’s one creepy dance. Man, I could give them dancing lessons, for crying out loud!

Tim: [laughs] I don’t think they were exactly aiming to look good.

Dad: Go watch the video again! The lead guy in the dark glasses can’t dance for shit. See how he moves! He’s amazing; he just doesn’t do anything. And then the other guy who’s not the singer looks like your old roommate! He’s got those weird glasses and looks like one of those creepy beatniks who gets up in one of those smoke-filled basement rooms and does poetry. Like, “I cried, I cried some more, I cried.”

Tim: Oh man, Dad. I don’t think any of my roommates did spoken word, but that could literally be a few of my old roommates you’re describing.

Dad: But the shadow puppet cracked me up. It’s like they sat around a table and said, “let’s think of all the weirdest shit we can do.” Another thing though: they’re all dressed in black. What’s that called? Goth?

Tim: [laughs] I don’t think they’re, like, a goth band. They’re wearing turtlenecks and chains.

Dad: Yeah, well, that’s the last thing. They were kissing the religious medallions and eating the gold chains. I was trying to figure out the relevance of that versus the song, video, and lyrics. I decided there is none.

Tim: That’s because this is all very goofy, non sequitur humor. Van Halen last week was goofy and didn’t make any logical sense… think of them like a more straight faced Van Halen! They didn’t take themselves seriously at all.

Dad: Not at all, you’re right! Both were trying to be campy, but these guys don’t want to follow the pop formula. You know me; I like my formula. Wait, what was that band from the ‘80s with the “ai-ya-ya-ya” song? Haircut 100?

Tim: Are you thinking Talking Heads? “Psycho Killer”?

Dad: Yes! And those guys were kinda different and didn’t follow the typical formula either.

Tim: You’re absolutely right. They were like wacky outliers that everyone loved. Scratch what I said about Van Halen! I’m going to risk saying I think Vundabar would be the Talking Heads of this scene.

Dad: I can live with that. Weirdness is an age thing; I used to like [Talking Heads] and B-52’s then, but if I had heard them now, I’d be like, “What the hell is this?”

Tim: I can see that. I’m not sure if that day will come for me, but I won’t rule it out. Final question: if you had to give this a rating, what would you give it?

Dad: Like, A through F? I’d say a B then.

Tim: What?! After all of that, you’re giving it a B? You said this was the worst since Mac Demarco!

Dad: I’m sure there’s an F out there somewhere, like one of those bands with screaming in it. I hope you don’t give that to me.

Tim: I’ll maybe try avoiding that, but I can’t promise anything. Okay, so B, not B-, final answer?

Dad: No, I said “D” as in “dog”! They get a D! As in, you couldn’t give me a free ticket to see these guys. Well, maybe if there were free drinks involved.

Laura Stevenson Releases “Jellyfish”

7eb8abe2-203b-4f54-bacd-aac91cd37817Photo Credit Kenneth Bachor

Cocksure, Laura Stevenson‘s follow-up to her 2013 album Wheel, is growing imminent. The New York singer-songwriter has released “Jellyfish,” the second single from the upcoming release. Where the songs on Wheel were folky and thought out to the tiniest detail, the songs from Cocksure rely more upon punk and DIY roots, having a rawer, rock-guitar-driven approach. This comes as no real surprise, as the record was produced by Stevenson’s longtime companion and collaborator, Jeff Rosenstock of Bomb the Music Industry!

But that’s not to say that Stevenson’s masterful gift of writing dynamic, emotionally-crushing songs isn’t still present. This time around, she just holds more confidence in her self-deprecation and dark thoughts. “Jellyfish” cranks itself out in just two and a half minutes, but by the time you’re done with it you’ll want some kind of external reassurance that you’re a good person. Give it a listen here, via Noisey.

Cocksure is out October 30th, on Don Giovanni Records.

Below are Laura Stevenson’s tour dates, including a stop in Boston at the Middle East Downstairs on November 19th.

10/14: Washington, DC @ Rock & Roll Hotel

10/15: Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle

10/16: Atlanta, GA @ Masquerade

10/17: Jacksonville, FL @ 1904 Music Hall

10/18: Tampa, FL @ New World Brewery

10/19: Orlando, FL @ The Social

10/21: New Orleans, LA @ House Of Blues Lounge

10/22: Houston, TX @ Rudyards

10/23: Dallas, TX @ Gas Monkey Bar & Grill

10/24: Austin, TX @ The North Door

10/26: Phoenix, AZ @ The Rebel Lounge

10/28: San Diego, CA @ The Casbah

10/29: Los Angeles, CA @ Echo

10/30: San Luis Obispo, CA @ SLO Brewing Co.

10/31: Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s

11/1: San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop

11/3: Seattle, WA @ Tractor Tavern

11/4: Portland, OR @ Dante’s

11/6: Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court

11/7: Denver, CO @ Hi-Dive

11/8: Omaha, NE @ Slowdown

11/9: Des Moines, IA @ Vaudeville Mews

11/10: St. Paul, MN @ Turf Club

11/12: Chicago, IL @ Subterranean

11/13: Nashville, TN @ The High Watt

11/14: Akron, OH @ Musica

11/17: Columbus, OH @ Rumba Cafe

11/18: Philadelphia, PA @ The Foundry @ Fillmore

11/19: Boston, MA @ Middle East Downstairs

11/20: Kingston, NY @ BSP Kingston

11/21: New York, NY @ Webster Hall Marlin Room

Teachers Rock: AP’S Music Education Moments from Back in the Day

29ed9c0Ah, fall–the smell of apple cider, the feel of a cozy sweater, the sound of boozy shrieks from over-enthusiastic Patriots fans–and the memories of a time when we were all decidedly less cool. Don’t lie, you didn’t find that Pavement record on your own. Whether it was your sk8er boi older brother, your orthodontist’s subscription to Spin magazine, or your abnormally chill English teacher, we all remember the people that taught us to appreciate music. To commemorate those teachers, here are the Allston Pudding staffers’ seminal music education moments from back in the day.

12-track Homework
It was a pretty average day in a really average town in Eastern Pennsylvania when I schlepped down to West End Guitar Shop, shitty knock-off Strat in tow and no idea what to do with it. The walls were covered with instruments, most of which seemed bigger than I was at the time. Much like every mid-2000s seventh-grader ever, I was there, I was into Blink-182, and I liked “Stairway to Heaven” enough to learn how to play it. Although the chord progressions and riffs to “Stairway” are utterly lost on me now, I still remember my homework each week—new CDs hand-selected by my teacher, a man named Brook, from a huge leather-bound binder. It became my own musical canon that taught me how to walk through the world. I began to take my road trips with Nick Drake, with Nimrod, with “In the Aeroplane Over the Sea” and Martha Wainwright, always returning the next week to get more. Thanks to Brook, I learned how to love a song to pieces and come to call it my own. I learned how to talk about music as a means of deciphering the complex peaks and cavities of the world, and how to rip that pesky F chord like it was my God-given duty. And, thanks to Brook, I deleted that one Nickelback song on my iPod. Brook, I owe you one.

Sydney Moyer

Parental Guidance
I spent the first sixteen years of my life as your archetypal awkward homeschooled kid. While N’Sync, Britney and Xtina ruled the general populous, I lived a life so sheltered that I didn’t even know who they were until their popularity had already hit a downward slope. My introduction to music came from my parents—who taught me both a spectrum life lessons and pre-chosen curriculum in our living room. My parents are both musically inclined, especially my dad; a jack of all trades who played snare in a drumline for twenty-some-odd years. He was the one who taught me to sing harmony with him for The Beatles, America, Simon and Garfunkel. He was the one who put a guitar in my too-small hands for the first time to learn the intro to Stairway to Heaven. They gave me a keyboard at seven, a violin at ten, a flute in middle school and a drum kit when I decided I wanted to play snare like my dad. I grew up on swing music and Elvis, Adam Ant and Frank Sinatra. Eventually, I discovered Blink-182 (mostly because Travis Barker lived in my town and, no, he did not want to buy some Girl Scout Cookies). Now that I’m a cynical grown up, I’m thankful that because of my parents, listening to just about anything can give me that nostalgic feeling of being young and curious.

Alyssa Alarcon

Farandole
My middle school band conductor’s claim to fame was that he once worked with N*Sync. I don’t have much else to say about that, except that it shouldn’t give you a negative impression of my band teacher. He was really badass, funny, and smart. He got a bunch of 13-year-olds to play Farandole (y’know, the one from L’Arlesienne Suite No. 2? By Georges Bizet? …Bueller?). He also had a lazy eye, which worsened the more tired he became. I can only imagine how tiring it is to keep 100 13 year olds focused on 19th century classical music. But he always found ways to knock our hormone-fueled egos down a peg—he had really good aim when it came to flinging batons across the room. So while I may not be a clarinet virtuoso now, my appreciation for how hard it is to be a great musician definitely carries on today.

Deanna Archetto

All the Small Things
My first gadget was silver, slim and the size of a half-pack of Juicy Fruit. Behold a Dell MP3 player, otherwise known to my 12-yr-old soul as “Clicky.” To strangers, she appeared more like a glorified flash-drive. In hindsight, who’s to say that wasn’t the case? But, this pocket-sized prism was my first opportunity for music ownership, and my brother Jay loaded my starter kit. I remember him taking liberty with most of Clicky’s space, but that’s only because he wanted me to have a lot of what most suburban skateboarders would consider the era’s “good stuff.” He must have done well, because I was hooked. Much of this can be attributed to who Jay was: my shaggy-headed elder of five years who could somehow accomplish anything if balanced on a board. He was my hero, and his taste mattered. I used to sit on my bed head-bobbing, meshing bands like New Found Glory and Blink-182 together, beside my pink Barbie pillow destined for replacement. Listening became something worth assigning time to. From Relient K to ZZ Top, to a randomly peppered-in “Lean Like a Cholo,” these hand-clicked tracks proved a fundamental principle: art is for appreciating, and appreciating is for the cool. With a head still shaded by alt-band beginnings, I have my big brother (and tiny flash-drives) to thank.

Becca DeGregorio

Substitute Teacher Blues
Two different teachers both had a huge musical influence on me at a young age. The first, my high school photo teacher, who moonlighted as a tattoo artist, motorcycle mechanic and aspiring guitarist played Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot in class one day. The album had a huge impact on me—in that I learned immediately about music’s ability to not only create interesting soundscapes, but be something culturally relevant and meaningful at the same time. Perhaps even more inspiring was his collection of guitar pedals and the fact that this was the only teacher I hung out with outside of school as a high school graduate. I still remember seeing his band Superstanza, having their demos in my Nissan Stanza and rocking out to my favorite song of theirs, “Posthumous.”

The second teacher was substitute throughout my four years in high school. A recent college graduate who almost spontaneously decided to commit himself to the guitar, songwriting and performing after graduating that there was no way he did could hold down full time teaching gig. My musical interests at the time weren’t great, but impressed him enough that we built a rapport and he began to share early versions of songs with me. Some went on to be songs he played for years to come as a touring musician. One called “Substitute Teacher Blues” was even about his experience balancing two very different jobs. Since then he’s gone on to make a full-time living for himself as a musician and has shared the stage with Martin Sexton, Mavis Staples, Galatic and a ton of different great session players from New Orleans. His name is Ryan Montbleau and even though his music isn’t exactly what I’m into these days, he’s still a huge inspiration to me as a success story from my town on the North Shore.

Andy Sears

“You go to shows….with your MOM?”
My mom didn’t think twice about driving me to a city 3+ hours away to see a show, or about driving back that night so I wouldn’t miss school. This was a semi-regular thing for my mom. Me scoping out shows, salivating over them, sheepishly asking if she….maybe.possibly….thought we could go—and in a second she would reply, “What? Yes! Let’s get the tickets before it’s too late!” That trait of hers is what led us to have a weird friendship with 30 Seconds To Mars, eat pizza on the floor of the Universal Studios’ Hard Rock Cafe while waiting for Death Cab For Cutie, and scream at the top of our lungs for Taste of Chaos and Lollapalooza alike. For her, it was a no brainer. Her mom, my grandmother, did the same for her for when Led Zepplin and Pink Floyd played within a tri-state radius.

For me, this was the freedom to explore and pure, unconditional love. These experiences and this music shaped me more than I could have imagined. I went to shows with her all through high school. She was my favorite show-partner bar none (sorry, friends). She taught me how to: be fearless when cheering for a bassist you adore, strategically position yourself on the rail to snag a setlist, make friends with your fellow concert-goers, camp out 8 hours before doors with a sidewalk picnic and games, and really just have a good fucking time. Young people need outlets, they need open doors to grow and to figure out who they are. My mom held the door open with a full tank of gas.

Jeeyoon Kim

The Great Doc Sousa
I think I was deprived of some “teacher imparting music-related advice that blew my tiny, pop-punk riddled mind” moments growing up. Yes, I had a middle school art teacher that gave me burnt copies of Jack Johnson’s discography, and an elementary school teacher that held mini-eulogy at recess the day George Harrison died.

I do, however, credit my relinquishing of insecurities and desire to absorb as much music as possible to my high school English teacher, Dr. Sousa. On our first day, he gave us thirty pages of curriculum, a list of 20 books we would cover extensively in class, another 100 if we had spare time, and the promise that he’d put his all into teaching if we promised our ears in return. He would kick empty desks whenever an exclamatory line in a book was read aloud, debate a single line of poetry in unabashed didacticism, and, on one occasion, break a classroom window while gesturing the importance of Virgil. His class teetered on the rails between a functioning classroom and complete madness, but he was the first teacher to tell me my writing was worth exploring. It started with essays, but soon, I was sending poems, music reviews and half-baked prose his way in hopes of receiving approval. That approval was everything and, after a while, it was like Doc embodied the competitiveness it takes to become a better writer. He instructed that my passion for music wasn’t something to shrug off (unless it was for besting or belittling others) and writing was the best way to release and relate the excitement. In a truly “punk rock” turn of events, my school fired him two years after I graduated for voicing a dissenting opinion against the administration.

I’m sure some would kill for the Jack Johnson art teacher or the Beatles-loving music teacher. But honestly, I’d give them both away if it meant kids could experience the great recklessness that was Doc Sousa.

Tim Gagnon

Qu’est-ce que c’est
As a kid, my older brother would pack me into his rickety ’94 Volvo with no mission other than leaving the house. More often than not we’d drive around our hometown with sodas between us, as he’d point out the suburban landmarks he so easily attached stories to. My brother has always been a storyteller, and I like to think it’s a skill we share. But I think more than anything, we’re linked by music.

A decade older, it seemed like he was always listening to something different and exciting. I was 7 or 8 when he dropped the needle on “Revolution 9” and the “fa-fa-fa-FA-fa” of “Psycho Killer.” I was a graceless preteen when he ushered in Isaac Brock’s Cowboy Dan, Frank Black’s Bossanova and Jeff Magnum’s friendship with the ghost of a young girl. From motown to new wave and 90’s slacker rock, he educated me on a world of punks and misfits, and the sense that feeling like either was an okay line to toe—and cross if you’re up for it. But more than anything, my brother taught me that if you like a song, it’s yours to keep. And if you love it, it becomes you.

Mo Kelly

The Dirty Nil Releases Strong New Track

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With tour dates scribbled down and a new 7-inch in the trunk, The Dirty Nil is on route to us. Ecstatic? Of course you are, especially because “No Weaknesses” is a track worth playing and replaying at increasing increments of volume. Drum along on that desk of yours, and pointer fingers might just bruise. Then you’ll be strong and regret nothing. The pace is THAT infectious.

Its the A-side of Nil’s 7-inch, which releases this November via Dine Alone Records. Click the link above, enjoy the premiere on Stereogum, and mark your calendars for October 18th, when the Ontario rockers play Great Scott with Meat Wave!

Tour Dates:
09/19-20 Toronto, ON @ Riot Fest
10/13 Detroit, MI @ Majestic Cafe *
10/14 Buffalo, NY @ The Waiting Room *
10/16-17 New York, NY @ CMJ
10/18 Boston, MA @ Great Scott *
10/20 Philadelphia, PA @ Everybody Hits *
10/21 New Haven, CT @ BAR *
10/22 Baltimore, MD @ Metro Gallery *
10/23 Pittsburgh, PA @ Cattivo *
10/24 Columbus, OH @ Double Happiness *
10/25 Cincinnati, OH @ MOTR Pub *
10/27 Nashville, TN @ The Stone Fox *
10/28 Atlanta, GA @ The 529 *
10/31 Gainesville, FL @ The Fest
11/03 Jacksonville, FL @ The Birdhouse
11/04 Charleston, SC @ Royal American
11/05 Chapel Hill, NC @ Local 506
11/06 Washington, DC @ DC9
11/07 Brooklyn, NY @ Shea Stadium
11/08 Long Branch, NJ @ Brighton Bar
11/10 Lakewood, OH @ Mahall’s
11/11 Bloomington, IN @ The Bishop
11/12 Chicago, IL @ Cobra Lounge
* w/ Meat Wave

INTERVIEW: ZZ Ward

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In the bloated world of singer-songwriters, cialis ZZ Ward is going for something different. Drawing on her childhood love of both blues and hip-hop, click ZZ (short for Zsuzsanna) has become well known for combining the two, matching a sing-songey flow with killer riffs and soulful melody. It’s a concept that, on paper, sounds like the fodder of a Starbucks point-of-purchase album, but her raw energy and startlingly forthright lyrics make her a commanding, original voice. Her 2012 debut Til the Casket Drops caught the attention of those in both the pop and rap worlds (the latter helped along by standout collaborations with Kendrick Lamar and Freddie Gibbs).

ZZ’s highly anticipated second album, This Means War, was recently delayed until next March, but she has decided to release four of the album tracks as a preview EP, entitled Love and War. The tracks show a progression of her songwriting capabilities, nailing both sweet love songs (on “Love 3x”) and gritty independence anthems (“Marry Well”).

ZZ is touring the new EP this fall, including a stop at Royale this Sunday. We chatted with her ahead of the show about the album delay, her trip to the Allston Goodwill and her thoughts (or lack thereof) on the Drake/ Meek Mill feud.

Allston Pudding: How’s the tour going so far?

ZZ Ward: It’s going amazingly. Better than I had ever expected, really! I’ve definitely put a lot of energy and creative thought into planning the whole thing, even the visuals. I just really want people to have an experience when they come to my show. To walk into the world of ZZ Ward and remember it forever.

So yeah, I put a lot of energy into planning the show but I would have never expected so many people to come to these shows. The turnout has been unreal. The love that I’ve been feeling from all of my fans has been really out of this world.

AP: So This Means War was recently delayed to next year. Why was the decision made to release some of the tracks as Love and War?

ZW: It was just moving really fast for me. I wrote the album in six or seven months and it seemed like the release date was coming up too soon. I hadn’t even had time to let the record sit in and in many ways figure out what the record was about to me.

So I pushed it back, but I wanted to ease my fans into the new music. I wanted to put out an EP with four songs and give them a taste of what’s to come. I feel a lot better now that it’s slowed down, because it was happening just a little too quickly for me.

AP: Where did the title This Means War come from?

ZW: This Means War is really just about the war that I fight within myself. When I wrote this album I realized that you would know I was in a new situation in my life, but I was still the same person with the same fuel for writing music.

Also, while I was writing this album, I found myself in a relationship that I thought was going to fix ALL of my problems within myself. (laughs) I very quickly realized that it only added more fuel to my fire!

AP: Would you say your approach to songwriting changed at all between the two albums?

ZW: No. Not at all. I think if anything, coming off of the first album gave me the confidence to dive deeper into my artistry. Feeling so much love and support from my fans on my first album really made me want to go even further into hip hop, further into blues. It made me feel very comfortable being an open book to my fans and telling my stories. The only way that I know to get through situations in my life is to write about them. That’s what makes me feel better; it’s my way of expressing myself.

AP: When I caught you live last year I was really impressed by the chemistry you had with your band. As a solo artist, what goes into choosing musicians to tour live with?

ZW: Really it’s finding people who are not only really talented but also that you can live with. We’re on a bus together here, so I really take the time to find good-hearted people that really love the music. They bring the energy to the stage, too, and my fans feel that. The wonderful thing about my band is that they love playing live. They really love connecting with the fans. There’s a lot of love on this tour, I’ll say that!

AP: Have you had to had to change anything in your stage setup to accommodate the new songs?

ZW: No, not really! It’s amazing because a lot of the songs on the new album were written in the same way which I wrote the last album, which is starting on guitar or piano and writing it in an organic way, and then bringing the songs to life with production. I think when it came to putting some of those new songs into the set, they fit naturally.

AP: You’ve had a pretty aggressive touring schedule over the past few years. Do you have any tricks to keep yourself sane on the road?

ZW: Hehe, so many. I’m learning as I go. One of my new things is, coming to the bus after the high of being on stage can be daunting. You come back and it’s silent after the euphoric feeling onstage. So one thing I’ve been doing lately is putting on the blues, so when I come to the bus I’m hearing Muddy Waters and I can calm down listening to that.

AP: Has there been one song in particular that you’ve seen gets the biggest reaction live?

ZW: It’s different in every city. I think that’s amazing. I’ve never had the experience of having, you know, one song that everyone connected with and then just a bunch of others. I’m very fortunate in that I feel that my fans memorize the lyrics to every song on the album. Even on this tour, I’m playing stuff from my mixtape and people up in Charleston were singing every word!

AP: You’ve been through Boston before. Do you have any fond memories of the city?

ZW: Yeah, there was a second hand store that I ended up going to before the Paradise show. The Goodwill, actually. I got some great finds there! Mainly just the people, though. That’s the thing about a city- it all comes down to the energy and that love. I definitely feel a lot of love from the people in Boston.

AP: Are there any other artists you’ve really been digging lately?

ZW: Yeah, actually I just met Rachel Platten the other day. She was so sweet! So humble. She came over to meet me on my bus, which was great because I’m such a fan of hers. I have such respect for other women out here hustling and touring, because I know how hard people work on the road. It was all love when I met her.

AP: As a hip-hop lover, do you have anything to weigh in on the Drake/ Meet Mill feud?

ZW: (Chuckles) No… Save your drama for your mama, I don’t play!!!

ZZ Ward will be playing at the Royale this Sunday (9/13) with opening performances from Marc Scibilia and The Young Wild. Tickets are still available here.

New track from Toronto punks The Beverleys

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Effortlessly cool punk threesome The Beverleys are about to hit it big with their debut album Brutal – or at least that’s how it looks, based off of their new single, “Visions”. Packed with punchy riffs and resounding choruses, “Visions” is sure to be an instant favorite among fans of bands like Potty Mouth or Titus Andronicus. Listen to the single below, or pre-order the album, out November 6 on Buzz Records, here.