}

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Ray LaMontagne Tickets to Benefit Children's Cancer Charity



Ray LaMontagne announced his first North American tour dates of 2009 for his latest release, Gossip in the Grain today, and fans will have the opportunity to buy front row seats and support The National Children's Cancer Society charity at the same time. A portion of each ticket package purchased through Tickets for Charity will automatically benefit The National Children's Cancer Society, and purchasers will be able to donate further proceeds to a wide variety of other charities. The National Children's Cancer Society has provided direct financial assistance to the families of more than 23,000 children battling cancer in the United States, and helped thousands more worldwide through the Global Outreach Program and Beyond the Cure.

Listen: You Are the Best Thing_Ray LaMontagne

This leg of the Gossip in the Grain tour will run the east coast, the midwest, and Canada throughout the month of April:

April 2: Montclair, NJ, Wellmont Theatre
April 3: Pittsburgh, PA, Palace Theater
April 4: Philadelphia, PA, Tower Theater
April 6: Albany, NY, The Egg
April 7: Northampton, MA, Calvin Theatre
April 8: New Haven, CT, Schubert Theater
April 11: Portland, ME, Merrill Auditorium
April 12: Burlington, VT, Flynn Center For The Performing Arts
April 14: Montreal, QUE, Metropolis
April 15: Toronto, ONT, Massey Hall
April 17: Cleveland, OH, State Theatre
April 18: Cincinnati, OH, Taft Theatre
April 19: Ann Arbor, MI, Michigan Theatre
April 21: Milwaukee, WI, Riverside Theater
April 22: St. Louis, MO, Pageant Theater
April 24: Asheville, NC, Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
April 25: Louisville, KY, Brown Theater
April 27: Birmingham, AL, Alabama Theatre
April 28: Jacksonville, FL, Florida Theatre
April 29: Tampa, FL, Tampa Theatre
April 30: Miami, FL, Fillmore @ Jackie Gleason

Monday, January 26, 2009

Seen Your Video: Nada Surf in Melkweg, Amsterdam



I caught Nada Surf awhile back when they had Delta Spirit open for them. Admittedly, I'm new to the Surf train; chalk my reticence up to an old friend who played their old song "Popular" non-fucking-stop.



Am I ever glad I gave them a new ear. The catchy combined backbeat of bassist Daniel Lorca and drummer Ira Elliot, coupled with the graceful lyrics of lead singer/guitarist Matthew Caws, Nada Surf is light years away from "Popular." Caws writes lyrics for the thoughtful punk and intelligent wallflower, and the songs are ones that you love getting stuck in your head. Their latest release, Lucky, is something pretty amazing, and includes three gems, "Whose Authority," "Weightless," and "Beautiful Beat," that I just cannot turn off.

Listen: Whose Authority_Nada Surf



Nada Surf are one of those bands you tend to forget about sometimes. They're not wicked flashy, or quirky, or known to fill the papers with their exploits. What they are though is indie music that is real, indie music you can believe in and so thus, indie music you find your way back to. And when you do, their records are kind of like a daisy coming up through broken concrete: simple beauty amidst rough and jagged hooks that hit you hard and amaze you at their resilience.

(See the rest of my photos from Nada Surf's 930 Club show here.)


I must be the only person who didn't know how good their live show was, as theirs was the one show out of the 987986786 we saw at SXSW 2008 that was impossible to get into. Matthew Caws is a great frontman, who pulls the crowd in effortlessly and has everyone dancing as one, figuratively...and literally. Check out the video below from Nada Surf's December 2005 show in Melkweg, Amsterdam.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Free Streaming of New Franz Ferdinand Record



Those hyperactive kids from Glasgow, Franz Ferdinand, are streaming their new record Tonight: Franz Ferdinand for free via their Myspace page. Out January 27 in hard copy, it's full of their trademark poppy dance-floor pep.

For you Los Angeles kids, they're doing an in-store at Amoeba Music in Hollywood on Friday (January 30th) at 7pm.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Seen Your Video: Airborne Toxic Event on David Letterman

We haven't posted about our old favorites The Airborne Toxic Event in the last little while so here is their debut on the Late Show with David Letterman this past Friday. The group playing strings in back of violinist/keyboardist Anna Bullock is Anna's brother's group, The Calder Quartet.

Hard to believe it wasn't even a year ago that we saw them at SXSW 08. Kudos kids!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Earotica: Dear Science-TV on the Radio Review



(Editors Note: Recently, Between Love and Like added a new writer, Dave 'Scout' Tafoya, to our crew. This review is Scout's first contribution to us, the first, we hope, of many. Welcome Scout!)

When an established band changes its sound – the size of the shift notwithstanding – they take a risk. They risk alienating an existing fanbase, they risk not finding an audience for their new sounds, they risk opening themselves up to new pressures, and they risk criticism from everyone with a voice loud enough to whisper. With this in mind, when a band decides on a 180 degree shift, to go where it’s never gone before, they must possess many qualities, the foremost among those being boldness.

TV on the Radio is a band with a blend of sonic components so particular that not even veteran critics have been able to appropriately classify them. Elements of doo-wop, R&B, drone rock, post-punk, soul, and avant-garde are utilized in their records, often in the same song. Little surprise then that TVotR's latest release, the musically accessible, Dear Science, takes ground elsewhere, in unambiguous political fury and whiplash-inducing stylistic transformations.

This transformation isn’t immediately evident from the first track on Dear Science, the stomping, fuzzy “Halfway Home,” but the fury is. Lead singer Tunde Adebimpe’s lyrics are cryptic and seem to place blame for some natural catastrophe on every individual who had knowledge of it but did nothing to stop it. The production subtly betrays a firmer presence of every member of the band – the bass crawls around behind the layers and layers of guitar and synth, while the drums sound like a mixture of programming and live kit. When “Home” draws to its phase-heavy close, the first real evidence of change arrives in the form of guitarist Kyp Malone’s sultry and soulful “Crying.” Malone’s voice, long lost behind Adebimpe’s commanding multi-octave range, is loud, clear, and shows a personality akin to Curtis Mayfield. Guitarist (and TVotR producer) David Sitek’s sound is discernible here in that time-honored tradition of lightly-distorted funk guitar, the notes being plucked, rather than that beautiful, Godspeed You! Black Emperor scraping he typically favors. Sitek’s guitar remains reigned in throughout the record, and compliments the arrival of the playful sounding synth and horn section funk (and what an entrance they make). Malone’s lyrics hint strongly at a corrupt figurehead not unlike the one recently dethroned by Barack Obama (mention is made of “coke in the nose of the nobles” and “tanks with no red light in sight”). It is here where the album’s strongest lyrical theme comes into play, that of a progressive era just around the corner. Just before the song’s many complimentary instrumental licks weave in between each other to form the closing measures, Malone calls for change: “Time to take the wheel and the road from the masters. Take this car, drive it straight into the wall, build it back up from the floor and stop our crying.” His voice shaking the rafters, Malone wants us to reach out and grab that power to change, as it is mere inches from our hands.

"Dancing Choose," a rocker with gangsta rap coursing through its veins, breaks with the band's normal stylistic boundaries. Four notes of distorted bass and then Adebimpe coming out swinging, his deft enunciation is backed by subdued rhythm section and saxophone, the whole scene reminiscent of an Ali one-two punch. This is TV on the Radio encapsulating post-punk as a whole, as it’s never been done before. “Stork and Owl” has Malone harmonizing quite beautifully with himself about death, love, and birth, sounding like an early-TVOTR tune with cinematic production. Its break-in pace seems somewhat out of step though when following “Choose” and coming before the album's strutting peak, “Golden Age.” “Golden Age,” is a song as catchy as it is poignant, and seems to capture all the best elements of 1970s music. Malone’s fluid rhythm and his assurance of that progressive era’s proximity just in time is enough to make the last eight years in America feel like just a bad dream. When the horns, layered vocals, dizzying violins, and simple but undeniable bass line come in, the song gives the illusion of waking from one dream (of decay and darkness) into another one (of euphoria and of the horns of seraphs). Sitek’s production is never better than on this minor miracle track. And he doesn’t stop there.

Sitek nearly outdoes himself on “Family Tree.” A combination of a hauntingly gorgeous piano riff steeped in delay and reverb and Adebimpe’s words are a testament to the pleasures of the now and the joy of life out of the shadows of legacy. With the help of Malone’s high harmonies and those swooning strings, “Family Tree” forms an unforgettable breath of life. It is the most uncharacteristic song in the TVOTR canon and their sweetest, most aurally pleasing effort to date. They then drop-kick us back into strife, hypocrisy, and political piracy, lest we get too comfortable, with “Red Dress.” Jagged guitar playing by Sitek and Malone, coupled with drummer Jaleel Bunton’s relentless afrobeat percussion, leads this tale of slavery and lost identity. As different from early TVOTR as “Fear of Music” was from “Talking Heads: 77,” “Red Dress” brims with anger and the fire of life.

Sitek’s mixing and producing creativity shines bright on the next three tracks. He pulls out all the stops and fills every second with production tricks on “Love Dog, each one as captivating as the next. But this quiet, brooding post-punk slow-burner is best suited to headphones as it exudes more atmosphere than hooks. “Shout Me Out” features acrobatic melodies and a chorus that sticks in the head, and “DLZ,” an indictment of death erasing one’s legacy on earth, becomes better with every repeat listen.

To say that Dear Science finishes strongly is putting it mildly. “Lover’s Day,” boldest of the album’s rebellion and genre-bending madness, is the most vivid and impassioned depiction of two bodies intertwined outside of the misogynistic confines of modern Hip-Hop, or the exaggerated naughty world of Prince. The music starts calm, military drums and soft tambourine, and builds. The music of “Lover’s Day” never reaches the same climax as Malone’s words do, but the song is still as lasting a testament to intimacy as there ever was.

Dear Science may be different from TV on the Radio's earliest efforts but this difference is genuine, emotional, demanding, captivating, exciting, and vital. It's got some definitive high points and while each of those points may not be the same height, Dear Science absolutely proves that TV on the Radio has the balls to switch things up, to vary from the tried and true. These changes were well worth the risk.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Sound and Vision: My Interview with Matt Vasquez of Delta Spirit


We made the following comment about Delta Spirit awhile back: They really are a barn burner of rock and soul. Delta Spirit will make you dance, lift your spirits, and reveal the beauteous sound that is the top to a metal trashcan.

If you haven’t had the pleasure of attending a Delta Spirit show yet, it’s a lot like an old-timey church revival without the snake handling. Theirs is a stage full of energy, of singing, screaming, dancing, an organized chaos with multiple people playing multiple instruments, a fist full of, well, feeling. I've caught them twice in the last little while, the first time at The Rock and Roll Hotel (Photos), and most recently when they were the middle opening band for Nada Surf at the 930 club (Photos). The RnR Hotel show was good, but the 930 Club show was just flat out white hot. No lie, I haven't seen a band and an audience that "in the moment" with each other like that in some time. People around me were rapturously glued to the band’s every move, and the band was right there with them. It was a true “come to jesus” moment of the best kind.

Delta Spirit’s sophomore record, “Ode to Sunshine,” wound up on just about everyone’s best-of lists for 2008. Hailing from San Diego, CA, the band is a group of five guys who bonded together four years ago over a seemingly simple (but not always practiced) idea: develop a band they were all really, really excited to part of. Guitarist Jon Jameson and drummer Brandon Young knew each other from playing together in other bands, and they'd become friendly with guitarist Sean Walker--but none of them wanted lead singer duties. So when Young happened upon Matt Vasquez and his arena-worthy voice busking in a local train station super-late one night, Young, having ears and not being dumb, got his contact info.



It's probably a safe bet that everyone is really, really glad Young takes public transportation. Vasquez not only came onboard as lead singer shortly thereafter, but when the band decided to record some demos, Vasquez contacted Kelly Winrich, his high school buddy and family friend, to see about using the Winrich family home recording studio. (The Winrichs aren’t professional musicians, no, but they probably should be...let’s just say that the Winrich family gene for musical talent isn’t recessive by a long shot.) The Winrich-house demos became 2006’s "I Think I've Found It,” with Winrich producing. Before long, Winrich was playing with the band as well as producing, so he joined the group full-time as a multi-instrumentalist.



During Delta Spirit’s recent jaunt with Nada Surf, Vasquez and I chatted by phone about the band, the “I Fought the Law and the Law Won” tour, and colored underwear.

BL&L: You've been out on tour with Nada Surf for the past month or so. How did things go this time out?

MV: This time out is really great. It's new for us because we've pretty much known everyone before going out on a long tour. We actually missed our first show because John got arrested. We actually made a film of it, like on a digital camera, and Kelly, our piano player like walked around with it like hidden camera star around the jail. And we did it to the music of Brian Eno's stuff from "Traffic." It's really funny and we're gonna post it, Sean from Daytrotter is gonna post pretty soon.
(Editor's Note: Sadly, I just got word that the film is lost due to theft. The thieves who broke into the band's van in NJ are apparently "Macs" and took the laptop that the film was on.)

And we just got so many tickets. Sean and I outside Minneapolis, we got two $100 soliciting tickets each for having a conversation walking to the van. We stopped for a second and had a cigarette, waiting for everybody, cop rolls up and gives us two tickets. And then uh...who else got a ticket...Kelly got a ticket for making a left turn on some street he couldn't at a certain time because we were following a GPS. This is the "I Fought the Law and the Law Won" tour. (laughs)

BL&L: I read that you are always recording new material as you travel. Your songs are pretty stripped down-do your tracks change a lot from the initial to the final, or have them been ruminated on a lot prior to recording so that what you record initially is the final?

MV:Yeah. It's very like I'll start something or Kelly will start something, or any one of can start something that is just a bare-bones idea. Maybe it's a song structure or a type of structure with lyrics and it's sorta heading someplace, and everybody else just keeps heading that way, and we ruminate together.

BL&L:That actually leads into the next section, how does a song come together amongst the five of you? I mean, do you guys kind of riff off each other and everyone does their own parts? I mean, you've got Kelly who plays about 45 different instruments (laughs), so how do you work him in and whatnot?

MV:Well a lot of times, considering Kelly can do anything, and whatever he feels like doing, he'll usually just do that. And then I'll fill in a gap...we all just fill each other's gaps up. If Kelly ends up playing guitar, chances are Sean will do percussion, and/or I'll play piano, and they both play guitar. Or you have a trashcan lid and you know...

We're looking into a tum drum, you know those big drums whose sound is very marimba-like; Tom Waits "Bone Machine" used those. We gutted a CP-70 piano, which has this whole pickup system on it. Using that would be really neat because it's got tremble and overdrive. We're not really sure what the next record is going to sound like, but we were up to about 17 songs before we left for tour. And when we come home from Nada Surf, we start demoing the next one.

BL&L: Do you try out any of this new stuff out during a tour?

MV:Totally. But it's been really hard this time around; actually the last couple tours, just cause we've had a middle spot, we've had zero sound checks. On earlier tours with Clap Your Hand Say Yeah and Dr. Dog, we were first of three so we always had that 30 min before doors to work stuff out until they'd start yelling at us. Now we don't have that. So we more so demo it on Garage Band or an MBox, and save it. Show everyone the song obviously, and say, "Just kind of have this in your head." They then put it into their computers, and listen to it once in awhile, and then once we get back, it's like, "Oh I remember that," and get to it.

BL&L: What do y'all do to pass the time while on the road, are there any "van rules" like "No stopping at Hardess or Bojangles"?

MV:In terms of van rules...we just bought a new van. The van we originally had was this total screwed up van that the Cold War Kids gave us for $2000 bucks, and it had vinyl floors and we could do whatever the hell we wanted in it. It had more than 200,000 miles on it. Before the Cold War Kids had it, it was a mental institution van. Basically you could do whatever the hell you wanted in that thing, people smoked with the windows closed while we drove, it just didn't matter.

Now we have a new van, er well, a pre-owned vehicle. And besides all the other problems with having a pre-owned vehicle-like rats actually living in the engine and ate the wiring out, and all sorts of fun stuff-once we got that all figured out, the inside was pretty clean. So now that we have carpet, we can't just run around and be really crazy. So we designated the shot-gun seat as the smoking seat, and you can't smoke anywhere else. But there's 4 out of 5 of us who smoke so it's basically like, round-robin/golden chairs. We built a bed in the back. But we built it too tall so it's like being in a Chinese prison camp. The dimensions are like, you can't sit up, you can't lay flat, you kind of have to always be in a cradle position, and you can barely roll over. Like it's shoulder-wide you know? It's so funny. We're actually touring with a guy who's a buddy of ours from San Diego. He was a guitar tech for As They Lay Dying, the heavy metal group, or hardcore group or whatever their genre is. And he's this huge vegan guy ...and he's always in that back bed. It's just amazing to me how he fits in there. Not that he's crazy fat or anything it's just this long haired blonde guy who's always back there snoring. And he sleeps so deep! We've probably got in two car accidents and he didn't wake up during both of them. It's insane.

BL&L: Anything else beyond the smoking restriction?

MV:When you're a driver, you can listen to anything you want. Except Brandon the drummer really likes techno and that gives me anxiety, so we ruled that out. And then metal is ruled out too. Especially now, our new roadie, he doesn't have an Ipod or anything, he has a 300-cd folder thing that weighs about 20 lbs. And it's like almost every piece of music you can imagine he has in there, metal-wise. Like every Megadeath record, Pantera, Down...it's very funny. Reminds me of junior high. He put Great Southern Train Kill on the other night and was like screaming....broke the rule, but it was really fun though everyone was like "SHUT THE FUCK UP!" But it was really fun.

And we have a Sirius radio that we bummed from Dr. Dog's tour manager. Since it's Sirius radio, it's Howard Stern once a day. We get the Howard 101 news, the Best of the Week, and the Best Ever, so it's really fun, it always kind of puts people in a better mood. The talk radio really helps, especially when it's Stern, because I mean, you got Eric the Midget, cmon, those guys are fucking insane. Stern's a good life lesson because if Stern can treat people good, then we can treat people good. (laughs)

BL&L: You and I had talked before about your first release, the out of print "I Think I've Found It." The sound of it, like the track "Gimmee Motivation" for example, is, well, poppier, for lack of a better word from the tracks on "Ode." Can you speak some about what changes took place between "Found" and "Ode" that made such a dramatic change to your sound?

MV:With that whole period it was kind of "do whatever the hell you want" and that's what it sounded like. And that's who we were when we did that exactly. And when we did "Ode to Sunshine," that's exactly who we were. And when we do the next one, that's exactly who we are then too.

Sound quality wise, we intended that EP to be demos. And we just put our foot down, like we'll be sick of these songs before we get to a full record, which is mostly true. I mean, that's the reason why we haven't played "Gimmee Motivation" in two years now. I actually really miss that song.

-Gimmee Some Motivation_Delta Spirit (from "I Think I've Found It" EP)

We actually found a box right before we left for tour of "I Think I've Found It" vinyl and the cds that we didn't even know existed. So we put it back on sale on this tour and we're just gonna sell it until it's gone.

BL&L: So then do you feel like you'll bring "I Think I've Found It" back in print at some point?

MV:Naaahh...maybe like if, you know, we ever become that band that has a glory days...if we are ever a band that gets to having glory days. We just take it one day at a time here. We're no Joe Strummers...

BL&L: Right, right. Kelly was the band's producer at first. How/why did he move from producing the band to being a member?

MV: Well, I would disagree that he was the producer just because, with the EP, a lot of times, he just turned mikes on and then fell asleep. (laughs) He's really responsible for a lot of drum sounds....it wasn't like he wasn't completely uninvolved. For "French Quarter," he wasn't even in the band but wrote the bass part. And he would do organ tracks and a bunch of things...he'd do good sounds when he was awake. And that was a larger part of the time than when he was asleep. (laughs)

-French Quarter_Delta Spirit (from "I Think I've Found It" EP)

Then with "Ode to Sunshine," he was way more involved. I went to high school with Kelly. We'd played together forever and then when he left, I was super-bummed but he was still a family friend. His parents helped build a a studio with a tracking room and all this great stuff. I've been through so much with him. When Delta Spirit kind of came around and we were getting together demos and stuff, Kelly let us do it for free. His family was obviously totally cool with it. Then things started happening, and he was like "Man I wish I was in your band," and I was like "Are you serious? Are you fucking kidding me?" It was like a dream come true for me. I mean, I love Jon, Sean, and Brandon so much, so having Kelly there too, it was just done for me.

Once that happened, and in terms of production and stuff, he took it way more seriously, and was a whole other thing. And I mean, everyone's opinions and theories about miking and EQs were really involved, but I think Kelly is a huge part of why "Ode to Sunshine" sounds like "Ode to Sunshine."

BL&L: I'm always curious as to what makes people go from appreciators of music to one who has to make music. Can you each speak to your experience with this?

MV:I think I can. It's a crap shoot between my mom and dad showing me a Stevie Ray Vaughn retrospective on television when I was about 5....and I didn't play guitar before then, but I did pick up one and fuck around with it and thought it was the coolest thing on the planet...and then my grandma, she used to work for Fender in '52, she was Leo Fender's sixth employee, so she bought all the boys guitars. I got a Strat. Then my brother's friend showed my brother "Come As You Are" by Nirvana. I learned my first proper guitar song and got crazy into Nirvana and Alice in Chains and Soundgarden and all that.

BL&L: How old were you when you got the Strat?

MV:I was 8 years old, in 3rd grade.

BL&L: Wow it was probably bigger than you were. (laughs)

MV:Yeah actually it was. And it was really fun. It was electric so it was easier to learn how to play. And I learned a bunch of tablatures. As long as I've been playing music, it's been a life lesson for me to not identify who I am with it. You know, I am who I am, not what I do, you know what I mean? For a long time, my whole youth, I always identified with the music I listened to....I always had my White Zombie band tshirt on and all sorts of crazy stuff. In 8th grade, I did a report on Randy Rhodes. I used to listen to Zepplin vinyl in my English class.

BL&L: You must have been a fun kid to have around. (laughs) What music do you recall being played the most in your house when you were a kid? You mentioned Stevie Ray Vaughn...

MV: Yeah Stevie Ray Vaughn, Elvis, Janis Joplin, The Beatles, Prince's Purple Rain, Garth Brooks, Charlie Daniels Band...that's a lot of my parents' music growing up. The Gipsy Kings...I used to run around my house and...you ever do that trick with the Laz-E-Boys that don't recline, like run up on them and tip them over with your feet? I used listen to that (sings) "Bamboleo, bambolea" [song] and run around in my short shorts, just doing that over and over again. I love the Gipsy Kings! And Charlie Daniels Band, I thought it was the craziest thing because it was the only thing on the radio that said "You son of a bitch" in "Devil Went Down to GA." And I remember going to Little League baseball practice, and hearing that and just being like WHOA!! THAT'S SO CRAZY!!

BL&L: Ryan Roco has done a large number of your press photos...
MV:He's actually with me right now! Him and Josh Ballenger, who does a bunch of video stuff for us, they've both moved to NYC so we picked them up in Brooklyn last night and they're gonna hang out with us. You'll meet them...

BL&L: So Ryan has done your press photos in addition to some odder ones that prove you and Brandon like colored tighty whities...(laughs)

MV:Ahh, they're just cheap Hanes. Go to Target you know! It keeps you sorted out (laughs)

BL&L: I was talking more that he photographed you in them, but that's beside the point. (laughs)

MV:We feel pretty comfortable with Roco-san, he's pretty great. Kelly and Ryan went to high school together, my rival high school. And they've done about everything in terms of getting in trouble. There's actually a whole crew of them. Josh does all the video, Roco does the photos, this other guy Brad "The Jew"...this is a random story but way too funny so I have to tell it-he decided to be a lumberjack and went up to Washington State, looked up on Craigslist for a job. First job offer right, he shows up and the next thing he knows there's a camera on him. And he's on that axe show (Axmen). Ryan is that kind of person too, he and Kelly always do these crazy adventures like fly to Vancouver, take a bus to Whistler to go snowboard. He just got back from Africa....We're all part of the same family just doing different stuff, and sometimes we get fortunate enough to hang out together. He's just so great.

BL&L: That's cool. It sounds like you guys are all very close knit so it's interesting to see that you keep so much like "in the family" if you will.

MV: Well you know, you stick with people you trust. You can handle when someone close to you says some shit to you. It's like, you always know that they're "there."

BL&L: So what's next for you guys? What's happening in the new year for you?

MV: We're very much looking to hang out with our family after this tour, just enjoy not running around. Even though I love running around. It feels way too awkwardly normal these days.

We were going to do a show in NYC for New Years but we just decided to stay home and keep recording and do nothing. I dunno, I might decide to drink a Sprite or something. (laughs)

2009 is going to be really busy. We have an El Ray show the 17th, and we leave for Europe the 18th, for like 10 days. Then we come back home and do a whole February headlining tour. I "think" it's going to end up being Other Lives as the main support band. And then the other opening band is a friend's band we've been promising forever that we'd take out, and finally we have the means to do it. They're this band called Dawes, they're really great. They sound just like The Band if a young Billy Joel that you could really believe in sang. And the drummer is this 18 year-old guy who plays like Levon Helm. The piano player learned bass from Rick Danko but he plays piano, and he's insane. He plays at this speakeasy in LA...they're just these crazy guys. The singer and drummer are brothers, and their dad is the only white singer in Tower of Power, so it's in the family. So that tour is gonna be great. Then we go back to Europe again, then record a record.

We're looking for a place to record actually.

BL&L: Really?

MV:Yeah, Catskills [Mountains] would be great. We really wanna do it on the east coast, out of the way of everything. Maybe not a cabin, maybe just a studio out in the middle of nowhere. So if you own a chic cabin and you're really rich, anybody....(laughs)

Delta Spirit 2009 Tour Dates
Delta Spirit 2009 Tour Dates:
01/16 - Los Angeles, CA @ El Rey Theatre
02/04 - San Francisco, CA @ Bottom of The Hill
02/05 - Portland, OR @ Doug Fir Lounge
02/06 - Seattle, WA @ The Tractor Tavern
02/07 - Vancouver, BC @ Media Club
02/09 - Boise, ID @ The Neurolux
02/10 - Salt Lake City, UT @ Kilby Court Gallery (Early Show)
02/10 - Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge (Late Show)
02/11 - Denver, CO @ Hi-Dive [Buy Tickets] $10
02/12 - Lawrence, KS @ Jackpot Music Hall
02/13 - Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry
02/14 - Chicago, IL @ Double Door
02/15 - St. Louis, MO @ The Gargoyle Club
02/16 - Columbus, OH @ The Basement
02/17 - Pittsburgh, PA @ Brillobox
02/18 - Ithaca, NY @ Castaways
02/19 - Albany, NY @ Valentine's
02/20 - Cambridge, MA @ Middle East Downstairs
02/21 - New York, NY @ Bowery Ballroom
02/23 - Charlottesville, VA @ Gravity Lounge
02/24 - Charleston, SC @ The Pour House
02/25 - Atlanta, GA @ Drunken Unicorn
02/26 - Mobile, AL @ Alabama Music Box
02/27 - Houston, TX @ Walters on Washington
02/28 - Austin, TX @ Emo's (inside) [Buy Tickets] $11
03/01 - Dallas, TX @ House of Blues
03/05 - Santa Barbara @ SOHO Music Club
03/06 - Solana Beach, CA @ Belly Up Tavern
(Delta Spirit is also playing SXSW this March in Austin, TX.)


Listen:
-Strange Vine_Delta Spirit (from Ode to Sunshine)

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

The Stooges guitarist Ron Asheton found dead at 60

ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Punk guitarist Ron Asheton of The Stooges has been found dead in his Ann Arbor home. He was 60.

City police Sgt. Brad Hill says there were no signs of foul play, and the death appeared to be of natural causes.

Hill says officers discovered Asheton early Tuesday after they were called to his home around midnight by an associate who hadn't heard from him in several days.

Asheton was an original member of The Stooges, the influential protopunk band founded in Ann Arbor in 1967. Asheton's brother, Scott, was the band's drummer.

Asheton's distorted guitar was a hallmark of the Iggy Pop-led group's late-1960s and early-1970s sound. He was named the 29th greatest guitarist of all time in 2003 by Rolling Stone.(Source)

Friday, January 2, 2009

2009: The Year of 9878967 Prince Records



Hey kids, I'm back from the Great White North. Hope y'all had a lovely holiday.

Onto Prince...you gotta wonder, did this cat ever sleep? He's actually putting out three records in 2009, not 9878967, but someone's been a very busy [purple] bee up there in Minneapolis (take THAT Ryan Adams). One of the records is supposed to include a cover of "Crimson and Clover" and another, a guest appearance by Q-Tip.

Prince is planning to release three new albums in 2009 without the assistance of a record label, according to an interview with the Los Angeles Times. A "major retailer" is in talks with the artist to release the music physically, while a new Prince Web site will sell it in digital form.

The two new Prince albums are the tentatively titled "MPLSOUND" and "Lotus Flower." He was also heavily involved in an album titled "Elixir" from his protege, Bria Valente. "We got sick of waiting for Sade to make a new album," he said of that project.

As for "MPLSOUND," recorded at Prince's Paisley Park compound in Minneapolis, the Times describes at "electro-flavored" and full of "trippy, experimental pop songs." Q-Tip guests on one track.

"Lotus Flower" is more guitar-driven, an approach Prince says he came to after touring as the guitarist in singer Tamar Davis' band in 2006. Tracks include "Dreamer," a cover of Tommy James and the Shondells' "Crimson & Clover," "Colonized Mind" and "Wall of Berlin."

Prince's last studio album, "Planet Earth," was first released as a free covermount with the U.K. newspaper the Mail on Sunday in July 2007. It was subsequently issued worldwide by Columbia Records.(Source)