Woods’ “Bend Beyond” Is A Gorgeous Psyche-Folk-Garage Melange, And A Perfect Album

Posted in Music with tags , , , , , on October 25, 2012 by johnbuckley100

If the slot for shimmering alterna-folk in last year’s Tulip Frenzy Top Ten List ™ had not been taken by Kurt Vile’s Smoke Ring For My Halo, then surely Woods’ Sun and Shade woulda made the cut.  An artisanal byproduct of Platonic Brooklyn, where everything is tasty and hand-crafted and somewhat left of center, Sun and Shade was like a Galaxie 500 record produced by Neil Young, punctuated with 7-minute ambient ragas.  It was pretty great, but excellent as it was, it is still a solid step below Woods’ astonishing Bend Beyond, available now in digital music stores hiding just behind your browser window.

Bend Beyond ranks in the Pantheon with Darker My Love’s Alive As You Are, John Hammond’s Southern Fried, Luna’s Penthouse, and The J. Geils Band.  You know where this is heading: yes, the declaration that Bend Beyond is a *perfect* record.  That’s right, perfect.  As we’ve commented before, perfect records are as rare as baseball pitchers’ perfect games.  (Even with that pronouncement, whether it will end up as Tulip Frenzy’s Album of the Year is not yet known, for as perfect as it may be, and it certainly is, the world has to account, and likely this year, for the greatness that is Ty Segall.  Does “World Historical” beat “perfect”?  We shall see.)

Bend Beyond does something we never even considered possible, it is an expression beyond our previously far too limited imagination, for it melds the aforementioned folk-rock marriage between Neil Young and Galaxie 500 to farfisa-lubricated garage rock with ambient traces of psychedelic fireworks exploding softly on the edge of your vision.  Somehow, like a Ben’n’Jerry’s flavor combo moved to the realm of geographic mash-ups, we have achieved this brilliant union of Brooklyn with Woodstock with Topanga Canyon sliding in muddy goo right on top of it, and the tasty output, while perhaps a mite bit lacking in carnivorous gristle, is nourishing and fine.

Go listen to “Find Them Empty” and tell me to my face that if it were slipped into a pail of nuggets taken from Lenny Kaye’s latest archaeological dig, you wouldn’t think it was the ’60s garage find o’ the year.

Tell me — we dare ye — that if you heard “Cali In A Cup” while lying outside on an autumn sunny day, headphones on while you stared at that red leaf falling from a maple tree, you wouldn’t contemplate chucking it all to go work in some Williamsburg wine bar, dedicating your evenings to reading Richard Brautigan novels.

Play “Is It Honest” loud from your Mustang while driving on Sunset Boulevard, and the remnants of the Paisley Underground would all march out with their hands up, their eyes blinking from behind Roger McGuinn half-shades.  “Hey man, what is that?”

It’s Woods’ Bend Beyond.

Like we said, a perfect album.

UPDATE: And so we find they are playing at D.C.’s Red Palace on November 2nd.  Ho ho ho. Can’t wait.

Big Tex R.I.P.

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on October 21, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Sad word out of Dallas yesterday: Big Tex’s immolation. Leica M9, Noctilux, Christmas 2011

The Lion’s Eyes

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 19, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Dumbarton Oaks.  Leica Monochrom, Noctilux f/0.95.

With “Twins,” Ty Segall Goes For The Triple Crown

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on October 19, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Sportswriters drooled pure Red Bull and Skol last month when, for the first time since the chain-smoking Yaz did it in 1967, Miguel Cabrera won the Triple Crown.  But what are we to make of Ty Segall’s epic 2012, with Hair, his brilliant collaboration with Tim Presley/White Fence, released in the spring, Slaughterhouse, the grunge-metal roar by The Ty Segall Band which came out mid-summer, and then just this past week saw the thrilling Twins, released under the boy’s own name?

It’s been a long time since an artist has had such a year.  Sure, the Beatles often had to compete with themselves for the top of the charts, and there was that amazing run in 1970 by Creedence Clearwater Revival, but notwithstanding Elvis Costello’s streak from This Year’s Model to Imperial Bedroom, the closest thing in rock history we can find to compare to Mr. Segall’s awesome trifecta goes all the way back to Bowie, who in less than a year (1972-1973) released Ziggy Stardust, gave Mott The Hoople “All The Young Dudes,” recorded Pin Ups, his album of covers from the mid-Sixties London scene, and for the piece de resistance, put out Alladin Sane.

If, because you’ve been hiding under a rock, you find it surprising that this guy Ty Segall is being mentioned in the same breath as the Beatles, Creedence, Elvis Costello, and David Bowie, then maybe it is time to get out more.  Because in 2012, Ty Segall has emerged as a triple threat — a classic rock’n’roll singer whose self-harmonies on the brand new Twins evokes the best bands from the era in which Carl Yastrzemski got his Triple Crown, an ace lead and rhythm guitarist, and increasingly, an amazingly protean songwriter.  (It is notable that on Twins, Segall’s learned how to add actual bridges and instrumental sections to the verse/chorus and sometimes verse/no chorus formula from his 412 previous solo albums released between 2009, when he was 4-years old, and 2011, when he turned 24.)

Look, we’ll confide in you, but please don’t tell anyone: Hair, young Mr. Segall’s collaboration with White Fence, as brilliant an example of garagey-psychodelia as we’ve heard in years, is absolutely in contention for Tulip Frenzy’s Album Of The Year.  But careful readers will also remember that we weren’t so thrilled with the album he released in early July with The Ty Segall Band.  Even though, after having exulted in last year’s Goodbye Bread, we yearned for Ty to quit recording albums by himself, and to get a *real* drummer and a *real* bass player to back him up, we found Slaughterhouse to be a little slipshod, and we weren’t thrilled by the Sabbath riffs.  But how were we prepared for Twins?

Oh, Lordy, why do you think we’re dredging up references to David Bowie and John Fogerty?  On Twins, Ty Segall proves he has gone way beyond being simply a young tyro.  Yes, he plays all the instruments, and usually that’s self limiting, because few are the one-man bands that can actually swing, for it takes two to tango, and three to play drums, bass, and guitar with any kinda pogoing lilt.  And yet on this ‘un, Sir Ty may as well be Crazy Horse jamming with the Jeff Beck Group: Twins is rock’n’roll nirvana, and Nirvana-esque rock’n’roll — loud and catchy, fast and bulbous, jacked into the mainline SF psych scene circa Summer O’ Luv even as it pulls off a Pin Ups-quality homage to late ’60s Britrock, such as it was.

As is clear from the terrific profile of the young surfer from Laguna Beach, by way of Haight-Ashbury, Ty Segall doesn’t just have a future, the dude has caught his wave.  The jury at Tulip Frenzy has a big November crisis to face, and we don’t just mean where do we move if Mitt Romney wins?  The question we have to contend with is how many slots of the 2012 Tulip Frenzy Top Ten List will be taken up by albums on which Ty Segall plays?  Stay tuned.

Take Me Home

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 17, 2012 by johnbuckley100

I’m taller.  Leica M9, Noctilux f/0.95, a rinse through LR3, a slight soaking in Color Efex Pro 4.

The Bishop’s Garden

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 14, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Leica Monochrom, 21mm Summilux

Over the past month, on a two or three times per week basis, we’ve been taking the Leica M Monochrom to the Bishop’s Garden of the National Cathedral in Washington to document this beautiful spot and the people who come there.  Here is a gallery of images we entitle “In The Bishop’s Garden” to get a sense of what a beautiful public space this is, at different times of day, in the late summer/early autumn.  We should say, it is really gorgeous in color, too, and we’ve been coming here with various cameras for years.  But we especially enjoyed visiting it with the Monochrom, thinking in terms of black and white only.

On The Horror Of Last Evening And ‘Wait ’til Next Year’

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 13, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Time’s arrow.  Unsatisfying.  Leica Monochrom, Noctilux, 3xND filter.  Washington, D.C., October 14, 2012.

 

 

Calexico At 930 Club, Or The Evening Redness In The West

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 12, 2012 by johnbuckley100

iPhone 5

Calexico returned to D.C.’s 930 Club on a night when we might otherwise have been distracted.  As we walked from the parking lot to the club, we could see in the living room of the condo nearby Joe Biden grasping the jejeune Paul Ryan in a hammerlock, giving him a noogie, and our heart was still beating fast from Jayson Werth’s 13-pitch at-bat that ended in a memorable walk-off, enabling our Nats to live another day.  But by the time Joey Burns, John Convertino, and their ensemble were two songs into showcasing their glorious new album, Algiers,  the aperture of our mind focused sharply on just what an American treasure this Arizona border band truly is.

They returned to D.C. with a harder edge than when they last showed up, in 2008, promoting the magnificent Carried To Dust.  Where that album conjured Monument Valley spires, Anasazi mysteries, and a Mexican folkloric tradition, Algiers is a purer expression of pop craft, even as it’s purpose-built on top of south-of-the-border idioms.  Listen to “Sinner By The Sea,” which they returned with for the first encore, to see what we mean: it starts like something you’d hear late at night in a Vera Cruz dancehall, but keeps a slow, garage-rock beat before efflorescing into a Chris-Isaaks-meets-the-Fleshtones bit of rock’n’roll magic.  Last time ’round, Joey Burns played the lion’s share of guitar, with a pedal steel player and bassist the other stringed instrument supporters.  This time around, the core of Burns and Convertino returned with the multitalented Mexicali horns, but also a smokin’ young guitarist who seemed as adept on lap pedal as lead.  Convertino is the most confident drummer who ever led a band from so small a geographic section of his drum kit.  And the dexterity of the musicians switching between horns and accordions and keyboards was like watching an All Star team shift the infield.

So many traditions come together on stage with Calexico.  Alt-rock and folk meet Tijuana Brass, conjunto, and Colorado Delta blues.  There aren’t a lot of American bands that can convey such a sense of mystery.  Creedence Clearwater could do it by evoking Louisiana Delta mythos from the streets of Oakland.  Calexico is closer to the Blood Meridian archetypes they evoke, both physically, given their locus from Tucson, and in spirit, with a cross-border collection of ace musicians.  Last night at 930 they had our full attention, as they should.

Street Photography, Personal Safety, And Lessons From Bruce Davidson

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , , on October 10, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Berlin, 20012.  Leica M9, 35mm Summilux FLE

It’s not unusual to take a photo of someone on the street and have them immediately glare at the camera, and at you, with menace in their eyes.  And sometimes people act on their impulse to go after the photographer.  Just this week in Washington, D.C., a street photographer was assaulted after taking a picture of a guy running in front of the Verizon Center, which is the most public space in a city of public spaces, the D.C. equivalent of Main Street.

This morning, the prolific street photographer Eric Kim posted a paean to Bruce Davidson, one of the 20th Century’s masters, and it included 15 lessons to be learned from Davidson’s approach to street photography.  It’s really very well done, a distillation of Davidson’s methods that include how to stay safe and get the shot, even when the person sitting across from you on the subway has a scar across his face that looks like it was done with a scythe in a knife fight with Death, and he says, “Take my picture and I’ll smash your camera.”  Davidson got the shot.  Eric Kim tells you how.

Raiders Of The Lost Oaks

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on October 10, 2012 by johnbuckley100

Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. Leica Monochrom, 21mm Summilux.