Archive for Tulip Frenzy

How Bob Dylan’s Different From His Peers

Posted in Music with tags , on April 16, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Oh, this is bloody perfect, from the 67th Volume of the Bill Flanagan interview, this time excerpted in the HuffPo.

BF: A lot of the acts from your generation seem to be trading on nostalgia. They play the same songs the same way for the last 30 years. Why haven’t you ever done that?

BD: I couldn’t if I tried. Those guys you are talking about all had conspicuous hits. They started out anti-establishment and now they are in charge of the world. Celebratory songs. Music for the grand dinner party. Mainstream stuff that played into the culture on a pervasive level. My stuff is different from those guys. It’s more desperate. Daltrey, Townshend, McCartney, the Beach Boys, Elton, Billy Joel. They made perfect records, so they have to play them perfectly … exactly the way people remember them. My records were never perfect. So there is no point in trying to duplicate them. Anyway, I’m no mainstream artist.

The Flavor Crystals Dissolve Softly

Posted in Music with tags , , , on April 7, 2009 by johnbuckley100

The opening act for the BJM last night at 930 were The Flavor Crystals.  They were awfully tasty: a Minneapolis shoe-gaze concoction composed of equal parts Dean Wareham and the third Television album, with maybe a little smidgen of Feelies when the pace quickened.  Their new record is produced by Kramer — not the guy from Seinfeld, the producer of all those first-take, guitar lush Galaxy 500 records lo those many years ago.   What is it that’s seeped into the Twin Cities water supply?  Between The Flavor Crystals and First Communion After Party, you might think you were listening to bands from San Francisco, not the land of Placemats and Suburbs.

Many years ago, the early Fall made you cock your ear to the way the guitars were mixed below the bass and drums; in so doing they confounded one’s mental mixing board.  The Flavor Crystals do something a little different, but no less intriguing: they play these soft loops of guitar wash, and it builds in time if not in volume, and you keep waiting for the crescendo, keep waiting for it to get louder or someone to bust out with a solo, and instead they just keep going, their internal governor a sonic self-discipline.  What they lack in dynamics, they make up in atmosphere.  It’s highly unusual to have an opening act that doesn’t try one’s patience with histrionics.  These guys are cooler than Minneapolis in March.

The Brian Jonestown Massacre: Smokin’ At The 930 Club, 4/6/09

Posted in Music with tags , , on April 7, 2009 by johnbuckley100

The Brian Jonestown Massacre played Washington’s 930 Club last night, and they were smokin’.  Literally, which was weird to see after these past 16 months of D.C.’s smoke-free ordinances.  But they were smokin’ in other ways, too, the sound perfect for Anton’s guitar to chime above all others, his vocals strong, Daniel Allaire threatening to thunder the tom-toms through the floor and down to the Metro below.

Matt Hollywood’s return adds a calm, Lennon-esque presence to the procedures, and early on, listening to him sing “BSA” was like hearing the voice of a long-time friend returning from the wars.  The band didn’t let loose the “whoo-hoos” on this T.Rex-like time capsule, but they sure did a few songs later on a marvelous version of “Who?”

It was a pretty similar set list to the one they played at Terminal 5 last summer, beginning, as always, with “Whoever You Are,” only then going straight into “Vacuum Boots.”  Anton’s guitar was first among equals, though Frankie Teardrop had the really cool-looking guitars to play — the Brian Jones’ vintage twelve-string among them.  At the 930 Club, the band was crowded on the stage, but the sound was expansive, and the sold-0ut audience of 900 behaved like they were on the set of “Crawdaddy” or “Hullabaloo” — rapt, into it, maybe a little amazed.

The BJM play in a bubble outside of time, not ’60s revivalists, not like the Flamin’ Groovies trying to capture the exact sound of the ’67 Byrds, so much as a band that is still enveloped in that era’s aura but with their own wholly original magpies’ garden of sound.

“That Girl Suicide” soared, the four, or was it six, guitars all finding their own textural adherence to melody.  There were moments when the sound was so crowded it was like one of this epic jam sessions, like the finale at The Concert for Bangladesh or something, where it was impossible to discern which guitar was Clapton’s and which George Harrison’s.  But always rising above was Anton Newcombe, his methodical, paint-by-number solos hitting the right note at approximately the right time.

Later, I overheard a discussion about Joel Gion’s tambourine “playing” that went something like this:

“Why do you think they push him out there as a front man?”

“I dunno.  Maybe before Anton’s parents let him form a rock band, they instructed him, ‘You can do what you want, just make sure there’s always a job for cousin Joel.'”

Gion adds comic relief, a visual foil to this excellent batch of Beatle-boot wearing, tight jeans rockers with their cigarettes dangling from their lips while they play the most gorgeous set of multi-layered guitar rock this side of the Stones ’66 tour.

It went late.  Sometime after a great version of “Anemone” and, finally, a really strong version of “Nailing Honey To The Bee,” those of us with day jobs began to slip away.   To hear the Brian Jonestown Massacre circa 2009 — given how much fun has been had viewing them in Dig! as the ultimate rock’n’roll ne’er-do-wells, and given how strong and excellent their performances these days are — is actually pretty uplifting. Anton’s mere survival may seem a triumph; that his band performs at this level is something even more.

Bob Dylan Must Read, Must Listen

Posted in Music with tags , on April 6, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Last week brought us “Beyond Here Lies Nothing,” from the forthcoming (only 22 more days) Together Through Life. Over the weekend, we got to read a frisky fun interview with Bill Flanagan.

(Delicious sample answer to a question about the songwriting on his new album:

“There didn’t seem to be any general consensus among my listeners. Some people preferred my first period songs. Some, the second. Some, the Christian period. Some, the post Colombian. Some, the Pre-Raphaelite. Some people prefer my songs from the nineties. I see that my audience now doesn’t particular care what period the songs are from. They feel style and substance in a more visceral way and let it go at that. Images don’t hang anybody up. Like if there’s an astrologer with a criminal record in one of my songs it’s not going to make anybody wonder if the human race is doomed. Images are taken at face value and it kind of freed me up.”)

He’s a little confused on his Mexican history, stating that the Mexican War, and its resulting real estate transfer of California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas to Los Estados Unidos, resulted in Spain, not the sovereign state of Mexico, losing its territory.  But this is a trifling matter compared to important stuff, like his declaration of admiration for Chess Studios.

Then today, we get to listen to the second song released from the album, “Feel A Change Coming On,” and read more of that interview, courtesy of, of all the sites in the cyberworld, Newsweek.  Go here:

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/popvox/archive/2009/04/06/an-exclusive-early-listen-to-bob-dylan-s-new-album-together-through-life.aspx?utm_medium=columbia-email&utm_source=bobdylancom&utm_campaign=columbia-email|bobdylancom|20090406

Are The Soledad Brothers America’s Greatest Unknown Band?

Posted in Music with tags , , on March 28, 2009 by johnbuckley100

I always thought the Soledad Brothers were members of the Black Panthers.  Turns out, sometime around ten years ago out Toledo way a bunch of white kids gave themselves that moniker and proceeded to release a series of the best Keef-rock records since the Glimmer Twins left St. Tropez. The title of this post is not meant to be ironic: although they haven’t released anything since 2006’s The Hardest Walk, these guys better not have gone the way of George Jackson and the Panthers, or at least if they have gone away, let’s hope they went out in a blaze of fire.  For these guys are Rolling Stonesy good.  They are Fleshtones good.  ‘Nuff said.

Imagine you’re in Heaven, and St. Peter’s showing you around, and he asks you what, in your opinion, would make Heaven an actual Paradise.  So you go for it and say, Well, I kind of wish the Stones hadn’t gone on to suck so bad after Mick Taylor left, and maybe I get in the vault where they keep Ladies and Gentlemen, The Rolling Stones and all the out-takes from Exile On Main Street.  So St. Peter goes, How would you like to hear a band of young folk from Ohio who actually produced an update to Exile? And you go, Wait, didn’t Liz Phair try that?  Because didn’t she go to school in Ohio?  (This is a complicated fantasy.)  And St. Pete goes, No, man, go to the Universal Juke Box we keep over there, and here are some nickels so you can track down an obscure compilation and listen to The Soledad Brothers”Prodigal Stones Blues,” and damn, boy, if you haven’t fulfilled your definition of musical Heaven.

And of course, the man is right.

Neko Case’s Middle Cyclone’s Great, And For The Right Reasons

Posted in Music with tags , , on March 12, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Sasha Frere-Jones is a pretty great rock critic, but he’s not infallible (cf. his championing Animal Collective.)  And while he gives Neko Case her due, and offers Middle Cyclone the right centrifugal spin in his New Yorker send off, it’s possible he loves her for all the wrong reasons.  He seems to take some pleasure in describing Middle Cyclone as Step Two in Neko’s post-Country incarnation, while also damning with faint praise such an exemplar of that supposed past period as Blacklisted. Well, now.

What was so great about Blacklisted, why it was such a revelation, was not just because it proved that Neko missed her calling as a comic novelist.  It was the way Neko and those high desert desperadoes, the fellas in Calexico and Giant Sand, were as well put together as a rattle and a snake.  Seven years later, they’re still playing music that is damn near uncategorizable, but sure sounds to me to pay equal debts to Loretta Lynn and Steven Foster, timeless Americana that pays a symmetrical homage to the drainage from the Mississippi and the Colorado.

Frere-Jones points to The Tigers Have Spoken as some break point between early and late Neko.  But that was a live album, with a combo — the Sadies — whose sound is a magpie’s jukebox, one minute channeling the house band from “Hee Haw,” the next mimicking “Foggy Notion”-era Velvet Underground.   Her foray on that tour no more or less represented a break from Blacklisted as would her next sojourn with the New Pornographers.  Fermented apples and mescaline, they both give a kick but there’s no comparison.  Besides, the marvelous Middle Cyclone, starring those same dusty hombres from Calexico and Giant Sand, is completely of a piece — if, I will grant, slightly less twangy –with Blacklisted.

Neko’s never been a strict adherent to rules of melody, which is weird given how gloriously her tomgirl pipes can levitate the church roof.  There is something dark and mysterious to her solo work — sort of like Calexico, and um, Giant Sand.  But this album soars with gothic heartache and angelic beauty, like Flannery O’Connor playing the cello on a warm spring Sunday.

Middle Cyclone’s great, deep, breathtakingly strange.  (Neko’s evocation of “Prison Girls” is as affecting, and odd, as her line on Blacklisted, “We’ve got a lady pilot who’s not afraid to die.”)  But if Sasha thinks it represents a break from the Neko of seven years ago — even though he means it as compliment — he just hasn’t been listening.

U2, The Return of Brian Eno, and Elvis Costello?

Posted in Music with tags , , , , on March 9, 2009 by johnbuckley100

The title track of No Line On The Horizon shows U2 living in another green world, before and after science.  While the album plays at par — since Pop, which is an underrated masterpiece, I’ve considered it a welcome development if there are as many as four songs on any U2 album that you’d put on a playlist — there are some remarkable moments.

The first, of course, is the opening cut, said title track, which basically has U2 playing along, karaoke-style, on top of an Eno loop so timeless, you’d think the little genius had been carrying it around with him on a floppy disk.  

And then there’s this: listen to “Get On Your Boots,” which is a pretty great song.  Listen to Bono’s phrasing.  I carried it around in my head for a week, going, “Where have I heard this before?”  And of course, it came to me: Bono’s singing in the exact rhythm that Elvis Costello snarls out “Pump It Up” from This Year’s Model.   It’s so close, it would fool the Shazam algorithm.   Good stuff, that, and the Eno sampling by, well, Eno is sublime.

It Was 43 Years Ago Today Lennon Was “Bigger Than Jesus”

Posted in Music, Uncategorized with tags , , on March 4, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Check this out, from our friends at SnagFilms.com.

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Is First Communion After Party The Best Twin Cities Band Since NNB?

Posted in Music with tags , , on February 28, 2009 by johnbuckley100

I think yes.  Since midweek, I can’t quite get to listening to any other band.  Sorry For All The Mondays… doesn’t have a single bad song on it.  Yeah, below you can see the initial reference points: Jefferson Airplane, shoe-gaze bands like Spaceman 3, bands like Black Mountain and the Black Angels and the Warlocks.  But these guys are magical.  Aside from having the best band name since The Rolling Stones, they’re the best Minny band since the legendary NNB of Big Hits From Mid-America fame, whose 30th anniversary hits this summer.  (They’re going to have a festival at the Hump Dome to honor the occasion.  Editor: no, they’re not.)

Tulip Frenzy wouldn’t steer you wrong: download “2CB” and if you don’t like it, we’ll give 99 cents to the charity of your choice.

Austin Get Ready: First Communion After Party Is Playing SXSW

Posted in Music with tags , , , , , , , on February 25, 2009 by johnbuckley100

Ah, I still remember my first communion after party: all the seven-year olds swimming on a bright May Sunday, school almost out, summer near.  Maybe we saw God, but probably not the way First Communion After Party does.  These guys are maybe the best neo-psychedelic band to have emerged in recent years, which when you think about it, is saying something.  If they set their amps up in a Catholic church parking lot, the Warlocks and Black Angels would put down their bingo cards and listen.  They’re that good.

If Byron Coley isn’t a charter member of the FCAP fan club, I’ll give up music for Lent.  See, they’ve got this Grace Slick/Marty Balin, Exene/John Doe thing going on vocals.  The guitarists have spent a lot of time listening to the 13th Floor Elevators.  I’ve seen an interview in which they deftly eschew the comparisons to the Brian Jonestown Massacre, but admit to getting their noses into the same batch of altar wine: Spaceman 3, Spiritualized, the Darkside, that whole tribe.

Austin get ready, these guys are going to be the biggest thing hitting SXSW other than the premiere of the film The Least of Me (which has a simultaneous premiere at Snagfilms.com, FYI.)  If you want a little taste right now, go to the iTunes Store and download Sorry for All The Mondays and To Those Who Can’t Sing, which is either the best album title I’ve heard in a while or the worst, I can’t decide.  I do know this: if my First Communion After Party had sounded like this, I might have kept the faith.