Showing posts with label destroyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label destroyer. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Egan's Five Albums for Spring

Every good album should correspond to a season. It's an immutable fact of life, and if you don't agree, it's either because you haven't thought about it, or because you're listening to bad albums.

After all, the essence of the album is its expression of a coherent set of ideas, feelings, and powers in a roughly 60-120 minute timeframe. Albums matter. That's why since time immemorial, bands have talked about the writing process in terms of the album; gushed excitedly about "going into the studio"; and mused about "recording cycles." That's why musicians care about cover art and liner notes--because the album is a medium for the message. We often take for granted that musicians (at least the good ones) are real people, and that their music is an expression of the joys and pains (and in many sad pop examples, the vacuity) of life. Well, life happens episodically, and so does music (compare Weezer's Pinkerton to the Blue Album and tell me that doesn't represent two different phases of Rivers Cuomo's career).

If albums didn't matter, then bands would be content releasing disconnected one-off digital singles with no accompanying art. This might be the Brave New World of Music that Apple Corp. and the Obama administration see when it sleeps, but it will never come to pass. Take heart. When the musical Armageddon is upon us, me and the other heretics will strap on armor of old CDs and LPs, arm ourselves with the raw power of Led Zeppelin II, Beck's Midnite Vultures, and some Fugazi Album. And we shall turn back the tide of .99 cent downloads!

Wait, what was I saying?

Ah yes, life is episodic. Music is episodic. And what's more, our connections to albums are subject to the same random tumult of our own lives. When did you first hear an album? Did someone give it to you? Who? Where were you at the time? Did you have reason to revisit it? How did it make you feel? On and on with questions we never consciously ask ourselves, but that abound when we really dig into an album.

Which brings me to seasons. I could probably group albums in an infinite number of ways, but something just feels right about seasons. Not only are they a reasonable size, but like albums they all have their own characteristics that we tend to associate with certain feelings and ideas-- some unique, some abstract--in a very personal, subjective way. Spring for instance is a time of renaissance. We emerge from our winter cocoons charged with energy and ideas; older and wiser but naive and hopeful. We find music that matches this wave of fresh air. But our enthusiasm is ripe to be dampened. As I write this, the skies have unceremoniously opened up to drench Washington, DC. Meanwhile, the temperatures have surged above 60, and the humidity has coaxed the tulips out only to wash their petals into storm drains.

Without further adieu, here are 5 albums that, for me, are forever tied to Spring. In memory, in experience, and in spirit.


1. Zwan- Mary Star of the Sea

A controversial pick, I know. I am a card-carrying disciple of the temple of Corgan, but hear me out: MSotS came out in the first week of February, 2003, almost three years after the Pumpkins broke up. After listening to months of dirty rumors swirl about what Corgan had up his sleeve, he delivered a payoff-pitch curveball. Zwan was a supergroup for musicheads, featuring Matt Sweeney (Skunk, Chavez), Paz Lenchantintin (Babe/bassist from A Perfect Circle), and David Pajo (Papa M, Slint and Tortoise), along with formerly disgraced Pumpkins drummer Jimmy Chamberlin. Billy Corgan tapping someone from Tortoise was a veritable collision of worlds, and it gave currency to Corgan's renaissance.

And that's what Mary Star of the Sea is about: rebirth; both for Corgan, and his listeners. Arguably no living band/musician of my time (90's on basically) has had a more tumultuous and public career than the Pumpkins. Think about it. There's actually some very deep similarities between Corgan and Axl Rose that I won't pursue now, but they're there. In 2003, memories of the Pumpkins' demise was fresh in every fan's mind, along with the band's last album, the grand, dark and narcissisitic opus Machina: the Machines of God. When Zwan unveiled MSoTS in 2003, (I still remember buying it at Newbury Comics) all we wanted was something to believe in.

And that Spring, we got it. Happiness and hope lived in Zwan. The three-guitar ensemble rocked, Chamberlin was in top form, and even Corgan's voice sounded rejuvenated. The first single, "Honestly" was a bouncy, emotive rock love song. When was the last time we were gifted one of those on the radio? Well-known Pumpkins-haters started approaching me to sheepishly admit tht they loved the single. We even found out what Billy looks like when he smiles (strange). Corgan's songwriting was thriving on a sense of spiritual certainty that had been absent in the Pumpkins' final years (though never explicitly religious, Corgan's "spirituality" could not be ignored on MSotS, or in the press surrounding Zwan). The music was fresh and unique--it was hard not to think big. The most direct statement of the album's spirit is first track, "Lyric." Watch the video and you'll see exactly what I mean. Marching through the streets of Chicago behind Billy Corgan? Yes we can!

It seems dubious in retrospect, but at the time, MSotS was a powerful and inspiring album. Even though it was released in Winter, it was a staple in my rotation throughout my final Spring semester of college. It also helped that Zwan came to Boston in April, and played one of the best shows I've ever seen to sold-out Orpheum. What better soundtrack for times of such importance? Listening to this album could literally make make a trip to the grocery store seem like an existential experience. My personal favorite: on "Ride a Black Swan" Corgan preaches the refrain, "Remove my spirit from darkness / love become my hammer" over a cresting tidal wave of guitars and drums. Music can have great power, and Zwan harnessed it, albeit briefly. This album is every promise--realistic and unrealistic--you make to yourself on the first sunny day in April.


2. Richard Hawley- Cole's Corner

It's Spring, 2006, and I've taken up residence in the gothic fortress of solitude that is Yale's graduate dormitory. Richard Hawley is a regular on 2005 year-end top ten lists, so I buy the album on an impulse. I know what to expect: lush sound, emotionalism, and Hawley's throwback crooning. After all, that is his calling card. I listen; I like. Over time, I am slowly conquered by the feeling of the album. Taken in pieces, it's easy to marvel at Hawley's talent for simply writing good love songs. Not songs expressing love per se, but songs inspired by love. Taken together, the songs on this album suggest something far more powerful--a longing that exists in and out of our relationships with loved ones. New Haven thaws and blossoms and I open the window, despite the biblical rains pouring into the concrete gutter outside. We long for the those we have left, and despite ourselves we long for the ones we have at hand. It's a persistent loneliness of society, and a deteremination to defeat it. Hawley's songs weave in and out of physical and emotional confines: wandering the street at Cole's Corner, eager to encounter love or something; inside a Hotel Room, locked in arms with an old friend and lover; down by the ocean; watching the city lights from a car on the hill, trying to forget someone. Hawley seeks and seeks, unable to escape his romantic hex, finding no refuge, and leaving us only with a reassuring lullaby: "Papa's gonna shoe your pretty little feet/ mama's gonna glove your little hand/ I'm gonna kiss your ruby red lips/ mmm hmm hmmm." I walk the streets of New Haven, my own Cole's Corner, and reacquaint myself with the evening.

3. Destroyer- Your Blues

Interestingly, this abstract (some might say inaccessible) album was my first exposure to Destroyer. I still remember listening to the opening song, "Notorious Lightning" for the first time, looking out the back window of a lonely Georgetown apartment in Spring 2004. It was trial by fire--that first track, "Notorious Lightning", is everything audaciously good and bad about Daniel Bejar's music in one 7 minute opus. It starts with graceful acoustic guitars draped in true poetry ("I lay myself down to observe your gilded jeans hit the ground and still haven't grown from this worship"), and then crescendos into a crashing, synthesizer-laden, flamboyant refrain in which Bejar caws "someone has to fall before someone goes free!" It is the beautiful but awkward emotional climax of the album, five minutes into the first song. But it sets the tone.

Afterwards, Bejar goes about his business exploring all sorts of unfamiliar people and places: Oakland, Warsaw, fops on the terrace, actors seeking revenge, inviting army sluts, lovers stealing gondolas to sea. All orchestrated around a synth, accoustic guitar, light drums, and that piercing voice. There are moments of light and happiness in this effortlessly imagined world, but all of it is imbued with a vague sense of foreboding, of collapse; of a weight that hangs on even the most mystical images. That unnamed feeling is of course, sadness, and Destroyer's music about that feeling is, by artful definition, the blues. His blues. Your Blues. Think about that for a second.

Your Blues
is every rainy day in April that you decide to walk instead of taking the subway. It is, as he sings in "Certain Things You Ought to Know," when we reflect on our "springtime on the barricades/our Springtime charades." And it is the peace of the evening after an April shower, in "What Roads?", when Bejar chants, "Tonight we work large, we aim high, pillars stare at a sky designed to come down upon everyone at once."




4. The Clientele- Suburban Light // Preston School of Industry- All this Sounds Gas-
I'm cheating. These two go together because I bought them together in Spring, 2002 at a 2-for$20 sale at newbury Comics in Boston. These are two niche albums that I can't explain my love for. The former is a collection of Clientele B-Sides (I don't even own any A-Sides!!!) that feels like a Sunday evening with friends (or a lover) outside on a freshly cut lawn. The second--the underrated solo project by Spiral Stairs from Pavement--is just plain good. It's about traveling, and understanding home-neither especially deep subjects but pertinent ones at that time in my life. More importantly, the songwriting and recording embodies a spirit of adventurism and ambition that Spring dutifully renews every year.



5. Modest Mouse- We Were Dead before the Ship Even Sank
Another controversial pick. This one generally goes down like ballast water with most Modest Mouse fans, who decided that the band sold out long, long ago. Longer ago, in fact, than you even realize. So goes the predominant hipster narrative, anyway.

These days, wringing your hands over the fate of Isaac Brock and compatriots is strongly discouraged, if not passé. The mainstream commercial success or 2003’s Good News for People who Love Bad News betrayed the band's trademark gritty esotericism, which now appeared to be bordering on the trite. Even Brock’s trademark guttural screams were starting to sound more like polished growls. As the band picked up legions of new fans (I cannot forget one local homeboy in a Redskins jersey and sideways cap, flailing around to "Float On" like a Kanye West song at Constitution Hall in DC), those more heavily invested in one of the best rock acts of the late millennium began to feel a distance from the band. This is the point at which we generally project on others as "selling out." The seeds had been sewn—many were quick to remind themselves—in 2000, when Modest Mouse left Up Records for Epic. [never mind that the album, LP and side project that followed were blisteringly good]. What came after that was just fait accompli. First there was Good News, with "Float On" in heavy rotation on Clear Channel adult contemporary radio stations [Say it ain't so!]. We Were Dead was just a followup. Same label, same sound...why even bother?

There's just one problem with this revisionist history: it forgets what it means to be involved with a band; to root for them. If you listen to WWDBTSES in search of reasons to dismiss it, you'll find them. There's no denying that Isaac Brock's poetic psychosis has ebbed, and taken his lyrical edge with it. The band has expanded from a 3-piece crew with a larger-than-life sound to a 5+ member well-produced collective. The addition of former Smiths' guitarist Johnny Marr (a major press point leading up to the album's release) produced riffs that hang like repetitive ornamentation on songs throughout the album. And do we really know what that second drummer is for?

On the other hand, if you listen to the album with a forgiving ear, an entirely different experience emerges. From the very first chords and lines of the first song, "March Into the Sea," the album rolls and pitches like a cutter lost in the straits of Magellan, with Isaac Brock as the grizzled, and generally insane, Captain. "March into the Sea" swells like a storm around choruses that featuring Isaac's self-mocking laughter: "Bang your head like a gong/ Because it's filled with all wrong/ A-ha-ha!/ Clang, clang, clang!" It sounds weird--maybe even a little contrived--and no doubt the Modest Mouse longingly cry to themselves,"what have you done with the REAL Isaac Brock?!" Then, in the eye of the storm, we hear a voice that resembles something real: "If you think you know enough/ To know you know we've had enough/ And if you think you don't, you probably will/ Our tails wagged and then fell off/ But we just turned back, marched into the sea." Sounds like he's sending a message... Then the raging sea is back, slamming your eardrums to the climax of the song: "Cut me down like the trees/ Like the lumber or weeds/ Drag me out of the sea and then teach me to breathe/ Give me forced health till I wish death on myself/ Give me forced health till I wish death on myself/ [more maniacal laughter]."

Egan Caufield contrarian opinion here: "March into the Sea" masterfully sets the stage for one of the most poignant inward-looking concept albums I have ever heard. This album is a posthumous death-knell from a watery grave. Isaac Brock doesn't give a fuck that you think he's sold out. In fact, you might be to blame; you and all the other fickle bastards that unceremoniously marked the band for dead the minute it was cool to do so. You know what? He doesn't care about you either, because even death, it turns out, makes for good music. The album is painted on a canvas of perpetual motion--boats, dashboards, marches, rickshaws, even carbon --and Modest Mouse is the hapless band of travelers, always moving, never settled; never arriving. Death is prominent on the album, as are bugs; it's lovely. But it's the marine motif ties the album together (see the brilliant video for Dashboard for more of the marine motif). The sea: that normally hopeful, infinite expanse on which Modest Mouse once sailed, has now swallowed the band and turned them into another one of Indie Rock's coral reefs.

I'll admit, it's dangerous to interpret albums so simply, but here it's impossible to escape the notion that this is an album about the band; marching, wailing, touring, growing, recording more albums in the face of death (perceived) with a healthy sense of cynicism and even some moments of apologetic hope (at the end of the boisterous "Spitting Venom" when Isaac sings reassuringly "Cheer up baby, it wasn't always quite so bad/ for every little venom that came out, the antidote was had," it kills me). It is art mocking life; theatre within film within music. And when it's all over, we are surprised to learn that no one has drowned after all. Modest Mouse is still alive and breathing, though perhaps amphibiously. Now there's a concept album for you.

The fact that so many Modest Mouse fans write this one off will never make sense to me. There's so much depth [no pun intended] to this album, so much of their gritty spirit, but most seem deaf to it. Unfortunately I don't think the new fans totally get it either. But I'll stand down. What does this have to do with Spring, anyway? Everything. This album is a string of April defeats: getting shafted on tax day, rejected from graduate school, betrayed by a best friend...and keeping on. Dig?

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Top 10 Shows, Part 1

I recently knocked out a perennial to-do list item by committing to paper every concert I have ever attended. It wasn’t easy [why is 2002 so hard to remember?], but definitely a rewarding exercise. Any excuse to mentally revisit Cambridge’s Central Square more than three times in one sitting is a good one. It also gave me a reason to dig through my shoebox collection of old shit, where I found tickets from a surprising number of shows, including Reel Big Fish live at Axis in Boston, 2000. Purchased through a Strawberries Ticketmaster outlet. 4realz.

But I wasn’t blowing off the dust for nothing. As is my way, I immediately set about rearranging the list according to rank. This is where things get interesting. So many variables go into any one concert experience. What album was the band touring for? Were they “on” that night? How was the crowd? Who were you there with? This chaos is what makes live music so great. Two people with the same music tastes could go to the same five shows and come out with a completely different impression about what they saw and heard.

So, that’s what this is all about: me. Egan Caufield’s distorted prismatic musical perception. There’s no second guessing this list because it’s openly subjective. This is what rocked me. Dig?

A couple quick guidelines and caveats: First, each concert includes the main act and the opener(s)—except for festivals, which counted as single event on my overall list but are now separated by performances for purposes of the the top 10. Second, I’ve put dates where I can humanly remember; others are estimated. Finally, I admit to leaving out two Rosenschontz concerts that I went to when I was 6, only because—based on the vague memories I have now—I think If I could revisit them now they would be so mind-blowingly bizarre/awesome that it wouldn’t be fair to the other bands on this list.

Part one, reverse order, #10-6. Dig:

#10 James Mercer (of the Shins) w/ Sam Beam (of Iron & Wine) at T.T. the Bears Cambridge, MA January 2003

In February 2003, Iron & Wine’s Creek Drank the Cradle had just been released, and had not yet garnered widespread attention. Sub Pop had paired Sam and James for a U.S. tour which brought them through Boston. My first concert on U.S. soil after a semester abroad, I was able to rope one friend into to coming along with no expectations. Standing in the third row of a tightly-packed but friendly winter crowd, we were treated to some incredible music that night. Sam Beam brought his sister on stage to sing a few characteristically sweet songs, and Sam Mercer was more endearing solo than with the Shins. I was mesmerized for the entirety of the two sets. Also, the kickoff to my final months in Boston—this unexpectedly superb show can’t escape the top 10.

#9 Eels Live with Strings at the 9:30 Club Washington DC, Spring 2005

I don’t consider myself a diehard Eels fan, but I dig their music and think E is one of the more under-the-radar musical auteurs of our time. So when a friend of mine who is a diehard invited me to see them in during the Summer of 2005, I decided to go for it. He warned me beforehand that the band tends to change their entire stage act every tour. For this tour, in support of the double-CD Blinking Lights and Other Revelations, the band consisted of E on piano, a standup bassist, a drummer playing on empty suitcases, and an actual string quartet. This could have gone awry, but instead I was blown away by a quality show. They played upwards of 25 songs, including a few rare covers. Even my diehard friend was shocked by some of the playlist selections. That’s usually a good sign [A creepy, violin version of “Novocaine for the Soul” segues into “Girl from the North Country”?! Unreal]. E held court with the crowd in a professorial manner, and brought the band back out for four—four!—encores. I was really impressed with the thought and that had one into what the concert would be, and it showed.

# 8 Ugly Cassanova w/ Iron & Wine at the Black Cat Washington, DC, June 28, 2003

After becoming a Modest Mouse fan in 2000, it would be another five years before I saw them live—by that time a shell of their former selves. But I was fortunate to experience the short-lived side project Ugly Casanova, which Isaac Brock pulled off under the tightening noose of Epic Records. The project included members of Red Red Meat and the Fruit Bats among others, and had the feeling of one epic, misguided campfire session deep in the Redwood forest. The type of one-off that I know I’ll spend hours explaining to my children how good it is, to no avail.

The release of Sharpen your Teeth coincided with my first Summer in Washington DC, and became something of a soundtrack for the humid, pastoral city. The August tour date coincided with a friends’ visit, and while she was a willing accomplice, her sister was less so. After a late dinner we arrived at the show and missed the opening band--something I never like to do. It was only later that I realized the opening band was Iron & Wine, meaning I would have seen them a full five months before Sam Beam hit it big, which I would be bragging about to you right now in a parallel universe. To say nothing of missing what in retrospect is an unbelievable twin bill for the Black Cat. But anyways…

When we arrived, Isaac Brock and Co. were in rare form. Brock appeared to be drunk, and not amused by the technical difficulties the band was having with sound check. Some faulty connection which no one could seem to find was releasing an awful hiss. After 40 minutes of delay the band hadn’t started playing. The crowd was growing restless and, sensing this, Brock was becoming eagerly belligerent. In a morbid way, after all the stories of Modest Mouse’s twisted past, this was precisely what I was hoping for as my first Isaac Brock experience. While he was trading slurred curses with the front rows, each of the band members tuned their instruments with short, loud bursts of sound. The effect created a jolting cacophony [the hiss never got fixed], unsettling and awkward. Then, slowly, behind Brock’s drunken raving, the instrumental bursts started to harmonize. It picked up rhythm, gradually, and then out of nowhere it started to take a shape…a song. Brock said his last words, shut up, and then joined in the melee, slamming the metal strings of his guitar, and belting out the first lines of Pacifico (“they said they’d give me everything/ now here’s the part that makes me laugh/ they didn’t give me anything and then they took half of that/ sharpen your teeth, or lay flat!”). The awkwardness was shattered, and the room was theirs. The intro had taken about five minutes to materialize, and I had never seen it coming. Not that Isaac wasn’t sincerely drunk or belligerent, but I’ve never seen the mood in a room so masterfully manipulated. By the end of the song, every band member and most of the crowd was shouting the refrain at the top of their lungs (“sharpen your teeth, or lay flat!!!”). Absolutely incredible beginning to a show.

The rest of the show was just as good, which is why it lands in the top 10. In an age when so many bands eschew spontaneity for fan expectation and the comfort of a rehearsed setlist/act, my appreciation for Ugly Casanova grows with time. Ironically, one band very guilty of this is Modest Mouse. I’ve seen them twice, and no show on any scale comes close to the intimate evening I shared with Ugly Casanova at Black Cat.

Unfortunately, the memory is forever tinged by one small catch: against my better judgment, I allowed myself to be convinced to leave before the encore. The following day I read in the paper that Ugly Casanova covered “Styrofoam Boots on Ice, It’s Alright”—an incredible but somewhat obscure Modest Mouse song. The lesson? Don’t break your own rules.

Dig!

#7 Built to Spill at the Showbox Seattle, WA June 1, 2003

I warned you context was everything. I’ve seen Built to Spill three times, and even though I believe that they will one day be remembered as one of the best live bands of our time (and as one of the few bands who seemed to really care about their live show), I always come away from their shows thinking: “solid.” They go a long way to reaffirming my faith in music in general, but on any all-time list, they’re likely to anchor the upper-middle portion. This show cracks the top ten for a specific set of reasons.

It was the Summer of 2003, and my friends and I had set out from Florida for a cross country road trip—literally. By May 31, we had made it to Eugene, Oregon. Knowing we’d be in Seattle the next night, we looked through city listings to see what was going on. Sure enough, our one night in the rainy city coincided with the opener of three night stand by Built to Spill at the Showbox. We rolled into town blasting Hole and Nirvana, ready to singlehandedly blow life back into the grunge movement. We arrived at our hostel with just enough time to change, take in a bit of the city, and then make our way to the Showbox.

Something about being out on Seattle’s streets that night—transient tourists in the great wellspring of so much music that I grew up listening to—it really felt special. Inside the Showbox, the walls were covered with posters from previous shows which only added to my awe-masquerading-as-nostalgia. Built to Spill was characteristically great. Doug Martsch walked on stage with a backpack, set it down, and then never looked back, riffing through a 90 minute no-nonsense set of BtS classics and covers. For the record, the crowd was lousy. One drunk imbecile threw ice from his mixed drink at Doug until another fan shoved him. But it didn’t really matter. That night wasn’t just about the show itself—it was about where we were and what we had done to get there. It was even about the fact that we’d leave the next morning. All that mattered is that we were there. Where it all happened, and—for those 10 minutes when Doug Martsch tore the place down with Cortez the Killer as an encore— where it was still happening. It was about freedom, Summer 2003.

#6 Destroyer at the Avalon Manhattan, NY March 28, 2005

I’ve now seen the enigmatic Daniel Bejar/Destroyer four times, and once with the New Pornographers. One of my top-three bands/songwriters of the past five years, every show teeters on the edge of glory, but there always seems to be a hangup. Most recently he visited my home turf at the Black Cat in support of Trouble In Dreams, too intimate a setting for what turned out to be an out-and-out rock show (i.e., notably bad acoustics). In 2005 I saw him play in Manhattan in support of nothing in particular, where he played a wet-dream setlist, except he did it with a stand-in backup band who did the songs little justice. Perhaps the ideal setting was back in 2004, when Destroyer had first made themselves known to me, and I saw them at Iota, a nondescript bar in Northern Virginia. He was probably selling out larger venues in New York, and meanwhile I was one of about 20 souls who came out to see him that night. [He even used the bathroom right before me!] Unfortunately for me, the Your Blues tour called for a lot of cacophony and squelching, and I left disappointed.

‘twas not the case in Spring of 2006, when I made the trip from New Haven to Manhattan for Destroyer’s stand at the Avalon, a church converted into a concert hall. I say “stand” with some irony because they were in fact opening for Magnolia Electric, Co., but you wouldn’t have known it. There was an undeniable ambience that night. Bejar, reunited with Destroyer’s original/primary lineup, had just released the opus Destroyer’s Rubies. As the band campaigned through a well-balanced set of old and new, the room buzzed—people danced, people swayed, people called out, seething energy. Chalk it up to the ghosts of the church, but I vividly remember thinking to myself that for one of the few times in my young musical life, I was witnessing something. Destroyer, the opening band, played for an hour and fifteen minutes and was summoned back for a three-song encore. Before Magnolia Electric Co. even had a chance, I had melted out onto 7th avenue to enjoy the New York night.

Stay tuned for part 2...