Categories
Concert Reviews

Lights Resolve Tear Up Sold-Out Highline Ballroom

Not every band can engage a room full of concertgoers successfully, but Lights Resolve has learned to do so, and quite effectively. Rather than write another show review, I’ll let Wendy’s pictures do the talking. (But if you REALLY want to read a review of what the LR guys are like in concert, you can check out my MTV post from last summer here.)

I made it to the LR show just in time to see Liam and Me and TV/TV perform and they’re definitely fun bands to be on the lookout for. If you need some entertaining reading, peruse Liam and Me’s hilarious advice column on their blog here. And, if you’re in the mood for some energetic, foot-stomping (did I really just write that?) music, be sure to give TV/TV’s songs “Indie Rock Girl” and “Let It Go” a listen on MySpace.







Categories
Interviews

Third Eye Blind

Releasing their first full-length album in over five years, Ursa Major (due out later this year) promises Third Eye Blind fans the music and undeniably unforgettable lyrics they are known for. Take already released track, “Non-Dairy Creamer” which begs the question, “Whose side are you on? Are you real or fake?” Listen to “Non-Dairy Creamer” here.

Jenkins took some time out to discuss at great length the ever changing music industry and ways the band is adapting, including Indaba Music’s interactive web program “Studio Access” where fans can create their own mixes of new 3eb tracks before the album is released. Read below for the exclusive interview including Jenkins’ take on the industry, his band (“Third Eye Blind was this band that was marketed and processed and packaged in a way that we didn’t really recognize”) as well as the upcoming release. You can listen to the MP3 of my interview with Stephan Jenkins here.

What have you been up to the past few years since you released Out of the Vein?
Well, I produced Vanessa Carlton’s album Harmonium. That was a real process. I’m so proud of that album; I think it’s a really beautiful album. That album is on the old record company model. I just don’t think it’s the right model for her at all because we’ve become so much smaller and closer a music community and we can’t tolerate as listeners that sort of layers of obfuscation that I think record companies bring. What I’ve done in the last two years was founded my own label, that’s called Assembly. It’s distributed through RED, which is a very tight, focused, dedicated group of music fans. So I’ve really changed my whole structure. Then I built a studio in this incredible Victorian mansion in San Francisco. It’s got these 30-foot glass ceilings. It was a house that was built for music at the turn of the century so it’s an amazing place.

Finally, the third thing is that we went out and played and toured this year and we had more people come to our shows this year than had ever come before. I think the same thing happened with Weezer where there was this real sort of rediscovery of the band. Third Eye Blind was this band that was marketed and processed and packaged in a way that we didn’t really recognize. After all that marketing wore off, what you have left is a playlist. And fans discovered that in the ways that they do, which was very personal for them and then they share it with each other. And that’s what has been happening and it’s been so great! It’s really this honest and direct exchange between our music and the people who engage it. So we toured and we’ve been writing this album and have been working on this album and I think it’s an album that is very much inspired by our fans.

It sounds like it. You’re partnering with Indaba Music for “Studio Access,” which basically allows fans to compete in mixing your songs.
Aren’t they great? They are so talented! They’re amazing. A lot of it is just like, “Darn, why didn’t I think of that?” I love to see our music go in and see someone else’s creativity and content. We want to use the technology that’s available to get closer to people, to actually make the community tighter and not have the sense of people being isolated and kept by themselves through technology and instead, find out what’s going on that’s specific to them. To find their people and their groups through coming together through music and each other and finding problems that they care about and ways that they can express themselves creatively through music. The creative expression part of that is definitely something that’s happening through Indaba. It really helps us as well because we are fueled by it. We wrote this album on the road in front of audiences, we tried songs out in front of them. I think the sound of this album has a big reverberant confident sound that comes from that feeling that we’ve had on the road. We always want to maintain that as part of the sound of making the record.

How much of a play are the fan’s remixes a part of the recording process?
Well, it hasn’t affected the recording process. But, one guy took these marching drums that Brad plays and he put them at the beginning of the song and I said, “You know what, that’s how we are going to opening our tour next year,” which would be super cool. So, that’s a way in which somebody else’s idea sparks an idea in us.

What can fans expect from this album?
Well, you probably got to hear one song, “Non-Dairy Creamer” and got some sense of it. I think “Non-Dairy Creamer,” the song itself – the arrangement keeps building and growing. We love the sense of unstoppable momentum for one. Two, I think that lyrically, I don’t know if we are an architect of emocore. But that’s what some of these magazines have said. I thought we were just fighting the Smashing Pumpkins, but I think that’s a sense of internal politics and really trying to speak to those was our contribution to emo. Me, I have no idea because I had never heard of the phrase until years after we made the record so I had nothing to do with it in trying to design something. Lyrically the difference is, on this record, instead of internal politics, this is more extroverted, it’s more external politics.

I think that’s very reflective of the times we’re in. I think that we’ve been stupefied and dumbfounded by a criminal and negligent administration over the last eight years. I think that the generation that really embraces the music is beginning to get its voice back and we’re beginning to say, “Wow, rebellion is American and we need to begin to speak up the way we know we should.” That’s been my sense in finding an outward voice. “Non-Dairy Creamer” is really just about being real versus being fake. There are all these phrases like, “Threat level orange.” What the fuck is that? All it is is asking you to be afraid. I think that being afraid is a particularly un-American concept that George Bush wants to ram down our throats. And so does John McCain and all his off-takes. “Oh be scared of Barack Obama because I have nothing to offer” crap. I think it is shameless and we are now able to call it for what it is. The song is saying, “Whose side are you on? Are you real or fake?”

Is “Non-Dairy Creamer” your first single?
Well, I think that’s a song we just put out first. But, the concept of a single is like, “Is it gonna get banged 40 times a week on MTV?” doesn’t really exist anymore. There’s really no such thing. I don’t even know what a single is, you know? Is it the track that we pay a marketing guy to go push on the radio? No, no it’s not. It’s just a song. They’re all singles.

You were huge in the 90s during the MTV era. How different is the music industry for you now? Do you think it would be easier if you started today?
I think it was very difficult in the 90s. It took a very long time and one of the reasons why was because music needed to be funneled. The outlets for music were so tightly controlled by a few people who had pretty much no interest in music or understanding or sensitivity to music. They were interested in one thing. They were interested in power and they were interested in competing with each other and egos. And they were interested in smashing that model into the ground, which in essence is what they did. They were these big, powerful dinosaurs that were hit by the comets of digital music. So now what’s happened is it’s become totally democratized. What I’m saying is, the jury is no longer rigged. I think that people with good music can go out and get it put out and it’s eligible to find audiences in ways that it wasn’t before. So I think in a lot of ways, it probably would have been easier for us to come out now. It’s really more exciting because we always have the answer for somebody else. In the end we’re still in some way working for the man, which I never wanted to do.

What is your writing process like? Is it any different on this album than previous albums since I know you said you wrote most of these songs while on the road?
What I do is I tend to write down ideas that occur to me. Then they often times take on some cohesion. The other thing I’ll do is I’ll have an idea and that idea will come in a rhythm. I’m a drummer by training so a lot of what I do is rhythmically based. That’s my primary mode of organizing some kind of emotion or provocation into a piece that makes that emotion travel. That’s the best I could put it.

I read that for this album you had more trouble thinking of lyrics than in the past.
Yeah. I still have trouble with some of the songs and the lyrics because I think that the reason for our shocking longevity is the lyrics. If I don’t feel the idea, the governing ghost of that concept inside the lyrics, it can really, really stump me. I have songs I’ve worked on for three years and I can’t get the lyrics right. Then another song like “Non-Dairy Creamer” just kind of comes together pretty fast.

Do you have any ways that you work on your writer’s block?
No. I just engage in a lot of self-hate and then I procrastinate. I do other things instead of working on music and put it off. That’s why we’re so slow at making records.

Do you have a tentative release date for Ursa Major?
Yeah. March. We’re going to put out “Non-Dairy Creamer” sometime in November digitally. So it will be a digitally release of that and a duet with Kimya Dawson. Kimya’s a friend of mine; she and I did a song on the last album. It will be a song called “Why Can’t You Be.” It’s a back and forth. One thing I love about her voice is its extremely distinctive and totally authentic and that’s a very rare combination plus she’s a really good lyricist. She’s very musical. One thing that’s great about Kimya is she’s got great pitch. I like our voices put together.

You’re also planning to release a follow up, Ursa Minor?
Ursa Minor, yeah. Ursa Major is the constellation of the bear. It’s good for us because we’ve been hibernating and now we’ve awakened and we are hungry for spring and we want to feed and we want to thrive.

Everyone on the boards seems to be curious about your old bassist, Arion. Is he playing on the next album and touring with you?
We love Arion and he’s just had a lot of personal struggles. So the band is not a working place for him right now, but he did play bass and actually co-wrote a song called “Red Star” with me and I love that song. I think he’s very talented, but we’ll be having other people play bass with us. But it’s not because we don’t love Arion, because we really do.

Be sure to check out Third Eye Blind’s latest EP release, Red Star and their latest tour dates on MySpace and watch out for their new Web site, coming soon at www.thirdeyeblind.com.

Categories
Artist of the Week

Artist of the Week: Cory Chisel

If you’ve been following this blog you know I have a special place in my heart for acoustic singer-songwriters. After seeing Joshua Radin this past Friday (review to come soon) I’ve been finding myself discovering similar musicians and genres of music. This week’s “Artist of the Week” is Cory Chisel. Watch his beautiful live performance from NYC’s Electric Lady Studios below.

http://www.baeblemusic.com/baebleVideoAndHeader.swf?flv=cory_chisel/Corey_Chisel_s1.flv&concertID=198&song=0
Watch the full concert at baeblemusic.com

Categories
CD Reviews

Reviews to Peruse

I’ve been working on a bunch of album reviews for a few different Web sites, most recently ReviewYou.com and inReview.net. Below are three of my latest reviews for you to check out:

Fiction Family

Desmond Drive

Lower Lights Burning

Also, I’m currently transcribing my interview with Stephan Jenkins of Third Eye Blind so be on the lookout for that! I’m hoping to edit the audio too so you can listen to my interview with him. Check back soon!

Categories
Song of the Week

Song of the Week: “The ’59 Sound”

Back in October I featured The Gaslight Anthem as my “Band of the Week.” Since then, they’ve been featured on many Best of 2008 lists for their album, The ’59 Sound. I’ve been listening to the album myself continuously this past week and highly recommend it if you haven’t picked it up yet.

“The ’59 Sound” was declared one of Rolling Stone‘s “100 Best Singles of the Year” and I keep hearing it everywhere I go — most recently during a set change at Highline Ballroom. Check out the music video for it below and be sure to catch the band on “The Late Show with David Letterman” next Friday!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1lq40tR72Q]

Categories
Features

Artist to Watch: Cary Brothers

I first caught Cary Brothers‘ performance during the Hotel Cafe Tour last spring with Ingrid Michaelson, Joshua Radin and Priscilla Ahn. If the name doesn’t sound familiar, Brothers is perhaps most known for his song “Blue Eyes,” which was featured on the 2004 soundtrack of Zach Braff’s film, “Garden State.” The soundtrack won a Grammy for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album and propelled “Blue Eyes” to the top of the iTunes Folk Chart. While major labels started lining up offers for Brothers, surprisingly he wasn’t interested.

“I’ve seen too many people go through the major label process — the rapid rise and fall that leaves artists burned out and used up,” Brothers said. “That’s why I am excited to bring my independent label Procrastination to Bluhammock. They didn’t ask me to write 10 songs that sound like ‘Blue Eyes.’ They let me make the music I wanted to make.”

And that is what he has done. From continuously touring over the past few years (he co-founded the Hotel Cafe Tour) to working on numerous albums, Brothers has been keeping busy.

With a voice that can ease your stresses of everyday life, his music is light and airy but at the same time has so much depth to it. “Honestly” is a beautiful slow ballad with light guitar strumming and even softer piano accompaniment, never overpowering his vocals.

“Ride” is another strong track with Brothers’ intriguing vocals and lyrics. Listen to “Ride” here for more of a feel. I’d love to know what you think! If you like what you hear, Cary Brothers will be showcasing songs from his upcoming album live in New York and LA in March, so be sure to check out his MySpace for more info! Take a sneak peak below on his video blog and listen to his cover of Ryan Adams’ “Come Pick Me Up.”

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RClZGugmc7Y]

Categories
News

Preview New Bruce Springsteen Album!

Although it’s not due to hit stores until next Tuesday, you can preview all the tracks on Bruce Springsteen‘s upcoming album, Working On A Dream on his Web site. Click here to listen to the audio snippets. The much anticipated 2009 release will be the Jersey rocker’s 24th album. If you like what you hear, be sure to pick up a copy next week! Track listing for Working On A Dream below.


1. Outlaw Pete

2. My Lucky Day

3. Working on a Dream

4. Queen of the Supermarket

5. What Love Can Do

6. This Life

7. Good Eye

8. Tomorrow Never Knows

9. Life Itself

10. Kingdom of Days

11. Surprise, Surprise

12. The Last Carnival

Bonus track:

The Wrestler



Categories
Artist of the Week

Artist of the Week: Ryan Calhoun

I stumbled upon Ryan Calhoun after he requested me on MySpace and I gave his music a listen. The first song that played on his MySpace page was “Who We Are.” A moving song with fitting piano accompaniment, Calhoun sings, “Mom and Dad, don’t worry about your son/I’ll be okay, I’ll take these days one by one/Though the times are hard I still know where I belong/I keep looking up so I can hold on.” With such ease and gracefulness, Calhoun draws the listener in with his heartfelt lyrics. On the last line of the song he sings, “‘Cause at the end of the day all we have is who we are” and you believe him.

Hailing from California, the acoustic pop-rock singer-songwriter writes on his bio: “I’m not trying to save the world. I’m not trying to reinvent the wheel or be the next cool indie artist. I just want to write great songs. I draw from my experiences in life. My relationships, my fears, my struggles everything that surrounds me. My songs are honest and I think that’s why people can relate to them and have a connection.”

And it’s true. His songs are bursting with honesty and emotionally-filled lyrics. At times Calhoun’s music recalls that of fellow California rocker Matt Nathanson with his sing-along choruses. However, setting himself apart is his ability to cause the listener to relate to his music wholeheartedly. Take his song “Draining” (video below). Calhoun sings, “You’re afraid to let me go/’Cause you think I’m all you’ll ever know/I’m trying to make things right/But I just need a little time/You wanted more, I needed space/To find where I fit into place/Please let me know that you’re okay.” The video is even more realistic, tying his lyrics and music in beautifully to the story. Edgier than previous tracks, complete with electric and bass guitar features, “Draining” demonstrates Calhoun’s versatility and ability to switch things up and keep the listener intrigued.

Watch the moving video for “Draining” below and if you like what you hear, check Ryan Calhoun out on MySpace. I have a feeling he’ll be selling out shows in no time.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INEppiMpc7g]

Categories
News

You Sing, I Write Featured As Top Reviews Source

A co-worker sent this Boxxet link to me, informing me that my blog is featured as one of their top 10 review sources! I’m not really sure how prominent this site is to begin with, but to be featured No. 7 on their “Top Reviews Sources” right before Rolling Stone is pretty incredible. Still kind of floored to be honest. They feature my review on Kanye West’s latest album, 808s & Heartbreak. If you haven’t read it yet, you can read it here. Thanks for all your support! It really means the world, and having people find my blog on sites like this is a hint that I’m headed in the right direction. As always, thanks so much for reading!

Categories
Song of the Week

Song of the Week: “Bitter Sweet Symphony”

Since interviewing frontman Ace Enders of Ace Enders and A Million Different People, and learning that his band’s name was inspired in part by The Verve‘s song, “Bitter Sweet Symphony” I’ve been hearing it everywhere! Such a great song, I’ve decided to make it my song of the week this week.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zx3m4e45bTo]

If you read my interview with Enders, you know that both he and a bunch of other bands have recorded a cover of the song and released it in December. The voices heard on the track include Mark Hoppus (Blink-182), Matt Thiessen (Relient K), Kenny Vasoli (Starting Line), Craig Owens (Chiodos), Alex Gaskarth (All Time Low), Aaron Marsh (Copeland), Duane F. Okun (Socratic), and Bryce Avery (the Rocket Summer). Fans can purchase it on iTunes here with all the proceeds going to VH1’s Save the Music Foundation. Learn more about the project here. And listen to the cover below:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-HQ9gqMPGbQ]

If you like what you heard, be sure to purchase it on iTunes where you can help Save the Music and get music into schools.