Silversun Pickups @ Stubbs (7/19)

Date Monday, July 19th
Location Stubbs
Doors 700p
Tickets SOLD OUT

Well, I’ll be honest, Silversun Pickups is not necessarily my cup of tea; I mean, there are a few catchy songs, but overall, it just doesn’t do it for me.  I will tell you that in going to this show, I’m really excited for the two opening bands.  Against Me is bringing their punk goes electric sounds to the stage as the middle act, and killer nice guys in Henry Clay People will bring their own hot tracks to the stage as the opening band.  Luckily, you can catch HCP at Waterloo Records on the day of the show at 5 PM for free, and we suggest you make it out there, as they’re a band you need to check out.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/04-Sink-Florida-Sink.mp3]

Fun Fun Fun Fest Leak

You know one of Austin’s best festivals is actually Fun Fun Fun Fest right?  Well, they’re slowly starting to leak out news about who will be taking the stage, and you get to hear it right from Bill Murray on this video.  Looks like we’ll be hosting Best Coast, Slick Rick and Suicidal Tendencies, so that’s a pretty solid start, especially considering how everyone is soon to fall in love with Best Coast.  We’ll keep you posted on more updates.

Delta Spirit @ Emos (7/17)

Date Saturday, July 17th
Location Emos
Doors 900p
Tickets $12 @ Ticketweb

There’s a bundle of really solid rock shows this weekend, but the one recommendation I can give you is that you need to end up Emos on Saturday.  Delta Spirit is headlining a show in support of their great new album History From Below.  Not only do these guys put on a great show that has one them fans all over, but they are playing with none other than David Vandervelde.  He’s been sort of a shapeshifter of late, originally coming off as Bolan, but trying to go a little softer in his current state.  Regardless, why not go enjoy the night with a couple of great bands worthy of your time?  Exactly, so let’s do this.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/05-someone-like-you1.mp3]

Download: David Vandervelde – Someone Like You [MP3]

Mystery Jets – Serotonin

Rating: ★★★★½

Years ago Mystery Jets began as a father/son project, influenced by the father’s classic tastes on Zootime.  They followed that up being influenced by the masses and the trends on Twenty One.   Now, we find them with Serotonin, matured and self-assured.  The latest release provides one of the most consistently enjoyable albums for all sorts of listeners.  Having stepped into their own, there is no telling where we’ll go from here.

You can barely hear the trickle of noise as the album opens, but as the vocals slowly climb on “Alice Sings” you can feel the rising tension.  Enter crashing drums, and we’re off into a blissful romp of a tune fueled by knife-like guitars and Blaine Harrison’s maturing voice. It’s really this maturity, and not only with Blaine’s voice, but with the band’s sound as a whole that makes this one hell of a listen. “Too Late to Talk” begins with a bit of cheesy keyboards, but they provide a certain sense of vibrance here, as opposed to the kitsch factor that was evident in previous listens.

There’s stylistic touches all over the record that keep the listening fun and frivolous, yet this doesn’t mean that the whistling on songs like “Flash a Hungry Smile” do anything to detract from the overall quality of the songs.  Really, it provides a deeper devotion to the purity of pop music.  They know they can use clever tricks, but if they focus on the rest of the writing, then they escape clear of cliches.  “Serotonin” has a similar little keyboard element kicking the song off, but the rest of the song sounds sort of bleak and dark, despite the subject matter.

Near the middle of the album, after you’ve been won over by song after song of special goodness, you hit the trifecta of amazing pop moments, surely the best moments on Serotonin.   That little bit of a jangling guitar in “Dreaming of Another World” along with Harrison’s rising vocal melody makes this song stick out, for some reason, right in the middle of the album.  Final production touches like the rolling drum beat near the end only make the track all the better. “Lady Grey” has this bubbling quality to it as the band sort of chugs along, but the kill factor comes during the chorus when Harrison asks “will you still love me in the morning.”   His vocal delivery is one of the best you’ll hear from him, even going back to the early years.  You’ll cease swinging your arms here if you listen to this chorus on repeat.  Finally, the third of the brilliant moments here comes via “Waiting on a Miracle,” slow pop polishing, just before Harrison belts out “I think you’re waiting on a miracle.”  Search all you want, but you probably won’t find pop music this good, indie or mainstream.

Closing out this album, it’s hard to find a single place where Mystery Jets took a misstep.  Every song has its own personality, and in that, they all carry bright choruses fastened to tight songwriting of the pop-leaning sort.  Serotonin is one of the most vibrant records of the year, built on the back of a band who seems to finally have come into their own as songwriters.  Perhaps this isn’t what everyone expected from them, but we should all be thankful that there are bands still willing to make music as lovable as this.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/07-Dreaming-of-Another-World.mp3]

Download: Mystery Jets – Dreaming of Another World [MP3]

New Tunes from Screaming Females

We first caught a glimpse of the power behind Screaming Females when they opened up for Ted Leo.  They wowed us then, and they are here to wow you as well.  The band has a new album titled Castle Talk coming out on September 14th, and its going to be killer.  One listen to single “I Don’t Mind It” and you can see why they’ve been winning fans all over with their classic alternative rock sounds.  Get ready for this band to win your heart.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/screamingfemalesidontmindit.mp3]

Download: Screaming Females – I Don’t Mind It [MP3]

New Tunes from The Biters

Who likes power pop? I do. I do.  Seriously, when I heard The Biters, I just went straight to iTunes and grabbed their EP.  I mean, its part Exploding Hearts, part Gentleman Jesse, and all parts just awesome.  There’s nothing arty or dancy, or even intricate for that matter, it’s just straight ahead rock n’ roll, like the good old days.  It fuels you with energy, and it’ll make your smile large. You gid?

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/The-Biters-Hang-Around.mp3]

Download: The Biters – Hang Around [MP3]

New Tunes from The Boat People

What can I say about Australian pop?  Man, it sucks me in every single time, but I won’t complain.  My newest find is The Boat People who just released their album Dear Darkly overseas. It’s got this atmospheric quality to the staple indie pop sound, and on the single “Soporific” the chorus is completely juxtaposed to the regular versus.  It’s a splendid style of songwriting.  Give this a try.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/02-Soporific-1.mp3]

Download: The Boat People – Soporific [MP3]

New Tunes from Villa Cola

For some reason, dance music never really goes away, and that’s not a bad thing, entirely.  I’m pretty picky about my dance tracks, and I’ve found a new one I’ve been enjoying all day long.  Villa Cola have just released their self-titled Villa Cola EP, and it’s got some great subdued dance grooves going on throughout its entirety.  You’re sure to find enjoyment in every song, so head out and find this small gem of a dance album.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/02-Modern-Lovers-1.mp3]

Download: Villa Cola – Modern Lovers [MP3]

School of Seven Bells – Disconnect From Desire

Rating: ★★★½☆

Often times, we find that a bit of clarity pays off huge dividends.  For the second album from School of Seven Bells, Disconnect From Desire, this is precisely the case.  A few years of touring since their last release, and those moments of clarity provide for an entirely different listen than their previous album, Alpinisms.

While the band once coated their sound in a bit of fuzz and indifference, the moment you hear “Windstorm”, you can tell the group has flipped the table over, revealing a more pristine, electronic version of themselves. For one thing, the production has the Deheza sisters coming off a bit clearer, even with the tribal chanting in the background.  Sonically, they sound as if they aged, like a fine wine, getting better with as time’s passed.

But, the bread and butter of Disconnect From Desire has to live in the darker elements of the record.  “Heart is Strange” probably sounds really powerful in a venue, but in your home stereo, there’s an element of smoke filled clubs coated in debauchery.  This isn’t to say that the band is hinting at such things with their lyrics, but you can almost feel yourself sinking into a sense of despair, albeit an exuberant sort of despair.  “Dust Devil” evokes a similar quality with its driving rhythms, and vocals that seem to just float atop the air.  For some reason, this track evokes a weird monastery feel, perhaps its the way the twins carry the notes, almost to the point of chanting.

Using a minimal amount of instrumentation, however, does create a bit of redundancy throughout the entire listen.  It’s not that School of Seven Bells can’t write good tracks, as it’s clear they have that power, it’s just that the album doesn’t have a lot of variance; it blends together a bit, and gets mundane.   “ILU” and “Camarilla” use really delicate vocals from the girls, but their voices are so distinctive, that if you placed these songs back to back, which they’re not, you might find it hard to completely tell the songs apart from one another.  Perhaps some will find this attribute infinitely rewarding, as many people love their electronics with a solid vocal behind it.

All that being said, one track will surely stand out for every listener. You’ll find this hook on “Bye Bye Bye,” where the programmed element alone is enough to keep this track on repeat for prolonged periods of time.  Oddly, the girls sound a bit younger here, almost a bit more refreshed.  A few more tracks like these placed carefully around the album, and you’d probably have Disconnect From Desire in the running for album of the year.  Just promise yourself you won’t miss this track.

All in all, progress has been made, and it seems a great deal more rewarding for all parties involved with concerns to Disconnect From Desire.  A dark quality resides throughout the album, but it comes in the form of moving electronic flourishes, clear, for the most part, of the elemental noise that was present in the past.  School of Seven Bells have made an honest record, and one that now seems to match their electric live performances.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/SchoolOfSevenBells-Windstorm.mp3]

Download: School Of Seven Bells – Windstorm [MP3]

The Love Language – Libraries

Rating: ★★★★☆

It sounds like things in North Carolina couldn’t be any better. The Love Language recently signed to Merge Records, and then they followed that up with the release of Libraries.  At first listen, you might find sonic touches of other bands, you might even think you recognize vocal qualities of singer Stuart McLamb.  In the end, you’ll find that this record is full of well executed songs, all of which provide repeated listening pleasures for every individual who puts down the cash to get this well crafted pop opus.

“Pedals” starts off slowly, before guitars begin to ring in backed by light keyboard strokes.  Enter Stuart, carrying his melody high above the rest of the band’s swirling sonic display.  There’s an edginess to all this beauty, and every movement within the song feels sharp, yet incredibly uplifting, especially when the strings arrangements enter during the latter part of the song.  You can’t start off much better than this.

During “Brittany’s Back” you start to get a hint that McLamb has a bit of Hamilton from The Walkmen in his voice, but during this song, his voice seems much more controlled than his vocal contemporary.  But, on “This Blood is Our Own” you really see a similarity, as Stuart reaches for that high spectrum of his own pitch, wavering just a bit at the top.  Still, this song, aside from the piano, doesn’t really sound all that much like the aforementioned band; it has a much more cinematic quality, one that would fit nicely in the wooded regions of the Carolinas.

“Summer Dell” starts off a slew of songs that don’t sound as crowded, musically, and they really take Libraries to the the top tier of indie rock.  Steady guitar strumming, and really sharp drum hits, give it a strong emotive quality, yearning for you to get lost amidst the finer details of the song.  “Heart to Tell” takes a like-minded approach, as its similarly stripped down, though you’ll find a more upbeat group, giving you a little bit of swing as you listen.  McLamb’s vocal performance here is one of the strongest of the whole collection, and creative production from the percussive section adds an extra level of enjoyment.

Something about the approach to the writing in “Wilmont” will forever stick with you.  After an album that seems filled, cleverly, with every inch of space, you have a slow number that is carried by light strumming and McLamb, that is to begin the song.  Once the drums kick in, and the guitar seems to be chasing the stars, you try to follow, yet you’re distracted by the vocals, almost haunted.  It is hard to pull yourself away from this song; you simply can’t do it.

That’s precisely the way you’ll feel listening to Libraries, especially after the third and fourth listen.  Details will begin to emerge, melodies will seep inside you, and you’ll discover that crooning sounds coated in wooded effects can be successful.  In fact, it’s so much so, you will keep coming back to The Love Language just to take a different look around the indie world. You’ll be better off for it.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/ll-heart.mp3]

Download: The Love Language – Heart to Tell [MP3]

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