Image

Videos!

Caribou live @ Henry Fonda Music Box, Los Angeles October 8, 2010

Dan Snaith aka Caribou and his band played Friday night, October 8th, 2010, at the Henry Fonda Music Box in Los Angeles, located at the Southwest corner of Hollywood and Gower, which is also the Southeast corner of the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The theater originally opened in 1926 as the Carter DeHaven Music Box Theater. It was called the Fox, followed by the Pix, between the Forties and Seventies, where films had their premieres, and in fact Jaws first showed at the Pix in 1975. The building has been restored over the past several years to its original façade, which could be called Streamline Moderne, (loosely defined as Art Deco, but stripped of its more decorative elements.) However, many Hollywoodites lament the loss of the neon sign which adorned the building three decades ago.

Inside the theater, above the stage and along the walls, are details from the right panel of The Garden of Earthly Delights, by the 16th century Flemish painter Hieronymus Bosch.

1garden1

This ancillary information is said to highlight the fact that the Music Box is a great place to see someone like Caribou play, because, like The Music Box, Caribou amalgamates different influences and styles, some of it “cutting edge” or “avant-garde” to the ears of some, and still retains a level of classicism, “rock classicism” in this case, by which I mean mid to late 60’s sounds and song structures. As an electronic newbie back in 2003/2004, this “classicism” helped me bridge the gap and appreciate Snaith’s music from the first.

All of Snaith’s records before Swim had been recorded on an archaic version of Sony ACID, a relatively basic music production software. In fact, Snaith has voiced his disdain in interviews for more in-depth software such as Protools, noting the importance of software whose facility, “allows the thoughts to move as fast as the music.” This also disproves the false notion that Snaith is a virtuoso who records all the instrumentation at once, and he describes his drumming abilities as “very basic.” While he does play the drums live (along with guitar, keys, analog, and recorder), the main drummer plays all of the most difficult parts, the frenetic cacophony of cymbals Caribou/Manitoba is best known for. (sourced interview via One Thirty BPM)

Caribou took the stage at approx. 11:20. They played for about 80 minutes, including the five minute break between the main set and encore. The crowd was very familiar with the recent album Swim, and surprisingly unfamiliar with the earlier material. The audience reception to “Melody Day,” opening track to 2007’s Polaris Prize-winning Andorra, was subdued, and you could almost hear the hipsters whispering, “What song is this?” when they played “Hendrix with KO,” off the 2003 Manitoba album Up In Flames. These songs were highlights of the show for me, prime examples of Snaith’s grounding in Psychadelic Pop. And of course they played all of Swim, playing “Kalli”, “Bowls”, and “Leave House” early in the set, finishing the main set off with “Odessa”, and encore-ing with “Sun”.

I saw Caribou at Cleveland’s Grog Shop back in June, and was surprised that Snaith’s gang trumped themselves with their Music Box show. Even despite the steep disparity in ticket prices ($12 vs. $23) and beer prices ($4 for a PBR tallboy vs. $7 for Heineken in a Dixie Cup). I suppose that’s the price we pay for a more cosmopolitan experience. The venues are more historical, the girls are more beautiful, and the bands play longer and more varied sets. Who says there’s a lower quality of life in the big city? I would gladly trade a covered parking spot or a $450 studio in Cleveland for the opportunity to see shows like Caribou’s at the Music Box in LA on October 8th.

Contributed by: Christopher Gedos

pixakahenryfonda

reviewed by
10-23-10

B3SCI EXCLUSIVE: Ticket Giveway – Saint Saviour @ Bush Hall, London UK 10/23/10

saintsavour

ATTN: b3sci UK fam. ex-Groove Armada frontwoman Saint Savour is playing a SOLD OUT gig @ London’s Bush Hall TOMORROW NIGHT (SATURDAY). SOLD OUT FOLKS! No more tickets left. Awwwwwwwwwww ……..but wait! You know b3scis got you. Thanks to our UK CONNECTS, You can be there! (We know we would want be!) Just be the first to hit our email and two free passes will be waiting for you at the Bush Halls door. This promises to be a fantastic gig as Saint Saviour is nothing less than world class on stage. You want these tickets.

Peep Saint Saviour’s bomb new single Woman Scorned:

Saint Saviour performing with Groove Armada at Glastonbury this year. Yeah!

Saint Saviour on Soundcloud
Saint Saviour on Youtube
Saint Saviour on Myspace

reviewed by
10-22-10

Mayer Hawthorne / The Heavy / DJ Jazzy Jeff Live @ Paradise, Boston 10/19/10

img_0034

img_0036

This will be a show, not a concert

And it was, and it was phenomenal.

We can’t front. We are serious fans of Mayer Hawthorne. And we’re also pretty into The Heavy. And DJ Jazzy Jeff is a legend. So you can imagine the pitch of our anticipation for this show. We. were. psyched.

img_0021

img_0019

The Heavy mean business. That much was clear throughout the band’s 45 minute or so set. Galvanized by a 3-piece horn section, The Dirty Three (and, man, did they sound it) and buoyed by frontman Kelvin Swaby’s crazy good vocals and stage presence/persona the band growled, rumbled, shaked, thumped and roared through a sweaty selection of tunes from their first two (highly recommended) LPs. “Owwwwwwwwwwwooooooohhhhh”, Swaby, in one of many cool exchanges with the crowd, called out for all the wolves in the audience. “We play music by the devil.”, alluding to the band’s unhallowed co-contributor. “You guys are live, more live than New York last night.” “Fuck New York.”, called back an adjacent show-goer. Swaby was over. He had the crowd. The Heavy were killing it. Sixteen pounded, How You Like Me Now boomed, What You Want Me to Do thundered. The Heavy were HEAVY, the best mix of loud guitar, soulful rhythm, and raw brass. Music by the devil.

img_0041

img_0039

img_00711

Mayer Hawthorne is a terrific performer. Mayer and his four-piece band The County sounded great. Mayer sporting a fly three piece suit with red tie, The County fitted in matching red cardigans opened the set with A Strange Arrangement standout Your Easy Lovin’ Ain’t Pleasin’ Nothin’ and it was on. Hawthorne and co. smoothed out to a set of approximately 12 songs, a survey of urban music influence spanning the last 50 years, The Temptations-y (and according to Mayer, first song he ever wrote) Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out, The Stylistics-esque I Wish It Would Rain, the 80’s r&b-influenced No Strings, and two Snoop jams The Neptunes classic Beautiful and Hawthorne’s own G-Mix re-touch of Gangsta Luv. Mayer was effortless in his engagement with the crowd, his on stage interactions with his band, and his overall ability to command the show‘s dynamic. “If you ain’t dancin tonight, best file on to the back, and let someone up front that will dance.” The kids were into it, the older dudes were into it, the girls got down. People had fun at this show. It felt great.

img_0092

So we got outstanding sets from The Heavy, Mayer Hawthorne, and lest we mention opener New Wave dude Gordon Voidwell; who played a cool set of Synth bangers to the Paradise filers in, no doubt gaining fans, admirers, and Gordon Voidwell true believers in his effort. Ok, could this get any better? I mean what more? What possibly could top this killer Mazda Car tour. DJ JAZZY JEFF! YES! Jeff is a legend. And the opportunity to see the Jazzy DJ get sick with the turntables in person? Oh yes. And Jeff straight up murdered it, turning in arguably the best set of the night. Dude moved effortlessly about the 1’s and 2’s mixing up classic rock with early 90’s house, and disco jams with Lloyd Banks. She’s just like you and me, but she’s homeless, she’s homeless. Gypsy Woman turned to Seven Nation Army. Seven Nation Army blended into Teach Me How to Dougie. Teach Me How to Dougie to BON JOVI. The actual tunes playing (they were all great) became irrelevant. Jeff was that locked in. We didn’t want it to end.

This was a show. This was not a concert.

reviewed by
10-22-10

The National – Terrible Love (Alternate Version)

national

1) check out this awesome alternate version of the national tune terrible love 2) check out the cool hijinx video the band shot for it 3) ??? 4) profit

The National – Terrible Love (Alternate Version)

rating: 8.8

brown9

reviewed by
10-20-10

b3sci exclusive: Mackintosh Braun

mackintosh5

b3science recently caught up with Ben and Ian from Chop Shop Records’ latest signing, Mackintosh Braun about their new LP Where We Are, the digital age, music licensing, fat free soy milk and more… check it out:

b3sci: a band of many influences, how has Mackintosh Braun evolved artistically on Where We Are from the days of your self-released debut The Sound?

Ian: we’ve been writing so much over the last couple of years that we’ve learned a lot about how we write songs together. i mean ‘the sound’ came out in 2008. but we had written all those songs in 2007, so we’ve had a lot of time to develop our sound and the way we write songs. this album gave us a chance to share a bit more of ourselves with the listener, and try things musically that we’ve always wanted to.

b3sci: If time and technology were no obstacle, and you guys could collaborate with anyone… ever, past, present or future, who would it be with and why?

Ian: Ratatat
Ben: ian’s got a real Ratatat thing going right now.. they’re great. ummmm, i’m gonna have to say, steely dan. that would pretty much make my dreams come true…

b3sci: how do you feel your synch in MTV’s 2010 season promo has influenced the future and fate of your band?

Ben: i think it’s cool whenever someone wants to showcase your music, and for us it was a compliment when i saw the MTV promo. we can’t really worry about the effect it might have on our future, for us it’s just about getting the music out there and hoping people attach to it.

b3sci: music licensing has come a long way in the last 10 years for emerging and established artists. what was once considered taboo and damaging to an artist’s cred is now of the most sought after opportunities. how would you guys like to see the fate of music licensing evolve?

Ben: music licensing has come a long way, it’s pretty incredible that so many great bands are getting opportunities that they never would have before the current “anti-jingle house” era that we’ve all grown into. i think to answer the question, popular culture and music go hand in hand, so to have it all so accessible now, everywhere you turn, is pretty great in my opinion, it’s helped us tremendously.

b3sci: how does it feel to be signed to Chop Shop Records, and have your vision supported by one of the most influential tastemakers (Alex Patsavas) in the entire entertainment industry?

Ian: it feels like if we planned it from the beginning, it wouldn’t have worked out better than this. it’s a great feeling…
Ben: yeah, it’s pretty great to have someone with her vision and ear for music support us like she does, everyone at Chop Shop is amazing. like ian said, it couldn’t have worked out better.

b3sci: first impressions speak millions, especially in today’s digital age of short attention spans. when somebody has the Mackintosh Braun “experience” for the first time, what is the first impression you’d like those listeners to walk away thinking?

Ian: “i’ve been waiting to hear that”
Ben: i want them to first feel the goosebumpy feeling in your arms when you hear that hot ass track, then i want them to think “damn, that’s some dopness.”

b3sci: what song on Where We Are do you feel most proud of, and why?

Ben: I was just telling ian that i’m really proud of the title track “Where We Are”. i just think we did a great job on that one, the drums sound great, i love the bridge, i’m just really proud of how that song came together.
Ian: I think for me it would be “Made For Us”. One of the reasons is that I love how you can hear both of our personalities come through in that song, and some of the things we tried and experimented with instrumentally, came out really well. there are a few notes in that one that really tug on my heart strings.

b3sci: what song, or artist, made you want to write and share music with people?

Ben: Led Zeppelin had a huge influence on me in my younger days, my mom got me into them when i was in 5th grade. i just always wanted to write music, and create sounds. i’ve never really thought about doing much else, it was the thing that i always had the strongest desire for. i still do.
Ian: I would have to say it was The Beatles, when i was listening to the song “help”, john lennon sings the line, “my independence seems to vanish in the haze”. the feeling that line gave me was so electric, that i knew i wanted to write music and try to create that for someone else.

b3sci: given the current landscape, who would be your top three acts to tour with?

Ian: Ratatat..
Ben: how bout Daft Punk, Royksopp or even Air would be amazing. There are many, many bands that we would love to tour with. lots of good music out there.

b3sci: What’s in your iPod? What album/artist is rocking your world right now?

Ian: loving’ “The Suburbs” by the Arcade Fire, and of course anything by Ratatat.
Ben: really love Wild Nothing “Chinatown” and i’m also diggin Real Estate “Out Of Tune” right now as well.

b3sci: what are 5 things that each of you guys absolutely couldn’t live without?

MB:
1) weed
2) our studio..
3) is that 5 things??

b3sci: what are 5 things that each of you guys could totally be cool living without?

MB:
1) fat free soy milk
2) third eye blind
3) people who ask about your shit, and then talk about their shit right away..
4) traffic in portland getting worse
5) the kazoo, even though jimmy made it sound awesome on “crosstown traffic”.

b3sci: What role do you think the internet will end up playing for music discovery in the future?

Ben: the largest role, it’s so important these days in discovering music.
Ian: yeah, we really may not have gotten here without it.

Mackintosh Braun info
purchase Where We Are

mackintosh3

reviewed by
10-16-10

Band of Horses – Georgia (Feat. University of Georgia Marching Band) / Grinderman – Hyper Worm Tamer (UNKLE Remix) / Moon Visionaries – In the Green Room

car-fox

hi. we’re rolling up on your shit today fully locked with heatseekers. we’ve got the band of horses dudes (AND A MARCHING BAND!) doing cee-lo, unkle stunt man mikeing the grinderman punks, and the moon visionary weirdos rocking out to a killer jam. car fox man, lets get fly! show us the carfax!

Band Of Horses w/ The University of Georgia Redcoat Marching Band – “Georgia” (Cee-Lo Cover) by Some Kind of Awesome
Band of Horses: purchase / info

Grinderman – Hyper Worm Tamer (UNKLE Remix)
UNKLE: purchase / info

Moon Visionaries – In the Green Room
Moon Visionaries: info / info

reviewed by
10-08-10

Pavement / Sonic Youth / No Age @ the Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles 09/30/10

pavement

…And the last band left standing shall receive the spoils, but these are metaphysical spoils, which shall not be quantified by ticket sales or legions of fans, but rather by the knowledge that your music inhabits a space within the sinuous web of rock and roll, and that every afternoon new bands are forming everywhere, inspired by a specific set of your songs…

Few bands over the past 25 years exhibit the level of influence wielded by Pavement or Sonic Youth, and we would have to go back a half-decade and across the sea to find bands like Joy Division, Gang of Four, and The Clash, who lay claim to a greater circle of followers.

That being said, the September 30th Pavement / Sonic Youth show at the Hollywood Bowl was a lineup for the ages, at one of the most beautiful venues in the world, a venue almost out of antiquity, so complementary with its natural surroundings that it couldn’t be man-made, or at least originally conceived by the father of the great Frank Lloyd Wright, who was called simply Lloyd Wright.

The up-and-coming Los Angeles band No Age opened the show. They are about to embark upon a European tour, which will be followed by an American tour, including a show at Cleveland’s Grog Shop, an old b3sci stomping ground. This is a band to watch. From what I’ve heard, they’re still in the process of amalgamating their influences, but their measures of experimentation show a band without a clearly defined ceiling, for whom the sky’s actually the limit, creators of music which belongs to “no age”.

Sonic Youth played for about fifty minutes, and they absolutely slayed it! Kim Gordon is 57 years old. She’s the hottest rockin’ grandma I’ve ever seen! The tightness of this band is unbelievable, the result of long periods of incessant, generally uninterrupted touring. They’re like Phish, where even if you’re predisposed against the style, witnessing their live performance is enough to baptize the neophytes. They stopped playing at approximately 9:35, waving and leaving without an encore, to the dismay of thousands of old and new converts.

My friend and I walked around the structure during intermission. Except for the steep incline up to the nosebleeds, there isn’t a bad seat in the whole bowl, thanks to the convex arrangement of seats. The consensus is that the new shell, added between the 2003 and 2004 season, has greatly improved the sound quality. Also worth noting, Heineken costs eight dollars at the Hollywood Bowl… we should’ve gone to a liquor store beforehand.

Pavement took the stage a little before ten o’clock. They opened with “Cut Your Hair”, which was the song they played on Leno back in ’94 (watch below). When we see the popular disregard in Malkmus’ falsetto, it’s easy to understand why they weren’t invited back for a second performance. Still, with its hooks and harmonies, “Cut Your Hair” could’ve been a single on the level of Weezer’s “Buddy Holly”, if only it had a Spike Jonze directed memorable music video. Other highlights included “Gold Soundz” (which was voted top song of the 90’s by Pitchfork) , and the transition into Shady Lane. Other set highlights included “Summer Babe” and “Range Life”.

Malkmus had a wry smile as he trotted off the stage, and I figure they’d be back in 90 seconds for an encore, which of course would include “A T & T”, my favorite Pavement song. But the house lights went up immediately, along with some barely audible PA music, a not-so subtle way to tell the masses to exit the premises. Sadly, the band were hoping to play an encore, which would’ve included “A T & T”, but couldn’t due to time constraints.

It was a fantastic show, and I couldn’t have asked for anything more. But Pavement only played 17 songs, totaling an hour, as opposed to their NYC concert, where they played 27. Hopefully I’ll still see them play “A T & T” someday.

Contributed by: Christopher Gedos

hollywood-bowl

reviewed by
10-06-10

The Temper Trap / Delphic Live @ House of Blues, Boston 09/29/10

temper

Melbourne, Australia’s wonderboys The Temper Trap continued their worldbeating tour of nonstop jams this past Wednesday at Boston’s House of Blues. The band rolled into the burger and fries venue accompanied by NYC duo The Hundred in the Hands and UK Mancunians Delphic.

We love NME hype bands so much it isn’t even funny. So when we heard NME it girls Delphic were on this bill, we were super super psyched. Their debut LP Acolyte is one of our favs of the year. The band’s brand of synth-driven Manchester-driven rock dance pop came off tremendously well live, suprisingly so. The interplay/coordination between various band personnel was phenomenal, between synthesizers and drum machines, guitars and bass, frontman James Cook’s killer vox and keyboardist Rick Boardman’s equally killer backup vox. The band was really really solid, on top form. Due to their still relative obscurity in the States outside the circles of serious NME hype loving anglophiles like us, Delphic hit the stage to maybe 80% crowd indifference but left it to near total venue admiration.

The Temper Trap have crazy fans and their numbers seems to grow exponentially by the day. The band’s potential is unlimited. These guys could totally be a Coldplay-level band in 5-7 years, they’re that kind of band. This was my first time seeing the band, and wow. All I can really say is wow, I was that impressed. The band, itself, sounded massive. Singer Dougy Mandagi is totally a star. The band’s brand of thoughtful, hopeful, artful pop just straight up destroyed I think everybody in attendance. Think about the word choice in that sentence thoughtful, hopeful, artful & destroyed. The Temper Trap are that kind of band. It’s truly remarkable what these guys are doing. Highlights for me from the set were second song Fader with its mega, dare I say Hutchence-esque, hooks and killer rhythmic elements and mid-set jam Love Lost which does sort of sound like what the aforementioned Coldplay might sound like if they were still hungry.

Potential. Potential. Potential. Both The Temper Trap and Delphic have a veritable shitload of it; Delphic, likely, more so in the UK but really with The Temper Trap, its’ worldwide. They’re that kind of band.

The Temper Trap: Info / Purchase
Delphic: Info / Purchase

reviewed by
10-03-10

Mount Kimbie Live @ the Downtown Independent, Los Angeles 9/26/10

dscf0813

The UK duo, Mount Kimbie, made their Los Angeles debut Sunday night at the Downtown Independent, an indie film theater which doubles quite nicely as a concert venue. After a chill on the venues rooftop patio, began the evening’s run of five plus hours of electro, experimental, urban, dub, and pop inspired acts. Classic mob’esque and big band sample-saavy MC’s, 5 O’Clock Shadowboxers, got things started sporting gun holstered costumes and some notable ‘Dharma Initiative’ references. Other support worth mentioning includes Sahy Uhns, Strangeloop, and Shlohmo; all who gave inspired performances.

Mount Kimbie hit the stage near midnight for their self-proclaimed first ever gig in LA. Experiencing first hand Mount Kimbie’s manipulation of electronic and live-instrumental (guitar, drum/symbol, and vox) sound layers offered an exciting glimpse at this duo’s potential, and that of a growing niche of electronic acts. What sets Kimbie’s compositions apart is the group’s ability to take the sonics apart, stretch them, ply them, break each of the sounds they produce into their simplest nuances. Less visually focused than any of the acts earlier that night, their songs and brilliant transitions lead to an inspiring set from an aspiring young group.

While the duo seemed concerned about some minor monitor issues, the sound was rather good and the crowd was no doubt pleased, and familiar, with the set consisting mostly of material from Mount Kimbie’s Maybes and Sketch on Glass EPs and their most recent LP Crooks & Lovers. The second to last track of the set, and released single, “Field” became the clear standout song of the night. A faint electronic texture looped with crescendo as a simple electric guitar lick sneaked in to build an hypnotic atmosphere.. when suddenly gears shifted, and another world of composition began. A basic progression of loud, driven guitar chords played out until electronics entered to bring the song back to a level reality; showcasing an ideal sound marriage of innovative electronic music and straight forward rock and roll. Other highlights of the set included their performance of the track “Would Know”, some interesting improv on eastern world melodies, as well as a next level-type manipulation of a “don’t go and tell my baby” vocal line.

In conclusion, Mount Kimbie’s first show in LA seemed to be, by their account a gracious one. Fans with open minds found their solace. The night served as yet just another shimmering example of music evolution across the pond. A duo with much more to them than any niche they fall into, Mount Kimbie prove, in their own way, that simple ideas can still lead to musical innovation.

dscf0814

dscf0810

photo

rating:
mayor-quimby

reviewed by
10-01-10

MONA – Listen To Your Love

mona

“Listen To Your Love” is new from little known Nashville collective MONA. it also happpens to be one of our favorite ways to spend 3 minutes and 20 seconds as of late. an unsigned band, they have 3 songs (one a demo) available to hear on their MySpace, and all we can think of is really big ass bands, you know like Bono shit (trust us – check that demo) or that one brothers and cousin thing something Leon. either way, blahstradamus is wiggin out right now.. pressed recently via Rough Trade, “Listen To Your Love” hit shelves with a limited run of just 300. needless to say we didn’t get one, but we want one, and if you want to give us yours… we are happy to oblige.

MONA – Listen To Your Love

info
purchase single

rating: 8.6
brown8

reviewed by
09-30-10

B3SCI EXCLUSIVE: Ticket Giveaway – Pavement / Sonic Youth @ Hollywood Bowl, This Thursday, Sep 30

pavement

If that headline got you as psyched as we are for this show, then you, my friend, are in the right place. Two of the coolest bands in history are headlining the Hollywood Bowl THIS THURSDAY and YOU, blahblahblahscience reader, have the shot at two free passes! Yeah! Just be the first rock and roller to tell us whether Stephen Malkmus or Thurston Moore has the better hair and the tickets are yours. Its that simple! We do have a definite opinion on this matter, but here at b3sci, we are gentlemen and never tell.

If you don’t win this giveway, keep cool, fool, you can still score some tickets here. get it girl!

reviewed by
09-28-10

Chapel Club – All the Eastern Girls

chapel

All the Eastern Girls is the new single from one of our fav UK bands, London’s Chapel Club. the Paul Epworth produced track is due for UK release october 11. we’re pretty hyped on this track, especially its killer chorus. seriously, check it. the band just dropped some new visuals for the song which you can sample below. and for real Chapel Club dudes! come to the United States, we want to see your show, thx, love b3sci.

Chapel Club – All the Eastern Girls

chapel club info
purchase info

reviewed by
09-15-10