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TICKET GIVEAWAY: Chromeo @ House of Blues, Boston 02/03/11

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The Canadian electropop kings roll into Boston’s House of Blues THIS THURSDAY Feb 3. If BOS is your city and you wanna go, we’ve got two free passes with yer name on ’em. The first microkorg-wheelin’ hoser to hit our email wins!

Chromeo – Night By Night (Skream Remix)

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reviewed by
01-29-11

Gil Scott-Heron and Jamie XX – I’m New Here

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“I’m New Here” is the lead track from Jamie XX’s forthcoming, We’re New Here, Gil Scott-Heron remix project. With the guts of Gil’s embattled baritone, Jamie XX melds the rhythmic electro Frankenstein that is this collaboration between two of the coldest motherfuckers on the planet.

Gil Scott-Heron and Jamie XX- I’m New Here

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rating: 8.8
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reviewed by
01-28-11

The Milk – (All I Wanted Was) Danger

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The Milk are kooky. Kooky like Tom Jones kooky. They’re also fucking awesome. Tom Jones fucking awesome.

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Rating: 8.0

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reviewed by
01-28-11

Chapel Club – After the Flood

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“After the Flood” is why we love Chapel Club. Turn this heater way up. Previewed from their forthcoming Paul Epworth produced full length debut, Palace.

Chapel Club – After the Flood

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rating: 8.6
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reviewed by
01-28-11

Chris Brown – Look at Me Now (Feat. Busta Rhymes, Twista & Lil Wayne) (Patchwork Pirates Re-Edit)

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Heard this fresh Chris Brown remix on this week’s Gilles Peterson show (of all places). This Patchwork Pirates Re-Edit may not be the “Perfect Beat” but it’s pretty damn close.

Chris Brown – Look at Me Now (Feat. Busta Rhymes, Twista & Lil Wayne) (Patchwork Pirates Re-Edit)

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Rating: 8.1

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reviewed by
01-27-11

Adele – Promise This (Cheryl Cole Cover)

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Wow, just, wow. Again. The way she glides over those falsetto notes in the chorus. Mindblower.

Adele – Promise This (Cheryl Cole Cover)

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Rating: 8.5

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reviewed by
01-27-11

TICKET GIVEAWAY: Local Natives @ Walt Disney Hall, Los Angeles 02/26/11

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The beautiful Walt Disney Hall in LA will be the scene as one of the city’s best rock and roll exports Local Natives make their triumphant homecoming, Saturday February 26th. This is an absolute can’t miss event as the band will take to the concert hall stage with the backing of a live orchestra. Pretty awesome, right? We’re stoked! So stoked we’re totally upping the awesome ante by giving away two free tickets to to the show! That’s right, a pair of passes to this totally rad show can be yours. All you gotta do is hit our email box in the next five days and you’ll be entered to win the tickets. We’ll select one entrant at random after Tuesday at Midnight, Eastern, when the contest closes.

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Local Natives Info

Local Natives – Wide Eyes (Teen Daze Remix)

reviewed by
01-27-11

Big K.R.I.T. – Hometown Hero (Feat. Grillade) (Live K.R.I.T. Wuz Here Session)

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Can’t front, I’ve had this on repeat literally all day. Maybe played it twenty times by now. The original “Hometown Hero” is great, the beat which features a sample Adele’s “Hometown Glory” on the hook is really killer but live with a live band/vocal (SF’s Grillade) on top it just takes the song to this just really powerful place. I mean, you really feel the song’s sentiment, it’s very very immediate. The guitar, K.R.I.T.’s flow, the vocal quality, it all draws you in, pulls at you to the studio where this session was cut, to the place where K.R.I.T. first put pen to the song’s rhymes, to your own home, your place of birth. All of that once. It’s amazing.

Big K.R.I.T. – Hometown Hero (Feat. Grillade) (Live K.R.I.T. Wuz Here Session)

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Rating: 8.0

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reviewed by
01-26-11

Little Dragon – Twice (Freddie Joachim Remix)

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Two of the most soulful forces in the universe collide on this mindblower of a remix. Freddie Joachim is one of our fav remixers; his work with tracks from Alicia Keys, Nas, and Esthero are just a few of his mixes we’ve covered. Little Dragon’s “Twice” is a personal fav here at b3sci so link up Freddie and with it and you’re talking some serious shit. The beat in the mix is sort of reminiscent of 90’s R&B, the thin snare, the busy hi-hats (think Darkchild). The added synth layers introduce, among other stylistic elements, jazz tones with tinges of vibraphone. Over the added instrumentation, Yukimi’s voice takes on this other-worldly quality. What was once this earthy, visceral, elemental thing is transformed and transported.

Little Dragon – Twice (Freddie Joachim Remix)

Rating: 8.4

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reviewed by
01-26-11

Adele – One and Only (Live at Tabernacle, London)

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Lately, the only music-related experience that seems greater than hearing Adele on record is hearing her live. Holy shit.

Adele – One and Only (Live at Tabernacle, London)

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Rating: 9.0

brown93

reviewed by
01-26-11

The Vaccines, Live @ Spaceland, Los Angeles 01/25/11

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The energy at The Spaceland was palpable last night for the West Coast debut of the next great U.K. guitar band, The Vaccines. However, there were two L.A. Bands opening for them, upon whom I must touch before turning my attention to the main draw.

Bixby Knolls play heavy, conscious guitar pop. They seem to have a faithful coterie of followers who were quite familiar with their songs. Their lead singer plays with a confident nonchalance while emotionally interacting with the crowd through the music, a prerequisite for any successful frontman. Their sound is of the UK rock tradition, a mélange of The Clash, The La’s and Echo and the Bunnymen. While they might not reinvent the wheel, there’s definitely a good bit of traction on their musical tires!

After a brief intermission of less than twenty minutes, Sweaters took the stage. I would technically call them a four piece, although there was a fifth member who participated on most of the songs, mostly banging away at the tambourine and sprinkling in some Saxophone at times. The lead singer plays the keys, with the bassist doing a strong back-up vocal, along with a guitarist and drummer. They have a raucousness which is representative of the best Rock. They’re unconcerned with derivation or with being sandwiched into the subgenre of the month. My main gripe is that the singer lacked the stage presence of the Bixby Knolls frontman.

Sweaters have fun on stage. A lot of fun on stage. This cannot be stressed enough. In an ‘indie’ scene which came to be defined in the 2000’s by the minor key, it’s so refreshing to hear joyous pop/rock music in whatever incarnation that may be. They also have a comfort with the technical aspects of playing which leads me to believe that more than one member has a background in Classical Music.

Sonically, they’re all over the place, which I think is a good thing in this instance. Their singer sounds a little too much like David Byrne, but hey, who doesn’t these days? They’ve got everything from Todd Rungren to Warren Zevon to The Modern Lovers to The Doobie Brothers lumped within their sound. Essentially, the keyboard, which was turned WAY UP, sets a foundation for their sound in the popular 1970’s vein. This homage, this sense of nostalgia, is probably their greatest strength and their most glaring weakness, as I can’t quite say that they’ve amalgamated their sounds into one cohesive style all their own. Will they be representative of Matisse before or after 1905? Youth is wasted on the young, and also on the next great band, which is why a band like The Vaccines coming together makes for such a magical, ineffable experience.

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At least one A-list celeb (A-minus in the eyes of some) was in the audience last night! It wouldn’t be a sold out show in Los Angeles without at least one familiar face. Creativity breeds creativity. The intellectually curious artist will make it a point to search out the cutting edge across various modes of expression.

Nobody moved as Sweaters left the stage. None of that usual dispersal toward bathrooms, bar-counters and cigarettes. The anticipation continued to build as the mics were tested. It was clear to me that this wasn’t a concert in Kansas City or (dare I say) my hometown of Cleveland. The jaded L.A. crowd has seen, heard, and done everything — their expectations were through the roof for a show with unrelenting consistency. The audience was littered with stoic Industry faces, betting the under on the length of The Vaccines’ set, which the bookmakers had probably pegged at 27 minutes!

The Vaccines take the stage around 11:05. Confident with the sound levels, they blast immediately into their first hit, ‘Wreckin’ Bar (Ra Ra Ra)’. Lead singer Justin Young, stripped of guitar on the 85 second cut, commands the stage, both playful and serious, toeing the line which separates gimmickry from insouciance. He dons his guitar for the second song and almost the entirety of the rest of the set. He’s especially confident and competent playing rhythm while singing. I hear fleeting snippets of The Ramones and The Beach Boys in their sound. They have the same lack of pretention as on ‘Please Please Me’ (is it sacrilege to say that?)

NME has proven over the decades a priceless ability to peer into that crystal ball of theirs and predict the future of UK Rock n’ Roll. The Vaccines is the band Interpol could’ve been had Turn On The Bright Lights been released in 1998 and they weren’t so indebted to Joy Division and The Bunnymen. For a band that’s only been together one year, The Vaccines’ continuity and vision is incredible. Even the cool crowd had let down their guard by the end of the first song. Will this be the band to break the current American prejudice toward UK guitar bands? The specialness of the night isn’t lost on the four-piece from London, for this may have been their first time on the West Coast, flying into LAX and seeing the endless Pacific. If that’s not inspiring for an artist, I don’t know what is.

‘Post Break-Up Sex’ is their paradigmatic song, I would say. It was played early in the set. For the self-mockery of the title, the sound is serious. The lyrics are emotional and intellectual. They’re not dripping with metaphor but produce highly specialized images. The same can be said for ‘Blow It Up’, which draws the quickest link to The Beatles of ’63 and ’64, but also discloses a little Replacements and even Roy Orbison on a strain of their musical genome.

I hear the Jesus and Mary Chain comparisons on ‘If You Wanna’, which was the fifth or sixth song of the set. There’s a touch of ‘Taste of Cindy’ and ‘Happy When It Rains’ in there, but again the influences are pushed to the background. The Vaccines sound like The Vaccines. They switch up their sound without pastiche or derivation, something Sweaters attempted in vain. ‘If U Wanna’ has a singalong quality by the second or third listen. They’re not as camp as The Arctic Monkeys, and not as repetitive as Franz Ferdinand, but I can’t comment authoritatively, since I’ve only seen Franz Ferdinand in a large venue, not a hotspot as intimate as The Spaceland.

The Vaccines closed their set with a cover of The Standells’ ‘Good Guys Don’t Wear White’, followed by another less than two minute track, ‘Noorgard’. In total, they played for about 35 mintues, covering the spread. They warned us in advance that they wouldn’t play an encore, but I was left wanting more regardless. I think the Vaccines are approaching the game like businessmen. They lack ego and hubris in their interviews. There’s a hunger and drive to their playing — they won’t rest on the buzz surrounding their debut, What Did You Expect From The Vaccines, slated for release on March 21st through Columbia Records, for which I shall wait with bated breath. Tell your friends and your frenemies: THIS IS THE BAND TO WATCH!!!

RATING: 9.728

Contributed by Chris Gedos

The Vaccines – We’re Happening

The Vaccines – Blow It Up

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reviewed by
01-26-11

Bag Raiders – Sunlight (Armand Van Helden Remix)

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Totally. Fucking. Killer. We finally got our hands on at least a radio rip of this five-alarm heatrock. Our man Armand goes in on the Bag Raiders’ blogosphere #1 and straight murders it. Get your own dancin’ hands (and feet) on it below.

Bag Raiders – Sunlight (Armand Van Helden Remix)

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Rating: 8.6

brown93

reviewed by
01-25-11