Tag: Performer Magazine

PERFORMER MAGAZINE – RECORD REVIEW: Mikie Lee Prasad, Jukebox Folktales: Volume Two

RECORD REVIEW: Mikie Lee Prasad
Jukebox Folktales: Volume Two
By: Keane Li

One of the hardest working musicians in the Bay Area, Mikie Lee Prasad has been performing his rollicking brand of energetic Americana in local pubs and clubs for well over a decade. His recent release, Jukebox Folktales: Volume Two, a sequel to 2009’s Volume One, features a number of the talented local musicians he’s worked with on past projects.
The album opens with the diabolical “Try Evil.” Mikie sings a story not uncommon for a bluesman – a meeting with the Devil in an otherwise common place (this time, a gas station), with the humor and gypsy-esque jive of Tom Waits. “Don’t Wake Up” and “Hammer,” ballads steeped in that classic swirling American sound, conjure images of summer evenings and family friends. The inclusion of Bongo, his dog, and Marie, his wife, on this record show that it is, indeed, a familial affair.

Jukebox Folktales: Volume Two is an exhibition in what experience, maturity, and witty songwriting can get you. From its happy highs to its somber depths, the variation on this well-balanced album creates an experience that can be tirelessly enjoyed. (Self-released)

(link to review…)

PERFORMER MAGAZINE – RECORD REVIEW: John Vanderslice, Green Grow the Rushes


John Vanderslice | MySpace | Twitter

RECORD REVIEW: John Vanderslice
Green Grow the Rushes
By: Keane Li

Few musicians have given as much to the Bay Area indie scene as John Vanderslice. The former frontman of MK Ultra in the latter half of the ’90s, he has since broken off into a successful solo career. His renowned analog recording studio in San Francisco, Tiny Telephone, has recorded great acts, from Death Cab For Cutie to Deerhoof, and he has himself helped produce records for Spoon and The Mountain Goats. Green Grow the Rushes, his latest EP, continues his journey through American alt-rock.
The record features a cacophony of whimsical tones. “Thule Fog” sounds as if it were part circus and part kabuki. Vanderslice manages to fill his record with the strangest of voices, as if he had an orchestra of worldly instruments at his disposal. Even on the relatively straightforward “Lay Down,” he employs an underlying synth sound reminiscent of the ’80s. The result is adventurous, as much a treat for the mind as it is for the ears.

While Vanderslice’s songwriting is remarkable, the production and instrumentation on Green Grow the Rushes truly shine. His songs are articulate and organized without being derivative. It’s refreshing to hear an artist explore new frontiers of sound and succeed so well. (Self-released)

(link to review…)

PERFORMER MAGAZINE – Interview with Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger (Sean Lennon and Charlotte Kemp Muhl)

Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger
GOASTT Official

INTERVIEW: Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger
Sean Lennon Expounds on New Project
By: Keane Li

In mythology, the concept of duality follows closely with creation. Day and night, good and evil – the balance between two opposite pairs defines the human existence. This is a relevant citation when discussing The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger, a two-person band balanced between opposite, yet complementary parts.

The pair in question is Sean Lennon and Charlotte Kemp Muhl. He, the only son of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, has both the benefit and curse of being associated with two of the greatest artists of our century. She, a professional model with deep poetic flair, performs vocal harmonies with him. Their first album, Acoustic Sessions, finds its release on their own label, Chimera Music, named after an equally mythical creature.

Sean is in bed and Charlotte, having just woken him, apologizes if he might sound groggy. The two have been dating and living together for the past year, a relationship that explains the intimacy of their debut. The origins of their project are similarly intimate: “I was looking through her stuff,” Sean recounts regarding Charlotte, “and I found this play called ‘The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger’ from when she was seven. And I called out that I had found it, ‘Hey, what’s this? It would be really cool if we started a band called The Ghost of a Saber Tooth Tiger.’ It was kind of a fluke idea, and she was like, ‘Sure, why not?'”

The phrase “my generation” was prevalent during the discussion, as they bounced profound ideas back and forth on topics like creating political art in an age of “subterfuge and obfuscation” or the irony of diminishing human connections in an increasingly digitally connected age. Charlotte, having grown up in a small town in Atlanta, had a significantly different upbringing than Sean, a native of New York City and twelve years her senior. After becoming a model at age 13, she traveled the world and, admittedly, had little connection with mainstream media.

“My only exposure to pop culture was really horrible,” she recalls, “like techno music in Milan. So when I met Sean, I had a lot of catching up to do in terms of musical references and learning everything that happened since.” Sean regards this as a positive quality. With a life surrounded by great musicians, he has what he calls a “library of pop culture” in his head; with a variety of influences from jazz fusion to hip hop to The Beach Boys. “Charlotte really isn’t poisoned by every Duran Duran single and Boy George comeback,” says Sean, praising her ability to create original work without influence.

Their dual natures continue into their songwriting process. Sean, with his penchant for melodies and chords, may be the most experienced in terms of instrumentation, but says he needs to “catch up” with Charlotte in terms of lyrical construction: “I used to just write about how I felt,” he says about his previous albums, “It was more like diary entries. It was sort of like documentaries of Sean’s feelings. And then I met Charlotte, and she was already a lyricist. She won all these poetry awards when she was young and she sort of pushed me to actually take lyrics seriously, as its own art form.”

Currently completing their upcoming “electric” album, the two are often distracted by side projects: “We’re going to put out a little mini-album for France,” Sean says when mentioning their European tour, “We’re still getting around to finishing our opus, or whatever you call it, for next year.”

“Our ‘magnum octopus,'” adds Charlotte. When asked if that will be the actual name, she replies, “It should be.”

Despite an increase in administrative duties associated with running Chimera Music, Sean describes the transition from a major label to self-publishing as “logical” for artists, as it offers more control over creative output. “Now that we have our own company, I think I realize how lucky I am in terms of artists who are less mainstream like myself, who are more indie or left-of-field.”

Charlotte laughs at his comment and cuts in, “I just had a horrible image of you performing with all these back-up dancers behind you in leotards.”

Sean replies, “What do you mean ‘horrible’? That sounds beautiful…”

Throughout the discussion, they readily offer opinions on every topic except one. When asked if they had any advice for other independent artists, they paused. “I don’t know. I think we need advice. I don’t think we have any advice to give,” says Sean. “Yeah, I don’t think we have the right to give any advice because we’re very much like Bambi on ice,” Charlotte seconds, then adds, “I think it’s very unoriginal to try to be obsessed with being original in a day when there’s such a confluence, a critical mass of every variation of everything happening right now. So I think it’s just really important to sort of stick to what you love, and really just try to execute it in a way that feels true to your artistic vision and not be so concerned with the image of it.”

Not bad advice; do what you love. “Yeah, it’s harder than it sounds. It’s a cliche, but it’s hard. You need to succumb to insecurity or the pressure to make a certain type of product.”

At its core, Acoustic Sessions is an exposed experience between two life partners, a joint effort that Sean describes as being more meaningful and fun than any of his previous collaborations with the great artists of his past. Their songs describe a view of the world from two contrasting perspectives, as a lyrical admission from a pair of nostalgics, written from the quietness of their home.

“That’s my favorite time,” Charlotte comments, “to play guitar in bed with you.”

“Yeah, those are the good times,” Sean replies.

http://chimeramusic.com

Photographer: Sean Lennon

Performer Magazine November 2010

PERFORMER MAGAZINE – Maus Haus


MySpace | Twitter

FEATURE: Maus Haus
An Eclectic Collective
By: Keane Li
July 2010

“Serendipitous” would be an appropriate word to describe the formation of Maus Haus. From their initial meetings to their creative process, everything about this San Francisco electro-synth sextet seemingly fell into place. To achieve the eclecticism in their albums, the band of multi-instrumentalists undergo extensive experimentation in the studio. Anything can happen. Their reversal of the traditional songwriting process has yielded the unique (and very catchy) results presented in their debut, Lark Marvels and their new EP, Sea-Sides. Having already gained considerable regional attention, the band is poised for their first East Coast tour this summer.

Maus Haus is Joseph Genden, Jason Kick, Joshua Rampage, Aaron Weiss, Sean Mabry and Tom Hurlbut. The manner in which the band formed is as happenstance as their studio work. “Jason and I met in Indiana when I was 17, kind of randomly,” recalls Sean. “He had just moved to San Francisco and was back East visiting.” The rest, the band describes, was meeting through friends at shows and “Craigslist magic.” The band solidified in the winter of 2007, and began recording and creating their first material in 2008. “It was a domino effect,” says Joshua. “I think we have a pretty good meeting of the minds. Everyone kind of brings their own idiosyncratic, subjective opinions to the table and things just go wild from there.”

Maus Haus, as a band name, was essentially meaningless, used as a placeholder that became something more. “As long as we can spell it in German,” they say half-jokingly. And what was originally a side project for a team of musicians in other bands certainly became something more. While their releases leverage the support of indie labels for distribution, the band is currently unsigned and spreading like wildfire primarily through word-of-mouth, supported by the strength of their live shows and recorded work. Says Jason: “Our first demo was a five-song unmastered CD-R and [Joshua] hand drew on it. We used to send those out to people and we basically had something posted on our MySpace page that said, ‘If you want one, just ask.’ So we were doing free demos until our record came out. And a lot of people took us up on that. It was really cool.”

With the exception of their original CD-R demo, the band chooses to bypass the CD medium for vinyl and digital download. “CDs are dead,” Sean says quickly. “Vinyl is really a beautiful product,” adds Jason. “You make a record, it’s very tangible. It’s very physical. And a CD, I don’t think anyone’s really gotten that attached to their discs. You can feel the grooves on a record. It’s very tactile and I think we would do vinyl and CD if someone wanted us to, but it just so happened we really felt strong about vinyl. It was our first priority.”

While each member of Maus Haus brings with them unique influences, the band finds its primary inspiration in krautrock and 70s disco dance. In contrast with many electronic groups, Maus Haus purposefully aims for a manual, more organic feel to their rhythmic repetition. The band prides itself on foregoing any form of sequencing in their live work, preferring to perform as many of their sounds as they can in fashion with their vintage influences. “To me,” says Jason, “I hear real human beings playing. Even if they’re trying to be repetitive, there’s people trying to be mechanical, and to me that’s way more attractive than having these things that are programmed.”

The band uses innovative methods to work together when gathering six independent minds might be difficult. An established web server allows each of the members to contribute musically from their homes. The inventiveness in their sound owes itself partly to their creative flirtations from the intimacy of being alone. Says Jason, “On recordings, it’s like anyone could be anybody. And I think that’s just how we like to do it, because the way we create songs is pretty strange. A lot of it comes from a couple of people working together alone in a recording situation and then bringing it to other people. And that’s actually a precedent that was set the first time any of us got together.” In crafting Sea-Sides, however, the band modified this precedent by planning more of the songwriting process – composed bridges and transitions – in order to piece together the best of their recorded moments of inspiration.

“I think one thing that sets us apart from other bands,” says Sean, “is that recording is a big part of our writing process. Usually a song idea will come out of recording and experimentation as opposed to people jamming together and coming up with things on the fly. And I think this adds a different kind of almost surreal element to a song once you create something in this recording world and you learn to play it later. You’re playing straight from your brain instead of through your fingers. You learn with your fingers what to play.”

But where artistic talent and ideals meet, so often is conflict found. “We definitely have our points of disagreement but that’s what’s great. I think disagreements really help,” says Jason. What kind of disagreements, specifically? “Fistfights. Long email threads,” Sean jokes. “Unfortunately we’re not at the point where we can afford a therapist,” adds Jason, “but if we ever could, we probably will. (laughs)”

As the band admits, “between six people there are 300 opinions.” So how does a six-person band of involved artists work together and sustain a healthy team relationship? “Lots of communication,” says Sean. “I don’t think you can be creative or collaborate with someone unless you know them, unless they are your friends, unless you understand a certain element of their brain or their spirit or however they work. Because, otherwise, it’s like you’re playing on top of each other. I think that’s a big part of what true collaboration is. My advice to independent musicians is to only make music with your best friends.”

Jason continues: “I think the basis of friendship means that you can have conflict and you’ll be able to survive it because it’s an understood thing that everyone’s going to say what they think at any given moment. It becomes an easier thing to deal with because you realize that we’re going to fight about this, but, no matter what, we’re going to be friends at the end of the night. That’s kind of what family or best friends do. Ultimately, we’re talking about music here, but at the end of the day, it doesn’t go home in our heads.”

Their advice to other bands: “Tour as soon as you can,” says Jason, “and play with bands you believe in.” Joshua adds a piece of advice that can ultimately apply to all facets of life, “It’s important to ask yourself, ‘Am I having fun?'”

In speech, Maus Haus exhibits the same eclectism and mature artistry prevalent in their music. And, as the interview came to conclusion, they depart by handing over a lone pack of Pop Rocks, in concert with the controlled randomness that so defines their work, casually with a disclaimer: “Don’t eat these while driving.”

Link to Maus Haus feature
Download Performer Magazine, July 2010

PERFORMER MAGAZINE – Tasso – Gower


Tasso | MySpace

Tasso – Gower
Los Angeles, CA
Produced by Cat Tasso
Engineered & mixed by Manny Nieto at Manny Nieto Studio
Mastered by Mark Chalecki at Little Red Book Mastering

Tasso’s debut EP, Gower, marks frontwoman Cat Tasso’s departure from her previous band, the May Fire. The Chilean guitarist and vocalist, now based in L.A., presents a polished rock EP with the assistance of studio engineer Manny Nieto, known for his work with the Breeders and Darker My Love. Teamed with drummer Franky Martinez, the duo effectively creates a large atmosphere of sound. The result is a collection of controlled freneticism, a display of raw and emotive rock anthems.

Gower opens with Tasso’s robust single, “Don’t Love Me (I Never Will).” Her conversational lyrics work well with the thrashing instrumentation, indicative of the track’s rebellious tone. The song’s steady, pounding rhythm appropriately mimics a beating heart as Tasso sings about a relationship where love is absent. On “Shine,” Tasso introduces vocal harmonies, adding an additional layer of depth from their previous track. Guitar and drums dance around one another in a form reminiscent of the White Stripes or Yeah Yeah Yeahs. It’s unapologetically rock – rough and ready. The passion and fury from the drums, in both Tasso’s recorded work and live performances, can be easily heard on this track. Martinez offers a hard-hitting quality that reverberates with a tight timbre. “Wish I Could Stay” offers a strikingly gentle transition from Tasso’s previous tracks. As the title suggests, the song fits the tone of a lullaby, a bittersweet and quiet conclusion to an otherwise ruckus night. The EP concludes with “Gloomy Days,” a track that exhibits both the volatility and slow shuffle of a stormy day. Solemn vocals sweep across syncopated beats in the verse, leading to a saturated and very harmonic chorus. It’s a haunting end to a heartfelt audio journey.

As a multi-textural expression of emotion, songs often become simplified and more conciseduring the developmental career of an artist. This is evident on Gower, as Tasso’s long experience rocking from clubs to stereos across multiple Americas has led her to create music as raw and chaotically refined as life itself. (self-released)

– Keane Li (more…)

Festizio in the New Issue of Performer Magazine (Twice!)


http://www.performermag.com
http://www.myspace.com/westcoastperformer

Two mentions and listed on the front cover! Not too shabby for our debut in a nationally distributed magazine. Even better, our album appears next to our good friend, Mikie Lee Prasad, a great local musician who we both know and love. The amp review below even features Dangermaker, a band we’ve performed twice with already. The mentioned show was our most recent at San Francisco’s Grant & Green Saloon in North Beach. And yes, that’s a picture of me next to the amp :)

Download a digital copy of the magazine.

Disclaimer: Although I write for Performer Magazine, I had no influence over our album review and our inclusion in the gear review was by request of the National Editor to test the practical usability of the amps.

Paolo Nutini – "New Shoes" / Revisiting the past through pictures of old shoes…


www.paolonutini.com
www.myspace.com/paolonutini

I’ve enjoyed Paolo Nutini’s 2006 debut, These Streets for some time now but only recently felt compelled to write an entry on it. Overall, a fantastic set of songs, it’s gotten me through many an introspective day with bittersweet tracks like, “Last Request,” “Rewind” and “These Streets.”

As I was going through some old Yelp pictures, I saw a photo I took of my own shoes. I was instantly brought back to that day, what I was feeling and how different things are now. From this inspiration, I’ve revisited a collection of past moments, as told via shoe, to serve as a reminder that it’s about time I grab a new pair…

☜ For the past four years, I’ve pretty much only worn Onitsuka Tigers. I still remember the first pair my ex-girlfriend gave me back in (what must have been) 2005. They’re affordable, stylish and really lightweight. They don’t provide adequate cushioning for the avid walker, as I discovered in Boston two years ago, so I enhance them with inserts. A simple adjustment and it feels like I’m walking on clouds. (2 minutes ago)


Some friends of ours are hosting the Pig Eat Fest to benefit the San Francisco Food Bank at Lake Merced. Two giant roasting boxes are filled with large, free range, local, sustainable, organic, et cetera pigs. I eat more meat today than I have in awhile. (07.11.09) ☞


















☝ It’s Memorial Day Weekend. My original plan to fly to New York and spend the night wandering before flying back the next morning is foiled by the fact that all my friends there aren’t in town. Instead, my Family Plan sis, Tinna and I drive to Fort Bragg and leave our names (“keaneiscool“) in the sands of Glass Beach. Promptly after, Tinna shows the world that Keane, in fact, is not cool by stomping my name into sandy submission. (05.24.09)

I have to go to work on a Sunday?! Luckily, a couple of friends are coming along. We inadvertently discover the How Weird Street Faire right outside my office. It’s a nice surprise to spend the afternoon dancing in the streets with the slightly less ordinary. (05.10.09) ☞



















☜ This is Truffles, a friend’s dog. We’re at Crissy Field, celebrating a birthday with a sunny view of the Golden Gate Bridge. I walked a long way here, not realizing how far it would be from my place, but was able to snap a lot of great photos along the way. (04.18.09)



Those of us far from home can always find warm comfort in Dolores Park during the holidays. And nothing says, “Happy Easter,” like beer swigging hipsters getting high on a Sunday afternoon. I’m pretty sure there’s a goat here too. There’s always a goat at Dolores Park… (04.12.09) ☞




☜ It’s February. My Italian friend, Veronica, hasn’t been to the Museum of Modern Art yet, so we decide to visit today while she is in the city. The special exhibit is one that requires participation. Goggles, gloves, nets and brooms – we try them all. After, I leave with a poster of a lone bird that I decide to hang on my bedroom wall. (02.08.09)



☜ I am in Hawaii. It’s just before Christmas and I’m visiting the Honolulu Academy of Art with my mom. It’s quiet and beautiful. I keep myself occupied by capturing photos to bring back as a gift for a friend. They are, to me, both elegantly sweet and sad. It feels like I’m stuck in time, with growing feelings that will eventually consume me for the rest of the following year. (12.20.08)



☞ I quit my job at the Federal Reserve Bank a month ago and have been backpacking down the East Coast since. I’ve been to Boston, New York, DC, Virginia Beach and Greensboro. Now I’m in New Orleans, on a ferry between the French Quarter and Algiers. I do not know that I will get an internship with Performer Magazine a month from now. I do not know that I will join The Conversation Group a month later. I do not know that I will get laid off from that same job two years after I start…

I do not know…

And thus, I do not care. (08.21.07)

WC PERFORMER – Fleeting Trance – 17


www.fleetingtrance.com
www.myspace.com/fleetingtrance

Fleeting Trance – 17
Produced by Manasseh Bernal & The Transient Society Of Dreamers & Believers
Engineered by Alex James Muscat & Dave Tweedie
Recorded by Alex James Muscat at West Lake Studio in Daly City, CA & Students On Meth at Expressions Center For New Media in Emeryville, CA
Mastered by Phil Void at West Lake Studio in Daly City, CA

The organic sound of strings, reeds and melodious harmonics lie deep within the heart of soulful Americana. Playing true to form, Oakland’s Fleeting Trance adds a set of seventeen fresh tracks to this timeless genre with the release of 17. Utilizing often off-kilter vocals with just the right amount of rasp, frontman, Manasseh injects rootsy angst over pristine instrumentation, where guitars jangle and keys shimmer at their highs.

What is perhaps most remarkable about 17 is the fact that it never gets tiresome. Fleeting Trance succeeds in crafting an album with absolutely no filler, where more is definitely better. A particularly outstanding number is “She’s Got Music.” It’s a lighthearted, horn-driven stroll of a song, with optimistic lyrics and uplifting melodies enough to inspire any listener to find cheer even for a second: “She’s got music in her soul / When it touch me, make me lose control / Life makes no sense at all but with some help I’m gonna watch love grow.”

“Four Leaf Clover” is a poignant track that erupts with a ticking momentum of steady intervals. This is appropriate as the lyrics are drenched with the concept of movement: “We’ve got rhythm, we’ve got rhyme / We’ve got nothing left but time.” Vocals burst with warm and jagged qualities reminiscent of Counting Crows.

The band displays its quiet side on “Crayon,” an ambient track painting a big and spacious scene despite it only containing two unique verses. It summarizes the qualities that make the band so effective: the creation of something large and meaningful with everyday situations presented with uncomplicated sounds and lyrics. It’s the culmination of many simple yet effective parts that makes Fleeting Trance’s 17 such a universal experience. (Last Stop Records)

– Keane Li (more…)