Soundboard: L.A. Times Music Blog
L.A. Times Music Blog

« September 2007 | Main | November 2007 »

No Age brings the noise, earns the praise

Noage

No Age is

currently riding high as the darling of the L.A. underground, but it wasn't so many

months ago that the noise-pop duo felt a sense of victory simply from being able to

release music.

"Our scheme was to release five different EPs, on five different labels, in five

different parts of the world -- vinyl-only, of course," singer-guitarist Randy

Randall says. "Could we actually pull that off? We spent all this time designing

record covers, getting things ready, and did it. We thought, 'This is it. We've

infiltrated.' We go the feeling we slipped in through the back door."

Songs from those EPs were culled to make up No Age's debut album, "Weirdo

Rippers," which set the blog world abuzz and earned plaudits from Pitchfor

k. Not long afterward, Randall and drummer Dean Spunt were signed to Sub Pop, for

whom they already have five songs recorded for a follow-up album. "That was a

complete surprise," Randall says. "Somebody told us they had heard our music

and seen us live."

What they heard is spastic pop blasted by Randall's distortion-fed guitar and Spunt's

punk rhythms and punctuated by fleeting bursts of beauty -- gorgeous chord progressions

or melodies that are gone before they have the chance to get stuck in your head.

"Our goal is to write great pop songs like Squeeze or the Ramones, but do it in

a way that makes sense to ourselves," Randall says. "We do have the

avant-garde noise aggression of a Screeching Weasel ... but it's like we only want to

write the good parts. If it goes on too long ..."

No Age's experimental

approach, first heard when Randall and Spunt were members of the band Wives, earned them

a faithful following among the sonically adventurous patrons of the downtown venue the Smell, an all-ages, volunteer-run

room where the volume and -- thanks to bands such as Anavan, Health and Abe Vigoda --

the sense of daring are always high.

"It's a funny thing," Randall

says of having graduated to larger venues, "no place feels too big. It's like we

always have our friends with us. Wherever we go, we just bring the Smell with

us."

||| No Age opens for Battles on

Tuesday at the Music Box @ Fonda.

||| Download: "My Life's Alright Without

You."

Photo by Jennifer Clavin

Monday, Oct.

29

Tegan & Sara and Northern State play the Orpheum (it's

sold out); Queens of the Stone Age play the Nokia (it isn't). ... Castledoor ends its

residency at the Echo, with Frankel and a solo set from Aaron Espinoza (Earlimart)

starting things off. ... Oliver Future's residency closes with warm-up from Steve Barton

& the Oblivion Click. ... Aushua's ends its stand at the Silverlake Lounge with

strong support from In Waves and We Barbarians. ... Pop Noir and Maxeen finish up their

co-residency at the Detroit Bar in Costa Mesa. ... And Hazelden and Radars to the Sky

highlight the Indie 103.1 night at the Viper Room.

Tuesday, Oct.

30

Heavy hitters everywhere: Thurston Moore at the Echo, Regina

Spektor at the Wiltern, Broken Social Scene at the Orpheum, Ted Leo and the Pharmacists

at the El Rey ... or, if you're in the mood for something mellow, Chris and Thomas at the Hotel Cafe.

Read Full Story Read more No Age brings the noise, earns the praise

Velvet Revolver show tonight postponed

Velvet Revolver's concert tonight with Alice in Chains, scheduled for the Verizon

Wireless Amphitheatre in Irvine, has been postponed because of the Southern California

wildfires. With evacuations having taken place in Irvine and the local schools closed

for the day due to poor air quality, promoters and the bands thought it best to

reschedule. The show will take place Dec. 12 at the Gibson Amphitheatre.

Read Full Story Read more Velvet Revolver show tonight postponed

Hearts of Palm, and other Thursday tidbits

HeartsofpalmukwinsNot just

another pretty face?

Hearts of Palm UK, the duo who

came on our radar

earlier this year, won a $20,000 grant and a trip to perform in New York City when they

were picked as the music winners of the Uncover/Discover emerging talent contest put on

by the arts and entertainment foundation Gen Art and underwritten by Biore Skincare.

Erica Electra says she and partner-in-pop Ambi-D will use the money to finish up

recording their full-length album.

◊ ◊ ◊

Something for Rockets

debuted its new single, "Beautiful Life," today --in an episode of lonelygirl15. Hmm. This weekend, the band will make

its sophomore album, "One Track Mind," available for free download through its

MySpace site. Pretty nice of them. SFR plays with Low Vs Diamond on Nov. 2-3 at the

Viper Room.

◊ ◊ ◊

The British trio called the

Enemy has been forced to postpone its U.S. tour -- which included dates Monday at

Spaceland and Tuesday at Cinespace -- "due to issues concerning the band's name in

North America only," according to a release from Warner Bros. Records.

There are several U.S. bands using that name, including the Rhode Island quintet, the Enemy. Reached by phone, a band member in

Rhode Island declined to say whether his band had any role in contesting the British

act's use of the name: "It's been interesting, to say the least, and we plan on

continuing to pursue things as the Enemy."

The British trio, teenagers from Coventry, signed to Warner this spring after some

nice chart success in the U.K.

◊ ◊ ◊

Division Day continues to digitally

release cover songs to celebrate the Oct. 2 release of their album "Beartrap

Island" on Eeenie Meenie. Here's one of the latest, a cover of Roxy Music's "More Than This."

Speaking of Eenie Meenie, another of its L.A. acts, Great Northern (playing Nov. 8 at

the Echoplex), will release a five-track EP described as the "prequel" to its

album "Trading Twilight for Daylight." Titled "Sleepy Eepee," the

batch of early recordings was previously available only at shows. Now they will be

released on iTunes on Nov. 6 (with a disc due in February).

Read Full Story Read more Hearts of Palm, and other Thursday tidbits

Light FM saves the drama for its EP release party

[Quick note about tonight, as my day job prevents me from prattling on too much

about anything ...]

Light FM celebrates the release of its

new EP, "Save the Drama," tonight at Boardner's. It's a nice slice of crunch,

Weezer-ish pop that they oughta play as club music before every Rentals show. I

scribbled a bit on Josiah Mazzaschi back in July; read it here.

Also on the bill at the free Radio Free

Silver Lake show are Nightfur and Lo-Fi Sugar.

Elsewhere, it's a tough choice for folks who wear black -- Interpol plays the Forum, while the Jesus and Mary Chain and Black Rebel Motorcycle Club team up

at the Wiltern. ... Tokyo Police Club brings

the dance to the El Rey. ... Kill the

Complex joins the fray at the Ruby night at the Key Club. ... And Man Man entertains at the Troubadour.

Read Full Story Read more Light FM saves the drama for its EP release party

Putting the rock in Something for Rockets

Somethingforrockets1crop

Talk about Dad Rock: "One Track

Mind," the forthcoming sophomore album from L.A. trio Something for Rockets, features a

guest turn from frontman Rami Perlman's father -- violin virtuoso Itzhak Perlman. "He's been

our No. 1 fan from Day 1," Rami says. "When writing the record, I kinda knew I

wanted him to be involved."

Enter the wistful song "Same Old Thing," which Rami describes as "like

a Puccini aria, almost schmaltzy on some level. I knew I wanted that song to tug at the

heartstrings."

In L.A. for a concert, the elder Perlman, 62, joined Rami, bandmates Josh Eichenbaum

and Barry Davis and producer Mark Hoppus (the ex-Blink-182 bassist) in the studio for

what Rami calls "probably the highlight of my music-making career." How did it

go? "My dad cracked jokes the whole time," Rami says. "And he met

[ex-Blink drummer] Travis Barker. That was quite a meeting."

The making of the record was being filmed too; at some point, fans might get a peek

at the process. "As he was leaving, the filmmaker said, 'I want to make a

documentary just on this session,' " Rami says.

That session and the others for "One Track Mind" -- on which Hoppus also

guests -- yielded an album that is a monumental leap from the lightweight electro-pop on

Something for Rockets' debut. "The first album was more laptoppy, more of a dance

party," Perlman says, crediting input from touring player Jacques Brautbar

(ex-Phantom Planet) for spurring SFR toward a harder edge. "But now we've gone in a

rock direction. We got the live show to the point where we were kicking [butt], so it

felt like the right thing."

||| See Something for Rockets on Monday at Spaceland (opening for

residents Oliver Future) and Nov. 2 and 3 at the Viper Room with Low Vs Diamond.

||| Download "That's a Lie" and visit the

band's page at Original

Signal Recordings to stream the album.

Read Full Story Read more Putting the rock in Something for Rockets

A-Trak plays the right tracks at Roxy’s party

[Colleague Liam Gowing reports from Saturday night's show at the Roxy:]

Packed to the proverbial gills with teensters, most of whom seemed to be

hovering around the lower end of the 18-year-old age restriction, the Roxy was one big,

sloppy, sweaty party Saturday night, with all possible credit going to A-Trak, the 25-year-old Montreal native who is Kanye

West's DJ and the mastermind behind the Fool's Gold label.

His was a

laptop-heavy DJ set, leaving one to wonder just how much of the music was automated. But

that didn’t matter a whit to the kids, several of whom made the most of the critical

mass by crowd-surfing.

The mixes were hard, hyper-kinetic amalgamations of everything from indie rock to

hip-hop to electronica. Who would have thought that Gossip’s “Standing in the Way of

Control” and Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” could be sliced, diced and reconstituted one

after the other so smoothly? Actually, I misspeak. The tunes were as bumpy as could be.

You could just about feel the ones and zeros grinding against each other as A-Trak ran

it through his secret cache of software.

The man born Alain Macklovitch was everything that Girl Talk was hyped up to be and

then some. Call me a sucker, but I had a great time.

Read Full Story Read more A-Trak plays the right tracks at Roxy’s party

Big local lineup for benefit tonight at Little Radio

Thehenryclaypeople

Nine bands, 12 bucks. That's the story tonight at the Little Radio warehouse, where a New

Orleans-related charity show offers a bunch of good local talent. Radio Free Silver Lake

speculates that the special guest might be Giant Drag -- the lineup on the flier is

reason enough to drop by the headquarters of the Internet radio station: Dios Malos, the Movies, the Submarines, Emma Burgess, Le Switch, the Henry Clay People, Tom Freund and Matt Ellis.

Also this weekend

The Black Lips play the first of

their three local shows tonight at the Troubadour. ... Spencer Krug-led Sunset Rubdown plays the El Rey.

On Saturday, the Warlocks celebrate

the release of their latest, "Heavy Deavy Skull Lover," with a show at Safari

Sam's, while West Indian Girl toasts the

release of "4th & Wall" at Spaceland. ... Silversun Pickups play to a sold-out

Wiltern. ... And for something completely different, try checking out Raspberry Cocaine at the Mountain

Bar. File it under: damaged electro with boundary-bending visuals.

And on Sunday, Ken Andrews returns to the

Troubadour, while the Go! Team cheers on

the crowd at the Echoplex.

Photo of the Henry Clay People by S. Cardoza

Read Full Story Read more Big local lineup for benefit tonight at Little Radio

Rocket to the top? Guess we’ll have to tune in

Rocketbyfoxphoto


I have no idea whether the band will do well -- though knowing the sensibilities of

the people who brought you "American Idol," I'd bet on them -- but the

commercial that aired Thursday night promoting Fox's new talent show "The Next

Great American Band" featured none other than Los Angeles quintet Rocket.

Haven't heard about "The Next Great American Band?" My colleague Robert

Lloyd's story is here. And a detailed story from Associated Press is her

e.

Rocket apparently made it as far as Lake Las Vegas (see photo above), where the

network invited 60 bands from the 6,000 entries it received to perform (in, as it turned

out, temperatures exceeding 100 degrees). The show starts tonight with the

sure-to-be-painful initial auditions.

Nobody in Rocket could be reached for an interview, but the act's back story can make

your head spin. The "band" started in the Spaceland parking lot after a show

when three blonde women -- all named Lauren -- struck up a conversation with Jim Freek,

who runs a boutique label of mostly kitschy power-pop bands, Teenacide. Freek asked the young women what they

did, and one replied, "We're in a band," although none was, or had been. Asked

the name of the band, one of the Laurens quickly replied, "Rocket." And a band

was born.

Rocketlauren
Rocket's first EP for Teenacide was largely covers and ghost-written (and -played), but

the band changed some players, practiced like crazy, became a fivesome, started writing

its own material and released a second EP that mixed covers with originals. The

quintet's music mostly rehashes girl-group pop, but in a spunky and charming way; from

its bubblegummy beginnings, Rocket has acquired a confident edge.

And its tireless touring has paid off. I remember attending their first show at Club

Good Hurt in West L.A. and thinking Rocket would never last, but I sold them short. The

band made the rounds on the Warped Tour, toured with the likes of Butch Walker and even

did a residency at Spaceland.

They're kind of made for TV -- in fact, singer Lauren Rocket even appears on the new

Junkie XL single "More" (off the Dutch

musician's new album "Booming Back at You," due in February), and in the

forthcoming video for the song.

||| Stream Rocket's music here.

Photos: Top, Rocket, from Fox Photo; above, Lauren Rocket on the set

of the Junkie XL video shoot, by lastnightsparty.com.

Read Full Story Read more Rocket to the top? Guess we’ll have to tune in

Fired-up Subways deliver a scorcher at Spaceland

Subways

On Tuesday night, the Subways marked the

completion of studio sessions for their sophomore album rather ceremoniously -- the last

note was played when drummer Josh Morgan banged a gong that was set afire.

On Wednesday, the British trio brought some heat of its own, delivering a blistering

10-song set to an appreciative Club NME crowd at Spaceland that included, among others,

their producer for the yet-untitled album, Butch Vig. The night was capped by

their memorable single "Rock and Roll Queen" and pretty much extinguished any

doubts that the precocious punkers could be major players.

Subways2

Singer-guitarist Billy Lunn -- the problems that required January surgery to remove

vocal nodes now behind him -- confessed to the crowd that he, Morgan and bassist

Charlotte Cooper were nervous, not having played live in months. But his manner, part

cocksure smile and part sneer, indicated otherwise. New songs "Kalifornia,"

"Turnaround," "Girls and Boys" and "I Won't Let You Down"

fit into the set seamlessly with six numbers from the band's 2006 debut, "Young for

Eternity."

"There are times I look at Billy and think, 'What the [heck] are you doing to

your voice?' " Cooper said afterward.

"My voice is as good as ever now," Lunn said. "There were some points

when we were making the record when I wanted to get back in the vocal booth ... I told

Butch, 'No, I do that better,' or 'I can scream louder there.' " As for the six

weeks in L.A. working with Vig, Lunn said, "He was so much more than a producer.

He's just the coolest [guy] on the planet -- I don't know if it's his temperament or

what, but we were like sponges, always wanting to learn."

Tentative plans are for the album to be out in March on Warner.

Photos by

Kevin Bronson / LAT.

Read Full Story Read more Fired-up Subways deliver a scorcher at Spaceland

About the Spice Girls, and I’ll be brief

Spicegirls1 I'm pretty

sure that the exclusive agreement between the Spice

Girls and Victoria's Secret -- the

forthcoming "Spice Girls: Greatest Hits" will be available for two months only

at the lingerie outlet -- was made simply to provide fodder for monologues on late-night

talk shows.

"What's more embarrassing than going into Victoria's Secret to buy bras and

knicker for the missus?" asks a bloke who was probably a fan way back in the '90s.

"Going into a Victoria's Secret to buy a Spice Girls CD."

"What's the only thing skimpier than the lingerie in Victoria's Secret?"

asks the fellow at the next desk. "The tracklist on 'Spice Girls: Greatest Hits.'

"

Back to the day job.

Photo by Mike Owen

Read Full Story Read more About the Spice Girls, and I’ll be brief

Matt Pond PA’s new “Light” (with exclusive download)

Mattpond3_3 Maybe it's because "The Green Fury" was one of the first albums I

loaded into my then-brand new version of iTunes -- that was at a time when we were

awaking every morning with a queasy churning in our stomachs over the events of 9/11 --

it seems as if Matt Pond PA has been around

forever. With his sixth album, "The Last Light," just having landed, Pond's

music is as much a retreat now from the digital cacophony as it was a safe harbor then

from ugly world events.

"The Last Light" is less orchestral than much of Pond's catalog, but no

less sylvan -- relocating to Brooklyn from his native Pennsylvania a couple years ago

hasn't diminished the songwriter's fondness for solemn, woodsy reflection. It's as if

every seminal moment or life-changing realization occurs after he's driven out to the

lake and communed with nature. Which is OK, because they often do.

Pond

documents these entanglements with a tenderness that's never overly fussy; in fact, on

"The Last Light," his narratives seem infused with a new energy. Perhaps it's

because Pond is taking his first turn as a producer, or perhaps it's the by-product of

his having given up meat and smoking. No matter. "The Last Light," with its

roster of guests, including the likes of Neko Case, Rob Schnapf, Taylor Locke (Rooney)

and Isobel Sollenberger (Bardo Pond), shines brightly indeed.

|||

See Matt Pond PA (with Jesca Hoop opening) perform tonight at the

Troubadour.

||| Exclusive download, expires in 2 weeks:

"Sunlight" (from "The Last Light")

Photo by Jeremy

Balderson

Read Full Story Read more Matt Pond PA’s new “Light” (with exclusive download)

Jesca Hoop makes the most of her ‘Kismet’

Jescahoop_01

Maybe it's her small-town upbringing in Sonoma County, or maybe it's her singing

voice -- which sounds like a cherub caught in a light breeze -- but people want to know

whether moving to Los Angeles somehow threatened Jesca Hoop. "They want to know if moving

through the concrete jungle has affected my writing," the singer-songwriter says.

"But if anything, it makes you talk louder, finish your sentences, speak

eloquently."

It is the artistically amplified Hoop you find on "Kismet," the debut album

she made with producers Damian Anthony and

Tony Berg. Grounded in folk music

but lovingly rumpled with off-kilter syncopation and jazzy instrumentation, the

collection reflects Hoop's upbringing in a Mormon family that harmonized together.

"I love traditional music, because you know what the intent is with traditional

music," she says. "With pop music, sometimes the heart of it gets crushed

along the way."

She credits Anthony and Berg -- along with collaborators that included drummer

Stewart Copeland -- for preserving "Kismet's" organic feel, especially on

"Seed of Wonder." "That song would give us a little tantrum or a sulk

every time we tried to add something to it," she says. "Seed" was the

song that sprouted Hoop, who spent five years as the nanny for the children of Tom Waits

and Kathleen Brennan. Waits' publisher Lionel Conway gave the track to KCRW-FM's Nic Harcourt, who championed it on his show.

"Kismet" indeed.

||| Stream "Summertime" here.

||| See Hoop perform Wednesday, opening for Matt Pond PA at the

Troubadour.

Read Full Story Read more Jesca Hoop makes the most of her ‘Kismet’

Clouds part, Delta Spirit celebrates ‘Ode to Sunshine’

[More on these guys at a future date, but for now a quick heads-up:]

Deltaspirit

SoCal quintet Delta Spirit

celebrates the release of its debut, "Ode to Sunshine," tonight at the

Troubadour. The album is a soulful slice of Americana that, like the work of their

cohorts the Cold War Kids, is more Deep South

than West Coast sunshine -- yet Delta Spirit's songs possess a Britpop-like anthemic

sensibility. Uplifting indeed. The band launches a 17-date tour supporting Dr. Dog later

this month.

Also tonight, Oct. 15

Big

shows at the Santa Monica Civic (Rilo Kiley,

with the Bird and the Bee

opening), the Wiltern (Jimmy Eat World) and

the Orpheum (PJ Harvey). ... Black Francis, with Eastern Conference

Champions supporting, start a two-night run at Safari Sam's. ... Hearts of Palm UK are among the openers

as Castledoor continues its

residency at the Echo. ... It's an O.C.-heavy night at the Silverlake Lounge, where Venus Infers supports Aushua's residency. ... And at Indie 103.1's

night at the Viper Room, it's the Mae Shi

and Xu Xu Fang.

Photo by Matt

Wignall

Read Full Story Read more Clouds part, Delta Spirit celebrates ‘Ode to Sunshine’

Oslo rises to release ‘Rise and Fall of Love and Hate’

Oslo

Underrated, unsigned L.A. quintet Oslo

celebrates the release of its new album, "The Rise and Fall of Love and Hate,"

with a show tonight at the Roxy. The album (out now digitally, in stores Nov. 6)

furthers the explorations by songwriting triad Mattia Borrani, Kerry Wayne James and

Gabrial McNair into heady, anthemic rock that sounds more London than L.A. Yeah, you can

hear some Radiohead in there.

||| Download the title rack here.

Elsewhere tonight, Oct. 10

Record release show at the Silverlake Lounge too, for both Kissing Cousins and Summer Darling. ... In the bigger

rooms, it's Beirut at the Avalon and Jose Gonzales at the El Rey, while the Henry Clay

People tackle Bordello (they oughta be too big for that room by now), the Microphones

play the Troubadour, Anna Egge entertains at Tangier and Wounded Cougar joins the

Willowz at Safari Sam's.

Read Full Story Read more Oslo rises to release ‘Rise and Fall of Love and Hate’

Thanks, Radiohead

My headphones are on, and the final strains of "In Rainbows" are fading away. On first

listen, Radiohead's new album is a magnificent

head trip -- am I getting any work done today? -- with production so meticulous

you're afraid to interrupt what's going in your ears by even breathing. "15

Step" and "Fishes/Arpeggi" are to die for, but I suspect that after

spending more time with this I will be wishing that someone would introduce Thom Yorke

to Red Bull and that Radiohead could write a full-on rocker or two.

Random other opinions:

Ann Powers, The Times' pop music critic, stayed up late last night and weighs in here.

Annie Zaleski in St. Louis didn't get much sleep either. She blogs

here.

Dave Rawkblog's first impression here.

Track

by track.

Why of course.

Meanwhile, I read only scattered reports of download problems -- did everyone get

his/her copy with relative ease?

Read Full Story Read more Thanks, Radiohead

Irish troubadour Fionn Regan, at the Troubadour

Fionnregan_01 Young

Irishman Fionn Regan is back in town. The

singer-songwriter wriggled his way into our consciousness with a tour stop in L.A.

earlier this year behind his album "The End of History" (Lost Highway), which

ended up earning a nomination for the Nationwide Mercury Prize in the U.K. His

oh-so-gentle folk music only serves to amplify the storytelling in his songs --

"Hey Rabbit," "Snowy Atlas Mountains" and "Hunter's Map"

come off as the most evocative of his sketches.

||| See Regan perform tonight at the Troubadour.

||| Stream: "Hunt

er's Map."

Other touts for Monday, Oct. 8

Justice follows up its Detour

Festival appearance with a show at the Music Box @ Fonda -- Tuesday's show is sold out,

but as of this afternoon, tickets remained for tonight's gig. ... Good Indie 103.1 show

tonight at the Viper Room, with the

Oohlas and Radars to the Sky

playing. ... Dual residents Pop Noir and Maxeen tonight are joined by Saint Motel at the Detroit Bar in Costa

Mesa. ... Holly Golightly plays the Echo

tonight at 9:15 -- fans there to catch the free residency by Castledoor will be admitted after the

songstress' set. ... Bloodcat Love and

OK Stranger head a nice lineup of local

talent at Safari Sam's. ... Aushua continues

its residency at the Silverlake Lounge with the support of Irish electro-pop duo Oppenheimer. Very catchy. ... And Oliver Future continues its residency at

Spaceland -- last week's energetic set was capped when the quintet backed its recent

tourmate, the Gray Kid, on a song. For

those who've seen the Kid rap/croon/sing/vamp to only backing tracks, it was quite a

revelation.

||| The Gray Kid, along with Sam Sparro, play the Echo on

Thursday night.

And here's a little parody to kick off your week, the Gray

Kid's take (starring Daniel Stessen) on "This Is Why I'm Hot":

Read Full Story Read more Irish troubadour Fionn Regan, at the Troubadour

Bat for Lashes’ cinematic beauty

Batforlashes

Bat for Lashes is as much an art project

as a band. Singer-songwriter Natasha Khan's sublime melancholy haunts with a cinematic

quality that speaks not only to her background in film and music but to her ability to

access imagery that seems to lie just behind consciousness.

"I'm managing to tap into that space between sleeping and awake," says

Khan, who was reared in England, spent summers in Pakistan and identifies with forebears

such as Kate Bush and Björk. "There are notepads under my pillow with all kinds of

scribbling . . . sometimes words written on top of one another. I'm just going with my

imagination."

In doing so she has captured the imagination of thousands. Her debut album "Fur

and Gold" was nominated for England's Nationwide Mercury Prize, and her L.A. debut

in July at Spaceland was played to an audience spellbound by the string-laden music and

its face-painted players, Khan and cohorts Ginger Lee, Abi Fry and Lizzy Carey.

"The album was just something I made to lift me, to provide transportation for

my heart," Khan says. "I didn't realize that other people might also get that

out of it."

An earlier tour of the U.S., including a drive down the California coast, inspired

some of the album. Andy Bruntel's rapturous video for "Prescilla" was shot, in

part, at the "Bat Cave" in the Hollywood Hills.

It's a long way from the triptych projections with soundtracks Khan assembled early

in her career at the University of Brighton. Or maybe not. "It's a two-way

process," she says. "My songs and my visuals are happening at the same

time."

||| See Bat for Lashes perform Tuesday at the Troubadour.

Here's the "Prescilla" video:

Read Full Story Read more Bat for Lashes’ cinematic beauty

Justice takes it to the streets, meekly

[Jeff Weiss boned up on his French and surveyed the scene at the South stage on

Saturday night:]

Justice’s Coachella

performance and subsequent Echoplex set have already passed into the stuff of legend.

Those who were there described it with a level of hyperbole akin to a Moses parting the

Red Sea armed with nothing but a pair of turntables and a crate full of old Daft Punk

LPs. Truth be told, conventional logic suggested that by mid-May, at least four Silver

Lake hipsters had perfected lustrous Gaspard Auge mustaches, purchased plane tickets to

France and sought employment at various Parisian boulangeries to support their

aspirations in the emerging Gallic techno scene.

So, perhaps it was these nearly insurmountable expectations that caused me to be

unimpressed with the red-hot Parisian techno duo’s Detour Festival performance.


Read Full Story Read more Justice takes it to the streets, meekly

One last time around the Bloc Party

Detourblocparty




[Later this morning, I will have a guest post on the Justice set. For now,

here's my final take ...]

Bloc Party made me wish I'd chosen the

Turbonegro set to end my Detour.

Oh, the Englishmen were charming enough, and their dancier material fairly rattled

the buildings at Main and Temple streets. But it ended up providing a little too pat a

finish to the long day. You add this one up, and it equals a day's worth of small

tent-caliber material at Coachella.

Do I wish I'd spent my Saturday on the

couch watching college football? No.

Do I wish Detour had at least one band

that was trying to save rock 'n' roll? Yes.

Photo: Bloc Party on the East

state (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

Read Full Story Read more One last time around the Bloc Party

Oops … Moving Units beset by glitches

Detourmovingunits




With a throng of very young fans ready to shake their bodies to every note,

Moving Units nearly crashed and burned on the

South stage. Blame the gremlins. "Sorry," front man Blake Miller told the

crowd after having to restart a song not once but twice, "you're not supposed to

see the smoke and mirrors."

Yes, for all the Units' swagger, much of the electronic underpinning of their new

songs -- "Hexes for Exes" will be released on Tuesday -- comes courtesy of a

laptop. And something was not in sync on this night, so the crowd that filled 1st Street

was left with warts and frustration. It made you nostalgic for a three-piece dance-punk

band that married in-your-face attitude with riffs so sharp you could shave with

them.

There's little of that on the Units' new album. Maybe the band's swagger remains, but

the danger is gone.

I will say one thing: "Kids From Orange

County" could probably fill the dancefloor at Cinespace.

Photo: Blake

Miller beckons as the Moving Units start their set (by Kevin Bronson / LAT).

Read Full Story Read more Oops … Moving Units beset by glitches

Should I put in for mileage for covering this event?

Detourlatoffice


Ssh, people are trying to work in that building (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

Read Full Story Read more Should I put in for mileage for covering this event?

One exchange heard during Autolux’s ambient set

"For years, everybody in Los Angeles has been rooting for this band."

"They must be awfully tired."

Read Full Story Read more One exchange heard during Autolux’s ambient set

There’s still no cure for the 1980s

Detourshoutoutlouds




As the sun set, things started to get topsy-turvy.

The Shout Out Louds channeled the Cure,

and too well. They're nice, they're Swedish, they figure to gain ground now that they

are no longer on a major label (Capitol) and are aligned with a hip indie (Merge). But

some of the tasty stuff in their set Saturday, and on their album "Our Ill

Wills," veers awfully close to the bittersweet flavors dispensed by Robert Smith

(although I'm not sure I ever saw him in red horizontal stripes) back in The Decade That Nobody at the Detour Festival

Was Old Enough to Remember.

And it occurred to me while Adan Olenius

warbled through the band's nice set that this Detour -- lacking anything resembling a

groundbreaking headliner -- represented little more than a window to what you can get

away with calling hip, as long as it's danceable and illuminated by enough Glo Sticks

and neon bracelets. At least the Shout Out Louds were playing; the myriad DJs dispensing

their various strains of disco were just recycling. Whether they are collagists or mere

selectors, their music acts as little more than an aural cattle prod, and possesses

about as much longevity.

The herds moved obediently.

Photo: Shout

Out Louds (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

Read Full Story Read more There’s still no cure for the 1980s

This was probably sponsored, but we hope not

Detourlogo

Even better, it's the wall of City Hall (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)


Read Full Story Read more This was probably sponsored, but we hope not

Ghosts in the afternoon, and nobody said boo

Detourdeadlysyndrome


The Deadly Syndrome's

music is sweet, then paranoid, then nervous, then chaotic. But there's something

that holds it together, as the young quartet showed on the South stage. Overcoming a few

first-festival hiccups, the Syndrome fared pretty well -- much better than the

cardboard-cutout ghosts that the band stations onstage during their performances. Most

of the ghosts succumbed to the breeze and blew over. The convulsive pop, with its

tinkling keyboards and explosive guitars, held up.

Only when guitarist Will Etling tried to join the set-ending drum circle (the quartet

huddles around Jesse Hoy's kit in kind of a percussive exclamation point on the song

"Eucalyptus") did the Deadly Syndrome run into trouble. Etling unplugged

himself -- his guitar cord was too short to reach over to the drum kit. They simply

weren't used to playing on stages this big. Get used to it, guys.

Photo: Chris Richard of the Deadly Syndrome (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

Read Full Story Read more Ghosts in the afternoon, and nobody said boo

A colorful start to the Detour Festival

Detouraggrolites


[Follow along as I meander through an autumn Saturday in a four-block region

conveniently located just across the street from The Times' offices ...]

As festivals go, this promises to be a pretty good block party. And as Bloc Partys go

... well, we'll leave that for later.

The LA Weekly Detour Festival in

downtown Los Angeles is a good idea -- a "mini-Coachella" in an area of the Southland whose

renaissance cannot be understated. Four stages of music, exhibitors and vendors, wacky

art installations, hipsters lounging on the resplendent lawn at City Hall: Detour seems

to have it all. And you could even take the subway to get there. Try that in

Indio in April.

Detourscissors_2
We lurched off to a noisy start at 2 p.m. when L.A.'s the Pity Party (playing the first of its

two gigs today; the two-piece were also scheduled to play in the evening at the Eagle

Rock Music Festival) served up a mid-afternoon spazz attack on the East stage. Yelpy,

hyperkinetic, dissonant: OK in small doses.

Detournicovega_2
When the color-coordinated bands kicked in, though, it got fun. The crowd was colorful

enough -- there were a lot of horizontal stripes, lively headbands, frilly dresses and

glow-in-the-dark footwear. Then Scissors for Lefty came out on the

South state wearing only shorts and gold body paint. Nico Vega went for all black, always safe,

Aja Volkman in a leotard.

Then the

Aggrolites, head-to-toe in red Dickies, riled up a West stage crowd with their

relentlessly tight dirty reggae, delivering the best set I saw during the daylight.

Jesse Wagner and crew are serious: Get with their program. Or they might send some

workers over to your house.

Photos: Top, the Aggrolites' Wagner; left,

Scissors for Lefty; right, Nico Vega (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)

Read Full Story Read more A colorful start to the Detour Festival

Eagle Rock — another place to catch the Fever

Denguefever2




Not into battling the crowd downtown? The Eagle Rock Music Festival

offers a great neighborhoody vibe and a slew of music (and dance, and more) on 10

stages. It runs from 5 p.m. to midnight Saturday along Colorado Boulevard, and Dengue

Fever (pictured) is among the 40-odd performers.

Full lineup, after the jump:

Read Full Story Read more Eagle Rock — another place to catch the Fever

Detour Festival: And Justice for us

Justice

The consensus in my group of music mavens is

that the lineup for the second annual LA Weekly

Detour Festival on Saturday pales in comparison to last year's -- nothing against

Bloc Party, Satellite Party, the Pity Party or any of the other parties involved. But

they (we) might be underestimating the excitement the Banger crew will bring to the

proceedings. Word-of-mouth is that the most anticipated set is Justice's.

Los Angeles'

representation is strong -- in particular I'm eager to see Autolux (new music, please?) and Moving Units (whose new music, "Hexes

for Exes," reflects a departure from the angular dance-punk on their first album

and will be released Tuesday).

See you there. Here are the set times for this

year's shindig, which surrounds City Hall in downtown L.A.:

City

Hall East
10:00-11:30 Bloc Party
8:30-9:30 Teddybears
7:10-8:00 Satellite Party
6:00-6:45 Kinky
4:50-5:35 The Noisettes
3:40-4:20 The Cool Kids
2:50-3:20 Nico Vega
2:00-2:30 The Pity Party

City Hall South
10:10-11:45 Busy P, DJ Medhi, Sebastian,

Kavinsky, So Me
9:10-10:10 Justice
7:55-8:40 Moving Units
6:40-7:25

Autolux
5:30-6:10 Shout Out Louds
4:30-5:05 Johnossi
3:40-4:10 The Deadly

Syndrome
2:50-3:20 Scissors for Lefty
2:00-2:30 Mink

City Hall West
10:00-11:00 Turbonegro
8:50-9:30

Celebrity Skin
7:30-8:15 The Raveonettes
4:55-7:10 Comedians of Comedy
4:00-4:40 The Aliens
3:05-3:40 The Aggrolites
2:10-2:40 Augie March
1:00-2:00 DJ Darren Revell - Indie 103.1

City Hall Plaza
9:30-10:30 DJ Paul V. - Indie 103.1
8:00-9:30 Le Castle Vania
4:30-8:00 Busy P, DJ Medhi, Sebastian, Kavinsky, So

Me
3:30-4:30 Franki Chan
1:30-3:00 Travis Keller
Noon-1:30 Bruce

Perdew

Read Full Story Read more Detour Festival: And Justice for us

The Pity Party, and other Detour parties

Thepityparty

The Pity Party has a whirlwind

weekend ahead. On Saturday, the L.A. duo will bang out an afternoon set at the LA Weekly Detour Festival -- they won an

online vote to fill a local band slot -- then high-tail it to play the Eagle Rock Music Festival.

Flustered? Not the Pity Party's wisecracking female half, Heisenflei (born Julie

Edwards). "We're going to have to figure out how to pace our drinking and when to

take naps," she says.

But why worry about pacing now -- the duo's frenetically robotic, yelpy pop has

quenched L.A. hipsters' thirst for something fresh since its January residency at the

Silverlake Lounge, and Indie 103.1 (KDLD-FM)

gave airplay to the single "Dronebots and Peons for Eons and Eons." The Raveonettes even chose the Pity Party for

a summer tour; now the duo is finishing recording its album with Manny Nieto (Breeders,

Circle Jerks).

Heisenflei teamed up with her old Buckley High classmate M (Marc Smollin) two years

ago. She plays drums, sings and triggers the bass lines on a Yamaha keyboard; he

provides looping guitar-scapes and vocals. The result is "angular, and a little bit

weird," Heisenflei says. "People who like our music, there's something wrong

with them."

The band's set-up initially drew comparisons to Quasi or the White Stripes --

"great, except they play stuff that's really catchy," she says -- but

Heisenflei cites a litany of influences, including David Bowie, Brian Eno and her

brother Greg's current and former bands, Autolux and Lusk.

The Pity Party's sonic anxiety seems to contradict Heisenflei's other endeavor -- she

has a knitting shop in Atwater Village. "With knitting you have two needles and

with drumming you have two sticks," she says. "You can hear a lot of knitting

influences in our music."

Photo by Timothy Norris

Read Full Story Read more The Pity Party, and other Detour parties

We Barbarians invade Silver Lake

[Random notes from recent club outings:]

Webarbarians




They've changed their color, and maybe even their stripe. We Barbarians, a trio featuring former

members of the classic rock-leaning quintet the

Colour, played just their second show Monday night at the Silverlake Lounge (opening

for this month's residents, Aushua). The

Long Beach-based threesome of David Quon, Derek Huele and Nathan Warkentin laid out a

half-hour set of tight, churning indie rock, impressing almost everybody in the room

(including their buddies Cold War Kids). Next

outing: Oct. 9 at the Derby.

◊ ◊ ◊

Silversun Pickups are

using a break in their touring schedule to begin writing material for a follow-up to

2006's album "Carnavas." So far, only a couple songs have begun to take shape

-- the titles, tentatively, are "The Royal We" (intended to have a heavy

string presence) and "There's No Secrets This Year." SSPU, which plays a

sold-out show at the Wiltern on Oct. 20, hopes to record the new album in the first

quarter of 2008.

◊ ◊ ◊

Divisiondayrr
And Division Day's record-release show for

"Beartrap Island" on Tuesday at the Echo was a pretty joyous affair, and front

man Rohner Stegnitz reacted in good humor to a website review that accused the quartet of

nicking the chords from Bowie's "Space Oddity" for the DD song

"Colorguard." He even slipped the lyric "Ground control to Major

Tom" into the middle of "Colorguard."

Touts for

Wednesday, Oct. 3

Gruff Rhys (Super Furry Animals)

performs at the Jensen Rec Center in Echo Park, while down the street at the Echo, Datarock headlines and is supported by Honeycut and Foreign Born. ... Driveblind plays the

Viper Room. ... Portishead's former DJ Andy

Smith rocks the Roxy.

Photos: Top, We Barbarians at the Silverlake

Lounge; inset, Division Day at the Echo (by Kevin Bronson / LAT)



Read Full Story Read more We Barbarians invade Silver Lake

Morrissey shows tonight and Thursday canceled

Morrissey's shows tonight and Thursday at the Hollywood Palladium -- the second and

third gigs in a 10-show stand before the venue closed for renovations -- have been

canceled because of "a ruptured water pipe resulting in a safety issue,"

promoter Live Nation just announced.

Tickets for the canceled shows will be honored at either the Oct. 8 or 9

performances, the promoter said. If patrons are unable to attend Monday or next Tuesday,

they should seek refunds at point of purchase.

"The Palladium apologizes to Morrissey and his fans for the inconvenience in

disrupting these historical performances," the press release said.

Read Full Story Read more Morrissey shows tonight and Thursday canceled

Division Day, Dusty Rhodes celebrate album releases

Divisionday_04

Division Day and Dusty Rhodes and the River Band celebrate

their album releases tonight.

Division Day, which plays at the Echo, is something of the Little Band That Could.

The quartet initially self-released "Beartrap Island" last year, then hooked

up with a start-up label that planned to re-release the album with wider distribution.

That start-up never started up. Local imprint Eenie Meenie now has the album, remastered with a

couple new songs.

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band, a folk-rock six-piece from Anaheim, released

"Today You Live" (SideOneDummy

Records), a collection of rootsy, harmony-laden numbers with accordion, banjo,

mandolin, sitar and harmonica. The band plays the Key Club tonight, where We Are Lions

kicks off an October residency. The Sunset Strip nightclub's Ruby Tuesdays are all-ages

and free.

Other touts for Tuesday, Oct. 2

Nick Lowe plays Safari Sam's. ... The Weakerthans, behind their new

"Reunion Tour" album, play the El Rey, which is sold out. ... Atmosphere tees it up at the Music Box @

Fonda [that's the new name for the Fonda Theatre, a press release tells me]. ... And Metric plays the Glass House.

Dustyrhodes

Photos: Top, Division Day; above, Dusty Rhodes

and the River Band

Read Full Story Read more Division Day, Dusty Rhodes celebrate album releases

Weeked wrap, Part 2: ‘Like a giant Cinespace’

Neighborhood




[A Buzz Bands correspondent describes the scene at the second annual

Neighborhood Festival at Exposition Park on Saturday:]

It was as if I awoke from a coma to find that the style of Los Angeles hipsters had

gone from tight jeans, hats, faded shirts and black-and-gray sneakers to, well, tight

jeans, hats, faded shirts and sneakers -- but done in Day-Glo. Any doubts that

"nu-rave" has arrived were erased at the Neighborhood Festival, Dim Mak's

dance-music gathering that featured the likes of the Faint, Mickey Avalon, Chromeo and

DJ sets from AM, Blake Miller of Moving Units and Dim Mak's founder, Steve Aoki.

But as with an event based in hipster culture, this one seemed high on style and

short on actual content. The crowd seemed largely unmoved by the live sets, with the

exception of the Faint, who seemed every

bit the main attraction they deserved to be. The real stars were the DJs -- Aoki, with

Har Mar Superstar acting as his "hype man," incited the crowd with a pumped-up

version of of the Refused anthem "New Noise" and finished his set with a stage

dive. AM mashed up Justice Vs Simian's "We Are Your Friends" with

"Where's Your Head At" by Basement Jaxx, and Miller's set -- he's now DJing as

Blake Is Ruthless -- featured three hot policewomen on the dancefloor.

One observer likened the scene to "a giant Cinespace," referring to Aoki's

successful Tuesday night promotion at the Hollywood club that was built on high energy

and seemingly hackneyed dance music spun with a liberating irony.

A lot it of sounds tired unless you're 20: Oldies with beats? Really? You don't

remember electro-clash?

Maybe it's the advent of DJ programs like Serrato, but dancefloor hits are being put

together in a genuinely fresh way. "New Noise" indeed.

Photo by

Trey Derbes

Read Full Story Read more Weeked wrap, Part 2: ‘Like a giant Cinespace’