- FILTER Magazine
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- FILTER Magazine
THE RAVEONETTES LUST for LIFE We Love You...Digitally Hello and welcome to the interactive version of Filter Good Music Guide. We’re best viewed in full-screen mode, so if you can still see the top of the window, please click on the Window menu and select Full Screen View (or press Ctrl+L). There you go—that’s much better isn’t it? [Guide stretches, yawns, scratches something.] Right. If you know the drill, go ahead and left-click to go forward a page; if you forget, you can always right-click to go back one. And if all else fails, intrepid traveler, press the Esc key to exit full-screen and return to a life more humble. Keep an eye on your cursor. While reading the Guide online, you will notice that there are links on every page that allow you to discover more about the artists we write about. Scroll over each page to find the hotlinks, click ’em, and find yourself at the websites of the artists we cover, the sponsors who help make this happen, and all of the fine places to go to purchase the records you read about here. Thank you for your support of this thing we call Filter. Good music, as they say, will prevail. — Pat McGuire, Editor-in-Chief Letters, inquiries, randomness: guide@filter-mag.com Advertising and such: advertising@filtermmm.com FILM FESTIVAL #20 • JAN.-FEB. ’08 The Mars Volta Del vs. El-P Black Lips Diablo Cody 2008 GOLDEN GLOBE® NOMINEE BEST PICTURE (Musical/Comedy) THE MOST T ORIGINAL O , ,G EXHILARATING GROUND BREAKING MUSICAL EVENT T OF O THE YEAR! MUSICAL EVENT T OF O THE YEAR! “ACROSS THE UNIVERSE SWEEPS YOU UP ON A WAVE OF TERRIFIC BEATLES SONGS.” – Peter Travers, ROLLING STONE Loaded With Special Features Including EXTENDED MUSICAL PERFORMANCES On 2-Disc DVD, Blu-ray High-Def and PSP TM TM TM TM February FOR SOME DRUG CONTENT, NUDITY, SEXUALITY, VIOLENCE AND LANGUAGE 5th Motion Picture © 2007 Revolution Studios Distribution Company, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Layout and Design © 2008 Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. Available at www.SonyPictures.com www.AcrossTheUniverse.com We get a lot of mail here at the Filter offices—some good, some bad, some…well, completely unclassifiable. Send us something strange and you might see it here. Someone must have caught wind of the massive coffee intake here at the Filter office to send us this little gadget: the iWhite (www.iwhite.be). Normally, we might have been affronted by the suggestion that our teeth aren’t naturally white and pearly (because, you know, they are), but we were too distracted by the pulsating blue beams of light this little thing emits. Whoaah! This could be our new accessory out at those desert raves we love so much. Complete, of course, with our new, blacklight-approved smile. IN THE GUIDE You can download the Filter Good Music Guide at goodmusicwillprevail.com. While there, be sure to check out our back issues, the latest of which features Spoon, Daft Punk, R.E.M., Band of Horses and Siouxsie. And if you’re heading to the 2008 Sundance Film Festival for some celebrity gift bags or maybe just the flicks, keep your eye out for us. We’ll be there. ON THE WEB Visit goodmusicwillprevail.com for music news, MP3s, magazine features, extended interviews, contests, staff picks, album and concert reviews and the world-famous Filter Blog (insider information, offhand opinions, album previews, etc.). To stay abreast of news and events in your town, sign up for the Filter Newsletter, delivered weekly to your email inbox. Cities served: Los Angeles, New York, Seattle, Philadelphia, Dallas, Chicago, Miami, San Francisco, Denver, Boston, Portland, Austin, Washington D.C. and London. AT THE STANDS Out now: Filter Issue 28—“The Importance of Being David Byrne.” In this issue Filter talks to chief Talking Head David Byrne about his remarkable legacy, his myriad passions and projects, his city and his extraordinary life—and how, just by being David Byrne, he has made everything around him a little bit less like everything else. Also: We catch up with past cover artist PJ Harvey for a discussion on the frightening state of our modern world, gather an eclectic group of artists and comedians to share their histories with a place called Largo and nail down the slippery rap maestros of the Wu-Tang Clan. Plus: Hüsker Dü, the Who, Sons and Daughters, Grand Ole Party, Todd Oldham and Charley Harper, the Features, Black Mountain, Soulsavers, the Helio Sequence, Kate Nash, Nada Surf, Noah Baumbach, Juno and a gut-busting EndNote by Whose Line Is It Anyway?’s Greg Proops. CONTACT US guide@filter-mag.com or 5908 Barton Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90038 Publishers Alan Miller & Alan Sartirana Editor-in-Chief Pat McGuire Art Director Christopher Saltzman Editorial Assistant Colin Stutz Editorial Interns Breanna Murphy, Brittany Burk, Danny Fasold Scribes Brittany Burk, Kendah El-Ali, Danny Fasold, Daniel Fienberg, Lauren Harris, Patrick James, Shane Ledford, Nevin Martell, Jeremy Moehlmann, Breanna Murphy, AJ Pacitti, Beau Powers, Zach Rosenberg, Sam Roudman, Ken Scrudato, Colin Stutz, Scott Thill Marketing Ewan Anderson, Samantha Barnes, Mike Bell, Samantha Feld, Tristen Joy Gacoscos, Max Hellman, Penny Hewson, Connie Tsang, Jose Vargas Thank You McGuire family, Bagavagabonds, Howard Kelly, Wendy & Sebastian Sartirana, Momma Sartirana, the Ragsdales, SC/ PR Sartiranas, the Masons, Pete-O, Rey, the Paikos family, Chelsea & the Rifkins, Shaynee, Wig/Tamo and the SF crew, Shappsy, Phamster, Pipe, Dana Dynamite, Christian P, Lisa O’Hara, Susana Loy Rodriguez, Jessica Park, Shari Doherty, Robb Nansel, Pam Ribbeck, Asher Miller, Ryan Scott, David Derrick, Antonio Cromarti, Nick Hardwick, Rachel Weissman, Andrea LaBarge, Patrick Strange, Willa Yudell, Jonathon Saltzman, Eric Almendral Advertising Inquiries advertising@filter-mag.com West Coast Sales: 323.464.4718 East Coast Sales: 646.202.1683 Filter Good Music Guide is published by Filter Magazine LLC, 5908 Barton Ave., Los Angeles CA 90038. Vol. 1, No. 20, January-February 2008. Filter Good Music Guide is not responsible for anything, including the return or loss of submissions, or for any damage or other injury to unsolicited manuscripts or artwork. Any submission of a manuscript or artwork should include a self-addressed envelope or package of appropriate size, bearing adequate return postage. © 2008 by Filter Magazine LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED FILTER IS PRINTED IN THE USA goodmusicwillprevail.com COVER PHOTO BY BELLA LIEBERBERG + STEFAN RUHMKE THE FILTER MAILBAG Rock radio customized just for you. Listen for free to millions of songs from thousands of artists to create your perfect radio stations. Choose from over 100 expert-programmed stations or create your own with your favorite artists. Share your stations with friends and play free personalized music on the Slacker Web Player, the full-featured Software Player or wherever you are on the Slacker Portable. Your Guide to Innovations in Entertainment Spread the Love with a MIXA Mix Tape Embarrassingly, the furthest some of us got with making a mix tape was recording some pretty godawful stuff from FM radio—granted, we were only 10 and thought editing out the annoying ads was extra considerate. Now that tastes have been refined and there’s all sorts of music to dedicate, the spirit of the medium has finally hit us…but the cassette tape is all but dead. Don’t deny it, fellow vintage lovers, the digital age (in all its impersonal glory) is here to stay—and that’s why we’re loving MIXA’s offer to look into the past and “undigital your digital.” The MIXA is basically just a flash drive in the shape of a tape cassette, but the website (www.makeamixa.com) allows you to design how it looks, case and all, by adding your own pictures and words. Plus, the 1GB capacity opens up the option of adding videos and photos to that list of musical dedications to lovers and friends. At $40, the price is a bit steep, but the MIXA does offer nostalgia and convenience with that extra personal touch. Kudos to an innovative solution to preservation: Long live the mix! BREANNA MURPHY Get Your Audio Fix with Zune Pass As if it wasn’t enough that Bill Gates and his mighty Microsoft Empire had already invaded the popular territories of computer operating systems, digital cable and first-person shoot’em-ups—they just had to go and lay their claim on digital music too. Well, if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em—and then beat ’em with better deals. The Zune Marketplace Pass gives users open access to over two million songs and for a flat rate of $14.99 per month, the average music addict can get quite the audio fix. When you compare that to iTunes, which charges a buck for each individual song, the Zune Pass is really quite a deal. And once users download their songs, they can feel free to share them with as many cyberspacers as possible without fear of a bloody R.I.A.A. reprisal. The only downside: you can’t download videos or burn your Zune Pass songs onto CD. But hey, that’s what Zune players are for. DANNY FASOLD VTech Lets You IM From Your Landline Phone When was the last time you used a landline phone? Was it rotary or digital? Take a moment to ponder, because as members of the present generation, it’s inescapable that we’re forcibly attached to our cell phones. The opportunities to communicate today—text messaging, IM, e-mail and visual voicemail—are all tools to navigate our hectic day-to-day and minute-to-minute 21st century lives, rendering most old school gadgets things of the past. Technology is finally letting the home phone join the cool club with some help from VTech, releasing the first landline phone that can compete with our mobiles. The IS6110 cordless phone’s premier feature is a full Qwerty keyboard (it doesn’t look too dissimilar from a PDA) that lets its owner send instant messages over AIM or MSN, so you can stay in touch from the couch or kitchen table. The IS6110 also has a phonebook that isn’t a pain to access, and you can record ringtones straight from a stereo or PC. Take a break from your cell, like a prison escapee. BREANNA MURPHY 6 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE Country radio customized just for you. Listen for free to millions of songs from thousands of artists to create your perfect radio stations. Choose from over 100 expert-programmed stations or create your own with your favorite artists. Share your stations with friends and play free personalized music on the Slacker Web Player, the full-featured Software Player or wherever you are on the Slacker Portable. Your Guide to Innovations in Entertainment Myvu:Video on the Go Ever crave the newest episode of Lost while running the treadmill, or positively jones over that hot new Filter TV video while you’re waiting at the bus stop…and you don’t want to advertise to the world (criminal or otherwise) that you’re packing a portable media player? Wait no longer, dear video fanatics, for the future is now. Whenever you strap on a pair of these Blade Runner-esque Myvu goggles and feed them into your MP4 or your portable DVD player, you’re greeted with a floating video image of whatever it is you’re itching to watch. Courtesy of the Myvu Corporation, the leading force in the new-fangled realm of eyewear electronics, these sleek, futuristic eye goggles allow the wearer to view videos wherever they are without the pesky distraction of having that nosy little punk in the next seat over peer over your shoulder to catch a peek. Don’t worry, you can see around the image, so users need not fear being blinded while wearing them. They sell for as low as $199.95, so grab ‘em quick, while they’re still a novelty. DANNY FASOLD Get Your MoJo Workin’ with the Mobile Journalism Kit Hey, journalists (aspiring or presently active)! Ready to upgrade that pen and Moleskine to the 21st century? The Mobile Journalism Kit, nicknamed “the MoJo,” just may be your solution. Following the technological trend of Let’s-Get-Everything-Possible-Into-Our-Cell-Phones, Reuters (the news service) and Nokia have teamed up to create a set of media peripherals aimed at on-the-go writers. The Kit includes a small Bluetooth keyboard, microphone, tripod (for video documentation) and solar-powered charger that all hook up to the Nokia N96 cell phone. The companies recently let their key demographic’s MoJos rise while covering events like the Edinburgh Film Festival, the U.S. Presidential campaign trail and New York Fashion Week; journos tested the devices out— making videos, conducting interviews and writing scoop—and, wouldn’t you know it, the Kits worked. Still in the “experimental” phase, the MoJo is being fine-tuned for consumer use, but it serves as an intriguing glimpse into how information can and will be gathered, documented and reported in the future. BREANNA MURPHY Hip Hop radio customized just for you. Listen for free to millions of songs from thousands of artists to create your perfect radio stations. Choose from over 100 expert-programmed stations or create your own with your favorite artists. Share your stations with friends and play free personalized music on the Slacker Web Player, the full-featured Software Player or wherever you are on the Slacker Portable. 8 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 9 Out of the Mouths of Babes Juno Screenwriter Diablo Cody Dishes It Out For Free BY DANIEL FIENBERG ALTHOUGH THE DIRECTORS GUILD POSSESSIONARY CREDIT REQUIRES that Juno be labeled “A Jason Reitman Film,” its authorship can be clearly assigned to Diablo Cody, well on her way to becoming Hollywood’s most successful blogging, stripping, insurance-adjusting, phone sex operating screenwriter. Juno is a bracingly funny, lightning-paced story about a hyper-articulate, foul-mouthed teenage girl (Ellen Page) facing the gestating consequences of an awkward sexual encounter with her best friend (Michael Cera). Although it has a conventional narrative and a subversively retro theme, Juno sounds utterly unique. In similar fashion, here Cody gives the Guide the scoop. A ll of Juno’s relationships were drawn from my own life. I wasn’t actually a pregnant teenage mom. I had a friend who got knocked up when she was 17. That experience was kind of unusual and it did inspire me. The parents are very evocative of my own parents. I’ve had the sort of dangerous relationship with the older man in my life. My high school boyfriend was absolutely the inspiration for the character of Paulie Bleeker. He was a very sweet, gentle guy. All of the guys I surrounded myself with were little lambs. I was always the aggressor in those relationships. It’s funny, actually. I think some people would perhaps be eager to shed those associations [from the past]. Not me. I’m glad to have an interesting backstory. There’s really just a hair’s-width distance between stripping and working in the entertainment industry. In fact, I used to refer to myself as an “entertainer” when I was a stripper, because it amused me. I thought it was a great euphemism, but either way you’re out there shuffling your feet with a desperate look in your eyes. “Look at me! 20 dollars.” At the time I was just having a nervous breakdown. It was fun. I was having a good time. But there was definitely an aspect of crazy there. It wasn’t until I was wrapping up the adventure that I started thinking to myself, “You know what? I’ve been blogging about this, I’ve been 10 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE writing about it and people are responding to it and they think it’s hilarious. I could get a book out of this.” I never in a million years thought I was going to be a screenwriter. I’m way better at this. I was a terrible stripper. When I was 19, my goal in life was probably, like, to marry Usher. Five years ago I wanted to pay off my car. My husband and I bought a house right after I got my book deal and we constantly had this backup plan where I was going to go back and strip at the only club in town that would have me at that point. In Juno, the women get to come to the forefront, which I like. This is treading into dangerous territory, but I think that women are naturally empathetic and tend to write male characters better than vice versa. Oooh. I said it. Interestingly enough, I sort of neutered myself with the whole stripper shtick, because I don’t encounter a lot of sexism. I get treated as a peer by a lot of men because they’re intimidated by my personality, whereas I have some friends who are, perhaps, more conventionally feminine who struggle with harassment. No guy is going to try and grab my ass in a meeting because he knows I’ll probably just ask him for five dollars. That’s prime. I used to have to endure that for free. —DIABLO CODY Black Lips’ Guide to Atlanta, Georgia BY BREANNA MURPHY THE RAPSCALLION REPUTATIONS OF THE BLACK LIPS NEED NOT BE FURTHER DISCUSSED HERE, but always worth mentioning is their beautifully messy talent. As similarly gifted as they are dangerously wild, the Georgian foursome never fails to unleash a set of impressive (and aggressive) songs with each new album. Having released one of our favorites of the past year, Good Bad Not Evil, they’ve been touring incessantly since its release, letting every shady corner of the world in on the good times and tunes. After the Endless Tour (still in progress) wraps up someday, the Lips will return to homes in their beloved Hotlanta, where a varied collection of bars, BBQ and bargain hunting will be waiting—all, it seems, a hop, skip and jump from the local Federal Penitentiary. Here, bassist Jared Swilley reminisces with the Guide and gives us a Cliff’s Notes version of that good ol’ pistol-packin’ Peachtree persistin’ in Atlanta. Atlanta’s Best… …spot for some dangerous meat: Harold’s BBQ This is my favorite BBQ joint in the city. They only have three things on the menu: pulled pork, ribs and Brunswick stew. It’s really old and they smoke the meat right inside, so you can see it all go down. All the employees sport pistols on their hips since it’s in a bad neighborhood and just a stone’s throw from the Federal Pen. …hometown venue: MJQ Concourse/The Drunken Unicorn The bar/venue where we all hang out and play. It’s the best place to see a show in Atlanta and there’s always something going on during any night of the week. …restaurant for a Southern food coma: Carver’s Soul Food Me and Cole [Alexander, vocals/guitar] used to live across the street from this strip club, and would end up there on late nights. It can be intimidating because it’s in the West End, and there’s about ten giant security guards at the door (who also have pistols on their hips), but everyone’s really cool. It’s cheap and they’ve even let us take photos in there and DJ on slow nights. The girls can really get down. One of the best soul food restaurants in the city. They serve really large portions of collard greens, fried chicken, Mac and cheese, etc. Still looks great on the inside and outside, and run by really friendly country folks. Not much else to say about that. …activity to earn an injury: The skate ditch It’s a ditch that we skateboard in at Piedmont Park. It’s hard to find because there’s kudzu growing everywhere. Fun, but be careful: One of our friends broke his neck there. …low-key, Blue State hangover: Manuel’s Tavern …former job that doesn’t suck: Majestic Diner An old bar, and the unofficial democratic headquarters of Atlanta. There’s no music blasting or hipsters anywhere, just old people—from construction workers to lawyers— having a beer after work. Good place to go for a quiet, private drink, and there are plenty of nice folks. We used to work here. It looks cool because it’s an old classic Greek diner. Plus, it’s open 24 hours and near all the places we live and hang out. Pretty colorful at night, and cool staff/owners that put up with us for a long time. …post-prison bargain: Charlie’s Trading Post DAN MONICK …way to watch a movie as they should be watched: Starlight Drive-In Drive-ins rule and there aren’t many left. You can bring your own food and alcohol and have BBQs. In the summer they screen really old B-movies all night. You can also get in free if you don’t mind riding in the trunk. It’s the best way to see a movie, and a sad reminder of our declining American culture. …friendly neighborhood strip joint: Queen City 12 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE prisoners go to first on their way back into society. This is kind of a thrift/wholesale/sports/clothing store where all the defective Carhartt, Dickies and Levi’s stuff goes. We get most of our t-shirts here. Also good for fishing, camping and baseball gear. It’s across the street from the Federal Pen, so it’s where the released …bar, period: Southern Comfort This is our favorite. It’s a 24-hour trucker bar that has a house band called the Joe Tucker Band. The pedal steel player actually played on our last album. It’s a bunch of long picnic tables, sawdust covered floors and big, cheap pitchers of beer. Plus, everyone dances no matter what song it is. It’s probably the best bar in Atlanta. F GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 13 The Raveone es Lead Us Into Temptation Lust For Life WITH A TITLE LIKE LUST, LUST, LUST, it’s obvious the Raveonettes has an overpowering fixation it needs to get out of its system. The Danish duo—guitarist/ vocalist Sune Rose Wagner and bassist/vocalist Sharin Foo—has always delighted in delving into the dark side of human nature, but its fourth full-length album takes the band’s reverb-drenched downward spiral even deeper. Opening with the insistent sturm und drang of “Aly, Walk With Me,” and continuing on to the shimmering Spector-minus-the-shotgun fuzz pop of “Dead Sound” and the charming come on, “You Want the Candy,” this winning effort quickly makes a case for the raw beauty of love, loathing, deception and, of course, lust. Black-clad, svelte and sexy, the Raveonettes has never shied away from playing up their glossy retro revamp of ’50s B-movie villains. As immaculately dressed offstage as they are before an audience, the Scandinavian duo has a taste for some of the finer things in life—good food, unforgettable libations, and the holidays—which they’re certainly not afraid to talk about. As well spoken as they are cultured, Sune and Sharin come across like a pair of stargazing kids who want to make art just so they can always be around it. Though Sharin now lives in L.A. and Sune’s home is in N.Y.C., they haven’t lost their touch for crafting the kinds of songs that invite you into a blackglittered parallel universe. And while Lust, Lust, Lust is the centerpiece of this bewitching new snowglobe inside which we’re being ushered, this is a world with so much more drama and deceit than we’ve seen before—not to mention a roomful of Christmas trees that stay up all year ’round. BY NEVIN MARTELL PHOTOS BY BELLA LIEBERBERG + STEFAN RUHMKE 14 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 15 “Why is love so difficult to deal with? Why are we never satisfied with what we have and why do we always crave more?” — Sune Rose Wagner Where have we found you? Sharin Foo: We’re in Denmark finishing up a tour. Today we’re in Odense, which is the little town where [author] Hans Christian Anderson is from. Where did the title Lust, Lust, Lust come from? It sounds like the name of an old pulp novel. Sune Rose Wagner: The first song that was written was “Lust.” And we really liked it, so I decided to write the whole album around it. I thought that lust was an interesting topic to write about and it came very easily for me. When it came time to name the album I just thought, “Well, the entire album is about lust, so why not just call it what it is?” But there were some other bands that had already made albums called Lust, so I thought, “What would Andy Warhol do?” Well, he would repeat the word nine times, but that’s probably too much, so we just did three. How does lust come out as a lyrical theme? Wagner: It was based on personal experiences. A lot of failed relationships. A lot of lusting for nightlife, sex and drugs. There was the sadness behind the lust, too. Why is love so difficult to deal with? Why are we never satisfied with what we have and why do we always crave more? Where does this lust come from? Do you feel like you’ve mastered lust now? Wagner: No. I do understand it—I feel like I’ve always understood it—but it still perplexes me. I feel like it’s a very difficult emotion to deal with and it can bring a lot of misery along with it. It can be a wonderful thing to have, it just depends on whether you’re single or not. If you’re in a relationship, lust can be very stressful. Can you think of a time in your life when lust played a big role? Foo: Not for me. It doesn’t have such a pulling need that I can’t stay connected to the bigger picture. It’s not something that has control over me. The Raveonettes has always had a very wellconceived and beautifully executed aesthetic. I imagine your homes must be intriguing spaces. Wagner: There’s always a lot of Christmas stuff in 16 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE my apartment. I have two Christmas trees up all year round. There’s one silver one and a Tim Burton tree, which is really cool. As a kid, I always enjoyed that time of year, because it made me very relaxed. I get very inspired by Christmas things. It’s probably the nostalgist in me, but I love to go to flea markets and buy old Christmas ornaments from the ’50s and ’60s. And I love to buy all sorts of cheesy holiday books. I have the autobiography of Santa Claus and A Country Christmas, where all the big country stars tell their best Christmas memories and give out recipes of traditional food they eat from Nashville. Do you share Sune’s obsession with Christmas? Foo: No, that’s to the point where it’s a disease; it’s an obsession to an unhealthy degree. I remember one time when we were touring, his whole bunk in the tour bus was just this Christmas extravaganza with colored lights everywhere. I do love Christmas, though. We just played a show in Copenhagen and we ordered fake snow for the stage. During the encore, when we played “The Christmas Song,” there was snow falling from the sky. There were almost tears in our eyes; we are such nostalgists when it comes down to it. Speaking of obsessions, I’ve heard that you guys are hardcore foodies. Foo: Yes, we are epicurean centralists. We enjoy food and wine to an almost unhealthy degree, also. We can spend many hours on the computer looking for the right restaurants to eat at when we’re on tour. Wagner: I have a subscription to Zagat and it’s my favorite website—it’s the only one I go to every day. When we’re out touring, we always go to the Zagat guide and see what every town has to offer. We like to eat really well when we’re on the road, because if you just eat fucking sandwiches and Burger King every day, it just puts you in a foul mood. Touring is really hard and it’s boring; it’s so much waiting and driving and all that shit. You’ve got to be sure to reward yourself, to make it all worthwhile. The way we do it is to seek out the better restaurants. If we can have a really good meal, then we feel like we’ve done something really nice to make up for everything else. F Sune and Sharin’s Ways to Stay Warm in the Winter ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sune: At home we drink Glögg, which is a little bit like mulled wine, but it has almonds, raisins and all these spices like cinnamon and cloves in it. You start with just wine, then add a lot of liquor to it—schnapps, vodka and anything else you like. The trick is that all the raisins soak up all the alcohol, so when you eat them you get really “festive.” Sharin: In Sweden they have beautiful saunas, and they’re usually located right by the lakes. After you get really sweaty, you walk outside and jump in the freezing cold water before running back into the sauna. I hear that if you pour alcohol on the hot stones [that heat the sauna] it can be very intoxicating. Sune: I love to cook confit de canard in the winter for gourmet comfort food. It’s French duck that’s been cooked over and over and over in its own fat, so it’s really juicy. It’s all fat and it’s so simple to make—I love it. And if you roast some potatoes with a little thyme to finish off the dish, then you’re in heaven. GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 17 Parallel Travelers Del became a hero to cats, and me. Del: I was in New Orleans, and me, A-Plus and Opio [of Hieroglyphics] were on a radio show. KRS-ONE came through, and then Company Flow came. El-P: That was crazy; it was Hiero, KRS and Company Flow in New Orleans. And then that night, we got shitfaced on hurricanes in the middle of the street. That was the first time we met…it was some sort of bullshit music industry conference. Del: That was the first time I heard Company Flow, I think y’all gave me a sampler tape. El-P: That was when we were just hustling, pressing up that shit ourselves. But then I worked on the last record Del put out, Both Sides of the Brain, and I produced a track. You both self produce. What is that process like? Do you compare notes? How is it different between you? Del the Funky Homosapien vs. El-P BY SAM ROUDMAN + PHOTOS BY TODD WESTPHAL ON SEPARATE COASTS, AND IN SEPARATE CREWS, El-P and Del the Funky Homosapien have been central players in a realm of hip-hop that operates more like jazz and less like American Idol. Two of the most distinctive voices in rap’s history, Del’s elastic, chiding baritone and El-P’s pummeling machine gun blasts are each compliments to their production styles, with Del leaning on Parliament raygun spaciness and El tied to shit-grit sample density. Their respective crews, Del’s Hieroglyphics and El-P’s now-defunct Company Flow, are rightfully venerated; their labels, Hiero Imperium and Definitive Juxtaposition, are indies at the forefront of embracing the digital era’s possibilities. So it’s no surprise that Del’s first solo album in six years, 11th Hour, is going to be released on El-P’s Def Jux, bringing with it the chance that these parallel time and space travelers might soon find themselves on the same track. 18 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE How did you first learn about each other? El-P: Del fell in this really weird, ill place with his first album, I Wish My Brother George Was Here. That’s a classic record to me. Here was this kid who’s related to Ice Cube with this West Coast gangster production and funk beats, but who’s also in the realm of De La and Tribe. And then on the next record, he basically created a style that many others took influence from. El-P: It’s probably really different. How do you produce it, Del? Del: I usually come up with a musical idea, not a lyric or nothing like that; a rhythm, maybe a drum beat. Sometimes a bass line, some kind of melody, and then I just arrange stuff around that until I have a completed piece. Usually I have an idea of whether I want it to be sinister or noble, happy or sad, or mad... El-P: You have a mood or an emotion in mind, basically. Del: Yeah. El-P: I’m kinda different; I don’t know what the mood or emotion is going to be until it just kind of unfolds. I really don’t have any clue as to what the hell I’m doing at any moment. It’ll take me hours to figure out what the fuck I’m doing, and sometimes weeks and months. I’ll make jams just to get me writing, I’ll make beats just to spark an idea, and then I’ll lay the lyrics down and that’ll change the music. It’s one long, weird process that actually is just painful as a motherfucker. Do you think you need that struggle? Would the work be the same if you weren’t suffering through it? El-P: I’m not a glutton for punishment. I would love it if this shit were easy. Life is fucking hard enough; I don’t need pain from my sampler. The fact is that it is what it GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 19 is. When I say painful, it’s obviously a pain that I enjoy; it’s a labor of love. You both have pretty deep discographies. How do you switch it up between albums? For instance, Del, how did you alter your approach to this album? Del: Before, it was easy to me, and I just kind of threw stuff together and thought that was acceptable for a long time. But my bag of tricks was running out—I felt like people were gonna discover that I wasn’t doing nothing. So I had to learn something about what I was doing so I could grow, lyrically and musically. I started getting more into how to actually formulate stuff. Lyrically, I wanted to communicate more with people. I felt like too many people already knew how to rap like I was rapping at the time, so I was like, “What else is there to do?” I don’t want to say I was trying to tone it down, because I’m not trying to be simple-minded, but I definitely want to be more direct with an idea to let people know where I’m coming from. El-P: It’s a natural progression. It’s one thing to come with a style that’s original and that hits when you’re younger, and run with something that’s funky and 20 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE natural and kinda blows up. But any real artist, as they progress, wants to alter the music in the same way that they’re altering as a person. You don’t want to be faking some shit that was natural at one point, and then all of a sudden it’s the re-creation of a moment. You’ve both clocked time in successful hip-hop crews. How is working in a group different from working solo? Del: I like working by myself better, man. To tell you the truth, it’s just quicker. I don’t have to answer to nobody, I don’t have to agree with nothing. El-P: I kinda feel the same. It’s been so long since I’ve been in a group. I’ll be honest, I’m much happier; it’s too complicated to involve yourself with a bunch of people. It’s one thing to be ambitious and have a vision, and it’s another thing to have a collective identity. That said, I wanna do different types of collaborative albums. Me and Del are talking about doing one. But as far as a career, it’s easier for me to do that on my own. F FOR MORE OF OUR CONVERSATION WITH DEL AND EL, VISIT GOODMUSICWILLPREVAIL.COM. RA D IOHEA_D IN RAINBOWS THE NEW ALBUM IN STORES 01.01.08 WWW.RADIOHEAD.COM / WWW.TBDRECORDS.COM z+ v 2008 _XURBIA_XENDLESS LIMITED UNDER EXCLUSIVE LICENSE TO TBD R E C O R D S , L L C GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 21 the CURSE of the SOOTHSAYER EXORCISING THE BEDLAM from the BY PATRICK JAMES MYTH IS ALREADY SPREADING about the creepy inspiration for the Mars Volta’s newest full-length riddle, The Bedlam in Goliath. It began when guitarist Omar Rodriguez-Lopez purchased an antique, Ouija-style “talking board” from a curio shop in Israel as a gift for singer Cedric Bixler-Zavala. Their use of the board (a.k.a “the Soothsayer”) became an obsession, revealing an ancient story of three people consumed by sexual violence. But the album’s conceptual blueprint brought with it harbingers of destruction in the form of what the band maintains is a curse. The Guide cornered Cedric and Omar in the Los Angeles studio that bore The Bedlam, hoping to illuminate questions of floods, disappearing tracks and contributors, and a record whose story didn’t want to be told. How did you find the Soothsayer? Omar: I was in Jerusalem, Israel. It was just something that stuck out as a great gift. You recognize things as belonging to people. You say, “Oh, that’s mine. That’s Cedric’s.” How did you begin using it? Cedric: It was just something to do for fun in the middle of Iowa while on tour with the Chili Peppers. You retreat to the bus and there’s this morbid fascination of treating the board like a car accident. From there, curiosity killed the cat. How did it contribute to this record? Cedric: Well, the music was there already. It was a matter of trying to fit together the puzzle pieces of words—stories which came from the board...translated from Hebrew, Aramaic, and Latin. Maybe some people would think it’s just the shape of paranoia in the back of my head, but spirits were consumed in this piece of antique. When did things start to go wrong? Cedric: I guess the domino effect would be us having faith in working with Blake [Fleming, the drummer who replaced Jon Theodore, and was replaced by Deantoni Parks, and ultimately Thomas Pridgeon] and then that faith completely backfiring on us. The worst was our engineer having a nervous breakdown and wanting to keep the tapes, accusing us of making music with evil intent. But we never told our engineer that we had this thing. Omar: We did two weeks of work here in Los Angeles and I went back to my studio in New York and Cedric calls me and says, “I’m not getting on the plane.” We’d made over 15 records together, and he says, “I’m not going over there. This music is evil, you’re trying to infect 22 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE people. I’m keeping the drives; I’m going to take them to the desert and burn them.” And this was just the music; just bass and drums at that point. What happened next? Omar: Our studio in New York flooded. Twice. I share the basement with nine other people and my studio was the only one that flooded. I lost half of my gear, had three power outages, went through three different computers, two laptops, four engineers. Tracks that had been there for months vanished into thin air. We would go back to previous playlists, other drives; they wouldn’t be there. Our mixing engineer was saying, “There’s no curse...” He would see these things happen right before his eyes. He calls it “quantum entanglement,” a scientific explanation for that which can’t be explained. We call it “the curse.” Cedric: We also call it “the story that doesn’t want to be told.” It’s a sort of love triangle. In the end, it’s just a product of this domestic violence where all parties end up dying. I don’t know how it happened, but they ended up in [the board]. “Goliath” is those three people in one. The main thing was after a while it [the board] tried to convince us to provide it with a vessel to trade places with it, give it a second life again—that’s the album. But you had to get rid of the Soothsayer to finish the record? Omar: I don’t even know where the it is. I bought a plane ticket to some place I’d never been before, far from here. I got in a taxi and said, “Drive, drive, drive.” I gave the cabdriver a hundred dollar bill to wait and I walked, walked, walked. I broke it and I buried it. I got back to the cab and said, “Take me back to the airport.” I could never find it again if I tried. F GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER 23 available at One-Liners: a miniature take on selected Filter Magazine reviews ........................................................................................................................... (Go to goodmusicwillprevail.com or pick up Filter Magazine’s Holiday Issue for full reviews of these albums) U2 The Joshua Tree [20th Anniversary 97% Box Set] UNIVERSAL This three-disc set is a must-have for anyone craving proof that Bono isn’t just a hologram. BRITISH SEA POWER 85% Do You Like Rock Music? ROUGH TRADE Certainly at a Decline no longer, and leading the grandiose charge for glory. Yes, BSP, yes we do. VARIOUS ARTISTS 91% I’m Not There [Soundtrack] COLUMBIA Thanks Sufjan, thanks Thurston, you did great, but nobody plays Dylan like the man himself. GORILLAZ 84% D-Sides VIRGIN Demon’s B-sides get help from Albarn and friends, and there’s nothing cartoonish about it. THE MARS VOLTA 90% The Bedlam in Goliath UNIVERSAL/GSL The afro’d soothsayers pit harmony against discord in a musical theater of good versus evil. Pure bedlam. MATT COSTA 83% Unfamiliar Faces BRUSHFIRE Costa’s second is best kept for moody, introspective mornings indoors and away from the sun. CAT POWER 89% Jukebox MATADOR Our ethereal songstress takes a few covered steps forward: it’s Cat Power revisited. JACK PEÑATE 81% Matinée XL All heart and no chops sure make Jack a dull boy. THE HIVES The Black and White Album 88% INTERSCOPE The Hives try new things with their sound; the outfits remain the same. THE LIBERTINES Time For Heroes: The Best of 75% ROUGH TRADE Sorry, Doherty. “Cracking” apart after two studio albums doesn’t mean you get a “best of” comp. THE HELIO SEQUENCE 88% Keep Your Eyes Ahead SUB POP Sure, synth-infused ’80s dance is fine, but ain’t nuthin’ wrong with some stark minimalism here and there. WHITE WILLIAMS 72% Smoke TIGERBEAT 6 Imagine if Raffi had mentored Girl Talk…but even more awkward than you’d think. BEACH HOUSE 87% Devotion CARPARK Here, the Beach House duo opt for the gloomier side of the shore. Time for a name change, maybe? 24 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE FILTER ALBUM RATINGS BOB MOULD 85% District Line ANTIThe chief Hüsker ditches the clubhouse beats in which he previously dabbled and dons his fiery guitar once again. N.W.A. Straight Outta Compton 70% [20th Anniversary] CAPITOL/PRIORITY The original release pissed off cops, moms and the F.B.I. The homages of this reissue couldn’t scare a kitten. 91-100% 81-90% 71-80% 61-70% Below 60% a great album above par, below genius respectable, but flawed not in my CD player please God, tell us why Music, etc. ........................................................................................................................... BECK 95% Odelay [deluxe edition] GEFFEN/UME Shaggy high jumpin’ hounds, rejoice— finally, the best “alternative” (Holy Kennedy, Pinfield!) album of the ’90s gets the bonus treatment. The kind folks at Camp Beck have pieced together a Buzz Bin-worthy double record, unearthing two unheard Odelay outtakes, a slew of remixes and b-sides, the amazing “Deadweight” single, and some LOL-funny liner notes, courtesy Thurston Moore, Dave Eggers and some ignorant high schoolers. “Skinny white boy?” “Is this classical?” “Is he Irish?” Listen and learn, kids: this is the sound of the youth you never had…and it’s glorious. SHANE LEDFORD DEAD MEADOW 89% Old Growth MATADOR Dead Meadow has the most dependable groove out there. It’s a drowsy, swaying trance-swing, with just enough boogie to keep you from floating away from the billowing rings of guitar effects and helium vocals. On this effort, the sky has cleared, and the bluesy psych riffage is balanced out with upfront production values and a number of acoustic touches to fill out their bread and butter spiritually-inclined riff-quests. Not old growth, necessarily; just growth. SAM ROUDMAN VAMPIRE WEEKEND 92% Vampire Weekend XL From the first marimba blast until the very last clave beat, Vampire Weekend’s debut bursts forth with an original energy of diverse grooves and distinct rhythms. In addition, the lyrics are both clever and sincere; narrative quips about Darjeeling tea, Lil’ Jon and Benetton are delivered with a knowing wink by all four players. Put simply on account of 2007’s buzz and 2008’s expectations: The record is an impressive verification of talent to the naysayers and a great excuse for everyone to start dancing. BREANNA MURPHY KATE NASH 88% Made of Bricks GEFFEN What’s not to love about a girl whose brand of love song tells her boyfriend: “I said I’d rather be with your friends, mate, ‘cause they’re much fitter.” Sure, Kate Nash’s songs are slightly sophomoric, but they make for the most pleasant of retributive-spiked pop, rounding out an 26 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE album that masterfully laces together piano, a little beatbox, some Björk-esque squawks and a sexy, throaty little voice for a Brit all of 20 years. Just don’t piss her off if you date her. KENDAH EL-ALI dvd The Ten 86% CITY LIGHTS From the brilliantly fried minds behind Wet Hot American Summer and the State comes this wacky, tacky, genius-on-crack-y comedy about those stone tablets that bearded dude was always yakkin’ about. Paul Rudd, Winona Ryder, Liev Schreiber, Rob Corddry and other funny people you’ll recognize star in this exercise in short attention span schtick. The ten stories feel like big-budget State sketches, and the DVD’s multiple bonus features— interviews, commentaries, and outtakes—are above average. Who needs church when you can learn the Commandments while coveting both Paul Rudd’s comic timing and Jessica Alba’s boobs? BEAU POWERS NADA SURF 79% Lucky BARSUK Nada Surf’s fifth begins in exactly the right place, continuing the pace and stride of past successes in its lead track, “See These Bones,” as Matthew Caws’ beautifully slow, tempered vocals ponder a fragile existence. From that point on, however, the album is a downhill slide of meaningful lyrics lost in jumbled harmonies and over-repetition. There are brief moments of inspiration and triumph (“Are You Lightning,” “Weightless”), but they never last long enough. And it’s a pity, because they’ve proven such perfection in the past. BRITTANY BURK/BREANNA MURPHY SIA Some People Have 87% Real Problems HEAR MUSIC/MONKEY PUZZLE “And when we reach a good place/ Let’s be sure to leave no trace.” Sigh. If only l’amour could be as this lovely creature croons it to be on the devastatingly romantic “Day Too Soon,” the centerpiece of her startling new collection. This is the gorgeous, aching soul record Sia had really always meant to make; a joyful, unflinching stroll through the minefield of human emotions. If it doesn’t turn your heart—and possibly some of your squishy bits—inside out and sideways then, seriously, there’s just no hope for you. KEN SCRUDATO JASON COLLETT 78% Here’s to Being Here ARTS+CRAFTS Though the self-defeating/acoustic-love bit this former Broken Social Scenester champions is usually charming, his nostalgia here seems a little forced. But to be fair, Collett hasn’t lost all sense of his past, evident in some worthy collaborations—one in particular with BSS bandmate and Apostle of Hustle frontman Andrew Whiteman. Plus, tailing a slew of altcountry tracks demanding a depth of mood attempted and rarely achieved is a relic of an Idols of Exile Collett: “Somehow,” a lamenting moment when his “ooooing” finally seems more authentically realized. AJ PACITTI DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS Brighter Than Creation’s Dark 79% NEW WEST Born decades too late but still giving Americana a new-millennium upgrade, Patterson Hood and his Drive-By Truckers feel like a band out of time. Opener “Two Daughters and a Beautiful Wife” is a winsome meditation on family that could have leapt right off of After the Gold Rush, fully formed. But Hood’s clan has one foot in the 21st century as well: The slow burn of “I’m Sorry, Houston” is as honest about dysfunction as it is ironic, a postmodern self-consciousness that reminds you where you are, even as you get lost in the DBT’s neo-Southern wilderness. Bring a compass. SCOTT THILL GOLDFRAPP 82% Seventh Tree MUTE Did you enjoy fucking to the glammy, glossy sleaze of Goldfrapp’s Supernature? Well, Seventh Tree takes the relationship to the next level, providing a chilled out, sensual soundtrack for lovemaking and post-coital snuggling. Gone are the hip-thrusting rhythms and sexy come-ons; these gentle tunes rely on acoustic guitars, mellow beats and breathy vocals to seduce the listener. Sure, it’s more mature and grown-up sounding (think Everything But the Girl meets Zero 7), but Goldfrapp helps give MILFs a good name. NEVIN MARTELL THE MAGNETIC FIELDS 87% Distortion NONESUCH It wouldn’t be a Stephin Merritt record if the basso profundo of indie rock hadn’t chosen a dictating leitmotif. Having abandoned his predisposition with a certain rune and scaled back his track-listing from 69 to 13, the Magnetic Fields frontman found an unlikely muse in the scourge of musicians: feedback. Merritt’s still trafficking in the same bright power-pop with the deceptively longing lyrics, yet this time it’s refracted through a fuzzy amp, and for the first time he matches the emotional discontent with aural dissonance. LAUREN HARRIS book MATT MAUST/PAUL G. MAZIAR 86% What It Is: What It Is WRITE BLOODY It’s not poetry, it’s not prose… what is it: what is it? With What It Is: What It Is, Cold War Kids bassist and visual artist Maust and wordsmith Maziar have succeeded in making a book that’s less of a book and more of a guided tour through places they’ve been, both actual and abstract. With prose poems about taking deep breaths from our collective unconscious and making exhalations of cold smoke into thin air, and photo-collage images of cities, faces, skies and subways, the work suggests a fractured postmodern world viewed through nostalgic eyes and voiced by a warm, familiar tongue that still sounds unique. It is what it is. BEAU POWERS VARIOUS ARTISTS Droppin’ Science: Greatest Samples 79% from the Blue Note Lab BLUE NOTE Blue Note has earned the right to comb their vaults for anything relevant to today’s music buyer—they have a great catalogue and relevance to spare—but the songs included here are relevant because someone else took them, sampled them and inevitably made them better. The sole exception is Jeremy Feig’s “Howling for Judy,” later pitch-shifted and looped for Beastie Boys’ “Sure Shot.” I can’t/I won’t/and I don’t stop listening to this rollicking flute tune bursting with more energy than even the Beasties could muster years later. As for the rest, I’ll stick with the samples. JEREMY MOEHLMANN LIAM FINN 86% I’ll Be Lightning YEP ROC There’s something remarkably touching in the sort of sparks Liam Finn (son of Neil, nephew of Tim) sets during his debut album. Don’t mistake the initial acoustic sounds purely as singer-songwriter ilk; the successes of Lightning are audibly best when he mixes polyphonic electronics into a low-key foundation (“Lead Balloon,” “Second Chance”). Finn’s wonderfully inconsistent with anything It’s like a private party in your inbox. Get information on local happenings including shows, clubs and exclusive Filter events. Sign up now at filter-mag.com on the record—moods, tempos and genres vary from song to song—save for nailing nearly each and every one while wearing his heart proudly on his kiwi sleeve. BREANNA MURPHY video game SUPER SMASH BROS. BRAWL 92% WII NINTENDO Nintendo’s multiplayer monster returns with an unbelievable roster of past Ninty greats—Mario, Link, Samus, Pit (Kid Icarus), Donkey Kong and Yoshi are just some of the familiar faces you’ll get to fight. Levels morph as you play, and solid ground turns into floating platforms. You can use (and customize) both the Wii remote or Classic Controller to find your favorite setup. Either way, the nostalgia is what drives the game, and fighting with and against your favorite Nintendo characters makes this a clear winner. ZACH ROSENBERG ATLAS SOUND Let The Blind Lead Those Who 88% Cannot See But Feel KRANKY If Willy Wonka had spun a cotton candy room into his factory’s architecture, its soundtrack easily could have been penned by Atlas Sound. Of course, coming from a label that’s famous for the aurally outthere, the solo work of Deerhunter’s Bradford Cox fits the bill to a psychedelic tee. The real power of the album, however, is that there is a beat-driven light at the end of every hazy tunnel, making for a journey that is as emotional as it is mind-bending. Eat your heart out, Augustus Gloop. KENDAH EL-ALI MIKE LADD 81% Nostalgialator DEFINITIVE JUX Eclectic and off-the-wall like a whiz kid with A.D.D., Nostalgialator suggests Mike Ladd was raised on hearty doses of channel surfing and Ritalin. Though that’s probably not the case for the prolific Paris-by-way-of-Boston emcee and producer, his 10th album bounces around frantically, blending electronic and acoustic arrangements with theme-song loops, early ’90s rapping and funky lounge grooves, showing complete disregard for a unifying sound. Eccentric almost to a flaw, it’s like a mish-mashed mix tape of what it sounds like inside Ladd’s hyperactive head. COLIN STUTZ JOE JACKSON 60% Rain RYKODISC Answer “yes,” and this is your album: Was Ben Folds your favorite band through high school, college, grad school, or is he 30 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE currently your most played artist on iTunes? Do drippy pop piano ballads with a pitifully decaying falsetto rev your motor and set your fancy flying? Does an album about a depressed, middle-aged man’s quest for love through drugs, fame and hardship seem like something you would relate to? “Yes?” For the rest of us…God, why? SAM ROUDMAN EVANGELICALS 84% The Evening Descends DEAD OCEANS Like their Oklahoman left-field rock peers, Flaming Lips and Starlight Mints, Evangelicals have a gift for skewed pop weirdness. The Evening Descends shows it off nicely, from the brokenbeat deconstruction of the title track to the mall rock of “Skeleton Man.” Deep with reverb and trickery, Evangelicals’ tracks sound like they were purposefully taken apart and reassembled, Frankenstein-style. And from the bizarre chill of “Snowflakes” to the atmospheric finale, “Bloodstream,” The Evening Descends is that rare offering, a detached experiment with heart. SCOTT THILL BABY DEE 87% Safe Inside the Day DRAG CITY If Bertolt Brecht and Antony starred alongside Tom Waits in Down By Law instead of John Lurie and Roberto Benigni and played cabaret chamber pop in prison instead of chanting “We all scream for ice cream!” it might sound something like Baby Dee. Dee is a 50-something transgender piano songstress who has recruited fellow gleeful weirdos like Will Oldham, Andrew W.K. and Matt Sweeney to play on her gorgeously oddball and all-around delightful Drag City debut. Song subjects dance from big-titty bee girls to bad kidneys to irrepressible albinos. I scream, you scream, we all scream for more Dee! SHANE LEDFORD book ABBY BANKS, THURSTON MOORE Punk House: 84% Interiors in Anarchy ABRAMS IMAGE During your twenties, chances are you probably experienced or even lived in a punk house just like these. Remember the charming characters with haphazard bookcases, a dubiously dependable bathroom/kitchen and endless free-art walls; places that were, naturally, prone to unwelcome visitors—human or otherwise. These hundred pages are basically a weird, adult version of I-Spy, as photographer Banks’ giant U.S. tour uncovers the hidden “majesty” of the houses punk built. Some people really do live this way. BREANNA MURPHY POOLTRADESHOW presents De*Nada February 12,13,14, 2008 C5, CENTRAL HALL, LAS VEGAS CONVENTION CENTER www.pooltradeshow.com FASHION FREEDOM WORLDWIDE dvd METRIC 85% Live at the Metropolis LAST GANG Explosive Metric frontwoman Emily Haines belts out to the eager fans at Montreal’s Metropolis: “Dead disco/Dead punk/Dead rock and roll/Remodel!” I, however, would have to disagree with Emily’s claim. Her band’s energetic performance proves that disco, punk and rock and roll are very much alive in their songs: it’s an amalgamation of musical genres I’m going to call their own dance-punk synth revolution. The DVD captures the energy in 10 well-shot live tracks. Go get in on the action before they remodel. BRITTANY BURK LANDMARK THEATRES The Ultimate Cinema Experience SONS AND DAUGHTERS 80% This Gift DOMINO On Scottish rock quartet Sons and Daughters’ third LP, the band takes on the role of a malcontent stuck in an oblivious society obsessed with putting its talent on display. The title is meant ironically, but the true irony is that this is the band’s most accessible album to date. It’s masterfully crafted pop, but overproduced with hooks so catchy they seem artificial. This Gift is both a blessing and a curse, wrapped just a bit too tightly. COLIN STUTZ Baltimore video game Devil May Cry 4 90% PS3, XBOX 360 CAPCOM Watch as everyone’s favorite demonkilling fops Dante and Nero turn nightmares onto their ears and unleash Hell on Earth for the first time on the PS3 and 360. New weapons and skills grace both characters, as this beat-down literally opens Pandora’s Box, one of Dante’s weapons. Explore everything from the jungle to Fortuna Castle, the epicenter of hurt emotions and demonic hullabaloo. Capcom has once again made gothic ass-kicking into an art form. ZACH ROSENBERG KELLEY STOLTZ 85% Circular Sounds SUB POP Sometime after the ’70s, optimism became a bit mistaken with naivety and, well, someone forgot to tell Kelley Stoltz. Through and through, his new record treads lightly through seventies gold (“When You Forget”) and heavier, soulful blues (“To Speak to the Girl”) while his vocals kindle love songs so warm they could make any frozen heart begin to thaw. And it’s not that Stoltz is without his own share of painful experience—he just knows how to keep his head high afterwards. BRITTANY BURK/BREANNA MURPHY West Los Angeles West Los Angeles The Landmark West Los Angeles 10850 West Pico Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90064 (310) 281-8233 B A LT I M O R E Landmark Theatres Harbor East 645 South President Street Baltimore, MD 21202 (410) 624-2622 G R E E N WO O D V I L L AG E The Landmark Theatre Greenwood Village 5415 Landmark Place Greenwood Village, CO 80111 (303) 352-1992 Order Tickets Online tickets.landmarktheatres.com Greenwood Village LandmarkTheatres.com U.K. Imports: presented by ........................................................................................................................... BRITISH SEA POWER Do You Like Rock Music? ROUGH TRADE BSP’s third effort is a ballsier drift sunsetwards from the chuggy-but-travelsick crypto-pop of Open Season, and it’s predictably lush. Drums clap like thunderclouds as “No Lucifer” rolls into life, an obscure ode to biblical projections of Armageddon, referring abstractly to the current Pope and backed by the weirder-than-weird appropriation of the “Easy! Easy!” chant of Soccer AM. A tilt at the mainstream? Perhaps, but when the rest of your album is about 1953 floodings in Essex and winsome anticipations of jumping ship from planet Earth right before the apocalypse, the logical answer is still no. “Waving Flags” is a killer first single—with Yan huskier than a huskie with a sore throat doing Tom Waits impressions—and in “Atom” they’ve a real gem that starts off a piano ballad before booting itself out of the way in a mushroom cloud of explosive serrated, guitars. Treasure them, please. JJ DUNNING HARRISONS No Fighting In The War Room MELODIC And so, yet another four-piece guitar band emerges from Sheffield, though this time geographical proximity is not necessarily an overriding factor. Certainly more Milburn than Arctic Monkeys, Harrisons nevertheless make a compelling argument to being the easy superior of the former and comfortable stablemate with the latter. From the mod-pop posturing of openers “Dear Constable” and “Man Of The Hour,” which seem to have more in common with the London-centric boisterousness of the Clash than the Morrissey-meets-Neil Diamond plaintive balladry of lighters-aloft highlight “Listen,” Harrisons’ itchy-trigger attitude and songwriting mastery ensures their own chapter in the seeming Never Ending Story of the Sheffield success saga. STEPHEN BROLAN LIGHTSPEED CHAMPION Falling Off The Lavender Bridge DOMINO Dev Haynes’ transformation from purveyor of messed up electro to sentimental folk troubadour has been a little surprising to say the least. Test Icicles may have given music a much needed kick up the arse, but, with their premature demise opening up the space for this album of softly spoken gems, we’re not missing them too much. While Lavender Bridge is far from immediate (Dev’s tales of twisted romance are a bit hard to swallow on first listen), a lot of the quiet beauty of the tracks doesn’t reveal itself until further listening. Steeped in Americana and heavy on the pedal steel, with delicate backing vocals provided by rising star Emmy the Great, this particular reinvention is a good, good thing. MOLLY JONES µ:OgS`W\UO\UcZO`UcWbO`a]\b]0`WbWaVc\RS`^W\W\Ua¶ ´9SdW\0`]\a]\:/B7;3A THE PYRAMIDS The Pyramids DOMINO Archie Bronson Outfit are one of Britain’s best-kept secrets: a growling, rumbling, sex-drenched blues-rock beast of a band easily the match of prime Cave or Stripes. Why mention this? Well, the Pyramids are two thirds of A.B.O. mucking about at triple speed (in terms of execution as opposed to tempo) and knocking out these, 10 slices of guttural garage rock sashimi so swampy they’re likely to send the weak of mind scurrying for the solace of something less challenging. Archie Bronson singer Sam Windett’s pained vocals are immediately recognizable, and “A White Disc of Sun” and debut single “Hunch Your Body, Love Somebody” both stand out. Purchase as a counterpoint to A.B.O.’s magnificent Derdang Derdang, or wallow in its filth exclusively. CHARLIE IVENS THE WOMBATS The Wombats Proudly Present…A Guide to Love, Loss and Desperation 14th FLOOR RECORDS Punk pop acts are 10 a penny, so what makes this Liverpool three-piece so damn special? Laconic frontman Matthew Murphy bleats his loves, losses and desperations over rumbling, bouncing rhythms and an almost constant wall of ringing guitar. The “ooohs” from bassman and backing vocalist Tord provide an added rocket boost, but it’s the lyrics what make ‘em, though. Influenced as much by Elliott Smith as the Beach Boys, the Wombats’ pop is underscored by sadness, pathos and above all, a self-deprecating humor that few artists can muster. The tracks do vary in quality, but when their formula hits the nail on the head, like on “Moving To New York,” said nail is shattered into its constituent atoms. Meanwhile, quieter numbers such as “Little Miss Pipedream” showcase their ability to construct songs that hold you by their quality, not just their relentless pop onslaught. KENN TAYLOR µ=\O\R=\¶3>OdOWZOPZS]\WBc\Sa4SP`cO`g#bV BVSRSPcbOZPc[ASQ`Sb@]][aOdOWZOPZS /^`WZ&bVSdS`geVS`S The Fly is the U.K.’s second largest circulated music magazine. Focusing on emerging talent, it’s the essential guide to new music in the U.K. Subscriptions are available, priced at £40 for 12 months (11 issues), by contacting subs@channelfly.com, or online at www.the-fly.co.uk. U`O\`]\RSQ][[ga^OQSQ][U`O\`]\RSTWZbS`ca`SQ]`RW\UaQ][ 34 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE i-P23™ Portable Speakers Quicksilver Edition Portable speakers for your iPod, $119.99 si5.com Radiohead In Rainbows Box Set Includes CD’s, Vinyl and booklets, $80 available exclusively from radiohead.com Diesel “Strobbe-Giu” black and grey abstract graffiti-inspired logo print hoodie, $150 Available at Diesel stores nationwide, or diesel.com Vans Iron Maiden Sk8-Hi’s, $65 vans.com 36 FILTER GOOD MUSIC GUIDE DEWAR’S ® ON THE ROCKS: Fill a rock glass with ice. Pour in DEWAR’S ® WHITE LABEL.® Enjoy the flavors of a masterfully Blended Scotch Whisky. SHELBY LYNNE JUST A LITTLE LOVIN’ INSPIRED BY DUSTY SPRINGFIELD IN STORES JANUARY 29 ON TOUR IN 2008 PRODUCED BY PHIL RAMONE © 2008 UMG Recordings, Inc. WWW.SHELBYLYNNE.COM WWW.LOSTHIGHWAYRECORDS.COM