Friday, June 04, 2010

Andy Friedman Weary Things (in which I play drums for the most part)



BUY Weary Things on iTunes

Brooklyn Rail Article

Listen to Andy Friedman's new album Weary Things

From AndyFriedman.net
Friedman released his second album, Weary Things (City Salvage Records/Kindred Rhythm) in the winter of 2009, which garnered widespread critical praise, a performance on NPR's coveted Mountain Stage, and a feature interview on XM's Bob Edwards Show, further solidifying his growing reputation as a "dusty, paint-splattered Americana sage." (Rochester News & Democrat) Despite this, and along with only a handful of other albums (including releases by Tom Waits and Chuck Prophet) The Associated Press highlighted Weary Things among The Best Overlooked Albums Of 2009. "Friedman can write a lyric and deliver it," declared Stephen Wine. "He is not to be overlooked, that's for sure." Friedman's "hard-tack country originals" were described in The New Yorker as "the mark of a true artist," while NoDepression.com called his songwriting "unforgettable." Old Crow Medicine Show's Ketch Secor, in a poem written about Friedman's sophomore album, called his record a "certified, genuine American tune." Indie-folk icon Sufjan Stevens proclaimed, "I think the world of Andy Friedman. I've always wanted to be Andy Friedman." In the album’s liner notes, David Gates -- the author, Pulitzer-finalist, and former senior arts editor for Newsweek -- sets the tone for Weary Things. “What [Friedman] sees through his windshield isn’t Greil Marcus’s Old Weird America," he writes, "but the weird, new America where the pastoral is no longer pure.”
"Andy Friedman is not exactly one of those musicians you play while you're paying your bills or cleaning the house," says NPR, "his songs demand that you sit down and listen to them, which is why he is such a hot live act." While his songs are anything but funny, Friedman has published over a dozen gag cartoons in The New Yorker under the pseudonym Larry Hat. As an award-winning illustrator published under his own name, Friedman’s portraits of cultural figures appear regularly in literally hundreds of magazines and newspapers worldwide, including recent covers for the New York Times Magazine and The New Republic.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Pachanga Festival Review




From: AUSTIN 360
Scene report: Pachanga Latino Music Festival

By Patrick Caldwell | Sunday, May 23, 2010, 03:18 AM

When Pachanga Latino Music Festival MVP Brian Lopez —at least the guitarist for Y La Orkestra, also performing at the festival, ought to be in contention for the title for pulling double duty in two wildly different acts — took a break from his solo set of classically inspired folk pop, he had one question for the audience.

“Why is everybody so far away? I know we’re from Arizona, but you can get closer,” quipped the Tucson musician. “We won’t bite.”

The answer, of course, had nothing to do with Lopez’s politically controversial home state and everything to do with the scorching early afternoon heat. Roasting temperatures punctuated by infrequent cloud cover meant a toasty start to Pachanga’s third year, keeping crowds thin for the first portion of the day. Lopez thoughtfully serenaded the criminally small early audience with a band that included Y La Orkestra leader Sergio Mendoza and a guest appearance from that band’s vocalist, Calexico collaborator Salvador Duran, whose contribution of whistling would put Andrew Bird to shame. Lopez sounded appropriately vulnerable and melancholic during his solo set, backed by a virtuoso band as he nailed “Praying for Rain” and a cover of “Leda Atomica” on the patio, by far Pachanga’s best-sounding stage. As with preceding act Pinata Protest — too few punk bands feature accordions — it was a shame more people weren’t there to see it.

But the beauty of the East Side’s verdant Fiesta Gardens is that — unlike inaugural Pachanga venue Waterloo Park — shade is never more than a few paces away, and crowds were appreciable if not acutely impressive on the pavilion stage, where Chicano legends Tortilla Factory blew through a loose, charming set heavy on appealing covers, from an energized take on the Gipsy Kings’ “Bamboleo” to a soulful “Stand By Me.” Original vocalist Bobby Butler remains an endearing stage presence, capable of blending English and Spanish, blues and tejano, with an ease unmatched by any other performer.

Cross-park Grupo Fantasma side project Brownout demonstrated why they’re the tightest, funkiest thing currently going in Austin, tearing into “Nawlins,” off last year’s game-changing “Aguilas Y Cobras.” Adrian Quesada took a moment to plug Grupo’s later show with legendary Fania Records producer Larry Harlow, calling him “why we do what we do.”

The tide turned and crowds thickened as the worst of the mid-afternoon heat passed. Tucson’s Y La Orkestra proved the major discovery of the festival, a sort of more avant, experimental (but equally expansive) Arizonan version of Grupo Fantasma — they’ve dubbed themselves “indie mambo,” which says it about as well as anything, really — with a killer lead vocalist in Salvador Duran. By the time Pilar Diaz took to the patio at 5 p.m., spinning a distinctly Latino take on twee indie-pop, Pachanga was properly hopping. The evening brought unlikely covers — David Garza taking on ZZ Top’s “Tush,” joyous all-female mariachi band Mariachi Las Altenas using a few bars of Kelis’ “Milkshake.” You haven’t lived until you’ve seen a mariachi croon “My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard.”

New York’s Pacha Massive brought feel-good world fusion to the Hierba stage as the sun set, with horn player Vince Veloso an unexpected treat — with four horns strapped to his person, and brandishing a flute like a samurai sword, Veloso was captivating even before playing a single note. San Antonio’s 60’s-evoking, Sir-Douglas-Quintet-by-way-of-Beach-Boys-harmonies rockers Hacienda ripped into songs off sophomore album “Big Red and Barbacoa,” proving themselves yet again one of the most exciting rock bands to come out of Central Texas in years. Hacienda have all the easy polish you’d expect of regular tour mates of Black Key Dan Auerbach, with good-natured banter with the audience and an effortless-appearing mastery of their instruments.

The “trendy and buzzed Latino act” slot that last year served Mexican Institute of Sound went to Bomba Estereo this year, and they were an equally ideal headliner to fetch the attentions of the younger, more dance-inclined festivalgoers even as tejano legend Roberto Pulidio provided more professional, family-friendly fare on the main pavilion stage. Bomba Estereo’s cumbia-with-a-modern-twist formula makes for engaging listening, all the more so under the direction of firebrand vocalist Liliana Saumet. Saumet’s often compared to M.I.A. or Santigold, but that’s not fair — she’s significantly better live than either, and as the crowd jumped along to infectious dance tune “Fuego” it was clear that Pachanga’s meticulous good sense in sussing out which international bands to book was as on target as ever.

There remain chinks to be ironed out in the still-growing festival, but from choice of venue to booking sense Pachanga defined itself yet again one of Austin’s musical events most worthy of watching. Bring on number four.

Lineup

Pachanga Schedule
The Austin Chronicle: MAY 21, 2010

Vitera
1:40pm, Pavilion Stage

Don't call Vitera "crossover." That's too soft a word for the tough, bilingual rock this local quintet makes. Brothers Haydn and David Vitera prefer "rock alterLatino," particularly given the former's electric and electrifying fiddle and golden (brown) voice. The group's debut is forthcoming. – Margaret Moser

Brian Lopez
2pm, Patio Stage

Tuscon's Jeff Buckley, guitarist Brian Lopez steps out from Arizona's Grupo Fantasma – Pachanga juggernaut Y la Orkesta – but not too far: Orkesta leader Sergio Mendoza holds down the piano and accordion under the sextet's violins and cellos, while Salvador Duran provides guest vocals. That leaves Lopez on shred and emote duties, his specialties. – Raoul Hernandez

Amplified Heat
2:40pm, Hierba Stage

Ever wonder what Amplified Heat's skuzzy Texas blues would taste like bottled and distilled? The local power trio has its own Big Daddy's Hot Sauce (Mean Smokin' Green Hot Sauce), whose smoked jalapeño flavor perfectly complements the Ortiz brothers' classic Red River shuffle on 2007's How Do You Like the Sound of That (Arclight). – Austin Powell

Tortilla Factory
3pm, Pavilion Stage

Tortilla Factory was way ahead of the game as a mixed-race 1970s Chicano soul outfit performing across the country. Four decades later, they're essentially a family band, still led by the legendary Tony "Ham" Guerrero and still pumping out exuberant, nonstop pop, rock, and soul. Guerrero and original vocalist Bobby Butler reunited in 2008 for All That Jazz, nominated in 2009 for Best Tejano Album in the Latin Grammys. – Margaret Moser


Brownout
3:20pm, Patio Stage

Like the J.B.'s to James Brown or Mr. Hyde to Dr. Jekyll, Brownout is the mostly instrumental alter ego of Grupo Fantasma. Once regarded as either warm-up or an after-hours wind-down to the main attraction, the eightpiece ensemble has gained near-equal footing thanks to last year's sophomore stunner, Aguilas and Cobras (Six Degrees), a surreal collection of Latin funk jams that features contributions from members of White Denim and Hacienda. – Austin Powell

Y la Orkesta
4:30pm, Pavilion Stage

Sergio Mendoza's Pérez Prado covers night has ballooned into Tucson, Ariz.'s 10-piece cumbia and salsa rock big band Y la Orkesta, starring the Calexico cell member's Willie Nelson, Calexico guest vocalist Salvador Duran, and Pachanga showcaser in his own right, guitarist Brian Lopez. "Indie mambo" grooved by sixpiece horns and two drummers. – Raoul Hernandez


Pilar Díaz
5pm, Patio Stage

Jetting in from Madrid two days before her Pachanga debut, Chilean-born L.A. multitasker Pilar Díaz imports her snappy Bangles en Español-like video "Ilegal en Estyle" just in time for immigration legislation making its way through the Southwest. Formerly of Neil Young's Vapor Records' rockers Los Abandoned, Danny Elfman collaborator, and onetime Bulgarian choirista, Díaz remains her own cottage industry of multicultural/-dimensional voz. – Raoul Hernandez
Mariachi las Alteñas
6pm, Pavilion Stage

Good mariachi music strikes you in the chest. Such is the case with San Anotnio's ninepiece Mariachi las Alteñas. Awing last year's Pachanga gathering, the musically astute ensemble not only delivers instrumentally, its all-female vocals are as rich and robust as any of its male counterparts, with the added pleasure of razor-sharp harmonies. ¡Sí, señora! – Belinda Acosta

David Garza
6:40pm, Patio Stage

Last year's unofficial Pachanga emcee, David Garza returns for another festival match of Six Degrees from Dah-veed. In addition to last year's Twang Twang Shock-a-Boom reunion, Shed Light, Garza's free best-of from his new millennial digital archives, just hit MP3, and he's begun recording a follow-up to 2008 mainstream comeback Dream Delay. Bets on who Garza's guesting with this year will be taken at the Pachanga box office. – Raoul Hernandez

DJ Dus
8:45pm, Chicano Soul Cafe

Dusty Oliveira's collection of mixtapes and mash-ups knows no borders. The Corpus Christi DJ's adept at mixing cumbia with dance and hip-hop, finding that sweet percussive spot, and mining something he calls "the science of the vibe." A walking sample sale. – Audra Schroeder


Bomba Estéreo
9:30pm, Hierba Stage

"Suddenly, the phone rings with a call from Colombia. Juan Carlos Losada, a very good friend of mine, is screaming and very excited about this crazy music festival in Austin, Texas, a place I had no reference for." So wrote Bomba bassist/looper Simón Mejía in March for a "My SXSW" diary about his Colombian quintet's 2009 voyage here. Seductress Li Saumet out front of the group's electro/acoustic bilingual slink (think early Manu Chao) guarantees more chapters in this tale. – Raoul Hernandez

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Tuesday, May 04, 2010

Friday, December 18, 2009

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Thursday, October 01, 2009

The Women and the Waves



THE LATEST!
New York Surf Film Festival
@the Tribeca Cinemas in Manhattan
September 26, 2009, 6:10 pm www.nysurffilm.com

Bend Film Festival
Bend, Oregon
October 8 - 11, 2009 www.bendfilm.org

Taos Mountain Film
Taos, New Mexico
October 8-11, 2009 www.mountainfilm.net

Film Series @ University of Hawaii, Oahu
October 11, 2009 For More Info: 808.223.0130

LA Femme Film Festival
Los Angeles, Ca.
October 15-18, 2009 www.lafemme.org

Surfer Magazine Review, August '09 Issue
"...a well-rounded indie account of the
estrogen-filled side of the sport."

SELDA

Friday, September 18, 2009

FISHFRY roughes


Songs by Jennifer Fishback.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Violet Horizon


New Record Release by Rob Balducci on Favored Nations

Music by Rob Balducci
Bass Ethan Meixsell
Drums Ian Fry

Listen HERE and the first 3 songs atmyspace.com/robbalducci

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Hello - Kings of Heart



Kings of Heart is Gabriel Renfrow

Friday, June 12, 2009

Last Year's Montreal Jazz Fest Review


Erik Leijon (CHARTattack) 7•2•2008

It may seem like an elitist, overly civic-minded thing to say, but if you weren't in Montreal in 1997 to witness Bran Van 3000's shattering of the glass ceiling that seemed to block so many local bands in that dreary decade, then you truly can't comprehend how this collective of poets, artists, rappers and musicians represented a new horizon for a city that seemed well on its way to oblivion.

Two years removed from a vitriolic sovereignty referendum — where the underlying feelings of resentment that permeated from both sides came out in the wash — businesses were leaving the city left and right, and most anglophones couldn't wait to pack their belongings and head down Highway 20 to the 401. Then came Bran Van 3000's 1997 debut album, Glee, which remains the closest anyone has ever gotten to a party on a disc. It had lyrics in both English and French and signalled the worst was over and the healing process was ready to begin. In these more optimistic days, Bran Van 3000 and others deserve credit for getting us through the rough patches.

Much like how the Bran Van 3000 extended family can all go their separate ways, yet congregate at the raising of some telepathic bat signal, more than 100,000 Montrealers, tourists and fans felt their party senses tingling and simply knew to show up to this monumental event.

Beginning with ex-Doughboys frontman John Kastner on guitar, vocalists Sara Johnston and Jayne Hill (the only members beyond BV3 mastermind James Di Salvio to appear on 2001's Discosis) performed "I Won't Lie" from 2007's Rose and "Speed" from Discosis before Di Salvio enthusiastically jumped in, thanked the crowd and broke into full party-rap mode. They all looked ageless, as if they had spent the last 10 years relaxing on a tropical beach, getting their batteries charged just for this performance. Even the material from Rose sounded much better live, and it flowed seamlessly with Discosis' electronic/world music flourishes and Glee's anarchic, structureless hip-hop. The rapping on the French "Forest" and the English "Afrodiziak" exemplified the fun nature of early Bran Van as they mixed all three albums in a series of medleys.

As with any massive, outdoor jazz fest show, the sound doesn't carry well down Sainte-Catherine Street, and most people settled for an obstructed view of the stage. It didn't deter fans from going absolutely ballistic when the 13-piece group (which featured what appeared to be a lot of old jazz guys) jumped into "Astounded," with bassist Gary McKenzie singing the Curtis Mayfield parts to near perfection. This was the first time the group were playing the Discosis songs live, yet they sounded surprisingly familiar. The back-to-back playing of Glee's haunting Jayne Hill-led ballad "Everywhere" and the legendary "Drinking In L.A." inspired the crowd to sing along and wave their arms en masse. Ex-Me, Mom And Morgentaler frontwoman Kim Bingham and rapper Steve "Liquid" Hawley brought endless energy as the stage became progressively more and more filled with familiar faces.

Eleven years after proving a Montreal band didn't need to mimic their Canadian and American counterparts to achieve success, Bran Van 3000 still serve a purpose beyond nostalgia. During their hiatus, fans would speak glowingly about how a Bran Van 3000 concert was a guaranteed party. With so many young outsiders coming to Montreal for an inexpensive college education, it was always hard to explain the aura surrounding the group. After this reunion show in Montreal, it's safe to say the legend lives on and will hopefully continue to grow.

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Thursday, June 11, 2009