Category Archives: music

Annie Where the Sun Don’t Shine, Milk and the Honeys

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This unique Alaskan band has a family at its core: Jesse’s brother James plays drums, His wife sings and plays ukulele, and now they have Jeremy (from Savvy) on banjo, Sarah Mitchell on vocals, and Patrick Mailloux on bass. They played perky reggae versions of pop songs and sexy poppy originals!/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/6fd/6122708/files/2015/01/img_0072.jpgOnce Annie was alone, then she was joined by Meghan on Harmonica and Eli on guitar. Now eli plays an electric, they have Rebecca File on a miniature acoustic Bass and Hard hitting Punk drummer Matt Harris on the drums. They ROCK now, but they don’t play often because Annie lives in Juneau, but soon it will be Washington D.C.

Totally by accident, my friend’s Paul and Deven’s Christmas card is in the background. oops.

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Era Coda, Bustin Jeiber, Deathhorse Paleons, The Longshots, Spiderwolf Death Horse

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Smooth crystal clear old school ska.

https://www.facebook.com/thelongshotsska

https://thelongshotsska.bandcamp.com/album/the-longshots-ep

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Wow,  band that plays odd time signatures, never harshly disorted, just jazzy and delightful and shimmering like Mahavishnu Orchestra or Frank Zappa. And OMG there is a vibraphone. PURE AUDIO BLISS, but this is a young band with no recordings yet.

100_3717 100_3719https://paleons.bandcamp.com/releases  Postrock heavyness from Eugene.

100_3714 Zang, Bustin Jeiber play awesome funk. I am sometimes annoyed by saxophones but this band is amazeballs.  https://bustinjieber.bandcamp.com/

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SPIDERWOLF/DEATHHORSE. confusing but appealing weird math rock jam band.

https://www.facebook.com/spiderwolfdeathhorse

Weezer, Human Ottoman

I haven’t been able to go to as many shows this semester as I did before, but I still make it to a few and of course, I am always drawing.

It was awesome to see childhood heroes Weezer play in Portland. They played a few old gems, including “she’s all I got and I don’t want to be alone!” Great show, the lights were fun, the choir and extra guest performers kept it mixed up and exciting! Weee! oh and I painted with coffee because that’s what was lying around.

Weezer at the Roseland Ballroom in Portland

Weezer at the Roseland Ballroom in Portland

One of my favorite local Eugene bands that combines math rock with jazz and a bit of everything: Human ottoman. Their songs are available to listen free online here.

Human Ottoman at Sam Bonds

Human Ottoman at Sam Bonds

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Crushed Out! and Browntown

Crushed Out have an amazing retro sound: a very surfy wet guitar tone and peppy drums.  A couple covers were quite welcome and got the crowd up and dancing. Someone might superficially call them a “rockabilly White Stripes.” Vocals are high and airy, like Elliott Smith or Crosby Stills and Nash. Lots of lyrics about love, birds, sharks and surfers. My favorite was “Sweaty, Sweaty Dress” and I’ll never get the epic riff from “To Sing True of Love” out of my head.

I tried a realistic look

I tried a realistic look

Moselle does the art for her band, I think its neat that a single person does all the art for the merch, cd covers and t shirts, that way there is a single vision and oeuvre. She puts waves and dripping water in the art, so I put some in my drawing. She also did animation for the music video, “to sing true of love.” She told me part of touring which is just as important as sharing music with fans is seeing the beauty of the natural world in our National State Parks. She listed her favorite as the Anhinga trail in the florida Everglades because it was so full of wildlife. “Like a zoo, but the animals are free and in their habitat.” Another thing I like to ask touring bands is, “what do you eat on tour?”

Moselle- “We like to cook rice and a vegetable, a one pot cowboy meal. We try to eat out as little as possible. We eat souerkraut, mac and cheese with Kale, one treat we really like is canned trout from Trader Joes, on a stone wheat cracker with onions.

Raw onions?

“yep.”

She said the band raised money to record their album by playing in small New Hampshire bars in the Mt. Washington Valley. “We brought our own sound system and we’d play for 3 hours for a couple hundred bucks. We started a music scene, kids started bands just for the chance to open for us. We played at the Red Fox restaurant in Jackson, New Hampshire and it eventually turned into the weekly dance party in town. We read an article that listed us in the top 10 bands of New Hapshire and we said, “Who are the other 9? we want to be friends with them!” -Moselle

Was guitar your first instrument?

“I started playing when I was 11, to Led Zeppelin and Nirvana’s “Nevermind.” Guitar was  basically the first instrument I stayed focused on.” -Franklin

Two of your songs have a very cool blues vibe, with turnarounds. (Early in the Morning and Wormtongue)
I think that makes them sound a lot like the White Stripes, ( is that what someone really unfamiliar with the blues guitar would say?) Is it really Mississippi John Hurt or someone older who popularized those familiar turnarounds? did you first play blues turnarounds learning Jimmy Paige songs?
I like how all the songs sound surfy, but they all sound different too.
Maybe “Mermaid Chant” has the most surf-like riffs, but “True Love” sounds like Buddy Holly or a girl group song.

I’ve seen some guitarists play with several delay pedals in chain. How do you get your delay tone? Are the same pedals you play with live the ones on the record?
You had two amps, right? what is the reason for that? does a different mix go to each one?
Is one clean and loud, and the other… a tube? with more of a crunchy or “tight” sound?”
“I have one delay pedal that is a ‘tape echo simulator’. I used a 1968 Echoplex tube tape echo on our album TEETH, but live the unit gets hot and stops producing echo in the middle of the show. So I’ve bought this El Capistan Strymon echo pedal. It’s almost identical to the analog tape echo. I have a Spring reverb running through a 1965 Fender Bassman, to get a surfy guitar sound. I have the tape echo running through a 1964 Silvertone 1483 bass amp so the sound is wider. Everything of mine is vintage but the pedals and my stratocaster, which is new from a builder in NYC.”

Here I went full on silly cartoon.

Here I went full on silly cartoon.

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This is a monotype, I painted watercolor and water soluble markers on a sheet of plexiglass over the original drawing. Then I pressed it against a wet piece of printing paper and transferred the image.

to see the old post i made about this band look here. (the drawings are better this time.)

Brown Town from Corvallis

Brown Town from Corvallis

Brown Town opened the show, they are a garage rock band from Corvallis. They play a fun bouncy style reminiscent of the Kinks. One member sings and plays the tambourine and another looks like Chris Dowd. They played a Monkees cover.

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Sabe Flores in Eugene

 

 

Sabe Flores came to Eugene to play some venues including Cozmic Pizza where I drew her and Connor MacLeod.

And Whirled pies where I got to play with her. Fun times! She is playing more in Alaska this summer!100_3219sabe 100_3217sabe

She visited the Village School and told students about having a career in music! She has been able to travel to Brazil and received scholarships but it takes lots of practice! The kids loved her! Connor kicks butt on the banjo too!100_3152 100_3149

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Mood Area 52 and Geo 4

100_2908 100_2910 100_2907 100_2906Some drawings I made of the always wonderful Mood Are 52… and the band they opened for “GEO 4” a new jazz group that leans towards tango, funk, gypsy and (in my opinion) loungy surf rock like “the Aquavelvets.”

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Wood Brothers at WOW Hall with Amy Helm and the Handsome Strangers

woodbrothersAmy Helm played a soulful and energetic set at Wow hall. Her band is fantastic, with a guitar player who can solo like the devil possesses his fingers, and a bass player who plays a ukulele through an octave pedal? Her drummer smiled the whole set through, playing a washboard and a charming piecemeal kit.

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I have listened to The Wood Brothers for years and loved their first two records especially. Their drummer, Jono could play the melodica with haunting, beautiful tones while playing drums! Sometimes he played an acoustic guitar like a drum, slapping it and striking it with brushes. The Wood Bros played very tight, singing backup harmonies and just putting on a fantastic show. This was the best show I’ve ever seen at Wow Hall. They didn’t play some of my favorites (where my baby might be Chocolate on my tongue, The truth is the light, but I didn’t mind as the newer songs are beautiful too. Oliver’s voice is unique and timeless, he would have fit in in the 7os or much earlier. Chris has incredible control over his bass, playing chords and slides and occasionally playing it with a bow.  It was fun to hear their old hits re-imagined as dancey poppy tunes. To hear what I am talking about, look them up on Spotify and listen to Luckiest man,  One more day, and Atlas. off of their live album. “tooth and nail” and “Sky High.”

100_2877 100_2878 100_2880It was especially fun when the two bands would combine and form a Hootenanny! Yeehaw! They played the classic Levon Helm song “Ophelia.” That and their other encore, something about making love, were both the highlights of the show!

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Libertine Belles (PDX)

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The Libertine Bells play old timey folk pop and “prohibition era swing” with three part harmonies. washboard percussion, ukuleles, banjos, washtub bass, winks and sexual innuendo. I love to hear a live band that creates a mood in the space like you’ve traveled back in time. Do you like Lambert, Hendricks and Ross? How about go father back and enjoy the Andrews Sisters’ Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy from Company B? You have got to hear their song ” Heartstring Tinkerin’ Tom” and their fun version of Minnie the Moocher.

If you enjoy music like this, and who doesn’t? Check out The Moonlighters, The Ditty Bops, Paris Combo, Manhattan Transfer  and the Pupini Sisters
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 They may be silly sometimes, but they aren’t messing around they have serious chops and including a trumpet player is definitely classy.

 

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Secret Lover, with Interview!

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All the way from Massachusettes, Secret Lover played Wandering Goat last night. Their fun, nostalgic pop is reminiscent of Blondie and Be Your Own Pet. Sally danced around and encouraged the crowd to get into the groove. The boys all sang backup and demonstrated their hip East coast fashion sense.

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She didn’t really have a blue wig, but, I call it artistic liberty. My favorites on their EP are “3D glasses” and “Perfect Wednesday” but all the songs were good.

Here is their interview, front woman and booking agent Sally answered the questions.

Do you get booked alongside other “girl bands” or bands with female members? What are advantages or disadvantages to that?

I think people do go out of there way to book us with other “girl bands.”  it’s always awesome playing with other girls,  and it’s not always something you see at shows. But still it’s more important to me just to play with good bands and good people than to play with strictly girl bands.

I assume you are traveling in a van? what is the make and model? Do you have any stories of it being less than reliable?

Yup, we have a van. very reliable. it’s a dodge caravan, ‘96 or ‘98. we really haven’t had any trouble with it. It’s Dave’s and he keeps it in tip top shape. he and the van have a special connection.

In my experience, traveling with men in vans results in a macho one upmanship of filthy jokes, is this the case for your band? Sally, do you keep the boys in check? or joke along with them?

They are filthy, vile little things. no, just kidding. apparently they hold back when I’m around, although there definitely are lots of jokes about butts. especially in Butte, Montana.

You’ve got a certain sound that is very retro, was this a conscious decision, or what organically result from your styles combined?

I’m not sure. we actually started out wanting to be a disco band, which is an older sound. but the retro psych/pop vibe that a lot of people pick up on wasn’t really a conscious decision. I was really into Broadway and cabaret when I was a kid, I’m sure that those early music experiences affect the way i write songs. the guys all grew up listening to the  music their dads liked. 60s stuff mostly. Besides the disco thing, which was always a bit of a joke, we never set out to sound like anything or to be a certain type of band. What came out was a pretty natural emotional response.

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who does your album art? I like the look of masculine and feminine images mashed together.

John! He’s our guitarist. If you need anyone to make album art or flyers, ask him! Feminine and masculine mashed together, that’s an awesome way to describe it. In a way that’s how I feel when I’m performing.

All the  songs on The Lasso are really fun and sound great!  Perfect Wednesday, 3D Glasses, and Yesterdays Man, are fantastic! I appreciate backup vocals. Your lyrics and delivery are so sassy and spirited.  The guitars having chorus effects really give the record a “spooky” and late 70s, early 80s sound. what pedal do you use to get that sound?

Thanks! no pedals, but the amp has a built-in chorus.

What are the goals for the band? who do you want to play shows with? Definitely to keep improving  our sound and put out great albums.  That, of course, takes time. More short term, I would like to put out vinyl and tour overseas. We wanna play with all the freaky weird bands across the country.

Do you have an agent? Does a member of the band do that? If so, isn’t it exhausting? How do you fight burnout?

I (sally) do it! I like it actually. It’s interesting figuring out how to talk to people– what kinds of words get people’s attention, what tone to use,  and so on. It’s also fun to talk to people you never otherwise  would have met/had a reason to speak to.

What is a reliable cheap food source you turn to on the road?

GRUEL. We bring rice and lentils with us and cook it at people’s houses. it gets real mushy and we put it into a big bin and call it gruel.

There you have it folks- Thanks Sally and the whole band! Listen to their record; its awesome!

They shared the night with

100_2851 Bubba! zany instrumental punk

100_2849Dobis, Fuzzy, ramonsey punk with the occasional 60s pop reference.

and Paleons

100_2845A heavy loud instrumental band along the lines of Work, Tycho, Mogwai and Russian Circles. Lots of pedals and very technical playing. I would go see them again.

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