NWmainstage | Music from the Northwest to the World
28Jul/101

Complete 2010 Capitol Hill Block Party Rundown–Bam!!

Posted by Todd Hamm

Hell yeah

Friday

While the better part of my daylight hours on Friday were spent gawking over the gorgeous pastoral backdrop at a sunny farmland wedding, my night began with a shove through a chain-linked entrance in a gas station parking lot, into a knob-twisting funk display from a band named Holy Fuck. And like that, my 2010 Capitol Hill Block Party experience had begun.

As the Canadian groovesters fired rubber band bass licks out over the mainstage audience, I slid into Neumo's to catch J Pinder rock his set as part three of the "Fantastic Four Hip Hop Show" (the first to sets by Candidt and The Physics were sadly missed). As a performer, the young Seattle emcee brought bounce to the stage to match his positive-message lyricism, playing a collection of singles he's released on various mixtapes, EPs and features for other artists as he's yet to release a full length album of his own. Despite this lack of traditional notoriety, Pinder grabbed the audience with ease. Maybe it was simply that there was a new face on stage at a local hip hop showcase, or maybe it was an actual flash of brilliance that the crowd saw in the man, but the crowd seemed to hang from his every word, and they sung word for word during the chorus of his last song: "go faaaaaaar...."

Next, The Stahi Bros popped on stage just moments after J Pinder finished up. Local legends Vitamin D and Maineack delivered their loose-groove hip hop in flip flops and casual wear. Their stoned approach to songwriting and between-song banter was enough to make me smile, however a large slice of the audience had wandered outside to see MGMT take the mainstage. I stayed inside long enough to hear Stahi perform an Ish-less rendition of Jake One's "Home", and pushed my way out into the Pike Street corridor in front of the mainstage.

This was clearly what the people had come to see. The crowd was in hysterics for a majority of the set, as the duo (which expands to a quintet live) pounded out hits like "Kids" and "Electric Feel", then largely took a break during their newer material. After a near skirmish with an unruly pair of high school aged girls who were unaccustomed to the shove-shove back dynamic of a sold out crowd, I was ready to dance my ass off and have a great time, and before I new it, I was slugging airplane bottles of rum from someone's pocket and getting high-fives from chicks in bikinis from their boyfriend's shoulders.

Saturday

I'm sure there are better ways to wake up on a festival weekend than an 8 o'clock phone call from animal control saying they're holding your cat on $45 kitty-bail because one of your soft-minded neighbors turned him in last night for not wearing a collar, but the important thing was that I was awake, and my Saturday had begun. I had made it through another day in festival land, and was ready to embark on yet another...after I got my damn cat.

After dropping off my convict feline at home, I hopped a bus to Capitol Hill where I wandered into the new Big Mario's Pizza to fuel up for the day. Block Party promoter and Mad Rad manager Kerri Harrop was sitting at the bar with a slice of pepperoni in one hand, and a vodka-cranberry in the other. It was just after two in the afternoon. I asked her if she had just gotten there. "I might as well have slept here," she scoffed wearily. With my Saturday morning headache subsiding, I finished my crust and wandered over to Neumo's to catch the first show of the day.

At 2:30, Eastern Grip's set was in full swing at Neumo's. The Seattle band named after the third most popular tennis grip on the Grand Slam circuit were playing their hearts out to a half empty club, which is really quite respectable for a gig with a 2 p.m. start time. Their straight forward garage rock threatened often to erupt into something quite heavy, but usually broke stride and took on a more upbeat tone, and it seemed to be this kind of unpredictability that begat their draw. Their lively stage presence carried over to their post-show banter as guitarist Rory McAuley told me after their set: "It was one of the most fun gigs I've ever played. Setting up I was worried nobody would show up, but people came." He went on to say that the power cut out to most of his effects pedals mid-way through the show, but overall "it went smoothly."

The Redwood Plan was lighting up the Mainstage when I ambled out of Neumos at roughly 3:02, and into the blaring sunlight. The group sounds like a slightly less 80s-tastic version of Gossip, the Portland-based pop powerhouse that graced the very same mid-Pike Street platform exactly one year ago. On stage there is constant jumping, clapping, and a guy waving a tambourine that may very well be the happiest man on Earth (who I would later see pull off a wicked back-spin on stage at the Dickies booth). Their hit "Je Suis Romantique" ("I Am Romantic") stands out as a definite highlight, but their whole set is extremely well done, and easy to get into.

It was somewhere in the ballpark of 3:17 when I made my first trip over to the Vera Stage; the smallish outdoor venue set up along the eastern edge of the festival grounds on 11th Avenue that draws it's name from the youth music and arts outreach program based in the Seattle Center that happens to be one of the Block Party's primary beneficiaries. Seattle thrash-metal band Cold Lake was tearing through the speakers at perhaps the hottest moments of the day (my phone told me it was 81°); their simple teeth-grinding riffs building tangible layers until they finally dropped into massive stuttering breakdowns toward the end of each song. The frontman's rough snarls and roars also left the crowd fuzzy-eared and wide-eyed if nothing else.

Feeling a little cooked, I ducked into Neumo's at close to 3:29 to escape the heat, where I caught the last song from local country-rock band Hallways. The song was more hard driving than others I've heard from the band, with wailing vocals from co-singer Stephanie Parrish and southern rock slides coming off Grant Burton's guitar that resembled something The Lonely H might have designed; I was diggin' it.

I happened to run into Festival organizer Dave Meinert as I left the beer garden surrounding Neumo's with his six month old daughter Olympia Baby Bjorn-ed to his chest. Appearing quite mellow, he confessed that his work was mainly done for the weekend, and that this day was his day to rest and hopefully expand upon the two hours of sleep he managed the night before. I wished him good luck and was on my way.

Moments later I was in the Cafe Vita Bean Room where KEXP had set up a remote broadcast for the weekend, and was only moments away from witnessing an intimate on-air set from the eight-member electro-funk band !!! (pronounced chk-chk-chk) before their Mainstage performance. As the clock struck 4:02, the switch was flipped and KEXP host DJ Michele Meyers kicked it over to the New York via Sacramento groove outfit, and as I started to roll tape, they ran away with the show. Sadly, my "tape" (handheld camera with a shitty batter life) ran out before singer/lead dancer Nic Offer climbed the coffee sack pile, hopping--or gyrating rather--from bag to bag ten feet above his band on the floor, but it happened, I promise! The crowd's cheers drew attention from the street, as passers-by flooded into the little room until my sunglasses were fogged by my neighbor's breaths. Offer ran through moves that looked like the rope-climb, the hula hoop and the water-tread before he delivered a healthy dose of the air-hump. Met with a swirl of shouts and whistles, the frontman returned to the ground and the band closed out with their single "AM/FM", which was sung as "K-E-X-P, ninety point three, Sea-ttle" for the occasion.

I made it back to the Mainstage at around 4:23 to catch Obits. The Sub Pop-signed, Brooklyn-based indie-punk quartet had come recommended as a band not to miss at several points earlier in the day, but the guys looked a little bored as they played outside of guitarist Sohrab Habibion along the right side of the stage, who's big time twisting and headbanging showed that he, at least, had come to rock. While the tightly woven, methodically written songs sounded crisp and Spoon-like over the sound system as it does on record, the band lacked any real kind of crowd interaction, engagement...movement really of any kind, and it irked me a bit. Rick Froberg's raspy yell brought a little life to the show, but it wasn't quite enough to get me rocking like I wanted to.

After Obits' set, I walked past a room that appeared to be sponsored by Vitamin Water in which the unmistakably tattooed Christopher Mansfield of Fences was strumming his way through some sombre ballad or another, and I would have stopped to listen, but I was all set to see Gabriel Teodros's project Air 2 A Bird on the Vera Stage, and kept moving. A collaborative effort of MC Teodros and MC/producer Amos Miller, the group played some seriously beautiful music with angelic backup vocals from Canary Sing's/Seattle Weekly's Hollis Wong-Wear. The production was bass-heavy yet easy on the ears--and soul, with uplifting verses and chanted choruses over a backdrop of sampled bird noises to make it go down smooth.

I again walked past the Dickies booth after the concert in time (5:36) to see Ballard MC Grynch leaning off the edge of the small stage-lounge after some kind of interview to autograph a female fan's exposed breasts. A quick interrogation after the fact concluded that it was in fact his first boob-autograph, and that he was excited to have been given the opportunity.

Next I heard a song from The Drowning Men inside Neumo's while I was waiting for Avi Buffalo to take the Mainstage. TDM were crafting some intense mood music, something sad and powerful with keys and guitar when they were overtaken by Avi Buffalo at approximately 6:14. AB's three members stood huddled close together--facing each other even, coaxing laid back sunny day music from their instruments and each other, playing as if they were simply rehearsing in someone's basement or backyard. They laughed and re-tuned guitar and bass between several songs, then broke into song like it had just happened incidentally. Twenty minutes later, I wandered into Neumo's feeling good about life.

Local funk-rap girlfriend duo Thee Satisfaction had just started in on their set, and the crowd was already in bounce mode, seeming compelled to leave the ground with every soul-sampled snare smack. The ultra-jazzy production sounded even cleaner and more textured than it had the last time I had caught one of their shows, maybe it was the quality of sound system, or maybe they're simply getting better. They looked and sounded more confident in their moves and raps than I think they have ever before, as Stas delivered concise, matter-of -fact spoken word between Cat's nurturing croons. It's the best Thee Sat. show I've seen to date, and possibly the best show I saw all day.

From Neumo's, I traveled down the block to the only one of the festival's four official stages I hadn't been to yet to catch Born Anchors at the Cha Cha. The carefully monitored attendance at the door was both reassuring and disheartening at first entrance. The venue's unofficial, overheated, overstuffed, wild ass show's during past block parties will continue to define the bar in my memory, although I'm sure this newer approach is much preferred by the fire marshal. After a short wait in line, I was allowed downstairs with space to move around, where I heard BA's splashy indie pop although I couldn't really see it happen. The "stage" area was set up un-elevated in the corner under the stairs where it was nearly impossible to view, which was a little annoying, but the band had recently added a rhythm guitarist and backup female vocalist that added some nice dimension to their streamlined sound, and it sounded great. The guitars were still nice and edgy live despite initial reviews of their new album reporting the contrary. With a lack of focal point from where I was standing, I grabbed a tall can of Tecate and got my mingle on while the hometown boy's (and girl) played the soundtrack. Just minutes after BA's set was wrapped up, a band called Virgin started up that sounded a lot like Cheap Trick, which is when I shook some hands and headed for the HG Lodge.

The HG Lodge was an unofficial, outside-the-gates venue this year as the Cha Cha had been in years past. Standing on the grounds of the old War Room with an awesome roof-top deck and roof-top-deck bar, the place was hosting a one year anniversary party for local record label/late night party pushers Members Only. They had invited about a dozen performers to play twenty minute micro-sets on the roof, and things were going swimmingly when I arrived at 8:05. There was a sheet cake at one end of the bar, which I forwent in favor of a $1 Pabst while my favorite local hip hop group of the moment Dark Time Sunshine (Onry Ozzborn of Grayskul) sent intermittently sublime and ear shattering noise into the cloudless sky. Finishing with "View Items 2" and "Run" from DTS's incredible debut Vessel, Ozzborn said his thanks and handed the mic to the next performer. Artist both local and national were lounging everywhere, taking a break from the busy festival environment a block away to relax and drink some cheap booze. I brushed shoulders with Ant, the production half of the night's Mainstage headliners Atmosphere and got a solid high five in before heading back through the gates of Block Party proper.

Grynch was rocking the Vera Stage when I wandered in at 8:41. The street was fairly packed and there were kids everywhere reciting the lyrics to tracks like "Chemistry" and "If Only" right along with the MC. I'm constantly surprised by the support local acts like Grynch have earned, and shows like this give me a kind of perspective that I occasionally lose while covering the local music scene. I watched from the back and took down a snow cone as the sun went down. After the show, the twenty-four year old rapper told me he was driving to Tacoma to hang out with Warren G (yeah that Warren G) who was playing a show in town that night, and I headed to Neumo's to see the next band.

At nine minutes after nine, Seattle's Past Lives was absolutely tearing it up. Between repeated gushes of "thanks you for having us" and "thank you so much for coming," lead screamer Jordan Blilie contorted his gangly frame and wrung unheard of decibels from his vocal chords on a number of occasions. Conversely, drummer Mark Gajadhar (also of Champagne Champagne fame) was making his ridiculous drum fills look easy behind the set, while the remaining two musicians were difficult to distinguish at first as they were both playing six string instruments, but were both rocking aptly regardless. The post-hardcore thrash gave me a much needed jolt of energy I needed to power through the rest of the night, and I speed-walked back to the Vera Stage.

Tomo Nakayama was spinning a beautiful thread of song with the rest of Grand Hallway just after ten. While I only counted six members on stage at the time, the band sounded rich and full under the wavering stars. There was a lone woman dancing wildly at the top fire escape five stories up the side of a neighboring building that pretty much captured the moment brilliantly. Nakayama's surprisingly powerful voice rang heartfelt through the 11th Avenue corridor, painting painful pictures of relationships near their end, only to clean things up with a care-free love song here and there, and closing out with "Raindrops" from their latest Promenade for an overall beautiful set.

After grabbing a burger outside the Wild Rose ("extra bloody" I said. "I don't have time!"), I headed to the Mainstage to catch what would be my final show of the evening. Atmosphere was spreading their emo-rap on thick at 10:45 to an audience packed nearly as tight as the MGMT set the night before. Standing on the sidewalk outside the Comet Tavern, I couldn't help but feel as though I had outgrown the Minneapolis duo a bit. While they have definitely done a lot for the do-it-yourself music scene, their music has crossed over into the mainstream pop jungle, void almost entirely of the angst-ridden journal entry rap that MC Slug grew to fame for. Ant's production has taken some interesting turns, but the added instrumentation has only seemed to detract from the original feel of the group. Regardless of my "professional" opinions however, I sang openly along with "Modern Man's Hustle" and "Godlovesugly" before grabbing a ride home to recharge for a busy Block Party Sunday.

Burnout

Sunday

Sunday was a day marked by bizarre music, play dates, and having to miss The Dead Weather because of work. Sure, I had seen the supergroup less than a year ago at the Paramount, but the new album is fantastic--probably the best thing in rock music right now actually--and as most anyone who's seen any Jack White band play before will tell you, you simply don't pass up an opportunity to see the man perform. As much luck as I had had skirting my restaurant job obligations all weekend however, I simply had to work.

I did get to see the first couple of shows though, and after dropping my step son off at his friend's house for a pre-arranged play date, I made the journey up The Hill for the final time of the weekend. I had a serious case of festival back, but I had little in the way of a hangover as I had smartly decided to take it easy the night before; the mark of a true three day festival veteran. I slunk into Neumo's and witnessed a group of four middle aged men wearing nothing but glittery gold spankies beneath their guitars and bunny rabbit cloth helmets above their shirtless upper halves. I soon discovered they were called the Steel Tigers of Death, and they sounded to have a pretty good thing going. Their So-Cal style punk was just simple enough for my mostly fried brain to understand this early (2 p.m.) in the day, yet just rowdy enough to get me excited about seeing some live music. They were actually quite good at what they did, and constantly pretended to be lost in their intros, looking at each other puzzled, and wandering around stage before making a coordinated drop into a heavily distorted rocker.

The Horde and The Harem were up next on the Vera Stage. Their soft psychedelia brushed past me but didn't necessarily grab me, probably because it was an extremely strange follow up to mostly naked punk rock show I had just come from, and I ended up not staying long.

The Maldives took the Mainstage at ten minutes to three, and proved once again that they're one of the cities best bands. Singer Jason Dodson's earnest words were sung in beautiful harmonies and rounds by the rest of the band, who's members pitched in when they were called upon to contribute, unselfish in their understanding of song, and obvious love for the music they were making. Panning the faces of the musicians, not one appeared out of place or uneasy; they looked as though they were right where they were supposed to be, and like they'd been there forever.

The surf-electronica off the bat of Flexions caught my ear next inside Neumo's, as the three piece played with such a finished drone that I initially thought all the sounds were pre-programmed. A few sirens and ambient wails were tossed in from the synth-tray, but the majority of the sounds were created live, with metronome-consistant bass surges and sharp keyboard whines that would probably make some bad ass soundtrack music.

With my in time at the restaurant creeping steadily nearer, I decided to take in Capitol Hill's own party boys Mad Rad as my final hurrah. Dressed in business slacks, pastel button-up shirts and ties, hair parts and all, the trio was joined as always by their loyal touring turn table-ist DJ Darwin (who was surprisingly clean cut) along with Head Like A Kite live drummer Trent Moorman and two members of Mt. St. Helens Vietnam Band wielding guitars who were standing next to a woman seated in a chair with a cello. Suffice to say it was a big operation. Producer P Smoov's jarring electro-stabs pierced the air to the delight of their Capitol Hill brethren in the crowd, setting off on the anthemic "Party Mountain", an ode to their elevated debaucherous playground, which was followed by more new material from their upcoming, yet untitled sophomore release. They were flamboyant as always: MC Buffalo Madonna climbed speakers while band mate Terry Radjaw sprayed bottles of water over as much of the crowd as he could reach. There were tortillas being flung like frisbies across the crowd, but it was difficult to tell whether they were coming from the stage or the crowd. A new song called "Epiphany" was a definite highlight, with a refrain of "you only live once" to really drive the point home. Massive synthesizers crashed through the speakers until they closed out their set with the crowd in hysterics. The wild crowd reaction proved that they are truly Capitol Hill's favored sons: the new Lashes or what have you; they owned the Mainstage.

At about four o'clock I finally headed for Pine Street, past the young girls skipping double dutch and the people trying to sneak in for free, as a cajun style wind ensemble played me out graciously, and I once again entered the real world beyond the Block Party.

Filed under: Concert Reviews 1 Comment
23Jul/101

Oceansize – SuperImposer (leak)

Oceansize

Posted by Todd Hamm

The first leak from Oceansize's fourth album Self Preserved While The Bodies Float Up is a return to the structured  chaos of early efforts like Everyone Into Position and the Music For Nurses EP. Released yesterday on the band's new Superball Music imprint, "SuperImposer" is bookended on either side with an edgy guitar flurry between which singer Mike Vennart runs taught strands through the upper register over a hectic time signature a la "One Out Of nONE".

It's good, and it's refreshing to hear the group gravitate toward to the kind of schizophrenic songwriting that piqued my interest in the first place, a good seven years ago. That being said, where past Oceansize tracks of this nature turn corner after corner, taking you down the proverbial rabbit hole as a listener, this song never seems to entirely unfold. There are flashes of promise everywhere--from the frantic intro/outro combination to the tightly wound guitar work behind Vennart's soft croons--but the bridge is soft and the melody is rather simplistic by comparison. The good news is that there's even more new Oceansize music on the way (SPWTBFU is due out September 6th in Europe, September 14th in the U.S.), and also that the release of the first single came with this delightful handwritten note from guitarist/keyboardist Gambler that you can check after the jump...

Oceansize - SuperImposer

Filed under: Track Reviews 1 Comment
15Jun/101

Song of the Day: Guthrie Scarr – “Voice of Reason”

Posted by Todd Hamm

It's not often I'll stumble upon a honky tonk jam that's rompin' stompin' enough to hold my attention for three and a half minutes, wake me up like a slap in the face or cup of coffee, and--although it would undoubtedly be of the awkward mock square variety--make me feel like dancing. "Voice of Reason" is written and performed by Seattle folk rocker and former Darlings of the Lo-fi bassist Guthrie Scarr (pictured left) along with an extremely talented backing band of young playmakers like Nate Stone (keys), Paul Ohnemus (drums), Brett Massa (bass); and journeyman grunge-era sound tech Ed Brooks (check your old Pearl Jam liner notes).

Guthrie Scarr - Voice of Reason

The song itself is not overbearing in it's complexity, nor does it rely solely on the singer/songwriter format that many name-bearing bands seem to. The track is rich and textured, uptempo and ironic in it's rowdiness. Scarr's chops on the guitar are evident in the ferociously picked riff that sets the tone from the jump, and holds steady through the duration of the track, interrupted by delightful minor breakdowns and his Axl Rose meets Ryan Adams vocals that lay over the top nicely, nearly daring the listener to have a good time.

Front cover

I pulled "Voice of Reason" from Scarr's debut solo EP Wasted Grace which you can track down on CD Baby's site HERE. While the remaining four songs on the release are of a more reserved nature, and often beg for a gentler melding of the soft instrumentation with the sharpness of his voice, the songwriting is promising, and the quality instrumentation matched with Brooks's crisp studio work serve well to carry the weight.

Filed under: Track Reviews 1 Comment
27May/100

Oceansize – Home & Minor EP

Oceansize - Home & Minor front cover

Posted by Todd Hamm

Expansive, yet often airy and lithe, Oceansize's complex sense of melody has drawn comparison to everyone from Radiohead to Tool. It's been their ability to evolve and create within new parameters, to bound through seldom used sectors of their "genre" while maintaining a strangely cohesive aesthetic, that has set them apart from most progressive acts of the day. With their most recent Home & Minor EP, the Manchester quintet has taken the opportunity to explore their gentler sensibilities for half an hour; something like the "Music For A Nurse" or "The Frame" arrangements, but more focused and refined. They haven't tried to pack the entire range of their catalogue into a single song (although that approach often makes for their best material) this time around, and it has worked surprisingly well.

"Legal Teens" begins blurry-eyed and curious, the reversed effects splashing between left and right channels the way water refracts light. As captured in the video, lead singer Mike Vennart drifts in falsetto with the guitar sway, Steve Hodson's bass slowly instills gravity, as Gambler's keys flutter between rhythm guitarist Steve Durose's soft, deliberate riffs and Mark Heron's warmly batted tom drums. As the track fades on the EP, "Getting Where Water Cannot" clicks on crisp in the middle of a subdued action sequence, where the tricky drum click soon picks up bits of guitar, bass, keys and trumpet as it tumbles through scenery that is as much David Gray as it is Radiohead. The melodic feedback of "Monodrones" serves preface to the title track's wobbling reverb and gregorian vocality, and while it may be the weakest--and longest--song of the collection, the lack of repetition and anticlimactic fray at the end of the song make it bearable background music. "Didnealand" has the spacious qualities of an old house, complete with creaky furniture, hardwood echoes, the family's grand piano. Not a word is spoken, nor does it need to be. "The Strand" closes out the disk in haunting fashion, with Vennart's dark lyrics whispered over the whine of industrial fans, or perhaps the quiet hum of machinery. The track nearly foreshadows a return to the deep brooding tension of "Voorhees", especially given the eery cat-wondering-in-a-warehouse sounds to wrap things up--and yet, it is the end.

Home & Minor is an exercise in patience, a six track build-up, that, while hinting at some kind of climactic resolution, is able to stand on it's own as a delightfully moody assortment of sounds. It plays perfectly into the bigger picture; it's simply the next chapter in the discography they seem to have already planned out, with vastly different spikes in plot and character development, but that follow the same extremely well thought out arc. It's hard to tell how those used to the edgy prog-metal, spastic time signatures and tangential song structures typical of previous Oceansize material will react, but by the sound of it, the band doesn't care much, or are at least confident. They are however, due for an explosion.

Here's the afore-mentioned video for the opening track "Legal Teens" from the Home & Minor EP:

11May/107

Avatar Young Blaze – Baptized in Vodka

Front Cover - Baptized In Vodka

Posted by Todd Hamm


The infamous young rap pusher/gutter life documentarian Avatar Young Blaze released Baptized In Vodka today, the follow up to his sinister debut LP Warm Blooded Cold Heart; a disk he says got love everywhere from his current home city of Seattle to his native Russia, and even featured a verse from star of rap stars Lil' Wayne.

Though heavily steeped in expectation, BIV actually turns out more streamline than the gaudy follow-ups so typical of the genre. With more focused production and cohesive songwriting, the tracks are musically and thematically relative, as Avatar's ice cold tenor crackles through the bulky instrumentals and carries the tracks with ease. There are features on the album, but none close to as noteworthy as Weezy, and of little consequence regardless. It's when Av is given space to breath on his own, as on the latin guitar laced "I Am King", the future-gloss opener "Put Me Under", or the mafioso tinged "Shootouts", that he sounds most in his element, and when the mood is pulled back a bit, as on the finale "Goin' Insane", his delivery works most to his advantage as the smoothed out instrumental plays sharp contrast to his gruff style, more so than ultra-hyped tracks like "Turbo Mode" and "I'm A Gangsta", although they do have definite club appeal.

Aside from the tiring shout-overs from the project's mixmaster DJ Folk, BIV is a solid hardcore record through and through, and a full step forward for the MC. To accent our take, we caught up with Sir Blaze to gain a little insight into the creative process, and find out why he wants you to know that death only scares you. Listen in...

NWmainstage: How would you describe the overall sound of Baptized In Vodka?

International. Unorthodox. Gutter. Emotional. Classy. Fly. Social. Honest.

NWM: Where did the concept for the album come from? Are there any religious undertones (since baptism is mentioned in the title)?

It evolved naturally from my previous projects, with the whole Russian theme. The baptism is the cleansing, the immersing. Vodka represents fire, passion, my Russian/ Ukrainian heritage. Baptized in Vodka is basically a metaphor for a couple different things.  First, being people are baptized in holy water, not vodka.  With me, and everything I been through, I feel like I've been baptized in vodka. I'm more extreme then the rest.  As far as religious undertones, I believe in God.  Im Russian Orthodox.  This is the oldest version of Christianity, where the most important thing is humility.

Back cover

NWM: Who did you work with on the album? How do you feel they affected the music?

As far as production, The Alchemist, Araab Muzik, Ty Fyffe, The Olympicks... My up & coming producer homie from New York V-Don got a couple joints on there aswell, look out for him he's a problem.  Shout out to Apoulo as well, he's from Seattle he definitely got it in. As far as features, Ackrite Da Butcha from Compton, Matt Blaque from the Bay, Carey Stacks, SkiMask Spec, Eighty4Fly all from Seattle.

NWM: How would you respond to people saying your rhymes are too violent?

Everyone perceives life differently, this is an aspect of life I've been exposed to, seeing as to when I rap, I rap about my life, not somebody else's.

I guess I've seen too much death up close.  Death scars you.

Avatar Young Blaze - Shootouts
Avatar Young Blaze - Goin' Insane

NWM: Do you have any plans for a tour or any upcoming projects?

I got a mixtape Im doing with Ackrite Da Butcha "From Geattle to Bompton".  Im also working' with Dj Nik-One from Moscow and some artists from Russia.  Also look out for BIV II which I already started working on.  As far as tours, I definitely got some things under wraps, especially overseas.

NWM: What do you want your fans to know about you?

I want my fans to know that I'm for real.  I also want them to know that I love them and am extremely grateful for their attention.  I get amazing feedback from all over the world: Russia, Ukraine, Czech Republic, Columbia, Australia, Seattle, NYC, LA, ext.  I don't take it all for granted. I want to continue to put myself and my emotions out for my fans. Theres alot of shenanigans going on in the game right now where rappers are just not credible on what they speak on. This is really my life, Im not trying to glorify negativity, Im a positive person. Im just speaking on what I been through, and where Im going.<NWM>

Baptized In Vodka is available for zero $s for a LIMITED TIME HERE, so get it before it hits iTunes.

Here's the new two part video from Avatar for the tracks "Cry" and "Everybody Get Low"--both off of Baptized In Vodka:

4May/102

Deftones – Live in Dallas web concert TODAY 5pm PST

Deftones

Posted by Todd Hamm

While the California trip-metal quintet has notably strayed from the raw, angst-driven hardcore of their cult adored debut  Adrenaline, and tended instead toward the often overproduced power ballads of White Pony and Saturday Night Wrist, the unprecedented love the band has shown their fans has more than kept their incredibly devout international following in tact. Hence, the web concert. Having first performed via net for their White Pony release a good ten years ago, the 'tones are doing it again TODAY from an undisclosed Dallas location at 5pm west coast time to promote their sixth album Diamond Eyes, which is conveniently in stores today as well. The hour long live show will be preceded by some kind of Q&A session, which will reportedly involve the band responding to fan questions that have been submitted over the web. Curious? So are we...

Check out also the first single--and title track--from the 'tones new album Diamond Eyes:

29Apr/102

Head Like a Kite – We’re Always On the Wrong Side Of Sunrise video

Posted by Todd Hamm

Moorman(L) and Einmo(R), photo by Dan Tyler

The first single (second if you count "Director's Cut", which was generously donated to Cafe Vita's GIVE compilation) from HLAK's third album Dreams Suspend Night, comes with an suave video directed by Matt Wesson. Although the video doesn't quite compete with Chase Jarvis's prolific artistry on the "Director's Cut" vid, Wesson does a formidable job of capturing the band's costume-laden goofballery with a conveyor belt full of dressed up (frontman) Dave Einmos and (touring drummer) Trent Moormans. Former The Saturday Knights MC Tilson once again comes along for the ride, and delivers a couple of quality verses that are delightfully lip-sunk by the rest of the characters as they float stage left.

Look for Dreams Suspend Night to drop May 18th on their very own record label, and catch their album release party May 21st at Neumos (SEA) with support from Daedelus, Thee Emergency and DJ Terry Radjaw.

22Apr/100

Dark Time Sunshine – Sleestack Payback & All Aboard video

Posted by Todd Hamm

Dark Time Sunshine - Vessel cover

It's been some time since musicians--rap artists in particular--have pushed themselves to produce the kind of multi-disciplinary artistry that Dark Time Sunshine has begun to create (well okay, here's one noteworthy exception). The music is futuristic dream-rap from the minds of Grayskul's Onry Ozzborn (under the pen name Cape Cowen) and Chicago's Alex Zavala. The duo has contracted videographer Christian Hansen to bring their vision to the visual medium, and he has done so beautifully on mash-up videos for "Doom"/"Go Team"/"Wrong Kids" (from last fall's free DTS album Believeyoume), and now "Sleestack Payback"/"All Aboard". The latter was released just days before the group's more formal debut Vessel, which features both songs, hit stores on April 20th. Hansen's glossy finish and fuzzy slow motion pans capture the surreality of the tracks perfectly, and the playful astronaut scenes were apparently shot in Japan, which is pretty rad.

Check out both videos below, and also download their free nine track album Believeyoume on Fake Four records HERE. If it tickles your fancy, you can pick up their new release Vessel on iTunes as well as at your favorite local record store.

Filed under: Video Reviews No Comments
16Apr/103

Ramble On – Rjd2 Interview @ Neumos 4/11/10

Rjd2 soundcheck at Neumos

Posted by Todd Hamm

{Check out also our review of RJ's new album The Colossus here}

At about 6:30 the band is soundchecking. The four members are wandering around stage twisting knobs, tapping keys, testing mics. With a guitar slung over his shoulder, Rjd2 has his back turned to the empty Capitol Hill venue, working some effects from "A Spaceship For Now" out of his MPC. The guy behind the keyboard is breathing the backup vocals for "Exotic Talk" through a modulated microphone, and the drummer is pounding out some tricky fills from RJ's vast catalogue of tricky drum breaks. The experience is like walking into an exploded diagram of the artist's body of work; bits and pieces of his catalogue strewn everywhere on stage, ready to be pulled together at the right moment.

After a minute or two, RJ notices me in front of the stage. "You here for the interview?" he asks. "We're gonna make some noise for a minute first." They jump into the middle of "Since We Last Spoke", the title track from his second album. The instrumentation is beautifully arranged live, and when the musicians lean closer to their mics to hum the refrain, it sounds like wind howling through Neumos as it bounces from speaker to wall and back again.

The sound is broken by a member of the venue's sound team giving instructions over the PA fed through their stage monitors, and once again they're changing levels, replacing speaker wire and moving about. Satisfied with his equipment on stage for the time being, RJ runs upstairs to the sound booth and changes out a chord or two, then backstage, then behind the bar to grab something--this guy is everywhere. After a few technical difficulties, he finally hops behind the turntables and cues some stage-rattling bass tracks, then mixes in some loops and taps out samples. He's making beats on the spot.

As the opening act, Bus Driver arrives to soundcheck, RJ cuts the sound and gives the thumbs up to the sound team. He approaches. "You want to go backstage?" he asks me, and I follow him to the green room. On our way downstairs beneath the stage proper, we pass several musicians hard at work on the venue's pinball machines, killing time. We hang a right into a room lined with couches and folding chairs. He yawns. "This is day number 55," he says of the tour as we sit down. After the show, he's scheduled to fly home to Philadelphia for the rest of the month, then it's off to Europe to play more gigs for a couple of weeks. This show is his ninth sell out in a row.

He's on the road to promote his fourth album The Colossus, a release that's melded styles from across the vast spectrum of his career, and received favorable press. "I had the idea of doing a record that would be as far reaching as possible, stylistically speaking," he says. "And so I would kind of be filling these roles, you know? I would go into sample-based, MPC mode and do a song like that; finish that. Then probably move on and do something of some other sort, like eletro-y or soul oriented or whatever, and I would end up going back to these things. For me, making a record--specifically this record--is a lot like putting a jigsaw puzzle together in the sense that once you get things down, you start having to look for songs that will play a different roll."

He talks as fast as you would imagine someone as busy as he is would, and his points are frequently accented by lively hand gesture. I tell him one thing that stuck out on this record was his sense of humor. "It's not a conscious thing as much as I just don't take what I do that seriously," he explains. "A record and a show are time to have fun. I guess to put it clearly, I don't have a lot of ego or pride as far as what I do as an artist." He adds that he tries not to think about his relevance in the music world. "In a way, it's assessing your own popularity...it's a dangerous thing. I make records first and foremost to please myself, because it's something I enjoy doing."

RJ with the band

The bass from Bus Driver's soundcheck pulses through the ceiling as I ask about The Third Hand, the soft rock/funk precursor to his current release that, while accomplished in musicianship and technicality of songwriting, left fans and critics alike puzzled as to the direction of his career. Despite what many journalists stated at the time, the album may have been more of a return to his roots than a departure, as he began playing the guitar long before he hopped on the decks, and actually still does most of his songwriting on the keyboard before it's transcribed elsewhere. "I stopped reading reviews," he laughs. "I read three: one was really good, like four and a half stars in the [Associated Press]; then Spin and Rolling Stone both wrote pretty unfavorable ones. I knew there was going to be a bit of a challenge in rolling out that record, I just didn't realize how big that challenge was going to be." He explains that he stopped reading positive critiques as well as negative ones. "It's an emotional roller coaster...If you care about one, you gotta care about the other. It's not a fair place to put yourself to only pay attention to the good reviews."

He begins to stretch, hinting that show time is near. Leaning one direction with his opposite arm extended over his head, it looks like a lat stretch. It almost looks like he's going for the high-five. I hesitate for a moment, but refrain. "Every record that I've made has really in so many ways been referential to the previous record," he says as he stretches. "The fact that a portion of Since We Last Spoke was not sample-based--it was live--was directly referential to Deadringer being a sample-based record, and I knew I had to branch out. The Third Hand was kind of a culmination of that pursuit, and the point of it was to do as much as I could on my own. The Colussus was referential to that in the sense that I wanted to do the exact opposite and collaborate as much as I could. I'm not working on a big picture, but the small picture has everything to do with what's relative to my immediate future and immediate past."

At this point we get up and wander back toward the stairs. He tells me  the show will be his best yet, and to expect costume changes among other things. I shake his hand and wish him luck before wandering back upstairs and onto the main floor where the first few members of a sell out crowd are beginning to leak through the door.

I failed to bring my own video camera, so this clip comes courtesy of macberns on youtube. Photo credits however, go to your boy.

1Apr/108

Avatar Young Blaze – A Day In the Life

Posted by Todd Hamm

Avatar Young Blaze

Is your rap collection too soft? Do you need more guns, drugs and illicit money getting out of your friendly neighborhood MC? Enter Seattle's (Ukraine's/Russia's) Avatar Young Blaze. He is a bad man. His lyrics are sinister, and they're delivered eerily calm through clouds of blunt smoke from luxury sedans and building rooftops. He's good at what he does, and although his subject matter usually slinks through the gutters and back alleys of his environment, there's something captivating and even familiar about the guy. With each venomous song or video clip he releases, Avatar welcomes you to the fold and guides you through his daily experiences, teaches you hard lessons he's learned and explains why things have wound up the way they have. For example:

This is "A Day In the Life", a mini-documentary that was releases today about the MC's life and influences, which basically finds him smoking a ton of weed and looking his most menacing in a winter-time L.A. hideout. He touches on topics like his upbringing, and his parent's flight to the U.S. to escape the crumbling U.S.S.R., as well as his flight to California to escape Seattle's notoriously rainy winters, and also why he's such a badass. In addition, he previews a couple of tracks from his new Baptized In Vodka project (release date TBA), which is a nice lil' bonus for fans.

Released simultaneously with the video was the first single from BIV called "I Am King", a song that captures Avatar's style at it's best: hardcore and brash, but honest. The production is clean and laid back--tropical even, and features smooth background vocals, which is somewhat of a departure for Av. Although it has a bit of a new and distant feel to it, the song sounds natural, as he tells it like it is in traditional Avatar Young Blaze fashion.

Avatar Young Blaze - I Am King