Showing posts with label Sunflower Bean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunflower Bean. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Phuzz Phest Night 1 (Winston-Salem, NC, 4/15/16)

Winston-Salem's Phuzz Phest has really come into its own in this, its sixth year.  While not quite as expansive as its sibling here in the Triangle (Hopscotch), there are ample venues and musical choices to satisfy the most discerning and adventurous music fan.  One thing they did exceptionally well this year was the genre-groupings at the respective venues.

Take Friday night.  Looking for indie, psychedelic, guitar pop?   The Garage had you covered with Sunflower Bean, Lacy Jags, and Shadowgraphs.  Wanted a punkier edge?  Try Reanimator.  The fancy digs of Millenium Center could fill all your EDM desires with the likes of Quilla and Neon Indian.  More garage-y rock held sway at Bailey Park, headlined by Thee Oh Sees.  Krankie's had a great lineup of twangy, rootsy, female-fronted acts like Lera Lynn and Sarah Shook and the Disarmers.

But this festival is so compact that, despite 7 or 8 venues, you could catch a little honky tonk, walk down the block for a little psych weirdness, then close out the night with some dance grooves... which I did, not in that particular order.

I started the evening off before sunset, at the wonderful new Bailey Park (a venue still under construction, but great nevertheless).  Drag Sounds are now formally a Baltimore band, but have heavy NC roots.  They got the festival proper started with their own brand of Velvety phuzz.

Drag Sounds...
As Drag Sounds was finishing, I walked the furthest walk this festival required (only about 7 blocks) up to the Garage, to catch Carrboro's Teardrop Canyon. Rootsy, psychedelic pop that can start slow but ends up grinding it up pretty good.

Teardrop Canyon...
Teardrop Canyon... from the street seats
Then I hoofed it down two blocks to catch one of the sets I had most anticipated, Greensboro's Quilla.  Her new album, Beautiful Hybrid, leans heavily on piano and acoustic instrumentation.  The live set, however, was more electronic (as almost every acts' are, but talking more dance-y type of electronic here).  Both are excellent, and her strong voice is the heart of each.  Quilla is definitely a rising talent, one that we're lucky to call local (despite her Montreal origins and French-Canadian/Peruvian parentage).  Keep an ear out.

Quilla...
After Quilla, it was back up to the Garage for another much-anticipated set... that of Charlotte's Shadowgraphs.  These guys create a very good facsimile of a late 60s/early 70s psychedelic vibe, while never sounding derivative.  I'm really digging their self-titled EP.

Shadowgraphs...
Both Skylar Gudasz's debut album (Oleander) and live show are entrancing.  I wanted to leave halfway through her sett Krankie's to see Lacy Jags back at the Garage, as I'd seen Gudasz a handful of times recently and the Jags only once.  But the music was so beautiful that it really felt like a siren had cast a spell on me.  I was frozen in place, stage front.  Sorry Lacy Jags! (it ain't a good festival without some hard choices)  Gudasz is another NC act that I'm guessing will be going places fast.

Skylar Gudasz...
It's just as well I stayed at Krankie's though, because Sarah Shook and the Disarmers were up next.  This buncha honky-tonkers from Chapel Hill are SO good, they burn up the stage every time they play.  Buzzfeed recently put Shook on top of a list of "5 Women Who Are Kicking Country Music’s Ass".  Well-deserved, and accurate.  And that band!  They definitely keep up in the ass-kickin' category.

Sarah Shook and the Disarmers...
Back to the Garage, I returned mainly for one of the festival's headliners, Sunflower Bean.  But I lucked out and caught the last couple from Spirit System.  Winston-Salem's answer to Peter Murphy, with a little Cocteau Twins thrown in.  I felt a little musical whiplash from Sarah Shook to this! (no pain, no gain)

Spirit System...
Sunflower Bean did not disappoint.  Live, they brought a much harder edge to the sometimes almost twee songs on their album Human Ceremony.  I loved it, as did the capacity crowd.  Bassists/singer Julia Cumming was fearsome, a monster onstage.  AND... their guitarist did not look nearly as much like Michael Cera in person as on the album cover! :)

Sunflower Bean...
One last stop, a few doors back down Trade Street at Single Brothers, to catch a little of Sumner James' (of Bombadil) set.  A mellow, electronic set accompanied by drums.  It was a good way to close to night one of an excellent festival.

Sumner James...
Up next, Night 2 (and some day party stuff):  Shirlette Ammons, Zack Mexico, Brett Harris, Body Games, Boulevards, etc. etc. etc.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Phive for Phuzz

This weekend's Phuzz Phest , in Winston-Salem, is loaded with local acts I've seen before, love, and will try to see again (in the rapid-fire, sensory-overload fashion that these festivals afford).  But this short "Phuzzy Phive" concentrates on a few Carolina acts I haven't seen yet and a couple of national ones, each of which I'm looking forward to seeing and hearing.


Quilla (Greensboro, NC)

Quilla (pictured above) made her name as a DJ, and by penning the massive dance-floor hit Walls a couple of years ago.  But she's also a multi-instrumentalist who plays beautiful piano and sings introspective songs that at some times have an almost cabaret feel, and at others, experimental. Bjork is a pretty obvious influence.  Her bio says she's a linguist and anthropologist who's half-Peruvian/half-French Canadian (born Anna Luisa Daigneault), and she's settled here in North Carolina.  That pedigree gives you an idea of the diversity and originality you can expect from her show.  Her new album, Beautiful Hybrid, is a wonderful, moody jaunt. (Friday, 8:15pm, Millenium Center)


Shadowgraphs (Charlotte, NC)

This Charlotte band treads confidently on psychedelic ground, with a very authentic 1960s feel that still sounds relevant.  It also overlaps with the kind of jazzy, bossa nova scene I'm a sucker for.  Moonchild makes you feel as though you've slipped into a backroom of the house from Peter Sellers' The Party, into a secret party-within-a-party to which even Claudine Longet didn't get invited.  That song's got female lead vocals, but the male-sung tunes evoke a similar time and place, if a little more rock'n'roll.  (Friday, 8:45pm, The Garage)



Sunflower Bean (Brooklyn, NY)

This is one of the bigger name acts of the festival, and I wasn't gonna include them because, well, everyone's talking about them (this show will probably be hard to get into).  But their recent album, Human Ceremony, is just perfectly infectious, breezy indie-pop...  another thing I'm a sucker for.  Nothing groundbreaking, but it hits all the right notes, and has just the right amounts of reverb and punk thrown in.  It's a simple recipe, but it's hard to cook it right.  Sunflower Bean make you want seconds. (Friday, 11:45pm, The Garage)


Shirlette Ammons (Durham, NC)

To say this is a local act I've never seen isn't entirely accurate.  I saw Ammons once years ago at Local Band-Local Beer in Raleigh, I think.  That was a good show, but if I recall, fairly straight-ahead rock/hip-hop.  Listening to her new album, Language Barrier, though, I think she's achieved something special.  Ammons' career has always spanned wide territory.  But that chameleon-like variety all seems to congeal on Language Barrier into a collection that's at once diverse and cohesive. Despite the poetry/hip hop background, this is basically a pop-rock album, with a healthy dose of noise and a stellar cast of guest stars:  Meshell Ndegeocello, Indigo Girls, Amelia Meath (Sylvan Esso), Heather McEntire (Mount Moriah), Hiss Golden Messenger, and others.  But they all work towards Ammon's singular musical vision, in which she rails against xenophobia, homophobia, and other societal problems.  Many of the songs are paired couplets, with a "seque" followed by the "main song", starting with the driving Earth Intro Seque and Earth Intro (featuring Indigo Girls).  I LOVE the pair of Language Barrier Segue (ftg. German rapper Sookee) / Language Barrier even more.  That German rap is damn infectious... and oddly reminds me of Arabic rap I listened to a long time ago.  I hope this "segue/song"structure is used live, but either way, it promises to be a compelling performance.  (Saturday, 8:15pm, Millenium Center)


Linear Downfall (Nashville, TN)

The write-up on this experimental band promises a "seamless blend of psychotic noise and beautiful melodies" and an "intense and jarring" show.  Damn, ya got me.  Listening to their music, it's an apt description.  You never know where they're headed.  From song to song, they tend to swap back and forth between sometimes downright abrasive soundscapes and more typically structured and (unexpectedly) even gentle songs.  Some of their earlier material seemed to be more straightforward pop.  But they're best when the they mix the melodic and the caustic.  For sure, Bjork is hiding somewhere in this musical noise amalgamation, too. (Saturday, 9:30pm, Krankie's)

As for Ammons, Sunflower Bean, and Shadowgraphs, you'll have to ask THEM if Bjork was involved in any way at all! :)

Phuzz Phest is this weekend, April 15th-16th, in Winston-Salem, NC.  It's held at a variety of clubs and outdoors spaces throughout downtown, all within walking distance of each other.  Wristbands are relatively cheap compared to a larger festival like Hopscotch, although for quality, Phuzz really holds its own with its big brother.  See PhuzzPhest.com for details.