Showing posts with label thefacesblur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thefacesblur. Show all posts

Monday, March 14, 2016

Body Games - Damager

Chapel Hill’s Body Games release their debut LP, Damager, this week.  I’ll admit from the start that I buy & listen to very little of the type of electronic pop mixes that Body Games creates.  If you couldn’t already tell reading this blog, I’m generally a guitar, indie, indie-pop guy.  Hell, I may not have even gone to see Body Games my first time were it not for a friend being in the band.  But immediately upon seeing them live, Body Games won me over (for me to say that about an electronic-heavy band means something). 

And it wasn’t just the stunning, synchronized visuals, courtesy band member Adam Graetz (thefacesblur).  They’re always a treat.  But it takes more than fireworks to impress this jaded soul (after all, my old zine was called “It’s the music, Stupid!).  Body Games’ live production is amazing.  Dense and melodic, the music radiates a hypnotic atmosphere, and you submit to a dark undercurrent.  Listening to the new album, I’m even more impressed by the layering and complexity brought to the live set.  But it’s not just layers for layers’ sake.  Its interesting mixes, and the catchy melodies of Dax Beaton’s songwriting.  Original, catchy melodies are all-too-rare in this genre (they’re usually sampled from some other, better songwriter). 

Right from Sunny Day, the first cut, we get the unexpected… South African vocals (Ladysmith Black Mambazo?) put through a deep filter, sounding as though they’re gurgling up from a deep ocean trench.  This jumps suddenly into a slow beat and a mellow-staccato verse from Beaton, and eventually morphs into grinding synth and a sinister-sounding refrain (“Come on, BOY!”). 

The entire record inhabits this shadowy-sexy groove.  On WMN, rhymes by local rapper WELL$ contrast with band member Kate Thompson’s heavenly vocals for a nice edge.  Body Games always shines when Thompson sings (she’s since moved, but hopefully, can telecommute her voice from South Korea!).  Matchstick is pure slow-groove, lover-boy pop, with Beaton auto-tuning “Every king needs a queen” to soft keys.  It’s probably the most straight-forward ballad on the record, and likely to be a crowd favorite.  Outdone treads similar slow-dance territory. 

After Matchstick, Damager returns to the mysterious, with the title song’s dreamy (nightmarish, really) intro.  It’s a heavier tune, but still one with a hefty dose of melody.  Gossip has similar dense vibe… distorted, wasp-like, voices humming in and out between more standard vocals.  Special gets very dark indeed.  Musings on an old relationship segue into heart-wrenching voicemails from a jilted lover.  A warped sample turns the Beach Boys' Nobody Knows What I'd Be Without You on its head, meshing with Special’s exploration of how complicated and hurtful relationships can be.

The last two songs, the quietly upbeat Silent Movie and the sadder Perfume, creatively incorporate more sampling... South African, again, and Blondie’s Heart of Glass, respectively.   But Body Games never relies on these samples; they’re always accents on already-fleshed-out songs.  Truth in any genre (whether a loner on a laptop or a baker’s dozen with horns, strings, and backup singers):  start with good songs, and the rest will take care of itself.   Body Games starts with good songs.

Body Games’ next show is at the always-great Phuzz Phest in Winston Salem, Saturday, April 16th.  While the LP is out March 15th, a second version called Damager+, including bonus tracks, will also be available.  Extra proceeds from that version will be donated to Janice O'Leary's recovery fund (she designed the artwork for the record, and was recently in a serious car accident).

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Hopscotch Music Festival Day Three - Saturday Night (Raleigh, NC, 9/12/15)

Closing night of Hopscotch 2015 spanned from old to new, and from one end of the Earth to the other.  It started with legendary L.A. punk band, X.  I'd seen them once before, some 20 years ago.  While the band, and the crowd, have aged significantly since then, the bands ability to kick out the jams has not.  My old punks can rock as good as your young ones!  Exene Cervenka's and John Doe's vocals still have that inexplicable link that is both harmonious and punk as hell.  See below for a video of X performing Motel Room In My Bed, from the classic album, Under the Big Black Sun.

X...
Popped back out of my milieu and into Kings on the way to Deep South (a recurring route at Hopscotch), to see thefacesblur, local musician and multimedia artist Adam Graetz' project.  The visuals Graetz creates go hand-in-hand with the deep, slightly dark sounds he puts out.   It makes for a stimulating and relaxing show, if those are at all simultaneously possible.  Jump to the bottom to see a video from thefacesblur's performance at Kings

thefacesblur...
One of the non-locals I'd heard about that I made a point of seeing was Warehouse.  This Atlanta band reminds me another Georgia band from quite some time ago, Pylon, both in their jarring, jazzy angular instrumentation and Elaine Edenfield's growled vocals.

Warehouse...
After a very tight and tense (in a good way) show, it was time to cut loose.  The closing three-band bill at the Pour House promised to be free-wheeling and high-flying:  Birds of Avalon, Zack Mexico, and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard.  The line was long , even for VIP wristbands.  Seemed a lot of others had the same idea I had.

Luckily, I managed to get in in time to catch about half of Birds of Avalon's set, but they really lit the fuse for the night.  I've recently come to appreciate this band for the power and energy (and talent) they bring to the stage.  Their crunchy guitars and keys, Velvety-drones, and big-rock sound had the packed house hopping.

Birds of Avalon...
A few days before Hopscotch, I gave my "shows to see" recommendations, and they were:
- Zack Mexico.

Yeah, that was it.  And man-oh-man, did they live up to it.  I'm biased:  they're probably my favorite NC band.  But if this night was any indication, that club just gained a lot of new members.  Frontman John Saturley had been across the country for months, and the band had only recently re-united for a few rehearsals in the days before Hopscotch.  But you'd never have known it.

The crowd was INTO it, and Saturley was egging them on.  From the opener to the always excellent closer, Meric Clanson, people -- including bandmembers -- crowdsurfed, jumped on and off stage, passed instruments around... it was truly a communal vibe.  Everyone was part of the show.  Towards the end, the band donned safety gear as Saturley smashed a guitar, then passed the broken instrument through the crowd.  Cymbals and guitars "crowdsurfed" earlier, the crowd "playing" them along with the band. It was a madhouse of controlled fun and fury... without a doubt (and my biased ass isn't the only one to have said this) THE best set of Hopscotch 2015.

See below for a video of their last song, which despite the horrible sound quality from my camera (plug into a decent speaker set and it's slightly better), still captures the fun and intensity of this set.

The crowd at the Pour House waiting for Zack Mexico...
Zack Mexico...
Watering the band (note streaks of water)...
Much crowdsurfing was done this night, by both people and musical instruments, each in various stages of disarray...
Derek Torres (T0W3RS) takling in Zack Mex...
Guitar, mid-smash, levitating onstage...
I myself was rather spent after the sensory overload of Zack Mexico's set.  But King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, all the way from Australia, made a perfect coda for the night, and the festival.  A 70's-influenced garage band from Melbourne, I'm not sure if they expected this kind of reception in sleepy Raleigh, NC.  But the crowd were riding high.  The crowdsurfing continued unabated -- even moreso -- and their great visuals gave the ongoing party a decidedly more psychedelic edge.  By the end, no one wanted it to stop.

King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard...
Nice tripod, dude! (I wanna see those photos)...
Craig Reed (Younger Brother Productions) rides the wave...
I think I see Jesus in here...
Those are feet in the air (to the left), btw...
Now THIS was the party I was looking for to end Hopscotch, and it definitely left me anticipating next year.  Hopscotch 2015 full of pleasant surprises and only a few mild disappointments.  But above all it was, as always, diverse as all get-out.  It's the shining light of this festival, and they just keep knocking it out of the park every year. Congrats to Greg Lowenhagen, Nathan Price, and the rest of the gang for another great one.  




Tuesday, January 28, 2014

The Human Eyes / T0W3RS / thefacesblur (Nightlight, 1/24/14)

Great show at Nightlight the other night (they've had quite a few great shows lately).  Since this blog's been asleep for awhile, let's start with impressions...

The Human Eyes make leaps and bounds fleshing out their 80s-heavy pop...
T0W3RS slowly (but surely) perfects their solo (but bigger than a full-band sounding) vibe... thefacesblur carefully stakes out a claim in our growing dance-pop-indie scene...
incidental smoke and mirrors...
soundz by D. Starport...
etc

Adam Graetz has put on some incredible backing graphics for live shows by T0W3RS, Lilac Shadows, and others around the Triangle for some time.  As thefacesblur, it's impressive that he can do the same thing while playing music.  Cool, mellow, dancey, electronic music with a slight international vibe.  Great overall début.

thefacesblur (no pun intended)...
Artist Barbara Barnes (Art Images Live) sketching thefacesblur...
T0W3RS is now solidly progressing as a solo act.  But with the energy and songwriting Derek Torres brings to the stage, I don't know if there's room for anyone else up there anymore.  Few local artists can hold a room rapt as well as T0W3RS (and still make them dance).  I once said that walking around taking photos in my hometown New Orleans is, for a photographer, like cheating.  Shooting Derek onstage is like that, too.  But doing so with a cool lightshow is downright criminal.  Can't wait to hear the record he's finishing up.

T0W3RS...
The Human Eyes are really coming into their own.  Thomas Costello's synth-laden pop-rock is still referenced to New Order, et al, for sure.  But he's bringing a live performance that's thicker with guitar-jangles, and tangles... probably not unlike a lot of bands back then if you were lucky enough to have seen them live.  A breezy, bitterwseet, rolling twang also underscores the electric edge of some numbers, like Another World, Let Me In, and Alex.

The Human Eyes...
T0W3RS play on a bill with The Love Language, GHOSTTE BLLONDE, and Hammer No More the Fingers at Cat's Cradle Friday, February 7, for WKNC's Double Barrell Benefit 11.  Soon after, the Human Eyes open for Merge artists Hospitality at the excellent new Cradle Back Room (Saturday, February 22).  Both promise to be great shows.