It’s July (tomorrow)

June 30, 2009

We’re getting premature ejulyication.  I’m so excited to sweat through 2 shirts a day at work, faint in the subway, and drive in hours of traffic to the beach! if you’re in Philly, july probably just corresponds to more homeless people near the bridge.  if you like music AND you’re in philly, then you should check out the concert calendar! section for all your concert needs for the lovely month of July.

July, july, you never seemed so _____(whats the word, gordon?)

The Decemberists-   July, July!


R.I.P. Michael Jackson

June 25, 2009

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No matter how bizarre and creepy he may have been, he was still one of the greatest artists of our time. Here’s a great track in memory of the King of Pop.

Michael Jackson- Rock With You (video)


News from RollingStone.com via Vilanova

June 22, 2009

John Vilanova likes music. John Vilanova is a Rolling Stone writer. John Vilanova went to Penn. 

We’re starting a new section on Trippin Franky dedicated to the work of Mr. Villanova’s work at Rolling Stone (yea, that Rolling Stone.)  Check out an article he wrote about those cwazyyy dudes in Phish (below).

Phish Bust Out Rarities, Kids for Unique Father’s Day Gig

Photo: Kravitz/FilmMagic 
Fresh off two headlining performances at Bonnaroo last weekend, Phish brought the first half of their first tour in five years to a dynamic end last night at Wisconsin’s Alpine Valley Music Theater. The band took the stage with some special guests — their seven children — before opening with their first rendition of “Brother,” a Middle-Eastern-influenced jam that hadn’t seen the light of day since 2003.

In a fitting Father’s Day tribute that borrowed a joke from a 1992 version where family, friends, and crew members jumped around in a giant bathtub during the performance, the Vermont foursome’s children sat center-stage in a miniature tub for the song’s nonsensical lyric chant, “Somebody’s jumping in the tub with your brother!”

The rest of the lengthy, fourteen-song set included a cover of Son Seals’ “Funky Bitch,” a new ballad, “Joy,” that will probably appear on the band’s upcoming (and still-untitled) album set for release on July 28th, and the return of “The Man Who Stepped Into Yesterday,” an late-Eighties composition by guitarist Trey Anastasio.Since its first live performance in 1987, “TMWSIY” has always sandwiched the traditional Jewish prayer, “Avenu Malkenu,” before a reprise of the Phish original. The set closed with a 17-minute version of Anastasio’s newest composition, “Time Turns Elastic,” building to an intense crescendo that left fans awestruck by a band that appears to be firing on all cylinders after the embarrassment of an acrimonious “final tour” in 2004.

Not to be outdone, the second set opened with a rare cover of Talking Heads’ “Crosseyed and Painless,” a tune the band famously covered, along with the rest of Talking Heads’ iconic 1980 album, Remain in Light, for a Halloween performance in 1996. Although rampant rumors of a much-anticipated onstage collaboration with David Byrne at Bonnaroo didn’t come to fruition, “phans” in Wisconsin were treated to a funky, 15-minute version that drifted into a spacey ambient jam before segueing nicely into the band’s own “Down With Disease.” Later in the set, another cover, Stevie Wonder’s “Boogie On, Reggae Woman,” brought a thick, danceable groove before a triumphant version of “Slave to the Traffic Light” closed the set.

Saving the best surprise for last, the band returned for an encore that featured a smoking cover of the Edgar Winter Group’s “Frankenstein,” featuring Anastasio on a five-necked guitar, bassist Mike Gordon on a flame-bedecked bass, and keyboardist Page McConnell on a huge keytar that had previously belonged to James Brown.

Phish return to the stage for a sold-out four night run at Colorado’s iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre, beginning July 30th. The second leg will run through mid-August.



PENN BAND OF THE WEEK: The Ally

June 20, 2009

I’d like to start by saying there is so little info on this band on the internet it hurts.

The Ally’s self described “roots fusion” sound. Having emerged from thePhiladelphia jam band scene at the same time as The Disco Biscuits, their lone release is fittingly tinged with multiple musical influences ranging from funk and reggae to electronica and drum and bass. -Top Shelf

The Ally are all dead and broken up now, and only released one album.  The album is called ‘Action’ and its nuttty  (It was the first album I heard with any electronica on it.)  Anyway, the dudes from the band have been up to some great stuff.  The drummer from the Ally played in JM2, a jamband supergroup including The New Deal’s Jamie Shields and Disco Biscuit’s Marc Brownstein.  The bassist, Ira, started the indie-rock band Yeasayer.

Songs

Click here to download Ally – Action – 01 Wooden Boat.mp3

Yeasayer – 2080

 


Indie Rock Inspired By Jam Bands…sounds like my life

June 20, 2009

Check out the beginning to this great Relix article about Indie Rockers who are shadily Phishheads and Deadheads.  Best Part: Yeasayer’s Ira Wolf Tuton played in The Ally….  Uhhh The Ally were a Penn Band! I think I smell “Penn Band of The Week.” 

Smells Like Hippie Spirit
Relix uncovers indie rock’s true jamband roots
Mike Greenhaus
2009-06-09

Though the indie rock and jamband scenes often seem worlds apart, members of many of today’s most popular hipster buzz bands actually cut their teeth on seminal jambands like Phish, Widespread Panic and the Grateful Dead. For the June issue of Relix, Executive Editor Mike Greenhaus sat down with Vampire Weekend, The Decemberists, The National, MGMT, Animal Collective and other indie elite to figure out why indie rock is more of an outgrowth than a reaction to the jamband scene.

The Thursday night of Manchester, TN’s four-day, multi-genre Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival is traditionally reserved for some of the year’s most blogged about bands and the spring of 2008 was no exception. In the span of only four hours, the overflowing This Tent played host to such indie elites as African-influenced pop stars Vampire Weekend, instrumental weirdos Battles and synth-rock royalty MGMT. The tent and its surrounding areas are filled with the usual mix of early arrivals: college kids, industry reps, groupies, journalists and fellow musicians—and the Olsen twins aren’t far behind. But instead of the disaffected industry chatter one might expect at an indie showcase, the conversation backstage has turned surprisingly, um, heady.

“We discussed playing a 45-minute version of ‘China Cat Sunflower,’” said MGMT guitarist James Richardson with a straight face shortly before his set, sporting a well-worn tie-dyed Grateful Dead T-shirt. “I think pretty much everybody in MGMT secretly loves jambands—well, not so secretly. We always have.”

A few yards away his bandmates are catching up with Vampire Weekend drummer Chris Tomson, who despite his band receiving an impressive 8.8 ranking by seemingly devout hippie-hater website Pitchfork, is proudly decked out in a T-shirt that meshes the Phish and the Philadelphia Phillies’ logos. “When it was announced and the band’s names were listed, I remember thinking that everyone was going to playing there,” he reminisces about his experience at the first, more jamband-oriented Bonnaroo in 2002.

Vampire Weekend’s Chris Tomson represents at Bonnaroo 2008- photo by Julie Schnee

But, shortly after that gathering of the tribes, something started to change. As the jam scene started to fragment stylistically, indie rock continued to mature musically and a generation weaned on Phish and Grateful Dead began to grow older while a younger generation began to look at other genres given the sudden dearth of arena-sized jamband draws.

“Too many bad imitators of Phish ruined that whole thing—everybody really wanted to be ‘indie,’” Richardson muses.

Indeed, though both the blogosphere and the mainstream media are quick to make it seem like hipsters and hippies are as different as hair gel and hemp, in reality some of the day’s most popular “indie bands” have at least one direct tie to the jamband world—not they’re openly citing String Cheese Incident as they’re favorite band on Facebook. Yeasayer’s Ira Wolf Tuton played in Disco Biscuits’ associates The Ally, Band of Horses’ Bill Reynolds was a member of jam-friendly roots rockers Donna the Buffalo, Brazilian Girls’ Jesse Murphy had another life in John Scofield’s Uber-Jam, Leslie Feist sang on The New Deal’s Gone Gone Gone, New Deal’s Dan Kurtz doubles in the electo-pop band Dragonette, all three members of the Lake Trout spinoff Big in Japan serve as the backing band for UNKLE and even the members of Clap Your Hands Say Yeah and Interpol have name-checked Phish.

Portland’s The Decemberists, who stress lyrical nuance over instrumental virtuosity, boasts two alumni of the ‘90s jamband Calobo: keyboardist Jenny Conlee and bassist Nate Query. “Calobo helped me with my technique and how to listen because when you’re improvising you always have to be aware of what is going on around you,” Conlee says.

So despite being often cast as diametrically opposed, the sound of a surprising number of popular indie rock groups is not just a reaction to their Phish and Dead-influenced youth, but rather a natural extension of the millennium-era jamband movement. In the other words: When did skinny jeans and songcraft start replacing tie-dyes and epic jams?


“Whats Going On Tonight in Philly” Hi8us

June 20, 2009

Because nobody’s really at Penn except for summer session people (ew), the section known as “Whats Going On Tonight in Philly” will be on hiatus until school starts.  

In other news, we will be doing some major work on the site. Including more flashing things>>>>>>>>>> and the creation of a generally cooler looking TF for the start of the new school year.

 

*update: the Concert Calendar is still going to be updated, OBVIOUSLY.


Penn’s Mysterious Rap Genious

June 17, 2009

haunted houseWhat we have here, ladies and gentlemen, is a viral phenomenon that traces it routes back here to the Penn campus. We’re all for fellow quakers sending us their tracks and more likely than not (unless it reallly just blows) we’ll post it up here. But this song is different– all we know from this ridiculously smooth flow from an undisclosed duo is that they spread their cream cheese at Einstein Bagels just like we do– except they do it while rapping out this massive tune. “Gettin’ Scared in My Cuntry House” (sic) has been circulating across campus, and I’ve received numerous e-mails telling me that I just have to hear this track. Will they ever reveal their identity? Next time you’re sitting in a boring sociology lecture, check to see if there’s two dudes in the back spitting rhymes. Consider me officially scared.

? – “Gettin’ Scared in My Cuntry House”


Sónar 2009

June 17, 2009

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Hey guys,

Javi B. here.  Just wanted to say hello to everyone out there and officially make my first post on the  blizog.  I’ll be running the A.R.T. Gallery here at TF, with an occasional music post when something major cool is coming up, kind of like right now.

As most of you know festival season is upon us, and while there are a lot of great ones here in the states (i.e. Bonnaroo, All Points West, EDC), our neighbors across the Atlantic have a pretty dope lineup as well.  

Tomorrow, Sónar 2009 starts in Barcelona, Spain.  The 3 day shindig is devoted to heady music and digital art.  Musical performances by: Animal Collective, Crystal Castles, James Murphy and Pat Mahoney, Deadmau5 and a bunch more.  Check out the site here    http://2009.sonar.es/es/   (Sorry it’s in Spanish, but I’m sure there’s an english version too)

The record label where I’m interning this summer is throwing a party in Barca tonight to kickoff Sónar in stellar fashion.  Sick dj sets from: Davide Squillace (Italian) and acid house guru, Josh Wink (Philly).  Here’s the flyer.  

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That Church On Locust Hosts Concerts!

June 16, 2009

First of all, who knew the church on 39th & Locust held concerts?

Second, Icelanders are taking over!

Im bald, angry looking, and make good music.

I'm bald, angry looking, and make good music.

Jóhann Jóhannsson, famed Icelander electronic/classical/post-everything (think Sigur Ros and Bjork) is playing at St. Mary’s Hamilton Village as part of The Gatherings Concert Series. Click Here for more info.  Fans of Sigur Ros and post-rock (all 7 of you at Penn) should make it out to this. I love icelandic music.

Check out Johann’s myspace here.

Fun Fact: Iceland's Population is only 300,000

 



Penn Artist to Watch: Bandiero

June 15, 2009

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We all remember Girl Talk’s epic performance at Starlight Ballroom this past year. The mash-up king brought the house down in true fashion, with all of us Penn kids pretending we were much more hipster than we actually are. Well, you need not look farther than our own Bandiero (né Max Bandier) for some classic, face-melting mash-ups that gives Girl Talk a run for his money. Combing classics from the 60′s to modern day jams, Bandiero’s got a natural sense of recreating and reinventing established pop gems. Keep your eyes and ears open for more from this Penn-bred DJ that hopefully will be lighting up dance floors across Spruce next year.

Bandiero – “I Want Country Grammar Back (Jackson5 vs. Nelly)”

Bandiero – “Let Him be High All the Time (Beatles vs. 50 Cent)”


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