Sunday, February 24, 2019

Deerhunter w/ Mary Lattimore 2/23/19 College St. Music Hall

LA-based harpist Lattimore is an in-demand or maybe indie-indemand harp player who has backed many rock bands. Mary also has quite a pedigree of soundtrack scores. Coming from the baroque freak folk Philly scene with bands like Espers and collaborations with Meg Baird, Mary has put the harp front and center. Unfortunately missed her brief set on this evening.
Deerhunter is an indie-psych-pop outfit from Atlanta. Led by enigmatic frontman Bradford Cox, DH has been struggling to be heard since the mid-aughts. The band was Cox on vocals/guitar, keys/sax, drums, bass, and lead guitar. The drummer had a metal edge, which gave an arena sound. The band reminded me of Spoon, Grizzly Bear, and Animal Collective. Pop nuggets often devolved into loud psych workouts. Many tunes were pulled from their recent release "Why Hasn't Everything Already Disappeared?". Ended the show with their "hit", "He Would Have Laughed", which culminated in a frenzied light show noise-out that was great. Cox had this odd button on his mic which transformed his voice into a devilly rasp. At the encore, Cox came out to thank New Haven and Yale for gracing the world the most recent Supreme Court Justice Schlitz Kavanaugh. Using the devil rasp and a loop pedal, Cox chanted "I Went To Yale" and "I Like Beer" (Kavanaugh tag lines for the un-initiated) into a beelzebub MAGA rally, chilling.

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Lily and Madeleine 2/18/19 Cafe 9

L and M are sisters from Indianapolis who now reside in hipster Mecca Brooklyn. The group was a quartet with the sisters on keys, guitar and vocals joined by a young woman on cello and lead guitar, and a female drummer. The songs were lush angsty pop for the most part, but veered into psych and even some disco at times. The cello was electric but the sound was decidedly cellish, which shaded the intensely personal lyrics. L and M said their forthcoming release was produced by the Nashville duo that worked on the Grammy nominated Kacey Musgraves album. I don't have to confess that pop music is not my thing ( I thought Cardi B was a rum drink with Red Bull!), but an interesting interview with the psilocybin chomping pop country crossover star Musgraves  made me open to the genre. L and M's vocals were the center point of their sound, most tunes started with one or the other solo then moved to beautiful harmony vocals. While listening, I was struck by the obvious genetic homologous nature of these two sibling singers. The sisters just came off a stint at CBS this Morning and you get a sense that they are bound for larger things.

Saturday, February 16, 2019

Bill Frisell Solo Fairfield Theater Company 2/15/19

Thanks to a friend for gifting a pair of tickets to see jazz guitar master Frisell. Unbelievably, this is my first encounter with FTC. An intimate seated venue with excellent views was a perfect place to see Bill. The Frisell catalog is long and varied, Spotify him and you are just as likely to get a skronk workout with the likes of Wadada Leo Smith and Andrew Cyrille or a dreamy jazz cover of the surf nugget Pipeline. Frisell came of age in the 80s-90s Downtown Scene with luminaries like John Zorn and The Lounge Lizards. Bill looks like a nerdy, shy, grandpa armed with a simple electric guitar, some effects and loop pedals, and an unexplained cache of beanie baby moose. A true musical omnivore, the show unfolded like Frisell's Great American Songbook Armoire. I mean this in the sense that the songs are pulled from a drawer, laid on the bed, stretched, teased, sped up, slowed down, and presented in a Frisellian new context. Setlist included: Moon River, Ruby My Dear, Come On In My Kitchen (I think), Lush Life, My Funny Valentine. An excellent version of the Bond theme, You Only Live Twice made great use of the loop pedal. Half the fun of this show was trying to figure out the tune, Bill's shyness prevented him from speaking a word the whole evening. Ended the set with What The World Needs Now and encored with the Shenandoah-Somewhere Over The Rainbow medley.

Friday, February 1, 2019

Steve Gunn w/ Meg Baird, and Alexander 1/30/19 State House New Haven

Alexander, aka David Shapiro, was positively reviewed in the last blog post. Local musician showed different talents on this evening. Simple acoustic guitar instrumentals morphed into psych-tinged folk. Alexander played some banjo too. One tune was about a friend who moved to California, while another he had the audience envision Kath Bloom (legendary local fractured folkie with whom Alexander plays with) accompanying on recorder. Chatting with him between sets, I was struck by how positive and humble he is.
Meg Baird, from Philly, also played solo acoustic. Her vocal style reminded me of female Brit-folk like Sandy Denny or Linda Thompson. She had this great habit of sliding into notes for added vocal effect. Awesome cover of Neil Young by way of Emmylou Harris "Wrecking Ball". Meg played in the band Espers and Heron Oblivion as well as duetting with harpist Mary Lattimore that exhibits a more experimental and rocking vibe. Meg stayed on stage to play keys and sing backup for Steve.
I love Steve Gunn. He played instrumental music with his pal drummer John Trucsinski when opening for Kim Gordon last year. On this outing, Steve on guitars, James Elkington on guitar and pedal steel, Meg, drums and bass. Steve sang some fractured melodies mostly off his excellent new release, The Unseen In Between. Vagabond, New Moon, New Familiar were all great. Luciano, the song about a neighbor's cat was a favorite.