Tuesday 30 April 2013 - Laura Stevenson * Field Mouse * Deseret (8pm)

Laura Stevenson (Brooklyn, NY)
https://www.laurastevenson.net/

“Brooklyn’s Laura Stevenson & The Cans make the good kind of indie rock: the beaming, soaring, cloud-gazing, theatrical kind; the nu-sensitivo version of ‘all killer no filler.'”Christopher Weingarten, The Village Voice

“Sit Resist by Laura Stevenson & The Cans is a slice of indie-pop heaven with a kitchen-sink mentality: chiming guitars, strings, violins, and Stevenson’s soaring voice all stack atop one another, and the results are shimmering pop songs.”Marcus Gilmer, A.V. Club

“(Runner) is a song about moving, sure, but also about naming your demons in order to blast past them. ‘Running’ grows bigger and bigger with each iteration of the chorus, till it hitches its sails to its own adrenaline high and leaves that hurt in the dust.”Lindsay Zoladz, Pitchfork

“On Sit Resist, there’s simply too much talent to not take notice.”Bryne Yancey, Alternative Press

 

Some day in the not too distant future, America will dip its corners deeper into the ocean, the waves ever grinding at its shores as tectonic plates shift and sink. The effect of melting icecaps on the beaches of her native Long Island is one of the triggers for Laura Stevenson’s worrying mind, as she struggles with the overwhelming notions of an infinite universe and the imminence of her own death. Obsessive musings on these subjects has led her to describe herself as an “unfunny Woody Allen,” though friends and fans might disagree, finding plenty of humor in her introspective and self-deprecating nature. The repetition of these existential questions is the driving force behind Wheel, an album brimming with life and death in the desperate search for what keeps us turning in the face of doubt, an exercise in coming to terms with the overwhelming beauty that can be found in the lack of an answer.


Laura Stevenson was born and raised on Long Island into a family of mariners and music makers. She spent many of her younger days on the sugar barges of NY harbor with her father and uncles, who all made their living on the water, at one time running one of the largest fleets on the Hudson. Meanwhile, her mother’s parents were successful musicians; Harry Simeone, the composer and choral arranger responsible for such works as “The Little Drummer Boy” and “Do You Hear What I Hear?” and Margaret McCravy (stage name McCrae), a singer from South Carolina who got her start accompanying her elder siblings “The McCravy Brothers,” a harmonious gospel folk duo, before continuing on her own to record and tour with bandleader Benny Goodman. Armed with her grandfather’s love for modernist dissonance, a genetic predisposition for harmony, and with her sea legs firmly planted in the traditions of American folk singing, Stevenson began creating melodies at a very young age. “My mom would find me in my room, looking out the window, out at the street, singing by myself, sometimes crying,” she laughs, “I was a weird kid.”

At around five Stevenson began playing piano by ear, and at that point her mother decided lessons were a sound investment for the young musician. In High School between going to punk shows every weekend, she spent her afternoons singing in four different choral groups, exploring a growing love for acapella. “Big time nerd stuff,” as she recalls, lamenting that there wasn’t a show like Glee around to validate her when she was in the thick of it. Hundreds of hours of extra-curricular singing combined with a natural talent has no doubt paid dividends when it comes to Stevenson’s powerful vocals. The confidence and precision with which she unabashedly sings out on record and on stage stands in sharp contrast with the reflective uncertainty and isolation that comes through in her lyrics.

Though Stevenson began writing classically on piano early on, it wasn’t until her late teens that she taught herself how to fingerpick the guitar, aspiring to have the quickness and intricacy of her “guitar god,” Dolly Parton. The new instrument opened up a window of creativity and Stevenson soon began writing songs heavily influenced by the writers her father had raised her on, such as Neil Young, Gram Parsons, and Carole King, while also drawing inspiration from music that she discovered on her own like Leonard Cohen, and Jeff Mangum. Meanwhile, leaving her comfort zone, Stevenson started playing in friends’ bands in and around Long Island, a time that she says, “taught me how to be on tour, how to give and take with other musicians, and not be afraid of my own ideas.” With a new found confidence and a solid and supportive community of creative people behind her, Stevenson moved to Brooklyn in her early 20s and soon started performing her own material, loosely assembling a backing band of friends from other projects. In 2010, she released her bare-bones full-length debut simply entitled, A Record, which she quickly followed the year after with Sit Resist, the first solid document of her work playing with a full band. Those two albums and a healthy amount of touring brought Stevenson a dedicated fan base, drawn to her voice, her words, and her relatable down-to-earth persona.

While writing the 13 songs that make-up her newest record, Wheel, Stevenson sought to understand her place within the frame of time, nature, and among those that she loves. With her words, a careful twine of prose and humor, Stevenson manages to expose the nagging contradictions that make life so terrifying but also so worth living, how it is possible to simultaneously feel both fear and joy, the bitter aftertaste of something so beautiful it makes you sick. Themes of passage, the cycle of the moon, the seasons, and love’s ever-shifting states of dependence, are all interwoven throughout Wheel as songs ebb and flow from her band’s crashing walls of distortion and pounding drums, to sweet string-led overtures, to moments where it is just Stevenson and a guitar.

In recording Wheel, Stevenson decided to up the production value, steering away from the lo-fi approach of her previous two albums. Forcing herself to fully give-in to the recording process, and relinquish some of creative control she enlisted producer, Kevin McMahon, someone whose work she respected immensely and who would, as she put it, “be the perfect set of ears for these songs.” She also brought in Rob Moose on violin and Kelly Pratt to play brass, adding their own layers of depth to the band’s full arrangements. Despite the move to sleeker production, Wheel retains its organic nature, relying primarily on the resonance of acoustic instruments and the electricity of simply over-driven amplifiers, with its most synthetic moment coming from a Roland organ, an unconscious decision that Stevenson explains as her and her band’s way of “being real, relying on each other’s energy to keep time and just playing the songs like human beings, flaws and all.”

 

Field Mouse (Brooklyn, NY)
https://fieldmousemusic.com/

Field Mouse is a dream pop band from Brooklyn, NY. Seamlessly interweaving influences from shoegaze, indie, and power pop, Field Mouse offers lush sonic textures and expansive soundscapes to complement the airy, wistful vocals of singer/guitarist Rachel Browne. Through complex and delicate harmonies, the songwriting of Browne and guitarist Andrew Futral breathes new life into common themes of lost love and renewal.

 

 

 

 

Deseret (Sorry, no verifiable info available)

 

 

 

Tickets available at
https://www.pegstar.net/

08:00 PM
21 & Over
$10.00 ADV
$12.00 DAY OF

 

 

 

Monday 29 April 2013 – A Couple Of Stand Up Guys Open Mic

A Couple Of Stand Up Guys (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/ACoupleOfStandUpGuys

Formed in January 2012, it is a rotating group of comedic talent from the Houston area set on revitalizing the local comedy scene with new talent featuring the best of Comedy and Music culled from the Houston Open Mic scene. Currently the group is performing Bi-Monthly shows within the Houston area.

Saturday 27 April 2013 - Besnard Lakes * Infinite Apaches * Vacation Eyes

Besnard Lakes (Montreal, QU)
https://www.thebesnardlakes.com/

The Besnard Lakes raise immediate comparisons to the Arcade Fire, but those are primarily due to accidents of geography and band chemistry: like the Arcade Fire, The Besnard Lakes are from Montreal and led by a married couple. That’s largely where the similarities end, because if this Quebecois collective resembles any of its Canadian counterparts, it would be as an unexpectedly effective combination of the Dears’ psychedelic pop hooks and the languid space rock ambience of earlyBroken Social Scene. The aforementioned married couple, singer and guitarist Jace Lasek and singer and bassist Olga Goreas, formed The Besnard Lakes in 2001 as a sideline to Lasek’s day job as an in-demand producer at the Montreal recording studio he and Goreas own, Breakglass Studios. (Lasek has produced and engineered records by Wolf Parade, the Dears, Stars, and many other Canadian indie acts.) The band was originally a full-time project, but before it could record its debut album, the other members of the band left. Undaunted, Lasek and Goreas recorded nearly all of 2003’s Volume 1 on their own during down time at the studio, then self-released the result. Following the album’s glowing reviews, a touring lineup eventually solidified, with guitarists Steve Raegele and Jeremiah Bullied and drummer Kevin Laing. During sessions for the band’s second album, Bullied was replaced by Richard White and keyboardist and arranger Nicole Lizée joined the band. Signing to the venerable dream pop indie label Jagjaguwar, The Besnard Lakes released their second album, The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse, in February 2007 and followed it up with The Besnard Lakes Are the Roaring Night in March 2010. ~ Stewart Mason. All Muisic.com

 

Infinite Apaches (Houston, TX)
https://infiniteapaches.bandcamp.com/

 

“If you are you are looking for one of those “bands to watch in 2013,” Infinite Apaches should be on that list. Their upcoming album, Suave Creation of the Monolithic Other, crackles with a nervous, tripped-out energy that keeps on foot in Nuggets realm of 60’s garage but manages to keep the other foot in with the modern noisy throat throttling of bands you can find on labels like Goner or In the Red.” - “Free Press Houston”

“I imagine moms probably get really horny to {them].” - “Houston Press”

 

Vacation Eyes (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/VacationEyes?fref=ts

the brand-new band formed by Wild Moccasins/Teenage Kicks drummer John Baldwin and Erase Errata’s Jenny Hoyston; Baldwin describes the sound as “at times very psychedelic and post-punk.” - Houston Press

Friday 26 April 2013 - Black Mountain * Co-Pilot

Black Mountain (Vancouver, BC)
https://www.facebook.com/BlackMountainOfficial

 

Black Mountain doesn’t have a creation myth, or not exactly: “Most of us were found standing ’round parties wearing similar T-shirts or shoes and nodding our heads to something cool on the stereo,” Stephen McBean explains. “Others were heard from behind walls but never seen ’til years later. You share a smoke, do a shot then end up in a van together for what seems like the rest of your life.”

In the late 1990s, Vancouver wasn’t particularly renowned for its raucous, all-encompassing psych-rock scene. “Just like everywhere else, Vancouver’s music scene has had its ‘up’ years, followed by its ‘down’ years,” Matt Camirand says. “When a city is in a musical honeymoon everyone goes to shows, more places start having shows, more people start bands, etc. Soon it’s too much of a good thing, people begin to take it for granted and eventually it all dies out like the dinosaurs. I think when Black Mountain started, Vancouver was near the end of a musical honeymoon.”That lack of sonic spirit, however disheartening, led to a certain kind of aesthetic freedom. It helped birth a sound – swampy, psychedelic, ecstatic, wild – unlike much else in the indie-rock universe. “The complete indifference here to rock music in general – at least at the time of our formation, it’s a bit different now – made us completely unselfconscious about what we were doing,” Josh Wells adds. “Nobody gave a shit, so we weren’t making music for any people in particular.”

From those dank basement parties, Black Mountain came together organically – vocalist Amber Webber was borrowed from another outfit and recruited for a 2003 tour, Jeremy Schmidt, Wells’ downstairs roommate, was assimilated based on the strength of his “solo synth-scape/space rock,” which according to Wells, “blew their minds” – and churned out a handful of striking lo-fi recordings. In 2005, on the strength of those tracks, Black Mountain signed to Jagjaguwar and released its acclaimed eponymous debut. “The band was really just being born during the making of the first record,” Schmidt says. A follow-up, In the Future, arrived – to critical adulation and copious Devil-horning – in early 2008.

A little over a year later, Black Mountain’s third LP, Wilderness Heart, was built on the west coast of America, in part at London Bridge Studios in Seattle, but predominantly at Sunset Sound, a former automotive repair shop in Hollywood that began as an outpost for Disney (songs for Bambi, Mary Poppins, and 101 Dalmations were laid to tape there) before it went rock n’roll, capturing tracks from The Doors, Ringo Starr, the Rolling Stones, and more. L.A. – with its tacos and sunsets, starlets and hills and post-Deco kitsch – was a considerable inspiration. “Just being under the influence of one’s surroundings, as we were while recording in L.A., had a tremendous impact on the process and the way we play. Consequently, the LA sessions have a free and summery vibe. The Seattle sessions, made in the grey, rainy environs that we’re used to up there, have a chillier, more claustrophobic feeling,” Wells explains.

“Shacking up in Sunset Sound for a few days put a smile on everyone’s face,” McBean says. “We were definitely spoiled more this time ’round as far being able to plug into a lot of pretty historical gear. There’s something about playing an old Martin or Gibson and thinking ’bout how many hands have strummed it and all the songs written on ’em,” he continues. “You can’t put ’em down – you want to continue the lineage.”

The new record is packed with succinct rock songs that pulse and pound with startling precision: it pummels you, you ask for more. Wilderness Heart is arguably Black Mountain’s tightest, most concentrated outing, but there’s still plenty of raw rock energy at work. “It’s our most metal and most folk oriented record so far,” McBean says. “I’m not gonna say it’s our best record or the album that we always dreamt of making ’cause that’s what everyone says. It’s all about where we were at the time the machines were rolling. You can’t control the electricity or how your limbs were moving that day. You have to erase the visions and just go along for the ride.”

“It’s a Black Mountain pop record, which is to say it’s nothing like pop at all,” Wells says. “This was the fastest record we’ve ever made. We’re used to spending a lot of time deliberating over the songs and spacing out recording sessions over years. Start to finish, this album was made in four months, which is something like a miracle for us. We’ve never worked with producers before and that was a challenge; for us to let go and let two outsiders into the process, D. Sardy and Randall Dunn – it took some growing for us to be truly open, but this album is all the better for it.”

The band cites a slew of disparate influences – New Order, King Crimson, Studio 54, Alex Chilton, sunshine, Janis Joplin, Please Kill Me, Shirley Collins, Mickey Newbury, jalapeno salsa, Night of The Hunter, Cactus Taqueria, Funky16Corners podcasts, Dennis Wilson, the house blowing up in the desert at the end of Zabriskie Point – but, as Schmidt points out, “Who knows how these things connect with the holistic mix of often dissonant forces that become Black Mountain?”

 

Co-Pilot (Austin/Houston,TX)
https://co-pilot.bandcamp.com/

Think Explosions in the Sky as covered by ISIS – Space City Rock

Being able to play seven-to-ten-minute instrumental songs and hold an audience’s attention is no easy task. Perhaps that’s why there aren’t many post-rock bands in Houston. It’s an ominous venture, especially when you run the risk of being compared to Austin’s infamous Explosions in the Sky. Co-Pilot is definitely not Explosions — the band has its own style of haunting, scenic post-rock. The four-member instrumental out of Houston and Austin uses a dark metal palette to paint landscapes with gradual crescendos and hasty decrescendos. It’s both deadweight-heavy and space gas-light. – Houston, Press

Wednesday 24 April 2013 - Thrones * Eloe Omoe * Omotai

Thrones (Salem, OR)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Thrones/316817901419

 

Joe fuckin Preston!!!!

Need we say more??! The man has the burliest resume in the history of heavy:

•EARTH,

•Melvins 1991-1992 Played bass on: Lysol , Nightgoat 7″. Not to mention a solo Ep that was released along with Buzzo and Dale’s. Also featured on the DVD “Salad Of A Thousand Delights.”

•The Whip 2001-2002 Played guitar in this band with former members of Karp.

•Thrones 1996-Present Thrones is the “solo project” of Joe Preston. Thrones features all instruments. Including bass, drums, vocals and synth performed by Joe Preston.

•SunnO))) 2002-2004 played on on both SunnO))) albums “White 1” and “White 2 . Played a multitude of instruments on these albums including bass, vocals and drum machine programming.

•High On Fire 2004-Present Joined High On Fire for their Summer 2004 tour. Also played bass on the latest recording Blessed Black Wings. Now a permanent member

 

Eloe Omoe (Charlestown, MA)
https://infrasound.org/eloeomoe/

On the surface, Boston’s Eloe Omoe sure sounds like all this modern noise the cool kids keep yapping about. Monster drummer Tim Leanse flails about his kit like a tranced-out dervish, melting classic psych-rock grooves into stuttering, percussive splatter. Meanwhile, bassist Sam Rowell rocks hard. With violent hands wrenching strings, she feeds exploded bass lines through numerous effects, warping feedback, static, and distortion into a howling ogre’s endless tirade. The result, documented on Marauders, the duo’s full-length debut, could be tagged “free metal” or even “freecore.”

But underneath the electric squall and hardcore aggression thrives a devotion to the improvising techniques of classic free jazz. Like Coltrane, Archie Shepp, and Sun-Ra (the band is named after one of Ra’s musicians, in fact), Eloe Omoe breathes “fire music,” ’60s-style. Across these six swinging jams, the duo erects wildly fluid sound patterns — spontaneous and formless, yet physical. Familiar motifs do emerge, and that’s because Leanse and Rowell, an intimate partnership on every level, have cultivated a shared musical language while playing together for over 10 years now — which is the most old-school thing about this pair. In an age of loose-knit collectives and one-off collaborations, these two cling to one another. - Justin F. Farrar

 

Omotai (Houston, TX)
https://omotai.bandcamp.com/

“All Ears: Omotai - Peace Through Fear
“Houston’s no stranger to shred-heavy metal bands - we come across so many that sometimes it feels like a new one is spawned each week. Not all of them are impressive riff masters, though Golden Axe, Cavernous, Ghost Town Electric and Scale The Summit all fall into that category. Newcomers Omotai can now be added to that list, debuting their capable chops on their inaugural EP, Peace Through Fear.

The collection of five songs clocks in at a modest 12 minutes and 16 seconds, but be not mistaken - every moment of it is filled with thundering drums, ripping guitar work, and a low end that would make Geddy Lee need to change his underwear. The EP moves at tremendous pace, crushing song into song, and before the listener is ready, ends abruptly.

Omotai wastes little time on Peace Through Fear, which with each listen reminds us more and more of a condensed version of Mastodon. The vocals, when they are present, and the ever-present movement of the songs are to blame for this. If Atlanta’s current reigning champions of metal were stuck in a compactor à la Star Wars, Omotai would emerge on the other end, ready to crush out track after track of bruisers.

Anthony Vallejo’s drumming on this album puts some of the greats to shame - a fairly recent transplant to Houston, he’s got to be one of the best in town behind a kit. Melissa Lonchambon, whom you may know from Sharks & Sailors, is arguably among the top bassists, and Samuel Waters is certainly no slouch on the guitar, either [although it gets a bit more difficult to pick given all the stunners we’ve got here in Houston]. The sad fact, however, is that none of these deserving bandmates are nominated for best of their respective instruments in this year’s Houston Press Music Awards.

If we’ve a complaint about this release, it’s the length - after listening to it dozens of times, we’re still suprised when it stops. Hopefully this is merely the beginning chapter in a long history of releases for the fledgling three piece.” - Houstonist.com”

 

Tuesday 23 April 2013 - Daniel Romano * Sergio Trevino * Josiah Hall

Daniel Romano (Welland, Ontario)
https://www.danielromanomusic.com/

Classic country music, the stuff of AM radio and the Grand Ole Opry, is a study in contrasts. There’s glitz and grit, reveling and wallowing, wretchedness and showmanship. Country music’s greats wore their battered hearts on sequined sleeves. From Bakersfield to Galveston, the legends traded their tragicomic highs and lows for gold records and white Cadillacs. But that was then; the days of Buckaroos, Nudie Suits and various Hanks are over, save for the museum displays. To quote a George Jones title track, “Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes?”

Enter Daniel Romano, a songwriter who channels country crooning and hard luck storytelling with cinematic fidelity. While references to marquee names like Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Merle Haggard are apparent in Romano’s music, the obvious influences certainly don’t demystify his talent. His take on the golden age of country music is much more than a revivalist mission; Romano works with equal parts authenticity and creativity, and his musical world is rich with archetypes and archrivals, wry observations and earnest confessions.

Romano’s solo debut, Workin’ For The Music Man (2010), announced a new artistic bearing to emphatic critical praise: “his singular vision of what classic country music is supposed to sound like” (Exclaim!). The follow-up, Sleep Beneath The Willow, was pure honky tonk poetry, and again received impressive response from all corners. The “dreamy homage to a bygone country-music era” (Globe & Mail) made the Polaris Long List, and solidified Romano’s reputation as a solo artist.

Come Cry With Me carries on with the traditional country aesthetic, musical and visual. Again self-produced and played, for the most part, by himself, Romano’s new album continues with themes of bad choices, hard times, boozing and losing. Amidst the tales of woebegone orphans, family knots and broken hearts, there are spoken word yarns that recall Hank Williams-as-Luke The Drifter. Romano’s deep rumbling baritone vocal dips serve, conversely, to lighten the mood, leaving no doubt that this artist knows how to deliver a punch line.

He is a contributing producer and touring member of the platinum-selling City and Colour, and also, one-third of the indie folk traditionalists Daniel, Fred & Julie. As well, Romano produced a breakout album by The Weather Station, out on You’ve Changed Records, which he co-founded.

Come Cry With Me was released on Normaltown Records on January 22, 2013.

 

Sergio Trevino (Houston, TX)
https://www.buxtonband.com/

Sergio Trevino of Houston’s Buxton and Ancient Cat Society performs a solo set.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Josiah Hall (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/josiahhallmusic

Indie Folk

Monday 22 April 2013 – A Couple Of Stand Up Guys Open Mic

A Couple Of Stand Up Guys (Houston, TX)
https://www.facebook.com/ACoupleOfStandUpGuys

Formed in January 2012, it is a rotating group of comedic talent from the Houston area set on revitalizing the local comedy scene with new talent featuring the best of Comedy and Music culled from the Houston Open Mic scene. Currently the group is performing Bi-Monthly shows within the Houston area.