The Bowery Presents

Music Hall of Williamsburg upcoming shows

Atlas Sound
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One of the latest "true queer art punks" to emerge from the cracked pavement of southern suburban sprawl, Atlas Sound is the solo moniker of Deerhunter frontman / provocateur Bradford Cox. Here on his debut album, Let The Blind Lead Those Who Can See But Cannot Feel, Cox / Sound moves out of dank nightclubs filled with eternal existential drone punk, and relaxes at home in his Grant Park, Atlanta bedroom. And this is, essentially, a bedroom album, a collage, mixing the garage rock and ambient electronic influences previously explored with Deerhunter in a new context, with newly aquired recording techniques, mainly laptop-based, learned with guidance from kranky artist Nudge's Brian Foote. The result is 14 Songs of melancholy and mania. Let The Blind Lead Those Who Can See But Cannot Feel is a true solo album, entirely created and produced by a single person. That is certainly not unique, especially in the contemporary scene. But Bradford Cox's unusual talent is the ability to take a wide variety of seemingly incongruous sound elements, and seamlessly meld them into a cohesive pop narrative. A sunken 4/4 techno beat underpinning "Winter Vacation"? Perfect. Mbira loops running over the top of "Qurantined"? Just what it needed. An insistent, clipped drum roll carrying "River Card"? Masterful. And ultimately it is this innate ability to combine all these disparate elements into a singular whole that makes this album such an enjoyable, and unique listen. "This album is for my best friend Lockett," Says Cox. It has a lot to do with childhood. I wanted to make an album that was uplifting but honest, which is why it seems sad a lot of the time. I want to make music that could be 'healing' or therapeutic to people who relate to it."
Broadcast
official website
myspace
Serendipity. Walking into Rough Trade in London some seven years ago, instead of the regulation dub or atonal screech-rock, I heard the oddest space lullaby, a mechanical melancholy waltz. Peeking at the record deck, the hand-stamped label told me it was ‘Accidentals’, the first single by Broadcast. I bought two copies, just in case.

I was intrigued enough to go and see them on their home ground, at the unpromisingly named Jug Of Ale in Birmingham the following week. It didn’t live up to its name. With lights and a film show to shame anyone I’d seen in the last five years, it felt more like I’d walked into the party scene in Midnight Cowboy. This may not have been entirely accidental. Broadcast looked incredible. Beatnik technicians, fierce concentration. Clearly, they cared a lot about their music. And it turned out ‘Accidentals’ wasn’t even close to being their best song. Pretty soon, I realised they were the group I’d always dreamt about.

The music was bent on fighting the forces of reaction – more Radiophonic than Radio Clash, Lalo Schifrin instead of Led Zeppelin. Music that tried to break out, burst free into Utopia using electronica, twisted samples, perverse rhythms and otherworldly wordless vocals. Music that suggested a million new directions, none of them pointing to Memphis or Moseley Shoals. Broadcast made further leaps forward, signing to Warp and releasing Work And Non Work (a collection of early singles) then The Noise Made By People in spring 2000.

This was where their pop sensibilities and experimental urges became fully assimilated: ‘Papercuts’, ‘Come On Let’s Go’, ‘You Can Fall’, which director Lynne Ramsay used as a pivotal song in the film Morvern Callar.

Hardening their aesthetic, they worked their way through three different producers before realising the unspoken understanding that ran between them meant that they were the only people capable of finishing what they’d started. The reviews tripped over themselves with gushing adjectives.

With HAHA SOUND even outside studios have been forsaken – it was all recorded in James’ house bar the drums, which were taped in a church hall across the road. The influences are again cinematic (Trish references Milos Forman’s Loves Of A Blonde, Hans Richter’s Dreams That Money Can Buy, and the beautiful Czech horror/fairytale Valerie And Her Week Of Wonders) as much as musical. Karl Orff’s Musica Poetica is also cited – “absolutely amazing tunes,” says Trish, “little Christmas songs for kids to sing at school.” James plumps for eccentric British jazzman, Basil Kirchin. They worry that French singers like Zouzou and Clothilde are too obvious to mention, when they are clearly not. “Steve from Tommy Boy used to laugh because we’d talk about Joseph Byrd (of electronica pioneers United States Of America) as if he was John Lennon, like he was the most famous person in America!”

Broadcast are not the kind of group who bash you over the head with some coarse gimmick. HAHA SOUND steals into your mind, gently drenches it with found sounds and the sweetest melodies. Like Cindy Sherman’s self-portraits, they are beautiful and unsettling – hints of ancient folk song dipped in a world of echo. They are still my favourite group.

Broadcast are Trish Keenan, James Cargill and Tim Felton.
The Selmanaires
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A Talking Heads infused surf-rock trio from Atlanta, Gerogia, the Selmanaires came together after twin brothers Herb and Jason Harris (guitar and vocals, drums and vocals, respectively) moved from Austin, Texas and met (eventual) bassist Tommy Chung. Cutting their teeth at smaller shows, the band built a following and by 2008 had a handful of releases to their name, including the debut album, Here Come the Semanairs, the follow up Air Salesmen, and the singles "Just to Get Yr Love" and Standing In Line At An Elevator.
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