August 18, 2009

AZLTRON Back to School Concert List!



The end of summer is fast approaching and it is time for many people to begin to think about their return to school in the fall. Some may dread the end of the carefree days of summer, but I am eagerly anticipating heading back to my collegiate institution. Partially because I’m ready for my summer job to be over, but also because when kids go back to school there are loads of concerts. Summer festivals are grand, but there’s something magical about traveling to see a specific band at a specific venue at a specific time. That and you can bring your own water. I have done my homework and picked four shows that aren’t too far away for my fellow Central New Yorkers to drive to and enjoy as well.

First up is Syracuse’s own Ra Ra Riot. They are playing at the Castaways Bar in nearby Ithaca on September 10th. For the uninitiated Ra Ra Riot is an indie band that formed during 2006 that combines the sounds of clean college rock like Vampire Weekend with the drama of string accented groups like the Arcade Fire. Their debut album The Rhumb Line has been garnering them critical accalaim from just about every major music publication you can think of and a spot performing on the David Letterman show. If you’re curious or a big fan don’t miss out! Tickets are only $15 dollars and available here.

If you’re willing to do some driving and have a passport, The Sounds are playing at the Metropolis night club in Montreal on September 12th. The Sounds are a Swedish rock band that sound like the angry love child of The Cars and Blondie. Their new album Crossing the Rubicon is one of the hottest records of the year so far with anthems like their track No One Sleeps When I’m Awake poised for some crossover success. I swear, if I don’t hear a track by The Sounds on my local pop music station in at least a year, there is something seriously wrong with the ears of America. Either way, the show will be a blast of showmanship and attitude from the crew and lead singer Maja Ivarsson. If you can read French, tickets are available here and they are $20.00 Canadian dollars so there might be some flux in the currency but the show will definitely be worth the hassle.

Fun and the Miniature Tigers are playing at the Waterstreet Music Hall on September 13th. Tickets are available here for the low low price of $10.00. Fun is the new band of the former frontman of The Format, Nate Ruess. They play catchy eclectic pop songs that are more fun than seven kittens and fourteen balls of twine. The Miniature Tigers play a similar brand of straight up authentic rock/pop that will set the mood perfectly.


If you’re looking for a more local show, check out another Syracuse born band, Professional Victims, who are having their album release party with Sirsi on September 18th. The Professional Victims seem to have a foot in a few different genres. One in classic rock, one in electronica, one in pop, one in industrial and one in punk. They are probably one of the most original acts to spawn out of Syracuse in the last year or so. If I had to compare them to other bands I’d say they sound like a mix between TV on the Radio and The New Pornographers. They are being supported by the hard rocking boy/girl duo Sirsi. Tickets are available here.

November 26, 2008

Guest Blogger Reviews El Ten Eleven @ The Bug Jar!

Since I can’t be everywhere at once, I’ve decided to start outsourcing some articles to some of my friends if they feel like writing. Don’t worry there’s no India tech support in the pipeline, but there is a review and photos of El Ten Eleven’s performance at the Bug Jar, courtesy of my congenial cohort, miss Sarah Heppel.

“So, I made the trip to Rochester Sunday morning with the main purpose to go to the Bug Jar and see El Ten Eleven.

We had about an hour to kill before doors opened, but we wanted to go there even later than that so we headed to a coffee shop that a friend recommended. Turns out it was closed so we ended up going to this other diner to get coffee. It wasn’t as fun and we weren’t there very long. We headed to the Bug Jar, but the show wasn’t going to start until like 10:30 or later so we were confused about what to do next. Soooo, we ended up going to another coffee house, Boulder Coffee. It was interesting because it was open mic comedy night! It was Semi-entertaining. We hung out for a while.. I didn’t get anything there because I just had coffee at our previous stop.

Finally, when we arrived @ the Bug Jar, the first band was about to start. My boyfriend Tim and I took a shot and had a beer to warm up. We went outside and stood for a while. We didn’t really care for the first band, The Cheetah Whores, at all. The second band, The Ideas, (?) were good but I felt the electric violin in the band wasn’t as prominent as it could have been. They still were good, though.

A few beers later, El Ten Eleven starts piling their stuff on stage. If you remember my post a month or so ago, I promoted this band, and when I saw the documentary Helvetica, there was a band I fell in love with who had a bunch of songs on the documentaries soundtrack.. Well this is them.

They have quite the gear load for a duo. The bassist/guitarist has a pedal board as long as I am tall, or so it seemed. He has 2 double neck bass/guitars and a few other guitars he uses. He was mainly lovin’ on the double neck and his single bass. He uses a loop pedal and manages to make the tunes sound not repetitive. He’s constantly tapping his feet on different pedals. He is the busiest guitarist I’ve ever seen. Their music was dead on and their attitudes showed they were loving Rochester.”

El Ten Eleven – I Like van Halen Because My Sister Says They are Cool

El Ten Eleven Myspace

For more from my amicable alcoholic amigo (JK!) check out her blog here.

Jonathan Visger’s North South EP

Mason Proper’s own Jonathan Visger recently struck out on his own to channel the sound of Mason Proper through the big beats and breaks Hip Hop production. It was his intention to get under the skin of the hip hop approach to music and recreate some of those driving moments where the breakbeats drop and sound really, really good. The beats here definitely have some bite to them, but it’s the musical textures and Visger’s entertaining lyrics that demand all the attention.

A whimsical guitar melody kicks off opening track “Books About Nothing”, sounding a bit like Vampire Weekend before a harmonica drops in along with waves of reverb. On the song, Visger muses “I got a job at a meat shop, only thing they think I’m qualified for, I read a famous book about nothing, it was incredibly thick”, incisively describing the rut that many of us fall into, working a dead end job, looking for something more but coming up empty. But the lyrics “I want to read more books about nothing” toward the end of the song indicate that hope isn’t lost, and that the traction to get out of that rut could be one ridiculously long book away.

The following number, “Fish Eyes” opens with a glorious synth tone as Visger’s vocals chime through a low-fi microphone or some kind of megaphone going on about the primordial goo that we evolved from as well as landlords and tenants. This fever dream of a song makes excellent use of funky guitars, neat keyboard noodling, and features the most driving hip-hop beat on the album. A highlight for sure.

The next song “Give Blood, Save a Life” employs a beautiful bad day piano melody that perfectly echoes the lyrics “This has been a long day, this has been a long, long, horrible, horrible day”. The whistles and backwards guitar add some great flavor to the song. I couldn’t think of a better song to carry a grudge to, while walking on a downtown sidewalk with your scarf pulled up over your nose.

Finally, “The Stupidest Things” opens with the sparsest keyboard melody and drum beats on the album before building and building into a prehistoric interpretive dance break down.

The lyrical content of the EP makes me believe that this is a celebration of isolation and introspection. About speculating about the guy who lives next to you while reading text books about how the eyes of fish have evolved. Overall, Jonathan Visger’s whimsical melodies and half crazy ADD lyrics make his North South EP a joy to listen to.

Jonathan Visger – Fish Eyes

Secret Tunnel Group – Jonathan Visger (You can buy the album here for $3.00! What a deal!)

November 6, 2008

Mason Proper’s "Lock and Key" Video Premiers on MTV’s Subterranean

The video for Mason Proper’s “Lock and Key” is set to debut on MTV’s subterranean tonight really late. The video features the band walking through an urban metropolis encountering many mannequins along the way. Some are drivers and some are suicidal, so keep your eye out. The way the video is shot super low budget with all the effects in camera casts a great feeling over the video that will have you thinking “business as usual… or is it?” As always the track is great indie rock fair as Jonathan Vigr’s voice charms and delights over a backdrop of quirky guitar melodies, ethereal arpeggios and slide whistles. That’s right. Slide whistles. Check them out.

P.S. Mason Proper is playing the Bug Jar in Rochester on November 15th! You should be there because I will be too!

Mason Proper – Lock and Key

Mason Proper Myspace

September 9, 2008

Walter Meego & Ra Ra Riot @ The Bug Jar

It’s kind of funny, during the entire summer I didn’t go to any concerts at all, save for The Faint in Philadelphia. Then when school starts (i.e. when all my free time disappears) I’m going to concerts almost every weekend. Why might this be? Well the number one reason is that I’m currently unemployed! So carting my jobless butt around the greater New York area has never been easier!

This past weekend I once again made the tumultuous trip to Rochester, NY to see Walter Meego and Ra Ra Riot at the Bug Jar. Whose owner, I must add, is a very kind gentleman. There was an opener who went by the name John Moses, who played acoustic guitar and harmonica, he was decent, but not the flavor I was looking for in Roc city. Such is the plight of the opening act.

Walter Meego soon took the stage, adorned with Mickey Mouse T-shirts. They launched into a noisy rendidition of “Wanna Be a Star” that was largely devoid of drum machine, so I feared that I was viewing a repeat of the White Williams show where the band would sound nothing like the CD. Not always a bad thing, but when the Band’s CD is amazing, it’s kind of a let down. Luckily as soon as the guitar reverb faded, Justin Sconza stepped out from behind a tower of Korg keyboards and stood behind a table that had what looked to be million little gadgets. He started gyrating behind the table, indicating that, yes ladies and gentlemen, the beats were about to drop. And they did, and it was good, amen.

The band unleashed some great songs from their debut album “Voyager”, including; “Lost”, their Heinekin hit “Forever”, “Girls”, my brooding favorite “Letting Go”, and the show highlight; the face-melting club destroyer “Keyhole”. Seriously, when I heard the break before the guitar solo, I turned to my girlfriend and said “Oh snap, it’s on!”. For real. The band ended with the slower song “Your Love”, which kind of surprised me considering that they are an electronic/dance/pop act, but their sound was fantastic, and I didn’t mind having my eardrums soothed with some sweet sweet synthesizers.
Ra Ra Riot the “Upstate New York Heroes” were next on the ticket and they literally came in the backdoor and brought their equipment with them. The drummer even had to push through the crowd to get to his kit. You’ve got to admire that kind of Pragmatism. Once all the equipment was on the stage, the band sound checked all of the instruments, allowing us to hear some of the violin and cello chops of the band’s lovely ladies.
The amicably charming Wesley Miles (Hey, nice name) took the stage and politely apologized for taking so long, and then the band roared into some energetic songs off of their new album, “The Rhumb Line”. Their songs seemed to cast a magic spell on the kids who had, oddly, stood still with their arms crossed occasionally pushing thier black square framed glasses up their noses during Walter Meego. The kids were now actually bobbing their heads. Very Strange. Highlights of the show included, a stirring version of “Ghosts Under Rocks”, Their new single “Dying is Fine” (To which a green shirted bearded man seemed to be testifying to with his hands in the air, reciting the song lyric for lyric), and my favorite song of their set, “Too Too Too Fast”, whose lyrics of frustration over love and eyes (What a great combo), a great violin riff, and of course ample use of John Hughes era keyboards. Despite some equipment malfuntions (Cello amp broke), Ra Ra Riot returned to play an encore of “Hounds of Love” originally by Kate Bush. They put on a fitting warm up show for their high profile hometown gig Sunday at Syracuse University’s Juice Jam opening for Bloc Party.
Walter Meego – Keyhole

Walter Meego – Letting Go

Walter Meego – Through A Keyhole (Le Castle Vania Remix)

Walter Meego Myspace

Ra Ra Riot – Ghost Under Rocks

Ra Ra Riot – Dying is Fine

Ra Ra Riot – Too Too Too Fast

Ra Ra Riot Myspace

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