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Posts Tagged ‘POV’

The Disco Biscuits: Planet Anthem

By: Dennis Cook

The Disco Biscuits have never been my thing. Long respected their general savvy and knack at carving out a unique niche for themselves, and there’s no denying they can play their butts off, but music either connects with us or it doesn’t. I offer this caveat because I came into Planet Anthem (released March 16 on Diamond Riggs Records) with ZERO expectations. And one’s POV on Bisco will heavily influence their response to their game changing new platter.

In a nutshell, the Biscuits have done what few bands to rise to prominence in the jam scene have done: Created a thoroughly modern, intensely sculpted set that has an honest shot of penetrating the mainstream. It’s also incredibly brave of a band to offer such a drastic reconfiguration of their sound this far into their career. They know dance music in ways few others can match, and they’ve whittled things down to a succinct beat science here. There’s some sexy space rock like “Uber Glue” likely to become live monsters, but there’s more cuts that could be singles or populist DJ fare (no problem imagining a Vegas disco spinning “You and I” next to Britney’s “Toxic,” or perhaps finding “The City” or “Big Wrecking Ball” sandwiched between videos by the Black Eyed Peas and Rihanna). Even if this doesn’t make it on the charts, the Biscuits now have a set custom made for the dance music underworld they’ve been French kissing for years.

For a band regarded by many as primarily a live entity, they’ve crafted a quality studio offering that holds up against the high gloss stuff on major labels and MTV. And as someone who didn’t come into this expecting “Morph Dusseldorf” or “Little Shimmy In A Conga Line,” I kinda dig this and see how it opens up a ton of new possibilities for them – fiscally, musically and otherwise. The ’60s psych-pop of “Fish Out of Water,” the Morcheeba-with-saucy-horns vibe of “Quad D,” the patient prog moan Of “Rain Song,” and post-punk, Public Image Ltd-esque “Sweatbox” are all fresh ground. And there’s little doubt the band will transform and trick out every tune in concert; their gift for variety and brainy rejiggering practically guarantees it.

There’s a sharp focus and pleasant disregard for their past on Planet Anthem that’s excitingÂ…if one can let go of insisting The Disco Biscuits continue to be as they have been.

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Christmas Crunch Crumbs: Did Courtney Love Abuse Her Daughter?; Is Lily Allen Engaged?; The Muppets Sing “The 12 Days Of Christmas”

Happy Holidays, My Glorious PopCrunch Fam! Cassie’s going to be in vacay mode for the next few days, but before I get out of here, I want to give you a few stories from around the blogosphere and a list of links for the road. Enjoy the holidays and be safe! Let’s get to it:
-”The [...]

MTV Programming President, Tony DiSanto, Defends “Jersey Shore”

While we’re on the subject of Jersey Shore: Ads pulled, death threats, protests — and that was only the first week!
MTV programming president Tony DiSanto is speaking to The Hollywood Reporter about the network’s publicly-panned new reality show, Jersey Shore. The Hills-esque feature, about well-to-do twentysomethings visiting the Garden State’s popular beach community for the [...]

Perfect Beach POV – Glorious Bikini

As the submitter says “This is God’s POV”. I can’t argue with that.
(College Humor)

Phish | 08.05 | Shoreline, CA

Note: In our constant efforts to bring you the most compelling Phish coverage anywhere, we offer two points of view on Phish’s first California show in over six years. First we have general reflections from our Editor-in-Chief Kayceman, followed by a fresh perspective from our Associate Editor Dennis Cook. Enjoy.

Words by: Kayceman | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Phish :: 08.05.09 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre :: View Mountain View, CA

Kayceman shares a few thoughts on Phish at Shoreline:

MIKE’S BAND

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Mike Gordon :: 08.05 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre

Since when is this Gordo‘s band? Don’t get me wrong, dude’s been dropping bombs forever, but I’ve heard lots of chatter about individual band members, how great Trey is playing now that he’s sober and focused (true), how strong Page sounds (no doubt), but after watching Mike control the entire show last evening I am compelled to champion his cause. Whether he was challenging Trey on “Chalk Dust,” crushing the funk on “Cities,” or pushing his fat bass notes into truly dark territory on “Down With Disease” and the hard-earned “Mike’s Song,” Gordo was the dominator at Shoreline.

NEW SONGS

Alright, no sugar here, let’s tell it like it is. We got a lot of new songs at Shoreline and we didn’t get the good ones. And I get it. A band always wants to play what’s new, and any healthy band has to be engaged in fresh material, but overall the selections from last night didn’t do it for me. Here are the new ones from Shoreline:

“Time Turns Elastic” – Time turns boring. Like many of their new ones, there’s a really strong jam at the end, but the set-up is too formulaic, almost like they are covering themselves in a way. Put it back in the oven, I bet it bakes into something nice, but it’s not ready yet.

“Stealing Time From The Faulty Plan” – I dig it, and definitely the best new one from Shoreline. A little like “Character O,” but I also like that track so we’re doing okay. The “got a blank space where my mind should be” chorus really works and Trey’s guitar is mean. More like this, please.

“Backwards Down The Number Line” – Not bad. I hated the placement as set two opener, but it’s a nice song that like “Time Turns Elastic” built up steam as it went. At the end of the day, I’m just not into the introspective songwriter thing with Phish; it’s not why we go to Phish.

“Let Me Lie” – No. No. Seriously, no! I don’t want to think of Trey riding his bike or taking off his shirt to feel it burn or using the brakes when he goes down hill. The metaphors are all wrong. At a rock & roll show we don’t use brakes, we want to fly off the rails because we’re going so fast.

KEEPING IT AFLOAT

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Phish :: 08.05 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre

For all my shit talking I actually really liked the show and think the band sounds really good right now. Song selection wasn’t my favorite but a few incredibly well played numbers kept the night afloat. The set one combos of “Chalk Dust”/”Divided Sky” (where Trey nailed the shit out of it) and “Suzy”/”David Bowie” were more than enough to satiate the packed house. Set two was carried by a spacey “Down With Disease” and then the “Maze,” “Mike’s” (a lil slow out of the gate but definitely worth the wait) > “Simple,” “Weekapaug.” The “Maze” was completely demented and likely the song of the night. If “Maze” wasn’t the highpoint, then “Mike’s” was, as shit got primordial in the back section. And just hearing “Bowie” and “Maze” on the same night is enough. Never in all my years have I seen both in the same show. Well played, lads.

SOLID B

For their efforts at Shoreline, I give Phish a solid B. And coming off Red Rocks and going into The Gorge, two mammoth sets of shows, a solid B on a Wednesday night with flashes of brilliance ain’t too bad.

Continue reading for Dennis Cook’s review of Shoreline…

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Susan J. Weiand

Phish :: 08.05.09 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre :: Mountain View, CA

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Phish :: 08.05 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre

Enthusiasm is much harder to offer than respect. While passingly familiar with the broad strokes of Phish‘s 26-year career, this show was only my third time seeing them in the flesh. Always feeling an outsider to their very codified clubhouse, I just let them be, marveled at what they’d achieved against any “normal” industry standards and patted my many Phish lovin’ friends on the back as they celebrated this band. However, I walked into Shoreline with a real zeal to unlock their zeitgeist, preconceptions left in a jar at home, and discovered a world class quartet with a vibrant, peculiar, fiercely engaging identity. And they were a shitload of fun, too.

Immediately I was struck by how twisty they are, but in such a friendly way. It would be so easy for this music to veer into artiness and highbrow distance but it really never did. Yes, there were a few meandering stretches but Phish 3.0 seems like a band with a mission, and at least from my newbie’s POV, that mission appears to be to shore up every good thing that’s distinct about them. The wandering is to be expected when juggling such primal ooze but they never really dropped the ball and their idiosyncratic internal logic swept one up in a journey, where time was both elastic and stolen, that will take awhile for my brain to untangle. I’m not sure they were trying to craft a cohesive narrative a la Phil & Friends but there was a scale of storytelling and brave, balls out execution that felt, well, epic (and apologies for falling back on that hoary jam-scene cliche but it fits).

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Trey Anastasio :: 08.05 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre

By the time they hit the rawk-tastic “Chalk Dust Torture” in set one I was pretty sold by the curious mixture of elements they stir – Frampton-like classic rock moves mingling with African high life, brainy electric jazz, calypso, barbershop harmonizing, dub accents, bar band moxie and way more. It’s so freakin’ illogical that it transcends any simple descriptor, a language separate from rock’s Rosetta Stone that others can play at but only these four dudes can actually converse smoothly in, a lovely chatter that emerges when they drink up the moment and move off the guide rails. To wit, the jam in “Chalk Dust,” which wobbled on the song’s axis, bellowing sea bottom bass and jittery sprinter’s heart drums being clawed at by hungry guitar that teetered between madness and Joe Pass finesse, wound into a flurry of keys unleashed by Page that actually quickened my pulse. There’s SO much going on in their music that it’s a smorgasbord to choose from, each person free to sample bites or just take in the general yumminess.

And there’s the no small matter of the abundant love their incredibly dedicated throng project towards the stage. Looking around during this show all I saw were people lit up from within by what Phish was creating on stage, and it’s not hard to surrender to that affectionate, alive riptide and join them in celebrating life and wholly engaged music making. Regardless of my ignorance, I love hearing the oddball titles of their tunes murmured adoringly on folk’s lips – “Golgi,” “Weekapaug,” “Ya Mar.” It’s a foreign tongue to be sure, and while FAR from fluent I left this gig determined to do a lil’ Berlitz blitz to bring myself up to speed, a surprising commitment given the shortness of time and abundance of music already on my plate. My anxiousness to educate myself speaks volumes about the intensity of what they laid down.

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Phish :: 08.05 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre

I can’t rightly say if this was a “great show” or merely a very good one. I simply don’t have the frame of reference to speak with any authority. What I can say is that despite their massive individual talents it was the group dynamic, their collective noise, especially in the second set that floored me. It’s a sound that runs down jubilation and finds the sweet spot between simplistic fare (there’s a goodly amount of pure cock rock to Phish but also a fair bit of nursery rhyme thinking) and stratospheric, highly theoretical muso smarty pants-ed-ness. More simply, Phish is a fucking platypus, fuzzy but laying hard-shelled eggs, a thumb in the eye to those who stuff things into neat genres. And they did all this with such exposed emotion, raggedly baroque eloquence and gee-whiz bravado that my wig was rightfully flipped.

A few other scattershot highlights: The swerving blur of “David Bowie” that closed set one; Page’s Chucho Valdes-esque piano throughout the night and his strong Traffic-era Winwood lead vocal on their tremendous cover of The Velvet Underground’s “Oh Sweet Nothin’;” Trey‘s heartfelt reading of Los Lobos’ “When The Circus Comes,” even if it put the brakes on the momentum they were building at that point; the wacky juxtapositions of mood and tempo; the way Trey occasionally brought to bear a very Derek and the Dominoes blues guitar growl and vocal yearning; the disco-y take on the Talking Heads’ “Cities;” the wicked turns of “Maze;” their unbridled love for people with “a ticket stub in their hand;” Chris Kuroda‘s Dumbledore-ian lighting wizardry; and the vast distances they traveled, often within a single piece, which ranged from the consciously gigantic and involved down to music box delicacy.

Instead of feeling overwhelmed (which their music can EASILY make one feel) I experienced a tiny taste of what’s kept millions on the ride for decades, understanding that while they’re the focal point, the enzyme, Phish is a collaborative effort produced by a combination of these extraordinarily gifted players, a mind-boggling catalog AND the writhing, hands in the air masses that gather around them. The morning after I can honestly say I finally dig Phish. Go figure…

Phish :: 08.05.09 :: Shoreline Amphitheatre :: View Mountain View, CA

Set I: Golgi Apparatus, Halley’s Comet, Chalk Dust Torture, The Divided Sky, When the Circus Comes, Time Turns Elastic, Ya Mar, Stealing Time From The Faulty Plan, Suzy Greenberg, David Bowie

Set II: Backwards Down the Number Line, Down With Disease > Limb By Limb, Oh Sweet Nothin’, Cities > Maze, Mike’s Song > Simple, Weekapaug Groove

E: Let Me Lie, Bold As Love

For more pics of this show go here.

Phish perform again Friday and Saturday night at The Gorge in George, WA. Check back for live Tweets, setlists, pics and full reviews. Complete Phish tour dates available href="http://www.jambase.com/Artists/2698/Phish/Shows">here.

Just like Leg I of Phish’s Summer Tour, JamBase will be at every stop with more coverage than you’ll find anywhere! Keep up to speed with all things Phish at jambase.com/phish.

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Reporters Uncensored: Behind the Scenes of the Global Web Series

There are unfortunately too many international issues that the MSM does not cover