Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: akron/family, baths, brighton music hall, february shows in boston, gang of four, joe fletcher and the wrong reasons, Kitchen Sessions, laura stevenson and the cans, manners, neko case, streight angular, triumphant return, wavves
Dear fine ladies and gentlemen who may occasionally have stumbled upon this blog and noticed the lack of action in the past, well… 2 months (and some weeks),
We now return to our regularly scheduled programming. I will not make excuses for slacking off, but instead just dive back into things and ring in this snowy, slushy, freezing month we call February. It takes some “umpf” to power through Boston’s frozen and wet tundra, and below we will at least try to motivate you off your cozy couch and out into the world. Yes, things still happen during the snowpocalypse. There’s even a stellar new venue in Allston, Brighton Music Hall, which is bringing in some of the most exciting concerts in Boston during the following months. Suck it up, buy some waterproof boots and get out there.
2/3 Neko Case @ the Wilbur Theater
At this point, the good seats at the Wilbur Theater will no doubt be sold out. But Neko Case’s powerhouse of a voice should rattle your bones no matter where you’re sitting. Middle Cyclone was pretty good, but nothing competes with her 2006 album Fox Confessor Brings the Flood. And, if you’re a New Pornographer’s fan but haven’t seen Neko bring it live (because she tends to, ahem, skip out on some concerts these days), you really, really should.
2/4 Wavves @ the Paradise
I am intentionally not listing Best Coast here, though she will be playing with her boooooyfriend. Regardless of their super obnoxious California stoner couple-dome, Wavves’ new album King of the Beach is ridiculously catchy and fun. In these cold-ass times, sitting back, closing your eyes and imagining getting high on a California beach before running into some breaking waves while listening to this album is almost mandatory. Also, know what warms you up in the Boston winter time? Skinny hipster mosh-pits! THAT’S WHAT.
2/5 Joe Fletcher and the Wrong Reasons @ Plough and Stars
Joe Fletcher’s first full length album White Lighter is some damn good Americana folk. He is a spirited dude, and Plough and Stars is just intimate enough for his spirit to become contagious. Below is a video from our friends over at Kitchen Sessions back in October.
2/7 Gang of Four @ the Paradise
THROOOWBACK! I’ve always wanted to see Gang of Four live, despite this being about thirty years too late. Anyway, 1977′s Entertainment! introduced me to post-punk, which is actually pretty abidingly chronological of me. Hearing “Anthrax,” “Natural’s Not in It” or “Damaged Goods” live would be pretty damn sweet.
2/9 Laura Stevenson and the Cans @ Great Scott
Read this excellent and in-depth article about Laura Stevenson from the Phoenix.
2/10 Deerhoof @ The Middle East Downstairs
2/11 The Hood Internet @ Brighton Music Hall
2/14 You Can Be a Wesley, Viva Viva and Drug Rug @ The Middle East Upstairs
2/17 Baths @ Brighton Music Hall
After years of remaining largely obtuse about electronic music, I’ve finally started to understand it’s appeal. Baths is masterminded by 21-year-old Will Weisenfeld, and his LP Cerulean proves that ambient beats can pack a serious punch. Two months of doing the most minimalist kind of dance – dancing-while-sitting-at-a-desk, that is – later, I am pretty psyched for this show.
2/17 Streight Angular @ Church
To be honest, though I’d seen Streight Angular’s name about a thousand times, I never actually listened to them until their recent single “Everyone is Syncopated” showed up on their Bandcamp. This track is pretty great in an impending mosh pit sort of way, and it is officially a mosh pit I’d like to be a part of.
2/18 Akron/Family @ Brighton Music Hall
2/18 MANNERS , Anna Fox and Chris North (of the Points North) @ Gay Gardens
If you haven’t gotten your hands on the Boston Countercultural Compass showlist (available in almost every bike shop, coffee shop, or independently owned anything throughout Jamaica Plain and Allston each month since about this time last year), you’ve probably missed out on some of Boston’s most wonderful offerings: DIY house shows. They come in all shapes and size, from fuzzy, experimental noise in an unfinished basement to cozy, New England living room shows with violins, flutes and drums. This show will likely be more the later, so bring your own beer, sit back Indian style and relax. And find a BCCC flyer, go their website, the Facebook group, or follow them on Twitter. It pays off.
2/19 + 20 Dr. Dog @ the Paradise
2/22 Mighty Tiny and Ketman @ Great Scott
2/24 White Rabbits and Magic Magic @ the Paradise
2/24 The Craters and the Points North @ TT the Bear’s
2/25 Asobi Seksu @ Brighton Music Hall
2/25 Galactic @ the Paradise
Filed under: Emma, Uncategorized | Tags: arcade fire, Dawes, finals, home, Houses, Jens Lekman, Kitchen Sessions, November, Serge Gainsbourg, Squinch Owl, thank yous, thanksgiving, Tom Waits
Our word count has taken quite a beating this month. I blame the onslaught of end-of-semester jitters, a perfect storm of restless legs, colder weather, needs for home and horrid, horrid amounts of work. We begin November still high off the fall magic of October and then plummet into the realization that it’s almost Thanksgiving, and every bit of work put off will be breathing down your neck with dragon-like force quite soon. Stage one: ambition and adderall. Stage two: boredom and burn out. Stage three: Turkey.
Thanksgiving is so rooted in traditions: Family traditions, friendly traditions, traditions misconstrued by false memories and drunk ones. It comes right at that time of year when I consistently reach my breaking point, and suddenly, without fail, everything I am working on or to seems insignificant, and I doubt I’m the only one who feels that way. When I return to the suburbs it usually only takes a few days for boredom to sink in. This time, I was charmed. The place you grew up, whether a small rural town, the city, or somewhere in between is honored during Thanksgiving. I apologize for the cheesiness but maybe that’s part of the charm, too.
So as I write from New Jersey, still seemingly full and sleepy from bird-induced tryptophan almost four days later and dreading the back to Boston commute, I’d like to say thank you. I know it’s a little late, I know everyone does this the day OF Thanksgiving, not after, but suck it.
I’ll say it briefly with words: Thank you to Allston, to Boston, to part-time (possibly stray) cats who kill the mice in my walls (and possibly in my head), to good beer and cheap wine, to crunchy leaves under bike wheels, to fighting the wind, to frozen hands swathed in soft gloves. To future confusion, to long talks, vaporizers and movies.
To the long way home, to the town I grew up in, with more leaves piled high than any other in New Jersey (a lot of this has to do with LEAVES, evidently), to the skyline, to old friends and their parent’s houses, to my parent’s houses, to bagels, to dirty basement irish bars and lost conversations, to wondering where missing people are, to bad jokes and good senses of humor.
Okay, that was less brief than I thought. Might as well have just composed my own version of “La Vie Boheme,” The college kid rendition…
And I’ll say it with music, too.
Poupée de Cire, Poupée de Son – Arcade Fire (Serge Gainsbourg cover)
I’ve been on a slight Serge Gainsbourg kick, starting sometime around 4 AM while writing a philosophy paper and ending… not quite yet. When I downloaded Histoire de Melody Nelson in the throws of hard work, the haunting, creepy yet sublime combination of Gainsbourg’s french whispering (about a car accident between Monsieur Gainsbourg and a young girl named Melody Nelson’s bicycle and the infatuation that ensues… thank you, Lolita), electric guitars and horns in the background got me through the night. This is a cover by Arcade Fire. Not with the same effects as the original, but pretty damn good.
Reds – Houses
Heard them during a yoga class (harhar), was upside down and still wanted to fall into a blissful yet bouncy, floating sleep. I asked the instructor after for the band’s name, and downloaded the entirety of their album All Night. I don’t pretend to know much about electronica or ambient music, but I’m definitely a fan.
I Am Always Coming Home – Squinch Owl
I saw this rag tag group of Western Massers at Kitchen Sessions a few weeks back, and their first EP (which you can download AND SUPPORT THEM at a price of your choosing on their website, linked) has been a staple of my days since. Watch the video put together by the Kitchen Sessions crew here and enjoy some accordion thronged folk, complete with a work saw played with a bow and her remarkable vocals. I am always coming home, indeed.
Your Arms Around Me – Jens Lekman
Sometimes you just need some Jens. ‘Nough said.
That Western Skyline – Dawes
This song is simply beautiful, and lead singer Taylor Goldsmith’s voice is really showcased. It’s pure folk rock, The Band reminiscent harmonics and longing lyrics. I don’t know who this “Lou” he keeps singing to is, but if a friend was sad that their lady left them, I’d like them to whine to me as beautifully as Dawes does.
November – Tom Waits
To keep the voices in my head straight, Tom Waits needs to be listened to heavily about every 3 months. And to end this eclectic mixtape of strange, I give you Captain Eclectic McStrange and awesome, Mr. Waits, sing-yell-speaking about November because, “It only believes in a pile of dead leaves and a moon that’s the color of bone.” Thank you all, and to all, a decent end to the semester, a merry end to the year.
To more frequent writing, to New England winter survival tactics, to not drowning in books! …
And if you are drowning in books, I guarantee a “drowning in books” themed playlist, coming to you in an hour of extreme procrastination and sadness, which I’ll write while trying to get library dust out of my lungs. It’s the least we can do. Stay tuned.


