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Friday, December 16, 2011

The Shins news

The Shins have confirmed a March release for their fourth album, "Port Of Morrow." It will be released jointly on James Mercer's own Aural Apothecary label and Columbia Records. 

Recorded in LA and Portland, Mercer handled all songwriting duties, lead vocals and majority of instrumentation. The record was produced by Greg Kurstin and mixed by Rich Costey. The cover art was created by Jacob Escobedo.

An exact release date and touring plans will be announced soon. As with the live dates earlier this year, the upcoming tour will see James Mercer leading a Shins lineup of Yuuki Matthews (bass), Jessica Dobson (guitar), Richard Swift (keyboards) and Joe Plummer (drums).

The album's track listing:
1. The Rifle's Spiral
2. Simple Song
3. It's Only Life
4. No Way Down
5. September
6. Bait and Switch
7. Fall of '82
8. For A Fool
9. 40 Mark Strasse
10. Port of Morrow


Kaiser Chiefs album and U.S. tour details announced

Danny North
Leeds, England’s Kaiser Chiefs surprised the industry and fans this past summer when they released fourth studio album "The Future Is Medieval" via an original digital platform, allowing fans to create and sell their own versions of the album and choose from album art designed by lead singer Ricky Wilson.

Now the band is planning their US return with forthcoming release, "Start The Revolution Without Me" (Fiction/Cooperative Music/Downtown), featuring five never-before released tracks. Next year, the band will be hitting the road for a US tour (full tour dates below).
 
The musicians worked with producers Tony Visconti (David Bowie, Iggy Pop, T. Rex), Ethan Johns (Kings of Leon, Ray LaMontagne) and Owen Morris (Oasis, The Verve) and tried producing their own tracks with drummer/songwriter Nick Hodgson at the controls. Out of this came Kaiser Chiefs’ most forward thinking output to date.
 
First track on the album, “Little Shocks,” sets the tone for the record’s sonic electronic experimentation. U.S. single “On The Run,”(produced by Stephen Street, who also did the band’s debut album, "Employment") sees the band voicing out against the cruel opinions of modern society. Closing track, “If You Will Have Me,” is a Lennonesque orchestral ballad, a son’s message to his estranged parents. "Start The Revolution Without Me" shows a more sinister side to the band's songwriting. The lyrics and melodies are a bit darker this time around, and it's a successful shift in direction.
 
The band has released three albums Stateside, including "Employment," "Yours Truly, Angry Mob" and "Off With Their Heads." Kaiser Chiefs have sold over six million albums worldwide and won three Brit Awards. 
 
Track listing for "Start The Revolution Without Me":
1. Little Shocks
2. On The Run
3. Heard It Break
4. Kinda Girl You Are
5. Starts With Nothing
6. When All Is Quiet
7. Cousin In The Bronx
8. Things Change
9. Man On Mars
10. Problem Solved
11. Can't Mind My Own Business
12. Child Of The Jago
13. If You Will Have Me
 
U.S. Tour Dates:
March 6            Boston, MA @ House Of Blues
March 8            New York, NY @ Terminal 5
March 9            Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club
March 10          Atlanta, GA @ Tabernacle
March 12          Houston, TX @ House Of Blues
March 14          Dallas, TX @ House Of Blues
March 20          San Francisco, CA @ Fillmore
March 22          Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom
March 23          Seattle, WA @ Showbox Theatre
March 24          Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom
April 17            Toronto, ONT @ Phoenix Theatre
April 19            Chicago, IL @ House of Blues

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Amos Lee EP due in February

On Feb. 14, Amos Lee will release a six-song collection of previously unheard songs as a CD, digital, and 10”-vinyl EP, entitled As The Crow Flies

The songs were recorded during the sessions for Lee’s critically acclaimed album Mission Bell, which was produced by Calexico frontman and multi-instrumentalist Joey Burns. The tracks on As The Crow Flies are also produced by Burns and feature musical backing by Burns and Calexico drummer John Convertino.
 
Mission Bell debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Top 200 Albums and Billboard Rock Albums charts when it was released last January, earning the Philadelphia-born singer-songwriter the highest chart position and best sales week of his career. Earning critical raves from scores of media outlets, the album also spawned the Triple A radio hit “Windows Are Rolled Down,” which gave Lee his debut No. 1 single.
 
In other Lee news, he was featured on PBS special ACL Presents: Americana Music Festival. Featuring the genre’s established and rising artists performing at the 10th Americana Music Association Honors and Awards ceremony at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium, Lee joined a lineup that included Robert Plant, Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, Civil Wars, and The Avett Brothers. Watch his stellar performance of “Cup of Sorrow” here.
 
This month, Lee wraps up an amazing year with his final live performances of 2011, which include two shows with one of Lee’s heroes, singer-songwriter John Prine, on Dec. 16-17. Lee also recently captured an amazing performance at Tucson’s historic Fox Theatre with members of Calexico for the upcoming fourth season of Public Television’s hit program Live From The Artists Den with the episode due to air in early 2012.

For a sneak peek, watch the trailer here: http://artistsden.com/2012/. In January, Lee heads to Europe for two-sold out shows in Amsterdam, as well as shows in Paris and London — all with support from The Punch Brothers.

The track-listing for As The Crow Flies:
“The Darkness”
“Simple Things”
“Say Goodbye”
“May I Remind You”
“Mama Sail To Me”
“There I Go Again”
 
Upcoming tour dates:
12/16  Mobile, AL                 Saenger Theatre (w/John Prine)
12/17  New Orleans, LA      Mahalia Jackson Theatre for the Performing Arts (w/John Prine)
1/16  Amsterdam                 Paradiso (w/The Punch Brothers) SOLD-OUT
1/17  Amsterdam                 Paradiso (w/The Punch Brothers) SOLD-OUT
1/19  Paris                            La Cigale (w/The Punch Brothers)
1/21  London                        Shepherd’s Bush Empire (w/The Punch Brothers)

Extra Q&A with Switchfoot

Here are more excerpts from my interview with Jon Foreman of Switchfoot…
 
Q: How did the European tour go last month?
It was probably my favorite time over there. The fans were great. It’s interesting when you travel the world and get a chance to see how different songs go over in different communities. Certain songs resonate better in Europe that they do over here.
 
Q: For ‘Vice Verses, the band worked on a select number of songs and honed them, instead of having dozens to pare down like on the last album.
We’ve tried the democratic process, where we all take blind votes. We’ve done records where every day, we’re taking another vote. You end up spending more time talking about the songs than you do actually recording them. For this album, Tim and I would filter through the material and focus more on the music, rather than which song to record that day.
 
Q: What was the experience like working with producer Neal Avron this time around?
He’s a very concise thinker and really good with songs. To work with him from the start, you have this cerebral element of how you’re going to get where you want to go. It’s much more charted out and thought through, rather than just throwing paint on a canvas and seeing where it goes. 
 
Q: Drew has referred to “Where I Belong” as a song at the heart of the band lyrically. You’ve said at some shows on tour that it’s the last song you want to play if the band ever broke up. What was your mindset while writing it?
While you’re in the studio, a lot of times you get divorced from the live experience. I wanted to remind myself why I play [music] and thought ‘what songs do I want to sing live’...[Now], it’s always a moving experience to play it live.
 
Q: Have you found people are very surprised after hearing “Selling the News,” which is a real departure for the band?
Yeah, it has been for some folks. There are always songs we’ve never released that feel a lot more adventurous than that one. [Since] they’re unreleased, they’re a part of you that no one has ever heard.
 
Q: The subject matter really makes you think.
At the moment, we have to remind ourselves how we define news. News is happening all around us. Your sister having a baby is news; it’s not necessarily something that’s going to hit the front page…sensational stories are going to come to the top. That becomes the backbone of what we think is the world and what is happening in the world, when in reality, that’s a very small portion of what would be deemed ‘news.’ 
 
Q: You’ve been periodically writing blogs for Huffington Post. Do you find that has been a good outlet to get your thoughts across on ideas that don’t fit into Switchfoot songs?
It’s been great to find space for a broader idea that might not fit into a three-minute pop song and fun to figure out how to write in that style and a really great outlet to get other ideas out.     
 
Q: This year marked the band’s 15th anniversary. Can you believe it’s been that long?
In once sense, I’ve always been playing music. I was in a Led Zeppelin cover band in junior high. In that sense, it feels like I’ve been in a band all my life. In the other sense, it feels like just yesterday we were starting the band. Time has definitely flown by and we’ve enjoyed every moment of what we’ve done. Maybe the old adage, ‘time flies when you’re having fun’ is definitely true for us.
 
Q: Do you find your solo projects in recent years like the seasonal EPs and Fiction Family album with Sean Watkins help you engage in other musical avenues you can’t with Switchfoot?
It’s invigorating to have other outlets for different songs because I feel that strengthens everything. You’re not put in a box in any location. For me, to have the seasonal EPs to throw mellower songs that would never fit on a Switchfoot record. Then to write with Sean Watkins and have that record be something completely different - to come back to rock ‘n’ roll, Switchfoot-style, it feel invigorating to dream up what you can do. I feel like ‘Hello Hurricane’ and ‘Vice Verses’ definitely came out of that limitless space where anything goes.

Peter Hook and the Light out now on CD

Following its digital release last May, Peter Hook And The Light’s debut EP “1102/2011” is now available as an extended physical CD edition through American indie label, 24 Hour Service Station.
It includes four instrumentals and two unreleased a capella takes of singer Rowetta’s treatment of "Atmosphere."
Reissued with 10 tracks in a jewel box sleeve adorned with James Chadderton’s acclaimed, visually stunning cover, the CD release is currently being sold at independent retail music stores, plus iTunes and other digital sites.
The 1102/2011 EP takes its name from the palindromic recording date of Feb. 11, 2011 at Blueprint Studio, Salford, U.K. and features the four tracks from the EP, Rowetta’s versions of “Atmosphere”, “New Dawn Fades” and “Insight” while Peter Hook sings on “Pictures In My Mind.”
“Pictures In My Mind” was an unfinished Joy Division track unearthed by the band’s “bootleg society” from a rehearsal tape stolen in 1977, setting it between Warsaw and Unknown Pleasures. The punky tune has been completed for the first time by Hooky And The Light for the release.
Having performed with the band consistently since 2007 at events such as Versus Cancer, 1234 Festival, Vintage and The Factory gigs, The Light’s guest vocalist Rowetta performs three of the classic Joy Division tracks which she has been singing live with the band over the past year, “Insight, “New Dawn Fades” and “Atmosphere,” delivering intensely passionate performances.
Receiving great reviews for her vocal performances from Joy Division fans and Factory aficionados, Hooky decided to record Rowetta’s unique renditions of these tracks, and she joined the band at Blueprint to lay down the vocals in February 2011.
Videos for both “Pictures In My Mind” and “Atmosphere” can be viewed on the Peter Hook And The Light YouTube channel, youtube.com/peterhookandthelight, along with footage from other The Light concerts.
The design for the EP is a stunning post apocalyptic Manchester streetscape by local Manc artist James Chadderton, who works as a tutor in the city in 3D and Graphic design. Inspired by the nightmarish futuristic visions of movies like The Terminator, Dawn Of The Dead, and the BBC’s classic “Threads” series, many assume that James’s artwork depict post nuclear fallout but James prefers to characterise them as “human devoid wastelands where the buildings have been left to decay. 
Peter Hook And The Light features Peter Hook on vocals and bass, his son Jack Bates on bass, Nat Wason on guitar, Andy Poole on keyboards and Paul Kehoe on drums. Rowetta performs as guest vocalist at selected gigs. 
Having performed together at the opening night of The Factory in February 2010, The Light have undertaken extensive tours of mainland Europe, Australia and New Zealand, America, as well as numerous UK and international festivals.
Following their well received Closer live appearances across the United States in Sept. 2011, their second American tour and their debut visits to Canada and Mexico the same month, The Light continue with live dates across Europe to the end of '11 and have just announced a return tour of Australia for April 2012. 
Track Listing:
1. Atmosphere (Featuring Rowetta)
2. Pictures In My Mind (Featuring Peter Hook)
3. New Dawn Fades (Featuring Rowetta)
4. Insight (Featuring Rowetta)
5. Atmosphere (Instrumental Mix)
6. Pictures In My Mind (Instrumental Mix)
7. New Dawn Fades (Instrumental Mix)
8. Insight (Instrumental Mix)
9. Atmosphere (A Capella)
10. Atmosphere (A Capella Raw Comp) 

Haçienda Records is the official label of legendary Fac 51 The Haçienda and based exclusively at its website at fac51thehacienda.com and has worked closely with American indie label 24 Hour Service Station, on the physical releases from Hook projects Freebass, Man Ray and now The Light.
Originally formed as a an outlet for the work of original club owner and Joy Division and New Order bassist Peter Hook, Haçienda Records has always intended to publish other artists, both new and established, to provide a platform for exposure in the industry.
Aside from The Light, Haçienda Records releases include humanizer’s debut EP “This Tiny Universe” and the first release from Canadian techno prodigy Richie G; his “Baum” EP has remixes by Hernan Cattaneo & Soundexile and Jesper Dahlback.
Section 25 brought out “Invicta,” their first EP of brand new material since the recent passing of Larry Cassidy, which also saw Jon Dasilva’s The Virgo Mechanically Replayed “Factory Fatigue” album unveiled.
Next month will see the debut EP from Super White Assassin with the “In Formation” EP. Fore more information, go to: 
face51thehacienda.com
peterhook.co.uk
24hourservicestation.com

Ben Kweller starts label, announces album

It's been a busy week and I'm catching up on some notable news and press releases. Here's one...

After 15 years of releasing records through both major and independent labels, Ben Kweller has announced the formation of his own label, The Noise Company. The Austin-based label will be home to all future Kweller releases, beginning with his new album, Go Fly A Kite, set to hit stores Feb. 7.

Signed to Mercury Records when he was 15, Kweller is interested in a situation where he has complete control. "When I signed my first record deal 15 years ago, many artists had little understanding of, or interest in, the contracts that would eventually bind their musical future," says Kweller.

"I was one of those artists. Fortunately, I've been lucky to make my music with little interference. I've worked with some great people, most of whom I remain friends with today. Unfortunately, we've all been operating within an antiquated system that doesn't work anymore. The Noise Co. is another step in creating my own system. It gives me the opportunity to work directly with people in the industry who were previously 'off-limits.'"

He continues, "There's a lot of geeky stuff involved, but as a die-hard music junkie and record collector, these things get me excited! It's the real deal, not just an artist self-releasing his music. We have a real staff, real funding, real distribution, and I look forward to eventually helping other artists achieve their goals too."

The label will have a global presence as well, having already secured deals with Lively Up in Japan and Shock in Australia.

Go Fly A Kite, Kweller's fifth studio album, hits hard with the unforgettably melodic and heartwarming fuzzed-out rock that first put Kweller on the map with his debut, 2002's Sha Sha

Friday, December 9, 2011

An interview with Switchfoot

courtesy Big Hassle
A version of my interview originally appeared at nctimes.com/entertainment

Switchfoot is among the best known rock acts to emerge from the San Diego area during the 1990s.
 
Successfully crossing over from Christian to alternative radio with ‘03’s double platinum CD “The Beautiful Letdown,” they can claim other gold albums and several hits – including the current top 10 modern rock single “Dark Horses” - in various genres since then. 
 
Besides music, philanthropic work is an integral part of the band, which regularly supports Standup for Kids (a non-profit that receives proceeds from Bro-Am, the annual Switchfoot-founded surfing contest/concert), Invisible Children, the self-established lowercase people, Habitat for Humanity, To Write Love on Her Arms and more. 
 
Continuing that charity support, Switchfoot front man Jon Foreman will perform an acoustic set to benefit Invisible Children alongside indie rock singers from The Get Up Kids, The Almost, Sleeping at Last and mewithoutyou at the Troubadour in West Hollywood on Dec. 15. Tickets are $15 via ticketfly.com. 
 
“I’m really honored to be part of that event with a lot of friends on the bill,” said the singer/guitarist last week, from a tour stop in Richmond , Va. “I’ll probably be doing mostly solo stuff.” 
 
In addition to a return appearance at 91X’s Wrex the Halls (“the show is like a big party where you get to [reconnect] with friends you haven’t seen in a long time”), the entire group will do a sold out Q&A session and acoustic set Dec. 14 at Largo at the Coronet in Los Angeles.
 
Foreman is especially excited about it because “we’ve never done anything like that before. It’s going to be an expose on how we made the new record [‘Vice Verses’]. We’re going to bring in gear from the studio and pull back the curtain on how we go after the vision we have for the music. That’s going to be a blast.” 
 
He also had a good time this past October, after joining Taylor Swift onstage in Phoenix for a cover of Switchfoot’s “Meant to Live” (a tune she’d been performing regularly on tour).  Both musicians’ Twitter followers were buzzing afterward.
 
On eighth studio album “Vice Verses,” Switchfoot – rounded out by bassist Tim Foreman, drummer Chad Butler, guitarist Drew Shirley and keyboardist Jerome Fontamillas - enlisted producer Neal Avron (Yellowcard, New Found Glory) and wanted to emphasize more bass and drum sounds. 
 
“Being a guitar player, I tend to think of guitars first, but it was probably me trying to be mature and see things from the other side,” Foreman explained with a laugh. “Maybe I’m just a frustrated drummer at heart. We wanted to give Tim and Chad a chance to shine and let the foundation speak for itself.” 
 
Focusing on rhythmic elements led the guys to “practice more restraint with layers. We tried to be concise and economical and very deliberate about how many things we put on top of the rhythm section.” 
 
The album is Switchfoot’s strongest since 2005’s “Nothing is Sound.” It ranges from Nirvana-esque opening track “Afterlife,” some ample feedback and gang chants in “Dark Horses” and the intense, yet hopeful rocker “Rise Above” to ominous programming anchoring “The War Inside” and the U2-ish “Blinding Light.”
 
Lyrically, Foreman’s subject matter revolves around the polarity of life. The quiet, prayer-like title track dates back to prior “Hello Hurricane” sessions; the band definitely knew it would be slated for the successor. 
 
“Having that concise directionality going into the project really helped steer the lyrics and song selection from the start. ‘Hello Hurricane’ was just walking to see where you ended up. On ‘Vice Verses’ [the album], we had a definite destination we headed towards.” 
 
Although the title track had been played before in concert, recording proved difficult. “We tried to put it into the band blender, but it just didn’t fit and was resistant to that approach. It ended up closer to the way it started - true to the seed of the song and really minimal.” 
 
Foreman uses a spoken word vocal technique amid orchestrated pop keyboards on the politically-charged “Selling the News,” quite a departure for Switchfoot. 
 
“It’s always nice when you can let people into a new room in the house,” he said. “At the airport, I’m reminded how inescapable the sales element of our media is and I feel surrounded by news that isn’t news…For me, the song is diving into the idea that anything is for sale and you’re making money off how sensational something is.” 
 
Still, the singer didn’t have any particular media organization in mind, while writing.
“It’s not ranting or railing against the system, but lamenting how narrow-minded our idea of the news is.” 
 
Spiritual-tinged album standout “Where I Belong” clocks in at nearly seven minutes and caps everything off with moving sentiments and a group chant recalling The Alarm or U2’s “40.”
Foreman thought about the live experience and sought to “encapsulate the present and future and all that we’ve been through to sing at the end of the night…anthems remind me why I’m here on the planet. That was the inspiration.” 
 
He was “blown away” by the positive reception the album and “Horses” single have received to date. “You never know how things are going to translate from your head onto CD and such. The reason I make music is to communicate with other souls. That is always paramount.” 
 
Although Switchfoot had been nominated for Grammys in the past, “Hello Hurricane” finally helped the band snag one in the Best Rock or Rap Gospel Album category earlier this year. 
 
“Man, it was wild,” recalled Foreman. “For us, winning was very gratifying. To be acknowledged by your peers: I don’t think there’s a bigger award you could win, you know? But it also reminded me that nothing is more rewarding than what I do night after night.” 
 
Looking ahead into 2012, Switchfoot is scheduled for a world tour and another round of U.S. dates. Foreman also has another album by Fiction Family – the folk tinged side project with fellow local guitarist Sean Watkins of Nickel Creek – tentatively due next spring.
 
“It’s been ready for a long time. I originally mixed the record myself and didn’t like it. I finally talked everyone into letting a professional [Adam Hawkins, who handled ‘Verses’] come in and do the job,” he explained with a laugh. 
 
Switchfoot plays 91X FM's Wrex the Halls, 6:15 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 11, Valley View Casino Center, 3500 Sports Arena Blvd., San Diego, $19.91-$54.91, 91x.com. 
 
switchfoot.com