Listen: TV Girl – If You Want It
0
This happened months ago, but I have just recently discovered the story of the song “If You Want It” from the California duo TV Girl, which heavily samples Todd Rundgren’s 1969 classic, “Hello, It’s Me.” I don’t know if I’ve ever met anyone who doesn’t like that song and TV Girl must agree, as they didn’t just sample it, they used it as a complete backdrop for their drumbeats, shiny keyboards, and reverbed vocals. Adding their own original lyrics, they basically turn it into their own song, singing…
“You wander into the bedroom,
You’re drunk, we’ve done this before.
…If you want it, you got it,
You only want it when you’re drunk,
My friends say you’re obnoxious,
You’re not so bad when we’re alone.”
A familiar story. Pitchfork love(d) it, while another music review site killed Pitchfork for only mentioning that they “cover” Todd Rundgren, not stating that they “rip him off.” Easy now..and to make this story much more interesting, Todd Rundgren issued take down notices to youtube and any blogs that were playing the song, distributed through Rhino Entertainment, a subsidiary of Warner Music Group. First, as the band states, they weren’t making any money off the track to begin with, and second, what is the story with “Fair Use” in music today? Can a band use a sample or can’t they? And if they can, how much can they sample it? And how much should it cost a band if there are profits, or should it cost anything at all? Is someone really suddenly not going to buy “Hello, It’s Me” because they hear this TV Girl song? Or does it actually increase the likelihood of more people discovering Todd Rundgren’s music? These are questions that surprisingly still haven’t really been legally answered, and it’s just going to be more and more of a problem in today’s rapidly-changing world of electronic music sharing, mashups, online radio, and bands forgoing record labels to take their music straight to the people.
Regardless, the record labels and big-time old-school music business machine do not like it. Listen to “If You Want It” below…while you still can.
Check out their latest, “Girls Like Me.” at http://tvgirl.bandcamp.com/
Listen: Rosie Thomas – Why Can’t It Be Christmastime All Year?
0Looking for some upbeat Christmas music to help get you through these hectic holidays? Check out Rosie Thomas’s happy shiny Christmas pop gem “Why Can’t It Be Christmastime All Year” from her 2008 Christmas album A Very Rosie Christmas. Rosie Thomas has released several solo albums and has also worked with Sufjan Stevens and toured as a member of Iron & Wine.
Check out her website for a new Christmas song from her as well, “Remember When It Snowed.” Her new album “With Love” is due out February 14, 2012.
Merry Christmas to all the Musichord fans out there and thanks for visiting our site! Be safe, have fun, and enjoy this holiday season!
Listen: Gary Clark, Jr. – Bright Lights
0Do you like gritty, bluesy guitar rock? Silly question, of course you do. Gary Clark, Jr. is a (relatively) new guitar sensation, rocking his favorite 1953 Gibson ES 125 with the feel of an old bluesman, though he’s only 27. Springing out of the fertile Austin music scene, Clark, Jr. blends hard-driving bluesy rock with a guitar virtuosity reminiscent of the greats. In fact, Eric Clapton picked him as the lone newcomer at the 2010 Crossroads Guitar Festival. Check out these live versions of “I Don’t Owe You A Thing” and “Bright Lights,” the title track from his major label debut EP, and see if you agree.
Album Review: St. Vincent – Strange Mercy
1
[4AD] 2011
St. Vincent is Annie Clark, a talented multi-instrumentalist from Texas. Prior to St. Vincent, she has performed as a member of the Polyphonic Spree, and contributed guitar to Sufjan Stephens touring band. Strange Mercy is her third album, and it’s a remarkable, curious, unclassifiable collection of songs, that are fractured, structured and flustered with ambiguity, energy and direction.
I don’t know what the genre Art-Rock is exactly, but maybe this is it. Each song on Strange Mercy is lovingly crafted, and unique, and like a good piece of artwork, leaves an awful lot up to the listener to find precisely where the meaning of the piece lies. This happens through her curious and revealing lyrics, and through the musical structure of the songs themselves.
On Surgeon, she opens with the refrain “I spent the summer on my back…” What does that convey – Depression? Hopelessness? Promiscuity? Loneliness? What you choose to take away from these tracks is entirely up to you. The answers aren’t defined, and the music deftly weaves a similar story of smooth, inviting warm string pads and sweet vocals, struck against pulsing synthetic bass lines, and a genre-hopping fusion of Annie’s formidable angular guitar playing.
As I said before, this album is open to interpretation, but to me, this record seems incredibly sexy in its energy. There’s something both strong and vulnerable in Annie’s delivery and the stark honesty that she exposes herself to the listener – in the candour and smoke of the album, that raw energy comes through pretty clear. From the opening track – Chloë in the Afternoon, that details an encounter with a dominatrix for a busy white shirted businessman (or woman), perhaps real, perhaps nothing more than an over-active imagination stemming from a scrawled appointment in a journal…
And there are beautiful, intriguing love songs, such as the title track, Strange Mercy, with its 80′s throwback synth tones, and heartfelt lyrics, or Dilettante, a vignette of a relationship that again, I don’t really understand, but absolutely oozes style:
Slow down, dilettante
So I can limp beside you
And follow in your house too
Hang on, street savant
My bank in my back pocket
How far you think you’ll take us?Oh, Elijah, don’t make me wait
What is so pressing?
You can’t undress me anyway
Listening to the record, I thought to myself – this is what music in the future should sound like. The album has a modern unique sound, and yet somehow manages to keep a kind of timeless class about it. But of course, that’s just my opinion. Chances are that yours will differ – and I think for Strange Mercy, that’s the way that the artist wants it.
Musichord Rating: 8/10 








Listen: The Alabama Shakes – Hold On
6Hot damn, sometimes a band just comes along and blows you away with their intensity, soul, and groove. These guys have everything all lined up, and singer Brittany Howard positively smolders with power and emotion. The band are currently in the process of negotiating for a record deal, although apparently they already have an album together and ready for release. Keep tabs on the Alabama Shakes over on their Facebook page. Meantime, Hold On…
Virgin Mobile FreeFest 2011, Merriweather Post Pavilion, Columbia, MD
0This year looked like one of the best lineups of the last few years, and arriving at Virgin Mobile FreeFest relatively early this year, there were already a good number of people there who agreed. But with 50,000 people forecast to show up at Merriweather Post Pavilion for the annual Freefest, the number of people during the first four to five hours of shows was manageable. This would not be true after 4pm, when Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, Patti Smith, TV On The Radio, and The Black Keys were scheduled to close out the main pavilion stage, and Cut Copy, Cee Lo Green, James Murphy, !!!, Deadmau5 and Ghostland Observatory were playing on the other stages.
The Virgin Festival (in the U.S.), which is now known as the Virgin Mobile FreeFest, was modeled after the British VFest, and has taken place in Toronto, Canada and Baltimore, MD in the U.S. over the last five years. The first VFest was originally set up as a paid, one-day festival and was made into a two-day fest for years two and three. Originally set at the Pimlico racetrack in Baltimore, MD, where the annual Preakness portion of the Triple Crown is, VFest moved to a “free” festival the last three years at the legendary Merriweather.
Obviously, for some, FreeFest is free – Virgin just asks for a $10 donation to “The RE*Generation, Virgin Mobile’s initiative to address youth homelessness.” But, there are also $50 “package” tickets available that included posters, etc., which is good, as the free tickets went in about 60 seconds, as usual. I was lucky to get free tickets this year, though really, $50 is still reasonable for the lineup provided, but it would suck a bit knowing other people got in for free. And, as you’re not able to come and go, once in you’re in, you’re there – everyone’s posters were completely crushed at the end of the day.
We hit the music right away, and it’s a loooong day, with the first band coming on at noon. The first set we hit was Alberta Cross on the “Festival Stage,” which, along with the “Dance Forest” stage, were both set outside of Merriweather’s main grounds (though the Dance Forest was a little close to the main “Pavilion” stage; the beats were bleeding into some sets on the Pavilion Stage.) Alberta Cross was impressive and fun, and one of the more “grungy” acts at the Fest, with lots of feedback, jammin’ basslines, and a blues rock aesthetic that comes on even harder in their live show than on their latest EP ‘Rolling Thunder”.
Rushing from one stage to the next, Bombay Bicycle Club (a UK-based band) was the first act at the Pavilion Stage, and as all of the seats under the pavilion were general admission, we were able to get seats up close for most of the acts at this time of the day. (Although that did mean camping out later on and missing James Murphy in order to be up close for The Black Keys, the VFest headliner.) Bombay Bicycle Club, actually named for a chain of Indian Restaurants in England, is a band whose music I did not know, and their quirky pop rock songs made me think of a slightly more rocking Belle and Sebastian, with falsetto vocals, bouncy keyboards and grooving melodies – music you can dance to – they were great, a pleasant surprise.
Rushing back to the Festival Stage, Two Door Cinema Club was up next, and these Irish rockers were a highlight of the show. The fans were into it, singing along with many of the songs, and the band knew they had good songs to play; there was no lacking of confidence emanating from the stage. Two Door Cinema Club has had great international success following their 2010 debut, Tourist History, though they haven’t had the same success in the U.S. – yet that is.
After Two Door Cinema Club, it was back to the main pavilion for Okkervil River, a band who I expected to have a more folk and country sound from what I had heard from their earlier albums, but this was a rock and roll show and then some. The Austin, Texas band is known for their intricate musicianship and intelligent lyrics, as well as their overall musical prowess. Led by Will Sheff, lead singer and songwriter, Okkervil River also features Lauren Gurgiolo (formerly of The Dialtones), one of the rare female lead guitarists you’ll see that kicks ass. They put on a great show and I was thoroughly impressed.
It was time to stay in one spot for a while by this point, as it was getting much tougher to get seats in the pavilion. Grace Potter and the Nocturnals were up next. After missing most of their set at Bonnaroo this year, I knew this show was not to be missed. Truly, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals have arena-rock potential, with a potent two-guitarist tandem, a female bass player with serious chops, and Grace Potter’s ear-splitting vocal capabilities, which are remarkable. There can’t be more than a few people ever born with a voice like that. As they’re from Vermont, Potter also took a few moments and spoke about the recent flooding and tragedies in Vermont and how it affected them. Sometimes you can tell when a band is destined to really make it big, and that is the case with this band. With three studio albums out already, it may not be overnight success, but it’s coming regardless.
After Grace Potter, and with Patti Smith coming up next, I took a few minutes to run over to the Dance Forest to check out !!! (supposedly pronounced chk, chk, chk, in case you were wondering), and their dancey funk punk. The music was good and the lead singer, Nic Offer, was all over the stage, exuding energy and mayhem. From there, I took a few minutes to go and check out Cut Copy (shouldn’t “Paste” be added to the end of that?) and their 80s sounding synthesizers and grooves. The Australian electronic band had a huge crowd and I swear if I closed my eyes, I could have been listening to early Depeche Mode- not a bad thing.
Making political statements and railing against the government (though she did honor U.S. troops overseas) is old hat for Patti Smith, as political activism has long been a part of who she is, and she did not disappoint during this show. The Patti Smith group tours as a four-piece band, including her well-known lead guitarist, the great Lenny Kaye. She did play “Because The Night,” and a lot of kids at the show recognized the song and thought she was playing a cover, having no idea that she and Bruce Springsteen share writing credits on her biggest hit, going all the way back to 1978. Patti Smith is truly a living legend and an accomplished artist, writer, and singer/musician, and I was lucky and glad to finally see her live. The Godmother of punk lived up to her reputation, and political righteousness and great music sustained her entire set.
I stuck it out after Patti Smith to keep my good seats for TV On The Radio and the Black Keys, and missed Cee Lo Green, though he was on the big screen in the pavilion, rocking with an all-female band all dressed in black. After his disappointing set at Lollapalooza, I would have been interested to see more of him to see how his show was going and if he had the crowd with him, but I just caught two songs on the screen – he was into it then at least.
By this point, the festival grounds had also gone WAY downhill with trash everywhere, and extremely long lines for food, beer, and any bathrooms, which you would really just as soon avoid now. The estimated 30,000 people were more than Merriweather could handle and the facilities were pretty much done towards the end of the evening. Which was one more reason to just stay in my seat.
TV On The Radio (TOTR) are unbelievable, a big band with a big sound, and a mix of so many genres, which they may veer between multiple times in any given song. Punk, hard rock, blues, soul, jazz and funk all have a place at the table, and they play it LOUD. Having lost founding member Gerard Smith to lung cancer this April, TOTR has soldiered on, despite the tragically early loss. My first experience seeing TOTR was seeing them open up for the Pixies about six years ago, and they have definitely refined their stage show and made it even more powerful and overwhelming. Brilliant.
Though there were in effect two headliners with The Black Keys and Deadmau5 closing their stages at the same time, The Black Keys were the main event for most. There were no seats available in the pavilion anymore, and coming out fashionably late, the Keys kicked off the show the way I saw them back in 2005 at the 930 Club in DC – two guys on guitar and drums. It’s amazing that they have pulled off the sound and the shows that they have with just the two of them creating the bulk of the music, which sounds like a lot more people and a lot more instruments. After a few tracks, they brought out the disco ball and a bass player and keyboardist to fill out the concert sound, which also allowed them to play songs from their most recent albums.
After the Black Keys, I went over and checked out the rest of Deadmau5’s set, and as it was remarked to me by someone observing the dancing crowd and the smoke-covered stage, crazy lightshow, and a pair of glowing mouse ears floating high above the stage pumping out dance/trance music, “I think I’m missing something here…” Right.
Having gone to the first two VirginFests at Pimlico in Baltimore, this year’s Virgin Fest was scheduled at a better time of year, in early-mid September, rather than in the 100 degree heat of early August, which made a huge difference in overall enjoyment of the show. However, Merriweather, even with the expansion outside of the normal Merriweather footprint, was unable to completely handle the hordes of people as far as food and restrooms. By the end of the day, it was almost impossible to get food or drink or hit the restroom and the grounds looked like a war zone.
Regardless, with the level of bands they keep bringing in, Richard Branson should keep the FreeFest going just as it is – a little free music is one of the few things most people can still agree is a good idea.
Musichord Rating: 8.5/10 








Listen: Gotye – Somebody That I Used To Know
0Gotye is a Belgian-Australian multi-instrumentalist. His latest single,”Somebody That I Used To Know” features New Zealand vocalist Kimbra in a stripped back, compelling haunting tale of heartbreak that reminds me of Peter Gabriel, in a good way.
Musichord Talks With Joe Kempler, Blackswoods Festival Promoter
1The Blackswoods Festival, a three-day camping and concert rock festival, is set for this September 23-25, 2011 in Mercersburg, PA, and we’re talking with festival promoter Joe Kempler, of Like Water Management, to get his take on just what all goes into planning and promoting a concert festival.

Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons play all three nights at the Blackswoods Festival in Mercersburg, PA
Joe, thanks for taking some time to talk with Musichord! We’ll jump right into the questions:
1. So, what are the responsibilities of a promoter for a concert / festival – what is the job description?
Everything…from booking the bands to making sure there will be enough port-a-potties and drinking water. Organizing sound, lights, on-site logistics, promotional activities, t-shirts, transportation, food, lodging, on-site vendors…luckily I won’t have to perform. The Blackswoods Festival will be the first festival I’ve organized, so I don’t have any staff at this point. But the Festival’s main attraction, Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons (playing all three nights) has a strong and dedicated following of people who are willing to pitch in and help. There’s no way I could do this without them and the fine people at Cosmo Sex School Records, Jerry’s record label.
2. How did you get into this kind of work, what made you want to be a promoter?
At this point, it’s labor of love. I’ve been a lover of live music since my first Grateful Dead concert over 30 years ago. Music has meant so much in my life that it feels good to do what I can to keep bringing great music to more people. It’s really all about the music.
3. Can you tell our readers about the Blackswoods Festival? What’s the history of the festival, what bands will be there, and why will it be a great concert festival?
Last year was the first “official” Blackswoods Festival, although the Jackmormons have played this site before. The site is private property and we’re really a “private party.” The property is really beautiful, a terrific wooded lot with a stream running alongside. Several of the bands have a strong local following. Hexbelt is very big in the area and Cris Jacobs Band draws extremely well from the Baltimore area. The Jackmormons have a very strong and dedicated following in the area, as well. The things that make any festival great will make this festival incredible…namely the music and the people. Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons are in top form right now. They’ll have a new album (maybe a double album) coming out in a couple of months which will likely be the best work of Jerry Joseph’s already storied career. And Jackmormons fans are just about the best people you’d ever want to meet!
4. What kind of roadblocks or issues do you have to deal with to pull the festival together that people might not think about?
As a promoter, you have to rely on a lot of people to do their jobs timely and do them well in order for things to run smoothly. So far I feel I’ve been lucky in dealing with great people. Given the fact that this is my first festival, I’m sure that when September 23 arrives, I’ll be able to give you a better list!
5. Any good stories to tell about the job, what’s the craziest thing that you have had to deal with promoting this festival?
You have to come to Blackswoods to get the good stories! And there are always plenty of them!
6. What do people not know about organizing concert festivals that you would like them to know?
Organizing a festival takes a lot of energy, a lot of hard work and a sizable investment. My goal is to make sure that everyone who attends has a great time…fans, artists, vendors, everyone.
7. There seems to be a surge in concert festivals in recent years, as they have become more popular and more bands are even using them to fill out their tours. Can you tell us why that is?
A good festival is a music lover’s dream. The fans get to see many artists…some that they wouldn’t otherwise see. So in addition to seeing music they already know and love, they can get turned onto something new and different. The artists love it even more because a good festival will provide an opportunity for artists to hear each other (which is something they usually don’t get a chance to do) and to collaborate. All kinds of great musical collaborations have been born at festivals…and we expect the same thing at Blackswoods!
8. How difficult is it to get the bands you want for a festival when there seems to be a lot of competition nowadays?
I think I’m lucky to be working with Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons. Jerry’s reputation as an artist is such that lots of other artists really want to play with him. So we had no problem filling our bill with great music. In fact, we had several bands asking to play Blackswoods that we had to turn down.
9. Live Nation is the biggest concert promoter out there, and there is a consolidation within the industry (Live Nation purchasing House of Blues) – how does that affect what you do?
I don’t think Live Nation will ever affect what I’m trying to do. Live Nation is a huge, publicly-traded corporation. They are in the music business to make money – which is the legitimate goal of any corporation. I’m doing what I’m doing for one reason only…the music. I want everyone to see every artist at Blackswoods. That’s my goal.
Blackswoods Festival Lineup: The Blackswoods Festival features a great lineup of bands including: Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons, These United States, Cris Jacobs Band (of The Bridge), Hexbelt, Wally Ingram, Mookie Siegel, Southeast Engine, Bret Mosley & Kenny Liner, James ‘JPat’ Dalton and Craig Greenberg.
Listen: Regurgitator – Super Happy Fun Times Friends
0
Regurgitator are quite possibly the coolest rock band in Australia. Their seminal 90′s album, Unit was recently named by JJJ listeners as the number 10 Hottest Australian Album of All Time. But let’s not dwell in the past. The brand new album, Super Happy Fun Times Friends is full of healthy mixes of rap, rock, with standard lashings of self-deprecating irony and cartoon violence. You need to hear this to really appreciate it.
And thanks to the band’s general awesomeness – you can! The album is available though all kinds of streaming sites for free. You can listen to the whole record and then pay whatever you like for it on the band’s BandCamp Page, preview and comment on tracks over at Soundcloud.
Or, for the traditionalists, pick up the album on iTunes.

















