This blog is dedicated to music, live and recorded. I review shows and albums and also publish feature stories on artists.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Pick of the Week: The Mars Volta - Sunday, January 27th - Fox Theatre, Boulder, CO

Why You Should Go: If you can get a ticket this is a show that you shouldn't miss. It isn't often that The Mars Volta bring their stadium sized rock show to small clubs like The Fox and as they prepare to drop their new record this week the band is sure to be in top form. With new songs and a new drummer who seems to be breathing new life into the collective The Mars Volta may just blow the front wall off the building. A furious raw energy is evident on the new record and is sure to electrify crowds when the band takes the stage.

The Mars Volta


Venue:
The Fox Theatre 1135 13th Street, Boulder, CO - 303.443.3399

Doors:
8:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
9:30 PM

*Price:
Sold Out

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

Labels:

Thursday, January 24, 2008

The New Mastersounds Regroup and Get Remixed

Inspired by the 70’s funk and groove of Jimmy McGriff, Groove Holmes, and The Meters, jazz guitarist Eddie Roberts and drummer Simon Allen have been striving for nearly 10 years to hone their sound and refine it to something that moves dance floors in a way that few other instrumental bands can.

They began life as the guitar centric Mastersounds before quickly realizing that the sultry churning of a Hammond B3 was essential to the sound they were looking for. Though the band only lasted a couple of years and recorded one single, it laid the foundation for a long standing musical relationship between the two. Roberts and Allen struck out on their own and soon crossed paths with Hammond player Bob Birch and bassist Pete Shand; The New Mastersounds were born and the search was over.

The sound that Roberts and Allen had been searching for is a tight mix of Jazz and Funk that comes to life in the hands of these talented players. While there is ample evidence of the band member’s fondness for Jazz in their sound, the groove that is laid down by the rhythm section of Shand and Allen is what holds the whole thing together and keeps the wheels on when Roberts stretches out in Jazz laced solos.

Though they are based in Leeds, England the Roberts claims that the US is the most promising market for the band. They have been playing club nights and gigs around the UK since their inception in 2000 and though things have always gone relatively well, the scene can’t support them playing more than three or four times a year in the major cities. As a result, they were forced to hop the channel early on and expose the music fans on the continent to their sound. It was touch and go for a while but recently things seem to be picking up a bit for The New Mastersounds as the band continues to tour there regularly. “We are having more records released in Europe these days. There are more labels taking an interest and actually starting to license our albums for the individual countries rather than before when we were releasing them on a UK label and selling them on Import into the different European countries which is harder obviously because there is nobody on the ground selling it for you,” said Roberts in a recent interview with Listen Up Denver! from his home in Leeds.

The increased exposure of the bands sounds around Europe has paid off with Italian label Record Kicks taking some serious interest in the band. Record Kicks knew that The New Mastersounds tight funk-based sound would be perfect for the clubs if it were remixed by some of the scene’s best DJs. “They approached us saying ‘we’d like to release a remix album, how ‘bout it?’ We were like ‘yeah great,’” Roberts said. “Then they asked us if we could sort it out and we kinda turned it back on them because we’ve tried to get remixes done in the past and it is difficult because everyone is so busy and to pull a project like that together takes so much time and effort. It’s just not our thing. We were busy making a new album and touring and everything so we told them they could run with it and we would be happy to provide all the tracks and send them out to who ever wants to do what. They ended up pulling it together and it was relatively easy for us as I just had to dig out all the separates for every track and get them out.”

It wasn’t until the project was finished that Roberts got to hear the result and as chance would have it he heard it in exactly the right setting the first time. “We were in France I stayed at the bar late night having a few drinks after our set and Simon [Allen] had given a copy of the album to the DJ who ended up just putting it on. I was talking and all of a sudden I was like ‘I know this tune,’ and I didn’t realize he had put the album on so back to back there were all these tunes I knew and I was getting so confused,” laughed Roberts. “It was really nice to hear it in the club environment which is what it is made for as opposed to hearing it at home for the first time. The dance floor was full and people were just going for it. They weren’t batting an eyelid and they were dancing like it was all different music and it was only really me that knew what was going on.”

While in the U.S. the music of The New Mastersounds is largely heard only when they are in town and up on the stage, in other parts of the world things are different and their music is part of the aural fabric of the club scene. “With all the 7” singles and the vinyl that we have put out, a lot of DJs around the world have our music and you can be in a club anywhere and all of a sudden a couple of tracks come on and you go ‘huh, this is us,’ and you see everyone dancing,” said Roberts. “That’s how I learnt my production sound. It was being in a club and hearing a track come on and saying ‘uh I wish I put more bass on that or I wish I’d pressed it a bit louder.’”

In many ways the role of a funk band like The New Mastersounds in the UK is one of a DJ and it is up to the live sound engineer to push the bass or the volume to satisfy the demands of the party. “The places we tend to play in the UK there is usually only one band on the bill with DJs on before and after us. We are there to play for an hour and a quarter and that’s it,” Roberts said. “That’s really where our sound has come from. The dance floor is already going and we have to slam it for an hour and a quarter and give them something extra compared to what the DJ is giving them. When we’re done we give it back to the DJ and the people carry on dancing for another 3 hours or more and we usually go out and join them.”

When playing the stages of the US The New Mastersounds are looking to pack the dance floors in the same way, but, without the benefit of a DJ to help out, they have to shoulder the load and play extended sets to the delight of their rabid American fan base. “We have always found it weird when we can to The States and all of a sudden when the band stops everyone leaves,” said Roberts. “We have obviously had to rethink our one and a quarter hour sets because you can’t just go out there, play for an hour and have everyone leave. So we started to get into this thing where we’d play longer and longer and it got all the way up to four hours one time just keeping the dance floor going all that time, like a DJ would.”

In order to keep up that kind of intensity it is critical that the band work well together as a unit. There is a certain “group-think” that is required to move the music into the territory that the beat hungry dancers out on the floor insist on. In late 2006 the band parted ways with long time Hammond B3 player Bob Birch, who had left the band to focus more on teaching and settle down a bit, and he was replaced by another Leeds local and friend Joe Tatton. “Joe [Tatton] fits in well because he knows where we are coming from musically and he has played with all of us at one time or another. He is also familiar with the DJ funk scene that we are coming out of as he has been around it as well,” said Roberts.

After Tatton joined up with the band The New Mastersounds toured for nearly a year before deciding that it was time to refocus the band’s sound and get back to the deep funk roots that they had started out in search of. They parted ways with horn player Rob Lavers who had joined them on the road on recent tours, and set to work re-discovering the group-think the quartet needed to thrive. “You’ve got to get the four piece right and really working, and then you can add things on top of it,” Roberts said. “We just felt that we needed to pull it back again and really concentrate on the sound of the four. So we did a lot of work on our European run in the fall, in sound-checks and things like that; just getting the sounds right and rearranging some stuff.”

On their last pass through the states in November, Roberts felt like things were hitting on all cylinders. “Everything was feeling really exciting and fresh again. The show in Denver, with Mofro, was one of our musical highlights as a band. We slammed it! Everything fell into place and it just felt great.”

The band has recently re-entered the studio to try to capture the new-found energy on tape for an album that is currently slated to be released in late spring. If Roberts’ enthusiasm about the bands current sound is any indication, we can expect another collection of the finest in nu-jazz and funk that the scene has to offer. Until then, The New Mastersounds will continue to hone their sound, road test new compositions and fill dance floors at clubs from California to Colorado during a ten date tour this month.

Check Out The New Mastersounds If You Like:

  • The Greyboy Allstars
  • The Meters
  • Papa Grows Funk

Labels:

Monday, January 14, 2008

PICK OF THE WEEK: The New Mastersounds - Thurs, Fri, Sat, January 17th, 18th, 19th - Various Front Range Venues

Why You Should Go: Inspired by the 70’s funk and groove of Jimmy McGriff, Groove Holmes, and The Meters, the music of The New Mastersounds is a tight mix of Jazz and Funk that comes to life in the hands of these talented players.

While there is ample evidence of the band member’s fondness for Jazz in their sound, the groove that is laid down by the rhythm section of Pete Shand and Simon Allen is what holds the whole thing together and keeps the wheels on when guitar phenom Eddie Roberts stretches out in Jazz laced solos.

Though they are based in Leeds, England the band claims that the US is the most promising market for their music. The extended, danceable deep funk and soul jams that this band kicks out are sure to get the whole room moving and the party going full strength.

The last time The New Mastersounds came through Denver, they opened up for Mofro at The Ogden and by many accounts they stole the show. Look for them to extend their set well into the early morning hours this time and reward all those fans willing to groove with them.

Note: There has been some confusion as to whether the bands Denver gig will be at Cervantes or Quixotes but either way, head up to 25th and Welton if your Friday night is begging for an infusion of Funk!

The New Mastersounds


Venue:
Thursday: Avagadro's Number 605 S. Mason, Ft. Collins, CO - 970.493.5555
Friday: Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom 2637 Welton Street Denver, CO 80205 - 303.297.1772
Saturday: The Fox Theatre 1135 13th Street, Boulder, CO - 303.443.3399

Doors:
Thursday: 10:00 PM
Friday: 8:00 PM
Saturday: 8:30

*Approximate Set Times:
Thursday
The New Mastersounds: 10:00 PM

Friday
The New Mastersounds: 10:00 PM

Saturday
Special Guest: 9:00 PM
The New Mastersounds: 10:00 PM

*Price:
Thursday
$12 (DOS)
Tickets Available At The Door
(Note: There is an 8:00 show by David Crossland and one ticket will not get you into both shows)

Friday
$15 (ADV)
$17 (DOS)
PURCHASE FRIDAY

Saturday
$10 (ADV)
$12 (DOS)
PURCHASE SATURDAY

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

Labels:

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Top 10 Albums of 2007

I listened to a hell of a lot of newly released music over the course of the last year and there were a few CDs that kept popping up in my rotation. For whatever reason these were some albums that I just kept putting back in the CD player, at home, in the car, at work, it didn't really matter. I just wanted to hear these records, and hear them again and again. In my estimation that makes them good albums.

I realize that "good" is relative (or at least it should be) but in this world of too many opinions I am going to add mine to the mix with my list of the 10 best albums released in 2007.

Honorable Mention - The Aliens: Astronomy for Dogs, Jackie Greene: The Dig Years, The Greyboy Allstars: What Happened to TV?

#10 - De Phazz: Days of Twang
  • File Under: Electro Jazz with a Beat
  • Standout Tracks: Boogie Philosophy, Hell Alright, Devil's Music
#9 - The New Mastersounds: 102%
  • File Under: Instrumental Deep Funk & Soul
  • Standout Tracks: Hey Fela!, 102%, Thirty Three
#8 - The Arcade Fire: Neon Bible
  • File Under: Talking Headsesque Indie Rock
  • Standout Tracks: Keep The Car Running, (Antichrist Television Blues), No Cars Go
#7 - Wilco: Sky Blue Sky
  • File Under: Experimental Alt-Country
  • Standout Tracks: Impossible Germany, Side With The Seeds, What Light
#6 - Assembly of Dust: Recollection
  • File Under: Americana Rock ala The Band
  • Standout Tracks: Whistle Clock, Samuel Aging, Bootlegger's Advice,
#5 - Band of Horses: Cease to Begin
  • File Under: Melodic Fuzzed Out Indie Rock
  • Standout Tracks: Is There a Ghost, No One's Gonna Love You, The General Specific

#4 - Ryan Adams: Easy Tiger

  • File Under: Largely Acoustic Alt-Country
  • Standout Tracks: Goodnight Rose, Oh My God, Whatever, Etc., I Taught Myself How to Grow Old

#3 - Joe Henry: Civilians

  • File Under: Smoky Jazz Club Folk
  • Standout Tracks: Parker's Mood, Time Is A Lion, Our Song

#2 - Iron & Wine: The Shepherd's Dog

  • File Under: Hushed & Inspired Indie Folk
  • Standout Tracks: White Tooth Man, Resurrection Fern, The Devil Never Sleeps

#1 - The National: The Boxer

  • File Under: Moody Indie Pop
  • Standout Tracks: Green Gloves, Apartment Story, Racing Like A Pro

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

PICK OF THE WEEK: Eric Bachmann - Saturday January, 12th - The Hi-Dive, Denver, CO

Why You Should Go: Eric Bachmann is one of the most powerful singer songwriters currently playing on the indie folk scene today. With simple arrangements and heartfelt lyrics, Bachmann presents his work confidently on the stage in a way that continues to win over new fans.

He began his musical life in the post punk Archers of Loaf before forming his most critically successful project, Crooked Fingers. Though Crooked Fingers is currently on an indefinite hiatus to allow Bachmann to focus on his solo material, his sets are still chock full of the bands material.

Despite being a resident of the area, Bachmann hasn't performed a concert in Denver since September of 2006. He has toured the country with Josh Ritter and Neko Case and even played a run in Europe supporting Two Gallants. The Hi-Dive is an intimate space that should play host to Bachmann's personality and musical style very well. Come welcome him home and encourage him to play more local gigs.

Eric Bachmann


Venue: The Hi-Dive, 7 South Broadway, Denver, CO 80209 - (720) 570-4500

Doors:
8:00 PM

*Approximate Set Times:
Elin and Freida: 8:30 PM
Ian Cooke: 9:30 PM
Eric Bachmann: 10:30 PM

*Price:
$10
PURCHASE

*All times and prices are gathered from other sources and I am not responsible for mistakes or inconsistencies. They are intended only as guidelines. Please, always call the venue if you desire the most accurate information possible.

Labels: