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Highlights of FYF

Vetiver

One of Sub Pop’s new indie darlings, Vetiver was the act that opened my day at FYF. Vetiver is one of those bands that’s really difficult to place within the constraints of a genre. I had never heard of them before, so I asked nearby neighbors about their sound and got a collection of responses: “ambiently sorrowful,” “indie electro-folk,” “somber and beautiful,” and, my personal favorite, “like a soft sweater hug”. Their show did an excellent job of melding all of these descriptions into a single, semi-coherent idea. Vetiver was subdued and epic, putting a far-reaching energy into their soft, minimalistic songs that reached all the way from the stage to the single water fountain in the park. While definitely more suited to night-time listening than the 2 o’clock-my-face-is-melting-from-the-heat time slot they received, I would jump at another opportunity to get another Vetiver-sweater hug.

Warpaint

Warpaint opened their show with a sprawling, powerful attack on the crowd that was still being lulled to peace by the Vetiver act. Their 10-minute opener destroyed the complacency that had settled over their audience, and was the coolest thing about the show. It was energetic, huge, and entrancing, pushing walls of shoegaze guitar and pulsing bass at everyone within earshot. While I felt that they lost some of their steam once they began playing the rest of their set, that first song alone started getting me pumped about the entire day, which is no easy feat in the heat of the day.

Best Coast

FYF Fest was a collection of bands that really didn’t belong on the same bill, which is partly what made it so awesome. The biggest exception I can think of, however, was Best Coast. Best Coast is possibly the most summer-y sounding band since Sufing-era Beach Boys, and for a festival poised to send off summer with a bang, Best Coast absolutely belonged at FYF. If you went to Best Coast hoping for those fleeting feelings of summer, they absolutely delivered. Frontwoman Bethany Cosentino stood perched in front of fuzzed-out Orange stacks, asked the audience to return her floppy sun hat if it were to fly away (it didn’t), and managed to transport everyone in the audience to the first week after middle school got out. It was simple lofi surfer rock done right, and as the day started cooling off and the wind started rolling in—which I’m convinced ocean breezes conjured by Cosentino’s coy vocals—Best Coast established FYF in my mind as the last great festival of the summer.

Titus Andronicus

Titus Andronicus was my favorite show of FYF Fest for three reasons: Dusty. Moshing. Hipsters. All the previous shows I had seen were fun, but the typical detached behavior of simply standing around and listening to a band with crossed arms was prevalent. I was worried it would happen again for Titus, a band that easily crosses the line between angsty and angry. But I had nothing to worry about, for by the second or third song, there was a throng of 30 or 40 people at the front of the stage moshing their hearts out. The desert dust filled everyone’s lungs, throats, and noses, but it stopped absolutely no one from singing, jumping, and yelling their hearts out. And between the emotive frontman, enthusiastic bassist, and the electric violinist who looked like she was having the time of her life, it was clear that the band was just as into it as the crowd was. The last song resulted in a massive crowd group hug (which you can see on the FYF photo album posted below) before dissolving in a blur of plaid and v-necks. Titus Andronicus had me coughing up the desert for days after FYF, but I would have paid entry fees to see that show alone.

Local Natives

I had seen (and loved) Local Natives at Coachella earlier this spring, so I thought I knew what we were in store for when they took the main stage at 5:45. I was hot and exhausted from the Titus set, but I loved Local Natives and there was no way I was going to miss them. Almost as if rewarding my dedication, moments before the Local Natives, the sun started setting behind the stage and the temperature must have dropped 60 degrees. A steady breeze overcame the crowd. The Natives walked out and burst into “Camera Talk”. And fell in love with this band once more. Despite the melodic, layered rock feel, they carried the show with all the presence of arena rock stars (without the egos!). It was their first day back home in LA, and they played like they were the most grateful musicians there that day. The keyboardist even burst out between songs, “You guys give me a reason to live!” before laughing it off and going into their (very awesome) Talking Heads cover, “Warning Sign”. The band played strong and enthusiastically, welcoming the sunset and closing their set with the very appropriate “Sun Hands”. Even though I’d played the album umpteen billion times over the summer, even though I’d seen them live before, their show made it all seem new and fresh once again.

Ted Leo and the Rx

Ted Leo’s band was one of the more established acts rounding out the playlist, originally coming from the late 90s. But Ted Leo has kept active, putting an album out in March this year, and his act showed it. Despite countless technical screw ups that were not the fault of the band, including busted speakers, falling mic stands, and bad wiring, Ted Leo stayed professional and put out a great show. The band played tight and fast, pumping out their energetic indie punk like a well-oiled machine. My main complaint was that the energy of the crowd (read: the mosh pit) was completely absent from these very deserving musicians. With the exception of a few isolated audience members, most people were standing perfectly still, which is truly an affront to punk of any variety. But unfortunately, that seemed to be the theme of Ted Leo’s set: the band putting out a great performance while everything fell to pieces around them. If you get a chance to see them, do it; but make sure you slip some Red Bulls into everyone’s drink first, because seeing these guys without a jumpy crowd really sucks the fun out of it.

The Mountain Goats

Speaking of established acts, how about those Mountain Goats? After missing about half the first song due to technical mishaps, John Darnielle and company powered through almost an hour of acoustic folk rock. The delivery of everything was perfect: just the right amount of tongue-in-cheek humor, just the right amount of the actual sadness that lies behind much of Darnielle’s heartwrenching lyrics, and an intense professed love for the upcoming band, Sleep. I’m still not sure if that was supposed to be ironic or not. Regardless, The Mountain Goats carried through their power-trio folk with all the excitement of a band who knew that they were in an absolutely bizarre place in the set list (between indie punk and stoner metal) and thought it was awesome. The end result was a great, energetic set that got the crowd going and kind of summarized the idea of FYF as a festival that worked because the bands didn’t really belong together.

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Sweat. Dust. FYF.

The sun beat down on me relentlessly with a coy smile from the piercing blue skyline.

I was dripping sweat (a phenomenon that I thought that I had escaped when I left Virginia) and squinting (I would forget my sunglasses).

My eyes were bombarded with plaid, skinny jeans, RayBans, distressed tank tops, and random items that looked like they had been hiding go seek in a thrift store for years (aka the various FYF uniform varieties).

Hundreds of LAers surrounded me. In front of me. Behind me. Beside me.

Me and the rest of KXSC had been standing in line for near an hour...anxiously awaiting our time to get to the front of a never-ending line and pass through a chain link fence that separated us from LA Historical Park.

It was 12:53PM.

53 minutes down. 11 hours and 7 minutes to go.

Hell to the f@!king yeah. Bring it on.

As with any memorable experience, I have difficulty limiting my words. There just seems to be an overwhelming abundance of stories within the story to tell (luckily I had my handy-dandy iPhone to shamelessly tweet 140 characters throughout the day and sleek Canon PowerShot to capture every moment I remembered to).

But, I am afraid that it will be impossible to recreate my 12 hours at FYF.

Even with a blog, little birdy, and memory catcher on my side.

So, in a few words: My time at FYF was as close to heaven that my kind (music-fiends slash DJs slash radio staff members) can get.

You would think…

That the endless lines would deter me (1hr to get in, 1.5 hrs to get food, 45+min to refill my $4 bottle of water…there was only ONE water fountain in the ENTIRE park…but that is another rant all together).

That the heat would frustrate me.

That the dust filling my lungs (especially when moshing) would anger me.

Nope. None of the above.

Rather, they all added to the experience.

It was as if every line I stood in, every droplet of perspiration that ran down my neck, and every cough that jumped from my mouth were wars to be won. And as the day proceeded, my ears were constantly rewarded for braving the elements.

While the Fest was filled with incredible talent that is sadly (or luckily…depending on how you look at it) underrated, I must say that:

Titus Andronicus + Local Natives + Dead Man's Bones + Mountain Goats = a smile that is still glued to my face.

All bands that I had never listened to. All bands that I left craving their entire discography.

Titus Andronicus gave me my first mosh pit experience. I was blowing dirt out of my nose for the next 24 hours and couldn’t talk, but it didn’t matter. I am proud to say that my personal fitness regime served me well and I held my own with the rowdy boys.

Local Natives had me tapping my feet and closing my eyes. They provided an escape to someplace where the California sun never leaves the sky and worries are a waste of time.

Dead Man’s Bones, first and foremost equals Ryan Gosling. Delightful. In addition, they made me realize that a child choir CAN be a good thing. But, only if they are dressed up in quirky costumes of iconic actors/musicians/fictional characters, that is.

Mountain Goats nearly brought tears to my eyes. This was truly the highlight of FYF for me. I had lost of my friends and, consequently, was standing alone. But this was okay because I kind of lost myself during their set as well. Never in my life had such horribly depressing music made me so incredibly happy.

The energy of all four electrified me. Which, in my opinion, is what separates great music from good music. What distinguishes artists from groups/artists.

If music can make you feel, well then, it has served its purpose.

I expected to leave FYF Fest with a few new favorite bands, a sweet tan, and a greater appreciation for the LA music scene.

I left FYF Fest as an avid fan that was unable to talk because a pound of dirt was lodged in my throat, had a horrendous tan line, and could barely move from sheer exhaustion. But, more than anything, I left FYF in sheer awe...feeling more alive than I had in months. And, for that, I feel blessed to have been in attendance.

PS: For those in need of more awesomeness…here is the link to my shameless tweets. Tasty. September 4th is the date you are looking for.

http://twitter.com/smoran819

PPS: Photos are rad too. Yes. You can download these. In full size.

http://gallery.me.com/shelbymoran#100470&bgcolor=black&view=grid

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New Name, New Home
Welcome back to Fall semester! KSCR has a new home in the Ronald Tutor Campus center and a new name: KXSC! While we hadn't planned on changing our name (we did so as a result of a duplication with a commercial station), we are stoked to be representing USC with new call letters, a new venue (Tommy's Place) and a brand new home complete with schmancy new equipment. So what can you expect from us this year? We will continue to provide the quality programming and events that you expect as well as ticket giveaways to yr favorite shows, live on-air interviews + weekly free shows courtesy of The Live Show, the much anticipated KXSC Fest and much more! Oh look, here's our Facebook fanpage and Twitter. Are you following us yet? Are you? Arrrrr yoooh? If yr feeling overwhelmed by all this change right now, let these pictures from our Grand Opening calm yr soul (and peep the full album on our FB here): *Photos by Heather D’Augustine

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The View From Nowhere 2nd Year Anniversary Show (DOWNLOAD)
"The View From Nowhere" - Spinning an Eclectic Mix of House Music & Electro, Spanning the Most Soulful to the Most Distorted 2nd Anniversary Episode The View From Nowhere 2nd Year Anniversary Edition Featured on KSCR Radio (http://kscr.org,1560AM) Air Date: 07-01-2010 8pm-12:00am Location: Underground Café In Studio Guests: DJ Soca (http://twitter.com/djsoca), Joker Pace (www.jokerpace.com) Number 9 (http://clubsoda.fm), Glitch (http://myspace.com/levonproduction) Info: This episode marks two important milestones. First, the View From Nowhere celebrates 2 years of musical bliss with its anniversary edition. Second, after 26 years, KSCR is moving from its original location to its brand new studios. Thank you to everyone that has supported the show. Music Sounds Better With You. - VFN Right Click and Save As to Download: Part 1/2 (VFN Mix) DOWNLOAD Part 2/2 (DJ Soca Mix & VFN Finale) DOWNLOAD Tracklist VFN/WDPK Intro Willy Wonka – Pure Imagination Intro (WDPK Bootleg) Annie – Anthonio (Fred Falke remix) Alexander Pope – Eloisa to Abelard (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) Deadmau5 – Strobe LCD Soundsystem – Get Innocuous (Soulwax Remix) (sample) Pryda – Balaton Pryda – Frankfurt Tyler Durden – You Are Not Your Job Ray Mang – Look Into My Eyes Joel Goodson – Time Of Your Life (Risky Business) Mario Basanov – Do You Remember (Arithmatix Mix) House of House – Rushing to Paradise Dennis Ferrer – Hey Hey (DF’s Attention Vocal Mix) Sébastien Tellier – L’amour et la Violence (Boys Noize Euro Mix) Bingo Players – Get Up (Diplo Remix) (sample) Crookers – Gypsy P Yolanda Be Cool & Dcup – We No Speak Americano Simian Mobile Disco – It’s the Beat (sample) Paul Johnson – Summer Heat Gary’s Gang – Do it at the Disco Gramophonedzie – Brazilian Gramophonedzie – Why Don’t You Roy Davis Jr. – Rock Shock (Thomas Bangalter “Stop Start” Mix) Bag Raiders – Shooting Star Grum – Can’t Shake This Feeling PNAU – Baby (Breakbot remix) Bag Raiders vs. Sammy Bananas – Fun Punch (feat. Carrie Wilds) Armand Van Helden – I Want Your Soul Pointer Sisters – Dare Me (Diizy’s Party Edit) Crydajam – Playground Freemasons feat. Amanda Wilson, Axwell – Love On My Mind Daft Punk – Rollin’ and Scratchin’ (sample) Pryda – Wakanpi (DJ DLG Re-Edit) Siriusmo – High Together (sample) Eric Prydz – Pjanoo Yazoo – Don’t Go Yazoo – Don’t Go (Bailey & Rossko Mix) Chic – I Want Your Love (Holic Aftermash) Scenario Rock – Skitzo Dancer (Justice Remix) (sample) Phoenix – Lisztomania (Classixx Version) DJ Soca LIVE In-Studio Mix Londonbeat – I’ve Been Thinking About You Metro Area – Miura Simian Mobile Disco – Hustler Technotronic – Pump the Jam Presets – This Boys In Love (Lifelike Remix) Slam - We Doin' This Again? Denis Naidanow feat. Tyree Cooper – Wonderland Dragonette – Competition (Ocelot Remix) Basement Jaxx – Romeo (Ryback remix) Tyree – Video Crash Mylo – Drop the Pressure (Rex the Dog Remix) Klaxons – Gravity’s Rainbow (Soulwax Remix) Ali Love - Secret Sunday Lover (Tom Neville Remix) Dusty Kid – The Cat Fukkk Off - Rave Is King (Original Mix) Josh One - Contemplation (Alex Neri Road Trip Remix) Audion – Mouth to Mouth The Paradise – In Love With You Alan Braxe – In Love With You (Axel Le Baron edit) Stardust – Music Sounds Better With You Chuck Roberts – My House (Let There Be House) Mylo – In My Arms (Tocadisco Remix) Fantom – Faithful Ugod – Ugodzilla (Yuksek Remix) MSTRKRFT – Easy Love Russ Chimes – Mulsanne Together – Together Daft Punk – Around the World (Kid Dub Remix) Daft Punk – Around the World (Original) Da Mongoloids – Spark Da Meth (Bangin Like A Benzi Mix) FEATURED ARTIST: House of House - Rushing to Paradise www.myspace.com/house0fhouse © DuoPhonix "The View From Nowhere" is a weekly show airing on KSCR Radio in Los Angeles
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Gibson Guitar Giveaway + Cyrus

Make Music Pasadena & KSCR's Gibson Giveaway! + Make Music Pasadena & KSCR's Gibson Giveaway!

=Make Music Pasadena & KSCR's Gibson Giveaway!

KSCR + Make Music Pasadena is giving away a Gibson guitar this Friday, June 18th, on KSCR's radio show, Stereotype! To win the Gibson guitar: 1. Winner will be the 7th caller after you hear Matt&Kim's "YEA YEAH" Call 213 740 KSCR. AIM = KSCRLive. 2. Must be able to attend Make Music Pasadena on June 19 to pick up guitar, valued at $500. More details about the giveaway may be found here (Link: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=132713173422138) -- Also, if that wasn't enough free stuff, KSCR will soon have shirts + stickers from Fox Searchlight's new movie, Cyrus, starring John Reilly and Jonah Hill. Stay tuned, folks! Trailer for the movie: http://www.foxsearchlight.com/cyrus/#/Videos.
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The View From Nowhere 05-04-2010 (DOWNLOAD)
"The View From Nowhere" - Spinning an eclectic mix of House Music & Electro, spanning the most soulful to the most distorted

VFN - KSCR Radio

Featured on KSCR Radio (http://kscr.org,1560AM/) Air Date: 05-04-2010 10pm-12:00am Photo Credit:

Right Click and Save As to Download:

Part 1/1 DOWNLOAD Track List Jean Michel Jarre - Equinoxe 4 (Pre-Show Track) VFN/WDPK Intro Ellis D - My Loleatta (Dish Apella) Bottin - No Static (www.myspace.com/bottinski) The Chemical Brothers - All Rights Reversed Demon vs. Heartbreaker - You Are My High (Vitalic remix) Bucketheads - The Bomb Prodigy - Breathe Crookers featuring Yelle - Cooler Couleur (Junkie XL remix) Daft Punk - Rollin' and Scratchin' (Gonzales Rework) Nina Simone - Sinnerman (Felix Da Housecat Heavely House remix) Gramophonedzie - Why Don't You Roy Davis Jr. - Rock Shock (Thomas Bangalter "Stop Start" Mix / Joel Lava edit) Thieves Like Us - Forget Me Not (Minitel Rose remix) Cut Copy - Hearts On Fire (Aeroplane Pop Remix) Breakbot - Stereo Provolone Bag Raiders - Shooting Star Klaxons - As Above, So Below (Justice Remix) Two Door Cinema Club - Something Good Can Work Taz - Can't Contain Me Busta Rhymes - Dangerous (VFN's Aeroplane Edit) Congorock - Babylon Deadmau5 - Slip Chuckie - Let The Bass Kick in Miami Bitch (LMFAO Radio Edit) The Bloody Beetroots - Rombo (feat. Congorock) Pitbull ft. Lil' Jon - The Anthem Ting Tings - Great DJ (Calvin Harris Remix) MSTRKRFT - Easy Love Russ Chimes - Mulsanne Röyksopp - What Else Is There? (Thin White Duke Mix) FEATURED ARTIST:

Bottin - No Static http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nK5NtW3KPE

http://www.myspace.com/bottinski

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KSCR - Live From Miami - Winter Music Conference 2010

One week of the year, music lovers from all over the world descend upon Miami for the largest music industry gathering of its kind, the Winter Music Conference. Frequented by those in the dance & electronic community, the WMC is host to a myriad of artists, DJs, record label representatives (A&R), producers, promoters, radio and media professionals.

Beyond the conference, surrounding Miami is home to an array of events across the city, including the Ultra Music Festival. Whether you’re sitting down for some authentic Cuban food, or enjoying a nice cohiba poolside, it’s nearly impossible this week to avoid the infectious sound that is the house beat.

KSCR’s own DJ Ahmar aka VFN recently returned from “The Magic City” with a grab bag of promos and new music.

Click Here to view the photos through our friends at Club Soda. Photos taken the weekend of March 26th at the Winter Music Conference, as well as Ultra Music Festival in Miami, Florida.

Big thanks to Paradax RecordsBeatportRVNG IntlThe Opium GroupX-MiX Productions and countless others that make Miami as legendary as its reputation has earned.

The View From Nowhere” airs Tuesday nights from 10PM to Midnight, right here on KSCR.

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Pre-Sleep Thoughts: Albums

For my next post I had planned on doing a write-up on the beautiful new Morning Benders album, the problem is that the album doesn’t come out until next week, March 9th. My ethical dilemma came when trying to figure out when the appropriate time was to post a review of an album that I “stole” off the Internet. I use the quotes because stealing in terms of digital music is used loosely in the fact that I use digital music as a test-drive for what I want to buy. It used to be that you only got to hear the singles on the radio and you had to base your decision of whether or not you wanted to purchase an entire $20 album, of usually 10+ songs, on just that one song. Looking back on that, it’s ridiculous; the new digital means of buying music is much more consumer friendly, but heavily exploited. Anyway, I will buy the Morning Benders album, Big Echo, when it comes out, but this brings me to the original question that kept me up late into the night. What is an album anymore?

And by that I mean, what makes it worth purchase? What does it mean to the consumer? For me, the album is a necessary experience to my favorite albums, sitting down with liner notes observing what the band wants to put in the booklet and what they don’t can give you a sense of what that certain band is about. Radiohead’s liner notes are filled with spacey drawings, usually symbolic of current political events. And since the release of Kid A, their liner notes have not included lyrics (A decision I don’t particularly like because Yorke can be hard to make out some/most of the time). Yorke has said that putting lyrics in liner notes emphasizes the voice when Radiohead wants the voice to be seen as another instrument, equal in importance to the bass, guitar, drums, etc. Another artist, Black Bear, put into the liner notes for his one album, personal photos of his current self or his childhood that pertains to each song, the lyrics were included and accompanied by his thoughts and inspirations to write the songs. This experience is highly more personal than the Radiohead lyrics, but what does it tell you about the artist? Black Bear is willing to fully open himself up to his fans, his listeners and wants that to be seen.

However, if you look at the latest Miley Cyrus liner notes, I’d be willing to bet her label typed the lyrics in with some cutesy font sprawled against some bright colors and pictures of her (maybe jumping! Or something else fun!). I can only laugh at the music industries inability to even try and deter the funds they are hemorrhaging. Album sales are at an all time low and the record industry isn’t even trying to make the album a valuable commodity to the listening experience. Seriously, how do generic pictures of Miley enhance the quality of the album? I want to believe that more people would be willing to purchase an album if it gave them more than what they are able to obtain online for free (the music), give us a reason, MIley, to go and buy your album, make it a quintessential part of the listening experience (Party in the U.S.A has so many deep meanings just waiting to be explored). The album should be personable, a glimpse into the inner psyche of a band that helps you learn about them as an artist and where the music you’re obsessing over comes from.

Yours Truly Presents: The Morning Benders "Excuses" from Yours Truly on Vimeo.

-Morning Benders review will be up soon-ish.

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KSCR January Event Giveaways!

When In Rome – Movie Premiere (1/27)

Often times, the expression “When In Rome” is misused by powerful celebrities like Ron Burgundy.

  Well, we here at KSCR are not in the business of misinforming. Instead, we have Red Carpet Tickets for the Disney movie, “When in Rome” starring Kristen Bell (Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Veronica Mars) and Josh Duhamel (Transformers) that we’re looking to give away!

Trailer:

 

The Premiere is on Wednesday, January 27th at 7:00pm. If anyone is interested, please respond via the blog or the KSCR Twitter with your name and e-mail address no later than Monday morning (1/25). 2 pairs of tickets to the red carpet premiere (actors will be there) await for the first listeners to respond. But it doesn’t end there, there are also another 5 pairs of tickets for runner-ups for an advanced screening so hit us up!

 

Drew Carey Benefit Show at The Hollywood Improv (1/24)

 

Movies not your thing? Well then, how about a comedy show at the legendary Hollywood Improv this Sunday (1/24) with Drew Carey (Whose Line Is It Anyway?, The Price Is Right) and 6 other really funny comedians! All proceeds will be donated to Relief International in aid of Haiti. Enjoy an evening of laughs while raising funds for a great cause!

 

 

Again, reply either to this message with your name and e-mail address or via the KSCR  Twitter.

 

And finally, since KSCR loves music, why not end this post with an appropriate song?

 

When In Rome – The Promise

 

Get Ready for Another Great Season of Programming here at KSCR.

Over and out.

 

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CMJ Recap by Emilie: Day 2 pt. 1
Day 2: Wednesday October 21st   Andrew WK was the featured speaker today at the CMJ panels and I was super excited to hear what the man had to say since I listened to him a lot as an angsty high schooler. The scripted introduction before his entrance was promising and there was a wave of excitement throughout the room. Then Andrew himself walks out, fit, dressed all in white sans a bloody nose and begins his talk. What did he discuss? I’d like to know, because I have no fucking clue. The man bullshitted, used bigger words to bullshit more complicated ideas, ninja’ed a chair until it broke, then bullshitted some more. There was a Q&A section where individuals could come to a designated mic that sat in front of the stage and ask anything. Anything. Boy did they take advantage of that freedom. Topics that were inquired about:   “I have been in a band for 12 years and we really fit your style, will you take us on tour with you?” “I am in a band and here is some shwag,” he hands Andrew his album and some propaganda then continues with some lame and awkward joke about something to do with Andrew’s shadow. “Can you tell me how to party hardy?” “Will you tattoo my arm” (Seriously. This was asked from one out of two boys who were sitting front and center dressed exactly like Andrew was dressed. It was obvious that they are die hard fans and that Andrew’s presence has made their lives complete.) “Life is really hard right now, what advice can you give artists who have hit rock bottom and have nowhere to go? Who feel they cannot go on? What can you tell me?” A girl bravely asks in a trembling voice. And finally, “What is going on? I read in the CMJ booklet that you’d be talking about your perspectives and what not on the music industry and I’d really like to know what you came to speak about.”   But Andrew does not answer anything. If each question was a puddle, Andrew merely dances around without getting his feet wet. Finally he goes to the piano, calls up Wayne and Garth from the front row, and sings Party Hardy.   Big. Huge. Disappointment.   After the panel Ali, Jace, and I headed to the Cake Shop for the Terrorbird showcase and meet and greet. Spectre and Terrorbird are definitely my favorite promo companies at the moment, so meeting Eric from Spectre and Jessica Kizer from Terrorbird made me way too excited, like I was meeting celebrities.  
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CMJ 09 - Atlas Sound and Broadcast
Just around 8 o' clock, we headed over to Brooklyn to catch Atlas Sound w/Broadcast and the guys that opened for them. Selmanaries (the aforementioned "guys.") underwhelmed.  But that may have been a keenly planned trap orchestrated by Broadcast.  Here's the setup. So there you are feeling underwhelmed after those "guys."  All of a sudden, the heavy beats and noise rock starts, accompanied by a trippy-as-hell abstract video installation mind-game thing. I gotta be honest.  My first thought was along the lines of "what the fuck?"  and my second thought was to flee for my life.  The second thought was supported by the earth-shaking bass.  I abandoned my friends Maura and Ali and headed to the my safety zone - the men's room.  Are you kidding?  The bass was not only earth-shaking, but also below-the-earth-toilet shaking.  Shit, these Broadcast kids are powerful.  I returned to the show and enjoyed the band and their video which may have been outtakes from the tape in The Ring.  I was convinced I was being brainwashed.  Broadcast finished, and my paranoia aside, were pretty impressive. Enter Bradford Cox, in what was one of the strangest and most engrossing shows I have witnessed.  He started off by tearing into some tracks off Logos, before taking a quick banter break.  I had this feeling like I was witnessing something special; he is a very sincere performer.  That's easy to appreciate these days.  My favorite track from the new album, "Walkabout" got a fascinating treatment: slowed-down, folk-tinged, and equally impressive as the studio version, I was completely invested in the show at this point. The thing is, it's not unique for me to be invested in a show.  It happens all the time. But that's where Cox really started to set himself apart.  I'll make it quick, but reread a couple of time for effect.  After starting a Velvet Underground cover that was "worth the wait" (there had been some time between songs), he promptly stopped the band, suggesting that that were off key.  He proceeded to take requests from the audience; some Atlas Sound songs (c'mon people), Rock Around the Clock, The Monster Mash (he almost played this, but claimed to have forgotten the tab sheet for it).  Here, he made iconic rock poses for pictures, played the intro to "Hattie Carroll" and basically used a couple songs' worth of time to hone his standup routine.  Honestly, it was pretty damn funny and a unique break from music.  He finished his set (which included the complete VU song), but the five-minute comedy break still sticks out as a memorable and enjoyable part of the show. The set was really strong, and very different from a Deerhunter set (he is Deerhunter's frontman if you didn't know.)  There was some folky stuff (harmonica included!), some psychy stuff, some noisy stuff, but it all put a new face on a familiar figure.  He also wasn't wearing a dress tonight. The whole time, all I could think is:  Bradford Cox is almost a genius.  He's the nerdy best friend you would think was a genius if you hadn't seen them behave under the slight influence of alcohol. I'll get some pictures of him up tomorrow.
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