Monthly Archives: May 2013

Kid Congo Powers – Rare as the Yeti video

Did you catch Jon Fisher’s excellent profile of Kid Congo Powers in last week’s CityPaper? If not, damnit, read it now! Powers is well known as both as musician and DJ around town, spinning a truly unique garage-soul sound. He’ll be leading the Kid Congo Power’s Hour at Sunday’s Sound Bites, an outdoor street festival of music and food at the 9:30 Club with a lineup that includes Deathfix, DJ Will Eastman, Batala and Rich Morel’s Hot Sauce, all to benefit DC Central Kitchen.
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Here’s an appropriately trippy music video for Rare as the Yeti, from Kid Congo’s 2009 album Dracula Boots.

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Boardroom Heroes – Tomorrow Came Early video

Pop-punkers Boardroom Heroes from Bethesda know their way around driving beats and catchy hooks. They’ve got the polish and youthful energy of Dookie-era Green Day down pat, as you can see in their brand new video Tomorrow Came Early, from their 2012 album Another Year. This live performance video was shot in the Kay Spiritual Life Center, a growing nexus for local shows at American University set up by their student-run internet radio station WVAU. Catch them live next at Casa Fiesta with a lineup of other local punk bands on Sunday June 9th.

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Live Picks! with Tony Porreco: Drunk Tigers @ DC9

Live Picks! with Tony Porreco

drunk tigers
Who: Drunk Tigers
Where: DC9
When: Thursday May 16th
Song You Must Hear Today: “Photos of Sad Brokers” 

I’m about five months into writing Live Picks!, and I think I deserve a break.  So shoot me: I’m taking a “me” day on this one.  Forgive my candor, but Drunk Tigers is the kind of band I would write up every week if only I were a little less self-aware of my punk/pop roots, and was totally okay with becoming the guy who highlights exclusively punk-ish acts: The rhythm section is bold and brash, there’s intriguing yell/sing-y vocals, but in the end, the bulk of the real melodic action lies in the manic, adventurous guitar playing.  And that’s the connection between me and a lot of my favorite rock artists, this desire to stir up excitement via catchy, frenetic squalls of electric guitar.

Admittedly, I kinda rushed you there, so I’ll help you up out of my passion pit and let you clean yourself off while I cover some back story on the band.  Originally from Charlottesville, Virginia, Drunk Tigers formed in 2008, and released a small handful of EPs.  In 2012, following 2 years of “indefinite hiatus”, primary members Matt Bierce (vocals/guitar) and Zach Carter (guitar/vocals) have fielded a new rhythm section and are back at it this year, playing a number of local shows in the past two months, each in quick succession of one another.

Anyway, back to the music.  Drunk Tigers actually opened for my snot-rock heroes Cloud Nothings at a 2010 show in Charlottesville, and they certainly fit that bill.  The tunes are fast, straight ahead, and replete with winding guitar lines.  They’re also not afraid of the occasional abrasive change up: “Lessons, Hurricane” sports a section with a deliciously malevolent repeating chord change, and “Outer Banks Inner Peace” moves back and forth between a couple benign arpeggios and some great Pavement/slacker-stomp guitar freak outs.

My favorite track of all their offerings, however, is a number called “Photos of Sad Brokers”, which is a wild ride, start-to-finish.  Some nifty features include a nitro-propelled intro section, and an abrupt tempo U-turn at the start of the first verse.  Then immediately prior to the chorus, you get a guitar riff that rips off Sam Cooke’s “Wonderful World” note-for-note, but the effect is delightfully familiar, rather than offensive.  There’s also the chorus’ lyric  “It’s not my birthday / It’s not my problem”, which I can’t make heads or tails of, but the disconnect between the two topics leaves me grinning nonetheless.

I plan on taking a second “me” day on Thursday to see them open for Arum Rae, who’s an Austin-based psych-blues songstress.  This is one of those shows where I want to know every song  and jump up and down accordingly.  My enthusiasm and I will be there.  You and yours should too.

Post script: Until last year, Drunk Tiger member Matt Bierce performed in another band called Infinite Jets, which (I hope!) is a pun on Infinite Jest, David Foster Wallace’s awesome novel of epic length (it’s so long it weighs 5 lbs. [unless you have it on Kindle like me, in which case, I guess it weighs 10.2 ounces]).

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Margot MacDonald – The Book Of Love video

Here’s another video in Margot MacDonald‘s Floor Sessions series, pairing a well-produced live video with a free audio download. Most people are familiar with the original Magnetic Fields version of The Book of Love, but I really got into the version Vandaveer did for their Daytrotter Session back in 2009. This new acapella version by Margot, queen of the vocal loop pedal, is just gorgeous. She’ll be opening for local indie poppers Simone & The Spectrum this Thursday at Jammin’ Java.

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Peanut Butter & Dave – In Air

Paul Bugala, aka Peanut Butter, and his stalwart drummer Dave, make math rock that doesn’t take itself too seriously. All those tempo changes can be tough, but PB&Dave clearly have a great time making music together. Yesterday they debuted their first music video for In Air, from their just-released second full length album When Everyone Is Getting Wise, showing the adventures of a man-sized tiger in our area. They kicked off a short tour last night at Velvet Lounge with a combination record release party and benefit for Publish What You Pay.

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Tom Goss – It’s All Over video

It’s been a quiet couple of days for new DC music videos, so here’s another one from the archives. A feelgood summer video from 2011 by gay singer-songwriter Tom Goss, It’s All Over features plenty of guitar strumming, partying and synchronized dancing in a few recognizable DC locales. This video looks like it was a blast to film. Can’t wait for summer!

Bonus feature: Howard Stump, an extra in the video, shot some behind the scenes footage.

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New Rock Church of Fire – Untitled Song video

They couldn’t come up with a name for this song, but New Rock Church of Fire did enlist Morgan Hungerford of DC’s Panda Head Magazine to shoot a video for it. It’s a few years old, but still a fun little video. If you haven’t checked out last December’s Issue 7 of slick style mag Panda Head, what are you waiting for?
http://vimeo.com/10648175

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DJ Mixes from Nappy Riddem & Fort Knox Five

If you liked yesterday’s DC DJ mixes, I’ve got even more for your listening pleasure today. The Fort Knox Recordings gang have two new mixes to get hyped about.
First up, Nappy Riddem blends reggae vibes with modern dancefloor touches on their latest mixtape, Angle It. Grab a download at their Facebook page and catch Rex Riddem & Mustafa Akbar live this Friday at the Black Cat opening for Violet Rocker.

If you need an introduction to Fort Knox Five, the new retrospective release 10 Years of Fort Knox Five will show you what you’ve been missing. Jon Hovarth and pals maintain a busy DJing and jetsetting schedule, and the monthly DJ mix series Funk The World showcase their distinctive and worldly tastes. My highlight from this mix is the FK5 Remix of Maria Juana by labelmates Empresarios, out later this month.

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DJ Mixes from Nadastrom & Pentamon

DC, do you need some DJ mixes to get you through the afternoon? Good, cuz here are a couple of local gems for your streaming pleasure.
In case you missed the tribute to DC mix that LA transplants Nadastrom put together for the BBC Radio show Diplo & Friends back in February, the hour long set featuring tunes from locals & expats Tittsworth, Fugazi, Doug Lazy, Oddisee, Deep Dish and lots more is now streaming on SoundCloud.

U Street Music Hall owner and Volta Bureau employee Will Eastman, under his new solo moniker Pentamon, put together a nice mix for the Baltimore music blog More Or Less’s mix series MOLCAST. This DJ mix devoted to techno parallels the new Saturday night vibe at U Hall. Enjoy!

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My Enemy Complete – Defragment video

My Enemy Complete brings electronic experimentation and industrial sensibilities to loud, intense rock music. Carlo Pizarro and Brian Fasani, formerly of 51 Peg, tapped Chrysalis singer Bilaal Y to front the new band, and they’ve been steadily gaining fans since 2008. Their self-titled debut EP came out in 2011, and the brand new video Defragment comes from their upcoming release. Littlemongrel Productions & Videographic Productions did a good job with this hybrid narrative and performance music video. If you’re up for heading to Baltimore, see them live at The Sidebar on Saturday May 11th.

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