Categories
WRENS WATCH

Wrens Watch, June 22, 2009

wrenswatch921111111111111We’ve been fans of New Jersey’s finest since even before their first album came out back in 1994, so let’s just say we’re used to sitting around waiting for them to take their sweet-ass time putting out new music. (Three albums in more than 14 years makes the Wrens about as prolific as Boston, which is kind of like being as tall as Kim Jong-il.) As reported in a Wrens Watch Special Report, January 9 marked a huge milestone for the guys: guitarists Charles Bissell and Greg Whelan, bassist Kevin Whelan and drummer Jerry MacDonald. They issued “Pulled Fences,” their first new (well, sort of new) song since 2003’s The Meadowlands. Perhaps motivated by finally releasing something, the band convened—not in a real studio, but in Kevin’s basement—22 weeks ago to begin work on its new album. And not only that, the Wrens recorded an actual song (which you can download for free here). When we checked in with Bissell 19 weeks ago, he took exception with our good-natured sarcasm and quickly ended the interview. After ignoring us for a while, Bissell finally gave us a progress report; it seems that while other bands get together and record, the Wrens stay apart and talk to each other on the phone. Or they do nothing at all. Or they update their Facebook pagesFourteen weeks ago, Bissell informed us he was “too busy” to respond to our questions, but he did promise us some exclusive Wrens mp3s in the near future. Thirteen weeks ago, he didn’t even bother responding to our emails, prompting us to call him an unprolific Ryan Adams. That got Bissell’s attention, who 12 weeks ago apologized (profanely) and promised us an exclusive Wrens mp3 for the April 6 Wrens Watch. After not delivering, he said he’d come through the next week, but he didn’t. When Bissell ignored us again (Wrens Watch, April 20 and April 27), we speculated the Wrens were actually recording. Or maybe Bissell was just being a jerk. But then he told us seven weeks ago he’d have a new Wrens mp3 for us. And guess what? The man finally came through. Download a demo of “Z,” which was written and performed by Kevin. We emailed Bissell numerous times to thank him for “Z” and ask him how the new record is progressing, but like we told you five weeks ago, he was unresponsive. He did email us a photo for four weeks ago, though, so we had that going for us. Which was nice. Three weeks ago, we got an email from Bissell saying, “Headed to bed but might have something for you.” As reported two weeks ago and last week, other than a strange email from him referencing Fat Albert, we hadn’t heard from him since. Last Tuesday, Bissell, apparently on vacation, said he would have a new song for us “as soon as I get home on Saturday.” Despite a number of friendly follow-ups from us, Bissell seems to be ignoring us again.

Categories
LIVE REVIEWS

Live Review: Shellac, San Francisco, CA, June 18, 2009

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And, lo, there came a time upon the land, soon after the reign of Nirvana, when many rock bands took on names found on the labels of empty containers that filled the dumpsters of industrial construction sites. And among the hardiest, yet most confounding of these to some, was the group known as Shellac.

I sampled (and eventually discarded) the wares of many of the noisy new bands I found in the pages of MAGNET when I began writing for the mag in early 1995. Chokebore, Unsane and the Jesus Lizard all eventually fell by the roadside. But Shellac‘s 1994 album, At Action Park, turned out to be a keeper. There was something brutally honest about that record, cut by famed alt-rock engineer Steve Albini on guitar, bassist Bob Weston and drummer Todd Trainer. Fifteen years later, here was the same trio back on the prowl. I donned hard hat and eye protection, slipped a six-pack of earplugs into my pocket, grabbed my lunchbox and headed off to the job site.

I’d seen one of Albini’s previous combos, Big Black, at San Francisco’s I-Beam in the summer of 1987, and since my ears only recently have stopped ringing from that very loud night, I knew what I was in for. But there comes a time when you’ve had it up to here with eccentric, bearded neo-folkies. You have to get your brain laundered. As expected, Shellac’s show is a no-bullshit affair: no chatter between songs, no choreographed stage moves. With lyrics all but indecipherable, Albini’s vocals could have been the shrieks emanating from the nearest urban gunshot-wound emergency trauma center. The only concession to planned hysteria tonight is the set’s opening sequence, with Trainer pointing a drumstick to the heavens to conduct a slow-motion slide into the first tune, whose thundering opening chords after this brief pantomime are a real sinus-clearer. There was one song intro that hinted at the minor-key, surf-guitar pyrotechnics of Dick Dale. Other than that, it was pure Albini, a man who may look like a tax accountant, but has your H&R Block dude ever twiddled knobs for acts that range from PJ Harvey, Cheap Trick and Joanna Newsom to the Pixies, Superchunk and Dirty Three? Toward the end of the set, Weston asked for questions from the packed house. The only good one was: “Is Todd still sponsored by Calvin Klein?” to which Weston answered, “No, but he’s getting blown by Christy Brinkley.”

Almost every time I walk around the faux-painted marble columns inside the ornately Edwardian Great American Music Hall (built in 1907), it reminds me of the Barbary Coast joint where Clark Gable and Jeanette McDonald rode out the first shocks of the legendary 1906 earthquake in the 1936 film San Francisco. After a night of Shellac at its most punishing, it looks like the old club might be good to go for another 100 years.

—Jud Cost

Categories
VIDEOS

Film At 11: Cursive

Cursive released its second video from Mama, I’m Swollen (Saddle Creek). Here’s “I Couldn’t Love You,” featuring actress Tania Raymonde (a.k.a. Ben Linus’ hot daughter on Lost) as a runaway bride. Read our Q&A with Cursive frontman Tim Kasher from March, and check out his subsequent posts as our guest editor.

Categories
GUEST EDITOR

From The Desk Of Bob Mould: Jimmy Webb

Bob Mould is a man always on the lookout for a new challenge. After Hüsker Dü (one of the most celebrated rock bands ever) folded in 1988, Mould would helm another powerful trio, Sugar, before beginning a fascinating, ongoing series of solo releases that have ranged from introspective to danceable, from melodic to nearly chaotic. The enigmatic guitar (and cultural) hero is finishing up what promises to be a fascinating memoir to be published next year and has just released a rock-solid solo disc, Life And Times. Read our new Q&A with him and earlier ones from 2008 and 2002. Mould will be guest editing magnetmagazine.com all this week.

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Mould: Songwriting, like most forms of expression, is a combination of unconscious, automatic and refined thought. Every songwriter has a different way of approaching the muse, and over the course of 30 years, my approach has changed several times. Technology, location and emotional state all play into the process. If I have a hammer, chisel and a tree stump, I will make you a log sculpture. If I have egg whites, skillet and a spatula, I will make you breakfast. Jimmy Webb is one of the most influential songwriters of the late 20th century. Beginning with “By The Time I Get To Phoenix,” recorded in 1966 by Glen Campbell, Webb amassed a string of hit songs with the likes of Campbell, the 5th Dimension and Richard Harris. Sadly, his sophisticated arrangements were not in vogue with the “in corwd,” who gravitated toward the protest music of the late 1960s. Webb was looked upon by some as “square” or commercial. In 1998, Webb finally published Tunesmith, a detailed, scholarly and masterful look at the songwriting process. I would suggest it to anyone who writes music, lyrics or is simply a fan of Western popular music. Webb fills the pages with examples from his own catalog of hits, as well as the songs of his peers. It is an insightful tome that allows the reader to see the craft of songwriting through the eyes of a true master.

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FREE MP3s

MP3 At 3PM: The Cubists

cubists4001The Cubists not only pay homage to cubism with their name, they actually take a cubist approach to psychedelic pop. Each of the five members of the Augusta, Ga., band brings something unique to the mix; the death of songwriter Noel Brown’s father, for instance, provided much of Brown’s personal musical inspiration. Their full-length debut, Mechanical Advantage, just came out this month on Georgia-based label Semi-Precious. “She’s Got Blood” is less experimental than what most of Mechanical Advantage has to offer, but it still shows off what makes the Cubists unique: the ability to create catchy songs that are both sonically rich and easily accessible.

“She’s Got Blood” (download):
https://magnetmagazine.com/audio/ShesGotBlood.mp3