Posts Tagged ‘social’

Tinariwen Announce North American Tour Dates

Tinariwen will perform with guest Sophie Hunger at The Social, Wednesday, June 9th.

http://www.thesocial.org/event/60279/

Tinariwen Announce North American Tour Dates

Release created 1 month ago

The celebrated band Tinariwen are set to tour North America in support of their powerful new album entitled Tassili in stores now. On their latest, the renowned “Touareg” band returned to the essence of their hypnotic desert blues sound. Recorded in the South-Eastern Algerian desert, the band is joined by Tunde Adebimpe and Kyp Malone of TV On The Radio. Later on, virtuoso guitarist Nels Cline (Wilco) and the horns of the Dirty Dozen Brass Band contributed.

The result is a simultaneously exotic and accessible sound that has garnered the group rave reviews. The band was profiled recently in the New York Times and Tassili debuted on the Billboard Top 200 its first week out and is currently #1 on the CMJ New World Chart.

In reviewing a recent sold out performance, Consequence Of Sound offered “Tinariwen proved why they’ve earned a reputation as one of the world’s most entertaining acts; their performance was a true testament to the universal power of music.”

The band’s sonic trek across North America begins with a performance at the Ooh LA L.A. Festival in Los Angeles. The event is sponsored by the Consulate General of France and, among others, trendsetting radio station KCRW 89.9. Tickets can be purchased via various outlets and at: www.oohlalafestival.com

TINARIWEN NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES

2011-09-30 El Rey Theater Los Angeles CA
2011-10-29 Luckman Fine Arts Complex Los Angeles CA
2011-10-30 Fillmore San Francisco CA
2011-10-31 Rio Theatre Santa Cruz CA
2011-11-02 Rialto Theatre Tucson AZ
2011-11-04 Granada Theater Dallas TX
2011-11-05 Fun Fun Fun Fest Austin TX
2011-11-06 Fitzgeralds Houston TX
2011-11-07 House of Blues New Orleans LA
2011-11-09 The Social Orlando FL
2011-11-10 Grand Central Miami FL
2011-11-11 State Theater St.Petersburg FL
2011-11-12 Variety Playhouse Atlanta GA
2011-11-13 Cats Cradle Carrboro NC
2011-11-15 9:30 Club Washington DC
2011-11-16 Trocadero Philadelphia PA
2011-11-18 Paradise Boston MA
2011-11-19 Webster Hall New York NY
2011-11-21 Rex Theater Pittsburgh PA
2011-11-22 Grog Shop Cleveland Heights OH
2011-11-23 Majestic Theatre Detroit MI
2011-11-25 Metro Chicago IL
2011-11-26 Cedar Cultural Center Minneapolis MN
2011-12-01 Showbox Theater Seattle WA

M83: Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming | Album Reviews | Pitchfork

M83: Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming | Album Reviews | Pitchfork.

M83 performs with guest Active Child, Wednesday, Nov 3rd at The Beacham.

http://www.thebeacham.com/event/65947/

Hurry Up, We're Dreaming

M83

Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming

Mute; 2011

By Ian Cohen; October 17, 2011
9.1 Best New Music

Artists:

Late last year, Anthony Gonzalez announced his next album was almost complete and would be “very, very, very epic.” With all due respect, consider the redundancy of that statement: Since 2003 breakthrough Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts, every new and increasingly colossal M83 studio record has led to widespread crowdsourcing of synonyms for “epic.” What exactly was he promising other than simply another album?

Well, throughout the past decade, the 30-year old Gonzalez has honored the tremendous impact of growing up during the golden age of CD buying by implicitly serving as a patron saint for those who treat the weekly trip to the record store as a pilgrimage and still covet the album as a physical proposition: His output always comes stylishly packaged, with cover art worth obsessing over and credits that need to be scoured in order to spot the guest appearances. Unsurprisingly, he ups the ante here by aspiring to what is still the paradigm of artistic permanence, both in terms of legacy and tactility: the double album, that occasionally ambitious, usually decadent, and almost always fascinatingly flawed endeavor of musicians convinced (rightfully or otherwise) that they’re at the peak of their own powers. Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming might be all of those things, but above all else, it’s the best M83 record yet.

But let’s talk about restraint for a moment: While each side of Hurry Up would be oddly slight for an M83 album, the demands of its 74-minute runtime are hardly daunting. It’s actually the easiest M83 album to consume in one sitting, a reverse accumulation of past strengths that makes for Gonzalez’s most compact and combustive music yet. He continues the path set by Saturdays=Youth by easing out of the mini-movie business in exchange for pop songcraft, while trading that LP’s pretty-in-pink pastels for the urban neons and fluorescents of Before the Dawn Heals Us and embodying Dead Cities‘ mile-wide expansiveness.

But the most crucial change is how touring with the likes of Depeche Mode has inspired a newfound showmanship in his vocals: Previously, Gonzalez enlisted outside help, piped in plot-advancing narratives, or sang in a low, tentative murmur that submitted to its massive surroundings. But here, within the first minutes of “Intro”, he’s matching blows with the juggernaut bellow of Zola Jesus‘ Nika Danilova to the point where it’s much tougher than you’d think to tell them apart. It’s really not too different from the first chords of “Planet Telex” or Lil Wayne’s “Tha Mobb” in terms of being an unmistakable sign that you’re going to be listening to this familiar act differently.

M83 have never stood for half measures in any aspect, but Gonzalez is absolutely going for it here in a way that sheds new light on known tricks: The hair-triggered drum rolls of “New Map” recall Before the Dawn‘s searing car-crash fantasy “Don’t Save Us From the Flames”, but Gonzalez’s nervy punctuation at the end of each line sells the idea that he’s along for the ride this time rather than being a passive observer. Dead Cities“In Church” was the sound of blissful acquiescence, but amidst the swaggering synth-metal of “Midnight City”, Gonzalez hollers, “The city is my church!” empowered and present, finding a voice for the evangelical zeal always implicit in his work.

Gonzalez has stressed Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness as a major inspiration (and by extension, its forefather, The Wall), and its influence can be spotted in Hurry Up‘s power ballads “Wait” and “My Tears Are Becoming a Sea”, sumptuously arranged tracks that could still be played solo on an acoustic guitar. Thankfully, he didn’t retain much from “Bullet With Butterfly Wings” or “The Trial”, and rather than one man lashing out at the world from the safety of his own thematic construct, you feel that Gonzalez is trying to connect with it.

As such, the moments of indulgence are in service of the album’s most endearing and silly emotions: Some might consider “Raconte-Moi Une Histoire” a throwaway because it’s “the one about a magic frog,” but besides embodying the whiplash emotions of youth by following the magnificent melancholy of “Wait”, its almost eerie brightness and Windows 95-era sound effects capture a technological optimism better than a lot of artists who are trying only to do that. Meanwhile, “Year One, One UFO” attempts to distill the percussion-mad, organic ecstasy of Vision Creation Newsun into three minutes, while on the opposite side, “Claudia Lewis” and “OK Pal” show a mastery of slapbass-poppin’, corporate funk-rock comparable to Ford & Lopatin or Cut Copy without the twinge of pastiche.

As with any double album, there’s a temptation to strip away the instrumental tracks or simply pick the best 50 minutes for your daily commute. But the interludes here are intended to be every bit as purposeful as the singles: The shorter the track, the more evocative its title (“Where the Boats Go”, “Train to Pluton”, “Another Wave From You”). While many of them stand as intriguing meditations on their own merits, they reinforce Hurry Up‘s intentions to be an immersive universe– check in whenever you want, but the magic’s in the exploratory phases. And why leave out what falls in between, like the thermite burst of the two-minute “This Bright Flash” or the stately “When Will You Come Home?”-to-”My Tears Are Becoming a Sea” triptych that serves as the connective transit between Side 1 and Side 2.

Then again, I can’t blame anyone who takes shortcuts, since the traditionally structured songs here are some of the most thrilling pop music released this year. The heavily saturated synths Gonzalez favored early in his career invited plenty of My Bloody Valentine comparisons, but whereas pure shoegaze of that nature attempts to overwhelm and obliterate, Hurry Up is like a sonic planetarium, penetrable and totally geared toward enhancing the user experience. Few artists make more ingenious use of the sheer physics of rock to this extent– defining which synth pads strike which emotional pressure points, using percussion as explosives rather than mere elements of timekeeping, coiling the tension of a verse to make every chorus feel phenomenally cathartic even without any words.

At this point in the year, you’d think a saxophone solo would have lost all the novelty it had accumulated over decades of disuse, yet when one pops up at the end of “Midnight City”, it triumphantly squires the track out at the highest point possible. After a streak of staccato guitar chords and splashy cymbal hits rev up “Reunion”, the shouts from its chorus could come from a soccer stadium or a speedboat chase. “Intro” is typical of Gonzalez’s love for zero-gravity arrangements of massed choirs and cathedral reverb, but there’s nothing buzzy or clouded about it– as high as he takes things, you can still see everything underneath in crisp, butterflies-inducing depth and detail.

And then there’s “Steve McQueen”, which somehow makes the preceding hour of music feel like its prelude. Point blank, it’s as close as most of us will get to being strapped inside a space shuttle, as midway through an almost unbearably tensile verse, you don’t hear drums so much as afterburners kicking in. By the chorus, it simply cannot go further up, and it explodes at the perfect moment into hair-metal guitar chords and synth-led skywriting. And yet, because it’s almost impossible to say what “Steve McQueen” is about (certainly not the actor), it’s capable of glorifying anything you choose– a slow motion shot of Kirk Gibson rounding the bases in the 1988 World Series, a holiday fireworks display, or getting into your car and simply celebrating the end of an exhausting day.

Is it a lot to handle? Of course, and those who have yet to connect with M83 may wonder if the sort of incapacitating longing expressed by “Wait” can possibly be experienced by anyone over the age of 16 or whether they’ll ever be able to afford the stereo equipment seemingly required for its intended effect. But remember, it’s called Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming: It doesn’t attempt to be a comprehensive or even realistic purview of the human experience, and lord knows there’s plenty out there that’s meant to capture small moments.

It’s easy to mistrust something so irrepressibly optimistic about the affective possibilities of music and to attribute these feelings to the domain of some “other,” whether it’s the 1980s, teenhood, or a pop product. Does it share some sort of commonality with “Born This Way” or “Firework“, or any other entry from 2011′s chart music that attempts to convince you of your own superstardom? Surely, but Gonzalez never comes off like he’s selling a brand, a lifestyle, or even himself– his lyrics remain as opaque as ever. Hurry Up instead serves as a framework to realize the marvelous capability of our dreams and daily lives, should we be open to experiencing it.

Corey Taylor – solo tour announced

Corey Taylor performs at The Social, Tuesday December 13th.
http://www.thesocial.org/event/71351/
Corey Taylor’s upcoming solo shows will include acoustic performances, book readings, Q&As and more!  General admission tickets and a limited number of VIP Packages are available here: http://www.thecoreytaylor.com/?page=tour (if buying tickets to La Grange Festival Oct 22 featuring Corey Taylor, ZZ Top, Lynyrd Skynyrd, and Jamey Johnson, enter promo code “coreytaylor” to get tickets at half price!)

The idea for the tour sprang from an intimate set of UK gigs that Taylor recently played to launch his book Seven Deadly Sins, as well as his speaking engagement at Oxford University this summer. Taylor will perform originals and some choice covers acoustically, read selections from the book, and take questions from the audience. Billed as “An Evening With Corey Taylor”, these shows will be a rare opportunity for many fans to see Taylor in this intimate a setting, and vice versa.
“I had so much fun doing this type of show in England that I just HAD to bring it to the States”, says Taylor. “Its gonna be one part Henry Rollins, one part Johnny Cash and probably a little heavy on the Monty Python. Its everything I love to do; singing, comedy and talkin’ smack. Hopefully the audience enjoys it as much as I do.”

Also, this month sees the launch of ZZ TOP’s First Annual La Grange Fest in Austin, TX. It’s a ZZ Top- hosted music festival set for Saturday, October 22. Joining ZZ Top are Lynyrd Skynyrd and Jamey Johnson.  Just added to the show, for a very special acoustic set, is Corey Taylor. “I really can’t say how excited I am to be sharing the stage with Skynyrd and ZZ Top!” says Taylor.  ”Just from a fan’s point of view, I can’t wait to see these bands. I’m trying to figure out what I can bring to the table, but I’ll do my very best. And of course, it’s always good to be back in Texas!!”


Corey Taylor solo dates are as follows:
10/22 Bee Cave, TX (Austin) La Grange Festival
11/14 Anaheim, CA House of Blues
11/15 Phoenix, AZ Crescent Ballroom
11/17 Houston, TX Bronze Peacock at HOB
11/19 Denver, CO Gothic Theatre
11/21 Omaha, NE Waiting Room
11/22 Minneapolis, MN Varsity
11/23 Milwaukee, WI Rave
11/25 Detroit, MI Eagle Theatre
11/26 Chicago, IL Double Door
12/1 Montreal, QC Corona Theatre
12/2 Toronto, ON Mod Club
12/4 Boston, MA Middle East
12/5 New York, NY Highline Ballroom
12/6 Philadelphia, PA World Café Live
12/7 Providence, RI The Met
12/9 Sayreville, NJ Starland Ballroom
12/10Baltimore, MD Sound Stage
12/12 Atlanta, GA Masquerade
12/13 Orlando, FL The Social

M83 FULL ALBUM STREAM

m83 will perform with guests Active Child, Wednesday, November 3rd at The Beacham.

http://www.thebeacham.com/event/65947/

October 10th, 2011

New York, NY

URBAN OUTFITTERS HURRY UP, WE’RE DREAMING

FULL ALBUM STREAM STARTING TODAY

ACTIVE CHILD TO SUPPORT M83 ON N.AMERICAN TOUR DATES

NEW DOUBLE ALBUM – HURRY UP, WE’RE DREAMING – OUT OCT. 18TH

“That pervasive dedication to heart-swelling drama is M83′s gift: No one is better, or more single-minded, when it comes to evoking dream-pop awe.” – SPIN

“An admirable paean to fuzzy memories, nostalgia, melancholic rumination and pop experimentation, imploring the listener to become the stories and places that populate dreams. 92%  – FILTER

In anticipation for M83’s new double album Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming – releasing next week October 18th – Urban Outfitters is streaming the full double-album on their website starting today, October 10th and on Saturday October 15, will play the full album in each of their 165 stores across the country starting at 3pm local time. To stream Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming through Urban Outfitters visit http://www.blog.urbanoutfitters.com/features/m83# Additionally, Urban Outfitters will carry an exclusive colored vinyl format of Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming.

M83 is excited to announce that Active Child will support the band throughout the fall US tour dates which start in Washington D.C on October 28th. Expected to be a sold out US tour, a late show has been added to Seattle and the venue in Orlando has changed to The Beacham Theatre.  The fall tour dates will be M83’s first live shows in over two years.  M83 last toured in support of the widely adored Saturdays=Youth, which saw the band on the road with The Killers in the US, Kings of Leon in the UK, and Depeche Mode in Europe. Check below for a full list of dates or visit www.ilovem83.com

“Midnight City” is out now and included on the Midnight City Remix EP, which features remixes by Trentemoller, Big Black Delta, Man Without Country, and Team Ghost. Rolling Stone calls it “Gorgeous and highly danceable”, Pitchfork says it’s “The fine-tuning of a master craftsman only challenged by himself”, labeling it ‘Best New Music’, and SPIN says it’s “the soothing sound of all the creeps in Grand Theft Auto: Vice City rolling on E and hugging it out instead of murdering each other.”

Produced by Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Beck, NIN, The Mars Volta, Goldfrapp), mixed by Tony Hoffer (Air, The Kooks), and including contributions from Brad Laner (from 90’s band Medicine), Saturdays=Youth vocalist Morgan Kibby,and guest vocalist Zola Jesus, Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is a double-album journey that takes us to the horizon and introduces us to new landscapes. About awakening, craving, and conquering, Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming pushes into new vocal territory for M83. Here we see Gonzalez test out different ways of singing, ranging from a spectral breathy whisper to a howling scream.  “I think it is a reflection of my 30 years of being a human being. It’s a compilation of all my previous music together. It’s a retrospective of myself”, says Gonzalez.

Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is the follow up to the John Hughes inspired and critics’ favorite Saturdays=YouthPitchfork called it, “An unaccountably alive, complete album”, giving it an 8.5 rating while, The New York Times, said “The music recalls the pumping beats and keyboard hooks of the 1980’s as if through a haze of time, floating in lush echoes that round off the edges.”

M83 is Los Angeles based French artist Anthony Gonzalez.

ilovem83.com | facebook.com/m83music | mute.com

NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES

Oct. 15 – Mexico City – Corona Capital Festival

Oct. 28 – Washington DC – Black Cat (early show) (Sold Out)

Oct. 28 – Washington DC – Black Cat (late show) (Sold Out)

Oct. 29 – Raleigh, NC – Kings Barcade (Sold Out)

Oct. 30 – Asheville, NC – Moog Fest

Oct. 31 – Atlanta, GA – Masquerade

Nov. 1 – Tallahassee, FL – Engine Room

Nov. 2 – Orlando, FL – The Beacham Theatre(venue change)

Nov. 4 – Houston, TX – Warehouse Live

Nov. 5 – Austin, TX – Fun Fun Fun Fest

Nov. 7 – Phoenix, AZ – The Crescent Ballroom

Nov. 9 – Los Angeles, CA – Music Box (Sold Out)

Nov. 10 – San Francisco, CA – Mezzanine (Sold Out)

Nov. 11 – Portland, OR – Wonder Ballroom

Nov. 12 – Vancouver, BC – Venue (Sold Out)

Nov. 13 – Seattle, WA – Neumos (early show) (Sold Out)

Nov. 13 – Seattle, WA – Neumos (late show)

Nov. 16 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue

Nov. 17 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall (early show) (Sold Out)

Nov. 17 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall (late show) (Sold Out)

Nov. 18 – Toronto, ON – Lees Palace (Sold Out)

Nov. 19 – Montreal, QC – Le S.A.T.

Nov. 20 – Boston, MA – House of Blues

Nov. 22 – New York, NY – Webster Hall (Sold Out)

Nov. 23 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall Of Williamsburg (Sold Out)

Friendly Fires preview (via TheDailyCity.com)

TheDailyCity.com: Friendly Fires at the Social.

Friendly Fires perform at The Social, Saturday, October 8th.

Friendly Fires at the Social

By Samir Mathur
Contributing writer
Twitter | Tumblr

FRIENDLY FIRES and THEOPHILUS LONDON play The Social on Saturday, October 8th.

It’s not a surprise that my favourite album of 2011 thus far is by a group of skinny white dudes from the suburbs of North London. That is pretty much a cert, any given year. But what IS unusual is that these skinny white dudes have made an incredibly danceable, lush, tropical sounding album. That is not a sound that you’d expect from looking at them. The album is ‘Pala’, by St. Albans’ Friendly Fires, and it’s a monster. NME called it “the perfect pool party soundtrack” and that sounds about right. I’m planning on dancing at this thing like a maniac. Highly recommend that you do the same.

Opening is Brooklyn rapper Theophilus London, whose recent debut album ‘Timez are Weird These Days’ was pretty good. He deserves props, if nothing else, for having a chorus that goes “Last name London, first name Theophilus.” Should make for an interesting contrast with Friendly Fires.

Theophilus London Announces Tours with Big Boi, Friendly Fires

Theophilus London Announces Tours with Big Boi, Friendly Fires.

Theophilus London opens for Friendly Fires, Oct 8.

Theophilus London Announces Tours with Big Boi, Friendly Fires

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Wednesday, August 10, 2011; Posted: 12:08 PM – by BWW News Desk

Theophilus-London-Announces-Tours-with-Big-Boi-Friendly-Fires-20010101Theophilus London has announced a tour in support of his much-hyped full-length debut Timez Are Weird These Days, which is out now (click to buy on iTunes and Amazon.) The tour kicks off August 11th with a SummerStage show in Central Park with Nas and Damien Marley, and also includes a string of dates with Big Boi, an appearance at Austin City Limits, and a 3-week tour with Friendly Fires. A full list of tour dates is below.

On August 20th in Austin, TX, Theophilus London will play the inaugural performance of the Special Engagements Concert Series, presented by Intel and Dell, which is a new live concert series debuting on Noisey.com. The monthly series is grounded in a technology-driven audience experience, which gives fans the power to collaborate with the performing artist before and during the show. Together, they will produce a once-in-a-lifetime event that is streamed live across the world. The series kicks off August 20 in Austin, Texas at the famed Lustre Pearl with Brooklyn-based sensation Theophilus London and host Telli from Ninjasonik. For this first Engagement, fans will determine which exclusive remix Theophilus London debuts during his set, send in visual interpretations of his album to accompany the performance, submit shout-outs and even decide the shirt he wears on stage. Leading up to the debut event in Austin, they will determine factors of the performance via polling widgets, Twitter and Facebook. Fans can watch Theophilus London’s video announcement and learn how to attend and call the shots by visiting http://noisey.com/specialengagements.

Timez Are Weird These Days is Theophilus London’s full-length debut. Critical praise has been pouring in from publications across the spectrum, including features in Interview Magazine, Details, XXL, Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and video and song premieres on Mashable, Wired.com and NY Magazine’s Vulture blog. He has performed on the Late Show with David Letterman (w/Sara Quin of Tegan and Sara) and Jimmy Kimmel Live! Theophilus will perform on the season premiere of 90210 on September 13th.

“Timez Are Weird These Days feels like a welcome cool breeze in sweltering mid summer.”
-Entertainment Weekly

“With eclectic taste and ready pop instincts, London creates an ideal mix of indie and hip-hop tailor made for rocking stages.” -XXL

“[Theophilus London is] pioneering a new path for music.” -Newsweek

Theophilus London 2011 Tour Dates
08/11 – New York, NY @ Rumsey Playfield (Central Park Summer Stage) w/Nas and Damien Marley
08/11 – New York, NY @ Beanpole x Kim Jones x Opening Ceremony Block Party
08/20 – Austin, TX @ Lustre Pearl, Noisey.com x Dell and Intel
08/26 – Brisbane, AU @ The Trivoli Theatre ^
08/27 – Newtown, AU @ The Enmore ^
08/31 – Sydney, AU @ Oxford Arts Factory ^
09/01 – Northcote, AU @ Northcote Social Club
09/02 – Melbourne, AU @ Palace ^
09/03 – Northbridge, WA @ Metro City ^
09/16 – Austin, TX @ Austin City Limits
09/16 – Austin, TX @ Emo’s Outside w/Twin Shadow
09/21 – Johannesburg, RSA @ Alex Theatre
09/24 – Johannesburg, RSA @ The Gearbox
09/30 – Marseille, FRA @ Festival Marsatac
10/04 – Carrborro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle *
10/05 – Asheville, NC @ Orange Peel *
10/07 – Atlanta, GA @ The Loft *
10/08 – Orlando, FL @ The Social *
10/11 – Austin, TX @ La Zona Rosa *
10/15 – Los Angeles, CA @ Club Nokia *
10/18 – Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom *
10/19 – Seattle, WA @ Neptune *
10/22 – Chicago, IL @ Metro *
10/23 – Toronto, ON @ Phoenix Concert Theatre *
10/25 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer *
10/26 – New York, NY @ Terminal 5 *
10/27 – Boston, MA @ Paradise *

^ w/Big Boi
* w/Friendly Fires

Friendly Fires, Cults & The Naked & Famous played Central Park Summerstage (pics, video & setlist) (VIA BrooklynVegan.com)

Friendly Fires, Cults & The Naked & Famous played Central Park Summerstage (pics, video & setlist).

Friendly Fires perform at The Social, Saturday, Oct 8th.

Cults open for Foster The People at The Beacham, Tuesday, Sept 20th.

Posted in music | pictures on August 8, 2011

photos by Amanda M. Hatfield

“At Central Park Summerstage, 10,000% humidity. So damp. Band (UK’s Friendly Fires) is dripping like undersea creatures.” – Moishe Friedman

Friendly Fires

Friendly Fires headlined a free and at-capcity Central Park Summerstage show yesterday (8/7) with Cults and The Naked and Famous. Friendly Fires played a pretty even mix of material from their debut and its recently released followup Pala (full setlist below). Cults, who will probably be able to headline their own Summerstage show next summer, opened the show two days after they played Lollapalooza.

The Naked and Famous, who are already headlining Webster Hall on October 27 with The Chain Gang of 1974 and White Arrows, and playing a sold out MHOW show on 8/12 with Winter Gloves, just added an 8/13 Brooklyn Bowl show with a Yeasayer DJ set. Tickets are on sale now if you’re into that kind of thing. All dates are listed below.

More pictures, videos, and setlist from the Summerstage show, below…


Friendly Fires – “Lovesick” at Summerstage 8/7/11

Friendly Fires – “Skeleton Boy” at Summerstage 8/7/11

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Friendly Fires Setlist (via Francesca)
FF Setlist


M83 – “MIDNIGHT CITY” OUT AUG 16th / NEW TOUR DATES ADDED

M83 perform at The Social, November 2.

August 9, 2011
New York, NY

M83

FIRST SINGLE – “MIDNIGHT CITY” – OUT AUGUST 16TH

NEW DATES ADDED TO FALL TOUR

NEW DOUBLE ALBUM – HURRY UP, WE’RE DREAMING – OUT OCT. 18TH

M83’s new track “Midnight City” will be released on August 16th as the first official single from the upcoming new album Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming, out October 18th.  “Midnight City” will be available as a free download on the official M83 website ilovem83.com until August 14th. Unlike anything we have heard from M83 in the past, “Midnight City” has excited fans and critics alike, receiving an overwhelmingly positive outpour of enthusiasm and anticipation for more. Rolling Stone calls it “Gorgeous and highly danceable” and Pitchfork says it’s “The fine-tuning of a master craftsman only challenged by himself”, labeling it ‘best new music’.

M83 has added two shows to the fall tour, including a late show at Lincoln Hall in Chicago on Nov. 17th and a Brooklyn show at the Music Hall Of Williamsburg on November 23. Due to demand, the San Francisco show will move to Mezzanine, opening more tickets to the public. The tour kicks off in Washington D.C. in the US on October 28th for dates throughout the US and Canada, including a headline performance at the Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin, TX alongside Lykke Li, Passion Pit, and Odd Future (full list of dates below).  Several shows on the upcoming tour are currently sold out including the opening night in Washington D.C., Raleigh, and the early show in Chicago. The fall tour dates will be M83’s first live shows in over two years.  M83 last toured in support of the widely adored Saturdays=Youth, which saw the band on the road with The Killers in the US, Kings of Leon in the UK, and Depeche Mode in Europe.  Tickets are on sale now.

Produced by Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Beck, NIN, The Mars Volta, Goldfrapp), mixed by Tony Hoffer (Air, The Kooks), and including contributions from Brad Laner (from 90’s band Medicine) on guitar, Saturdays=Youth vocalist Morgan Kibby,and guest vocalist Zola Jesus, Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is a double-album journey that takes us to the horizon and introduces us to new landscapes. About awakening, craving, and conquering, Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming pushes into new vocal territory for M83. Here we see Gonzalez test out different ways of singing, ranging from a spectral breathy whisper to a howling scream.  “I think it is a reflection of my 30 years of being a human being. It’s a compilation of all my previous music together. It’s a retrospective of myself”, says Gonzalez.

Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming is the follow up to the John Hughes inspired and critics’ favorite Saturdays=YouthPitchfork called it, “An unaccountably alive, complete album”, giving it an 8.5 rating while, The New York Times, said “The music recalls the pumping beats and keyboard hooks of the 1980’s as if through a haze of time, floating in lush echoes that round off the edges.”

M83 is Los Angeles based French artist Anthony Gonzalez.

NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES
Oct. 15 – Mexico City – Corona Capital Festival
Oct. 28 – Washington DC – Black Cat (Sold Out)
Oct. 29 – Raleigh, NC – Kings Barcade (Sold Out)
Oct. 30 – Asheville, NC – Moog Fest
Oct. 31 – Atlanta, GA – Masquerade
Nov. 1 – Tallahassee, FL – Engine Room
Nov. 2 – Orlando, FL – The Social
Nov. 4 – Houston, TX – Warehouse Live
Nov. 5 – Austin, TX – Fun Fun Fun Fest
Nov. 7 – Phoenix, AZ – The Crescent Ballroom
Nov. 9 – Los Angeles, CA – Music Box
Nov. 10 – San Francisco, CA – Mezzanine
Nov. 11 – Portland, OR – Wonder Ballroom
Nov. 12 – Vancouver, BC – Venue
Nov. 13 – Seattle, WA – Neumos
Nov. 16 – Minneapolis, MN – Varsity Theater
Nov. 17 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall (early show) (Sold Out)
Nov. 17 – Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall (late show)
Nov. 18 – Toronto, ON – Lees Palace
Nov. 19 – Montreal, QC – Le S.A.T.
Nov. 20 – Boston, MA – Paradise
Nov. 22 – New York, NY – Webster Hall
Nov. 23 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall Of Williamsburg

The Dear Hunter @ Lincoln Hall – REVIEWS (VIA UR Chicago)

The Dear Hunter @ Lincoln Hall – REVIEWS – UR Chicago.

The Dear Hunter play The Social, Saturday, August 20th.

The Dear Hunter @ Lincoln Hall

The Dear Hunter w/O’Brother and The Felix Culpa
Where: Lincoln Hall
When: July 24th, 2011
Grade: 4 out of 5 meatballs
Reviewed and photographed by: Amanda Kaiser

On a humid Sunday evening Chicagoans of all ages crowded within the confines of Lincoln Hall to see The Dear Hunter’s sold-out show. Though the band hails from Rhode Island, the high demand made it evident they have a loyal fan base here in the Windy City. This concert marks the first U.S. headlining tour for the group; previously they toured with progressive/alt rock bands like Dredg, and Coheed and Cambria. The tour began July 15 in San Francisco, CA and will conclude in Pomona, CA on August 27.

This debut headline tour came at the perfect time, corresponding perfectly with the release of their newest music project. The sextet primarily played songs off their new EP The Color Spectrum, released June 14 on Triple Crown Records. The grandiose concept album, comprised of 36 songs, features collaborations with the likes of Manchester Orchestra. The project is dedicated to allowing listeners to experience nine different colors through the medium of sound.

The night’s lineup featured special guests The Felix Culpa, O’Brother, and Kay Kay and His Weathered Undergrounds. The Felix Culpa, a post-hardcore indie quartet from Wisconsin, came on first and jammed out, setting the adrenaline-filled mood for the night. Atlanta’s O’Brother took the stage next, filling the room with searing guitar riffs and howling cries. Kay Kay and His Weathered Undergrounds appeared as the last of the opening acts. The scruffy Seattle-based outfit spun 60s reverb with an impressive seven-person band, incorporating tuba and swooping violins into the usual repertoire.

The Dear Hunter is oft-described as post-punk, though the collective dabbles in country, cabaret, blues, pop and metal, especially on their newest release. When the band took the stage, however, there were no skinny jeans, sullen shoegaze or ebony spiked hair in sight. Instead, the band appeared extremely casual, sporting various shades of worn flannel and the lead singer donning a beanie. Their look screamed “jam band,” but I was about to find out that The Dear Hunter’s sound is infinitely more advanced and complex than any group of washed-out post-collegiates you’d find in your momma’s basement.

Frontman Casey Crescenzo’s vocal range is incredible, scaling from a perfectly-on-pitch falsetto to a grinding baritone, repeatedly throughout the songs. His talent provides the perfect complement to the group’s up-tempo aggressive rock. Throughout the performance I couldn’t shake the feeling that his voice reminded me of someone, and suddenly it came to me: Muse singer Matt Bellamy. The vocal similarity between the two artists is almost uncanny.

The alt-rock outfit opened with “The Church and Dime” off their second album released in 2006, a complex piece packed with layered vocals and intense percussion. Midway through the show “Red Hands” was a clear favorite, and the audience sang along in impassioned unison, smiling and dancing with arms raised above their heads. This song delivered unadulterated pop-rock euphoria with the imploring chorus “Oh God, what have I done / Now my darling put your clothes back on.” “She’s Always Singing (Yellow)” featured catchy vocals, bright guitar riffs, and a reverbed Beach Boys-esque sing-along with a summery vibe. “Fall and Flee” was another standout of the night, beginning with a psychedelic, scattered sound reminiscent of Animal Collective and transitioning into moments of dreamy, lo-fi vocals and rollicking piano segments.

During the first few songs even Crescenzo’s powerful vocals were no match for the blaring guitar riffs and relentless drums competing for attention, and his mellow presence seemed to fade into the background. By the end of the concert though, Crescenzo found his footing and had the audience wrapped around the strings of his guitar. Despite releasing their newest music project a little over a month ago, the hyped-up crowd knew most of the words to all the songs, new and old, closing their eyes and belting out the words while swaying as if in reverie.

The totality of The Dear Hunter’s performance was made interesting by the long segments of explosive instrumentals followed by moments of tenderness, filled with twinkling pianos and dreamy reverb-soaked guitar. The contrast between the two made these quieter moments all the more arresting.

The Dear Hunter’s magnum opus that is The Color Spectrum aims high, and their performance follows suit. Crescenzo and his band mates possess a raw energy that draws their fans in, and though the aggressive rock wasn’t really my cup of tea, I could appreciate the band’s endearingly emo, yet progressively experimental, sound. For such a talented and imaginative group I’m surprised they haven’t garnered more fame yet, but with luck the remainder of The Dear Hunter’s first headline tour will gain recognition for a collective that seems to be forming a sonic subculture all their own.

Just announced: Odd Future coming in November (VIa TheDailyCity.com)

TheDailyCity.com: Just announced: Odd Future coming in November.

Just announced: Odd Future coming in November

By Samir Mathur
Contributing writer
Twitter | Tumblr

Odd Future will play the Beacham Theater on November 3rd

Odd Future – or Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All, if you’re not into brevity – are, by far, the most-talked about new band of 2011. I think I’ve only heard three of their songs, but I still feel like I know a whole lot about them. Let’s see: L.A. based gang of teenagers, all of whom do their own thing as well as perform with the group; not fans of Bruno Mars; one guy was sent to a juvenile facility in Samoa against his will; the main dude is called Tyler the Creator and he recently broke his leg; oh, and there’s some business about their lyrics being completely homophobic and sexist. Read this article about how GLAAD has spoken out against the band. Apparently you have to either love them or despise them: there is no middle way.

Anyway, they just announced a tour this morning, and it involves a stop in Orlando on November 3rd. It certainly promises to be interesting, as their live shows have a reputation for insanity. Oh, you don’t believe me? Check out the video above. That was just in a TV studio. It’s scary to think about what they’ll do to downtown’s newest venue.