Friday, December 4, 2009

THE METAL DETECTOR: Christmas Edition


the METAL DETECTOR
with Al Wreckless







As every metal fan knows, metal is not just a musical style; it’s a way of life. And it takes commitment. To truly be metal, at least 83% of your world must be classified as metal. Unfortunately, in the modern climate of the world, lines between reality and fiction are blurred more than ever. It’s getting harder and harder to determine what is truly metal. That’s why you need THE METAL DETECTOR.


Today, we take a look at Christmas. There is probably no more polarizing holiday than Christmas. On the one hand, it was intended as a celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ but has been commercialized into a crass materialistic season where people will literally kill one another for a good deal. Mortification would disapprove.

On the other hand, it’s a crass materialistic holiday about spending money. KISS would highly approve. In fact, I think Gene Simmons took a copyright on the whole concept of Christmas and we now all owe him some royalties.

Christmas started as a way of co-opting the Pagan festival of Dies Natalis Solis Invicti. The entire Norwegian black metal scene would disapprove. Christmas also minimizes the importance of Hanukah. Orphaned Land would disapprove.

In the end, no matter how much fun it is, Christmas isn’t very metal. On a scale of one to ten Manowars, it only rates a 2.7. And that’s simply because of this--

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

WTF chic


This fall has produced more than its share of WTFs: Weezer with Kenny G, Grizzly Bear with Michael MacDonald, Animal Collective sampling Zamfir, the Weezer Snuggie (let's face it Weezer has been one big WTF since Matt Sharp left.)

So what the fuck? Why are artists so geeked on being uncool? One possibility is a visceral reaction to the hipster culture that has spread to every corner of society. One could easily imagine the shaggy-haired hipster reaching for his iPhone at the first toots of Zamfir's pan-flute (mission accomplished!) In much the same way that Twee was punking the punks, WTF could be kicking cool kids in their girl-jean crotches. Of course, the irony of this explanation is it would mean that this is a calculated move rather than an organic outgrowth.

And, if there was anything sinister about the last decades obsession with hipsterdom-- it was the subculture's cold calculation. The explosion of media and meta-media fed into a vicious cycle of microtrends and hyperawareness. Keeping up with everything was only a click away and hipster clones quickly began rolling off factory lines. From the denizens in the deepest enclaves in Brooklyn to flood victims in the Midwest as seen on the evening news, faux-hawks and Strokes look-a-likes dotted the American landscape from coat to coast and campus to campus.

So as underground culture searches for a post-hipster identity and forces itself to un-ironically (gasp!) embrace its inner Pee Wee Herman, we may have to withstand periodic jolts of uber-uncool. Just open wide and try to relax-- like the micro-fads before, it'll be over before you know it.

Friday, November 6, 2009

Local, Live Alt-Rappers Stay On Message




Before the Benjis and the bling, hip-hoppers were all about a backbeat and a message. Whether it was De La Soul talking peace and love or KRS-One dropping knowledge, these "golden age-rs" emphasized content and commotion instead of an image or street cred. A wave of locals are returning to this ethos of early hip-hop only to take it in a new direction. Some are taking it to its more abstract, its more extreme, while others infuse the genre with new ideas and sounds. The results can be strange and abrasive one minute and propulsively upbeat the next.

BloodThirsty Vegans started as a cadre of artists playing only a once a year benefit show. A lineup began to solidify around a couple of MCs and the same core group has been together for about eight months.
MC Vendetta, née Janna Willoughby, and My Rap name is Alex are the two vocalists/ MCs that anchor the variety of musical styles that the band delves into. While the term "skip hop" has been thrown around, in reference to the band's frequent fusion of ska and hip-hop, the Vegans musical style varies widely and remains difficult to pin down. Both MCs deliver rapid-fire quasi-ragamuffin style lyrics over this bubbling stew uptempo musical styles. The band says they differ from most live hip-hop acts in that they write tightly compacted definitive songs as opposed to a more "jam bandy" approach. Alex explains one unifying musical theme: "You should get up off your ass and dance."

Unifying the band as well is the message-driven content of their lyrics. The Vegans espouse a "call-to-action" mentality and challenge their audience both to appreciate what's around them and to get active, not only on the dance floor but in the community as well.

"I started writing to have an impact," says Alex. "But you can't have nearly the impact if people don't enjoy it."

"And we try to (have an impact) with the way we produce as a band too," adds primary drummer _dave. "We're getting our CD cases printed locally and on green materials; and we get our shirts prints locally."

The band continues to play more frequently than ever including many benefit shows that support a variety of causes.

"At zero money," says _dave. "But that's just cause we like playing a lot."
---
Another message driven artist steeped in the hip-hop ethos is Jack Topht (which, by the way, not a stage name). Along with The Vegetables, his partner Lindsey Grate who plays a drum kit and a variety of keyboards, Topht takes rap music to that more bizarre, abstract place. Adding elements of folk, punk, bedroom pop, and freak rock, his act is one part music, one part performance art.

"Me and Linds never really fit in with anybody," says Topht. "We do three or four rap songs, and then we got these quirky pop songs that don't really sound like anything... so I think we fit in with a lot of bands, but at the same time we don't fit in with any bands. We're like a punk rock band, or like, a weird pop band and we kind of make sense with noise bands too, cause we have an original sound."
Topht raps and sings over a myriad of beat-driven songs, which he describes as "light-hearted, upbeat and fun." He also tries to include what he calls "pep talk songs", songs that exude a positive, motivational message to serve as reassurance in a harsh reality.

"Those are the major theme's I try and cover: life's weird, do your best, stuff like that you know?"

The band recently took these themes on the road, playing shows across the Midwest and up the West Coast. Topht says the band played with a variety of acts, in a variety of settings: a sweltering basement in Reno, a garage rock fest in San Diego, an art-house/performance space in Montana. He says they translated well at almost every show in almost every city. They returned to Buffalo ready to record another full length album.
---
Zev is another artist skewing the old school ethos. A Ph.D candidate at SUNY Buffalo, Zev has his fingers in many pies. He performs both as a solo act, backed by prerecorded beats, and with live bands as well. As a solo performer and producer, his sound can be dark, rich and cinematic.

"I definitely like lush soundscapes and multi-layered stuff," says Zev. "A lot of influence (for me) comes from really early boom-bap, real stripped down stuff. But I definitely prefer more lush stuff."

As someone who's been performing with bands since the late 90's, Zev is also in touch with the live, more tactile approach to musical performance.He tailors the live hip-hop versions of his songs to arrangements written by the particular group he's working with at the time, whether it be with local indie rockers notic or musicians from an artist group called the Intangible Collective.

Some 80's and 90's rappers had an overtly political or social messages. Public Enemy, NWA, and Ice-T all drove home their message with scathing indictments of both the community and the system around them. Zev tends to stay away from hot button topics that might turn off listeners and instead focuses on more introspective issues.

"I talk about the sense of alienation (that comes from) living in this sort of, weird post-modern world and the sort of questions of identity that I think a lot people in this country and around world that people are asking themselves," he explains. "So, basically the unrest that comes from being a compassionate individual in this exceedingly violent world."

Zev performs, when time allows, at traditional venues and art spaces alike. He says while school and other endeavors take up much of his time, making music and performing in Buffalo are passions he finds time for.

"Buffalo has such a great music scene: its close knit, its good size and its definitely made me feel that I should keep doing this stuff cause there's really a lot happening here."

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

THE METAL DETECTOR: Twitter


the METAL DETECTOR
with Al Wreckless







As every metal fan knows, metal is not just a musical style; it’s a way of life. And it takes commitment. To truly be metal, at least 83% of your world must be classified as metal. Unfortunately, in the modern climate of the world, lines between reality and fiction are blurred more than ever. It’s getting harder and harder to determine what is truly metal. That’s why you need THE METAL DETECTOR.


Today, we take a look at social networking website Twitter. If you don’t know what Twitter is, then you’re the ultimate hermit and therefore truly metal and don’t need this column for help.

Like other social network tools, Twitter allows long-lost friends, family and random strangers with little in common to connect and keep up on each other’s lives. Metallica would approve. I think. I’m not sure what their stance on fan interaction is these days.

Twitter has found a surprising audience with the older generation. Even congressmen have taken to tweeting during Obama speeches. There is no age limit to be a twitterer. Ronnie James Dio would approve.

On the other hand, Twitter limits you to 140 characters per post. Anything you say has to brief, thus preventing something truly epic. Voivod would strongly disapprove.

Truthfully, social network websites are pretty lame and populated by Top 40 fans and wimpy emo nerds. In other words, the very people metalheads should be beating up. On a scale of one to ten Manowars, Twitter scores a pitiful 1.3. Stick with MySpace, at least you can customize your profile page to look evil and force people to listen to some crunching metal.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Crappy Futurism: the new aesthetic?


The lo-fi retro futurism of the Flaming Lips fantastic new album along with Wired's "Good Enough Revolution", and even the latest iPhone killer, with its allusions to Star Wars' futuristic dystopia, seems to be heralding a new aesthetic in our culture and music. This new aesthetic makes all the more sense when framed by these "tough economic times" we currently live in.

Call it a commentary on the materialism of the past decade. A decade that saw brand name/ designer awareness reach an all-time high. Think about it, when The Devil Wears Prada came out, no one asked for an elaboration on what exactly Prada was. Urban, which made a name for itself catering to grungy skateboarders, now sells $200 sunglasses out of a case by the front window.

Call it a commentary on the modernism of the past decade. Minimal modernism was everywhere-- Kompakt, futura, IKEA, even the White Strips saw a post millennium bounce. No doubt all this minimalism would experience some blow-back. But if minimalism were a stock, I'd short it.

Instantly transmitted cell phone video, tinny mp3s, twitter... What does this all mean for the future of music? The recent rise of lo-fi rock and glitchy techno might be more than passing fads. Will the blown out sounds of Times New Viking ever be used to sell Cadallacs? Will Sileni's micro-edited freakouts ever pack the dance floors on Chippewa? Highly doubtful, but don't be surprised to hear something like "No time, no hope" underneath a Mountain Dew commercial sometime in the crappy near future.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

THE METAL DETECTOR: Dick Cheney


the METAL DETECTOR
with Al Wreckless







As every metal fan knows, metal is not just a musical style; it’s a way of life. And it takes commitment. To truly be metal, at least 83% of your world must be classified as metal. Unfortunately, in the modern climate of the world, lines between reality and fiction are blurred more than ever. It’s getting harder and harder to determine what is truly metal. That’s why you need THE METAL DETECTOR.


Today, we take a look at former Vice President Dick Cheney. At first glance, he doesn’t seem very metal. He looks like my grandpa. Actually, he looks like Col Klink’s grandpa. But let’s take a closer look at this complicated imp, shall we? He shot a guy in the face. The members of Mayhem would approve. He’s big on starting wars for self-serving reasons. The members of Bolt Thrower would approve. He’s in favor of torture. The members of Slayer would approve. He’s intolerant of other religions/beliefs/opinions,etc. Varg Vikernes would approve (though he’d support a different religion).

Now that Dick Cheney is now longer in power, we can sit back and admit that he truly is a badass. Seriously, he shot a guy in the face and the guy was so scared, he actually apologized to Cheney. That’s pretty metal. On the other hand, he did pretty much fuck our country over. On a scale of one to ten Manowars, Cheney rates an 8.2.

Monday, September 21, 2009

Upcoming: 9.25 More new bands with familiar faces


Just in time for Lego Rock Band, local power poppers will reassemble in different forms this Friday at Merlins. With lots of "ex-"s on the fliers, be sure these guys know their way around a hook or two:

On Beta (ex-Old Sweethearts, current Johnny Nobody)
Tuco (ex-Clearmotive, Miracle at Rich, The Control)
Turn it up (ex-Elad Love Affair, The Design)

September 25th, 11 p.m. $5

Thursday, August 6, 2009

besnyo break-up--> new projects


besnyo have announced their break-up after over 4 years of playing and recording music. As one of the premier local indie-electro bands, the band will be sorely missed. However...

when bands break-up there are always new projects coming together from the ashes of old:

Wooden Waves - being touted as Sleeping Kings of Iona 2.0, the demos being streamed here sound promising and pick up on similar themes of both bands, driving indie-dream-pop with elements of shoegaze and electro.

Cinnamon Aluminum - described as "an experimental/ambient/freak out jam group", their first demo sounds a lot like an AC bootleg with its triumvirate of loops, echos and arpeggios. Let's hope CA incorporates the African rhythms, alternate time signatures and micro-processed samples that makes that other band transcendent.

Worrywort - no footprints on the web yet for this new project. They can been seen in the old-fashioned live format in the upcoming weeks, including a Cd release party.

September 4th @ Burnwood Studios
885 Niagara Street 5 dollars 8pm
w/ All of Them Witches & Fourem

WORRYWORT CD RELEASE
October 16th @ Karpeles Manuscript Museum
220 North Street (corner of North & Elmwood) 2 dollars 7pm
w/ Cages & Fourem

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Sunbaked




Like a blast of hot sunlight through the cold July clouds, the new sun-bleached Son of the Sun Ep arrived just in time to breath new life not only into the summer, but into the local indie rock scene as well.

Retroists Son of the Sun have been slumming it in the garage now for a while now, making meticulous sounding yet slightly derivative guitar based rockers. Like so many other local bands they leaned heavily on retro swagger and vintage tones for their appeal.

However, the new Ep Before the After finds the band hitting a different stride. The meticulous production is still there, but the new album has the band trading their tight jeans for board shorts, cranking up the reverb and finding a real knack for writing timeless, lazy surf gems. The new songs are just as '09 as they are '59 and can be added to Buffalo's bizarrely strong surf cannon that includes songs from locals such as the Irving Klaws, Bloody Hollies, the Waves, Blue Rocket Trio, Dimetrodon, Skate Korpse and Mockba.

Songs from the new Ep can be downloaded here or streamed here.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Redwater DIY: part 1


When Redwater enters the studio this fall, the band will be determined as ever to put hits to hard drive and release a full, proper album.

"Plain and simple, this record is going to happen because, for us to be together for as long as we have and not actually have something to show for it-- is one of the most frustrating things." states singer, guitarist and de facto frontman Kevin Di Lucente.

Di Lucente, like the rest of the band, carries himself as easy going-- almost to the point of reluctance. Rounded out by guitarist Tony Nash and the rhythm section of drummer Mike Dicioccio and bassist Jay Czuba, the band members maintain an understated, yet ebullient confidence, holding conversation as easily as cracking a cold beer.

The band's primary sound is based around a trio of classic rock, grunge and country. Loud, catchy, up-tempo, blues-based hooks and riffs have been the band's meat and potatoes. As the songs shift gears and change palettes they tend to highlight Nash's technical flourishes and Di Lucente's vocal swagger.

Nash, with his beard and shoulder-length hair, comes across at first impression as a rockist through to the bone. He says when they first started playing together almost three years ago, they first gravitated to a "raw, rock" sound that was a "common denominator." However, he adds that the group's sound has begun to evolve into something more complex, less immediate.

"We've had that time to get through that, just that debut period, where it's just hungry... but after a while you don't have to scream. Slower songs-- basically what it translates to-- different tempos, trying different things... we don't just listen to hard rock, or rock 'n roll and you know, alternative."


The band practices and records in a converted basement in the last house on a dead end road in Orchard Park, just a stone's throw from the Stadium. Set back from the road and bordered on one side by a small patch of woods, the space is far removed from the downtown bars where they regularly play. The sincerity of the Southtowns comes across in the band's music and attitude. Describing themselves as an "honest band" looking to reach a "broad audience", they bristle at the thought of elitism or pretension in their music.

In looking to keep their music honest, especially on the upcoming record; the group is setting the goal of giving it a raw, live sound. While Nash cites the layered production of Pink Floyd as an influence, he says the band must walk a fine line and keep the recorded songs true to their live versions.

"Kind of like Zeppelin and Beatles, all these classics, they revolutionized recording with crazy panning and all this stuff," he says. "But at the end of the day, there was a [good] song underneath all that and it was easy to see."

"We don't want it over produced, but we don't want it to sound like we just threw a tape player down," says drummer Dicioccio.

They plan on recording the entire album themselves, in their neon-sign lit basement space, with Nash's recording equipment. It's an approach the band has used before on their previous two Eps. Nash, who takes the helm with respect to engineering and producing the band's sessions, has been recording music for around 10 years and says he has a good feel what will work and what doesn't.

Jay Pagano, an engineer at Select Sound Studios in Kenmore, says bands that hone their sound live can sometimes experience pitfalls when entering the studio.

"The big difference between playing live and playing in the studio is what you can hear," he says. "[Some bands] might feel that they're well rehearsed, but when they're in the studio they might be totally off key, they're playing their pitches too high or too low, their tempos are way off-- you don't really hear that in a live aspect that much, but in the studio you hear the slightest little thing," says Pagano.

He notes that newer bands are also not set in their ways and tend to "go with the flow" more over groups who have logged more studio time.

Redwater has an ambitious agenda, setting the goal for the upcoming release at 10 to 12 songs. They say the ratio of new-to-old songs will be about 4-to-1, with the "newer" songs being played out only a handful of times. Fully embracing the idea of changing or writing songs in the studio, they say they will take full advantage of the control and time they have in Nash's ad hoc studio.

The band, currently in the pre-production stage, is posting updates on their mySpace site. Expect silo3 to follow the band through the process as a look at a local band recording their first full-length in a DIY setting.

Friday, July 10, 2009

“The Economics Of Fast Food”




chit-chat from the Chainsaw--
an irregular feature
by a. cerda






As a Dollar Menuaire, the McDouble pisses me off. And not just because it robs me of an extra piece of cheese. It’s because… well, okay, it’s because it robs me of an extra piece of cheese. But I refuse to be hoodwinked by the clown. Why does getting that extra piece of cheese cost me 19 cents when a regular cheeseburger only costs 10 cents more than a regular hamburger?

The math doesn’t add up, especially the more you break it down. Okay, let’s assume each slice of cheese really costs 19 cents. Now a McDouble is only a penny more than a regular cheeseburger. That means each patty only costs a penny. So that leaves 79 cents covering the bun, pickle, ketchup, mustard, and whatever other condiments they throw on there.

Now, we know condiments really can’t cost much otherwise restaurants and sporting venues across the nation wouldn’t offer them so freely. Let’s give an estimate of about 10 cents for condiments. Now, we’re down to 69 cents for bun and pickle.


An 8-pack of hamburger buns generally goes for about $1.50, meaning each bun is about 19 cents. If my math is correct (which it is, unlike my logic), that means the pickle is costing me about 50 cents. That’s outrageous! Especially since I order mine without a pickle. I want my 50 cents back, clown.

By the way, why is it that two 4-piece pack of chicken nuggets is not only cheaper than one 6-piece pack, but you also end up getting two sauces instead of one? Maybe if McDonalds wasn’t losing money hand over fist in the McNugget department, they could put the double cheeseburger back on the dollar menu.


from the McDonald's official Web site FAQ:
"What if I order a McDouble with an extra slice of cheese. Then it would only be $1, right?
No. If you order the McDouble with an extra slice of cheese, you will be charged for the extra slice of cheese. Nice try, though!"

(Ed. Why the dickish tone?)

Thursday, June 4, 2009

How Pitchfork is killing "alternative"

Through top-notch writing and reviews, pitchfork.com has become the premier internet resource for all things music, especially for acts that don't show up on the mainstream pop culture radar. That being said they have effectively crippled underground, alternative or whatever you want to call it.

They have done this not by HOW they review, but by WHAT. For example:

1) They review mostly stuff that is very polished or heavily buzzed. This shuts out a lot of acts with unproven yet redeeming qualities, especially when compared to the ink/ love something like Maximum Rock n Roll gives a lot of unknowns.

2) Because of what they review, they create the mentality that image and polish are more important than the music itself.

3) Some accuse the web site of promoting style or personality over substance-- giving props to acts based solely on charisma.

So-called indie, underground or whatever has become very poppy and very trendy in this post-Pitchfork age. I hate to sound like an ol' timer but "alternative" used to be about being different or weird. Now-- its about having a different brand or image.

Like the financial sector, the advent of Pitchfork becoming the premier taste-maker for the music industry has lead to another "boom and bust" industry. Acts and genres are sequentially built up and torn down. Music doesn't seem to evolve organically anymore with Pitchfork-reading hipsters across the lands glomming on to the latest trend (or in Buffalo, last year's trend (oh BTW, it's been over for a few years now-- GIVE IT UP STONER ROCKERS!!!)) only to see it blow up in their face.

The last serious rock movement was the garage revival earlier this decade, which, by the way, was based entirely on the rebooting of old ideas. Meanwhile, micro/minimal techno seems to have turned the page on electronic music, trendiness be damned. These two examples show ground swells in "pop" music still exist, however substantive, yet it remains to be seen if the snowballing of underground trends via Pitchfork hype will have an effect on music in the long run.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

On hiatus til May-ish

this being my last semester and a busy one, silo3 will be on hiatus until late spring. sorry to those looking for their stories to appear. they will in due time.

-BS

About Us

Buffalo, NY, United States
I am an online journalist/blogger/ freelance writer with a strong background in science and deep interest in indie rock.