Saturday, October 30, 2010

Treats

Photo by L. Coolidge
Along with the changing leaf color and falling temperatures, fall brings with it plenty of good things to eat for young and old alike.  Candy corn, apple cider and pumpkin pie fill the shelves of farmer's markets and the stomachs of satisfied eaters.  While the pumpkin is well known as a pie filler, it's less known, but equally delicious, as a brewing ingredient.  Here's three tasty beers that will make you think twice about turning your pumpkin into a jack-o-lantern.

Dogfish Head Punkin Ale 
The innovators over at DogFish Head seem to do everything just a little bit different and a little bit better than a lot of the other breweries out there.  The Punkin Ale is no exception.  Brewed with real pumpkin meat and organic brown sugar, punkin ale is full of taste, body, and alcohol - coming in at a ghastly 7.0 ABV.


Shipyard Brewery - Pumpkinhead Ale
The Pumpkinhead Ale from Portland, ME brew house Shipyard, is  light golden in color and full of spice.  Most of the pumpkin taste is masked behind the more noticeable cinnamon and nutmeg flavor.


Smuttynose Brewing Co. - Pumpkin Ale
Coming out of New Hampshire, the Smuttynose Pumpkin Ale finds the right blend between pumpkin and spice - not too much of either but just enough of both.  Flavorful enough to know you're drinking a pumpkin beer but without overpowering the overall flavor.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Nice Costume!

Five predictions for Phish's Halloween costume this weekend in Atlantic City: 


Panda Bear - Person Pitch - a long shot, but Trey has talked about loving this album, by Animal Collective co-founder Noah Lennox, and "Comfy in Nautica" fits perfectly with the seaside setting.











Led Zeppelin - I - a Zeppelin album is a definite possibility with the band playing several tracks from the Zep catalog in the past, including songs like "Good Times, Bad Times" off this record with relative frequency.




James Brown - Sex Machine - cause even sounding like James Brown on his worst night would be pretty damn funky, as Phish know all too well.











Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend - after Trey's recent comments in the LA Times blog about this year's musical costume having a huge effect on his guitar playing and Trey's interest in the indie bands of today, this was the first album I thought of.  Not sure I want them to play this (even though I do like this album) but hey, you never know.




The Mothers of Invention - Freak Out! - the influence of Frank Zappa on the Phish sound can be heard in lots of different places and this would be a seriously freaky choice on Halloween.  I can already hear an extended vacuum solo in "The Return of the Son of Monster Magnet".





Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Favorite Record Review: M. Ward - Hold Time

There are moments each of us carry, that linger on in our memory, long after the time at which they occurred has passed.  These memories replay on a revolving loop in the background of our daily lives;  sometimes being retold and remade, embellished or misremembered, but forever a constant reminder of our overarching narrative.  Played together, these memories are the way in which we see ourselves in the world - the events of our lives from the first person.

Matt Ward's collection of songs off of 2009's "Hold Time" provide the score for these personalized motion pictures.  His songs are familiar and comforting, reminiscent of something we know, but they seem to hover just beyond recall.   Ward's voice is lushly coarse and delivered with layers of genuine tenderness, coating his songs with a thick stroke of emotional residue.  He sounds as if he woke in the middle of the night to sing these songs just for us.   

The album opens with "For Beginners", but kicks off in earnest with "Never Had Nobody Like You" the first of two standout electric tracks; charged by a delicious fuzz, supporting vocals by the female pronoun of Ward's side project She & Him, actress Zooey Deschanel, and a decisive bass drum thump.  Covers of Buddy Holly's "Rave On" (also featuring Deschanel) and Don Gibson's "Oh Lonesome Me" (featuring Lucinda Williams) assemble new structures from old architecture and are decidedly original in approach and distinctive in sound.  "Fisher of Men", "To Save Me" and "Epistemology", the second up front electric track, have Ward weaving subtle religious references around jogging bass lines, uplifting choral parts, and aloof cool slide riffs.  A pair of unadorned acoustic tracks, "One Hundred Million Years" and "Blake's View" supply the philosophical mortar to fill the joints the religion he sings of cannot.  

Thoughtful track sequencing allows the album to ebb and flow like a canoe happily taken by the current of the river.  Overall the guitar playing, like Ward's voice, sounds almost lazy at first, but in actuality brims with shy confidence and great skill.  The instrumentation is purposefully applied and always seems to enhance rather than detract from the core of the songs. 

On the title track Ward sings, "You were beyond comprehension tonight, but I understood, now if I could only, hold time....hold time....hold time".  With this album, M. Ward seeks to do the impossible: both pause the moment while present in it to keep it from ending, and physically grasp time as a means of understanding and contextualizing our story within the larger storyline.  While even M. Ward can't keep time from passing, he does manage to be the cinema to let our moments replay.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Live Bait Vol. 2

Yesterday, to coincide with start of the fall tour, Phish released Live Bait Vol. 2, a fully mixed soundboard recording of a selection of jams from the second leg of this summer's tour.  The free download is the available over at livephish.com

The second half of this summer provided some of the strongest shows the band has put on in the 3.0 era (fueled by the new Ocelot Languedoc) so I'm a little surprised by cuts like What's the Use, NO2, and Kung being included here, but it's free and a big thanks goes out to the band for making this available.  Let's all hope for a Vol. 3.

Phish starts a three day run at the 1st Bank Center in Broomfield, Colorado tomorrow night.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

I Can Barely Hardly Wait

The Delta Spirit's blend of roots influenced rock caught my ear in 2009 with their full length debut from a year earlier "Ode to Sunshine".  Matt Vasquez's current yet timeless songwriting sung and sometimes yelled over a well integrated mix of guitar, piano, and some unorthodox percussion give songs like "Trashcan" and "People, C'mon" an urgent yet open feel.  The songs manage to be catchy enough to be the right kind of anthemic, without being preachy or cliched.  The everyman appeal of Vasquez's writing has expanded even farther on this year's "History from Below", after Vasquez was introduced to Howard Zinn's "A People's History of the United States".  Zinn's retelling of history from the viewpoint of the people rather than the powerful is required reading for anyone who is even moderately willing to consider that the history you learned in high school social studies may not be the whole story.  

Check out a couple of video's that I love of the Delta Spirit performing "Trashcan" and "People C'mon" in an impromptu set for La Blogotheque's Take Away shows on a San Francisco cable car.  The Take Away Shows feature lots of great artists performing unannounced shows in unconventional locations.  So you get Bon Iver following what look to be some uninterested listeners around the streets of Paris or the Arcade Fire in an elevator using a phone book to help keep the beat.  Really great stuff both for the concept and the performances.  



Delta Spirit - Trashcan from La Blogotheque on Vimeo.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Hungover

Before his breakout success in The Hangover, Zach Galifianakis had what I thought was one of the funniest, all be it, short lived late night talk shows.  The Late World with Zach premiered in the spring of 2002, but was quickly canceled due to low viewer turnout.  Unfortunately, VH1 failed to hold onto a comic gold nugget that was way ahead of its time.  The opening piano monologue, interviews in strange places, Sneaky Jesus, and Zach's digressions into all sorts of unrelated and offbeat topics with guests, were a perfect storm of funny.  Check out this opening where Zach shoots the opening monologue from his (alleged) house.


 


Another great pre-Hangover Zach moment, is his leading man role in Fiona Apple's video for "Not About Love" from 2005's Extraordinary Machine.  The nonsensical antics of Galifianakis play perfectly off the heavy weight of Fionna's lover out of love lyrics.  The quick cuts to Apple slamming the piano punctuate the song's quick changes of tempo.  Apple and Galifianakis convincingly play their parts as ex's in the "glad to see you go" breakup tale.  The video captures the unhinged, just about to jump energy of the music which Fiona does so well, with a playful visual counterpoint.



   

"No Glamour in Vengence"

Some stories would be entirely unbelievable, were it not for the fact that they just happen to be true.

That was my reaction upon hearing the story behind "The Ballad of Vitaly", the closing song on Delta Spirit's June release, "History from Below".  The song recounts the story of Vitaly Kaloyev, a Russian architect turned murderer turned folk hero who was convicted and imprisoned for the 2004 murder of air traffic controller Peter Nielsen.  Nielsen was the only official on duty on the night of July 1, 2002 when a passenger plane from Moscow to Barcelona collided with a cargo flight over German air space, killing all 71 people involved.  Included among the fatalities was Vitaly's wife and two daughters.

In the years following the crash, Kaloyev was unable to cope with his grief.  He became enraged by an offer made by Skyguide, the company in charge of managing the skies on the night of the crash, to financially compensate him for the lives of his loved ones.  Through a private investigator, Kaloyev tracked down Nielsen, whom he blamed for the deaths .  Vitaly confronted Peter Nielsen on the steps of his home in Kloten, Switzerland, where he lived with his wife and 3 children after retiring due to the stress associated with the crash.  Vitaly has said he doesn't remember much after seeing Nielsen face to face.  Hours after their meeting, however, Vitaly Kaloyev was found by police in a nearby hotel covered in blood.  Peter Nielsen was dead, stabbed to death on his front steps with his wife and children in the house.  Vitaly was sentenced to 8 years in prison for the murder.

Listen to the story on NPR's World Cafe about the Delta Spirit and the story behind the song.  Listen to the full song here.