July 10, 2008

Gazelle - Sunblown (Hidden Agenda, 2008)

Filed under: kansas city, music, review — admin @ 2:10 pm

gazelle - sunblown (hidden agenda, 2008)


Gazelle is Jeff Dimpsey, formerly of Hum and National Skyline, and Adam Fein, of Absinthe Blind. There, I said it. Get it out of the way now.


The key point is that the strength of this album should not be over-shadowed by the pedigree of either artist. This project furthers the work both have previously done. As an album, Sunblown is full of space-filled, shamble-to-float atmospheres. Some, like “Sonhead”, are built around a core mood of ambience; others, like “At Last, Friend,” or album closer “The First Rays” work themselves into almost-typical indie pop songs. More importantly, even the most upbeat tracks are full of a cool distance that breathes melancholic intimacy.


The album opens with “Jets”, which builds on its programmed drums, ice-on-the-window pads and sun-aura synth which soon breaks to reveal a disaffected but clean, upfront vocal. From the beginning, Dimpsey and Fein demonstrate how gracefuly they manage to steer clear of genre pigeon-holes. Gazelle doesn’t fit in with either the wall-of-sound Claire Records or Club AC30 crowd - librarians will have a hard time categorizing this among the resurging dreampop/shoegaze movement of the moment. Still . . . this is the music of half-sleep. It’s lucid . . . rock for dreaming, but of later-life, back-porch reflection dreaming. The album’s entire demeanor is too Mid-Western, too grounded in maturity and experience, to even need to compete with the younger age’s sturm und drang, and it’s all the better for it.


It’s important that Sunblown could easily have more guitar, more upfront drumming or sidechain-compressed basslines roiling our subwoofers - there’s also plenty of room for more lyrics, more super-group star power draw. Instead, Gazelle choose the path of subtlety and restraint. The duo knows when to ride the fader a little lower on the noise than we might expect, which in turn allows everything else to stretch out more in the mix. There’s a late afternoon sun here for us, but we’re with the duo, a few inches below the surface, looking through the opaque. Chilly piano and a moving synth bass on “Lineal” give way to an extended downtempo passage through the middle section of the album’s longest song. We’re unsure of the outcome as vocals reverberate over a re-building drum line, until finally everything but a single tone falls away for the final minute.


“Phasedown” follows this with the true lullabye of the album. The soft vocal drifts over the horizon-twinkle of guitar and synthesizer before Erin Fein, Adam’s sister and currently of post-Absinthe Blind project Headlights, lends vocals just before the song erupts quietly in a falling-star storm of dark light.


If there’s any downside here, it’s that, much like National Skyline before, there’s probably not a great chance of the duo touring much, which is unfortunate. There’s obviously a lot going on here studio-wise, but if they could somehow find a way to share and extrapolate on this experience with us over a few beers and a loud PA, we’d all be better off for the experience.


The album can be purchased through Parasol, and of course Gazelle have a Myspace for further listening and updates.


Gazelle - First Rays (alternate master version, from Sunblown, Hidden Agenda, 2008)



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July 9, 2008

UUVVWWZ, The Show is the Rainbow, & The Mae Shi @ the Record Bar, 7/5

Filed under: kansas city, music, review, shows — admin @ 2:19 pm

In the interest of getting these up, this one’s gonna be video/photo heavy. It’s probably best to let these three acts speak for themselves anyway - it was a great night of forward-thinking, truly independent music.


UUVVWWZ hit the stage as we were walking in. What followed was a solid 30+ minutes of exuberant, wild fun - equal parts spoken wordish sing-shouting, abstract guitar breaks, fuzzy bass, and stop-on-a-dime ass-shaking drums. This is a great example of what happens when a band enjoys what they’re doing and how quickly that will carry over to the audience. We all had to acknowledge the Record Bar was fairly empty this night - but UUVVWWZ’s performance was the catalyst that made everyone who did show up decide to gather around the stage and get involved instead of hanging back at the bar or moping around on the smoking patio outside. It’s safe to say if it weren’t for this Lincoln band’s spark, the night might not have turned out as great as it did.



UUVVWWZ @ the record bar, 7/5/08


UUVVWWZ @ the record bar, 7/5/08


The Show is the Rainbow, who was just finishing up another fairly lengthy tour alongside fellow Nebraskans UUVVWWZ, did his set from the floor in front of the stage, and had a video backdrop displaying all sorts of fun, crazy, and weird stuff. None of which, mind you, compared to what was going on with the act himself. A veritable one-man band, TSISR was quickly writhing around half-naked on the bar’s wooden floor, pausing only occasionally to tell jokes like a seasoned stand-up comic working hard to stay ahead of the audience’s grasp of what was going on. The fact that it worked on so many levels, or much less worked at all, is a testament to the effort Darren Keen, the man behind TSISR, puts into his work. It’s also worth mentioning we have Keen’s own label IT ARE GOOD to thank for being able to pick up UUVVWWZ’s self-titled album on vinyl (with cd-r included inside, thank you very much!). Here’s UU’s Teal Gardner showing off the EP cover she designed for The Show is the Rainbow:


Teal shows off TSITR


It was hard to get good footage of him, which, going by his youtube page here, is nothing unusual. Keen will be back in the area at the Replay on July 26th. The video is one from Santa Cruz, and is followed by some pics we took:



the show is the rainbow @ the record bar, 7/5/08


the show is the rainbow @ the record bar, 7/5/08


The Mae Shi put on one of the most energetic sets we’d seen in quite awhile. I danced my ass off and would highly recommend that you see these guys when you get a chance. By dance, I mean skanked. This could have been the El Torreon several years ago, or some house/basement show somewhere just as easily. The lyrics were real. The guitars were fierce, the synths abused and the drums smashed. I’d heard a little bit of these guys a few years ago, probably the Terrorbird album, but it wasn’t enough to register at the time. Now, we’ll be taking every opportunity we get to see and support them when we can. We even mulled over going to Baltimore next week for the Whartscape festival - if you are in the area, and don’t go to this . . . well - there’s no good excuse, really. $40 for over a weekend’s worth of amazing underground artists . . . it sums up what the Mae Shi are about, really. This is the sort of band that is going to take the opportunity to challenge you, and do it for your own good.





the mae shi @ the record bar, 7/5/08


the mae shi @ the record bar, 7/5/08


everyone dancing to the mae shi @ the record bar


The double vinyl HLLLYH looks great as well:

the mae shi - hlllyh double vinyl


UUVVWWZ Myspace

The Show is the Rainbow Myspace

The Mae Shi Myspace

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