Shellac at the Great American Music Hall, SF CA, 06.18.09

June 23, 2009

I had the good fortune to see Shellac perform at the Great American Music Hall in SF last Thursday, June 18. The Chicago-based trio — Steve Albini on guitar and vocals, Bob Weston on bass and vocals, Todd Trainer on drums — doesn’t come around too often and they’re one of those bands that I woefully had never seen; it just hadn’t been in the cards for me until this time around I guess, and I’m really happy that it worked out. Not only is Shellac one of my favorite rock bands, but now I can count them as one of my favorite live bands too. I love their no-frills approach to a show, quirky/cool stage presence, musicianship, gear, tone, performance, and most importantly their music — one of the best shows I’ve seen in a long time. It suffices to say, a highly recommended experience. Here are a few pics I snapped…

All three band members set up next to each other on stage, with Trainer’s drums right up front. Albini wears his guitar strap like a belt around his waist, instead of over his shoulder. Albini and Weston both play Travis Bean guitars, boutique vintage instruments with a cult following. The amps and speaker cabinets look custom and sounded great.

For more on Shellac’s recent SF shows, check out my homie Audrey’s blog, where she posted a seriously awesome video of Shellac doing “Dog & Pony Show.”


The Death of Music Journalism at the Hands of Crowdsourcing

June 17, 2009

Christopher R. Weingarten is my new hero (and not just because he’s wearing an Ego Trip T-shirt in the video clip below). A music writer for Rolling Stone, the Village Voice, Decibel, Idolator and others, Weingarten took the stage at this week’s 140 Characters Conference in New York and ripped Twitter and crowdsourcing a new asshole. I could go on in an attempt to sum up the brilliance behind this rant, but you should just watch it for yourself. It’s amusing, intelligent, impactful and critical — everything a good rant should be. If you’re on Twitter (and who isn’t these days), you should follow Weingarten at @1000TimesYes, where he’s working on reviewing 1000 new records in 2009…

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Ovipositor Summer Update

June 14, 2009

Ovipositor is making moves…I mean, you know, for as many “moves” as we do make, which isn’t many, so any moves are big moves, right?  Anyway, check it…

Colin developed and launched an all-new web site for the band, complete with history, streaming music (listen to all three records!), and a pay gate to buy all three albums. Sweet.

We’re still working on the screen-printed packaging for the Oakland Minor CDs (cover pictured here), but you can buy it as a digital download or disc (we’ll get it to you in a special limited edition package of some sort) through the site, and we’ve also got some business type deals in the works that will land the records on all the major online retailers in the coming months. More on that soon.

In the meantime (and thanks to the networking prowess of drummer Mark Pino), we’re basking in the glory that comes with getting Oakland Minor reviewed in the latest issue of The Big Takeover magazine — Issue #64, with The Decemberists on the cover. I can’t find the review on the site, so here’s a scan of it:

Finally, one last note about shows…We don’t really have any booked right now. One of the three of us is out of town at any given time pretty much all summer, which has made booking shows particularly challenging. But we’re still doing our thing at Colin’s Beatnik Dungeon weekly, so the next time you see us live, you’ll probably hear a whole mess of new stuff. We’ll let you know when that happens. In lieu of live show news, here are a few songs from our last show at the Starry Plough in Berkeley back in March…

Ovipositor, “Burning Breath”

Ovipositor, “Intermission”

Ovipositor, “When I Die”

These songs were recorded with a Zoom H2 (captured as 320kbps mp3, using the 120-degree mic array), which was set in a mic stand afixed to the front of the sound booth. No effects were applied to the recording.

Bass Nerd Stuff

June 7, 2009

[I’ve been a horribly neglectful blogger lately — I just realized that I went to the entire month of May without a single post. Ouch. Sometimes life just runs away with all my time, but I’m really going to try to be better…even if it just means posting a shitload of TED videos and short music reviews, if that’s what I have to do to keep this thing moving.]

I’ve had bass playing on the brain lately. Ovipositor has been working on some new songs, as well as tackling a few covers — Gene Pitney’s “Last Chance to Turn Around,” MX-80’s “More Than Good” and Velvet Underground’s “I’m Not A Young Man Anymore” — and I’ve also been writing a little on the side over the last few months, churning out a handful of pieces for a noted bass magazine. I’ve been doing gear reviews, but I’ve got an artist feature on deck, and I’m currently auditing the bass certification courses at a reputable music school’s online program for a feature in the same magazine later this year.

Truthfully, I’m not totally pleased with the editing job on some of the reviews — I feel like my own voice has been squeezed out in favor of a more prosaic approach — but whatever, it’s not horrible, I’m happy for the side work, as well as the opportunity to expand my bass palette, and I’ve spent plenty of time on both sides of the editors’ desk, so I now how it goes. Anyway, here are links to some of my most recent pieces:

Electro-Harmonix Bass Big Muff Pi. I actually kept this pedal after the review and use it quite a bit. I like it because I’ve spent so much time running though distortion pedals that are built for guitar, and end up sounding like shit on a bass signal. This one is built for bass, and nicely dials in the classic, gloriously fucked up Big Muff tone for bass frequencies.

Xotic X-Blender. This pedal was cool too, but I didn’t keep it when I was done reviewing it. I’m just not the type of player who would make use of it — it’s an effects loop bypass pedal, which is good for players who have a lot of pedals. I’m a bass player; I look and feel like a fucking tool if I show up somewhere to play with an array of pedals. Gimme a distortion box (maybe a low-pass filter) and I’m good.

Sterling by Music Man. I kind of regret testing this series of basses. Sure, I was unbiased, and yeah, they’re pretty nice basses. But I love my Jazz bass (Fender American Standard), and have spent a considerable amount of time dialing it in the way I want it to sound and feel. Playing other, loaner basses just made me want to play my own. I think I’m done reviewing basses.

Warwick Sweet 25.2 & Sweet 15.3. The editors sugared up this review a bit. Not that I hated these amps, but I definitely had a tough time with them. I think it goes back to what I was saying about those Sterling basses vis-a-vis review gear versus my own gear. In this case, I love my Ampeg amp rig. Anything less is…well, less. Still, I wrote this review from an unbiased perspective, and I honestly put these amps through their paces, and they’re decent little combos. It’s just that what I turned in wasn’t as nice as what ran. But that’s how the game is played.

Bonus Bass Nerdery: A few years ago, I was in NYC on business and had the opportunity to see and film bass player extraordinaire Victor Bailey do a clinic for a Bass Player magazine event at the Millennium Broadway hotel on Times Square. This particular clip blew my mind at the time, and has not yet ceased to amaze me. Bailey rearranged the Weather Report classic “Birdland” as a solo bass piece (with some vocal additions; Bailey played bass in Weather Report after Jaco Pastorius left the group), and his style, while not always inhumanly perfect, is so dope, and so totally soulful, whenever I hit the wall with whatever I happen to be working on, I watch this clip and am reminded that I have a long, long way to go and a lot of room to grow as a bass player:

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Watch the rest of this clinic — which is basically six clips of Bailey showing why he’s among the best — over at BassPlayer.tv.

Photo by Thug E. Fresh: me playing with Oviositor at Li Po Lounge, SF.