Author Archives | nickdavis

Church to Take Over KC Music Venue?

Church to Take Over KC Music Venue?

A note from the owner of beloved Kansas City music venue Crosstown Station, Chip Mitchell:

“Crosstown Station …  will not be booking any shows after September 30th or until further notice.  The landlord of the property has entered into a negotiation process with a potential buyer that would likely have a different use for the property.

Rumor is the space is to be turned into a church. Said one friend, “doesn’t that usually happen in reverse?” Indeed. As a Popwreckoning exclusive, we have an early design for the new space’s logo.

Posted in Kansas City, Music News1 Comment

SXSW Interview with: The Body Rampant

SXSW Interview with: The Body Rampant

The Body Rampant just dropped a new EP, . And prior to the EP’s drop, the experimental rock band took by storm. The group took the time during the festival to chat with PopWreckoning about how they formed, where they got equipped with their well-known paper mache mask accessories and more. You can check out the full with the band below:

PopWreckoning: How did you guys meet and form ?
. Lopez, Vocals: I was playing an acoustic show back home and met our bass player, [Schleifstein]. He was playing in another band. I was in northern California at the time and moved down to LA with this kid, Dylan, and we just recruited basically all the members on different outlets. Me and Jacob [Nichols] had been in touring bands, previously in the past, like hardcore bands, stuff like that. We kind of knew each other–recruited him. Found [Sabouhi], our other guitar player. off Craigslist.
Ryan Sabouhi, Guitar: Yeah, Craigslist: a really good outlet for several different things – selling shit, etc.
JML: Then we found our drummer, [Thomas]. He’s just a rockstar. We knew about him from basically everyone in town, you know what I mean?
Mike Thomas, Drums: Word of mouth
JML: Yeah, word of mouth. He’s a smoking drummer. We’ve got a good lineup. We’re pumped.

PW: How did the on stage thing come about?
MT: Basically,JM knows this guy, , who is just this incredible artist and he actually made all these masks out of paper mache. It just catches the eye with an alter-ego kind of thing.
JML: A lot of the breweries and local companies, he does art for them – murals. He’s a world famous artist – he’s been on the Tonight Show and shit. I just, well, he’s a local in northern California, where I’m from, so I’ve just always seen his stuff around. We just hit him up with our music and he liked it and was down to work with us.

PW: Did you draw any influence from other bands that use costumes/masks on stage?
Jake Nichols, Guitar: We don’t really use them on stage, so it’s not like we’re the KISS Army or something like that.
RS: We just use them to basically get our name out there and have this kind of huge thing going.
Dylan Schleifstein, Bass: I think we use them because it enables us – when we put the mask on it gives us the freedom to go out and do what we want and not worry about what else is going on
JML: Our bodies are basically rampant when we have the masks on – we can do what we want. We can get nuts. When we’re on stage, we still get nuts, but we’re a little more ourselves.

PW: What can people expect from your live show?
RS: Energy. Energy for days. We’re like a pop band, alternative rock band, but we like to rock.
JML: We hate when bands just stand there and they’re not loud. We like to be really loud and move around a lot.
MT: A lot of involvement. You want to get the crowd as involved as possible: best way to bring them on.
JN: We just try to have fun with our live show.

PW: Sounds great. Now you have a new EP, Transient Years. Tell me about that and how you came up with the album title?
JML: The album title is kind of loosely based around the masks as well because they’re transient – and it’s like when you’re stuck in time in one place and you’re doing nothing for so long – it sounded cool too. The album comes out April 5. We’re pretty stoked on it.

PW: Who would you say are some of your influences on the album?
DS: So many.
RS: We have varied, but similar musical styles. Casey Bates–we got to work with on a lot of the songs. Definitely working with a producer who had that much input and had worked with so many other big bands that could coach us to be as on point as possible. Musical styles? Could go for days. Anybody’s who’s good.
DS: We listen to hip hop, oldies, metal, grind – everything.
RS: You’d never know that by listening to the CD. A lot of different artists we listen to have to do with our style.

PW: So who are some of the people you’ve been checking out at SXSW? Have you had much time?
MT: That’s the problem when you’re a band at southby, you don’t have time to see your favorite artists. We tried a couple times.
JN: Saw Wiz Kalifa – that was awesome.
JML: Saw The Limousines – they were sick. Mike, did you see anyone? Mike was the drunkest, haha.
MT: Dude. I probably did, but I don’t remember. The Stroke s- I wanted to see the Strokes really bad.
DS: Saw the singer and drummer walking around. He was so dirty. haha.
MT: He gets paid basically to be that way.
DS: If i was him, I’d get that dirty.
JML: Girls love that.

PW: So what’s after South by for you?
JML: We are during a lot of online, commercial stuff.

PW: What’s your favorite social media outlet to reach out to your fans?
JML: Facebook.
DS: Facebook’s where’s it’s at.
JN: There’s been a lot of cool things we’ve seen popping up at SXSW and a lot of people approacing you about it. Everyone’s trying to build the new Twitter.
MT: The new iPhone app.
JN: We usually use Twitter and that goes to everything else. we like to keep it simple. post to Twitter.

You can follow the Body Rampant on Twitter here and find out more from them on Facebook here.

 

Posted in Interviews, Music News, SxSWComments Off

Interview with: Acrylics

Interview with: Acrylics

 

Ethereal Brooklyn act  had a busy schedule at 2011′s , but they found some time to catch up with PopWreckoning. The synth heavy duo,  and , chats about new album , Super moon vibes and the influence of “. Check the full out below: 

PopWreckoning: You just played a set here at SXSW, earlier, right?
Jason Klauber, Acrylics: Yes.
PW: Was that your first SXSW performance ever?
Molly Shea, Acrylics: First of this year.

PW: You’re a fairly new band and you just had an EP that came out on ‘s ‘s label – the first to come out on his label. How did you get hooked up with him?
JK: Pretty much we’re a part of that Brooklyn band cesspool. We’ve crossed path Chris over the years and he thought it’d be fun to have us record some sessions. These sessions ended up being put out as an EP, so they just put it out. At the time they were just doing singles, and we were just going to record a single, but it stretched out into a 5-song thing. It was really casual. We spent about a week in a church that he records out of. It was really fun to do that. That was our first release and we’re putting out a new record – well it just came out.
MS: It came out March 1.
JK: We’ve been working on it for so long that it’s hard to say – to put it in the past tense, but it did come out.

PW: It’s still pretty new. Present tense. Now on that record, you did a song with Chairlift‘s .
MS: She’s just a friend that we met three or four years ago just through musicians in Brooklyn. It’s really true about Brooklyn, I guess.

PW: Well how would you describe that Brooklyn scene? Is it like just being in a family or…?
MS: It’s so huge that there’s so many different groups of bands that know each other. It’s hard to classify the whole sphere.
JK: It’s more of a social thing. Musicians like to hang out with musicians, and there’s a lot of them in Brooklyn. It’s as simple as that. With Caroline, she came to visit us in the studio one day and we had that song going.
MS: Very casual event.
JK: Yeah, we said you want to sing some backup vox? And she said yes, so next thing you know she’s singing.
MS: We thought it was the perfect song for her.
JK: She did some vocal athletics at the end of the song and it’s very atmospheric. Like, “ah-ah-ah-ah,” so we thought she deserved a feature and credit on it.
MS: It was a vocal solo.
JK: She’s a phenomenal singer, so it’s just fun to have her lend her talents to what we were working on.

.” ft. Caroline Polachek

PW: So for people who haven’t heard your music, why should they check your record out?
JK: It’s a good record.
MS: We put our hearts and souls into it. I know it sounds corny, but it’s true.
JK: I think there’s some good songs on it and it’s produced in a way that makes it a great record to listen to by yourself in an intimate space. It was created much with that type of intimacy. It’s like watching a movie that takes you from place A to place B while you’re lying in bed. I think you can achieve something similar if you run through the course of our record a few times as well.
MS: It’s a personal, intimate record. I imagine people listening to it on their headphones.
JK: It’s certainly not for everybody, but I think that people who will connect to it, will connect and have connected, in a very sincere and meaningful way. That’s what it’s about for us.

PW: Who are some of your influences on the record?
MS: Tough question.
PW: That’s supposed to be one of the easy questions.
JK: Haha, yeah. We didn’t want to sound like anybody else, but if we ended up sounding like everybody else, it can be a good thing, you know?
MS: We listen to a lot of different – I mean, I love a lot of 60s psychedelic music. I love a lot of loud, hard rock. That might not have come across in an obvious way on the record, but it’s there. We have a lot of punk rock roots that we feel are strong.
JK: I was in the middle of the “Twin Peaks” series when we were making the record so a lot of the Angelo Badalamenti scores for that project had some influence over the sound. In terms of the songwriting, we were just taking from everywhere. For me – most of those songs are just written on acoustic guitar in your bedroom. You decide as just two people how to build up your sound. I think we were interested in cinematic, rich, layered textures. When we were making this record, I wanted something that was connected to a classic, rooted American feeling, but we also wanted to bring in other worldly elements, so that together you’re home, but also somewhere else. You know, that feeling when you come home from being away and you feel great to be home, but at the same time, home looks different than how you remembered it. That sense of being somewhere else when you’re somewhere familiar. That sort of weird – we were going for that.

PW: Since we’re talking while at SXSW and this is kind of a huge and crazy festival, what are some of the coolest and craziest things you’ve seen while here?
JK: A fight! We saw a really crazy fight.
MS: We walked really far into East to check out our friends Das Racist play yesterday. It took us about on hour to get there and it was in a strange part of town and a fight broke out after the show.
JK: Like someone getting his head stomped kind of fight. Very scary. Everyone ran out. It was like walking out into rural Arkansas in the 1960s. We live in the ghetto of New York, so…
MS: We love that kind of shit. We love to go on adventures like that.
JK: We lapped it up like a cat.
MS: We saw all sorts of strange things happen the other night.
JK: There’s this thing called the extreme super moon, which is coming on Saturday. It means that the moon is the closest to Earth that it’s been in 18 years. I think this stuff happening coincidentally with the super moon, is dark vibes.
MS: So everyone be vigilant.
JK: We thrive off those sorts of vibes. We wear black on the outside because black is how we feel on the inside. Haha. I say with a smile. Haha.

PW: Haha. So what’s next for you after South by?
MS: We’re going on a national tour, late April to May, with JunipJose Gonzalez‘ band. So we’re super stoked about that because we’ve never done a full tour.
JK: We’re bringing the message to the people. We’re in the process of writing a new record as well.

PW: One record just out and you’re already doing the next one?
G: Absolutely. We stay working. All the time. Writing. That’s what we do.

You can find more about the Arcylics, including tour dates, at myspace.com/acrylicsnyc.

Posted in Interviews, New York, SxSWComments Off

Checking in from Austin

My editor Bethany informed me that acquiring this press pass means I have to actually post some articles. Having thought about this for a few hours (minutes) I’ve determined my angle.

I had three main goals for attending this year’s : helping to put on the MidCoast Takeover, helping to promote the band I’m managing (The Grisly Hand), and to see a ton of shows.

I’ve chosen to blog my attempt at getting onto the national stage. I’ll warn you in advance: I don’t really know what I’m doing, but I’m pretty sure no one else does either.

Posted in Austin, SxSWComments Off

Checking in from Austin

My editor Bethany informed me that acquiring this press pass means I have to actually post some articles. Having thought about this for a few hours (minutes) I’ve determined my angle.

I had three main goals for attending this year’s : helping to put on the , promoting the band I’m managing (), and to see a ton of bands.

Everyone’s covering the bands, so I’m going to cover my attempts at getting The Grisly Hand on the national stage.

Posted in Austin, SxSWComments Off

The Grisly Hand CD Release Show

The Grisly Hand CD Release Show

Kansas City country-rockers performed Saturday, November 20, at Davey’s Uptown Ramblers Club in Kansas City, MO to a near-capacity crowd in celebration of their new CD/EP, Safe House. You can purchase Safe House on iTunes, or on CD and Vinyl in Kansas City-area record stores.

Posted in Concerts, Featured Item, Kansas CityComments Off

Ticket Giveaway – Drive By Truckers @Crossroads KC

Ticket Giveaway – Drive By Truckers @Crossroads KC

When the Drive-By Truckers play the at Grinders in Kansas City on Sunday, September 26 (buy tickets!), PopWreckoning wants you to be there. We’re hooking five lucky winners up with a pair of tickets to the show.

To win, you must be 18+, able to go to the show and correctly post following the instructions below by Friday, September 24 at 7 p.m. CDT. Use your real/full name and a valid email address to enter.

1. Who are the two founders of the Drive-By Truckers?

2. What is your favorite Drive-By Truckers song and why?

Purchase tickets for this event.

Posted in Concerts, Contests, Kansas City, Music News23 Comments

End of 2009: Nick Davis

End of 2009: Nick Davis

Top 3 Albums of 2009: nick

  • The XX – The XX
  • Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavilion
  • Coconut Records – Davy

Best Show of 2009:

  • Fleet Foxes at Metro Chicago. 8/8/09. Despite overcrowding and horrible heat inside the building, Robin Pecknold and gang gave far more to the crowd than could reasonably be expected.

Most Anticipated in 2010:

Posted in PopWreckoning NewsComments Off

Monsters of Folk Release First Song “Say Please”

Monsters of Folk Release First Song “Say Please”


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