Tag Archive | "CD Release"

Soft Reeds CD Release show with Cowboy Indian Bear & Motorboater @ Record Bar, Kansas City MO

Soft Reeds CD Release show with Cowboy Indian Bear & Motorboater @ Record Bar, Kansas City MO

Friday night in boasted a bountiful crop of local acts to check out. One of the best bets could be found at the where was hosting a showcase for . Opening was and .

Motorboater is , a musician who also plays in KC’s Queen’s Club. With his solo project, Dan trades in the guitars and pop rock jams for his Macbook and electronic-dance tunes. The music was like Passion Pit meets Yeasayer meets Metro Station – I’ll let you decide if that sounds like a good combination or not (and to make the genre even more confusing, Eaton left everyone with a Taylor Swift remix). Hunched over his computer monitor, shoulders bobbing to his tunes, I could see how Motorboater could really take off in the proper environment, but in the low key Record Bar where the majority of patrons would rather chill in a booth with beers than get up and dance, Motorboater got a little muddled.

“We’re a new band called Black Man Running,” quipped after his band had already warmed the crowd up with a couple songs. In reality, Hillard is part of the very popular three-piece Cowboy Indian Bear. This band draws in listeners with cool vocal trade-offs between Hillard and , but then blows fans away with bombastic drums not just from backbone drummer , but from all the members. It’s serious music, but as Marty’s quip proved, there’s also a light-heartedness to it as well.

Since the showcase was all about Soft Reeds and the band’s new , the band did a few things out of the norm for a typical local band show. They began with the premiere of a music video for “This Affair,” made by Gnarly Productions. It wasn’t only the first time fans were seeing the video, but a first for the band as well. The band began their set with album opener Brave New World, a catchy rock tune with a bit of a garage rock edge. Though a bit out of order from the album, as can be expected at a CD release, Soft Reeds played through most of their songs on Soft Reeds Are Bastards until the bar turned on the lights to kick everyone out. The songs have a classic, jangly upbeat sound that make this release perfect timing to catch the tail end of the summer bbq season. Just be warned, for as happy as the major chords and and staccato key notes make it sound, lyrically and vocally, the music is juxtaposed with a gritty edge. One of my favorite Soft Reeds songs both live and on the album, “The City and the Stars” has a chorus that says, “I”m torn between the city and the stars: open spaces and lived-in bars.” Kind of fascinating sentiment if you really think about it, but a good metaphor for the type of feeling I get from this album. Yeah, you can have the cliche openness of the countryside and the stars just like you can have the clean cut cheery sounds of music like the Beach Boys or you can go with something more true to how life is – it might be a little worn-in, but it is familiar and interesting at the same time, much like the sounds of this album: familiar, a bit worn-in, but very interesting.

You can stream the new album at the Record Machine here. It is officially released July 13.

Soft Reeds Set List:
Brave New World
Bleeding Hearts
The City and the Stars
Thick of Thin Things
Wasted Time
Baby’s on Fire
Hemel Dalingen
The Sirens of Titan
This Affair

Posted in Concerts, Kansas CityComments Off

The Belles @ Love Garden in Lawrence, KS

The Belles @ Love Garden in Lawrence, KS

As far as friendly, intimate concert atmospheres go, Love Garden takes the cake. And when paired with band The Belles, the record store’s atmosphere and the band’s CD release show last Friday was a breezy complement to a humid summer day.

eased right into their short and sweet stripped-down set with “The Late Hours,” showcasing soft vocals and a gentle beat while onlookers quietly continued to gather at the back, drawn by the band’s soft sincerity. But that’s not to say there wasn’t energy; after the first song, they picked up the pace, and their equipment looked thrown together but it worked; seeing a suitcase used as part of a drum kit was interesting and enjoyable, and the fun, upbeat rhythms allowed the audience to partake in some toe-tapping until the set slowed down again. There was more silence than chatter in between songs, as the crowd waited with bated breath to hear where would take them next. When they arrived at the fifth song of their set, an upbeat track titled “Existence is Fragile,” the small crowd’s energy was at its highest. And the title track, “Time Flies When You’re Losing Your Mind,” immediately followed, an enchanting song that kicks off the band’s new and was just as fun to hear live.

Then, long before I was ready for the end, the Belles had just one more song to play. “What We Are” began softly, the searching lyrics seemingly asking quiet questions of someone unknown, and then continuing slowly and somewhat darkly down the same path until the end. Their set ended just as quietly as it began, but it seemed more resolute than it had before. After just a whisper, a quiet, shimmering moment at the set’s close, Love Garden regained its liveliness and resumed the overhead tunes of a regular record store day.

While I wish the set had been longer, I also appreciated it for what it was. I felt thrown into the sudden stillness that was the show, an intimate half hour illuminated by colorful overhead lights and surrounded by albums, onlookers and the occasional wandering cat. It was refreshing and lovely, leaving me feeling almost prepared to leave the calm of the show to step back out into the cacophony of a bustling, busy street and a sweltering Kansas evening.

Posted in Concerts, Kansas CityComments Off

The Belated – Belief in the Process

The Belated – Belief in the Process

In an age where digital music is supreme, art is easy to lose in the shuffle. So perhaps when handed , carefully pondering the mysteriously blue cast series of cylinder objects that look like a cross between buttons and compartments on the front cover, then flipping over to wonder why the album had divided itself into three parts for the track list and then even continuing to wonder over the selection of incomplete lyrics on the inside was a mistake. Yet, when considering the band is the Belated, then analyzing every little decision made on this record doesn’t seem so insane.belated

’s is a rare breed in the city. While many of the new bands in the area are busy experimenting with electronic loops and whistles and other bizarre gimmicky sounds popularized by the hipster crowd out of , the Belated is staying more traditional to the guitar-rich, lots of cymbal-crashing rock band sound. The band does have a nostalgic 90s sound (which isn’t that surprising when considering one of the members hosts a ’90s at noon’ radio show), but that isn’t to say the Belated is stuck in the past. No, what it does say is that the band is aware of the past and knows how to respect it. So perhaps, carefully examining something like album art isn’t so crazy for a band like this.

The album starts with the band’s first single, “Intelligent Redesign,” a song ripe with big rolling drum crescendos ending with even bigger cymbal crashes.  A low bass riff trickles throughout the song. The pre-mentioned 90s vibe is most evident in the -like vocals. It’s a big song with a title that promises exactly what it delivers. The music video for the song says a lot about the band, too. A 90 percent serious video lightened with brief interludes of dancing from Kansas City’s favorite concertgoer.

From “Intelligent Redesign,” the band continues mixing broody vocals with even moodier instrumental patterns. The lyrics are dark, yet an aire of sarcasm and irony serve to lighten the mood rather than darken even deeper into a lyrical black hole. Just like the video, the band is mostly serious, but still fun. Singer Michael Richardson showcases phenomenal, dynamics as he goes from whispering “I Don’t Remember” to yowling down the scales like on “Someone – Somehow.”

The only problem with his vocals is that this is the element that is almost too unwavering. While the band, instrumentally progresses between bluesy riffs from the keyboard on songs like “Sacred” to the latina marching band sounds from the percussion on “Someone – Somehow” to the straight up rock on many of the others, the vocals seem stuck creating a slight tension. Yet, the diversity of the instrumental sound is something that is quite welcome on this album. The band shows that they are capable of engineering a new sound with just their skills and not modern music’s common desire to make “new” with computers. Sure, there are effects like reverb and echoed layering. There’s even the occasional synthesized string, but this is still very organic and fresh. They’re ranging from early to in the instrumentals and it works well for the Belated.

Though there are strong single possibilities with “Intelligent Redesign” and “Escalation,” the band crafted an album: not a collection of singles. Check the whole thing out, and yeah, the album art is significant. The album does seem to have three distinct sections. The first two thirds of the album is bigger than the last third, which serves as more of a catharsis by the time “Daily Rose” comes about. The selected lyrics are some of the more significant stand out lines in the songs. Yet as for the image and the arrangement of those lyrics? Those are best left to the imagination of the album’s owner.

As said before, the Belated is a rare breed not just for Kansas City, but for music in general. This is an album worth checking out.

The Belated is celebrating the album’s release this Friday, January 8 at Crosstown Station. They’re joined by fellow locals Nutchhatch 47 and Pet Comfort. Doors are at 8 and tickets are just $10. It is one of the first chances to see new drummer in action as well as hear the new tunes.

Track Listing:
01. Intelligent Redesign
02. I Don’t Remember
03. Sacred
04. Someone – Somehow
05. How Did You Know
06. Easy
07. Escalation
08. We Don’t Belong
09. Lazy Fascination
10. Wound
11. Daily Rose

Posted in Albums, Kansas CityComments (1)


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Concert Calendar

Nov 23, 2011
HaHa Tonka @ Recordbar, Kansas City MO

Nov 25, 2011
Thee Oh Sees @ The Granada, Lawrence KS

Nov 25, 2011
Baby Teardrops - Vinyl Release @ The Brick, Kansas City MO

Dec 1, 2011 Now, Now @ Recordbar, Kansas City MO

Dec 9, 2011 Felix Culpa - Farewell Show @ The Metro, Chicago IL
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