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koo koo kanga roo

Koo Koo Kanga Roo Launch “Bestest Friend” Cover Song Contest; ‘Midnight Slushie’ Out Sept. 13

Koo Koo Kanga Roo is all about dancing, yelling, and bringing the party. Founders Bryan and Neil won’t be satisfied until the entire room has joined in on the fun. Think the multiplied by plus the driving dance beats of and the live show antics of the .

Performing in an was fun…for a while. Then the constant lugging of gear, half an hour sound checks, and an audience who was only ever half interested in the they were playing began to take its toll. Bryan and Neil agreed there was more to being in a than just playing music for their fans. The goal was to create the most fun interactive live show that no one had seen before. The tools to accomplish that goal were; a giant roll of paper (to their dorm walls with ideas), a few sharpies, their super weird imaginations, and no rules. A few months later, with those goal accomplished, a dance duo was formed, and that duo was Koo Koo Kanga Roo.

Koo Koo Kanga Roo’s Midnight Slushie will be released on September 13th and features a guest appearance by of

Koo Koo Kanga Roo have just launched a “Bestest Friend” cover contest and the winner gets a Koo Koo Kanga Roo show at their house. The band wants you and all of your friends to cover their new song “Bestest Friend” off their new album Midnight Slushie which comes out September 13. Click here for the song: www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wGcmW5A5CI

 It’s only 3 Easy Steps:

 1. Video Tape a One Take, Single Shot Video of you and all your friends covering “Bestest Friend” live on your instruments and stuff. (No Edits, use your computer camera, etc.)

2. Post on Youtube with the Title (Koo Koo Kanga Roo “Bestest Friend Cover” – Name of your group)

3. Email the link to your video to kookookangarooparty@gmail.com 

Here’s a link to additional info and a message from the band: http://kookookangaroo.com/bestest-friend-bestest-cover-contest.

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Interview with Innerpartysystem

Interview with Innerpartysystem

‘s always down with cereal…and that wasn’t the only knowledge (programming, guitar, synth) and (vox/programming) of Innerpartysystem dropped on me. We talked about their current Pac Sun Tour, upcoming album plans, cereal and they explained what “Butt ” is. Check out the full interview below:
Bethany, PopWreckoning: This tour just started about two weeks ago. How has it been treating you so far? It is a pretty diverse line up. Has that changed the audience reactions to your set?
Patrick Nissley, Innerpartysystem: We have a tendency to win people over. Our show is really high energy so rock kids will like it. We have some heavier sounding beats. I think hip hop kids like it. At least that’s what we’re going for. They might hate it.

PW: I know that your guys’ set is highly influenced by the light show, how involved are you in the planning of that?
Kris Barman, Innerpartysystem: Yeah. We built that. We did all that stuff. I’m serious. We went to Home Depot. Bought wood and bought lights. Then we figured out how to sync it all up with the computer. So we built that and Jesse [Cronan] (synthesizer, sampling) actually designed the light show.
PN: Yeah. We don’t actually have an ld. It is all synced to our computer.
PW: Yeah. That’s awesome and your light show is awesome and it seems like everyone else always hires their own light guy.
KB: We try to be as DIY as possible. We want to save money. We don’t want to pay anybody.innerparty (3)

PW: Nice. I know you just released a “Winter Mixtape.” Tell me about that.
KB: A majority of that is Jared [Piccone] (drums). Jared does all the mixtape stuff. We just like putting more shit out there for kids to listen to. is free pretty much nowadays, so the more stuff you can put out and get them to listen to, well it’s just cool to let them here what we’re listening to and what we’re hearing. It is kind of what we’re listening to now and what we think is cool.

PW: So what are some of the bands you’re sampling now or listening to now?
KB: Listening to now… I’ve been listening to the same bands forever. There aren’t any bands. I should listen to music, but I don’t.
PN: I’m really into right now.
KB: Hall and Oates is something you’re always into though.
PN: Um. Usually a lot of really obscure electronic shit that a bunch of dudes from Sweden do that no one has heard.

PW: Now, you’re all from Pennsylvania, right?
IPS: Yeah.
PW: It seems like you don’t hear too much about electronic-based bands from Pennsylvania. Is there a scene that I just don’t know about?
KB: Where we are from, the only scene is bands.
PN: I think . Gwar’s the scene.
KB: Gwar does all of it.

PW: So how did you guys get into it?
KB: I personally, I’ve been doing it since I was really young. I got into programming beats from I don’t know, 27 down, so I’ve always done it. I’ve always had an interest in it. I don’t know where it came from. When you sit at home on your computer, what else are you going to do? I love music, so I learned how to make music and I was like, oh this is really cool. I’ve been doing it ever since.
PN: For me it kind of started with like fruity loops in high school.
PW: Fruity loops?
KB: It’s like a really sh-well, actually, it’s not shitty at all, it is a beginner program, but it can do a lot of stuff. It is like beginner to pro. So you can make music.
PW: OK, I for some reason was thinking cereal.
PN: No.
KB: Haha, no. Totally different. I’m always into cereal though.
PN: I’m always down with Fruit Loops. That’s how I got into electronics. Cereal. Can we quote that in your thing, so it is a little blurb here?
PW: Innerpartysystem loves cereal.
KB: Cereal. What drives Innerpartysystem.

PW: Haha. We’ll see. My mom lives in Scranton, so that’s about as familiar as I get with Pennsylvania.
PN: There’s a lot of butt rock in Pennsylvania.
KB: Yeah.
PN: I’m going to say it is safe to say we coined the term “butt rock.”
PW: I would say that’s safe to say.
PN: Butt rock is where the drummer has the gotee and the lengthy hair. Always the ripped guitar player with the white beard and they play like a cover .
KB: They do the “Jugh jugh jugh jugh jugh ooo.”
PN: Like really shitty breakdowns. There’s a lot of that in Pennsylvania.
PW: I really wish this was a video interview right now. So it has been about a half a year since you parted with Island. Is that a decision that has been good for you? Have you learned a lot since then? Do you still find major labels relevant?innerparty (5)
PN: I’m about to drop some knowledge on you. We’re not on Island anymore.
PW: Right. It has been about half a year.
PN: Oh, right. Fuck me. I’m not dropping shit. It was a mutual thing. Island wasn’t doing anything for us. Obviously we didn’t sell three million records and become the biggest band in the world. We’re not fucking . For us, it is more of an route and we’re trying to find that way.
KB: It’s nice now that we don’t have a label to talk to for the “big single” and all that shit.
PN: Yeah.
KB: We could make a song out of fart sounds if we wanted. No more of the chorus needs to be “bigger.” Make it “big.”
PN: A&R people say that a lot. “It’s just not big enough.”

PW: “Don’t Stop” was pretty popular in Kansas City.
IPS: Was it?
PW: Yeah. Last year you played our Christmas show.
KB: Oh that’s right. The Buzz.
(crazy announcer voices)
PN: You’re listening to the Buzzzzz.
KB: The Buzzzz. 93.3
PW: Haha, oh no. Not that. They’ll kill you. 96.5.
KB: 96.5 the Buzzz.
This continues for quite awhile
KB: AM Radio.

PW: So no label plans for the future, or sticking with DIY?
KB: Maybe. It depends.
PN: There are some people looking at us, but really we need to write the next record and see where it goes.

PW: Have you started planning it out at all?
KB: A little bit. It really needs to come to fruition. Like that word?
PW: How do you, well, you do a lot of remixes vs. original music-how do you draw the line between the two or is there a preference?
PN: Remixing is easy.innerparty
KB: Yeah. We love remixing.
PN: A lot of the things we create and I get most excited about are remixes. I don’t know if there is even a line to draw. It is just whatever rules. We could be writing a song and working on our remixes at the same time. We don’t spend like three days on a song and stop. We get bored on one thing and we move on. We have A.D.D.

PW: To wrap up since it is still pretty loud and I’m sure you want to get back to the show, do you have a favorite musical memory of the “Naught Decade?”
PN: Personally or music in general?
PW: Personally is fine.
KB: Last ten years?
PW: Yeah. You don’t have to be cliche too and say KC is the best or something. Just a favorite memory. Super easy.
PN: Favorite musical place or?
PW: Just favorite musical memory?
PN: Just playing a huge show.
KB: We played Projekt Revolution in the UK and there were 49,000 people there. That was huge for us.

PW: Are your UK crowds pretty different than your US crowds then?
KB: Yes.
PN: Yeah. For some reason, we did way better over there. “Don’t Stop” hit radio really hard and MTV and all that crap, so yeah.
KB: I think shows are better there. Kids just flip shit. Drinking age is lower, too. That loosens them up and fuels the fire. Kids, well, music is still thriving over there and radio is still good over there. They just know music better than in America. Americans can be boring or listen to just down music.
PN: Another way to answer that question: I think it is great the way electronic music is coming to the pop culture now. Definitely in the last five or six years, a lot more bands are using a lot more electronics, which I love since we are all huge electronicheads. A lot of the bigger bands, bands like and , are getting huge.
PW: I’ve noticed that too. Sweet. Well, we’re wrap up there since it is loud and cold.
IPS: Cool.
PW: Thanks so much.
IPS: Nice to meet you.

Innerpartysystem: website | myspace | @ afentra’s vd party

Posted in Interviews, Kansas City, PhiladelphiaComments (1)

Röyksopp @ The Regency Ballroom, San Francisco

Röyksopp @ The Regency Ballroom, San Francisco

Once known for their exceptional and quirky debut chill-out album Melody A.M., Norway’s Röyksopp was kind enough to include San Francisco as one of the stops on their brief three-city North American tour. In the four years since their 2005 SF show at The Independent, the ’s membership has remained unchanged yet their product has become quite different. The sometimes dark, atmospheric melodies and introverted live presence has been replaced by a tougher, more electro-pop sound, interesting visuals and stage theatrics.

Playing to a sold-out crowd at the Regency Ballroom, and were joined by whose mysterious vocals were a spot-on fit for the blippy, joyous, Norwegian club-pop. Drecker was the focal point as she posed in an ever-changing array of costumes that would make proud. The set list was a mix of tracks from all three studio albums, though the more placid tracks from Melody A.M. and The Understanding were given a club-friendly conversion. Although this is to be expected given the percussion-driven and pop-influenced style of 2009’s Junior, the live show still captured the festive atmosphere and triumphant and danceable sensibilities of their 2005 Röyksopp’s Night Out.
The 15-track set included an extended version of “Eple,” a vocoder-thickened version of “Remind Me,” “Happy Up Here,” “Poor Leno,” a disco-tinged “So Easy,” “You Don’t Have a Clue,” a raucous and frenetic “This Must Be It” and a groovy, head-bobbing, down-tempo version of “What Else Is There.” The pace never slowed to allow songs like the red-velvet lounge of “Sparks” to fit in although there were occasional momentum-disrupting pauses between songs. In every instance, the sophisticated melodies and lush instrumentation were given a very dance-worthy treatment that never felt forced or awkward. Along with , Röyksopp continues to be one of Norway’s hippest musical exports.

Combining bits from The Chemical Brothers, ABBA and Orbital, Röyksopp constructs some seriously addictive beats, innovative melodies and swirling, brooding electro-pop. This time out, it’s more suited for the club than the coffee shop.

Set List:
Forever
This Must Be It
Remind Me
Happy Up Here
Tricky Tricky
Alpha Male
You Don’t Have a Clue
I Wanna Know
The Girl And the Robot
Eple
What Else Is There?
Only This Moment
—–
So Easy
Poor Leno
—–
Fat Burner

Röyksopp: website | myspace

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Remix Monday: Walter Meego ‘Forever’

Remix Monday: Walter Meego ‘Forever’

     

is a from Chicago, Illinois. They’ve had a few EPs and singles out as well as their first album, Voyager, released last year. The first song off of that album is “Forever,” one of my favorites. meego

.Walter Meego – “Forever”
“Forever” is a sweet pop song, delivered with a soft sincerity through the vocal chords of lead singer, . The track has elements of electronic , but in a much simpler fashion. ‘Forever’ is very reminiscent of ‘s “Digital Love” – a ballad designed for a little dancing.

.
The Escort remix has no similarity to the original. At least I can’t make out any similarities. This is a pure instrumental piece, all the vocals stripped and thrown away. The song is edgier, faster and focuses a throbbing percussion beat spiked with electric guitars. It diversifies itself in the middle by featuring a solo of the thick and heavy bass guitar riff.

. Remix
The sweet, love filled ballad is transformed into a fast, electronic swiveling tune, sprinkled with sparkles of synthesizers. The vocals are left in tact, but feel forced around the music of the mix. Van She Tech makes the tune harsher as well, which can be slightly jarring at times. But it does feature beautiful, orchestral melodies at specific intervals.

Walter Meego: website | myspace

Posted in Remix MondayComments (1)

Monolith Festival: Sunday, Sept. 13 @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Denver

Monolith Festival: Sunday, Sept. 13 @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre, Denver

Wait a second…is that…sun?

Yes, the second day of saw some sun. Though I must stress “some.” Granted “some” was a significant improvement to the cold, icy rain that drizzled on concertgoers the entire day before.

Feeling encouraged by the slight appearance of sun, Monolith’s second day promised to be good.

crowd

// Woxy.com Stage @ 1:40-2:20 p.m.

I started off with Scottish group We Were Promised Jetpacks. I couldn’t decide what I liked more. Their music or their stage banter with the audience.we were promised jetpacks

During a brief break in their set, a girl shouted out, “Say four,”

Whore?” asked Adam Thompson, causing the audience to erupt with laughter. “I’m not some kind of Scottish circus freak. I can’t roll into town and say whatever you want.”

The group just released their debut this past summer and while they cite their influences as and , I’d say they have mainly the accent in common and while I like those other two bands, I think We Were Promised Jetpacks had the most enjoyable live show after seeing all three at Monolith.

“I’m going to let you in on a secret,” said Thompson near the end of their set. “This might be our only good song. We peaked.”

I wouldn’t let Thompson’s modesty fool you. All their songs are good.

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// Esurance Music Stage @ 2:30-3 p.m.

I was a bit disappointed with the arrangement of the next options at the festival. I could either see DJ rapper or hip hop artist Rahzel. These genres are not really my thing and I was disappointed that there weren’t any alternative genre options when the rest of the line up was pretty good about having variety at different stages.

I decided to sit at the top of Red Rocks and watch some of Rahzel. Rahzel, is perhaps better known either as the “beat boxing champ” or as a member of .

The first ten minutes were painful. I find having a DJ yell, “We’ve got the champ; we’ve got the champ” over and over while some other guy simply talks kind of lame. That “warm-up” part was something I could have done without.

But then, Rahzel finally showed off his beatboxing skills. First it was ‘ “Seven Nation Army” then a little Justin Timberlake and countless other popular tunes. And that was bad ass.

Neon Indian // Woxy.com Stage @ 3-3:40 p.m.

Now Neon Indian was more my speed with its synth heavy lo-fi pop. It is the project of of .

Monolith was the first ever live performance of the , but as Palomo’s bold movements and twists of the microphone cord made it look like they had been performing forever. His female bandmate on keys was a bit more timid though and I’m not sure if that was her personality or nerves.

I expect this group to blow up soon because let’s be honest…who doesn’t love the synth?

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// Southern Comfort Presents Stage @ 3-3:30 p.m.

So I didn’t intend to see any of Monotonix and then I accidentally ended up seeing too much. monotonix

After emerging from the depths of Red Rocks, I was surprised to see a large crowd huddle in front of the Southern Comfort Stage, yet no one was on stage nor did it look as though anybody had been on stage. Crews were already setting up for the next band. Yet there was some weird sort of rap rock…I’m not quite sure how to describe what was going on soundwise…coming form the middle of the croud.

Suddenly, from the depths of the crowd, a skinny, shirtless man with long hair was lifted on to the shoulders of the crowd. This was Monotonix and the people were just eating his performance up. I finally got to see him, but this is also when I saw too much of him.

It wasn’t long before he was mooning the crowd and I decided it was time to take my leave from the spectacle and check out another band.

// Esurance Music Stage @ 3:30-4:15 p.m.

Maybe it was the singer’s stripped shirt, but there was a definite sailor swagger to the Dandy Warhols. dandy warhols

They seemed happy to be playing, but there was also an aloofness that made it a little difficult to connect with their live show.

The group was at their best when songs called for extra percussion effects like on “The Legend of the Last of the Outlaw Truckers.” The band sounded better and seemed happier on songs like that.

Set List:
Burned
Trucker
Junky
Good morning
I Love You
Holden Me Up
The Last High
Bono
Get Off
U2BF
Wasp
P/Boys

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The Love Language // Radius Earphones Stage @ 3:40-4:20 p.m.

Looking at the stage set up for The Love Language, my first thought was that two separate bands were going to duel for the ownership of the drummer. Two keyboardists faced each other and two singers stood side by side. It was crowded for such a tiny stage. love language (3)

But once I heard the band start to play, it was quite clear that something different was happening on stage. Instead of two separate bands battling for control of the drummer, siamese twins would be a better image to conjure up. The band was a single entity, but at the same time, as they switched from song to song, they showed different personalities. The Love Language are Siamese twins, not joined at the hip, but at the drummer.

Aside from walking away from this review with that weird imagery, know that soundwise, they really are the language of love. They are just happy-sounding and sweet and tons of other things that make you want to curl your toes with glee. There was a carefree nature about the music and the performance, so carefree in fact, that the band hardly flinched when all their foot-stomping knocked one of their keyboards off the stand.

Set List:
2 rabbits
providence
nocturne
blood
brittney
blue angel
sparxxx
manteo
lalita
hello mary lou

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// Southern Comfort Presents Stage @ 4-4:45 p.m.

I’ve had the privilege of seeing The Thermals before.

I just love the nasally stretch of the singers vocals, “Nooooow weee cannnn see,” the bassists growth from nonchalance to lost-in-the-moment jumping, and the unabridged enthusiasm of the constantly smiling drummer. thermals (3)

Yet, since I had seen them before, I regrettably had to pull myself away to catch some acts I had never seen before. Next time, Thermals. Next time.

Set List:
Return
Afraid
Future
Trivia
Let go
How Know
Call Name
Back Gray
Sick
Trip
100 %
Strosa
Pillar
Culture
We See

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Bad Veins // Woxy.com Stage @ 4:20-5 p.m.

Two guys, flowery wood boxes, a big film machine and a telephone. Sounds like the beginnings to a weird sitcom, but really this was just the beginnings of Bad Veins, a duo that features a tape machine named “Irene.”

The guys and “Irene” produced a really full sound, but I’m not entirely convinced I understand the purpose of the telephone bit.

While I’m sure many in the audience inadvertently wandered in, they stayed because they group was unique and good.

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HEALTH // Radius Earphones Stage @ 5-5:40 p.m.

HEALTH – OMFG.HEALTH (2)

I can’t decide if I love the festival organizers for booking some amazing bands or hate them for booking some amazing bands in ridiculously small rooms.

If you were one of the lucky few who didn’t get shut out of HEALTH’s set, you know how amazingly fortunate you were to witness them live. Each band member was all over the stage, jumping and thrashing. I’ve never seen so much energy from a electronica rock band.

If you were unfortunate enough to get shut out, get in your car and drive somewhere to see them even if that means driving to an airport.

This is a band everyone must witness once in their life.

HEALTH

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The Twilight Sad // Woxy.com Stage @ 5:40-6:20 p.m.

The Twilight Sad rounded out the Scottish trio performing at the fest.

A schedule change moving Savoy earlier and shifting and Phoenix later due to a cancellation from illness in ‘s camp made it so I wasn’t conflicted with choosing between Twilight Sad and Passion Pit.

The set was hauntingly beautiful, but a bit of a downer. A technical hiccup in the set lightened the mood a bit as the band awkwardly stated, “Wish we knew some jokes.”

They were talented, but awkward and shy, which I suppose is fitting for their music. Plus, they had accents, and who doesn’t love a good accent.

Set List:
Doonstairs
Faster
Hit Single
Eyes Oot
Mooth
Rabbit
Sheepdng

(not typos, just how they wrote it out on the set list)

The Twilight Sad

// Radius Earphones Stage @ 6:20-7 p.m.

Tigercity was some smooth, easy-listening and I unfortunately was jutigercityst too revved up to go see Passion Pit to truly enjoy this group.

It wasn’t that Tigercity was bad and they had the recipe for everything I love–synth! It was just that it was more so something that was more appealing to an older crowd that still wanted to be hip than what I’m into. Sorry Tigercity.

Set List:
Fake Gold Other Girls
Graz 75 B
Ancient Lover
Power Stripe Solitary Man
Red Lips D Water
A Better Place James
My Type
Let Her Go
?
Mallory

Passion Pit // Southern Comfort Presents Stage @ 7-7:45 p.m.

OK, again, I don’t know why the festival organizers didn’t put Passion Pit on the main stage because the entire day this was the band that I heard everybody talking about going to.

They were good the last time I saw them, but I can’t get over how much the stage presence has improved. Every band member was all over the stage, jumpipassion pit (12)ng off monitors and the kick drum and falling on the floor.

The crowd makes a Passion Pit set. They know all the right times to respond and sing back the vocals.

High-pitched vocals have the potential to be obnoxious, but in Passion Pit’s case, it is pure fun and add the electronica beats and you have a non-stop dance party.

I could have been content to end the night here, but some of my favorite French rockers were getting ready to take to the main stage.

Set List:
make light
i’ve got your number
let your love grow tall
little secrets
to kingdom come
better things
sleepyhead
smile upon me
…can’t remember what was played here…
the reeling.

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Phoenix // Esurance Music Stage @ 7:45-9 p.m.

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Phoenix has been in the music game for a long time, but it wasn’t until Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix that the States finally took notice of these French rockers.

Yes, the lyrics don’t always make sense (remember English is not their first language), but they sure sound good and are tight musicians.

Think Air with a dash of –this comparison shouldn’t be too hard considering all these artists are part of the Versailles scene.

Phoenix started strong with “Listzomania” and even stronger with “1901,” a song that blew audience away when performed on SNL.

My night ended with Phoenix. Sorry , but I had an eight hour drive that had to be completed before my roomies’ class the next day.

But it doesn’t matter. I couldn’t hope for a more perfect end than Passion Pit and Phoenix.

Set List:
Listzomania
Long Distance Call
Consolation Prizes
Lasso
…sorry, blanking on this part of the set…
Girlfriend
Rome
Too Young
1901

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Monolith: website | day 1

crowd 2

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Remix Monday: DatA “Rapture”

Remix Monday: DatA “Rapture”


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