Tag Archive | "Reagan"

Dylan Champagne – Love Songs of the Apocalypse, Vol. 1

Dylan Champagne – Love Songs of the Apocalypse, Vol. 1

claims to wear many musical hats and he’s not kidding. He released an album in 2008, charting on the top 200; he sings and plays guitar for a new-wave band called ; he’s a a part of a secret society of composers who meet monthly; and he fronted the now defunct math-core band . And his newest endeavor of the , Volume 1 explores punk, , and 70′s roots with acoustic leanings. Champagne describes it as “Springsteenesque acoustic -punk” or perhaps “acoustic lyric-driven rock with strange time signatures, a strong pop sensibility and nostalgic themes.”

Anything with the word ‘apocalypse’ in the title is enough to gain the interest of the Millennial Generation. With shows like and movies and , we seem to have a fascination with brain-eating crazies that pop up at the end of the world. Dylan Champagne says that he’s been having dreams since he was just a boy. “I suppose the reoccurring dreams began when I was about 9. It was the 80′s and was king,  and everywhere you looked was nuclear this that and the other. Love Songs of the Apocalypse Volume 1 is a shout-out to the mid-sized semi-urban dystopia in my head.”

The album starts with “Baby in a Bear Suit” and it’s a refreshing listen. Champagne has a wonderful baritone register that he takes full advantage of, and my immediate reaction was a comparison to Jarrod Gorbel of The Honorary Title. He has sometimes painfully honest lyrics and a lot of them are tongue-in-cheek. It’s a nice change of pace to hear songs with a simple and straight-to-the-point message; sometimes you just don’t want to figure out complex poetry and metaphors. Sometime you want to hear it like it is.

Champagne’s songs are certainly lyrically driven and we get a glimpse of apocalyptic feelings with lines like “flying high above the zombie streets/cutting class and breaking bottles in the creek/and your friends all bite their tongues/and you might as well be dead.” The album begins on a soft note and at this point I would definitely call it acoustic. But the tempo steadily progresses through the album with “Dealt” and “The Daily Albatross,” and we reach wailing electric guitars on “California Song.” “Finally Ready” is a welcome break, listeners get a chance to catch their breath for a minute with a calmer piano-infused song. It’s one of my favorites of the album; I have a soft spot for piano in my acoustic-y rock music. “Empty Notebooks” continues with the chilled out theme, and “The Ballad of J Flato” is just what it sounds like: a lovely ballad that might seem to lull a person to sleep, save for the last minute or so that explodes with a burst of energy, carrying the listener through the rest of the album. “Forester Pass in Chinatown Slippers” is a look back at the strictly low-key acoustic beginnings of the album, and the rest of the album is smooth sailing, save for the last song “The Short Goodbye” which is a catchy little sing-along piece featuring a tinkling piano and female vocals to wrap things up on a sweet note.

This isn’t an album I’d normally pick up, but I can honestly say I’m a fan. Put this record on when you’re having a musically ADD day; it features a little bit of everything and in forty-five minutes or so, you’ll be feeling satisfied no matter what your initial craving was for.

Track Listing:

1. Baby in a Bear Suit
2. Dealt
3. The Daily Albatross
4. California Song
5. Finally Ready
6. Empty Notebooks
7. The Ballad of J Flato
8. Forester Pass in Chinatown Slippers
9. Row Homes in the Desert
10. Greenfield Manifesto
11. The Short Goodbye

www.brokeinoakland.com/dylan

Posted in Albums, ReviewsComments Off

Bear Mountain Picnic – Happiness in the Dybosphere

Bear Mountain Picnic – Happiness in the Dybosphere

Whenever my mind turns to a band I want to see, my thoughts invariably turn to . It’s unfortunate that my thoughts do so since the band broke up well over two years ago. Like a lost loved one they stay in my thoughts. Their only release, a five song EP called Happiness in the Dybosphere, remains in my constant rotation and their songs rank as some of the best driving around music of all time. bmp

The band’s name is owed to the song from the Bob Dylan Bootleg Series, volume 1. “Bear Mountain Picnic,” the song, comically details a man who purchases phony tickets for a phony event and the eventual letdown. Bear Mountain Picnic, the band, matched the attitude of this song beat for beat.

The group wrote true blue indie-rock songs on par with the or Wowee-Zowee-style . The songs were well constructed snippets with vocal arrangements that seemed to come right out of . The band declares on “Silent Trade,” the opening song on Happiness in the Dybosphere:

My father was a military man/he went down in a blaze of glory

I’d like to tell you everything about him/but it’s just too gory of story

A short moment later they nail a great melody over a Dylan-esque guitar part on “Brain Tonic” and then merge that folk guitar with a strong Pixies influence on “Your Cousin’s Neck.”

Many of the band’s finest songs don’t appear on the EP. At live shows they broke out classics that teetered on the edge of pure before falling back into pure indie-rock. The most memorable of that group was “Bear Mountain Picnic Blues,” a song the band used to open sets shortly before the break up. The song gave a quirky twist on the band’s ‘current’ situation—most noticeably being blacklisted from the Blind Pig in Ann Arbor.

The band members have carried on. (bass and vocals) carries on in the acoustically geared and (guitar and vocals) has moved onto the Chicago scene where he plays in . The results of both bands are great and worth hearing, but if you build a time machine set it for Detroit between 2003 and 2005.

Track Listing:
01. Brain Tonic
02. Gold
03. Headlines
04. Silent Trade
05. Your Cousin’s Neck

Bear Mountain Picnic: website | myspace

Posted in AlbumsComments (1)


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