Tag Archive | "Todd Fink"

The Faint @ the Granada, Lawrence KS

The Faint @ the Granada, Lawrence KS

On the day of their show, The Faint‘s Jacob Thiele tweeted, “Eating biscuits and veggie gravy at Java Break & Worked Up So Sexual came on the stereo. Awkward! Mostly cuz its strange music 4 breakfast.”

I beg to differ, Mr. Thiele. There is never a strange or wrong time to listen to your band’s music.

I was only 8 when formed up in . I wish I could that I was savvy enough at 8 to have started listening to them then, but it would be almost another 8 years when I would discover Danse Macabre and learn that there was a world of musical genres that existed outside of what I heard during my middle school years at the roller skating rink. At that point in my life, I did start listening to the Faint at all hours of the day…even during breakfast. Two and a half years later, I had my first chance to see the band live in Lawrence at the . It was the first time I ever danced at a show.

Suffice it to say, I was ecstatic when a co-worker offered me her extra ticket to the evening’s show. I couldn’t wait to return to the venue where the band first blew me away five years prior.

The band has come along way since when I first saw them. They had some sweet lights, but the set up was modest. A few years ago, I saw them in Omaha and the set up had expanded to three times as many lights and singer donned a lab coat and goggles (looking like Dr. Horrible). Tonight, the stage had been taken over by eerie, foil-covered . Their arms outstretched like at any moment they’d attack the band and the audience. The almost looked alive as the strobe lights reflected off their metallic sides, creating the illusion of movement. Fortunately, they were stationary, which was nice because they gave me the heebie jeebies without needing animatronics.

The audience wasn’t as filled as past shows, but for who did show up, they were all packed into the pit throwing their arms up and dancing with the band. It was a party, as any The Faint show should be. A big electronic, indie rock, dance party. The band didn’t play a single song that I felt stopped the energy level or was a dud to the fun. Of course, some tunes stood out more than others such as “Get Seduced,” “Worked Up So Sexual,” “Paranoia,” and “Geeks Were Right.” At one point, some girls from the crowd even hopped on stage and put a hat on Fink. He went with it, but a roadie didn’t look as pleased as he escorted the girls off.

Now, as much as I love dancing, I think I love watching the Faint more. Remember when I said I was 8 when the Faint formed? These guys are over twice my age, but they have more energy than a preschool classroom. They all feed off each other and if they’re not busy playing an instrument (yes, this band is electronica, but they still play actual instruments!), then they’re dancing. It is fantastic! It’s crazy to me to think that a couple days from now, they’re opening for Spoon in their hometown. I’d hate to be the band to try and follow The Faint. Good luck.

I got to the show late after work, so I wasn’t able to snag photos. However, my awesome friend, Fally, also blogged about the show and she does have photos and video that you can check out here.

Set List:
Mirror
Dropkick
Agenda
Conductor
Psycho
In Concert
Southern
Hospital
Machine
Desperate
Seduced
Centipedes
Worked Up
Paranoia
//
Geeks
Glass Disappear

Posted in Concerts, Kansas City, OmahaComments (1)

Ladytron/The Faint @ Webster Hall

Ladytron/The Faint @ Webster Hall

and are currently on a co-headlining US tour. They played two dates at , alternating the headlining slot. I caught Friday night’s show where Ladytron headlined, and I have to say, when you compare the energy levels of each band’s set, it seems clear that The Faint should be holding that headlining slot. I enjoy Ladytron, but after getting pumped up and shaking my ass to The Faint’s set, that whole disaffected head bob thing didn’t work out so well. Okay, maybe I wiggled my butt a little during “Seventeen”.

I have little critique for this show. Both bands put it out there, with sets spanning their sizable catalogs. is a spaz in the best way possible. The vocal duo of and continues to be endlessly sexy and fairly mysterious. Nothing new here. It was a Good Show. I danced, I snapped photos, I watched from the balcony as a girl beat the living hell out of her significant other wholly undisturbed by security (he sported some facial blood once security finally did show up to escort them out), and my girlfriend and I got rubbed up on from behind—and almost got into an altercation with—a total creepster [read: old] in a leather jacket. It was an eventful evening.

Photographic evidence as follows:








Posted in Concerts, New YorkComments Off

Goo Gives Mixtape

Goo Gives Mixtape

   

, the popular indie dance sensation held in , recently hosted a Valentine’s Dance with some sensational music that they’re now giving away for free.
mixtapeweb1

At the Valentine’s Day Goo, attendees were given a mixtape featuring the evening’s playlist. Artists mixed on the tape include everything from to . Now for the benefit of late attendees or those unable to go all together, Goo is offering the mixtape for download. “We still love the mixtape and we’re hoping to make this a tradition,” said Goo on their website.

Goo was originally started by local area musicians looking to provide a dance outlet to the Omaha community. Original DJs involved from the start include ‘s .

Tracklisting:
SIDE 1
The Monkees – Steppin’ Stone
The Pixies – La La Love You
Justice – Valentine (Plastic Fang Remix)
Flight of the Conchords – Theme song
Wire – Three Girl Rhumba
Bryan Ferry & Roxy Music – Let’s Stick Together
Of Montreal – I’d Engager
Crystal Castles – Crimewave (Crystal Castles Vs. Health)
Bingo Players – Get Up (Diplo Remix)
Panda Bear – Comfy in Nautica (XXXchange Remix)
Black Kids – I’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance (Twelves Remix)
Telepathe – So Fine
Animal Collective – My Girls

SIDE 2
Fan Death – Veronica’s Veil (Erol Alkan’s Extended Rework)
Fan Death – Veronica’s Veil
Mr. Oizo – Cut Dick
Walter Murphy & The Big Apple Band – A Fifth of Beethoven (Soulwax Remix)
The Kills – Getting Down
Late of the Pier – Space & The Woods
Sex Pistols – Bodies
Sparks – Angst in My Pants
Devo – Girl U Want (Black Light Odyssey Mix)
Plastic Bertrand – C’est Plane Pour Moi
Joy Division – Love Will Tear Us Apart
Kate Bush – Hounds of Love

Goo: website | myspace | download Side One. download Side Two | interview with Todd Fink

Posted in Music News, OmahaComments Off

Interview with: Todd Fink of the Faint

Interview with: Todd Fink of the Faint

If electro indie pop group gets you swooning, then this is one interview you don’t want to miss. Lead singer took the time to talk to Bethany about the band and how to live the good life when not on the road. Check it out:

PopWreckoning, Bethany: So Fasciination was the first time you guys did everything in your album making process. What sort of new challenges did you face with that? Was it similar to remixing?
Todd Fink, The Faint: Yeah, we’ve done remixes as a band and it’s not that different from making your own tracks, at least the way we do it where you just take a lot of tracks from the artists and do the vocals on its own track, usually.
We had done one of those just right before we recorded this record. It was one for . We did that in another studio, but in seeing how that went, we felt pretty good about doing our own record. We knew that we could do our own record without any trouble because we had been doing more and more of it as we recorded each record. It was good to get that little boost of confidence before actually recording our record. So yeah, it was easy, I guess.
It is nice to have the freedom to do whatever you want to do without having anybody take advantage of anybody or having to explain why you want to do one thing or another. If a mic is pointing at a guitar and you feel like a mic could be moved to a better spot or if you want to use a different mic, you might as well try it. You can stay up there all night. It’s your place. It was nice.

PW: So are you guys going to do a remix album for Fasciination like you’ve done for some albums in the past.
TF: I don’t know. At one point we were going to do them for every record, but we didn’t do it on the last one and I don’t think that we’re going to do it on this one. We’re going to just release songs on the record as singles, 12 inches, that kind of stuff. We have one out so far that has a couple remixes on it and another remix that’s been circulating on-line and maybe compilations and stuff like that. So we’ll see.

PW: Does have any plans to release albums for any other artists or are you guys just using it for your own records?
TF: We talk about. We’d like to, but it just isn’t really a money making project. To put out other people’s records and maybe make money on it, you’d have to have an artist blow up. Maybe that would happen, maybe it wouldn’t, and we wouldn’t really be putting it out for that reason. We would put out things that we like and think the world should hear. If lots of people want to hear it, that would be great. We’re not ready to be risky about it yet and we’re not really in the financial situation to do that. I think with the Faint and other things, we’re pretty busy.

PW: Yeah, I imagine you guys stay pretty busy being on the road. So the new album, Fasciination, deals a lot with thoughts of the future and on songs like “Machine in the Ghost,” it deals with know-it-all leaders and people who think they are the boss of everything, and I know that for a lot of artists that politics are pretty important. How has this election year been figuring into your lives and your music?
TF: We follow the election and took election day off on tour. How’s it figuring in beyond that? I don’t know. I mean we’re rooting for as a band and hoping that we get some kind of change in the way things are going. I know that we’ve been pretty discouraged in the last couple of elections and we’re hoping that it can’t go that way forever.

PW: Do you guys get a chance to watch the debates on the road?
TF: If at all possible, we’ll watch that kind of stuff. We did just miss the first presidential debate because we were flying from Australia to Japan, I believe, so it wasn’t possible. We watched the VPs the other night and it was interesting. We know who we’re rooting for.

PW: Do you guys refer to Omaha as Obamaha?
TF: I have friends that own a gourmet, soul-food fusion type restaurant that did say Obamaha on the window after it was announced that he would be the Democratic representative.

PW: What restaurant?
TF:
(temporary memory lapse) Dixie Quicks! It’s called Dixie Quicks and I recommend it to people who come to Omaha. It is easy to miss.
PW:
For sure, is it in the Old Market area.
TF: It is down towards the Old Market. It is on like 17th or 18th Street and Jackson. The Old Market starts on 13th, so it’s up a little ways from it.

PW: Outside of political issues with our own country, I know you’ve been involved in a lot of other issues, like, you went to Haiti several times. Recently you had an art project that you did with Orenda [Fink]. What was that exactly and how did you get the idea to set something like that up?
TF: It just kind of happened naturally between our friend in Haiti. There’s a guy that we’ve known for quite some time named , who is an artist in the Birmingham area, Alabama. He went to Haiti with us, working there and kind of teaching art and working with aspiring Haitian artists. We did a project with them. That’s what we originally did.
We went with them and collected field recordings-sounds of the city, sounds of Haiti in general-and sowed them into a sort of sound collage for the art show that sort of fit within vibe of the whole thing. His was turning garbage and found objects into assemblages, sculptures and different types of collages. So, it made sense.
We did that in Haiti and brought that show more recently back to Omaha. It was great. We didn’t really know what to expect in Omaha, but it was a complete success. We’re actually doing something today, with my friend Ben [Brodin], we are doing a live soundtrack or score to the movie The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. It is one the first horror movie, silent films. It is classic. So that’s what we’re doing today. We’ll see how it goes.
(For those unfamiliar with silent film tradition, orchestras or a small music group used to sit in the theater and play the soundtrack and sound effects for the film live. As part of a horror series at Film Streams, Todd Fink, and composed the soundtrack and performed it live for the opening night of the series. So when he says live, he means live.)

by Chris Knight

by Chris Knight

PW: It seems like a lot of Omaha artists start off in one band and then has like eight other projects. Do you guys do a similar thing? Would you work on a solo album or is pretty much the Faint and the occasional art project?
TF:
I work on things for different projects all the time and a lot of times they end up as the Faint. It is a way that I like to think about music that it can be inspiring. Some times they end up as the Faint songs and others, I just have little bits of things to do here and there. Or if something comes up like the Haitian sound collage or the soundtrack that we’re doing today, I may use parts for this or that. I’m making a lot of things.
I have a side project that I’ve been doing recently called with a guy in Miami. I don’t know. I don’t know what the future of that is. The other guys do, of course, like Joel [Petersen] has . is ‘s project of heavy death metal and he just put on album out on that not too long ago. And a couple of us play with a guy named here in town who does drone, ambiance kind of wall sounds, experimental type sounds. It’s called Fathr^, no “e”s in it. They’re actually performing tonight as well. I’m hoping to make it over after the film that I’m doing. I know Dapose is playing with him tonight and I’m not sure if anybody else is. Maybe Clark [Baechle].
PW:
Where at?
TF:I think at the Bemis.
I checked the show out and it was solid. Just Dapose played with Fathr^. It was quite the event, there was an art exhibit opening upstairs and the show was set up downstairs. Complimentary wine and beer were offered. Fink was at the show, as were Saddle Creek employees and most of the members of .

PW: What other Omaha artists do you recommend?
TF: Box Elders is my current favorite. Maybe Box Elder. I can’t remember if it is plural (It is plural) , but go listen to some tracks on MySpace. We just played with them in Omaha recently. , , , Orenda Fink. My wife’s always got a bunch of projects.

PW: What is one thing you wish people knew or understood about the Faint that they don’t already know. A stereotype or rumor you’d like to dispel?
TF: I’m not very schooled about what people think about the Faint to be honest. I don’t read that stuff much and nobody would come up to me and tell me one thing or the other about what they think. People will just say I like this song or the album or I hate this or that. Why don’t you do this more, but I don’t really get a feel for what the Faint means to people or what they think of when they think of the band. I’m too close to it to kind of understand it, so I don’t know. It is hard to dispel or affirm any of them now.

PW: Well, how about your Omaha association? There’s nothing associated with that?
TF: It is fairly interesting that there’s a electronic pop band from Nebraska that doesn’t sound like music of the heartland exactly. What do people think about Nebraska from an outside perspective, I get that. I like Omaha. I’ve spent my whole life here, so I’m not sure I want to stay here until I die.

PW: But you wouldn’t relocate the Faint to California or anything like that? (Cough, cough , cough cough )
TF: I don’t think we could all agree on a place to move with everybody we care about, which is probably why we’ve lived in Omaha as long as we have. It’s affordable and it’s easier not to move than to move. So if I move, I’d have to make trips back to do recordings and rehearsals.

by Shane Aspegren

by Shane Aspegren

PW: So, what do you think of the change that Omaha’s made in the past year with the venue regulations in places like the Slowdown and the Waiting Room? Has that affected you guys at all?
Basically, Omaha was having a hard time deciding if places that went back in forth between venue and bar should be allowed all ages shows. Eventually, the City Council decided all ages shows were acceptable, but minors would have to have a notarized parental permission form on file with the venues. Omaha also passed an indoor smoking ban. [Ed. note: Notarized parental permission? Intense.]
TF: It kind of affected Jacob [Thiele]and I with Derek [Presnall] of Tilly and the Wall. We had the party called . It might have affected the longevity of that party, but we were about to end it anyway because we had to start touring. So not really.
I like being able to go to bars and not have smoke in them. I’m all for the freedom of anybody to get addicted to whatever they want, but I don’t want to have to share it with them necessarily. I like clean air. Although, the lights in the club don’t look quite the same unless you have a hazer in there and some places don’t allow people to smoke and put that on the smoke list.

PW: Yeah. Now, GOO kind of resurfaced as Gunk. I know you’re busy, but do you have any desire to get involved with Gunk and maybe guest DJ with that?
TF: I don’t know what that is?
PW:I think some people have brought back GOO, but renamed it as Gunk, but they’ve been having it at the Waiting Room. You still have DJsand a dance party theme, like what you were doing with GOO.
TF: Is is successful?
PW: Yeah, they’re getting the same turnout. It’s the 18 and over crowd. There’s a 3-D Gunk in like two weeks maybe. You’ve inspired somebody, I guess.
TF: Cool. More power to them. It’s not GOO, but the point of GOO was to have people have something to do in Omaha and have something that’s really like a night out where you can dance and sweat and dress ridiculously. Do those things that you need to be able to do and have an outlet for it.
Before that, I didn’t feel like there was much of an outlet for it. There are places, but I don’t know. It’s good to keep it going, although, I probably, I think we’ll probably do GOO again when we have a chunk of time at home.
PW: So, Gunk completely sprang up separately? You had no idea about it?
TF: No, I saw a flier recently. I thought it was like, “You remember GOO? Now, it’s hard and it’s called Gunk.” I was kind of like, well, I understand why they do it like that, but it’s kind of like, can’t they get it going on their own without having it seem like it’s part of GOO? Because we worked hard to get it going, you know? I did notice it, but it just didn’t…
PW: That’s interesting because I think a lot of people thought it was a development out of GOO.
TF: Right, that’s why I think I’m not really sure I like that it is intentionally referenced so it is confusing to people. In order to think that that’s what it is. On the other hand, I don’t know, it’s kind of like a tribute to our party, I guess. If you want to look at it like that like it is carrying it on. Referencing it makes it sound like it is cooler than it probably was than not referencing it or a different party.
PW: Yeah, well I know people really enjoyed GOO and blocked it off on their calendars.
TF: It was definitely a good party.

PW: Well, that’s all I have, so thank-you.
TF: Alright, it was good talking with you.

The Faint: website | myspace

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The Faint – Fasciinatiion

The Faint – Fasciinatiion

favorites and underground dance-punk sensations are finally releasing their first album after a four year break. Fasciinatiion is completely do-it-yourself and is the first album the band has ever written, recorded, produced and released on their own via their imprint. Even the album art is their own work.

Fans can still expect to break out their dance moves as this album is just as entertaining as the band’s previous releases, although a little slower and more reflective. The band delves deeper into electronica with this release and match the themes of the album by making vocalist sound even more robotic.

Single “The Geeks Were Right” gives a great taste for what the rest of the album sounds like as well as showing a primary lyrical theme of predicting the future. Fink sings, “When I saw the future / The geeks were right. / Predator skills, chemical wars, plastic islands at sea / Watch what the humans ruin with machines.” Interestingly the band separates themselves from society with these lyrics and refuse to be included with the rest of humanity.

This bleak outlook on humanity creates a very dark album. “A Battle Hymn For Children” looks at the costs of war, “Get Seduced” critiques our pop culture obsession, and “Mirror Error” moves from society to a more personal critique. As the band goes through more descending scales, the album descends deeper into its darkest themes.

The Faint did very well for their first time completely on their own and fans will not be disappointed after their long wait for new material. Fasciinatiion is released by blank.wav on August 5, 2008.

Tracklisting:
01. Get Seduced
02. The Geeks Were Right
03. Machine In The Ghost
04. Fulcrum And Lever
05. Psycho
06. Mirror Error
07. I Treat You Wrong
08. Forever Growing Centipedes
09. Fish In A Womb
10. A Battle Hymn For Children

Band Info: website | myspace

Written by: Bethany

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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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