Nevermind The Posers

See ya in the pit.

I’m Alright if You’re Alright by The Helveticas June 28, 2012

Filed under: CD Reviews — NVMP @ 11:53 PM
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Review by Jake Davis

I’ve had the pleasure to watch and experience The Helveticas grow from a simple high-school band to something infinitely greater.  Their signature jazzy-indie sound has finally broken free of conventions, and has transcended into what can be called a tremendous step forward for this little band from Hartford, CT.  The true beauty of their music is how the songs are written.  Very rarely do you find a band where all members are at the same level instrumentally, and all three members are superb musicians.  All of their songs, especially the newest tracks on their debut album I’m Alright if You’re Alright, are one of the easiest set of tracks to jam to that I’ve ever heard.  For a band of high-schoolers to create a record where all songs stand independently, but also come together even greater is truly a marvel.  Even if you didn’t like the band when you first heard them, I implore you to go and give this new album a listen on their BandCamp.

Surprisingly, even their oldest tracks have been tightened and given a new sound, a greater sound.  Their jazz training can be heard in the best way, and every track is a wonder to listen to.  However, as most debut albums are, there are still imperfections.  With only one vocalist and almost no harmony, it’s easy to get a bit tired of the same vocalist and vocal stylings by the end of the album.  I hope for their next release, they decide to occasionally switch up vocalists or add more complex harmonies apart from the rare backing vocals on this album.  In that same vein, as a long-time listener, I was hoping for a few new tracks to supplement the plethora of older tunes that they’ve played for nearly two years now.  Of course, if this is your first time listening, then they’ll all seem quite awesome.  One of my favorite parts of the record is an instrumental track added to the beginning of “She Killed Me,” one of their oldest songs.  It truly showcases what I love best about these guys, great music that keeps evolving, getting better and tighter.  So again, listen to The Helveticas, it’s more than a pleasant surprise.

 

“Summer Fling Don’t Mean A Thing” by NFG June 16, 2012

Filed under: music news,Music Videos — NVMP @ 11:39 AM
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New summer anthem?  I think so.  I didn’t realize how close Van’s Warped Tour is!   Are you ready?  NVMP certainly is!  2012 will be the 10th year we tear up the tour and bring you the latest bands to check out.  Stay tuned for more!  Happy Summer, Happy Warped Tour, Happy Music Festival Season!!!

 

Keane, Strangeland May 23, 2012

Filed under: CD Reviews,New Music — NVMP @ 6:40 AM
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by Hoverbee
Dear Keane,

Come back to us, please; we need and miss you.  You captured our affections with 2004’s Hopes and Fears and reaffirmed our feelings for you with 2006’s Under the Iron Sea.  We forgive you for breaking our hearts with 2008’s Perfect Symmetry.  We heard the song “Clear Skies” on 2010’s EP Night Train and anticipated the rekindling of our love.  Your latest release, Strangeland, reminds us that if you love something, you should let it go and hope that one day it will come back to you.  Strangeland is an appropriate name for the album.  It’s a place we’ve never been and a place we do not wish to return.  Stylistically the album is a far cry from Perfect Symmetry and elicits memories of days gone by, but lacks the compassion and rawness of the bands first two albums.  It leaves us with an emotional void.  It’s as if they no longer really love us and are just sticking with us out of obligation.  They seem to be simply going through the motions leaving us with songs that are lifeless and boring.  Here we do not find the passion in vocals, production, and arrangement that we crave so badly.  We also long for the familiar vocal stylings of Tom Chaplin.  Chaplin’s voice has a different timbre and he sings much lower than his vocal range.  It makes us wonder if he spent a substantial amount of time locked in a closet with Brandon Flowers (not that we don’t love Mr. Flowers.)  We really do love you, Kean, but for now, we are letting you go because we can’t stand the pain.  We’ll hold our breath and wait for your return.

Sincerely,
Your Fans

 

People Who Live In Glass Houses… May 14, 2012

Filed under: Can You Believe This?!,Rants — NVMP @ 9:43 PM

…Need a life of their own…

So it came to my attention that ABC is starting a new show.  Before I tell you what it’s about, let me say how abhorrent I felt the concept of Big Brother, or even Survivor was: these staged “reality shows” depicted people in manufactured situations and try to film the so-called action.  I like to think of myself as an independent thinker, so naturally, all of these I found repugnant.  I thought the reality show craze itself was a superficial solution to the writer’s guild strike of 2003-ish.  That somehow, we would get one or two seasons of these bullshit shows, and eventually, get back to actual television – that is where the line between reality and fiction is clearly visible: news or sitcoms, documentaries or dramas, etc.

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

Now we have tons of shows on the idiot box following people around as they live their lives, and even some that show people doing their jobs – wow imagine that, watching people work.  In theory, it sounds about as exciting as a root canal.  But sadly, the masses buy into this drivel.  No article can change society, or at least not one posted on the internet, but I’d like to illustrate this vicariously-living cancer we, as a culture, gobble up hook, line and sinker.

Here is the breakdown of a new show coming to ABC:

“The Glass House,” the exciting and interactive real life and real-time reality competition where viewers are in charge of the game, premieres MONDAY, JUNE 18 (10:00-11:00 p.m., ET) on The ABC Television Network. In “The Glass House,” 14 contestants will live and compete for a quarter million dollars in a totally wired, state-of-the-art house, playing not just against each other, but also playing to win over the viewing audience each week. Both online and through their social networks, viewers will be encouraged to support and follow the contestants they like, their votes helping to determine which contestants are sent home and also which eliminated players will earn the chance to return to “The Glass House” to compete each week.  But viewer feedback doesn’t end there! Several times a week, viewers can watch a live online feed of the players and vote to decide everything from what players wear and eat to the games they play, even where they sleep. Viewers will also have the chance to give their favorite contestants feedback on their game from outside the house. How the contestants use that information is up to them, because in the end it’s about who plays the best social game. The most important alliance players can have is with their fans!”

Now that you know as much as I do about this new television abhorrence – allow me to dissect it.

We are turning into a voyeuristic society – so much so that instead of going out fishing we watch Deadliest Catch.  Instead of harboring our own primal instincts for self-preservation, we watch Survivor.  We, as a society, are becoming more and more distant from ourselves, and more infatuated with the others.  If it’s on the ol’ picture box, we eat it up, no matter how inane.  Now we have social media working in concert with television to create a grand distraction of epic proportions.  This reminds me of the Gerard Butler movie “Gamer”: where people control other people’s actions, simply because they can.

Now let me assert this: would you rather control someone else’s life, telling them to play monopoly and wear Capri pants and eat disco fries, or would you rather live your own goddamn life?  Hopefully, you chose the latter, but apparently network television (and the research of the population they did – and trust me, they don’t do anything without dumping tons of money into researching it first) believes it’s the former.

Another question: where, how and when did we become so terribly, terribly voyeuristic?  This is the equivalent of opting to watch porn over going out and getting some ass…doesn’t make sense when you look at it like that, does it?

I’m not saying I have a solution to this problem, as this is just a rant pointing out the “idiocracy” under which we all toil.  Then again I do have a solution – stop watching TV and make your own life.  Stop worrying about which dude the Kardashians are banging this week and concentrate on your own job, your own finances, your own relationships, and your own well-being.  (After all, the economy is in the shitter, a staggering percentage of people are morbidly obese, and families are at times composed of complete strangers to one another) We are so obsessed nowadays with people who are special for being famous, and no longer infatuated with people who are famous because they are special.  Fifty years ago, guys like Sammy Davis Jr. wowed us with their multi-faceted entertainment ability, and people tuned in to watch American Bandstand and other similar programs.  Now people flock to the television to see which pageant mother is giving her daughter lifelong issues one inappropriate costume after the other. People are DVR’ing shows about Tori Spelling being with child, an actress who is neither talented nor relevant.  Jersey Shore has tons of teens, tweens and even twenty-something’s obsessed with their douchebaggery, waiting to see how much more unattractive Snooki can get, both physically and as a humanoid.

My point is just this – the only reason this drivel is on TV or in the media is because you people keep buying into it.  How about we have a renaissance of reason and enlightenment of the masses, and realize that these people are buffoons, and however “entertaining” they might be, they make exponentially more money than the population who slaves 40+ hours a week, and unwinds by watching this manufactured mirror of “life” unfold from the comfort of their modular Ikea furniture.

Shut off the TV, open your mind and get with a new program.  This message is brought to you by Alexander ‘Stigz’ Castiglione.

End Transmission.

 

Rest In Peace May 7, 2012

Filed under: Can You Believe This?! — NVMP @ 7:06 AM

We have lost a few great players in the music industry so far in 2012.  Rest in peace all.

MCA (Adam Yauch) of the legendary Beastie Boys has passed away from cancer of his parotid gland and one lymph node at the age of 47 on May 4th 2012.  Click here to read the eulogy for Yauch on the official Beastie Boys website.

This is a tribute to Adam Yauch from Coldplay at Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles on May 4th 2012.


On April 26th 2012 we lost influential New York deejay Pete Fornatale at the age of 66 due to a brain hemorrhage he suffered on April 15th.  Fornatale was one of the pioneer free-form deejays on early rock radio station WNEW-FM.  The station played long versions of songs and sometimes entire albums.  In 1982 he started “Mixed Bag,” a program on Sunday mornings that emphasized singer-songwriters.  I had the pleasure of being taught Rock n’ Roll in America by Professor Fornatale at Monmouth University back in 2006.  Click here to visit Pete Fornatale’s official website.  To honor Pete, his family requests donations to be made in Pete Fornatale’s name to WhyHunger, an organization he has been associated with since it was co-founded by his good friend Bill Ayres and the late Harry Chapin in 1975.

This year we also say good-bye to drummer Ritchie Teeter who played in The Dictators and Twisted Sister.  He died on April 10th 2012 at the age of 61.  No cause of death has been released.  Here’s a video of The Dictators covering the Stooges’ “Search and Destroy” at CBGB’s on May 11th, 1977.

Michael Davis, bassist for the politically charged punk-rock pioneers MC5 passed away on February 17th 2012 at the age of 68 after being hospitalized from liver failure.  Davis started the Music is Revolution Foundation to help aid music classes in public schools and was a successful producer.

Riot guitarist and founder Mark Reale passed away on January 25th 2012 after complications from his long-time battle with Chohn’s disease at the age of 57.

Also, Jim Marshall, founder of Marshall Amplifications (the ‘Father of Loud’) passed away at the age of 88.  Many people in the music community showed their love of the man who created the iconic amps used by some of the world’s greatest guitarists.  Slash made an online statement “The news of Jim Marshall passing is deeply saddening. R&R will never be the same w/out him. But his amps will live on FOREVER!”

 

The Beer Burglars, DIY Punk Rock At Its Finest April 25, 2012

Filed under: Concert Reviews,Music You've Been Missing — NVMP @ 7:46 PM

Show Review by Angela Blasi

March 30th, 2012 at Seven Days Bar in Union Beach, NJ

Ride bikes, drink beer, get awesome.  That’s the running motto of hardcore punk band The Beer Burglars.  I had the pleasure of watching this group perform at the Seven Days Bar in Union Beach, New Jersey a few weeks ago.  I had no idea what to expect, except lots of songs about beer.  I have to tell you, no truer a statement has been uttered.  Releasing their debut album entitled The Punks , the band maintains its identity and refuses to play large-scale venues.  Ready to play anywhere, anytime, the bands persona is confident and carefree.  But does this translate on a stage?  Absolutely.  The night I saw the Beer Burglars, lead singer Steel English donned a full face mask that was part skull part ski mask and was a perfect replica of Satan meets V for Vendetta.  Although I never saw his face, he kept me entertained all night long with hardcore vocals, screaming incessantly about beer as he shot gunned cans and provided loyal fans with refreshment.  Now, I didn’t think it was possible to come up with so many songs about beer let alone like that many songs about the same topic, but it is and I did.  I think my favorite track of the night was “Beeranator;” a short but intense track where the only word I could make out was “Beerinator!” but I thought it was great regardless.  Besides the brutal in-your-face vocals with a sense of humor, I really loved the way guitarist Henry Scardaville lent his energy to the stage.  Fun to watch, he added the right amount of intensity and personality to his nimble technique and colorful vocals.  Granted, the vocals were a lot of screaming but it wasn’t annoying or overdone.  Rounding out the rhythm section was Kat Scardaville pounding away with effortless precision on drums and Hurricane Luke holding it down, locking in with the fat sounds that filled out the musical line up.

Overall I like what the Beer Burglars have started here.  No matter what show you go to, you’re bound to have a good time regardless of how many songs you may or may not know.  Just crack open your favorite beer, raise it to the sky and scream along like any of the regulars.  Everyone’s invited.


 

Free Download of “Perfect Match” along with graphic novel Perfect Teeth April 17, 2012

Our favorite fictitious musical band of crooning vampires Perfect Teeth, from the graphic novel written by Vinnie Fiorello of Less Than Jake, have finally released their first musical endeavor to the public.  To coincide with the novel’s plot, life imitates art in their latest single entitled, “Perfect Match.”  A true monster ballad, Jon Snodgrass of Drag the River lends his distinct vocals as he croons: “It’s a perfect match/Let’s burn the maps/File down our fingertips.”  Rounding out the mix, we hear the Descendants Stephen Egerton on guitar, bass and drums.  So how does such a thing come to life?  Through e-mail correspondence, Fiorello and Snodgrass pieced together the skeleton of what was to become the first vampire love song to top the (pretend) charts.  Taking this rough copy via cell phone, Egerton was then able to musically adapt the original demo to a more suitable mood, tailoring each instrument to the heart of the piece.

I really enjoy the content as it doesn’t try to sound campy or silly, it’s as though I’m really listening to the plight of a living (or something like it) Edward Cullen, only way cooler and not so moody.  The type of heartfelt Vampiric hit single you’d expect in the wildly popular times of undead creatures.  Ultimately, this joint effort is a good listen, offering the reader a chance to fully absorb what is not only an excellent musical composure from great artists, but also an opportunity to fully immerse in the alternate reality of the graphic novel.

Click here for a free download of the graphic novel Perfect Teeth along with the song “Perfect Match.”  Click on ‘Free Downloads’ and check out everything Paper + Plastick is offering.

 

Secret Music’s video for “Ghost in the Graveyard” April 9, 2012


This catchy synth/guitar song from Secret Music has a flaming video portraying a break from monotony by running into fire.  Ted Batchelor, the stuntman in the video, is the Guinness World Record Holder for Longest Body Burn; he leaves his wife and mundane, suburban lifestyle behind to ‘awaken the voice of his soul’ by running through the desert and lighting himself on fire.      

The track was produced by Passion Pit’s Ayad Al Adhamy and is off the band’s self-titled debut, which dropped March 6th on Black Bell Records/Warner Music’s ILG.  Secret Music will be touring with Middle Class Rut and Beware of Darkness starting on April 21st, see dates below.

Secret Music Spring 2012 Tour:
w/Middle Class Rut and Beware of Darkness

4/21/12 – The Juggermaut Gallup, NM
4/22/12 – The Black Sheep Colorado Springs, CO
4/24/12 – Marquis Theatre Denver, CO
4/25/12 – Club Sound Salt Lake City, UT
4/26/12 – Neurolux Boise, ID
4/27/12 – Doug Fir Lounge Portland, OR
4/28/12 – T A Club Spokane, WA
4/29/12 – El Corazon Seattle, WA
5/02/12 – Fulton 55 Fresno, CA
5/03/12 – House of Blues San Diego, CA
5/04/12 – Constellation Room Santa Ana, CA
5/05/12 – Silverston Hotel & Casino Las Vegas, NV
5/06/12 – Troubadour West Hollywood, CA
– Oz Litvac
 

Break Anchor’s Debut EP “Black Hearts & Blackouts” March 26, 2012


Review by Angela Blasi

Released March 20, 2012 on Paper + Plastick Records behold the debut EP from Break Anchor.  This pop-punk outfit channels the spirit of East Bay sounds from a scene gone by and is fronted by the well-known Jay Navarro (Suicide Machines and Hellmouth).  Comprised of his own angst and battles with the trials and tribulations of his life, this EP beautifully expresses his gritty, downtrodden yet resilient spirit.  The opening track “All I Have” had me hooked from the first line; its subtle-driving guitar riff building with choral vocals only to break into a hard, driving piece that never loses momentum.  Even lyrically, I enjoy the content as it reflects some of my own sentiments living in this Great Recession economy.  The vocals scream, “Everything is money!” while I envision myself signing this at high volumes in the summer sun; my own fuck you to the establishment.

Without hesitation, the second track “Can We Pretend” is focused and hard-hitting from the start.  Carried by the punchy bass progression, it’s a personal track that is easy to relate with.  It’s raw without being unclean, passionate without being overbearing.  There is a sense of belonging in these first two tracks, fantastically conveyed to the listener in a time when the definitions of success and identity are blurred.  This brings me to the last track, “Failure of Epic Proportions.”  “You try and convince me this is what I’ve been working for/ Time flies/ I don’t know, I work so much I don’t know you anymore/ Growing up makes us forget who we were.”  Simply stated yet poignant, Navarro’s lyrics easily bring life to the heart attack feeling of measuring one’s own failures and successes.  A slower track, this last song doesn’t lose focus of the other two, despite being a more emotionally charged piece.  This is definitely one of those songs to listen to when feeling particularly disenfranchised and disconnected from the well-to-do establishment, seemingly oppressing us all.  The song then ends with the calming serene sounds of ocean waves, as if to signify the finding of inner peace through the hell and turmoil that is self-discovery.

I’m excited to hear more from this band; their music is refreshing to hear.  They have met their goal in achieving a fresh sound that is in your face while bringing to life the influences of punk rock from past days.  From the first listen I was hooked and left wanting more.  The EP never compromises the heart of its members, giving the listener three tracks of unadulterated feelings, eloquently stated while being melodically raw with rich hooks and riffs.

Click here to listen to Black Hearts & Blackouts 

Break Anchor also recently debuted a music video for “A Failure of Epic Proportions,” watch below

 

Cake Fans Create New Video For “The Winter” March 23, 2012

Filed under: Music Videos — NVMP @ 6:59 AM
Tags: , , ,

Review by Hoverbee

Cake is known for including the average Joe in the creation of their music videos.  The video for “Short Skirt/Long Jacket,” off the album Comfort Eagle and directed by lead singer John McCrea, is composed of footage presenting everyday people listening to the song and giving their reactions.  Similar to that is the official video for “No Phone” off the album Pressure Chief which features members of the public wearing headphones dancing to the song. With the video for “The Winter” off the album Showroom of Compassion, the band has taken the concept a step further.  Director and friend of the band Tracy Rowland presented them with the idea of including the listening audience again, only this time extending the opportunity to their global fan base.  The video combines footage of nearly 200 participants singing along to the song.  The massive undertaking by these fans, ranging in age from 5 to 55 and hailing from 165 different cities in 20 countries on 5 continents, is a wonderful way to express their love of Cake and to support the band.  So, check it out!