Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Live Letters To Host Intimate Concert Series

Live Letters, the new music photography blog helmed by shutterbug Sara Montour, recently announced its Evening With Friends concert series.


Per the site’s Facebook invitation, Evening With Friends are “small, intimate concerts designed to bring a unique live music experience to the Twin Cities. Each Evening With Friends will be hosted by a musician or band that will then hand-select other songwriters to join them for the evening. All musicians will start the night on stage together, taking turns playing songs, and the evening will end with an acoustic set from the host band.”

The first show will be hosted Gabriel Douglas, best known as the bearded frontman of the 4onthefloor, and will take place at a private loft in Minneapolis on Thursday, June 14 at 7 PM. Surprise guests, guaranteed to be incredible, will also be on the bill.


Tickets are $10 and can be purchased via Brown Paper Tickets. Because of the intimate aim of these concerts, space will be limited.

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more on local show happenings!

- Erica Rivera

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Local Photogs Launch "Live Letters" Site


Shutterbugs Sara Montour and Jenn Barnett announced the launch of Live Letters, an online portfolio of their concert photography, today.

"LIVE LETTERS is here to document the amazing live music that’s happening in this lovely city, and occasionally elsewhere. As a photographer the art of creating compelling images is as important to me as solely documenting the show, so I’m more than excited to be able to showcase some incredible photographers, videographers, and audio magicians from all around, including the wonderful Jenn Barnett who has jumped on board with full force and is going to be an incredible part of this entire LIVE LETTERS project," Montour says on the home page of the site.

BNLX at Amsterdam Bar & Hall by Jenn Barnett

A calendar of upcoming shows is also featured on the site and it is packed with must-see musicians, in multiple music venues throughout the Twin Cities.  Aural and eye candy?!  Here we come!

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more happenings on the local scene!

- Erica Rivera

Monday, April 30, 2012

Earworm Of The Week: David LeDuc


David LeDuc (of Pictures of Then and The Less Complex) released the video for his new track "Amends" last night. This project was collaborative, calling on the talents of seven musicians worldwide in addition to LeDuc, who penned the tune. Paul Haataja (of the Twin Cities rock band Far From Falling and Fuzzy Fotography) directed the video.

"The track was recorded piece by piece and each contributor wrote and recorded their part in separate studios from around the globe," LeDuc explained in his press release. LeDuc then collected the contributions via the Internet and arranged and mixed the final track in Minneapolis.

Musicians featured on the track are Ein Astronaut (Germany, drums), Laurena Segura (Quebec, vocals), J.B. Dazen (The Netherlands, bass), Arno Ceres (France, MIDI Sounds), Raven Zoë (Oregon, vocals), Bob Clagett (Georgia, guitars) and Mykl Westbrooks (Minneapolis, guitars).





Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.

- Erica Rivera

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Mayors Crash Trampled By Turtles Show At First Ave

Last night's sold-out Trampled by Turtles show at First Avenue included some surprise guests: Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak and Duluth Mayor Don Ness. (St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman was also rumored to be in the audience.) After These United States played a crowd-rousing set, Mayor Ryback presented TBT's frontman (and KFAI interviewee) Dave Simonett with a proclamation that declared April 11 Trampled by Turtles day in Minneapolis and Duluth.

Then, encouraged by both the band and concert attendees, Mayor Rybak took a dive into the sea of bluegrass music fans and crowd-surfed. Mayor Ness, who was initially hesitant to participate, dove in the crowd after witnessing Mayor Rybak's brave display of solidarity with Twin Cities music fans. Photographer Erik Hess captured the moment below.


Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio to stay up-to-date on all the concert happenings in the Twin Cities!

- Erica Rivera

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

The Brick Gets Bashed


Word on the street is that The Brick, the latest music club to open in the Warehouse District of Minneapolis, is a bust. We didn't attend the packed-to-the-max inaugural event last night that featured Jane's Addiction, but you'd have to be living a social media-free existence not to notice the amount of criticism the new venue drew on Facebook and Twitter. The bash fest continues today on The Current's, City Pages', and Minnesota Daily's websites, as well as the LOL/OMG blog. Our favorite critique, however, comes from The Tangential, where local writer Jay Gabler proposes "Ten Things AEG Could Have Done To Make Minneapolis Music Fans Hate The Brick Even More".

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more local music news.

- Erica Rivera

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Howler vs. 4onthefloor: Whose Side Are You On?

Note: The views expressed in this post are my own and do not necessarily represent those of "Live From Studio 5!", KFAI, or any other human being on the planet...though I wager some of you will agree.

I was hoping to avoid chiming in on the recent Howler uproar, but it's gotten so out of control at this point, I figured, why not add another voice to the cacophony?

The beef, in brief: Jordan Gatesmith, the frontman of Howler, a band so stereotypically hipster it was bound to be snatched up and mass-produced by a record label, recently trashed his hometown music scene in an interview with The Guardian.


"They'll build up these bands -- no offense, Minneapolis -- that I will hate. I will completely hate. But they'll like sell out the biggest room in Minneapolis," Gatesmith said, citing 4onthefloor, a stomping blues band that includes four members who play four kick drums in 4-4 time, as an example of what's wrong with the Twin Cities' music scene.

 "They're like Mumford & Sons crap," Gatesmith continued.  "I'm sorry. But that will get huge. They'll do like crazy big venues, then everyone will be like, 'Yeah! 4onthefloor is the band to watch! Everyone get ready!' And then, of course, nothing will happen outside of Minneapolis for them. And I think a lot of bands that kind of do the punk rock thing, or kind of the underground thing are the really good acts that will just never see the light of day. So I have a hard time with Minneapolis."

I don't necessarily disagree with Gatesmith. Minnesotans love their hometown bands, gag-inducing gimmicks and all. We find a favorite and over-expose it to the point where you wish the band would self-destruct already. Personally, I thought 4onthefloor was a bore from the get-go. They're a band made to sell beer. No surprise, of course, that they quickly partnered with Pabst after walking away with first place at last year's "Are You Local?" competition.


I'll stand by the Facebook statement I made that night as the rowdy winners took the stage: "There are artists and there are entertainers." 4onthefloor is the latter. That's not necessarily a bad thing; we all need a frothy sonic escape sometimes, but let's just be honest about what a band is. Vita.mn's "Are You Local?" competition, like its City Pages counterpart, "Picked2Click", is not about talent anyway; they are popularity contests. The trouble with attaching so much clout to those titles is that our musical lust is momentary, and Twin Citians have an especially short attention span. Our preferences are as fickle as the weather forecasts; wait a minute and they will change. And why shouldn't they? This is the land of 10,000 musicians! And in a pond this itty bitty, it doesn't take much to look like a big fish.

Perhaps the only thing that riled me up about Gatesmith's statements is the idea that Howler is any better--or any different--from 4onthefloor. Both bands received excessive media attention and fan adoration long before they'd proven themselves worthy. Both bands are one-trick ponies. I'd dare say that 4onthefloor's horse is already dead; Howler's will soon follow. A year from now, no one will remember either of these outfits beyond this petty argument about which of them is more authentic.

If I must choose sides, well...I won't. I don't particularly like the music either buzz band is producing. I certainly wouldn't pay to have their tunes on my iPod or to see either act live. The one thing 4onthefloor does have going for it is a good-hearted frontman, Gabriel Douglas, who is a known supporter of, and collaborator with, musicians in the Twin Cities.

Douglas has donated his talents and time to Rock the Cause, an organization that can do no wrong as far as I'm concerned. And if we must bring this bickering down to a superficial level, Douglas is as passionate about hoodies as I am, while Gatesmith seems like the kind of guy who'd willingly wear eyeliner and skinny jeans, two things I've successfully eschewed for my 30 years on this planet. Based on those personality traits alone, I'm siding with Douglas.  (He also grows impressive facial hair.  Let's see you do that, Howler!)

Thankfully, what Howler boasts in ego, 4onthefloor has in humor. Here's their musical retort to the controversy, a cover of another bloated-beyond-belief band, Mumford & Sons.



If I know anything about the Twin Cities' scene, it's that you don't want to piss off the wrong person. Enjoy your record label asphyxiation and Brit love, Howler.  Heck, you may as well relocate. Minnesotans may be "nice", but they can hold a grudge like nobody's business. Consider your bridges here burned.

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more unsolicited opinions on what's hot and what's not on the local music scene!

- Erica Rivera

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Midwestern Musicians Win Big At 2012 Grammys

The Twin Cities indie music scene has reason to celebrate after the 2012 Grammy Awards were handed out tonight in Los Angeles.

Dan Wilson, the Minnesotan musician best known for the '90s pop rock band Semisonic, was thanked by Adele during her acceptance speech for Best Pop Solo Performance.  Wilson co-wrote Adele's heart-wrenching "Someone Like You" ballad.  Wilson later joined Adele onstage for her acceptance of the Album of the Year award.


Also on the brag-worthy award-winner list is Bon Iver, the auto-tuned effort of Justin Vernon.  While technically a cheesehead, Vernon's roots to the Minnesotan music scene run deep; there's nary a hipster in the Twin Cities who doesn't know someone who knows someone who knows him.  Bon Iver took home awards for both Best Alternative Album and Best New Artist (despite the group beginning, in earnest, with the release of For Emma, Forever Ago in 2008).


Here's hoping Vernon stays humble despite the accolades and doesn't become an overplayed outfit like the once endearing and now annoying 2011 Grammy Award winners, Mumford & Sons.  Let the record show that the Twin Cities loved you first!

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio to ensure you don't wait for the Grammys to decide what constitutes good music.

- Erica Rivera

Monday, February 6, 2012

Voting Open For Vita.mn's "Are You Local?" Competition


Voting is now open for Vita.mn's "Are You Local?" battle of the bands! Through Feb. 13, music lovers can choose their favorite Twin Cities acts online. The top three finalists will play a SXSW sendoff showcase at First Avenue on March 2 with Peter Wolf Crier, Astronautalis, the Blind Shake, Pink Mink, and Fort Wilson Riot.

Last year, "Live From Studio 5!" guests Pictures of Then made the top three.

PICTURES OF THEN at "Are You Local?" 2011

Perhaps our latest interviewees The Farewell Circuit will come out ahead, too?

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more amazing local tunes.

- Erica Rivera

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Bon Iver Plays Saturday Night Live

Though technically not "local," many on the Twin Cities scene consider Bon Iver's Eau Claire roots to be close enough to consider him one of our own. With humble Midwestern beginnings, an almost too-cliché-to-be-true "lonely man in a log cabin" recording story, and a dramatic rise to fame that includes multiple magazine cover stories, a collaboration with Kanye West, and four Grammy nominations this year, there's hardly a hipster heart string Justin Vernon hasn't pulled. Vernon doesn't seem to have let celebrity go to his head (yet?) as evidenced by his recent claim that "Rock n' roll should not be decided by people that have that job. Rock n' roll should be the fucking people with guitars around their backs." Far from a sell-out, Vernon may just be indie music's biggest hero.

This video is from his appearance last night on Saturday Night Live.

- Erica Rivera



Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more of the best local up-and-comers.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

A Musician On A Mission: 100 Videos, 100 Days


David LeDuc, bass player for local indie rockers (and 2010 "Live From Studio 5!" guests) Pictures of Then, has a new project in the works: 100 videos in 100 days.

"It's really just a kick in the pants to myself," LeDuc says. "It's to get myself in a better groove of writing music everyday, or at least learning a new cover."

The focus of the project is mostly musical, though there will be content included from PofT tours, The Less Complex in studio, and other fantastic randomness that LeDuc is known for.


LeDuc starts the clock today. See what unfolds on his YouTube channel, and visit him online at his official website and bandcamp page.

Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.

- Erica Rivera