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Live Review: Javelin's synth and dance rhythms at Portland's @MississippiStud @JavelinJamz http://t.co/gA6siZC2d6
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Featured Artist: Santa Monica surf-pop band Cayucas may be ready to break out with their new LP. @cayucasband http://t.co/7bQbZOIfBD
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Live Review: Synth pop duo Holy Ghost! played a high energy show @theTroubadour. @HolyGhostNYC http://t.co/24Qk3imn0N
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New Song: Here's "Better Days," from former BNB Artist of Wk @EdwardSharpe + the Magnetic Zeros http://t.co/141p8EWLjF On tour; LP: July
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Featured Artist: Cayucas Holy Ghost! Lights Up The Troubadour New Song By Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros Mixtape 23: The Holydrug Couple, Elephant Stone And More Album Review: The Lone Bellow Laura Marling Charms Seattle at The Columbia City Theater Album Review: Savages, Silence Yourself Premiere: Armed With Legs - “Little Sinner” (Video) Hangout-Y’all: A Recap of Alabama’s Beach Festival Hangout Festival Album Review: The Weeks - Dear Bo Jackson Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. Showcases New Material at The El Rey
Featured Artist: Cayucas
Over the past few years, along with electronic music, indie pop bands have found themselves in the unfamiliar position of becoming fixtures on alt rock stations, but also pop radio. Groups like Grouplove - - - READ MORE
Holy Ghost! Lights Up The Troubadour
Monday night’s Holy Ghost! Show at the Troubadour confirmed that in-the-know music listeners could turn literally any venue into a dance party. Even the most hallowed of rock halls in Los Angeles. - - - READ MORE
New Song By Edward Sharpe And The Magnetic Zeros
We're excited to share a new song from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zero! "Better Days" will appear on the band's forthcoming self-titled third studio album out July 23rd via Community Music. - - - READ MORE
Mixtape 23: The Holydrug Couple, Elephant Stone And More
More new bands discovered at APF. Brigit came out digging The Holydrug Couple, who was one of “those new bands that maybe you didn’t come into the festival knowing but came out of loving.” - - - READ MORE
Album Review: The Lone Bellow
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Laura Marling Charms Seattle at The Columbia City Theater
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Album Review: Savages, Silence Yourself
When it comes to Savages’ debut album Silence Yourself only one thing is certain: this is a confrontational piece of music. It’s a smack of spittle to the face; the recoil of a revolver blast; the hang time of - - - READ MORE
Premiere: Armed With Legs - “Little Sinner” (Video)
Jim Vermillion and Nick Krivchenia have been making music together for several years, and on June 11, the duo is releasing its debut, self-titled album, Armed With Legs. To celebrate its release, - - - READ MORE
Hangout-Y’all: A Recap of Alabama’s Beach Festival Hangout Festival
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Album Review: The Weeks - Dear Bo Jackson
The Weeks are a band to watch for. There is much to say about this raucous group of four and their extremely talented surrogate keyboardist Alex Collier who has taken a full forward position on their - - - READ MORE
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. Showcases New Material at The El Rey
Whenever a band uses extensive synths and heavy, yet interesting productions in their sound, there will always be a challenge in trying to get that music to translate well in a live setting. This is one of - - - READ MORE
Javelin And Portland, OR: A Love Story

Javelin And Portland, OR: A Love Story

23 May 2013

Even before Tom Van Buskirk proclaimed Javelin’s love for Portland during the end of their set at Mississippi Studios last week, I felt the...

Tom Van Buskirk of Javelin Talks Boom Boxes, Hi Beams and Familial Telepathy

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20 May 2013

Javelin is Tom Van Buskirk and George Langford, two cousins from Providence, RI who began playing music together in 2004. But unlike many of...

Album Review: The Lone Bellow

Album Review: The Lone Bellow

21 May 2013

  Why yes, I am a mainstream Country enthusiast. I do enjoy a nicely crafted Country-pop collection that barely scratches the surface somewhere between folk,...

Features

Featured Artist: Cayucas

Featured Artist: Cayucas

23 May 2013

Over the past few years, along with electronic music, indie pop bands have found themselves in the unfamiliar position of becoming fixtures on alt rock stations, but also pop radio. Groups like Grouplove, fun. and Passion Pit, have redefined what it means to be a popular band...

Mixtape 23: The Holydrug Couple, Elephant Stone And More

Mixtape 23: The Holydrug Couple, Elephant Stone And More

22 May 2013

More new bands discovered at Austin Psych Fest. Brigit came out digging The Holy Drug Couple, who was one of “those new bands that maybe you didn’t come into the festival knowing but came out of loving.” Kristen was there too, and raved about the effulgent future...

Los Angeles Kicks Off Summer With The Jubilee Music And Arts Festival

Los Angeles Kicks Off Summer With The Jubilee Music And Arts Festival

21 May 2013

  Nothing says summer like outdoor music festivals, and though there are plenty of heavy hitters spanning the country and beyond in the next few months, Los Angeles is celebrating early with the Jubilee Music and Arts Festival - a two-day all-ages event that includes indoor and outdoor...

Premiere: Armed With Legs - “Little Sinner” (Video)

Premiere: Armed With Legs - “Little Sinner” (Video)

19 May 2013

Jim Vermillion and Nick Krivchenia have been making music together for several years, and on June 11, the duo is releasing its debut, self-titled album, Armed With Legs. To celebrate its release, we’re proud to premiere the Seattle-based two-piece’s first official music video for “Little Sinner”. The video documents the evening of...

Featured Artist: The Neighbourhood

Featured Artist: The Neighbourhood

15 May 2013

In a time when the Internet is a kingmaker, it’s hard for a band to come from literally nowhere to land on the airwaves across the globe. But when you’re a band from the farthest stretches of Los Angeles county and have only been together for 18...

Mixtape 22: Warpaint, Pyyramids And More

Mixtape 22: Warpaint, Pyyramids And More

14 May 2013

This week we're revisiting our coverage of the Austin Psych Fest. The first day of the festival Kristen immediately took to some awesome bands between hitting up $1 Lonestars and salt lick BBQ, including the brilliant ladies of Warpaint. Kristen also reviewed Pyyramids’ (the duo of Tim...

Featured artist: Born Ruffians

Featured artist: Born Ruffians

08 May 2013

The varying equation of determining what is a best new band, a rising band or a potential star is often a complex one. But above anything else, the one prerequisite that’s more important than anything else is that band needs to be great and have its brighter...

Of Monsters And Men, Vampire Weekend, Kanye To Close SNL Season

Of Monsters And Men, Vampire Weekend, Kanye To Close SNL Season

03 May 2013

Season 38 of NBC standby Saturday Night Live will finish with a musical flourish after a three-week hiatus.  This Saturday (4), guest host Zach Galifianakis will be joined by Of Monsters and Men.  A week later (11), SNL alum Kristen Wiig hosts musical guests Vampire Weekend.  And...

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Concert Review: Portugal. The Man Takes Over the House of Blues in Anaheim, CA

Written by  Published in Live Reviews Monday, 09 May 2011 10:00

ptm3

This past Saturday night, May 7th, I headed down to the House of Blues in Anaheim to check out Portugal. The Man in concert for the second time.  The first time I saw this strangely wonderful band play was last October at the El Rey, and I was relatively unfamiliar with their stuff.  Now wholly enamored with 2009’s Satanic Satanist, an owner of the majority of their albums (2007’s Church Mouth will by my next endeavor), and excitedly awaiting their next album, In the Mountain In the Cloud, due out this July, I was really excited to see them.

I arrived at Downtown Disney, had to convince myself to not go to Disneyland, and walked through the open street of shops and restaurants, complete with an outdoor stage occupied by a live band playing swing music to a busy dance floor. Along the way, I ran into P.tM’s very bookish and nerd-chic (for lack of a better word) keyboardist, Ryan Neighbors, hanging out with guitarist Cody Votolato (of Blood Brothers fame) from the opening band, Telekinesis. I stopped and said hello as they headed off to grab a cup of coffee. Excited at my fortuitous encounter, I skipped off to the venue.  I walked in to the cool, dark hall and stood on the floor before a big patchwork curtain.  Ads blinked on TVs as I waited, and the crowd around me chattered anxiously.

The music began with the first opener, Unknown Mortal Orchestra. This New Zealand band was relatively boring, to be frank. I noted a total of about 4 people in the audience that seemed to be feeling the set (i.e. dancing, head nodding, cheering).  They had no stage presence and even less energy.  The drummer seriously looked like he hated his life.  His cymbal crashes were so uninspired it was almost comical. The lead singer made no sense to me in his peach orange tunic and short brown bowl cut, and the bassist hid behind a head of white-blonde hair.  They had interesting sounds, just repetitive and unvaried. The vocals were sort of cool—lead singer __’s voice is simultaneously raspy and high pitched.  I imagine these guys would be better on a recording, but in person they were a bore (especially when in anticipation of P.tM).

unknown_mortal_orchestra_2

Unknown Mortal Orchestra. Cheer up drummer, it's not so bad.

The next band to open was Seattle-based trio Telekinesis, who was mercifully more entertaining.  They were high-energy, and their songs were fast-paced, full, and fun. They reminded me of a more indie version of Taking Back Sunday without as strong of vocals. Drummer/singer Michael Benjamin Lerner head-bobbed as he sang like he was cruising to "What is Love" from behind a drum-set with a neon pink and green TK taped on to it and Gumby and Pokey dolls chilling on it.  At one point, guitarist Votolato (who I met before the show) looked like he was literally scribbling on the guitar, producing a pterodactyl-sounding scream to amp up their sound; he certainly stole the show, often walking to the front of the stage and just screaming in some animal rage.  Awesome. Next, Neighbors, the keyboardist from P.tM, joined Telekinesis on stage for a song called “Dirty Thing”, which was cool. But, the crowd, including me, still felt antsy to see the main act.  Overall, I was impressed enough by Telekinesis to pick up an album, so keep an eye out for them more on Bestnewbands.com.

Telekinesis

Telekinesis

Finally, the time arrived to see P.tM.  When the music finally started playing—a burst into “Sleep Forever”, a track that has already been released from their new album—I eagerly awaited the kitschy curtain to pull back.  However, those cruel temptresses from the band played along behind the curtain while a mini-movie played on the TVs around the venue.  Dogs bounced around on screen and all I wanted was to see the band.

Sleep Forever by Portugaltheman

Portugal.-The-Man-In-The-Mountain-In-The-Cloud-Cover-Art-600x545

Portugal. the Man's cover art for the upcoming album In the Mountain In the Cloud (in characterisic P.tM style).

However, as P.tM finished up their first song and headed into “We Got It All” the video developed a story.  I watched a journey by dogsled, a pack of dogs and their owner who I figured out now was John Gourley, and tried to put the pieces together.  Then there were drops of blood and something went wrong and Gourley was trying to figure it out and he seemed stranded and he had a shotgun and was walking in deep snow. I think he was trying to hunt for food but then he was running and then he tripped and set off the gun and shot himself in the head and my hand clapped over my mouth.  Dramatic pause.  The song continued with camera shots as if from beneath him in the snow of him singing while the snow turned red around him.  Then the dogs ate him, while occasional flashes of the same hungry dogs playing with and licking the now-dead character blipped on the screen.  It was morbid but also strangely happy—very P.tM to say the least.  Whew.

ptm2

Portugal. the Man all bathed in blue light and poetic stuff like that.

Finally the curtain opened and the band stood in front of a backdrop of a mutant Mount Rushmore-like display of dripping colors and perverted faces and strange looking things.  Now, let me just explain, I could hardly take notes during this performance because it was so hypnotizing.  Every track was somehow melded together but so distinctly its own living thing. P.tM’s live performances are known for their originality, and this one held up that standard for sure.  Seeing a P.tM concert will never just be a regurgitation of the album—they blend songs, speed up songs, slow down songs, add in the epic-est of epic jam sessions, and almost always succeed in blowing everyone’s mind.  Their songs are so dominating and overpowering and room-filling, but, at the same time, Gourley’s voice is light and eerie and ethereal.  It’s like being afraid to approach the Wizard of Oz—green and all powerful and mystical—but then you’re lured in by an adorable cuddly kitten and you realize it’s not so scary (Ha-hah, METAPHORS!).

ptm1

A rare moment of Portugal. the Man not in shadows.

The visuals of this show were amazing as well.  The lighting was unbelievable, and I always want to thank whoever does the lighting because it can really contribute to and even make or break a show.  For this set, there was haze when haze was due, there were green and red bursts of lasers that you want to reach out and try to touch, there were flat green beams of light that broke over heads of people and guitars, and there were reds and purples and blues and greens and whites and flashes to stimulate your eyes and take you out of reality.  The lighting of the show was also interesting in that the band remained mostly obscured throughout the entirety of the show.  There was never really any direct light on them, and they appeared in silhouettes or in and out of shadows.  The drummer was merely a reflection of cymbals. I, personally, thought this to be intentional and calculated for a mysterious effect; I could see others being annoyed by this though.  I imagine it was done for more of an emphasis on the music than on the band itself. I dig.

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John Gourley welcomes us to: the FUTURE.

Anyways, because there’s no point in trying to describe each song individually—they stand on their own while making a beautiful and cohesive collective—I will list what they played.  After “We Got It All” the played a mixture of “How the Leopard Got its Spots” and “The Home”, “Guns & Dogs”, “Do You”, “Senseless” (off the new album), “The Sun”, “So American” (also off the new album), a more complete version of “The Home”, in which my only note is “SO GOOD”, “The Woods”, “Mornings”, “New Orleans”, one I didn’t know that was sort of a P.tM version of a Marvin Gaye slow jam, “Shade”, “60 Years”, “People Say”, and “AKA M80 The Wolf”.  The encore was a unique, extended version of “And I” that went on for about 10 glorious minutes or so.  It was over too fast.

UPDATE: Thanks to Oliver Johnson via Facebook, I have been informed that the encore was a mix of "Stables & Chairs" and "And I", rather than only "And I".  Thanks for letting me know, Oliver! (P.S. Oliver is a pretty sweet name. Just thought you should know.)

Check out P.tM's "Do You" live at Southpaw in Broolklyn on June 17, 2009 from the band's YouTube Channel.


Catch Portugal. the Man's next show (with Unknown Mortal Orchestra and Telekinesis) on Wednesday, May 11th, at the Black Sheep in Colorado Springs, CO.  Click here for info and tickets.

Here are more upcoming dates:

MAY 11 Colorado Springs, CO The Black Sheep
MAY 12 Fort Collins, CO Aggie Theatre
MAY 13, 14 Denver, CO Bluebird Theater
MAY 17 Kansas City, MO Record Bar
MAY 19 Little Rock, AR Revolution Music Room
MAY 20 Dallas, TX Granada Theater
MAY 21 Houston, TX Fitzgerald's Upstairs
MAY 22 Gulf Shores, AL Hangout Music Festival
MAY 25 Columbus, OH Outland Live
MAY 26 Cleveland, OH House of Blues
MAY 27 Toronto, ON Lee's Palace
MAY 28 Syracuse, NY Westcott Theatre
MAY 29 Danbury, CT Festival Fields @ Western CT State University
MAY 30 Burlington, VT Higher Ground
JUNE 3 New York, NY Webster Hall
JUNE 4 Hunter Mountain, NY Mountain Jam Music Festival
JUNE 7 Pittsburgh, PA Mr. Small's Theatre
JUNE 8 Baltimore, MD Ram's Head Live
JUNE 9 Asheville, NC Orange Peel
JUNE TBD Manchester, TN Bonnaroo
(from BrooklynVegan.com)
Check out their tour schedule from their offical website here.

Photos: All photos used with permission by Musashi Schroeder

Last modified on Tuesday, 19 July 2011 14:10
Claire Gallagher

Claire Gallagher is from Las Vegas, Nevada.  She grew up under blinking signs for Girls, Girls, Girls! and she hummed to the clanky sounds of slot machines in casinos and grocery stores and airports.   She now attends school at UCLA and is becoming very intimately acquainted with the kick-ass music scene Los Angeles so sweetly provides. When Claire is not on the back of a horse or playing with her pet snake, Skittles, she is listening to music, eating orange chicken, or spinning around in her rolly chair.  She is fond of tyrannosaurus rexes, John Steinbeck, and the fleeting feeling of post-concert deafness.  You can check her out on tumblr as well.

Website: kidsincities.tumblr.com Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.