25/1/10

The National - New Album and Spring Tour



I just got this from the The National distribution list.
I thought probably one or two might be interested...

MM

-----

Hi Everyone!

We have exciting news for you this morning. We are very pleased to announce the first tour dates in support of our new album in April, May and June.

The as of yet untitled follow-up to Boxer will be released worldwide in May on 4AD (specific date TBA). The shows begin at the Big Ears festival in Knoxville, Tennessee on March 28th followed in April by two special shows April 22nd and 23rd at the National in Richmond, VA. We will then play Royal Albert Hall in London on May 6th, Le Zenith in Paris with PAVEMENT on May 7, and Astra in Berlin on May 9 before starting a North American tour in Los Angeles at the Wiltern on May 22nd. Ramona Falls will be opening our US shows on the west coast.

There are limited pre-sales starting tomorrow morning and we encourage mailing list members to get tickets early.

The US pre-sales begin at 10am local time on Tuesday, Jan. 26 and run through 10pm Thursday, Jan. 28. The London & Berlin pre-sales start at 10 am local time on Wednesday Jan. 27 and run through 10 pm Thursday, Jan. 28.

We will announce support acts for the tour and have more specific news about the new album in the coming weeks. All dates are listed below.

See you soon ...

26-28 MARCH: KNOXVILLE, TN
BIG EARS FESTIVAL 2010 / TENNESSEE THEATRE
Tickets on-sale now:
http://www.ticketfly.com/purchase/event/3065

22 APRIL: RICHMOND, VA
THE NATIONAL
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/0100442F9DDB5528

23 APRIL: RICHMOND, VA
THE NATIONAL
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/0100442FAE716864

06 MAY: LONDON, UK
ROYAL ALBERT HALL
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.co.uk/promo/3v6xmt?camefrom=CFC_UK_LINA_TN_FC270110

07 MAY: PARIS, FRANCE
LE ZENITH w/ PAVEMENT
Tickets on-sale now / FNAC:
http://www.fnacspectacles.com/place-spectacle/manifestation/Pop-rock-Folk-PAVEMENT-ZPPAV.htm
Tickets on-sale now / Digitick:
http://www.digitick.com/ext/billetterie2/index.php4?site=radical&p=11&idRep=422355

09 MAY: BERLIN, GERMANY
ASTRA
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketonline.com/de/de/production/21099-The+National/

22 MAY: LOS ANGELES, CA
THE WILTERN
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.livenation.com/edp/eventId/417298

23 MAY: SAN DIEGO, CA
SPRECKELS THEATRE
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.americanmary.com/tour.php

27 MAY: OAKLAND, CA
FOX THEATRE
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/1C00442BAD786B92

02 JUNE: BOSTON, MA
HOUSE OF BLUES
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.americanmary.com/tour.php

05 JUNE: PHILADELPHIA, PA
ELECTRIC FACTORY
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/02004435CD005CB9

06 JUNE: WASHINGTON, DC
DAR CONSTITUTION HALL
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/15004435C0226C84

08 JUNE: TORONTO, CANADA
MASSEY HALL
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.americanmary.com/tour.php

16 JUNE: NEW YORK, NY
RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL
Pre-Sale Tickets:
http://www.ticketmaster.com/event/1D004435F3B759C

--

thanks for your support!
/the national

12/1/10

"Work", the new album by the Shout Out Louds


After almost three years, The Shout Out Louds are coming back with a brand new album. Personally, I really like this swedish band, mainly because their extremely effective manner in which they remind me that there is still a tiny part of me that enjoys POP music. Their catchy tunes and uncompromising lyrics always leave me with a fresh feeling, allowing me to simply move on and almost acting as a palate cleanser.

"Walls" is the first single from their new album "Work", scheduled to be released on February 23, 2010. The album was recorded in Seattle in collaboration with Phil Ek (Fleet Foxes, The Shins, Modest Mouse).

The band recently started with the planning of their US tour, which will be followed by a grand collection of European sites. Luckily, this morning they announced a date for Philly, scheduled for May 3, 2009 at the First Unitarian Church. As expected, I already got my ticket...=)

I leave you with two videos, one from their first single Walls, and another from Fall Hard, a song I like very much, which was recently displayed at NPR.

Enjoy,

MM



Shout Out Louds - Fall Hard from Merge Records on Vimeo.



Fall Hard at NPR's All Songs Considered

10/1/10

Fanfarlo, at NPR's Tiny desk concert

A beautiful 3-piece set from Fanfarlo, directly from NPR's Tiny desk concert series. Below the video from the show on December 17, 2009, where the band played a couple of songs from Reservoir and a cover from a Christmas Song. I love this band and I can't wait to see them live again.

Enjoy

MM

6/1/10

The Editors / The Antlers – Feb 20, 2010 at The Trocadero

The renowned British band from Birmingham “The Editors” (aka Pilot, The Pride and Snowfield) will come to Philadelphia on February 20, 2010. Their visit is part of their world tour promoting their third album entitled “In This Light and On This Evening”, released in October of last year. The band has selected The Trocadero Theatre as the venue for their stop at Philly.

The Editors have been perceived by some as one of the most influential British bands of the decade along with Arctic Monkeys and Interpol, achieving platinum level in their first two albums. “In This Light and On This Evening” seems to display even more the darkness of the band’s true soul, showing without a doubt progression in their approach to music since some of their previous relevant songs like Munich.





The icing on the cake for this evening will be without a doubt the startling opening act, to be provided in fact by one of MUSICAL SOULMATE’s choices in 2009, The Antlers…(yes, it is correct, they are the opening band!)...

In the end, this evening brings a lot of expectations and for some of us a live show from The Antlers would be more than enough for an amazing night. However, let’s wait to see what The Editors have to say about that.

I’ll keep you guys posted.

MM

2/1/10

The Decade in Music

A few days in 2010 and a whole new decade has already begun. Time to look back and reflect. However, I do not feel myself comfortable or apt enough to provide a concise and objective review of what happened in music during the past 10 years. My exploration into new, original and independent music took part only on the second half of the decade. As such, I remain vigilant and I try to enjoy the spectator chair of multiple reviews and well-written pieces of what we should all consider relevant or determinant music, of the now passed first decade of the century.

Thinking ahead I wish to be in a better position in 10 years to describe everything we are about to enjoy, starting now. In the mean time, I share with you the following review from the New York Times of what they considered relevant from 2000-2009.

Enjoy,

MM




Naughtie Behavior | The Decade in Music
By ANDREW GENSLER | DECEMBER 31, 2009

Just as there is not yet a consensus on what to call the first 10 years of the 21st century — the aughts, the naughties, the 00s — we can’t quite decide how to term this decade’s musical contributions: the Beyoncés, the Age of Letting Simon, Paula and Randy Choose Our Music, the Golden Age of Brooklyn Hipster Cred, the Period of Major Labels Imploding, the Crazy-All-The-Time-For-Gnarls-Barkley’s-“Crazy”-Time, the ’80s? So we’re just going to go with…all of them. Here, our Top 10 music trends of the aughts. Or whatever.

We Became Musical Zombies Suddenly, everywhere you looked, zoned-out pedestrians were sauntering about in their own sonic bubble with white wires dangling from their heads and an entire music library in their pockets. Public social interaction all but ceased and was replaced by incredulity over the unbelievably apropos song choices of the iPod’s “shuffle” mode. More important, it spelled the death of the CD tower.

It Was the ’80s All Over Again Williamsburg in the 2000s looked like a Jane Fonda workout video, with 20-somethings wearing brightly colored leggings, asymmetrical haircuts and off-the-shoulder Flock of Seagulls T-shirts (and those were the boys!). Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart” blared from more jukeboxes in the aughts than the previous decades combined. Interpol, The Faint, Soviet and Yacht channeled New Order and Depeche Mode; post-punk groups like Gang of Four rubbed off on the Rapture, Bloc Party, Franz Ferdinand and Clinic.

Hip-Hop, R.I.P. Jay-Z became the chief executive of Def Jam Records and bought a pro basketball franchise; P Diddy got his own show, on TV and Broadway; 50 Cent signed a nine-figure deal with Vitamin Water; and nobody self-promoted better than Snoop Dogg (see his G.P.S. unit and his bid to become the next Oprah). Maybe Nas and the music critics Simon Reynolds and Sasha Frere Jones are right: hip-hop really is dead.

New York Became the Indie Music Epicenter Like Athens, Ga., in the ’80s and Seattle in the ’90s, New York — and especially Brooklyn — in the 2000s became the epicenter of an exploding independent music scene. It began with the Strokes and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs and continued unabated throughout the decade, with other nationally recognized acts like TV On the Radio, The National, MGMT, The Dirty Projectors, Grizzly Bear, Animal Collective, LCD Soundsystem, Yeasayer, Vampire Weekend and many, many others.

We All Got Reality-Checked If you were mildly telegenic and could do a few trills and glissandos then you, too, could be on American Idol. That said, Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood’s platinum records were impressive; Ruben Studdard, Fantasia Barrino, Jordin Sparks and Taylor Hicks not so much. More telling was the success of the also-rans: the Oscar-anointed Jennifer Hudson, the mom-approved Clay Aiken and the glitzy gay provocateur Adam Lambert — all more winning than the winners. And thank goodness for Susan Boyle, who proved you could rack up sales with just a lovely voice and a YouTube following.

There Was No Shame in the “Sell-Out” Game Unlike those achingly principled ’90s grunge bands, artists in the aughts didn’t think twice about getting paid. Feist moved iPods, the Go Team sold Hondas, Of Montreal directed you to Outback Steakhouse, the Shins hawked Big Macs, and, more recently, that awesome Phoenix track made stodgy old Cadillacs seem rocking. Even Sonic Youth, the erstwhile defenders of artistic integrity, seemed not an ounce embarrassed by playing “Star Power” on a recent episode of “Gossip Girl.”

The British Came Back Maybe it was their early exposure to Lulu or Dusty, but whatever the case, the newest crop of British songbirds made some of the most compelling music of the decade. Smart and sassy (and sometimes self-destructive), angelic-voiced artists like Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen, Kate Nash, Adele, Florence Welch (of Florence & the Machines), Mica Levy (of Micachu and the Shapes), Natasha Khan (Bat for Lashes), Romy Madley Croft (The xx) and, of course, Antony, melted our stolid Yankee hearts.

YouTube Got Us All Humming More often than not, music reached the masses via e-mail from friends, family and co-workers with the dubious subject heading, “You Just Gotta See This!” Whether Filipino prisoners performing “Thriller,” the choreographed wedding entrance to Chris Brown’s “Forever,” Tay Zonday’s bizarre “Chocolate Rain,” getting Rick-rolled by Rick Astley for the hundredth time, or Andy Samberg and Justin Timberlake’s unprintable Saturday Night Live song — the fact that the entire globe seemed to be singing along simultaneously somehow brought us closer.

When They Were 64: The Baby Boomers Refused to Exit Gracefully As much as we all love and adore Bob Dylan (68), Paul McCartney (67), the Stones (Mick and Keith, both 66), Neil Young (64), Bruce Springsteen (60) and the Who (Pete is 64; Roger is 65), wouldn’t it be better to remember them as they were? Instead, we get weird Christmas albums and endless reunion tours. Yawn.

Bands Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Web Some of the most interesting emerging bands weren’t waiting around for record deals — they were wildposting tracks to the Web and drawing attention from sites like Pitchfork, Stereogum, Brooklyn Vegan, MBV Music, Fact Magazine, Prefix, Fluxblog and RCRDLBL, which in turn let you and me become our own A&R guy. Even not-at-all-emerging bands like Radiohead embraced the digital space and made the record companies take notice. What made it all possible? A little thing called an MP3, bringing the decade full circle.