November 25th, 2009
Clublist Spotlight • Totless Bar0 comments
November 25th, 2009
Primer: Max Tundra0 comments
November 25th, 2009
The Very Foundation Friday, Dec. 4 | The Very Foundation talks about sex, baby—about all the good things and the bad things it could be.0 comments
November 25th, 2009
Morrissey 101 | Loved. Adored. Worshipped. Why is everything coming up Morrissey?0 comments
November 18th, 2009
Clublist Spotlight • A Better ’Stache0 comments
November 18th, 2009
CD Reviews: MarchFourth Marching Band, Curious Hands0 comments
November 18th, 2009
Meth Teeth Sunday, Nov. 22 | Making the best of this bummer called life.0 comments
November 18th, 2009
Primer: Girls0 comments
November 18th, 2009
Sparkle And Fade | The rise and fall of Everclear and The Cherry Poppin’ Daddies.0 comments
November 11th, 2009
CD Review: The Dimes | The King Can Drink the Harbor Dry (Pet Marmoset Records)2 comments
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[August 27th, 2008]
HOT VICTORY,
Self-Titled (Megathon/One Legged Pup)
[DRUM & DRUM] On side A (the “HOT” side) of its new single, Hot Victory stakes its entry into the burgeoning drum & drum genre. Live, it’s Portlanders Caitlin Love and Ben Stoller on mirror-image drum kits with a squall of cassette tape noise and broken toy accoutrements. On record, it’s often one drum set in a big hall, accompanied by hand drums, buckets, found objects and what sounds a lot like the ambient power-tool smorgasbord of a construction site (most likely found sounds from under the venerable Hawthorne Bridge, near Audiocinema, where this EP was cut). By side B’s single long track, “Bungalow,” the pair’s gone completely prehistoric, with the percussion getting deconstructed even further and the ambient sounds seeming more simian by the moment. But part way through the B-side, things change: The glitchy distortion of processed drums creeps in from silence, only to be doubled by a massive reverbed kit and blissed-out, sub-bass synths. It’s a glimpse of just how accessible these skeletons of songs could be—if the artists involved were considering an audience outside of friends and fellow art fags. When making music this purely abstract, and processing it to gorgeous two-tone vinyl, there’s no reason to consider anyone else, really.
PURE COUNTRY GOLD, P.C.G.E.P. (Green Noise)
[PUNKIFIED BLUES] There’s no country to be found on the craftily named P.C.G.E.P. (no doubt a reference to the Butthole Surfers’ infamous PCPEP), but there is plenty of pure, uncut, adrenaline-fueled blues revisionism. The raspy vocals on all these tracks are workmanlike and pushed through vintage mics. The instruments are played and produced perfectly for the sort of high-octane, punk-influenced rock and roll that’s PCG’s bread and butter. These two men (Patrick “Petey” Foss and Jake Welliver) absolutely wail on the guitar and drums, setting up four toe-tapping numbers and knocking them down in under eight minutes. Side A kicks off with “The Boss,” a series of open chords and fast beats the band can’t seem to wrap up fast enough. Next up is “Witchtown,” a swinging blues guitar line that rides over a shuffling drumbeat, just begging for sweaty dancing and spilt beer. If the first track on side A sounds like Buddy Holly as interpreted by John Waters, then side B kicker “Lady Low” conjures the ghost of Elvis and pumps him full of amphetamines (as if he needed more). The closer is a chunky midtempo rocker called “You Got to Bro Up to Bro Down” (a title that peels back the veil of poster-modernism at work here). This one ends with a bit of noodling and feedback that would make Greg Ginn sneer with approval.
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