Author: andrea Page 40 of 71

Unrepentant Anglophile, a music obsessive with a fetish for luxuriously packaged objects, and an armchair traveler.

everyone wore white

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Ambivalence is a difficult emotion to deal with in pop music. Yet, there it is in the title of D.C.-based songwriter Carol Bui’s second album, Everyone Wore White [54 40 Or Fight! Records].

To a Western eye, white is, traditionally, the color of purity, and of celebration, new beginnings (brides wear white, for instance). From an Eastern standpoint, white is the color of mourning, of loss. But, to Bui —who is of Vietnamese descent— “white” is culturally fraught, speaking as it does —sociologically, culturally, and racially— of the aspirational desire to assimilate, to “pass” into the dominant culture, and in doing so, to mourn one’s own cultural identification.

The resulting album touches on such complex socio-political themes with a marked lack of earnestness —Bui’s elegiac songs are candid, yes, but play out with the complicated, ambiguous shading of narrative. The album draws a great deal of power from Bui’s poetic yet plainspoken lyrics, expressive vocals, and her unerring ability as a guitarist to pit delicacy against dissonance. The resulting album is a watercolor wash done in bright, saturated hues; multi-faceted, it is as much bluesy lament as it is pure pissed-off fury, as much catharsis as elegy.

Bui was kind enough to answer some questions for me last week, and her answers were thoughtful, candid, and funny. She’s in the middle of an extensive tour for the album —check the tour dates at the end of the interview to see if she might be playing your town. She’ll be in Providence tonight at AS220 —she’s on first. (I think. Whatever you do, arrive early!)

A fair number of your songs deal, either directly or obliquely, with your Asian heritage, either slyly (“Hyphen-American” from This Is How I Recover), or poetically (drawing on traditional songs and arrangements, for instance). You also deal quite frankly with sexual politics, utilizing narrative to give voice to differing perspectives. I imagine that was also your intent with the cover art. The juxtaposition of the elegaic title (Everyone Wore White) with the woman’s pose and inscrutable expression hold a great deal of tension. It’s a frozen, morally charged moment, all but asking viewers to supply a narrative to go along with it. Why did you pick this image, and, in doing so, what was your intent?

Carol: Honestly, I saw this painting on the artist’s website and just thought it was so beautiful and provocative, I had to have it on my album. It wasn’t until later, when I had to actually stop and think about how to name the album, when I saw how it all fit so well with the music. The title came from a lyric in “Rockville.”You’re quick to see that it’s about both celebration and loss. Most people I presented the title to were like ‘um, explain, please?”

White is the color of mourning over in most parts of the east… but I also meant for it to be about race, too. I wanted to be white as a kid. And whether my family knew it or not, they did, too. When I was younger, we used to go to Vietnam every summer to visit family. And I remember it being so weird that people loved how light my skin was. Everyone wanted lighter skin over there. My aunts even wore some kind of face cream in this little green tub that supposedly lightened the skin. Fair skin was important. So was the number of creases you have on each eyelid, which kind of translates to how western you look. I remember watching Hong Kong epic movies with my mom and she’d comment on the actresses, how one was ugly because she had only ‘mot mi’, or one crease on the eyelid…how another was beautiful because her eyes were bigger, skin more fair, and so on.

The title of your new album, Everyone Wore White, evokes both celebration and loss. The music bears this out too, playing out with a kind-of defiant, scorched-earth delicacy. Were these songs conceived as a song-cycle? What was the process of like?

Another question I don’t know how to answer! I didn’t really have one idea or theme for the album as I wrote the songs. Some of them took months to piece together. Others took maybe a day. My songwriting process has always been kind of instinctive —not so objective, which I think really frustrated some past band mates. I typically start off with a chord progression or ‘riff’ and then build on top of it. I’ll play those parts over and over again for months sometimes before I know what to do with them next. Vocal melodies tend to come easily. I like to sing stuff that kind of bounces off the guitar a little. And I almost always hear drums as I go along and my guitar playing usually reflects that. It’s a very physical thing…how it feels to sing and play the songs pretty much dictate how they ultimately come out, I guess.

When did you first start writing your own songs? How has your process changed over time?

I started writing songs when I was 15 or 16. I think it was when I first started listening to Hole and Sonic Youth, because I loved their music, but they also made it seem very doable…that the rules aren’t quite so rigid. My process has changed over time somewhat as I’m starting to write less out of ego and more out of …I don’t know!

Songwriting is an incredibly personal form of expression, but one’s personal style is inevitably shaped by formative influences. What songwriters or bands would you count as your inspirations? Then and now? Do you remember the first sounds that obsessed you, or that shifted your perspective?

My mother used to play these Khanh Ly tapes to help me sleep. I slept in the same room as my parents for a long time growing up, more than most people I know. I remember feeling so sad because some of Mom’s favorite songs were about death as a result of war and being displaced, and I kept thinking to myself “I want to die before my parents die. I wouldn’t know what to do without them!” I obsessed over that thought all the time. I was always afraid of losing them for some reason. And Khanh Ly —she’s a very convincing singer. I think my favorite singers have always been those with voices that are more expressive, dynamic, and “chesty”…not as in breasts, heh —but the push seems to come from their chest or heart rather than the sinuses or nasal passages. Like Stevie Nicks. Jeff Buckley. PJ Harvey. Kathleen Hanna. Kat Bjelland. Robert Plant. Maura Davis. Billie Holiday. Ella Fitzgerald.

You make music in Washington , D.C. There’s this clichéd idea of the great big extended Dischord family, but obviously it’s a lot more complicated than that! How would you describe the scene there?

I don’t know, I don’t feel like there’s one singular ‘scene’ or community that stands out to me as the fingerprint of DC right now. Musically speaking, there’s TONS going on, especially since those new venues (Rock and Roll Hotel, The Red and Black) opened up on H street. We’ve got a country, swamp-americana thing going on with bands like Revival, These United States, Shortstack, and Mikal Evans. They’re all terrific. We also have this new wave of traditional pop-rock and roll thing with Georgie James, Middle Distance Runner, Greenland… They’re all getting a lot of attention.

Dischord is still very active and thriving —with the new Evens record, the Farraquet reunion… Beauty Pill resuming their touring and whatnot. That new Aquarium album that came out last fall is really effing catchy. And there will always be a diy/punk/hardcore/noise scene among the younger bands, mostly supported by Exotic Fever and the local universities. I was just asking Katy Otto of Exotic Fever what she thought because I had absolutely no idea how to answer your question at first, and she said a few things that I think hit the nail on the head. She describes it as “self-started”, “risk-taking, and “ever-shifting.” I guess throughout the city, those are the constants that we’ve all inherited from the Dischord legacy. More people are booking their own tours, self-releasing and producing their own records —and so on.

Favorite guilty pleasure (musical or otherwise)?

I don’t feel guilty about any of it!! Just kidding, that’s a total lie…I haven’t learned to be THAT self-assured just yet. Heh. I LOVE Beyonce’s “B’day”. There’s this song called “Suga Mama” that’s just amazing —so many hooks on that album! I used to be apologetic about liking the Riverdancesoundtracks. Some of that stuff is just gorgeous. There’s this song called “Macedonian Morning” that’s on the second one…I think? I dunno, I love it. The strings are so curvy and beautiful.

Something that inspired you today. It could be an overheard conversation, a piece of music or a passage from a book…

I read “This Band Could Be Your Life” several months ago, and there was one Kim Gordon quote from the Sonic Youth chapter that really sticks to me…it was something like, “people pay money to see musicians believe in themselves.”

What do you do when you’re not making music? And, if you didn’t have music as an outlet, what do you think you’d do instead?

I’m a web programmer by trade. If it weren’t for music, I don’t know what I’d do. I’m really obsessed with cinnamon raisin peanut butter from the Peanut Butter Company. I’d probably just eat that all day!

TOUR DATES:

9/24/2007: AS220, 115 Empire Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903 – $6, 8 PM
9/25/2007: Night Owl Records, 72 Cottage Street, East Hampton, MA, 8 PM
9/26/07: The Skinny Pancake, 60 Lake St., Burlington, VT
9/27/2007: Valentine’s,17 New Scotland Ave, Albany, New York
9/28/2007: Geno’s Rock Club, 625 Congress St., Portland, Maine
9/29/07: Philadelphia, PA
09/30/2007: 449 Room, 449 South Broad St., Trenton, New Jersey
10/1/2007: Washington, DC | 10.2 Chapel Hill, NC | 10.3 Greensboro, NC | 10.4 Knoxville, TN | 10.6 Murfreesboro, TN | 10.9 Austin, TX | 10.10 OKC | 10.11 Tulsa, OK | 10.12 St. Louis, MO | 10.13 Lawrence, KS | 10.15 Madison, WI | 10.16 Bloomington, IN | 10.17 Indianapolis, IN | 10.18 Chicago, IL | 10.19 Traverse City, MI | 10.20 Canton, OH | 10.25 Wilmington, DE | 10.26 Harrisonburg, VA | 10.27 New York, NY | 11.2 Durham, NC | 11.3 Williamsburg, VA

Carol Bui [Myspace]| Carol Bui [Web Site]] | 54 40 or Fight! [Record Label]

MP3Carol Bui, “The Year After” (from Everyone Wore White, 2007)

MP3Carol Bui, “This Is How I Recover” (from This Is How I Recover, 2004)

PHOTO BY SHERVIN LAINEZ

Dial

Dial168kcoverJPEG400x400pixels

In a perfect world, Jacqui Ham’s work would need no introduction. She’d be deservedly renowned for her unconventional, yet cathartic, style of guitar playing. And not just for her guitar, but for her singing, a profoundly post-rock glossolalia that draws as much on jazz and blues influences as on the punk notion of throwing out the rule book and starting from scratch. Jacqui, a guiding force in primal No Wavers Ut , assembled Dial Dial in the early 90s with Rob Smith (ex-God, guitars, drum machine), Dom Weeks (Furious Pig, Het) on bass & synthesizer, and Lou Ciccotelli (Eardrum) on drums.

Dial’s music is characterized by a rawness, both emotional and musical, that lends it a furious immediacy. This tendency towards assaultive guitar din can give way at the most unexpected moments to surprising delicacy, as on the transfixing “Psychotrance,” a lustrous, cracked-mirror mantra in which Jacqui’s world-weary, jolie-laide coo fights against the fractured tide, her vocals spectral and brutal in equal measure. Exploiting tape hiss and the pitted, low-end patina of electrical interference, what is initially apocalyptically skuzzy-sounding becomes, via droning repetition and haunted keening, nearly sepulchral by song’s end. It’s a perfect entry point into Dial’s new album,168k [Cede], a blurred-out, ghost-in-the-machine howl that never once lets up.

168k is their third album, but it has a clarity and spaciousness that mark it as a move forward. While the group’s previous album, 2000’s Distance Runner, was at times far too rubbed raw and abstracted, 168k is a more incisive listen. Limning the fertile territory between abrasive noise and oddly meditative controlled chaos, the album even flirts—in its own fractured way— with pop song-form, be it on the aforementioned “Psychotrance,” the surging, incantatory “Soda Wars,” or the hardscrabble, coiled “Hey Condition.” Jacqui’s densely imagistic lyrics are sung with fitful, rhythmic tartness; her tempest-tossed wail rides the waves of contorted noise with assurance.

168k’s songs have an immensity of scale and space; they’re constructed with precision and move with monumental, glacial force. At times heavily claustrophobic —all looming intensity and livid emotion—the bruised landscape gradually gives way to something softer, less scorched-earth. But that’s no admission of complacency —simply a reminder that, if you listen carefully enough, there is beauty to be found here.

Currently, 168k is available at Other Music, Ear Wax in Williamsburg (Brooklyn), Revolver Carrot Top , and CDBaby.com. If you have any trouble getting a hold of it, let me know ASAP.

For previous albums, try Crucial Blast.

MP3Dial, “Little Eye” (from Infraction, 1997)

MP3Dial, “Psychotrance” (from 168k, 2007)

Bits & Bobs

amazing street art, brooklyn

So many shows, so little time.

Neptune is playing this Friday, September 14 with Numbers and Parts and Labor at the Milky Way Lounge in JP. Presumably they’ll play some new stuff off of their upcoming record for Table of the Elements.

• Saturday 9/15, 3-7PM, we have the Somerville Rock & Roll Yard Sale in Union Sq., Somerville, MA. Vendors include: Teenbeat, Vicky Wheeler (Autotonic), What Cheer? Antiques, Elisa Archer (Samba Goods), and much, much more. Visit their blog for more info. (Rain date is Sunday, 9/16.)

• Back in Providence, local art space Firehouse 13 has an amazing lineup of Temple of Bon Matin, Gutterhelmet, a self-described “power trio of two” consisting of Alec Redfearn and Matt McLaren from the Eyesores, Xerxes, and Crude Hill, a new duo comprised of visual artist extraordinaire Leif Goldberg and former Urdog songstress Erin Rosenthal. Chris Moon from Last Visible Dog will round out the craziness with some visual accompaniment. Firehouse 13 is near the Broad and Elmwood split at 41 Central St., Providence.

Looking ahead to next week:

• In anticipaton of the impending Plastic People of the Universe show on Sept. 26th, AS220 will offer a FREE screening of a 2001 Czech documentary about the group on Sept. 19th at 9:30 PM. This is one band who know —far better than most— the subversive, revitalizing power of music. Targeted by the Communist regime for their free-thinking, anarchic spirit, the group nevertheless continued to make music, even at great personal cost to themselves. That they made it through to the other side is a testament to their creative spark.

Mission of Burma will be playing on Saturday, September 22nd at Babyhead Decibel in downtown Providence.

Sunday 9/23 they play two shows at Boston’s amazing ICA, one at 4 PM and an evening show at 8PM.Jonathan Kane’s February opens. (And I recommend them quite highly too: Kane was a founding member of the Swans. His own musical output is markedly different: lighter in tone and subject matter (but by no means ethereal), his group specializes in really atmospheric, spacious, percussion-led instrumentals. They’ll pair well with MoB.)

Sunday night, there’s another great show at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts: Gruff Rhys from Super Furry Animals and Ulrich Schnauss [Domino].

I’ll be seeing MoB at 4 and zipping over to the MFA, hopefully just in time for Ulrich’s set!

Mission of Burma Home | Neptune on Myspace

MP3Neptune, “The Lighthouse” (from the LP Patterns)

MP3Mission of Burma, “Youth of America” (Live)

AMAZING STREET ART, BROOKLYN, 2007. PHOTO BY ANDREA.

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