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No Exit / Summer’s Ready When You Are

Jandek_04_26

Jandek
Boston Institute of Contemporary Arts
Friday, June 8

The Masons
Blizzard of ‘78

Jake’s
Providence, RI
Saturday, June 9

Anticipation nearly derailed my enjoyment of last Friday’s Jandek show at Boston’s swank new ICA. It’s hard to enjoy a performance on its own merits when there are so many years of built-up tension between the mysterious press-shy performer and his notoriously obsessive fans —it’s bound to create an certain degree of tension that is possibly disproportionate to the performer’s abilities. The collective anticipatory tension in the sold-out hall was practically stifling. (Or was it simply that the ICA didn’t think Jandek fans deserved AC?)

To be honest, I didn’t quite know what to expect. Now that I’ve seen him, he remains as absolutely mysterious as ever. He emerged unannounced from stage-right in what amounted to a costume —a mask?— of black from head to toe. Not a word of idle chatter —not that I expected a boisterous “Hello, Boston!” or anything, but no concessions whatsoever were made to the audience. The performance —dubbed “The House of Despair” by one attendee— simply began, with very little fanfare and absolutely no flashiness.

The show that followed was two very solid hours of Jandek and his pick-up ensemble —saxophonist and lyricon-player Jorrit Dijkstra, trumpeter Greg Kelley, and percussionist Eli Keszler— presenting what amounted to a very intense performance. While Jandek —I mean, the representative— did not once acknowledge the audience and retained an almost impassive demeanor throughout— the tonally mercurial lyrics were vividly emotional, leavened occasionally by flashes of wry humor. Throughout, there were non sequiturs and closed doors and despair so dark it veered dangerously close to self-parody.

At the same time, the Steinian repetitions and the pervasive sense of isolation and unease built and built and built towards something genuinely cathartic. By the hour and a half mark, I had grown used to the sometimes halting, sometimes over-the-top rhythm and had become transfixed by the odd spectacle. Some time past that, I was ready for it to be over. (A combination of the content being emotionally draining and a certain performative sameness setting in.) And then, as suddenly as he emerged from the darkness, he returned to it, without a hello or a goodbye.

Which seemed very, very appropriate, all things considered.

I must say here that his ensemble —who’d apparently only met him that afternoon for a lone rehearsal— were absolutely phenomenal. Although they’d never played together as a group before, they certainly sounded incredibly vital and cohesive. The drummer was especially fun to watch. He was almost a one-man band —he had extra cymbals, triangles, a small xylophone, and all sorts of neat instruments to add depth to his already-powerful drumming. Mostly he was just really fun to watch —as a player he was athletic but not leaden, with all sorts of showy but not arrogant tricks in his arsenal.

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Saturday night I headed out to local haunt Jake’s to see local supergroup the Masons play their record release party with Blizzard of ’78.

The Masons were great fun, in that summery, slightly Noo-Wavey Cars-y way, all big choruses and surftastic keyboards. Tonight the ever-shifting Masons line-up (songwriter Kraig Jordan being the lone constant) included such local luminaries as Dave Narcizo (Throwing Muses) played drums, Don Sanders (Medicine Ball) on guitar, and Jeffrey Underhill (Velvet Crush/Honeybunch) on keyboards.

It was the kind of big-hearted, big-chorused music that you can sing along to even if you’ve never heard it before —it’s immediate, and joyously accessible without being inane. While we’ve all come to expect drearily lowest-common-denominator entertainment during the summer months, the Masons have crafted an effortlessly summery set of songs without condescending to the listener’s intelligence.

Blizzard of ’78 were, as always, rowdy, glammy fun. Singer Pip sported a slightly amended look this time around: between the 70s-drug-dealer-trying-to-go-legit facial hair and the frilly rented tux shirt and frayed vintage two-piece, I had to wonder if Grinderman were holding open auditions. (Maybe Sclavunos was busy with any one of his million-and-one other groups.) Contemplation of dubious costume choices went out the window as soon as he opened his mouth. Day-um, he’s got star quality. He sure as hell can sing —for all the group’s aspirations towards a bluesy, slightly seedy glamour (like a cross between JXBX and the Bad Seeds), there’s something almost angelic about his voice that elevates the occasionally verging-on-generic material.

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The all-knowing, all-seeing Jandek page. | Buy Jandek records. (And there are a LOT of them!) | The Masons open for the Schemers (!!!) at Lupo’s on June 29th. You can buy their albums from 75 or Less Records.

PHOTO BY JOSHUA HARRIS FROM JANDEK’S 4•26 SHOW.

Don’t hang up

JordanCrane

A few of my favorite things right this minute…

+ A new (yes, new interview with Prolapse. A lively and informative read.

+ Sparks in Stone Lanes.
I stumbled across former Wire editor Mark Sinker’s blog the other day. I’m in the midst of reading this essay about the personal politics of punk and how they relate to one’s own shifting boundaries. Lots of interesting tangents vis à vis Jaime Hernandez’ Love and Rockets characters Maggie & Hopey. While defining Punk seems like an impossible task, I appreciate Mark’s deeply personal rather than po-facedly rock-crit take on the issue: “Punk’s freedoms are absolute, if only in this sense: No-one else’s rules apply to you.” He poignantly sums up Maggie & Hopey’s ever-shifting, immensely complex relationship thusly: it “exalts their battle to discover new ways of being adult without betraying their adolescent choices.”

+ I’ve written about delightful New York City-based group La Laque here before. Although they’ve released a split EP with PAS/CAL, they have yet to offer up their oft-promised first solo release. Their MySpace page assures us that it’s imminent; here’s a re-recorded version of “Le Weekend” from that upcoming EP. It’s a delicious re-working of what had been a slightly mournful song (thanks to violin and a downbeat arrangement). Now it’s bright and punchy, with buoyant Farfisa and tribal drums, while retaining a necessary hint of darkness reminiscent of No Wavers Rosa Yemen (is it that slightly desperate tone in singer Devery’s voice?). Not sure how I feel about the surfy guitar solo at the song’s close, but it’s growing on me.

+ The new Electrelane single, “To The East”, is fast becoming one of my favorite songs of theirs. The video —a delicately washed-out, near-sepia-toned affair with filigrees of color animated over the top— is both celebration and elegy. In that way it reminds me stylistically of AC Marias’ haunting “One of Our Girls (Has Gone Missing)” —all flickers of love and loss. Someone’s dancing out of your life forever…

Verity Susman’s solo side project, Vera November, has a MySpace page . She’s recorded a cover of Arthur Russell’s “Our Last Night Together”, and it’ll finally be out this summer on Rough Trade as part of a Russell tribute album. The songs sound incredibly lush, especially “Give Me A Sign.” You can see snippets of Verity performing the song as part of this trailer for the upcoming Arthur Russell documentary.

+ Today’s music purchases:

Experimental Dental School, 2 1/2 Creatures [Cochon, 2006]

Broadcast, The Future Crayon [WARP, 2006]

***
La Laque on MySpace | For more information on Prolapse please visit Graham’s most excellent Prolapse page. | Electrelane | More info on the Arthur Russell movie.

MP3La Laque, “Le Weekend” (re-recorded version from their upcoming EP

MP3Electrelane, “To The East”

IMAGE BY JORDAN CRANE

(al)chemical disorder

pleasureforever_crop

Not as dark or as angular as Chrome, or as blatantly Birthday Party-worshiping as the Bellmer Dolls, sadly-defunct San Francisco trio Pleasure Forever whipped up a thrillingly tense amalgam of lush, theatrical glam (thanks to bouyant underpinnings of piano and violin) and guitar-lashed despair. (It helped that, song after song, Reznor-alike singer Andrew Rothbard brought himself to an exhaustive edge of hysteria.) The music, too, was desperate and haunted, constantly threatening a kind of emotional overload. With music this endlessly taut and lyrics this overheated and vulnerable, it’s a bit mystifying why the band didn’t find a greater success than they did. I once saw them open for Savage Republic, and they tore the roof off the place. They’re long overdue for reassessment.

The band released two Sub Pop albums —a self-titled disc in 2001 and Alter in 2003— and called it quits some time after. The reconvened this year to finish off a between-albums covers EP, which has now been appended with four additional rare cuts and released as Bodies Need Rest [Conspiracy].

I’m off to Montreal for the weekend to see the Nihilist Spasm Band (“spasm band” being a term for a group that makes their own instruments —Neptune and Turkish Delight would also qualify) play theSuoni Per Il Popolo (Sounds of the People) Festival (which also includes performances by David Kristian, the Ex + Rhythm Activism, Charalambides, and the afromentioned Jandek) on Saturday the 16th. Jon Whitney (Brainwashed) DJs between sets. Don’t miss it if you’re in the area!

Alas, that means I’m going to miss Jeffrey Alexander’s birthday party on Friday night at downtown Providence’s own AS220. Venerable psych-folk duo Charalambides headline a bill that also includes Bronhard/Going/Public, GHQ, Blue Shift, Work/Death, Madagascar and Siege Engine. Go on down Friday night and toast Jeffrey on me.

Conspiracy Records | Pleasure Forever | Pleasure Forever on MySpace | Nihilist Spasm Band | Secret Eye

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MP3Pleasure Forever, “The Bars” (from Bodies Need Rest)

MP3Pleasure Forever, “This Is The Zodiac Speaking” (from their final Sub Pop album,Alter)

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