Tag Archive: Alela Diane


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Rating: 10.0/10 (2 votes cast)

I have a friend that’s soon going to be a famous actress.  This is not a lie.  I woke up yesterday morning to find “Paranormal Activity” as the top Twitter trending topic.  See, I have friends in high places, and soon you’ll have to recognize that this is just how I roll.  I eat fine cheeses and fly around in helicopters on the weekend.  Brad Pitt sends me Christmas cards.  Occasionally, I email the Olsen Twins about good music; I do this for fun and because people like me.

Not really.  But I’m absolutely stoked that my friend, Ashley, appears on the short cast list of Paranormal Activity, supposedly one of the scariest movies ever made.  I’ve posted the trailer below, and if it doesn’t get your ass off the couch and to your nearest movie theater, check your pulse immediately.  I graduated high school with Ashley, and she’s been working her ass off since college trying to break in and the current flurry of buzz surrounding this movie just may be her ticket.  A couple of years ago, she landed a “reality TV” spot on a show about party planning.  I flew out to LA and actually appeared for six seconds on the TV show.  While this is my six second claim to fame, I certainly wish Ashley (who’s dating my best pal, Aaron) all the luck in the world.  Originally, the movie wasn’t set for viewing in every city, but the viral marketing has exploded.  It should be playing in a theater near you.  By the time you’ve read this post, I will have seen the movie.  From what I understand, it’s so creepy that you’re probably reading this post as I cower in my room, afraid to open the door.  If you’ve seen it, hit the comment section.  I’d love to hear your thoughts.  Here’s the trailer for it…

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On the music front, I’d like to use this space to atone for some music blogger sins lately.  I feel a little dirty every time I write our Radio Dick post, particularly because I blast the ether with 10-15 tracks with very little discussion about the music I’m peddling.  The main reason for this is that it’s a weekend post, and we try to keep things smooth and simple as the week draws to a close.  The flip side of this, however, is I don’t often write about the worth and merit of the tracks we’re posting on Sundays.  Throughout the week, we hit some in-depth reviews, but this day is usually reserved for simply handing you free tunes of emerging bands.  In this effort, I always feel like I screw over the record stores.  When the dust settles, you probably should be spending your cash at the record store.  I’ll go out on a limb and assume that a majority of our readership has a turntable.  If you’re digging deep for obscure indie music, it’s no secret at this point that vinyl is the best way to listen to any of the music we post.  So I’d like use this space to showcase two of our favorite local stores that just so happen to do business on the same eastside Cleveland street.

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Music Saves and Blue Arrow are excellent local record stores and the people are great, to boot.  Melanie and Kevin at Music Saves are on top of things, and a quick browse through their website shows the soft and gentle nature of their enterprise.  I grow tired of pompous and abrasive “smarter than thou” record store owners.   You know who I’m talking about, right?  The snobby and aloof musical genius that judges every purchase you make, taking every chance they get to show you their prowess in uncovering emerging music.  Melanie and Kevin steer widely clear of this mentality and their shop is more homey and inviting.  The interior is warmly decorated, “Vinyl” the cat marches around you while you shop, and both owners make it a point to promote the Cleveland Scene.  Check out their website HERE and if you’re in the area, make it a point to stop by Waterloo Road in Collinwood and say hello.

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Blue Arrow Records is a kickass vintage vinyl store a few doors down from Music Saves.  To tell a family secret, I’ve not been able to shop here as much as I’ve liked due to my schedule, but from what I can gather, they’ve been doing well and the several visits I have been able to make have been great.  Just like Music Saves, Blue Arrow is a husband/wife enterprise, focusing on collecting and reselling quality vintage vinyl.  They run the gamut here from obscure records (we actually managed to see a copy of Trent Reznor’s first band’s LP) to the staples of any decent vinyl collection.  The prices are insanely affordable and it’s a great place to catch an in-store as well.  An elevated stage sits in the back and they host DJ sessions and in-stores whenever possible.  The point of emphasis with Blue Arrow, however, is the unique floor design.  The entire floor is made up of old LP covers, lacquered over and polished.  No expense was spared on the floor, and it has to be the most unique and coolest idea I’ve seen in a record store.  Check out more photos through their website, HERE.

So as you listen to today’s big ass list of music below, make it a point to support your local independent record stores.  Even though I get a lot of music demos handed to me free over here, I make it a point to pick up anything I love on vinyl.  I try my best to give back to the industry and you should, too.  Today’s list is a mixture of the remix and the upcoming.  Oddly, the tracks on this list I keep playing are not new, particularly “Mouth Breather” from The Jesus Lizard.  Remastering and re-releasing is popular for this iconic band lately and as tracks get released, I keep playing them like crazy.  I hit up the excellent Canadian music blog, Chromewaves, the other day to catch a great live version of White Rabbits’ “Percussion Gun” and posted it here.  I don’t think he’ll mind.  Check out the blog while you have the chance.  We’ve also got a new Royksopp remix that’s fresh out of the birth canal and sure to get you moving this morning.  Enjoy the list and have a great week of work, folks.  Good times.

Molina & Johnson – Twenty Cycles To The Ground

Tape Deck Mountain – Bat Lies

Sleep Whale – We Were Dripping

White Rabbits – Percussion Gun (Live On Myspace Transmissions)

Slaraffenland – Meet and Greet

T.H. White – Fantasy Pictures

Princeton – Sadie and Andy

Ganglians – Blood on the Sand

Of Montreal – Brush Brush Brush

Alela Diane feat. Alina Hardin – Bowling Green

The Jesus Lizard – Mouth Breather

Bear in Heaven – Dust Cloud

Mando Diao – Dance With Somebody (The Hood Internet Remix) Feat. GZA and Cadence Weapon

Royksopp – Tricky Tricky (Feat. Fever Ray) (Salem’s Remix)

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Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)

headlessheroesIf you live somewhere other than the United States or Canada, you’ve probably already listened to the Headless Heroes.  However, for our North American readers, May 19 is a day to circle, as that’s when you can grab a copy of Silence of Love, a top-drawer collection of covers featuring the piercingly lovely voice of Citizen Dick favorite Alela Diane.  The band is a collection of musicians assembled by Eddie Bezalel expressly to record a collection of covers of his choosing.  Interestingly, the album doesn’t sound a lot like Diane’s solo work.  While she works, largely, in the folk idiom, producing acoustic driven nuggets of song-writing gold, this album features a more expansive sound.  It’s not wildly divergent from her solo work (there aren’t any high energy dance tracks here), but it does incorporate a broader aural pallate.  It’s a testament to Diane’s talent that she can perform at a high level with both her own folkier material and with a bunch of covers that feature a bigger sound.  This kind of artistic flexibility implies good things for her future (and ours, as listeners).

The album, strangely, doesn’t play like a covers album either.  The songs are, for the most part, intimidatingly obscure and/or manipulated and re-interpreted to a degree that they sound like originals.  To the first point, you’re some kind of super-duper music snob if you even want to pretend that you’ve got any Vashti Bunyan albums on your shelf, so hearing Headless Heroes cover her (amazing) song “Here Before” isn’t going to be an experience that has a lot of sonic touchstones; this is probably going to be the case for songs from I am Kloot and Gentle Soul as well.  Headless Heroes are likely to be the only band you’ve ever heard sing these songs and, because of this and the level of intelligence and talent they bring, they own them.   To the second point, nobody has the brass or the lack of foresight to try and make “Just Like Honey” sound like the Jesus and Mary Chain.  Why bother?  That’s three minutes of perfection that’s impossible to top.  When Headless Heroes cover that track, the fuzz is gone, replaced by a killer slide guitar and the brooding vocals are gone, replaced by Diane’s crystalline pipes.  It’s still a cover, but it is distinctly unique from the original; rather than tackle a classic head on, Headless Heroes subvert the song enough that a non-attentive listener might not pick it out immediately as a re-imagined canonical track. (The video, below, has creepy peacocks, so if you’ve got some sort of bird phobia, tread carefully.  Also, for those of you with the Jesus and Mary Chain original on the brain, the gender inversion of the vocals at the end is killer and may well be the best thing about the cover.  Last item in this parenthetical, I promise:  Full disclosure, this is the song on the album that’s stuck on repeat for me, so if I’ve spent too much time gushing over it, you’ll just have to deal with it.)

That reworking motif works for a majority of the album, possibly because many of the songs aren’t immediately recognizable.  The one spot where this approach falters a bit is on the cover of Daniel Johnston’s “True Love Will Find You in the End.”  (I’m not certain that “falters” is the right word here, but it comes closest to hitting my feelings.   I don’t want to sound pejorative; the song’s still a delight, but its tone strikes me as misplaced.) The original version of that song never played as hopefully to me as the Headless Heroes’ version  does.  When Johnston sang it, it sounded like the clarion call of defeat, his warbling voice in front of a spare and oddly, almost indefinably off acoustic guitar.  His faltering delivery always focused on “the catch” not on the optimism, for me.  That song makes me want to cry every time I hear it.  It’s powerful and affecting.  The Headless Heroes version is more technically astute and Diane crushes the vocals, but it sounds really sunshiny to me.  Diane, as a vocalist, implies that you can step out into the light, where I’m not sure Johnston did.  All this to say that it sounds weird to me.  In a vacuum, you’d love the Headless Heroes version unconditionally, the shimmering guitar solo in the middle and the beauty of Diane’s voice guarantee that, but with the context of the original, it’s tough.  Headless Heroes’ cover is below and the original is (or should be) in your ipod.  You make the call.  (We’d welcome some discussion on this issue in the comments.  I’m willing to admit that I might be over-analyzing this.)

It’s been a big year already for cover albums.  Phosphorescent’s To Willie, Condo Fucks’ Fuck Book and this Headless Heroes album all take others’ material and attempt to do something unique with it.  I’d argue that this project is the most ambitioius and succesful.  The To Wilie thing, while intriguing, never really gained a lot of traction here at Citizen Dick and the Condo Fucks album, while amazing and endearing (and catchy as hell), is a bit one-dimensional when placed next to The Silence of Love.  Given the prowess of Diane, the quality of the covers chosen and the high degree of uniqueness of the covers themselves, this is clearly an album worth tracking down.

“True Love Will Find You In The End” – Headless Heroes

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Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)

There are a near infinite number of ways to stumble across new music.  Thinking about my favorite artists often makes me think about the first time I heard them.  I caught Ani DiFranco’s “Little Plastic Castle” on the radio on a Saturday morning, driving home from the laundromat.  The first time I really listened to The Who, I caught a ride home from my summer job with a kid who had Meaty, Beaty, Big and Bouncy in his cassette player.  I’d never heard of Medeski, Martin and Wood before I saw them open up for Morphine at Cleveland’s venerable Agora. No doubt you, dear reader, have as many little anecdotes for your own favorite acts.

Today’s twin bill album review, at first blush, might seem wildly inappropriate.  We’ve jammed a sensitive, acoustic singer-songwriter in with a collection of garage rock covers.  But, for us, Alela Diane and the Condo Fucks epitomize two of the classic ways to find new music: going to rock shows and hanging out with cool kids.  Alela Diane opened for Blitzen Trapper in Detroit last weekend.  We caught her and were hypnotized by her talent.  Condo Fucks, the erstwhile incarnation of Yo La Tengo, are the cool kids, showing us why it’s important to pay attention to Small Faces and Richard Hell.  Alela Diane is the hand of fate, guiding music lovers to rock shows; Condo Fucks are the tape deck, cranking out badass tunes that you should have heard before, but were too busy listening to ELO to notice.

rt-488Our first exposure to Diane’s music, as mentioned above, was the live show.  As such, the impressions many of the songs made at the show carried over as we listened to the album for the first time.  Happily, there’s no drop-off from the live stuff; the songs were powerful in person and that translates on record.  Alela Diane’s songs are little nuggets of folk perfection; her vocals are both  emotive and rangy, shifting from a smooth calming tone to a high warble as the content demands.  The instrumentation is lushly acoustic, with a diverse drum sound and broad spectrum of stringed instruments, including, among other things, occasional banjo and mandolin and  a prominently featured (and well-used) violin.

There are several standouts on the album.  “White as Diamonds” is a showcase for both Diane’s voice and that violin we mentioned above.  This song has an intensely homey feel; it could have been recorded in an Oregonian log cabin’s great room in front of a roaring fire, with snow visible through a hand-blown glass window and a hunting dog sleeping on a homespun rug.  The harmonies behind Diane’s voice are pitch perfect and the drumming is more up-front than the folk tag might suggest (we’re not saying that it’s Topper Headon back there, but it’s not just sissified brush strokes on a cymbal either).

Another clear highlight is the duet with Michael Hurley, “Age Old Blue.”  This was another point where the live act informed our ears; Diane’s father is a member of the touring band and I assumed that it was her father singing on this song before I read the liner notes.  It’s, essentially, a song about family, beginning with Diane’s crystalline voice intoning, “The sea beneath the cliff is the blue in my mother’s eyes that came from the blue in her mother’s eyes, thrown on down the line by our family who worked the fields on borrowed land above the ocean.”  This is when Hurley dives in, his grizzled voice contrasting perfectly with Dianes’s.  It’s an almost uncomfortably personal song, and it’s right in your ear; where some of the other songs have that living room sound, this one sounds like you’re standing in a closet with the band.  It’s a can’t miss song.

The album spreads out a bit as well; “The Ocean” (which killed live) hinges on a distinctly native American drum sound with a tweedly mandolin in the front.  “The Alder Tree” brings back that mandolin but almost moves in a march tempo, with what sounds to be a wood block in the chorus.  These tracks show that Alela Diane has more than one gear.  There’s not an electronic re-mix on the album, but it’s not a fifty minutes of monotony either.  Alela Diane comes with a fervent recommendation from us.  If you’re going to see Blitzen Trapper on their remaining dates, show up early and catch a treat.  We’ll bet that you’re walking out of the show with a copy of To Be Still tucked under your arm.

Buy Alela Diane at insound!

“White as Diamonds” – Alela Diane

I feel a bit guilty for outing Condo Fucks as Yo La Tengo. (In fact, I’m worried that Matador is going to send over a team of indie rock ninjas to take out Citizen Dick’s servers and erase all record of both me and this review.  Matador, if you’re reading, I thought it would be cool because Brooklyn Vegan spilled the beans first; if you’re sending an elite strike team anywhere, it should be to them.)  My ethical concerns to the side, this album’s pedigree doesn’t have any bearing on my love for it; its dirty garage feel is cool as hell and works independently from any feeling you might have about the alt-gods that recorded it.  I’m in no position to assess the motives of Yo La Tengo, but I think the nom de guerre here might be to play up that notion of garage geniuses toiling in obscurity; it’s nice to imagine three dudes you don’t know banging out Beach Boys b-sides in one of their mom’s basements.  Condo Fucks are those guys.

Yo La Tengo’s encyclopedic repertoire of cover songs, highlighted on their annual visits to WFMU and on Murdering the Classics,  is legendary and this collection of covers does not disappoint.  They have a fantastic ear for picking songs that are both neglected by the masses and brilliant.  Be honest.  If I say “The Troggs,” you think “Wild Thing,” not “With a Girl Like You,” which is the song Condo Fucks cover.  I’d not heard the original, but the cover had me scrambling to the internet to find the original.  The background “bah-bah-bah”s, poking out beneath a layer of fuzz are strangely beautiful and the song’s theme of young love is touching.  My modern ears prefer the Condo Fucks’ version, but the importance of the track to modern music is, I think, what the album is trying to emphasize.  How many great (or mediocre) bands have emulated this sound?  How many of them credited The Troggs?

It’s this older brother quality of the album that is a large part of its appeal.  Condo Fucks are dragging the milk crate of records down to the rec room and cranking tunes, helping folks to discover great music.  Further, they’re offering a weird kind of time line of amazing songs and ideas.  Richard Hell and the Voidoids’ “The Kid With the Replaceable Head” follows that Troggs cut and it’s impossible not to hear the similarities.  It might be hard to draw that line if you’re not an honest-to-god rock journalist, but this album gives the average listener that insight.  (I don’t have a degree from Northwestern and I was able to connect the dots, so there you go.)  Even without this second layer of meaning, the songs rock. If you ignored the fact that these were covers, you’d still be grooving on the gritty solo in “Dog Meat” and nodding your head to the stoned surf rock of “Shut Down.”  Granted, it makes it that much more fun to know that those are Flamin’ Groovies and Beach Boys songs, respectively, but Condo Fucks pump enough energy and authenticity into the album that it almost doesn’t matter.

There are eight seconds on this record that epitimoze why it’s so easy to love.  The band launches into the killer riff that starts Clifford T. Ward’s “So Easy Baby,” before someone says, “let’s try that one more time.”  Tape keeps rolling, the band stops and starts right back up, crushing the rest of the song.  This is a record in the most traditional sense, a document of people making music, warts and all.  It’s 33 minutes of stomping fun and I’d wager that it was recorded in  less than a week.  There are no fancy over-dubs here.  Given that, it still sounds great, in the way that a dirty mutt with a flea bitten hide and chewed ears is cute.

We’ve got a track below and underneath that, the Small Faces’ original version.  Listen in whatever order you want, but know that when this album drops on March 10, you’ll be crawling the internet looking for the originals of all these tracks.  Buy this album and reserve an afternoon.

What’cha Gonna Do About It” – Condo Fucks

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We know you’ve been on the edge of your seat, waiting expectantly for Citizen Dick’s first road show, covering Blitzen Trapper from Chicago to Detroit.  We pulled out all the stops on this one, with pictures, commentary, set lists, and even a few words from the Trappers themselves to share with you today.  So sit down, strap in, and prepare to live vicariously through our Blitzen Trapper adventures.

Diamond Jim Reporting from Chicago

If you caught Friday’s entry, you probably already know that I love the Empty Bottle.  I would have been stoked to go there just for the cheap beers and to hang out with Radley (pictured below), the black cat who calls the bar home; so the fact that Blitzen Trapper happened to be playing two shows there on Thursday had me overwhelmed with joy.  For those of you who have not had the pleasure of visiting the Empty Bottle, you should know that it is definitely not your typical concert venue.  It is, however, your typical neighborhood dive bar that just happens to feature some of the best live indie rock shows in Chicago.  As you might imagine, the place is a small, dark, and intimate no-frills type of joint, just the way I like it.  It is so intimate, in fact, that no one in the room could have possibly been more than 30 feet away from the band when Blitzen Trapper took to the small, dimly lit stage, which was packed full with 6 grown men, 4 guitars, 2 keyboards and a drum kit.

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The first set of the night started off with one of my favorite tracks from Furr, “Stolen Shoes & a Rifle,” and took a mellow tone early on with a heavy dose of more material from their most recent album such as “Sleepytime in the Western World” (after which singer Eric Earley reminded the crowd that the first headlining show they ever played was right there at the Empty Bottle just a few years ago), the title track “Furr,” and “Lady on the Water.”  But once the band fired up “Black River Killer,” followed by the hard rocking classic “Murder Babe” from Wild Mountain Nation, the crowd really started to get going and the show took on a new, slightly more intense tone.  From there the set was sprinkled with a mix of old and new material, with the standouts including “Big Black Bird,” “Love U,” and another of my favorites from Furr, “Fire and Fast Bullets.” All in all, it was a very strong and diverse set, closed out with a stellar rendition of the Blitzen Trapper anthem, “Wild Mountain Nation.”  And by the way, I stole the set list.  Check it out below:

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*Although “Devil’s A-Go-Go” is listed here, they did not play it due to time constraints.  Good thing I was able to take in both shows, eh?

After the first set came to an end I was forced out into the cold Chicago night for a bit while the venue prepped for show number two, so I strolled a few doors down to the Blind Robin where I enjoyed a pint of Cleveland’s own Great Lakes Dortmunder Gold and a quick game of Scrabble.  About an hour later, after getting my ass thoroughly kicked at Scrabble, I was back at the Empty Bottle waiting for Blitzen Trapper to take the stage once again.  As soon as I returned I could sense a completely different energy in the bar, and at that point I realized that I was about to experience a completely different show from the one I saw just a few hours earlier.

The late show began just after 11:30pm with a hard and fast rendition of “Fire and Fast Bullets,” followed immediately by an absolutely epic romp through “Saturday Nite” which ended with an outrageous mini-jam session that featured Eric Earley wailing on the electric guitar.  At that point, Eric mentioned to the crowd that they might have gotten a bit “too crazy” (not possible), with drummer Brian Koch reminding us that this is what the band is capable of when they “reach for the stars,” providing some memorable banter for the crowd;  this something that was missing from the first set, likely due to the tight time constraints of the early show.  The next several songs, including “Stolen Shoes & a Rifle,” “Murder Babe,” and “Big Black Bird” maintained a high level of energy and kept the crowd rocking until a small acoustic break midway through.  The acoustic portion of the show featured Eric and Marty on stage alone performing a cover of “Cocaine Blues” and a few other tunes.  When the rest of the band returned they picked up right where they left off, rocking out with “Black River Killer,” “Gold for Bread,” and a handful of others before closing out with a mind-blowing one-two punch of “Devils A-Go-Go” (thankfully they actually played it this time) and “Wild Mountain Nation.”  In this blistering section, the band was able to treat us to a small and stripped down encore that consisted of Eric, Brian, and Marty performing an acoustic cover of Dolly Parton’s hit “9 to 5.”  To wrap this all up, after two complete shows I actually left wanting to hear more; that is when you know you just witnessed a phenomenal performance. And by the way, I stole the set list (picking up on a possible theme here?).  Check it out below:

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Citizens Brian and Kevin Reporting from Detroit

Our journey was a touch different from James’ in that we had to burn through three hours of highway before the show.  Diamond Jim can hop on a train and rock out; we’ve got to trek across Ohio, slog through Detroit construction and sort out where to park in a foreign land.  Happily, we made it to The Magic Stick relatively unscathed, sound in mind and body, but with a speeding ticket from Ohio’s finest in the glovebox.

We pulled into the venue just as the doors opened, our brief detours resulting in strangely ideal timing.  The Magic Stick is in an apparently recently refurbished area of Detroit, with high class eateries rubbing elbows with seedy corner groceries.  The venue itself is in the second floor of what seemed to be a manipulated warehouse, with exposed duct work and high ceilings.  It’s a bit cavernous, longer than it is wide, and the acoustics, depending on one’s position, ranged from eardrum rupturing to pleasant.

(Editor’s note:  Keep this in mind  in the following paragraph:  we’re not moist-pantied fanboys, but we’re also not Kurt Loder, dig?  We’re journalists and fans at the same time) We were doing some generalized milling about before the show and bumped into guitarist Marty Marquis.  We chatted for a minute about the tour and the broader world.  We were worried that the Trappers might be tired after two sets in Chicago and a long night on the road, but Marty assured us that they were fresh and ready to kick out the jams.  Best part of the conversation: Marty’s belief that the Obama administration will mandate kindness from border patrol guards.

Marty also talked up opener Alela Diane and his assessment was spot on.  The quintet, fronted by the winsome Diane, played a nuanced set of countrified blues, with soaring three part harmonies and solid musicianship.  The set struck an emotional chord with the audience when the guitarist was introduced as Alela’s father; his work on the telecaster and mandolin were a clear highlight, but the vocal acrobatics with his daughter were both technically astute and indicative of a genetic love for harmony.  We were not familiar with Alela’s work before the show, so a standout track for us was the cover of “Gold Dust Woman.”  It takes some brass to sing Stevie’s songs, but Alela pulled it off.  At the merch table after the show, she passed along that they love playing those more personal covers.  It made us want to wrangle an invite to a Diane family holiday.  They’ve probably got a violin prodigy cousin squirreled away.  Alela Diane was a perfect opening act and someone to keep and eye on in the future.

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The crowd was well primed for Blitzen Trapper, and they came out of the phonebooth with the cape on, ripping through four blistering cuts before giving anyone a chance to catch a breath.  The night’s second song, “Saturday Nite” is, essentially, a dance song, and it had everyone, even the hipsters, ducking and weaving.  The cap to the opening blast was a deeply freaked out “Sleepytime in the Western World,” which devolved into clomp and clatter before regaining its composure and shuffling to the finish line.  It’s an intricately crafted song and it’s impressive to see the sensibilities transferred live; this delivery of complexity is a trick the Trappers have down pat and one they pulled all night.

The clear reason that the band’s able to get the live show to sound as smart as it does is that all six members are wildly and diversely talented; nobody does one thing.  Each member has a toybox of instruments at their disposal, which they use with vigor and attitude.  For example, Marty plays the big ass farmer cowbell as acutely as he does the ax.  (Another Marty highlight: his declaration after “Lady on the Water” that everyone should buy melodicas and form a “Grand Melodica Army”)  The band’s chameleonic ability to play a vast array of instruments well gives the band a huge sound on stage; it’s as if the twelve hands on stage are fifty.

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The setlist did a solid job delivering both more accessible newer material (the hits, to be succinct) and more raucous and eclectic older material.  “Furr” got everybody to sing along, but only the tuned in were nodding their heads during “Miss Spiritual Tramp.”  A highpoint was the three-song dive into psychedelia of “Gold for Bread,” “Jericho” and “Love U.”  Blitzen Trapper turned up the distortion and hammered through those songs without pause or concession.  It was a thrilling display of power and chops.

As all great things must end, the set closed perfectly with the blistering “Devils A Go-Go” and “Wild Mountain Nation.” (This coincided with the tail end of James’ shows, so  folks in Toronto and beyond should NOT be trying to beat traffic.) In a set that weaved through nearly every song from Furr and half of WMN, it’s a fitting shout-out to their loyal fans to end with the two songs that essentially sparked some of the success they’ve been enjoying.  Interestingly, Marty mentioned in our chat that the last time they played in Detroit, Fleet Foxes opened up for them in the very same venue to a mere 60 intrepid souls.  The 400 fans at Magic Stick tonight, regardless of what songs they came to hear, caught two of the best in the Trapper arsenal at the end of the night.  ”Devil’s” smacked the audience with a palm full of erratic intensity and the guys’ were clearly going for it here.  Maracas, keys, blips, pounding bass lines, punchy guitars and shake your ass rhythm wrecked the audience before “Wild Mountain Nation” gave the couples one last track to smooch to.

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The encore involved a three part harmony and reference to Detroit Rock City.  When we talked to Diamond Jim after the show, we figured the encore was very similar to the second set at Empty Bottle the night before, but it had its own highlights, particularly the crushing “Cracker Went Down” off of their first album.  The pulsing blues jam was a fitting way to wrap up an exhaustive and highly charged 3 concerts-in-24-hours marathon.

In two nights, we got a ton of killer live music.  There’s too much that we love to describe in detail.  When we sat down to write this review, we were a tad overwhelmed.  It’s difficult to pinpoint, at least in the Detroit show, what stood out, because everything was a highlight.  We were lucky enough to catch Blitzen Trapper this past September in Buffalo, NY where they opened for Iron & Wine.  Even in a more calm and stripped down set, it was obvious how hard-working and invested these guys are in their craft.  When standing in these tiny venues watching them rock out, it’s almost as if a dual certainty emerges.  On one hand, the personal anthems and quirkily talented musicianship resonates very well in an intimate environment. However, it’s also obvious that these guys are soaring, enjoying making music and getting the crowds asses to shake.  Make sure you get the chance to see them on this tour, becuause tiny venues may be a thing of the past real soon.  Take a cue from your Dicks and pile into the car if they’re not hitting your home town. (We’re looking at you, Syracuse.)

As we left the show completely satisfied (snagged some free stuff on the slide at the merch table, bought a signed vinyl of Wild Mountain Nation and Alela Diane’s new LP), we had just one little job left to finish.  Not with luck, but with great and dexterous skill, as is the pattern, we stole the set-list.  Check it out below this review.  Also, enjoy a few photos from BOTH shows below, and then click on the link to head over to our Eye Candy page where you can view even more.  With a yawn (we’re tired, dudes),  we leave you with two last thoughts:

If you only take two things away from this adventure, let them be:
1. NEVER miss a Blitzen Trapper show if they come anywhere near your town
2. Citizen Dick ALWAYS gets the setlist.  Always.

setlist

25-plus kick ass pics from our tour diary-Click Here!

Blitzen Trapper – “Gold For Bread”

Buy Blitzen Trapper music at insound!