WORDS BRIAN CARROLL

It's June, and the spring music drought is officially over. If you like the Black Keys, or Swans, you've probably already bought those bands' new records and are enjoying them correctly. Instead of telling you what you already know, this month Made reviews three solo releases that are in danger of falling through the cracks in light of all the new music by which we find ourselves surrounded:

PHOTO COURTESY OF ARBUTUS RECORDS

PHOTO COURTESY OF ARBUTUS RECORDS

SEAN NICHOLAS SAVAGE – BERMUDA WATERFALL

Pointing to exciting new signs of life in the recently deceased Chillwave genre, the tenth album from heartful Canadian John Waters clone Sean Nicholas Savage is a cool breeze for a hot summer's day. Eschewing notions of punk as fashion, or even leaving the bedroom, Bermuda Waterfall finds Savage perfecting a homespun mood of sincerity and nostalgic lightness to craft a musical oasis, an admirable and marketable skill worth honing in trying times. Savage sometimes confuses time with place, as if to be transported by nostalgia automatically moves your soul around the globe, but Bermuda Waterfall remains clever, musically sound, loose, and leggy.

Your ears will truly stand at attention upon playback; Savage opens the album bizarrely by channeling Exotica legend Yma Sumac from left-field for one minute before fading out abruptly on the first track, “Boogie Nights.” From there, things get much more accessible, but Savage still embraces an unlikely parade of discarded influences throughout the lounge-y affair. With a particular bent to late Seventies R&B and early Eighties lite-FM, like a four-track Daft Punk on a shoestring budget, nods to Roberta Flack, Joni Mitchell, Steely Dan, Christopher Cross, Lionel Richie, Shuggie Otis, Elton John, Michael Jackson, and even Wham! all pop up in the mix, each subtly pointed toward the Caribbean in their own way.

On Bossa Nova single “Naturally,” Savage delivers some of the closed, percussive synthesizer needed to bring electronic music producers away from the dead-end of sawtooth-based EDM doldrums. Though his sincerity and enthusiasm is occasionally too apparent, with glorious and sweeping falsetto harmonies unselfconsciously drenched over almost every chorus, Savage's wonderfully warm acoustic guitars and Rhodes Electric Pianos stand out as the album's disarming, sunny highlights.

Sean Nicholas Savage has created a relaxing vacation record for people who can't afford to go on a relaxing vacation. The poolside schtick wears a tad thin when it's dialed in too-directly, unveiled, but as I wipe the sweat from my brow in a sweltering apartment, my hat goes off to him for selflessly attempting to reverse global warming (and time itself). You might not play it into the ground, but will enjoy dusting this record off once in a while for years to come when you can't quite put your finger on what it is you want to listen to. On Arbutus Records.

PHOTO COURTESY OF NETTWERK RECORDS

PHOTO COURTESY OF NETTWERK RECORDS

PETER MURPHY - LION

As if aware of precious time running out, Bauhaus and Love & Rockets singer Peter Murphy has abandoned patience and ambitions for pensiveness. With Lion, the studio-centric crooner delivers a testosterone-laden blast of Hard Synth-Rock, as if he's been tracking wounded antelope David Bowie across the Serengeti and is finally ready to pounce for the kill.

Upon his coronation, Murphy never holds back, allowing the listener to feel every crisp beat and guttural vocal roar in the mix as they run for the hills with him to viking Valhalla. The best tracks, like “Low Tar Stars,” “The Ghost of Shokan Lake,” and “Loctaine” still benefit from the Goth flavor Murphy does better than anyone, but as the production frequently strays too far from classic new-wave design, updating samples and synths with their supposed modern day equivalents, things only seem to progress as far as 1994, not 2014. While it's awesome to hear Murphy try to melt faces, he does so strictly on his own, admittedly dated terms.

Over-produced, a term I loathe, is a begrudgingly apt description of this bulging mass of effected guitars, synth, orchestration, and digital drums. Imagine Filter, Rob Zombie, Primal Scream, and Rammstein all played simultaneously and you have a sense of the insane power Murphy is attempting here. The album somehow manages to transcend this excess through the sheer tunefulness of Murphy's actual songwriting, especially when he steps out of attack mode and into rock royalty mode on the flip-side.

Despite the album's impressive ambition and killer energy, you have my permission to feel fully drained by track five, a feeling which the album smartly capitalizes on by letting the reeling dizziness in the wake of its various walls of sound become integral to the drugless psychedelia it creates between outbursts. While listening, I had a hard time flicking this pesky notion that buried underneath the hubris, Murphy was writing like Sea Change-era Beck on some of Lion's enormous and expansive ballads, for whatever that's worth.

Peter Murphy's heavy-handed production gambles will likely pay off with overdue commercial airplay and new respect, especially from the Trans-Siberian Orchestra crowd, but anyone who prefers folk, twee, and cute, organic sentimentality should give this release a wide berth. Recommended for Hard Rock veterans.

PHOTO COURTESY OF WARNER BROS.

PHOTO COURTESY OF WARNER BROS.

DAMON ALBARN – EVERYDAY ROBOTS

Damon Albarn's experience of making a Gorillaz album entirely on iOS devices (The Fall) must have had an effect on his worldview. Forty-five seconds into his fourth --not first, as his label would have you believe-- solo album, he takes a lyrical swipe at smart phones, and you fear you're in for another preachy, hypocritical release about the evils of modern technology. Statements about today's society being programmed and not having enough time to think independently are indeed easy, low-hanging fruits. Especially so when the artists who make them are dependent on the same devices from which they distance themselves to create and spread their music.

It's lucky, then, that the album quickly turns about-face to embrace technology and finds Albarn filling almost every track with odd chirrups and squeaks, giving an experience not-too-dissimilar from riding on a slow amusement park ride featuring animatronic songbirds desperately in need of a little WD-40. These strange background noises and how they interact with lilting acoustic guitar patterns are the album's architectural strong point. Albarn can crank out effective, lightly heartbroken ballads like nobody else, so he does this almost exclusively here.

The title track, “Everyday Robots,” is a curious, serviceable, beautiful earworm, but not a hit.   “Mr. Tembo” is a self-derivative single that flatly combines the gospel and African vibes of late-era Blur to unsurprising, lackluster results. Maybe you've heard snippets of this album, found it predictable, and are wondering where the truly unique songs are hiding. At the tracklist's midpoint, starting with “Parakeet,” the same eerie dread and downright weirdness Blur delivered on their classic William Orbit-helmed 13 slowly begin to creep toward the spotlight. By the album's close, everything starts sounding a lot more comfortable, genuine, exploratory, and, well, interesting. Half creative and half skippably dull, Albarn's new one is recommended on a track-by-track basis, if you have the time to sort it out.  

Posted
AuthorMade Editor

WORDS  Brian Carroll

This month in MADE, Brian Carroll gets an opportunity to talk with Ethan Kaplan, Senior Vice President of Live Nation and co-founder of Live Nation Labs. Ethan worked his way up from running the most popular fan site for rock band R.E.M. (becoming close friends with that band) to the position of record executive at the band’s label, Warner Bros., before making the move to Live Nation, the world’s largest music promotion and ticketing company. He joins us in advance of an upcoming lecture and talk at the Cloverdale Playhouse on February 25th about the current state and future of the music industry.

So, tell me, just how screwed ARE bands that don’t have an internet presence?
Uh, you’re not a band, basically. I know zero bands that don’t have an internet presence.
You can’t really be a functioning, performing entity known as a band without one at this point. It is kind of the only outlet left, besides just playing in front of people. So, there may be bands of convenience that just play in front of people, but if you’re serious about making money from your art, its kind of a prerequisite.

Can you tell us a little bit about Live Nation Labs and their mission in a nutshell?
Live Nation Labs is basically an internal startup to Live Nation. Live Nation is the largest concert promoter in the world. We also own Ticketmaster, making us one of the ten biggest e-commerce sites in the world, and we have an artist management company. We’re a division that sits alongside all those. We’re responsible for Livenation.com and Live Nation Mobile in the US and Canada. Our aim when we started was to really take a technology-focused approach to solving business problems, so we’re very engineering-focused. We operate like a startup with the support of a big company. We tackle problems in the way a startup would: we try to learn from our customers, hypothesize, testing-wise, built fast, build fast, and keep extremely nimble. So, we’re entering our third year of existence, I have twenty five people on my team, which is a mixture of mostly engineers, some designers, and some product leads, and we have a lot of stuff to do, but we’ve accomplished a lot since we started it.

Bands with several members may have no problem getting someone in the band to run promotion, but solo artists can often find themselves too busy recording and practicing to give it much thought. Do you think as music promotion becomes easier through apps that we will see a rise in independent solo artists, or is the day of the lone wolf over?
I always say, “Water finds it way.” Solo acts have existed since music has existed, and it’s always been tough to be a singer-songwriter on your own. You’re playing open mics, you’re trying to get shows, you’re hauling your own equipment; It hasn’t changed much. Certainly there’s tools that make it easier.
I have a lot of friends that are well-known (and some not well-known) acts, and they always have a network of people that may not be in a band, but certainly support them. Their wives, their brothers, their sisters, sometimes their parents, and you know, where there’s a will, there is always a way.
If someone is really serious about what they do, they’ll definitely find a way to make it happen. Technology (in terms of apps, sites with different services, and software) has made certain aspects of it easier to do on your own and from the road; certainly outreach is easier with Twitter and things like that, but I don’t think it really makes much of a difference if you’re solo or if you’re in a band. There’s more work being in a band than being alone, just trying to keep a band together, for instance.

If a band or artist had to pick just one currently available app to use for music promotion, which would do you think would be the most effective in reaching an audience that actually cares?
I’d say Twitter at this point. I mean, it’s between Twitter and Facebook, but I always lean towards Twitter because I like their products better.

If music artists had the same access to collated meta-data (such as tags and descriptions) as webmasters and marketing departments do behind the scenes, they could easily determine the least-often-used characteristics of music to generate work unlike anything the world has ever heard. What resources, if any, do you think an artist can currently use to hack music history like this?
Every music service tries to tackle music discovery in meta-data. Beats Music just launched today, and they try to do the “curated playlist” thing, Spotify tries to do it, ARIA tries to do it, ECHOnet is an entire service that a lot of these use to do it. I think being a student of musical history is not predicated on having a service that gets you access to what genres there are. You can easily rabbit-hole yourself into genre explorations in any of the services. You can start tracing the history of punk music from Spotify, for instance, and you can spend all day going through every aspect of punk and new wave music from today back into the Velvet Underground - if you wanted to. It’s not going make you any better of a musician than going to a local record store and asking the clerk, you know, “What record should I buy besides the Velvet Underground’s ‘Loaded’ or ‘...and Nico’?” There’s always ways to explore the history of what you make, but everybody is always informed by whatever sources of history they wanted to be, whether it’s a data service and tool telling you that, your older brother, the record store clerk, or Wikipedia. There’s no real good answer there on how you make and form your influences.

Does devoting one’s career to digital media like apps, as opposed to physical media ever feel risky? Do you ever imagine a time when the screens just won’t turn on anymore?
I’ve been in digital as a career career since I was fifteen. The screens have never got turned off, there’s just more of them. I’m surrounded by [screens.] It used to be there was one computer on my desk, and now I have an iPad, a computer, an iPhone, four computers on various desks, screens everywhere. In my car and when I fly in airplanes there’s a screen, so I tell you, I can’t get away from them at this point. They’re just multiplying. I think that they’re going to just disappear in certain ways, I think technology moves towards zero, or towards transparency, and we’ve seen that happening in the past couple years, with screens getting smaller and more ubiquitous, or screens getting bigger and more ubiquitous. I think technology always is on a path to the infinite in that way, and that’s definitely transpired.

In 2007, an infamous study was conducted by the Spanish National Research council, in which pop music for the past fifty years was mathematically analyzed and scientifically proven to be increasingly less complex and dynamically interesting of late, validating a common complaint of older generations. Does it ever feel like artists are being unfairly rewarded for setting the bar too low?
Umm, no. If you ask any pop music act if they set the bar too low, they would point to their producer or record company for the reason they did so. Attention spans are less, because there’s more options for how to consume stuff, so getting attention above the band is harder. What you’re seeing is just normal organization and optimization, given [the] increasing amounts of output. So, radio starts normalizing because there’s less attention given to it; it has to find the path toward getting attention. It’s like genetic algorithms: the fittest survive. Sadly, in pop music, which is radio-driven for the most part, the fittest is crap, but that’s not a slight on pop music, that’s just what pop music is. Pop has never really changed.
If you trace the history of Top 40 pop, you know, the old Dick Clark kind-of-stuff, the structures are the same, chord progressions are the same, methodologies are the same, nothing’s really changed. Radio is still the primary outlet for pop. Now what constitutes pop has adapted, right? It used to be that Urban music was more of a heavy influence on Top 40, now it’s EDM, Country is bigger than ever right now, but the fundamentals of what makes a good pop song? You can go back to Stax, and Sun Records, and any of the older record labels that did that and it’s not much different. The production for us is less adventurous, certainly, than, you know, Phil Spector, but Dr. Luke and Phil Spector are cut from the same cloth.

In a related question, if we have the technology to analyze the content of music, meaning it is not entirely subjective, is it ever automatically sorted by quality or complexity on these apps, for the benefit of listeners who might feel, like you said, that ninety percent of the music on these apps is not good enough to justify the download, or is that sort of generic judgment best left to the fans rather than algorithms?
I think that’s the human factor of music. There’s no predicting what people are going to react to in music. Your taste is always formed a lot younger than people expect it to be and people are a lot less adventurous than app developers and manufacturers want them to be. Taste is so highly subjective, everyone has a guilty pleasure, and everybody has a fanatical drive towards certain artists, but it’s so individualized that no algorithms can really parse that. I can say, somewhat, that if you like this band, you may like that band, but that’s an informed decision based on me being somewhat of a tastemaker and knowing musical history and knowing why this band sounds so similar. And that’s more me knowing, personally, “Oh, this band listened to that band, so I know they have similarities and since they are similar to each other, fans of these might be similar to each other,” but no algorithm’s going to tell me that; it’s all based on the human factor.

Did you have any mentors in college, and what was it about them that inspired you?
In college, I was in the newspaper industry and I had a lot of mentors in that industry. Sadly, a couple of them are now unemployed, when that industry died, a couple of them just lost their job recently. I worked with newspapers since I was fifteen. On the music side of things, during college I was working with R.E.M. and their manager, Bertis Downs, was one of my big mentors as I worked through college and grad school, and eventually landed at Warner Bros. Records. That entire band is definitely people I look up to, and gave me very good advice along the way in terms of the direction music was taking. There’s no better education in getting into the music business than being friends with one of the biggest acts of the last forty years. That didn’t work if I just favor it, it helped a lot.

If the foundation of a hipster ethic is avoiding the mainstream, does it make it harder for artists to hide in the shadows as a “coveted secret of the hipster elite” when everyone’s music becomes more accessible across the board? What steps have you seen artists resort to to try and reclaim that shrinking underground real estate?

I look at Jack White as an example of an artist that does this very well. Jack White is one of the most successful indie artists, but he’s retained the indie cred by not ever subscribing to one specific label or one specific method of doing anything. He’s unpredictable, and by being unpredictable, he is by nature more indie than any of the hipster bands, the Owl Citys and the Mountain Goats, and the whatevers of the world, even though he’s sold more records by far than any of them. So I think that is what I look at, or the David Byrnes, the Patti Smiths, and the Michael Stipes of the world. They defy a label by refusing to be labeled as hipster. Hipster is mainstream at this point, it’s just like flannel was in the post-Grunge era, and the Seattle sound, when that became co-opted by MTV. So, you know, hipster doesn’t mean anything. There’s artists that live outside of that by just not being defined by it, and that’s always going to be the most inky and individualistic thing that artists can do.

One always tends to feel a little repressed on the internet when a music review or blog post does not allow user comments. Do you feel that the reason that a website like Pitchfork Media disallows comments is that their audience will publicly reject, and therefore socially inspire rejection of their tastemaker status?
I think it’s important that a review stands on the review, and if you’re going to be a curator of records, as Pitchfork tries to be, or Rolling Stone, or NME, or Vox, or Selector, or MOJO, or Q, or any of the other magazines and curators, you have to stand on your own as a critic. Critics shouldn’t necessarily engage like that. I think the act of criticism is, by nature, a solitary act of judgment. It has to stand on its own. I think comments, to a degree, devalue a lot of what criticism has done. And, you know, I’m an advocate of community, and online community, and online identity; I just think there’s a time and a place. It doesn’t mean I like Pitchfork, and certainly as a curator and a critic they fall flat a lot, but I admire the ethos that stands on its own. It doesn’t have to rely on engagement with their audience or acknowledgment of that audience to be.

Two common methods of music promotion employed by record companies is to pay journalists directly to review their releases, and even more subversive, to pay interns disguised as peers to post loads of positive feedback about their new releases on music forums and blogs under multiple accounts. But if you were to inform the average music listener of this, they may not understand why these tactics are unfair, or, more likely, they may just not care. So my question is, if social media pressure to digest buzz wholeheartedly, especially among young people, already topples the sensation of being mislead by an entire industry, is there really any reason for record companies to resort to what is basically dishonesty in the first place?  
I don’t even think they do anymore, at this point. It’s so much easier to get the entire fanbase to mobilize around an act than to try to be subversive.You don’t have to. Mainly in the Sixteen-Indigo days, interns were “astroturfing,” and certainly you did favors for journalists, that’s just good PR. You don’t even need to do that now. You can activate a fanbase, as an army, really easily at this point if you have a good Twitter following or Facebook following, to a dangerous extent. I haven’t been at the label in three years, keep in mind, but when I left we were able to mobilize street teams very easily as authentic promotions.

What was the first ticketed concert you attended?  
Oh god, when I was four, it was Sheena Easton at the Concord Pavilion. After that, it was R.E.M., October 31st, 1995 at the Arrowhead Pond in Anaheim.

What was the last concert you attended?
Devotchka? I think it was Devotcka, band from Boulder. Oh, it was Peter Buck’s wedding; it was “Edwardian Chair.” A bunch of R.E.M. guys, the Decemberists, and a bunch of people played.
It was a rock star wedding, so it counts.

Americans pay four-hundred percent more for internet speed only a third as fast as what is standard in Japan and South Korea, and we currently rate sixteenth worldwide in terms of internet speed. If everything we do now is connected to the internet, why do you think more corporate pressure isn’t being placed on ISP’s to lay the fiber optic networks they were ordered and paid to do by the U.S. Government? Why can’t some large corporation with a vested interest in the infrastructure just sue the pants off of the lazy bastards?
We’re a big, loosely federated nation of states, very large, with no economic incentive to do that. They have much more economic incentive to tariffs than to drive the local stuff, because that’s where the money is. There’s not a lot of money in home Ethernet, unfortunately, and the fiber activation has been a money loser for so long. They don’t have an incentive, one, and also they don’t want net neutrality upheld, two. So, [we have] the ISP’s because we’re a private enterprise state -- we’re not a BBC, or in the UK, where they actually provide that. They want net neutrality struck down, and they’re going to be holding out to a huge degree, as it’s just not in their economic interest. I think a lot of that is going to fall down as the cable model disintegrates. As everything goes IT-based, it’s going to be more incentivized to increase the speeds because they’re going to need it. In most cases it’s the upstream that’s limited, not the downstream.

What once-common genre do you seriously feel is most overdue for a comeback, given today’s music trends?
I’d say Rock music. There’s not a lot of good Rock, sadly.

Describe the penultimate music app of the future, “one app to rule them all,” and why it isn’t here now.
I don’t think there is one, that’s a loaded question. It could be an app that dis-intermediates all the streaming [music] providers and helps you match that, and there are apps like that, but these are all to various degrees of success. It’s a tough one, because I can’t think of any that are universal music apps. It’s an area that remains to be discovered, basically.

Could you let our readers know what apps Live Nation Labs has taken under their wing or developed, and how these apps differ from one another?
So far, the only big production app we have is the Live Nation app. It’s basically a content discovery app, and it’s the first version of it that we relaunched. We have more features added to it, coming soon. And we have other apps pending, for Android, iPad, and potentially some other small apps that we’ll be working on.

Internally, does your company ruffle feathers or scratch heads at Live Nation, or does everyone seem to “get it”?
Well...our approach is definitely sometimes controversial, but for the most part, people seem to get what we’re trying to do. We are disruptive in the sense that we approach things in a way that’s unique, more similar to how a startup would than a fourteen-thousand-person company.

On your company’s blog, one is just as apt to find personal business philosophy as they are marketed information, making it a veritable treasure trove of seemingly UN-corporate wisdom, guided by a genuine desire to show rather than tell. Given the common view on success in business, that it involves selling ideas to solve real problems, how much do you think altruism factors into the success of one startup over another?
I think goodwill with the user base, certainly, is an aspect of the success of a startup, but the reality is that however altruistic a startup is in respecting their users, and respecting their base, it does fail. The main aspect of being a startup is trying to develop a product market. You have to respect your investors, you have to respect your users, and you have to respect yourself, in terms of what you’re doing, and I think honesty on our site – you know, we’re a big company, and where we have to focus is being honest with our users, respecting our users, and not being a big, corporate identity and hiding behind that. So we try to take that same approach of being authentic, of being real, and apply it to how we deal with fans. It’s tough, because we’re a big company and people see us as a big company, but we have to apply that and check ourselves often and not rely on whether we’re the biggest; we have to listen.

In talking to music fans in Alabama, there is a general feeling that we are overlooked, excluded, or given a inferior selection of concerts compared to the rest of the country. Does the music industry know that we use the internet in Alabama, or should we just be glad to have a choice between, say, Jeff Dunham and Toby Keith?
Well, you know, people wrap tours based upon where they can sell tickets, sadly. Auburn is a college town, so you certainly do get people touring through there, I’m sure. Maybe not the biggest acts, but I’m not even sure what the venue picture looks like down there. But, you know, the whole indie music scene has its roots in the American South between Athens and Charlotte, so it’s not like you guys are forgotten about.

What music have you guys been listening to in office lately, and how have you been listening to it?
 When I control it, I always put it on Sirius XM’s Classic Alternative station, which is essentially music, basically, by all the people I know or admire, like the Replacements, R.E.M., Television, Patti Smith, stuff like that. It drives everybody crazy because it’s like “old guy” music, and I’m not old, but it’s considered old guy music because it even predates me. Actually, the best record of the year for me was Joseph Arthur’s new record, ‘The Ballad of Boogie Christ,’ and a caveat: he’s a friend of mine, but the record’s amazing, it’s a double album - concept album - it’s really good. So that’s the new new record I’ve been listening to a lot.

You’ve given talks at SXSW on the future of the music industry. It seems like people in the industry, musicians and label owners, might especially benefit from your inside information in order to stay abreast of what is happening. Can you tell us a little bit about what topics we can expect at the upcoming talk at the Cloverdale Playhouse, and what impact or benefit checking it out might have on the music listener?
The title of the talk is “Nothing Can Save the Music Business But A Musician,” and it’s based upon a post I wrote, actually. The whole point is: there’s a lot of people that talk about how to save the music business, and how to solve music, and a lot of startups try that are often making products they think will fix the music business, or labels think they’re going to fix the music business, but the reality is that it’s a musician that’s going to fix the music business by being a musician. They’ve made music way before people even called it a business. People have been making music since they banged rocks together. Music may even predate human history and civilization. So in the end, startups will come and go, labels will come and go - labels have come and gone – artists will come and go...Music always survives. Music is very resilient and the business around music is actually very resilient; it’s just not resilient in the ways that people want it to be. So, a lot of what I want to talk about is not, just, you know, “I work in the music business,” but I’ve been friends and worked with musicians since I was fifteen, and in front of the biggest musicians in the world [R.E.M.]. I had to live through the latter half of their career arcs and a lot of what I think about music stems from my whole worldview revolving around that one band and all of their friends and the people associated with them. I saw this whole arc play out between 1996 and today, in terms of the “future of music” conversation. It’s been a conversation for fifteen, sixteen years, but in the end nothing much has changed. People still make music, people sell music, and people still like to go to concerts. People are still fans and are willing to lay down in front of a train for their favorite artists. I’m really passionate not about the future of the music business, but what music means and why music means what it means.

Ethan Kaplan will be speaking and taking questions from the audience at the Cloverdale Playhouse on Tuesday, February 25th at 7pm. The event is free, but donations are encouraged.

Posted
AuthorMade Editor

WORDS Brian Carroll

This month, MADE highlights a few of Montgomery's own distinguished, sorely under-served rock bands. While our city lacks agreeable turf for physical music distribution and consignment, these bands have set a name for themselves anyway - based purely upon the strength of their live shows and personalities.

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Eleven Year Old
Prattville's Eleven Year Old plays bad ass garage-tinged surf music. By hitting two of the three or four or ten eternally cool 1950's and '60's guitar styles, their music projects the requisite dedication and focus respected in bands who attempt mining in such rich, classic veins. The youngest band on the list, these guys may look to be just out of high school, but are quietly serious about the music they make and never fail to impress. What sets them apart from last-gen Alabama surf acts like Daikaiju and Man or Astroman? is a welcome lack of kitsch in their presentation. Solid beyond their years, Eleven Year Old is a must-see band, unburdened with caricature, who fire up crowds with a driving and crucially likable sound.

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The Hard Gospel
Another great band from Prattville, this doomy three piece is comprised of veterans of the Montgomery hard rock scene, and sounds a bit like Queens of the Stone Age had a baby with Motorhead. Elements of punk and wicked, sinewy guitar leads provide punctuation to the band's concept: dark, loud, moral ambiguity. The Hard Gospel, as an idea, straddles lines between heaven and hell, and as a band, between classic '70's metal and the modern vestiges of commercial rock. Due to each member's experience working in related styles, they sound remarkably polished for a new band. Having just released their hi-fi debut album, “The Commandments of Morality,” directly on bandcamp to excited local buzz (in The Gump, that means a few bands liking each other's Facebook posts), The Hard Gospel is a band of musician's musicians, but they don't overdo it; The rarity of their live shows makes each one subconsciously feel like a guarded secret of the well-informed, and it works.

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V-8 Death Car
A new, eager to play, good-natured band out in Dothan, V-8 Death Car spends a lot of time in the city of Montgomery, delivering old fashioned major chord rock and roll, nostalgic drive-in movie era branding, and a slight classic punk vibe, which, all combined, has the odd but understandable effect of landing them in '70s power pop territory. Figuring out which direction they will veer, musically, is one of the best things about discovering new bands, but personally I'm hoping that they give in to this "Teenage Kicks"vibe at which their music hints. V-8 Death Car holds the distinction of being the band most likely to appreciate press given to them, having worked hard in the last few months to get our city's deserved attention. We hope to see more recordings from the band in the future, but they're working on it. For now, you can sample their wares on YouTube.

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Reverse Engineer and the Pinebox Sound Label
Ed Kemper Trio veteran Kenny Johnson runs a local record label called Pinebox Sound that hosts several related bands worth checking out including Black Racers, El Chupa Cabras, and Reverse Engineer. Fans of the EK3 will not be surprised by the overarching, maniacal, Brainiac-esque hard-rock style evident on some of these projects, however, Montgomery has a lot of hard rock bands (probably too many) and it's unclear specifically why, other than that our people are angry, which has become obvious nearly to the point of dismissal on the grounds of false dramatics being no less wearing than the false realities against which they rail. That's why its great that the most recent work on Pinebox's Soundcloud page, particularly with Reverse Engineer, show that Johnson has taken a natural, introspective leap to more avant-garde instrumental compositions, ever pushing artistic boundaries. An expansive, nervous, multi-textured improv collaboration featuring diverse local players, Reverse Engineer is crisply recorded and acid-jazzy, the sort of band that would sound perfect between Bitches Brew and Sun Ra listening sessions.

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Jeff McLeod and No
An article on Montgomery music would be incomplete without highlighting the prolific Jeff McLeod, who over the course of his career as a musician in this city has put together numerous bands and albums with intelligent, unique, high concepts. These days McLeod pulls double duty as lead singer and guitarist for local hard rock band “No,” while his solo recordings find him pulling a free-handed humanity out of the freshest experimental gear as part of a wizard-like, chaotic, esoteric attack on convention. His albums feature a wide variety of instruments put to use exploring ambient and noise in mostly-instrumental music, and are sometimes augmented by electronics that act as an antithesis to the canned or metronomic sound the word typically conjures. Six of his numerous solo releases can be heard at jeffmcleod.bandcamp.com, and the terrific and terrifying pure essence of negativity manifested as a genius rock trio "No" can be seen playing live, often misunderstood, wherever the loudest local music is to be found. ...And the Lawyers Guitarist Jason Fifield fronts a local favorite: A two-piece indie rock band named ...And the Lawyers. With a signature funky afrobeat guitar sound that favors intriguing jazz chords and uptempo, progressive rhythms, ...And the Lawyers puts on a wonderfully diverse set, some songs highlighting Fifield's acerbic, playful spoken vocals, full of non-sequiturs and humor, others going in a more instrumental, bombastic or pastoral direction, with immaculate clean-channel guitar noodling and a big drum sound. Not to be confused with smooth jazz Tuscaloosa band “The Doctors and the Lawyers,” Fifield's band brings a much-needed homespun weirdness and occasionally comic mischief to the Montgomery scene.

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AuthorMade Editor
CategoriesMusic