Archives For February 2012

We Will All Be Changed

LarryKloess —  February 7, 2012 — 2 Comments

There are concerts that will forever be imprinted on my memory, that as I remember them, I feel like I am right back in the midst of the euphoria. Ben Harper at the Ryman in 2005: 3 sets, 33 songs and 4 hours of pure bliss. Driving through a snowstorm to see Iron & Wine at Denver’s Paramount Theatre in 2007. I thought I was going to die that night on those roads, but I would have died happy. Mumford & Sons bringing their big tent revival-esque show to Nashville’s War Memorial in 2010. Yes, I had beer spilled all over me that night. Yes, I was thrown up on. Yes, I even ended up in the ER that night from an injury suffered in an intramural football game earlier in the evening. YES, it was still quite possibly the greatest concert I have ever been to.

Then nights like the one this past fall happen, a night that will forever be cemented in my own unofficial “Shows Hall of Fame”,  when one of my favorite bands (and one of the most talented I might add) Seryn graced the makeshift stage of my house’s living room floor and left each of those in attendance mesmerized and awestruck at the sheer power and weight of their live performance. Now for anyone who has seen the talented Denton, Texas, five-piece play at a proper venue can attest to, they play a brand of folk rock that sometimes can get cranked up to eleven (insert Spinal Tap jokes here, please). It is truly a sight to see. But even more impressive, on that late October night was the way in which each of the band’s members handled their art with such delicateness throughout an unplugged acoustic set. There is always a sense of bringing order out of the chaos with Seryn’s songs, at one moment launching listeners into a post-rock ether only to bring them back again to a soothing sereneness when the music drifts into the background and the only instruments left are the wondrous harmonies of the voices.

My comment that night to a crowd of a little over 70 that had gathered in the living room and spilled to all corners of the house was that it was like “Christmas, my birthday, and every other holiday thrown in together”, and in so many ways it felt like a grand celebration worthy of its own official holiday. It was both a culmination and a nascent beginning of thoughts and dreams that had been floating around for years as my love for music grew and evolved. Cause A Scene didn’t exist at that point, but the seeds that had been planted during years of musical discovery germinated rapidly from that point forward. There were moments during the course of the evening where I was nearly moved to tears, both through Seryn’s propulsive songs and the incredible intricacy of opener Tony Brown and the Lion’s Den (talk about being pleasantly surprised in a HUGE way!). That night, in a form true to Seryn’s standout “We Will All Be Changed”, we were forever changed through the awakened belief that music can not only entertain or inspire, but can transform each of us.

The entire evening was filmed and recorded by the fantastic Ryan Silver:

It was also photographed by my wonderfully talented roommate, Barrett Santi. You can see many more of the photos from the evening here.

All In The ‘Family’

LarryKloess —  February 6, 2012 — Leave a comment

Much is made these days of the ‘immediacy’ of an artist. Perhaps it’s the raw power of their voice. Maybe it’s the way their lyrics make you feel like you’re peering into their soul. Sometimes it’s the interplay between the various instruments that take repeat listens to unravel each nook and cranny of their sound. Rare is the artist who is able to bring all of these variables together and snatch your attention away from whatever you were working on at the moment.

Seattle, Washington’s Noah Gundersen is just that artist. His music surprises with each track on his most recent release, the ‘Family’ EP, moving seamlessly between a visceral earnestness as evidenced in the hard-charging “Fire” to an open letter to “the ones we love” on the ballad “Garden”. Where Gundersen really stands out is on the angst-ridden opening track of “David”, where he seems to plead for something more with the lyrics “I wanna hunt like David/I wanna kill me a giant man/I wanna slay my demons/But I’ve got lots of them, I’ve got lots of them.” The hauntingly beautiful track moves along at a locomotive’s pace, forcing the listener to find their inner David to go and slay the Goliaths of the world.

As you might imagine, Biblical imagery abound throughout the seven tracks of the EP. Gundersen takes you on a journey that reaches a fitting conclusion along the way that “heaven is where we make it.” And with sister Abby in tow throughout the album on violin and providing vocal harmonies, Noah’s description of the music being about how family “lives with us, for better or worse” seems to err on the side of this pairing being very much for the better.

Noah and Abby will be joining the fantastic William Fitzsimmons on the Southeast and Southwest legs of his tour, making a stop in Nashville’s very own 3rd and Lindsley on Tuesday, February 28. I’ll be there, and I highly recommend you attend as well. In the meantime check out the lead track, “David” below.

Breaking the Ice

LarryKloess —  February 1, 2012 — Leave a comment

Here in Nashville (and across much of the country) we’ve had a bit of a climatic confusion this week, where temperatures in late January and early February have felt like Punxsutawney Phil came out a few days early and missed his shadow completely. I mean, can it possibly be spring this early on? Please Lord, let it be so. Ushering in this uptick in the weather, is an artist whose voice sounds like the warm thaw of winter making way for spring, one Michael Kiwanuka. His voice is about as memorable as his name, and once you’ve heard him channel Bill Withers over the course of his 3 EPs,  you would swear the clouds outside have made way for the sun and the trees are ready to bloom. Maybe that’s a bit hyperbolic, but Kiwanuka comes closer to the sound of Gaye, Redding, Morrison and the like than any other artist I’ve seen. And as another blogger recently said, Kiwanuka’s voice just sounds like “home.”

His story is one that is sure to attract a lot of buzz as the son of Ugandan parents who escaped the Idi Amin regime and relocated to London. He’s now signed to Ben Lovett of Mumford fame’s Communion Records (which, by the way, may be one of the best labels out there right now) and has been prominently featured on Later With Jools Holland and BBC Radio overseas. On the heels of winning BBC’s Sound of 2012 award, he’s sold out every single show on his February tour in the UK and is poised to break through in a major way on our shores with an appearance at SXSW 2012 (there seems to be a recurring theme here with all these artists – someone get me to Austin in March!!). His debut album, “Home Again” gets released in March, perfectly suited to coincide with all the colors of spring and warmer temperatures that the month will bring.

I was recently asked to recommend music for a friend’s father/daughter dance at her wedding, and without hesitation my recommendation was a song by Kiwanuka. In my mind, his songs deserved to be played during the course of important moments in our lives, where you just have to have a soundtrack to your memories. Check out these videos of him performing below and tell me if you don’t agree.