Faith No More – Le Butcherettes: Live at The Orpheum, Boston MA


Faith No More, by Hillarie Jason Photography

It isn’t every day that Faith No More comes to play a show in New England or anywhere else. Nor is it every week, month or year. In fact it’s more like every couple of decades, so when they scheduled a date on their tour in support of the new album, Sol Invictus, on Monday, May 11, at The Orpheum in Boston, I knew it would be one of the most anticipated shows of the year and would sell out in a matter of hours, which of course it did.

Many of us traveling from the western part of the state to get to this show were treated to some stupendous traffic on the Mass Pike because one of those Bolt buses literally exploded on the highway. Even still you probably didn’t miss the opening act, Le Butcherettes, who played an extremely long set of something like an hour and fifteen minutes. Honestly, they were pretty good, but I couldn’t help but feel sorry for any band opening up this show. Most people were crammed into the lobby area like fish in a can, downing some sort of alcoholic swill instead of watching them. All they wanted to see was the band that has been absent for a generation. I’m not sure if the singer was acting out as part of her stage act or if it was along the lines of “hey pay attention,” but about 5 songs in she ferociously ripped off her candy apple red high heels and chucked them up into the balcony.

Faith No More, by Hillarie Jason Photography

Faith No More started the set as they have for each show on this tour. With the stage and band members resembling something like a Buddhist slumber party version of A Clockwork Orange or maybe your Aunt Dotties funeral; everything wrapped in white socks or painted white and cheerful sprays of flowers lining the front and back of the stage; the band said hello with the song ‘Motherfucker’.

The set, which included at least one track from every studio album, was top to bottom flawless. Both the old and new songs were fresh and vibrant. They played like a band that had never stopped touring together and seemed even more cohesive than when I saw them in ‘97. The energy was palpable and the crowd responded in turn, but since The Orpheum is a very old seated theater without the standard “pit” it was more of a stand in your seat and scream your head off kind of show. Although, when I went up into the balcony, I could literally feel it bouncing up and down quite dramatically. It was pretty terrifying and I found myself checking to make sure I knew the location of the closest exit to run to in the event of it collapsing.

Faith No More, by Hillarie Jason Photography

They had some fun with the crowd during the song ‘Midlife Crisis.’ Stopping mid-song just before the third chorus and letting the crowd fill in the words, Mike Patton then asked, “You proud of yourselves now?” Much to my amusement and the bewilderment of everyone in the theater, they continued the song after a brief pause to the tune of the Boz Scaggs’ song ‘Lowdown.’ And yes, I have had ‘Lowdown’ in my head since the show. Thanks for that.

Faith No More, by Hillarie Jason Photography

Banter between songs was kept at a minimum other than a quick joke from Roddy Bottum regarding the age of The Orpheum as well as Mike Patton singling out one “hippy dude” about what he thought of Le Butcherettes. Though I had to laugh when Patton announced it was their last song (which it wasn’t) and the crowd erupted into a sea of boos to which he responded, “Boo my ass mother fuckers. Enjoy it. Shut the fuck up!” Enjoy it, we did.

Welcome back, Faith No More. You have been missed.

[slideshow_deploy id=’25577′]

WORDS AND PHOTOS BY HILLARIE JASON


Faith No More Reveals Album Title, Release Date Confirmed


FAITH NO MORESan Francisco - October 28, 2014Dustin Rabin Photography 2680

Reactivated Bay Area musical chameleons Faith No More have announced their first new album in 18 years will be titled Sol Invictus, released on Mike Patton’s own imprint Reclamation Records/Ipecac on May 19th. Easily one of the most-anticipated albums of not just 2015, but the last few years, Sol Invictus will be the first full album of new music from the band since 1997s acclaimed Album of The Year, released just before the band went on hiatus. Bassist Bill Gould comments:

What I can say is that I think through our experience as musicians over the years, I think what we’re doing reflects where we’ve gone since we made our last record as Faith No More. I think this kicks things up a notch,” explained Bill Gould in a recent Rolling Stone interview. “And I think there’s parts that are very powerful and there’s parts that have a lot of “space.” Everything we do, with our chemistry, the way we play; it’s always going to sound like us. It’s just what we do, that makes us feel good. “

 

Press Notes:

Sol Invictus was produced by Gould and recorded in the band’s Oakland, Calif. studio.

The Bay Area band recently announced their first North American tour since 2010, with all dates sold out upon on-sale. Faith No More travels to Japan and Australia in February.

Faith No More tour dates:

February 17 Tokyo, Japan Studio Coast

February 18 Tokyo, Japan Studio Coast

February 21 Adelaide, Australia Soundwave Festival

February 22 Melbourne, Australia Soundwave Festival

February 28 Sydney, Australia Soundwave Festival

March 1 Brisbane, Australia Soundwave Festival

March 3 Auckland, New Zealand WestFest

April 15 Vancouver, BC PNE Forum

April 16 Seattle, WA Paramount Theater

April 17 Portland, OR Keller Auditorium

April 19 San Francisco, CA Warfield

April 20 San Francisco, CA Warfield

April 23 Los Angeles, CA The Wiltern

April 24 Los Angeles, CA The Wiltern

April 25 Santa Ana, CA The Observatory

May 7 Chicago, IL Concord Music Hall

May 8 Detroit, MI The Fillmore

May 9 Toronto, ON Sony Centre for the Performing Arts

May 11 Boston, MA Orpheum Theatre

May 13 New York, NY Webster Hall

May 14 New York, NY Webster Hall

May 15 Philadelphia, PA Electric Factory

May 29 Nurburgring, Germany Grune Holle Festival

May 31 Munich, Germany Rockavaria Festival

June 2 Milan, Italy Sonisphere

June 4 Vienna, Austria Vienna Rocks Festival

June 5 Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic Rock For People Festival

June 12 Landgraaf, Netherlands Pinkpop Festival

June 13 Donington, UK Download Festival

June 20 Clisson, France Hellfest

June 21 Dessel, Belgium Graspop Festival

June 24 – 27 Seinajoki, Finland Provinssi

Aug. 7 – 9 Montreal, QC Heavy Montreal

www.fnm.com

www.facebook.com/officialfnm

www.twitter.com/faithnomore


The Melvins – Hold It In


the melvins hold it in cover

 

The Melvins new album starts off with a rather ominous question: “What was that shit you sold me?”, from the song the ‘Bride of Crankenstein’. Indeed, it is the question every fan of the long running act can ask freely. Those who love their music heavy, heady, obtuse and downright confounding for over over 30 years can attest that every new album from this band brings different flavors to table. They have never made the same album, or song twice. Buzz Osborne and his first officer on the Federation Starship Melvins NCC 1701-X, Dale Crover have influenced many more bands than admit it. They have evolved from the creative outliers of a budding scene (Seattle, in the 80s), into the elder statesmen of sorts for bands of their ilk. No wonder Hold It In comes from Ipecac Records, a label full of like-minded, talented crazies. Joining Buzz and Dale for this outing are Paul Leary and JD Pinkus from Butthole Surfers. The pairs of musicians are a match in every conceivable way chemistry-wise, creating some unsettling and special tunes.

As you would imagine when these guys get together to create, things get weird, and in a good way. Odd riffs, whimsical songcraft and brave arrangements dot the tracks. From the dismal heaviness and driving riffage of ‘Bride…’, to the bright garage pop of ‘You Can Make Me Wait’, the trippy-proggy ‘Barcelonian Horseshoe Pit’, to the twangy stomp of ‘I Get Along (Hollow Moon)’; the inventiveness of each band is heard. It is definitely a sound and a feel of a Melvins album, with contributions from Paul and JD. You can discern a “Paul riff” here and “a Buzz lick” there and imagine the energy in the room when these four came together. Some of the touchstones here are sick amounts of feed-backing amp fuzz, phantom interludes, a few amazeballs solos traded, Floyd-ian space-rock tone-poems, and a rhythm section like a terrifying monstrous beast at times. All the propensity for weird-assed lyrics, and bizarro vocal deliveries (including ungodly shrieks from JD) all come to the fore as well. A little bit of something for everyone.

When it aims to be heavy, this is one of the heavier albums the band has put out of late, which says a lot considering the Big Business collaborations. ‘Onions Make The Milk Taste Bad’ and ‘Sesame Street Meat’ (two of the better titles this year) are gnarly as hell; true rockers. Another great cut, ‘Piss Pistoferson’ reeks of glam rock greatness, way down to the production value. They are getting their classic Kiss jones out, and frankly a Kiss song hasn’t been this good since 1991 anyway. The angular album closer ‘House of Gasoline’ sounds like it was more fun than should be legally allowed to have when it was birthed. A jam among jams.

The only shame is Leary’s distaste for the road means this lineup will only tour as a trio with Buzz, Dale and JD. Still, in reference to the opening line of the album, whatever shit they were sold, I want to buy some right now and I suspect you will too.

 

9.0/10

The Melvins on Facebook

KEITH CHACHKES


Melvins Announce New Album, Working With The Butthole Surfers


The Melvins fall 2014

 

The Melvins have announced their new album Hold It In, to be released this fall on Ipecac. The first new album from the group since 2010’s The Bride Screams Murder features a new configuration of the band. Buzz Osborne and Dale Crover are joined now by famed Butthole Surfers Paul Leary and JD Pinkus. Hold it in was recorded between Los Angeles, where Buzz resides and Austin TX.

 

In an upcoming recent interview conducted with Ghost Cult, Buzz remarked that the yet to be announced Melvins project would be “like nothing anyone has ever heard from us”.

 

 

In a further quote from the press release Buzz chimes in further:

Hold It In is a refreshing piece of fiction in a boring world of fact and bullsh*t,” said Osborne. “Paul is one of the best guitar players I have ever heard and Pinkus has an outside the box type of approach to both guitar and bass that you just have to let it ride. I can’t believe this actually happened. I’m thrilled.”

“It’s very rare you get a chance to work with three folks from the ‘Break A Wish’ foundation, all at the same time,” said Pinkus. “I believe they’ll remember their experience with me forever (or until they finally all lose their fight with S.I.D.S).”

The Melvins kick off a round of U.S. tour dates on Oct. 15 in Sacramento at Assembly, which also includes a performance at this year’s Voodoo Experience in New Orleans. Osborne, Crover and Pinkus will be the touring roster for this run of dates.

Tour dates:

October 15 Sacramento, CA Assembly

October 17 Bellingham, WA Wild Buffalo House of Music

October 18 Seattle, WA The Showbox

October 19 Portland, OR Roseland Theater

October 21 San Francisco, CA Great American Music Hall

October 22 San Luis Obispo, CA SLO Brewing

October 23 Los Angeles, CA The Troubadour

October 24 San Diego, CA The Casbah

October 25 Phoenix, AZ The Crescent Ballroom

October 26 Albuquerque, NM The Launchpad

October 28 Dallas, TX Trees

October 29 Austin, TX Mohawk

October 30 Houston, TX Warehouse Live – Studio

October 31 New Orleans, LA Voodoo Fest

November 1 Pensacola, FL Vinyl Music Hall

November 2 Gainesville, FL The Wooly

November 3 Jacksonville, FL Jack Rabbit’s

November 4 Orlando, FL The Social

November 5 Ft. Lauderdale, FL The Culture Room

November 6 Tampa, FL Orpheum Theater

November 8 Atlanta, GA The Loft at Center Stage

November 9 Birmingham, AL Zydeco

Tickets are on sale this Friday, Aug. 1 at 10 am local time.

Osborne is currently touring in support of his debut acoustic album, This Machine Kills Artists, performing shows this week in Tucson (July 30 at Club Congress) and Palm Springs (July 31 at Pappy & Harriet’s) before heading to Australia and Europe for an additional six weeks of dates. Crover temporarily joins OFF! for the band’s August tour.

The Melvins on Facebook



Buzz Osborne Goes Unplugged- Stream ‘Dark Brown Teeth’


king buzzo album cover

Buzz Osborne, the enigmatic front man of The Melvins and legendary upsetter of the norm continues to excite and explore new ground with his first acoustic album- This Machine Kills Artists (Ipecac). As a fixture in the underground avant-garde music scene for 30 years, his resume is filled with classic albums and critical acclaim. Buzz is following his muse wherever it takes him these days after spending a lifetime crafting heavy and experimental music, and it was time for a change. Due out on June 3rd, Buzz explores the softer side of his spirit with no electric guitars or effects, and just good old six-string skills and his wry lyrical story-telling. We have heard the entire album and it promises to be something beyond just a “for fans” release. Check out this stream of ‘Dark Brown Teeth’ and look out for Buzz on his solo acoustic tour soon.

Tour dates:

05/17 Pomona, CA – Scion Rock Fest
06/10 San Diego, CA – The Casbah
06/11 Echo Park, CA – The Echo
06/12 Santa Ana, CA – The Observatory
06/13 Fresno, CA – Strummer’s
06/14 Sacramento, CA – Assembly
06/15 San Francisco, CA – Great American Music Hall
06/17 Eugene, OR – Wow Hall
06/18 Portland, OR – Hawthorne Theatre
06/20 Seattle, WA – Neumo’s
06/21 Bellingham, WA – The Shakedown
06/22 Spokane, WA – The Hop
06/23 Missoula, MT – The Palace
06/24 Billings, MT – The Railyard
06/26 Fargo, ND – The Aquarium
06/27 Minneapolis, MN – Grumpy’s
06/28 Milwaukee, WI – Shank Hall
06/30 Grand Rapids, MI – The Pyramid Scheme
07/01 Columbus, OH – A&R Music Bar
07/02 Detroit, MI – Small’s
07/03 Cleveland, OH – The Grog Shop
07/05 Syracuse, NY – The Westcott Theater
07/06 South Burlington, VT – Higher Ground
07/07 Portland, ME – Portland City Music Hall
07/09 Dover, NH – Dover Brickhouse
07/10 Allston, MA – Brighton Music Hall
07/11 Pawtucket, RI – The Met
07/12 Hamden, CT – The Ballroom at The Outerspace
07/13 New York, NY – Santos Party House
07/14 Brooklyn, NY – The Wick
07/15 Philadelphia, PA – Underground Arts
07/17 Baltimore, MD – Ottobar
07/18 Charlottesville, VA – The Southern
07/19 Charlotte, NC – Visulite Theater
07/20 Carrboro, NC – Cat’s Cradle
07/22 Atlanta, GA – The Basement
07/23 Birmingham, AL – The Bottle Tree
07/25 New Orleans, LA – One Eyed Jack’s
07/26 Houston, TX – Warehouse Live
07/27 Austin, TX – Red 7
07/28 Sam Antonio, TX – Limelight
07/30 Tucson, AZ – Club Congress
07/31 Pioneertown, CA – Pappy and Harriet’s

King buzzo promo photo

Buzz Osborne on Facebook

 

 


Kayo Dot – Hubardo


kayodot hubardo coverTen years into its uncompromising career Toby Driver has led Kayo Dot boldly through albums of intense complexity, raw aggression mixed with a delicate fragility which only heightens their ability to carve menacing abstract compositions that challenge attention span yet contain moments of jaw dropping high quality.

 

Urgent brass accompanied by tense fretwork and Driver’s deranged ranting makes discordant parts of ‘Vision Adjustment to Another Wavelength’ a harrowing cacophonous experience. The music is wantonly complex and overtly technical yet it is its ability to through curveball each time which makes you press on. The sweet flute playing of Daniel Meads gives the aforementioned number an elegance and grace many purveyors of extremity sorely lack.

 

Driver’s death grunt over opener ‘The Black Stone’ feels far too intense for the music it accompanies yet Kayo Dot’s arrangements flow very naturally for the most part. No mean feat considering the ninety plus minutes of chaos this meticulously crafted leviathan drags you through while referencing everyone from Gorguts to Talk Talk.

 

The sheer unpredictability of it all is a joy to revel in. With songs averaging a minimum of eight minutes, this is a dense and challenging journey into art-house macabre but there are moments of transcendent beauty like ‘The Second Operation (Lunar Water)’ which shatter that mould.

 

Desolate saxophone accompanies angelic voices and the eerie narrative of Driver. Shifting from crushing technicality to blissful indie rock within a blink of an eye isn’t easy. Recalling the hazy jazz escapades of latter day Radiohead before ‘Floodgate’ pummels your brain with Keith Abrams visceral blasts and layer upon layer of vocal histrionics.

 

Always eclectic Kayo Dot succeeds in seamlessly blending the terrifying with the tranquil in a manner which almost defies description. The free jazz technicality prog rock ambience, fragile tenderness and vehement blasts of impenetrable art noise all flow throughout this often magnificent double album. There are moments of utter pretentiousness but it’s this resistance to conform which marks Kayo Dot out as a true maverick act who have finally produced a defining statement of their art.

 

8/10

Kayo Dot on Bandcamp

Ross Baker


The Melvins – Tres Cabrones


TresCover-5x5With their warped sense of humour, unique style and penchant for musically doing whatever the f-they want, (the) Melvins career has been a long and interesting one. From major label signings to being dropped to the present day, which sees them this year celebrating 30 years of being a band, Buzz and Dale at least, have seen it all.

Tres Cabrones (Ipecac), their 19th studio album, welcomes back original drummer Mike Dillard and it’s a record that once again proves why The Melvins’ long-standing career is fully justifiable.

 

As usual, the Washington four-piece have made an album that no-one should attempt to neat-pile into a generic category, mainly because Tres Cabrones has no such one to squeeze into. Ranging from 1 to 8-minutes long, the tracks have no time pattern, with long and sludgier tracks standing alongside shorter, satirical outbursts. For instance, ‘I Told You I Was Crazy,’ a slow and dense number, comes straight off the back of short parody track ’99 Bottles Of Beer,’ which sees the band chanting along to mostly abstract noise. Whilst expected, the latter of these types of songs (of which there’s 3) do become tiresome after your fourth hearing but everywhere else (the) Melvins bag of tricks is never-endingly brilliant to hear.

 

Straight-up punk fused with solos (‘Walter’s Lips’), noise rock mixed with acoustic endings (‘Dogs and Cattle Prods’) and metal chugs merged with grungy guitar strums (‘City Dump’), there’s no originality spared on Tres Cabrones. Often lyrically bizarre and, for the most part, well-musically crafted, (the) Melvins latest album may have a few downs but the innovative ups more than outweigh these small annoyances. Their career may be approaching its more mature stages, but hanging up their guitars in favour of golf clubs certainly doesn’t look likely in the near future, a situation we should all be thankful for.

melvins19833

 

 

 

 

 

 

7.5/10.0

 

The Melvins on Facebook

 

Emma Quinlan