The TVD Storefront

TVD Vinyl Giveaway: Cornershop’s Urban Turban and Singhles Club 7″ Screenprints

As we noted yesterday in our full review, “With Urban Turban, Cornershop continue with their welcome and unexpectedly prolific return to the record racks. Collecting the fruitful results of a batch of collaborative singles, this album should easily satisfy old fans, while its playfulness, intelligence, and range will help recruit new ones.”

“…Urban Turban’s best moments present a further deepening of Singh’s and Ayers’ pop ingenuity. If they’ve always successfully avoided the shallowness of pastiche, they also seem to have found a way to increase the frequency of their output without putting any strain on the level of quality.”

Urban Turban…still shines as another exceptional collection of tunes from a consistently rewarding group of pop scientists. And it’s an album certain to only improve with increased familiarity.”

It’s true. We like it quite a bit and in tandem with the band and their label Ample Play, we’ve assembled one heck of a giveaway for two winners.

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TVD Washington, DC

TVD Ticket Giveaway: Soundbites, A Benefit for DC Central Kitchen at the 9:30 Club, 5/20

Hungry for music and, well, food? Sound Bites brings the best of D.C.’s music and food to the 9:30 Club Sunday May 20. Your musical and culinary gluttony won’t be all for naught — proceeds from the evening of tasty tunes and grub benefit D.C. Central Kitchen.

The “Sound” portion of the night brings you an appetizing lineup of Eric Hilton of Thievery Corporation for a DJ set, Bone, Fur, and Feathers, Nappy Riddem and The Archives. Also present is Batala, a local Brazillian drum troupe and a “Mixology Madness” competition hosted by 99.5’s Samy K.

All that dancing will make you hungry, so the “Bites” brings you food from area restaurants such as Cork, Della’s Dolce, Harry’s Smokehouse, Policy, Room 11, Taylor’s Gourmet, Chipotle, Sixth Engine and more.

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TVD Cleveland

TVD Ticket Giveaway: Reggie Watts at the
Grog Shop, 5/17

Reggie Watts, who calls himself a “disinformationalist,” loves to disorientate his audience by combining a unique blend of stream-of-conscious comedy with music.

He’s unpredictable, and you probably won’t know what to expect, but you’re in good company, because he doesn’t know what’s going to happen either. Feeding off of the crowd’s energy, Watts is known for creating an improvised set using two tools: a looping machine and his voice.

Watts has received love from the nation’s big wigs—we’re talking SPIN, Rolling Stone, and Conan O’Brien, to name a few. He’s slated to perform at this year’s Bonnaroo Festival. Hell, he’s kicking off his national tour tonight in Chicago, but we think you really ought to catch him in Cleveland tomorrow night when he comes to the Grog Shop.

In fact, we believe in this endeavor so much that we’ve snagged you a pair of tickets to see him. All you’ve got to do is leave a comment and tell us why you need to be there. We’ll let one winner know by 4pm tomorrow!

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Vinyl Giveaway:
Electric Guest, Mondo

You’ll be hard-pressed to find another producer today who’s risen to such prolific heights as fast as Danger Mouse. Arguably the best thing to emerge from the mid-00s “mashup” fad, producer Brian Burton hit it big on The Grey Album, his deft fusion of the Beatles and Jay-Z, and has since become one of indie rock’s most sought-after producers.

Since 2005, Burton has been the yin to Cee-Lo Green’s yang in the psych-soul duo Gnarls Barkley, paved the way for the Black Keys’ rock superstardom with his production on their 2008 album Attack and Release, made sharply nuanced indie pop with the Shins’ James Mercer as Broken Bells, and gave Norah Jones a sexed-up makeover on her newest release Little Broken Hearts.

Most recently, Burton has bestowed his magic touch on LA indie poppers Electric Guest, whose Danger Mouse-produced debut album Mondo was released on April 24 on Downtown Records. Mondo fuses the group’s MGMT-esque indie pop with a healthy dose of R&B – to speak in Danger Mouse terms, imagine a Beck-helmed Broken Bells with some borrowed Gnarls Barkely soul. Frontman Asa Taccone‘s infectious falsetto is put to good use, coupling with enormous hooks and hip-swinging funk to create a retro-tinged sound that’s entirely listenable.

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TVD New Orleans

Show of the Week: The Dirty Dozen Brass Band tonight, 5/16

The Dirty Dozen Brass Band performs this evening as part of the Wednesday at the Square concert series put on by the Young Leadership Council. Breton Sound is the opening act at 5 PM.

The Dirty Dozen have been innovators on the New Orleans brass band scene since the 1970s. Each album takes the band in a new direction including legendary collaborations like jazz stars Dizzy Gillespie and Danny Barker and pop sensations like Elvis Costello and Widespread Panic.

Their latest effort, Twenty Dozen, was highlighted in a recent New York Times “new releases” column. Seven of the eleven tunes are compelling original songs like the opener, “Tomorrow,” which has a energetic, modern feel complete with a call and response style chant. The compositions are split between the members of the group including a great rave up, “We Gon’ Roll” by the drummer Terence Higgins. It also features a chant-like vocal part, “We gon’ roll, we gon’ roll, down in New Orleans…” before guitarist Jake Eckert unleashes a wicked solo.

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TVD Chicago

TVD Recommends: Hollows and Coffin Pricks record release show at the Subterranean, 5/17

Even attempting to cover one or two every week, I’m still not able to keep up with all of the amazing record releases in Chicago. This week though, we’ve got a double whammy. Hollows and Coffin Pricks will be releasing vinyl on the same night, at the same show. Lucky us.

Grab all of the details about the releases and Thursday’s show at the Subterranean, below.

Chicago indie pop quintet Hollows released their debut in 2010, and have since crafted their ‘90s girl-group influence into an impressive sophomore effort. The record features some seriously gorgeous melodies backed by strings and horns on top of the traditional instrumentation.

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TVD Seattle

TVD Recommends:
Buffalo Death Beam
at The Tractor, tonight, 5/16

You know those times when you’re reading the newspaper and spot an article about how Spotted Strawberry Lemur Kittens are about to go extinct because there are only five left, and you’re suddenly flooded with both amazement that you lived so long unaware of their existence and motivation to keep them around for future generations to drive to near extinction?

Well, this is kind of like that if you swap out the adorable endangered creature with the Eastern Washington-based harmonic modern folk band Buffalo Death Beam.

For the last several years, Buffalo Death Beam has traveled the Pacific Northwest, playing consistently beautiful and complex sets while catching the attention of The Inlander and KEXP, releasing an EP and, more recently, the album Salvation for Ordinary People (which you can listen to hear [GET IT!?]).

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
OFF! (s/t)

The first full-length LP from hardcore punk survival unit OFF! delivers more of the brief, scorching sound initiated on their four highly-regarded EPs. It’s a dandy listen, and it places Keith Morris and cohorts at an interesting place. Just where will they go from here?

When it first came to my attention that Keith Morris was going to be fronting a new band, my immediate impression was a mixture of sincere happiness for the guy and a complete disinterest in actually hearing the music. We’ll get to the happy part a few paragraphs down, but the apathetic aspect has been hashed out by quite a few others already; it has to do with both the age of Morris and his band members and the actual contemporary relevance of the whole hardcore punk shebang.

Methinks that hardcore is a perfectly fine genre to tackle in the here and now, but it is a form best served up by a band of fresh-faced upstarts like Trash Talk rather than promulgated by a bunch of certified oldsters. Unlike blues, jazz, and country & western, punk rock and hardcore in particular doesn’t ripen with age; it’s very much a young person’s game. Of course, plenty of old punks are still making high quality music. It’s just that very few are still working from within the confines of the style that originally spawned them.

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TVD San Francisco

TVD Live: Roger Waters performs The Wall at AT&T Park, 5/11

Roger Waters performed The Wall to a sellout crowd at AT&T park on Friday night, and it was nothing short of spectacular. Having seen this show scaled down (for lack of a better term) inside of an arena, Waters took it above and beyond.

For the 8 stadiums scheduled on the tour, Waters has redesigned and scaled up The Wall significantly. The genius behind Pink Floyd’s finest work says, “The stadium show couldn’t have been done 40 years ago. We couldn’t have filled the space in a way that would have been emotionally, musically, and theatrically satisfying. Technology has changed. Now we can.”

The Wall is double the width of the indoor arena show, coming in at an enormous 500 feet wide and standing 40 feet from the floor. The 20,000 square foot wall is the largest projection surface ever toured in a live entertainment with over 1,000 bricks displaying hi-definition images from 41 state-of-the-art video projectors.

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TVD Washington, DC

Richard Davies and Eric Matthews of Cardinal: The TVD Interview

Cardinal play Washington, DC’s Velvet Lounge tonight, 5/15.

The baroque, neo-psychedelia of Cardinal’s classic, self-titled debut album couldn’t have been more out of step with the indie rock world when it was released in 1994.

The album paired the prodigious talents of Australian songwriter Richard Davies, who had previously been a creative driving force in The Moles, with Eric Matthews, a bravura arranger and multi-instrumentalist who plays everything from harpsichord to trumpet and marimba.

Critically acclaimed upon its release, the record was both strangely anachronistic and remarkably prescient––it’s hard to ignore its influence on much of the chamber pop that followed (Belle and Sebastian and The Flaming Lips, in particular).

Despite the album’s unexpected success, Davies and Matthews went their separate ways shortly afterward to concentrate on vibrant solo careers and other collaborations.

Fast forward to 2012: Davies and Matthews surprise and delight music fans by announcing they have reformed Cardinal and are putting out a new album, Hymns, through Fire Records. To celebrate the album’s release, Cardinal is embarking on a short tour, which thankfully includes a stop at the Velvet Lounge tonight with Kuschty Rye Ergot and Cigarette.

To find out more about this most unexpected (and hugely welcome) reunion, I asked Davies and Matthews some questions via e-mail.

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