Wednesday, February 8, 2017

This Saturday, 2/11, Fundraiser for WFDU at APYC with The Brixton Riot, The Anderson Council, Big Quiet, Glazer


Presented by Signal To Noise NJ & CoolDad Music

This Saturday, February 11th, I'm co-hosting a fundraiser at Asbury Park Yacht Club with our good friend, Sugarblast Al C of the Signal To Noise radio program on WFDU. Al has assembled a great line-up of bands for the southern installment of his set of February pledge-drive fundraisers. The show itself is free, but there is a suggested donation of $10 to help keep the station going.

WFDU is an oasis in a desert of commercial radio. The station offers specialized programs focusing on music that gets overlooked by the big guys, and they provide airtime for Al's excellent Signal To Noise program. Al regularly features some of our favorite tri-state area bands both by playing their records on the air and inviting them to play live, in-studio. None of that would be possible without the generous support of listeners and fans.

Saturday night's show features

The Brixton Riot, celebrating their 10th anniversary as a band



The Anderson Council



Big Quiet



Glazer



So, come on out this Saturday night to check out some stellar bands and to support independent radio.

If you can't make it -- which you totally can, so I don't even know why I'm saying this -- there are two more fundraisers later this month, both at Mercury Lounge in NYC. On February 24th, the bill features  Monsterland, SAVAK, and Fruit & Flowers. The next night, February 25th, you get Antietam, Honey Radar, and Big Bliss.

And, and, and... ...if you're some kind of shut-in who can't make it to any of these, you can always head over to Bandcamp to support WFDU by picking up the Signal To Noise, Vol. 1 compilation that features several of our friends like Dentist, Fruit & Flowers, The Brixton Riot, The Anderson Council, Sink Tapes, and more during their in-studio performances on the show. You can, of course, do that anyway or just go direct to WFDU.FM and make a donation.

You can listen to Signal To Noise every Wednesday night (Like TONIGHT!) on WFDU.FM HD1.

So many chances for you to help keep independent music on the air. See you Saturday!

Friday, March 27, 2015

Big Quiet, Big Quiet, 2015

Album Review

As you might imagine, CoolDad Music gets a good deal of email. Definitely a lot less than lots of music-related websites; but, sometimes, too much for me to deal with all by myself. I ultimately read everything, but I have to prioritize. The first things I always click on immediately are emails that look like they were sent to me personally and not obviously as part of some bulk PR blitz.

A while back, I got one that said simply:

"You are cordially invited to listen to a preview of our new album, Big Quiet."

OK. So maybe not hugely personal, but it came from Big Quiet directly. I clicked through to the album and saw "All songs produced & mixed by Mitch Easter and Big Quiet." Um... ...What?

Mitch Easter? Like Chronic Town, Murmur, Reckoning Mitch Easter? Like Game Theory Mitch Easter? Like Boylan Heights Mitch Easter? Like engineer on Brighten The Corners Mitch Easter? Well, ok then.

I listened to the record. And I listened to the record again. This is a good record. Big Quiet are a Brooklyn-based trio who possess an obvious affinity for the southern gothic, jangly, post-punk sounds of my youth. I guess you'd probably call it "dream pop" in 2015, but the songs retain some of the jagged edges that make those first three R.E.M. records some of my favorites of all time.

The album opens with "You're Gonna Find Out;" and, right away, things sound big and spacious. "You're gonna find out how this ends," sings Cerio; and there is this kind of theme on the record that she's going to be the person she wants which may or may not be exactly what you expected.

It's one of the songs on the album that I'd put into the (made-up for the purposes of this piece) southern-fried shoegaze category as the band holds off on the serious jangle pop for a little later. Cerio's guitar is distorted and Chris Matheson provides a post-punk style bassline. Cerio's vocals are also way more out front than either typical shoegaze or early R.E.M., and her delivery reminds me a bit of Belinda Carlisle.

"Ghost" is built around a familiar-sounding but can't-quite-place-it poppy riff. The doubled vocals and harmonies along with Stephen Perry's rolling drums make for another big indie pop gem.

It's on third track "Why Do We Bother?" that we get our first real references to the sounds of something like Reckoning as Cerio's Rickenbacker jangles its way throughout the song. It's not a delicate nostalgia piece, though, as things get a lot noisier for the chorus. Similarly, the guitar work on "Say Yes" and "Nervous" had me thinking back to early Peter Buck; but there's something in the power of the rhythm section and the guitar solo on "Nervous" that make things sound more modern.

"Punk Floyd" kicks of with a noisy, shoegazy intro before things get much poppier, Cerio singing a catalog of things "I'm not." "Never Smile" is the album's longest song at just over four minutes. It's got a fantastically jangly intro, lots of "ah ah ohs," and lines like "I'll never smile as you walk me down the aisle."

On "Clay Pigeon," we get a guitar solo whose tone had me writing "Mascis" in my notes. There's the wide-open space feel again on "Another One for the Record Books," which even brings in some strings. "Maura & Dana" opens with an infectious riff and keeps up a hyperactive intensity through to the close of the album.

It's funny. I may not have even gotten to Big Quiet's email yet if it had come from some PR firm. If I had, I may not have listened to the album yet if I'd never noticed that it was produced by the man who's made some of the most meaningful records of my entire life. I did find my way to Big Quiet, though. Wouldn't you know it? It's one of my favorite records of 2015 so far.

Big Quiet release their self-titled debut tomorrow, March 28th. They'll be celebrating with a release show at Brooklyn's Pet Rescue that also features Scupper, Journalism, and Hamish Kilgour of The Clean.