2014 Archives

16
Nov

Watch The Great Kendrick Lamar on SNL

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The great Kendrick Lamar performed last night on Saturday Night Live and simply slaughtered.  Again.  Lamar and large ensemble first raged through his new single, i, sporting spooky contact lenses, dancing, adding some libbing, and ending the song ferociously.  Later, Chantal Kreviazuk opened and collaborator Jay Rock set up Kendrick to deliver the track Pay For It.  So dang good.

Check ’em both below.

15
Nov

Check Out The Sons of Bill–Playing The Lobero Tonight

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In the interest of time, we advise/remind that Charlottesville, Virginia’s The Sons of Bill (literally, three brothers whose dad is “Bill”) are playing the Lobero Theater tonight.  They are out in support of their buzz-worthy, brand new album Love and Logic.  To get a feel for the band, check out three songs from the new album.  First up is the just-released live video of the driving song Bad Dancer (which starts off reminding of Modern English’s I Melt With You but moves forward from there), followed by the audio for the pop-majestic Brand New Paradigm (which would be atop the charts in an ideal world, with its Beatles, Lennon and Elton influences and harmonies), and finally the homespun Lost In The Cosmos (Song For Chris Bell) (with vocals that remind of Yoni Wolf of the great Why? band).

To sum up:  we whole-heartedly subscribe to The Sons of Bill and this vow from another song, Hymnsong, off the new album:

“We’re convinced that there’s a cadence to the murmurs in the dark,
rapt in patient arbitration, between our weary head and heart,
til’ our spirits cease their raging in the silence of the night,
we’ll look for love and logic in the dying of the light.”

The band is out on tour and you can see the rest of the post-Lobero dates HERE (including tomorrow night at the Great American Music Hall in SF).

15
Nov

Watch “The New Basement Tapes” Perform on Ellen and The Tonight Show

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It’s been a rare throwback week on The Lefort Report, featuring the imprimatur throughout of the greatest, Bob Dylan.  Between last weekend’s The New Basement Tapes’ performance, and two new, Dylan-esque songs by Bonnie “Prince” Billie and Houndmouth, it’s been a downright Robert Zimmerman weekTo finish it off, we give you below two more performances by The New Basement Tapes (Marcus Mumford, Dawes’ Taylor Goldsmith, Elvis Costello, My Morning Jacket’s Jim James, and Carolina Chocolate Drops’ Rhiannon Giddens), who were recently brought together by producer T-Bone Burnett to add musical life to a collection of previously lost, circa-Basement Tapes lyrics by Dylan.

Without further ado, first check out below their performance of Kansas City on Ellen (we love the harmonies supplied by Giddens, Goldsmith and James to go with the best use yet of Marcus Mumford on lead).  After, check out the performance (featuring Costello on lead vocal) on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon of the title track of the ensemble’s new album, Lost On The River.  Great stuff from this super-group.

14
Nov

They Never Get Old: Watch Sylvan Esso Perform “Coffee” and “Hey Mami” on Conan Opening for Foster The People Tomorrow Night at Santa Barbara Bowl

by Lefort in Music

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Sylvan Esso’s addicting song Coffee may very well end up as our Best Song of 2014.  Time will tell, but certainly we’ve sang its/their praises since early-adopting the song in January.

Last night the duo (Amealia Meath and Nick Sanborn) were the musical guests on Conan.   Check out Coffee and web-exclusive Hey Mami below.  While we’ve heard both before, the duo has added interesting inflections and even more space to the songs, and Meath has Feisted/Joni-ed/Rickie-d her vocals in spots, all to great effect.  We love this act.

Sylvan Esso opens for Foster The People tomorrow night (Saturday) at the Santa Barbara Bowl.  Get there in time to catch ’em–the show starts at 6:30 pm.

Coffee:

Hey Mami:

13
Nov

Listen to Houndmouth’s Great New Dylan-esque Song “For No One”

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We’ve been fans of the Indiana band Houndmouth since we first laid ears on them back in 2012 .  In that same year they were signed to Rough Trade and released the critically-acclaimed album From the Hills Below the City.  Heretofore we’ve loved the much-vaunted verve and drive of the band live, and leaders Matt Myers and Katie Toupin in particular.

Houndmouth is currently at work on their sophomore album (as yet untitled), which will be released in 2015.  And now they’ve released the first song from these sessions, a dramatic downshift entitled For No One.  In contrast to their prior program, For No One is a superb, spare and intense ballad sung in the key of Dylan and delivered with vivid, Dylan-esque imagery (including one more reference in song to Kon Tiki).  Bravo!  Check it out below.

12
Nov

For The Husked and the Hooved: Watch New Bonnie “Prince” Billy Video for “New Black Rich (Tusks)” Off New Album

by Lefort in Music

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Following our piece yesterday on Neil Young and given being hopelessly mired in the new Basement Tapes Raw release from Bob Dylan, there was something quite conjoining this morning when we happened upon the new single (New Black Rich (Tusks)) from Bonnie “Prince” Billy.  The song wouldn’t have been out of place amongst Young’s harrowing hat-trick and has allusions to Dylan lyrics within (“and the times they are not a-changing fast enough”), and is the latest from Bonnie’s recently-released, critically-acclaimed new album, Singer’s Grave a Sea of Tongues.  The new album is produced by the regular Bonnie-collaborator  Mark Nevers (see the previous Bonny albums Lie Down In the Light and Master and Everyone).

As you’ll hear below, New Black Rich (Tusks) is a heartfelt, ennui-ridden ballad (“I’ll say goodbye before we meet”) with an On The Beach-meter that features the perfect accompaniment of Billy Contreras on fiddle, Chris Scruggs on mandolin and Emmett Kelly on guitar, all of whom add a handsome hue and sepia-tones.

As you can view below, Bonnie has now released the song’s official video (directed by Claudia Crobatia) that tells an off-kilter love story (imagine that, from Bonnie “Prince” Billy).  In the video, the be-tusked Bonnie walks into a bar (no joke) and finds a beautiful, be-hooved singer who he slow-dances with.  Who hasn’t felt be-tusked or be-hooved at times while out in this world of ours?  The song and the video are beasts of beauty.

11
Nov

Neil Young’s Harrowing Hat-Trick and 15 Of Our Favorite Young Songs

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Everybody “knows” Neil Young (and this is nowhere).  But we’ve found that only a subset of folks younger than 50 actually know three consecutively-released albums from the mid-70s that define Neil Young for us.  There’s a reason for that.  Unless you held on to your turntable and owned the vinyl versions of these albums before the world went digital, the good part of a generation didn’t have much opportunity to hear Young’s harrowing hat-trick of consecutively great records:  Tonight’s the Night, On The Beach, and Zuma.   On The Beach was released in 1974, went out of print on vinyl in 1980 and wasn’t released digitally until 2003.  Tonight’s The Night and Zuma, both released on vinyl in 1975, weren’t released on compact disc until 1990.  So 15-30 years lapsed between when these albums were originally released on vinyl and when they were released digitally.  To sum up (in the words of the Talking Heads):  “Some of you people just about missed it!”  And that is a crying shame because some of the most original and emotionally-charged music in all of rock n’ roll appeared on these three albums.  As has been written about more thoroughly elsewhere and everywhere, these three albums comprised Young’s emotional reaction to a rash of events:  stardom encountered following the commercial success of Young’s album Harvest; the trials and tribulations of being in the super-group Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; the overdose deaths of entourage members Bruce Berry and Danny Whitten; and Young’s failed relationships.  All were fodder for one of the greatest creative periods in Young’s musical life.  And in our book, you can’t praise much more than that.

On the Beach was inspired in part by the overdose deaths of Danny Whitten in 1972 and Young’s roadie Bruce Berry the following year.  Young wrote and recorded the harrowing, wee-small-hours Tonight’s the Night late in 1973, but first released On the Beach.  Young released Tonight’s the Night the next year.  He then finished off the hat-trick by releasing the rocking Zuma later that same year.  As mentioned, despite containing some of Young’s best songs, Tonight’s The Night was rejected by his label for being too unpolished and grim (just listen below to Young’s heartfelt, ravaged vocals on Mellow My Mind and his soul-reduced Tired Eyes).  So Young instead offered up the barely-less ominous album On The Beach. Hence the latter’s being released first.

Taking these albums in their proper chronological order, Tonight’s The Night features several of our favorite songs by the artist and of all-time, including Borrowed Tune, Albuquerque (decrying notoriety), Tired Eyes, the title track and Mellow My Mind.

On The Beach features the signature songs Ambulance Blues (damning his critics, amongst other things–lyrics at bottom), the title track (rejecting stardom), Motion Pictures (an elegy on his relationship with then-wife Carrie Snodgrass), For The Turnstiles and the raving Revolution Blues (about Charles Manson).

And finally, Zuma contains a quiver of the best songs Young’s ever recorded, including the astonishingly great Barstool Blues, Don’t Cry No Tears, Pardon My Heart, Through My Sails and, why not, Cortez The Killer (in case you’ve been living under a rock and haven’t heard it).

If you haven’t heard (or even if you have) any of the songs mentioned above, check them out below.  And if you don’t own these three album masterpieces, add them soon to your collection.

Ambulance Blues

Back in the old folky days
The air was magic when we played.
The riverboat was rockin’
in the rain
Midnight was the time
for the raid…

All along the Navajo Trail,
Burn-outs stub their toes
on garbage pails.
Waitresses are cryin’
in the rain
Will their boyfriends
pass this way again?

I guess I’ll call it
sickness gone
It’s hard to say
the meaning of this song.
An ambulance can only
go so fast
It’s easy to get buried
in the past

When you try to make
a good thing last.

So all you critics sit alone
You’re no better than me
for what you’ve shown.
With your stomach pump and
your hook and ladder dreams
We could get together
for some scenes.

I never knew a man
could tell so many lies
He had a different story
for every set of eyes.
How can he remember
who he’s talkin’ to?
‘Cause I know it ain’t me,
and I hope it isn’t you.

Well, I’m up in T.O.
keepin’ jive alive,
And out on the corner
it’s half past five.
But the subways are empty
And so are the cafes.

Except for the Farmer’s Market
And I still can hear him say:
You’re all just pissin’
in the wind
You don’t know it but you are.

And there ain’t nothin’
like a friend
Who can tell you
you’re just pissin’
in the wind.

I never knew a man
could tell so many lies
He had a different story
for every set of eyes
How can he remember
who he’s talking to?
Cause I know it ain’t me,
and hope it isn’t you.

10
Nov

On Monday Let’s Focus On The Big Picture: Watch Space-Bound Video for Jose González’s Encouraging Song “Every Age” Off Impending New Album

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Build a place where we all can belong.”  Wishful thinking you say?  Well, we’ll take utopian over dystopian any day of the week, but especially on Mondays.  ‘Cause it’s all we can do sometimes.  The great  José González  gives us yet another reason to carry on today.

Late last week while we were away, González (of the groovy Junip, Red White + Blue’s Arthur Russell Tribute Album, etc.) offered up the first single (Every Age) and video from his next album, Vestiges & Claws, which will be released February 17th 2015 on Mute.   Every Age has been on repeat at Chez Lefort every since.  The melody and message are deceptively simple and heartening, and in the face of the surrounding turmoil, a great encouragement to the world.  The lyrics can be found below the video.

The inspirational video for the song below uses 360° technology to create an all-sensory experience of space.  Directed by Simon Morris and Chris Higham, the video was produced by global collective Eyes In Space whose aim is “to mesh artistic experiment with scientific innovation to open new worlds.” González sums up the video and song thus: “The lyrics [of “Every Age”] fit well in the sense of living on a globe together and how it can make us wonder and reflect on how we can make this the best trip ever!”  Amen!  Watch the 360° version of this galactic journey here, and watch the standard version below.

González ‘s self-produced new album is his first solo album in seven years and is filled with all-original material centered around concepts of civilization, humanism and solidarity.  About the album, González has said (though Every Age doesn’t reflect the following):  “I started out thinking that I wanted to continue in the same minimalistic style as on my two previous records, but once I started the actual recordings I soon realized that most of the songs turned out better with added guitars and a more beat-like percussion, and with more backing vocals.”

Every Age is now available digitally at the usual spots. Download it instantly when you pre-order the album here.  We can’t wait for Vestiges & Claws!

González has also announced a European and North American tour in support and you can see the dates HERE.

EVERY AGE

every age has its turn,
every branch of the tree has to learn
learn to grow, find its way,
make the best of this short lived stay
take this seed, take this spade,
take this dream of a better day,
take your time, build a home,
build a place where we all can belong

some things change, some remain
some will pass us unnoticed by
what to focus on, to improve upon
in the face of our ancient drives
feels so clear, feels so obvious
to each one on their own
but we are here, together
reaping what time and what we have sown

we don’t choose where we’re born
we don’t choose in what pocket or form
but we can learn to know
ourselves on this globe in the void
take this mind, take this pen,
take this dream of a better land,
take your time, build a home,
build a place where we all can belong

8
Nov

Check Out Vaults Beginning with New Track “Poison”

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We’d been hearing great things about British trio Vaults, but until this week we hadn’t heard a song that truly vaulted them over a some of the better players in the synth-pop genre, falling somewhere between The xx, Florence and the Machine, Bat For Lashes and Purity Ring.

But with new track Poison, we’re beginning to fully appreciate the building buzz for this band.  The track is from the impending release of the trio’s EP entitled Vultures.  Check it out below.  We love the almost-realcountry rasp in the (as yet) unnamed female singer.  Afterwards, check out our other favorite from the band, Cry No More (from over a year ago) with its water-glass/wind-chime effects and soaring vocals.  And then go HERE to hear more Vaults music.

Be open to being into Vaults.

7
Nov

Watch Bahamas Perform “Bitter Memories” In a Brewery

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As mentioned again and again, Bahamas (Afie Jurvanen) is amongst our favorite singer-songwriter-guitar players. Watch below as he deftly renders Bitter Memories at a Minneapolis brewery for North Shore Sessions.  The song is off of Bahamas‘ latest, outstanding album, Bahamas Is Afie.

Bahamas music has also recently been featured in the James Franco Droid Turbo commercial.  Check it out at bottom.