Author Archives: Meta

  1. Music Without Borders: The Hinges

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    The Hinges- Danny, Simon and KarenIt was like something out of a Pacific Northwest thriller, a typical rainy grey evening in the parking lot outside of a cafe bakery on the far edge of town. I met a tall bearded man and then, following his instructions, got back into my car and tailed his Nissan into the woods until the road turned gravel, the forest closed darkly in around me and another car started tailing me.

    And then it wasn’t Twin Peaks after all, the Nissan pulled into the driveway of a cabin, the other car passed us by, and guitar player/singer Danny Kelly got out to welcome me to the cabin he shares with his partner and fellow Hinge, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Karen Hancock.

    “I was totally crushed out on her,” Danny says, remembering how as a music student at Evergreen he first met Karen. She was studying dance and creating music for her dance pieces. Years later in 2001, they met up again in New York where they’d both moved to further their musical paths. Karen called up native New Yorker Danny to see if he knew of any open mics or places to play in NYC, and he dragged her to a spot called the Sidewalk Cafe in the East Village that featured 80 musicians all signed up to play an open mic that didn’t end til the last participant left the stage.

    As a couple, they next moved back to the Pacific NW. Karen played in the Seattle bands Saba, Violet Ray, Flicker and Knot Pine Box. Danny played as a solo act and with Heliotroupe in Olympia. Most recently, prior to The Hinges, the couple formed Set & Setting. “It was a big, loud, psychedelic dance band,” says Danny, who named it after a phrase from Timothy Leary.

    Now with The Hinges, they return to the acoustic music that has always been a big part of each of their souls, and specifically of the subtle songwriting of Karen.

    “We’re writing together…but for the most part we are plumbing (the depths of) Karen’s songs that I’ve been hearing for eleven years,” says Danny. “Karen writes in images… they’re like looking at pictures.”

    The Hinges at Rainy Day Records - photo by Joel Kluger

    The Hinges at Rainy Day Records – photo by Joel Kluger

    The duo has a new record out, “Surprise,” a mostly acoustic disc of elegantly turned out songs that showcase Karen’s mesmerizing vocals and Danny’s fluid guitar. It opens with “Waterfall,” a number that drifts over the edge of a dream and cascades into a luscious chorus while Danny’s guitar slowly and steadily glistens along like droplets. It’s a beauty and it sets the tone for the songs that come after, like the title song “Surprise”. This is another charmer, and if comparisons are your thing, think of the slow sway of Mazzy Star with a singer who wasn’t numb but instead someone interesting like Laurie Anderson.

    The third song, “Heavy Weather,” is Danny’s. He wrote it and sings it like a Cassandra warning the unheeding masses about something heavier than snow that’s coming this way.

    Next is the first of two versions of Karen’s “Deep Oblivion,” a old tune from Karen’s past. It’s a bluesy stroll through limbo that they recorded in their cabin, with Danny playing a dryer drum and producer Colm Meek hitting a mic stand. It sounds like someone pickaxing their way to China, very appropriate to the deepness of the title. Colm later had second thoughts and deleted these percussion tracks, but Danny and Karen liked them, so now there’s two versions.

    As calming as a warm night under the stars though the lyrics talk of a cold northern wind, the next song, “Northern Wind” is in ¾ waltz time. “That’s all I ever write is waltzes. I don’t know why because I hate waltzes,” muses Karen.

    They choose to cover the Stones’ “Moonlight Mile” with a lush reverberation of added background vocals.

    They also add a cover of “Dreaming My Dreams,” which they discovered in a old Nicholas Roeg movie called “Bad Timing.” They transform it into a mournful song of broken hearted love that would sound great around a burning bunkhouse.

    “Born Lucky” is the most upbeat song here, perking along like some rejuvenated jug band music, but it was actually a leftover from their Set & Setting days.

    The ninth and final track is “Deep Oblivion” again, this time without the coalmine percussion.

    The keyboards are courtesy of Colm Meek, and Reyza added bass to “Heavy Weather”.

    The future finds The Hinges working on their next record, road tripping, and playing gigs down in California, the East Coast and locally. On Solstice’s full moon, they’ll be playing at Squidstock. Additionally Karen, as Knotpinebox, will close out The Experimental Music Fest (June 28-30), and Danny will appear at the Z Kamp Phamily Reunion (June 1st at the Skokomish Grange Hall). ◙

     

    The Hinges handmade “Surprise” CDs are available at Rainy Day records and at thehinges1.bandcamp.com.

  2. Music Without Borders: Rose Window / Speck Mountain

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    Rose Windows Band PhotoSpring is in the air, love is all around and it’s a good time to check in with a two traveling bands based around couples that’ll be coming through town in a couple days. From Seattle comes Rose Window with their debut “The Sun Dogs” out on Sub Pop records, the Seattle label started by ex-Olympian Bruce Pavitt.

    With a roster that extends from Nirvana to Fleet Foxes, Sub Pop has an unerring ear when it comes to picking new bands. Rose Window is a powerful septet of Seattlelites built around lead guitarist and composer Chris Cheveyo, whose music creates a whirlwind out of foggy sounds and smoky melodies with a charm that’s captivated all who I’ve played it for. The sometime Goth, sometime Persian tinged instrumental passages balance the vocals of Rabia Shaheen Qazi, who sounds perhaps closest to the Jefferson Airplane’s Grace Slick if she were even more witchy. At other times she transcends sex and gives Led Zeppelin’s Robert Plant a run for his money.

    Aside from the seven band members, the record also features players on harp, pedal steel, viola and cello, creating a mystic music, grandly evoking the lunar soundscapes of Pink Floyd or Radiohead, deep pop for the restless, the curious who want more than calls for booty and cowboying up from their music.

    I recently had the opportunity to ask lead guitarist and composer Chris Cheveyo a few questions and thought it would be nice to get an outsider’s view of Olympia.

    Chris: “There is a girl named Raven that lives in that town. We love her more than anything. (Flute player Veronica Dye’s) sister also used to work at Happy Teriyaki and said the sauce was made from Sierra Mist. Cryptatropa is the place where dreams are born, The Clipper is where they go to die, and the back bar of The Clipper is where we go to discuss them. We love that town but we’ve never lived there. We’ve played a couple shows at the barn, one at Le Voyeur, one in the woods near the college, and two at The Northern. All of them have been amazing.”

    I was also curious about their influences and direction.

    Chris: “Black Sabbath is the band that initially drew us all together. Sun City Girls, Tinariwen, and Frank Zappa are also key ingredients and artists that we look up to. We get ham-handedly compared to a lot of current psych rock bands but … We aren’t interested in jamming, we enjoy composition and we don’t see a lot of that currently in the psych rock genre.”

    The titles might be helpful in decoding a little of the band’s direction are : “Native Dreams,” “Season of Serpents,” “Wartime Lovers,” and “Indian Summer,” which turns out not to be a Beat Happening cover.

    Chris: “It’s also the name of a Doors song and I’m sure a hundred others. The song is a true story about a traveling experience I had during an Indian summer over 10 years ago. That’s the only reason I named it that.”

    Speck Mt color

    Okay, meanwhile, from Chicago comes Speck Mountain, a quartet heading out for the lonely streets of Mazzy Star territory with dreamily narcotic female vocals and echoing guitar parts. The Chicago quartet is centered around the duo of vocalist Marie Claire Balabanian and the guitar and bass of Karl Briedrick, recently they’ve added ex-Chin Up Chin Up drummer Chris Dye and ex-pentecostal church organist Linda Malonis. Asked about their influences, Karl Briedrick took time out of touring to answer.

    Karl: “Staple Singers, Television, Dr. Dre, Plastikman, lots of ambient music, and all kinds of hits. We just absorb stuff.”

    I was also curious about their current direction.

    Karl: “Our newest record “Badwater”, definitely grew out of synergy. Before that record, Speck Mountain was a recording project for Marie-Claire and I, who happened to play some live shows. This record is the first time we came into the studio as a band. I would never want to go back to the old way.”

    And, what the heck, I asked these Windy City denizens if they’d ever even heard of Olympia.

    Karl: “We’ve actually played Le Voyeur before. Also, I have been to Olympia a few other times as well. It is the most beautiful part of the country as far as I am concerned. I feel vibed-out in that landscape.”

    We knew that. Both bands are currently planning their next record and touring our town: Rose Window plays this Thursday, May 16 at the Northern, while Speck Mt. plays Le Voyeur on May 17. ◙

  3. Music Without Borders: Brittany Kingery

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    Brit1Over drinks at the Spar, I met with singer Brittany Kingery to talk of her upcoming CD release party with Game Six, the band she shares with songwriter/guitarist Rob Hill and vocalist Derek Harris.

    The 32 year old Brittany was born in Olympia, and raised in McCleary where she took up the drums in fourth grade. In high school she performed in four bands and became a drum major in her senior year, which was also the year that she took up performing as a singer in musicals and choirs.

    After much drumming about in various jazz and marching bands, she focused on singing, acting and dancing at the American Musical & Dramatic Academy in New York. She returned to Oly in 2005 and began concentrating on being a vocalist, then met Rob Hill and Derek Harris who, besides being the sole two members of Game Six, also ran Campfire Karaoke at Characters Corner out on the way to Steamboat Island. They had one album out when Brittany joined them and she soon took on an ever-expanding role until it was Brittany Kingery’s Campfire Karaoke.

    Next, Game Six released their second record “God, Love and Mexico” on which Brittany appeared as a vocalist. Now comes her debut, “Edge of the Ocean”, featuring Brittany’s strong and smooth vocals with Game Six backing her up. The record was produced by Rob and The Brown Edition’s bassist Tom Pell. Additionally, the Brown Edition are among the ten guest musicians who helped play the songs on instruments such as keys, horns, pedal steel guitar, mandolin and Latin percussion.

    “Edge of the Ocean” has a definite Latin feel. Half of the songs are sung in Spanish, and the group coined the term Trop Rock to define the style. “It’s a little bit singer/songwriter, a little country, a little folky, but overall it makes you want to be on the beach drinking a Corona in Mexico, it just kind of takes you there,” explains Brittany.

    The CD also contains two tracks from Game Six, “Shamrock Bar” a sweet tropical pop song that could almost be a Captain & Teneille hit, and “Bahia De Banderas” a dance remix of a track from “God, Love and Mexico”.Brit

    Brittany explains the Latin influence. “Rob has had a love of Mexico for many years now and in 2009 he asked if I would come down with Derek.” The trio met in Bucerias, a small town outside of Puerto Vallarta, where they performed at an Irish pub that has a huge festival every St. Patrick’s Day

    “It was the first time I went to this little town, and then I just… I fell in love, from the first time I went there, I said, ‘I want to buy a house here, I would love to live here’,” swoons Brittany. “It’s this great small town feel, everybody’s just wonderful there, and I have a lot of passion for learning the language as well as the charities down there and helping them out.”

    In particular Brittany was drawn to Corazon De Nina, a privately run foster home that currently houses seventeen adolescent girls who have been removed from abusive homes. Just this past March Brittany was down there for three and a half weeks shooting some videos for the record, performing at the Shamrock Bar’s Irish festival and headlining a concert in Puerto Vallarta where they raised $5,000 dollars for the foster home.

    Additionally all of the proceeds from album sales and downloads through the album release concert will also go to Corazon De Nina.

    For the CD release show, Brittany will be backed by a full band. “It just adds so much energy to the whole performance”, she says of the band that includes drums, bass, keyboards, guitars, congas, ukelele, pedal steel and players from the Brown Edition. Asked if she does any covers, she mentions Kenny Chesney, Little Big Town and “Number one favorite of all time, Led Zeppelin. We do “Rock n Roll” but we took it and made it a Blues Swing kind of feel…and “D’yer Maker”, we do that as well.”

    In her future Brittany sees herself in Mexico. “You get to wake up to sunshine everyday, it doesn’t get any better than that. I would love to share my music … and tour around the area to explore and enjoy Mexico.”

    Start the Cinco De Mayo celebration on May 3rd at The Royal when Brittany Kingery and Game Six celebrate the CD’s release at 8 PM, followed by The Brown Edition, who have recently inked a recording contract with the Spectra Jazz label. ◙

     

    More info at www.BrittanyKingery.com.

  4. Music Without Borders: The Brothers Jim

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    Brothers Jeff &_ Chuck color“Chuck had a nervous reaction that resulted in that first track on the record being written.” This is the way Jeff Springer describes his brother Chuck’s reaction to his suggestion that they play some songs at an open mic. That was three years ago when they began playing as The Brothers Jim. “Breathe In, Breathe Out” is the song that Chuck came up with. Jeff continues, “It’s about jumping in head first into an experience that makes you nervous, but if you choose to just not do things just because they’re scary, then you’re not really living”.

    Ok, so The Brothers Jim actually are brothers, they just aren’t named Jim. Instead there’s Jeff, 31, and Chuck, 38, and the band name is a Brothers Grimm reference. They grew up in Olympia listening to the classic rock collection of their older brother, who is 13 years older than Chuck. These days when they aren’t rehearsing, they are more apt to be listening to the sounds of Iron & Wine, Josh Ritter, Langhorne Slim, Decemberists, or the Avett Brothers rather than the Beatles, Stones, or Metallica.

    They had been songwriters in their past bands, but Jeff says “It’s been kind of revolutionary for both of us as songwriters to have each other’s voice and input in the stuff that we’re coming up with.”

    Focusing their musical talents on their brother act, they began playing gigs around the Pacific NW, and last year put out that first CD. The Brothers Jim played everything on the record themselves, though Chuck remembers “there’s an added drum machine kick drum” on one track. Written over the last three years, the resulting music on the CD is full of brotherly harmonies, fluid guitar licks, relaxed tempos and – on “Electronic Friends” – a humorous look at the whole Facebook and texting world.

    Now they’re slowly recording all brand-new material for a full length record. Chuck mentions that the new songs feature coal miners, oil tycoons and dates gone terribly wrong, and one called “The Journey” about a father and son and the passing down of “the secrets of life, that may or may not even exist.” They also hope to add some friends’ talents on things like cello and strings for their next one.Brothers Chuck &_ Jeff b&_w

    Meanwhile they both have day jobs that they like. Chuck works for the state and Jeff is a campus minister at T.E.S.C. and they’re realistic about the music field as a career choice. “Not only are there more musicians playing in bands … than there ever has been, but there’s this whole other group of people who aren’t necessarily musicians but who make digital music and you’re competing with them as well,” says Chuck.

    They see open mics as a great way for musicians to work out ideas, gain a following and for audiences to see fresh talent. Jeff says. “What’s really striking to me in Olympia is that there’s are so many open mics which suggests that there are a lot of people interested in creating a really vibrant music scene in our area. If people aren’t willing to take a risk and come see somebody they’ve never heard of or an open mic just to hear what’s out there,” the next Macklemore or Led Zeppelin that’s lurking locally might just die of malnourishment. Jeff concludes, “you’ll most likely be entertained.”

    The thing is, according to a poll that I’m just making up here, despite its size Olympia has more talented musicians per capita than anywhere else. I always enjoy myself at open mics, maybe it’s the friendly folks or maybe it’s watching someone steal the show or discovering another new way for music to sound bewitching or even watching some guy mutilate nursery rhymes with an acoustic guitar. If you live here you owe it to yourself to drop the remote, step away from the couch, Tivo whatever you’re watching, and go out and check out some local musicians singing their hearts out. ◙

     

    The Brothers Jim and Science! play the Pig Bar Friday April 19th.

  5. Open Mic opportunities in Oly!

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    Open Mic Nights!

    Want to hear more people singing their hearts out? Check out these open mic opportunities:

    Monday – The Westside Tavern

    Tuesday – Tugboat Annies

    Wednesday – This is a busy one with open mics at The Pig Bar, Hannah’s, Cafe Love, and a Blues Jam at Charlies’ Tavern

    Thursday – Buzz’s Tavern, the 1230 Club, and Burial Grounds coffee shop

    Friday – O’Malleys (in the west side bowling alley)

    Sunday – South Bay Pub & Eatery (all ages til 10 pm), and a Blues Jam at The Two Mile House

    Thanks to Mike Burdorff, Scott Lesman, and Andy Geerstin for their open mic info.

  6. Music Without Borders: Survival Knife/Unwound

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    Justin Trosper has a name familiar to a lot of folks around here, partly because his distant family members were Tumwater pioneers with a road named after them. But to the musical community more importantly is his involvement with Unwound, a well known local band that put out seven studio records and toured nationally with the likes of Sonic Youth and Fugazi during the 90s and 00s before dissolving in 2002.

    I met with Justin on a recent Sunday afternoon to discuss his new band project, Survival Knife and the upcoming re-release of deluxe editions of the Unwound catalog.

    His musical career began in high school when his friends Brandt Sandeno, Vern Rumsey and he formed the band Giant Henry. After graduating from high school the three decided to scrap that band, throw out their repertoire and begin anew as Unwound.

    This was 1991 the same year that Calvin Johnson and Candace Peterson of K records and Pat Maley of Yoyo records invited them to perform at the milestone musical festival, The International Pop Underground at the Capitol Theater.

    “I.P.U. was a pretty big turning point for a lot of people in Olympia,” Justin remembers. “We recorded four songs with Calvin before I.P.U., he came to our practice space and recorded us practicing…one of those songs was on the (I.P.U.) compilation.”

    Nirvana, Bikini Kill and the Melvins were also on that compilation.

    They next recorded an eight song cassette with Pat Maley and headed out to tour.

    “We did the DIY thing straight out of high school.” Justin remembers. “We made a tape and we made some t-shirts and Calvin gave us a bunch of records from other bands to sell and he gave us a bunch of phone numbers and we basically just set off on this tour. We probably played two weeks of shows in four weeks time.” he says. They also played CBGBs in New York with their high school friends Bikini Kill who were also out touring for their first time.

    In the wake of the I.P.U. Fest, Slim Moon – who had a spoken word label, put out a music compilation called Kill Rock Stars which included Unwound and many of the bands featured at I.P.U.

    When Brandt quit the band in 1992 Sara Lund joined as the new drummer and they began a cycle of recording for Kill Rock Stars, which had become a record label, and then going on tour – producing seven studio records over eleven years.

    Unwound continued in that form until various events conspired to end the band. They were all approaching 30, Sara had moved to Portland, their last tour had found them unfortunately scheduled to play New York on Sept. 11th 2001 and finally one member’s substance abuse made it difficult to continue. They recorded their last record at an analog studio they had built at Justin’s home in Tumwater and played their last show in Olympia on April 1st 2002 at Thekla (now the cowboy bar Big Whiskey).

    That last record “Leaves Turn Inside You” is a seductive mix of cyber-funk blasts under explorations into the far limits of electronics and guitars, full of a new synthetic realness that has aged well and shows the distance their sound has evolved from the post hardcore noisy beginnings of their 1992 self titled record.

    Though Unwound had unwound, Justin continued to record other bands; (The Bangs, Anna Oxygen, Young Ginns, Worst Case Scenario and Replikants) at his home studio before selling his share to Vern and moving to L.A. for three years to pursue a degree in environmental studies.

    Justin continues, “For ten years…I didn’t play a live show until last year.” That was when his new band Survival Knife, in which he sings and plays guitar along with old friend Brandt Sandeno on guitar and Chris & Meg Cunningham on drums and bass respectively, began to play out.

    “It sounds like Unwound to some degree…it’s all guitar oriented, though the rhythm section is more straightforward. It’s ten years later and I’m better at editing… though”, Justin continues, “I wouldn’t say my tastes have changed drastically.”

    Survival Knife have just released a blistering single, “Traces of Me” b/w “Name That Tune” on Sub Pop records and have enough material ready for an entire album which should see release in a year or so.

    Meanwhile, this past December they self-released a live record from Unwound’s last tour and Numero records will re-issue the entire Unwound catalog with extra outtakes and demos as a box set and as individual albums. These reissues will start with the release of a limited edition vinyl LP of their high school band Giant Henry on record store day, April 20th.

    They also established a website, UnwoundArchive.com two years ago. “We had this whole history that hadn’t been documented sitting in our closets,” Justin says. “It’s a museum, it shows everything that we’ve done, interviews, flyers, more audio, our last show.” He goes on, “Getting active in doing that was coincident with starting to play again”.

    Survival Knife plays the Northern on Weds. March 20th with Lois Maffeo and Deathfix (featuring Fugazi’s Brendan Canty).

    Justin leaves me with the warning “Bring your earplugs”. ◙

  7. Music Without Borders: Sour Owl

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    sour owl_5x7x300_bwEdit     First things first, Sour Owl singer and guitarist Lynn Hansen wants to be sure I don’t change his sex as I had done last year in an article concerning the death of his bandmate Steve Munger. But really anyone who has met Lynn would be hard pressed to mistake this bearlike fellow for anything other than male… so I shift the blame to editing.

    Recently Lynn, guitarist Ian Weintraub, bass player and vocalist Skyler Blake and I got together at their practice space and talked about a lot of things: Caveman weaponry (Lynn has studied and taught it), local bands (“there’s over 1,000 of them”), marijuana legalization (they’re all happy about that), their new record (they’re recording it), the world’s problems (we solved a few), and their upcoming show (March 1st at the Olympia Ballroom with NY soul singer Sharief Hobley).

    The seven piece funk rock powerhouse also contains: Joe Baque (keyboards), Tommy Russell (flute, sax), Steven Bentley (drums) and the newest addition John Croarkin taking Munger’s place on horns and sax.

    These three are the main song writers, though Ian says that Lynn is the most prolific, to which Lynn drawls, “If I weren’t so lazy I could supply 50 bands with songs”.

    They’re excited about this upcoming show mentioning that Sharief has played with Alicia Keys and Rufus Wainwright and has recently been recording in Brooklyn with Kanye West and John Legend on a posthumous new record from Aaliyah, the late star of the ‘Queen of the Damned’ film. Sharief will start the show solo and then be joined by Sour Owl who’ll back him on a few numbers before the full Sour Owl experience takes effect.

    The seasoned players in Sour Owl have been musically involved for years, decades really and came from assorted regions and backgrounds before coalescing into the current Olympia funk/soul brotherhood. Lots of musicians have spent time in the band but Lynn is the only constant since the band’s inception in 2001.

    Their level of musicianship and the respect they have for one another easily attracts a continually great lineup. Lynn relates how “Joe invited himself into a gig and at the end he said “so am I in the band or what?’’’

    They relate other tales of Joe, who will celebrate his 91st birthday on the day of their gig, and Ian describes how “he’ll play a dinner show at a local club and then show up at 9:30 huffing his gear onstage for our show.” Lynn continues “Everyday Joe shoots 100 arrows off of a 45 lb. Recurve bow into a two foot cube.” Skylar adds “it’s like having Yoda in the band”.

    Meanwhile, the record that these rock/blues brothers started with Steve Munger back in 2011 continues to be recorded with a release date in the hopeful near future. They supplied me with a collection of rough mixes and works in progress as well as a few never released songs including covers of Frank Zappa, John Lennon and Howlin’ Wolf by way of Electric Flag. On record the music is larger than life and live they should totally help even the most couch-bound get up and attach their groove on.

    So put on your dancing shoes and head on down to the Olympia Ballroom which, I gotta say, has become a really great dance concert venue that more people should know about.

    In addition to that show, these jazz/R&B brothers play Ben Moore’s Sat. March 16th for a St. Paddy’s day concert party. ◙

     

    Recommended shows:

    Grunge comes to Tumwater when The Supersuckers Eddie Spaghetti performs a free show Thurs. Feb 21st at the SW, Tumwater. Call for directions.

    Blues Control, an instrumental duo from NY, play the Northern on Sunday March 3.

  8. Music Without Borders: The Pine Hearts

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    Pine Hearts_ Derek, Joe &_ Lob by Joel Reid  Recipe to be cheerful. Take one part Blackberry Bushes, add one part Oly Mt. Boys, mix in one part Tilted Stilts, let ‘em cook together for six months and you have The Pine Hearts.

    For half a year now Olympians Lob Strilla on vocals and banjo from the Tilted Stilts, Joe Capoccia formerly of the Black Berry Bushes on vocals and guitar and Derek McSwain, also of the Oly Mountain Boys, on mandolin and harmony vocals have been winning the hearts of PNWers with exuberant picking and singing in an acoustic jamgrass style.

    I first heard them last summer at the Blue Heron’s anniversary Grange party and was blown away by their high energy and the way the years they’ve all put in singing and picking in various styles shows up in their choice of melodies and tight harmonies.

    On their debut record ‘Distant Lights’, their songs all feature tight high-energy playing, but with an acousticness and a bluegrass subtexture that means that it’s also… kind of …hmmm, what’s the word that’s opposite of irritating?

    ‘Distant Lights’ was recorded by Bob Schwenkler of Bicycle and K records in his impressive bedroom in five days (including the mixing) in exchange for Joe installing a living room skylight.

    Wanting to get some insight in the record from the band I invited them over to spill the beans and shoot the breeze.

    “I’ve always been a big fan of Joe’s,” remembers Lob, who in the spring of 2012 had saved up some money to afford him time to get an acoustic music project together. Hearing that Joe had just left the Black Berry Bushes, Lob sent Joe a fateful message.

    “I got a random text one day,” says Joe. “I was at Blockbuster video actually… returning some movies, and Lob sent me a text that said, ‘Hey, if you ever want to do a music project together, let me know.’”

    Joe was into it, and that stoked Lob, who thought, “Yes! We need another member and I was like, you know, Derek McSwain is a hella committed musician and he’s hella fun to hang out with, and he could be perfect, and we jammed and it happened really fast… everything happened really fast.”

    Basically, the band got together to play some gigs that were booked before they had come into existence. And after playing 15 or so gigs with uncomfortable names, they got serious. They rejected some doozeys like Unicorn on the Cob, or their religious tribute to Guns and Roses, Nuns and Moses. Wisely they settled on Pine Hearts and were gladdened to find no one had their name or their web address.

    They’ve just returned from a snowy tour through Montana and sing the praises of hot springs, venison and ironed clothes on hangers. “Montana takes very good care of their musicians…people are very warm and very giving,” says Derek.

    The record’s eleven songs are mixed between slower numbers like “Alright Fine,” melodramatic ones like “Heartache or the Whiskey,” and upbeat songs like “Last Man Standing,” which Lob tells me is about “hanging out with your friends and making it last and keeping your friends first. The last line “A lonely man is the last man standing.” He adds, “You don’t wanna be by yourself.”

    Joe tells me that his song “We’re On Our Own” is from his days with the Pasties and concerns that band, a big house in Bellingham with a widow’s walk, a party, a chase and… the police.

    Not a duff track here, but my favorite track is the first, Joe’s composition, “Don’t Let the Stars Bring you Down” with it’s great melody, hooky chorus, and almost pop music feel.

    They’re still transitioning, but already their uniqueness is established with strong songwriting and singing, and when that’s backed by their superb picking, well, they soar. I expect to hear more amazing music from them in the future. Speaking of which…

    Next week they are off visiting friends on Orcas Island, where in exchange for the band playing a couple events they’ll be loaned the use of a house to record a new album. “We have books and books of songs, we could record five albums,” Lob says.

    In the final analysis, these guys wail on “Distant Lights”, but it’s a sweet wail like a late summer afternoon breeze coming off a field of fresh mown hay wafting over the apple pie cooling on the window sill.

    That’s how they roll.

     

    Pine Hearts

    Distant Lights

    (ThePineHearts.com