Tag Archives: alternative

Building, B-Sides and the School of Seven Bells

CINCINNATI – It has been quite a trip for Brooklyn’s School of Seven Bells.  Following the September, 2010, departure of keyboardist Claudia, twin sister of lead vocalist Alejandra (Alley) Deheza, the now-duo this year released their third, and arguably strongest, effort to date – Ghostory.  I caught up with Alley and guitarist Benjamin Curtis following School of Seven Bells’ MidPoint Summer Series performance last Friday on Cincinnati’s Fountain Square.

The new album is a pop Janus:  written around a unifying theme, but laden with potential singles.  The underlying story revolves around a girl named Lafaye; a lifetime of unpleasant memories, disappointments, regrets are ghosts which surround her.  One wonders where Lafaye’s sense of loss ends and the band’s begins; somehow, the group has taken a loss and used it as a springboard.   By their own account, things are better this way.

“I think it’s the way that people perceive us – in my mind anyway,” said Deheza.  “The records before [Ghostory] were mainly Ben and I anyways.  We were always the main songwriters, so we were fortunate.  We were already in that habit, instead of having to completely reconfigure what we were doing.  I think it was more having to present it in a different way to the fans and people who had gotten used to seeing . . . “  She paused, looked down at the table, then looked back up – resolved.

Alejandra “Alley” Deheza

“You know there’s something really charming and romantic about siblings in a band, and I totally understand that.  I mean, I’m smitten by it, too,” Deheza smiled.  “So I think for us, it was more presenting it in a way that wouldn’t be as shocking as it probably was to a lot of people.  But as far as creatively, I think the energy in a band is really important.  When everybody’s there that wants to be there, it’s the best thing that could happen to anybody.  Everyone’s happy now, so it’s better than ever.”

I turned to Curtis.  Did he feel there was tension prior to Claudia leaving?

“Obviously,” he said with a wry smile.  “She quit.”  Deheza looked at him and they laughed, maybe a little nervously.  They have clearly moved on from whatever unseen drama came before.

“We’re so happy making music right now,” Curtis said, with Deheza nodding her agreement.  “I think we’ve never really been inspired more to make this thing work and last.  We’ve never had more energy for it than we do right now.  We were writing so much – we’re just trying to find a way to do everything that we can do whenever we want to do it.”

I asked Deheza what that meant.

“Put out music whenever we want, you know, not have to wait for any schedule or anything like that.  I think that’s what we’re trying to figure out, is a way for us to be able to do that ourselves and not have to ask anybody, you know?”

School of Seven Bells’ late efforts have been noticeably engaging.  In the course of producing my radio show and sourcing new tracks, I inevitably share impressions with peers.  A DJ acquaintance, Matt Barker (host of “Totally Wired” on Juice 107.2 FM in Brighton, UK), and I find ourselves largely in agreement:  many of School of Seven Bells’ recent B-side releases have been strong in their own right.  I was flabbergasted that “Love from a Stone,” backing their “Lafaye” single, wasn’t included on the album.  The same might be said of “When She Was Me,” the alternate track on their Record Store Day 2012 Siouxsie and the Banshees cover, “Kiss Them for Me.”  I asked Curtis and Deheza who decides which tracks are released how.

“It’s funny, because we never have songs that we think are going to be a B-side or anything,” intimated Deheza.  “We’re excited to write another one.”

Benjamin Curtis

Curtis half-shrugged and smiled.  “The way we feel about it, in this digital age, every mp3 is just as available as any [other], and they exist forever.  It’s not like a limited pressing.  I feel like every song’s gonna have its day between now and infinity, so we don’t really stress [about] what side of the record it’s going to be on.

“It’s more a function of time,” he said.  “I think the real quality that we have is we really don’t have the energy to finish something we don’t like or something we don’t think is great.”

“Yes.”  Deheza nodded.  “Yes.”

Curtis continued.

“I don’t know how people write songs that they know are not as good as the last song they write.  Our favorite song that we’ve written is always the last song we’ve written, and it’s been that way since we started writing together.”

So their latest favorite song is . . . ?  Deheza and Curtis shared a tentative grin.

“Well, we have a new . . . ,” she trailed.  I have them on the spot.

“There’s a song called ‘Ablaze’ that no one’s heard yet.  We have a bit of a backlog.  It’s gonna be a B-side.”  Curtis looked at Deheza; they giggled.  “It’s headed in that direction.  Lots more B-sides.  It’s gonna be all B-sides from here on out.”


Over the Rhine Brings Love for Over-the-Rhine

CINCINNATI — After months of construction and some controversy, 3CDC last Sunday unveiled the rejuvenated Washington Park in Cincinnati’s Over-the-Rhine district.  The renovation includes a new dancing fountain, underground parking garage, children’s play area and, perhaps most importantly for the Midwest music scene, a brand new stage.  To christen it, one of Cincinnati’s most well-known musical exports (and neighborhood namesake), Over the Rhine, performed to a packed-in crowd numbering in the thousands.

Karin Bergquist, of Over the Rhine.

“It was a no-brainer to play [here],” siren Karin Bergquist advised.    ”Please enjoy the park.  It’s for you.”

While their career was still somewhat nascent, Bergquist and her songwriting partner (now husband), Linford Detweiler, lived on Main Street and they took the name of the neighborhood for their project. Continue reading


Great Lake Swimmers Drift into Cincinnati This Saturday

Canadian Indie-Folk Artists Extraordinaire to Play at the Taft Theater

 

CINCINNATI – If you’ve heard their 2003 self-titled debut, or Bodies and Minds (2005), you know.  Great Lake Swimmers are masters of crafted, folk lullaby.  Known as much for their music as for their idiosyncratic choices of remote recording locations — abandoned grain silos, empty churches and island castles — on their previous records, their latest album, New Wild Everywhere (now out on Nettwerk) represents a milestone change — they recorded it (gasp!) in a traditional sound studio.

“We had a really great run with the last record,” said Tony Dekker, GLS’ cornerstone and primary songwriter, referring to 2009′s Lost Channels.  “I think we were all suffering after the tour.  We took some time to do a little bit of a healthy break.”

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In the meantime, the Swimmers kept busy.  Dekker worked on a project with Canada’s National Parks, and the now-expanded touring band produced an instrumental soundtrack for One in a Thousand, an eBook about Lake Ontario’s Thousand Islands by photographer Ian Coristine and writer Donna Walsh Inglehart.  The

New Wild Everywhere features more layered instrumentation and smooth production — it feels more alt-country and polished than GLS’ earlier releases.  Miranda Mulholland’s violin and backing vocals are brought forward and seamlessly interwoven with Dekker’s high, soothing notes; Greg Millson’s percussion work is more evident.  Producer Andy Magoffin brings a warmer mix.  The songs are generally more uptempo, but there are the expected waltz-time moments inherent to Dekker’s body of work.  For those who have never heard the Swimmers before, it is an imminently accessible, well-crafted indie-folk installment.  For the Olde Guarde (like me), a deluxe edition featuring stripped-down demo versions of most of the new songs satisfies better than Snickers on a Sunday.  Overall, it seems more collaborative, like more fingers are in the compositional pie.

“I still bring finished songs to the band.  I write all my songs for acoustic guitar and vocals.  And then, it sort of undergoes these really wide-ranging transformations when I get them involved with it.  As far as the layering, they do – they have added a lot more,” Dekker explained.  “We were all present the whole time in the studio.  It wasn’t like the bass player [Bret Higgins] comes in and plays his tunes and that’s it.  Everyone was there for the whole process.  So it did feel like there was a more collaborative spirit, at least in the arrangement.”

Hearing Great Lake Swimmers live is an arresting experience — they exhibit a concentrated musicianship uncommon to twentysomething neo-folk bands.  They live in their songs; Dekker seems to be able to go to a place while singing that is mysterious and emotionally excrutiating, and to readily channel that depth of feeling into his singing.  But, as LeVar Burton so aptly pointed out in countless episodes of Reading Rainbow — you don’t have to take my word for it.  They’ll be here.  This Saturday.

“It’s been a while since we played in Ohio and in particular the Cincinnati area,” said Dekker.  “We’re really looking forward to it.”

—-

Upcoming Show:

Great Lake Swimmers, with Daniel Martin Moore

Saturday, 06/23/12, 8 pm door / 9 pm show

Taft Theatre, Cincinnati, Ohio

$10 advance / $13 door

 

Great Lake Swimmers are:

Tony Dekker — Guitar, Lead Vocals

Erik Arensen –Banjo, Guitar

Miranda Mulholland — Backing Vocal, Violin

Bret Higgins — Upright Bass

Greg Millson –Percussion

 

More Info:

www.greatlakeswimmers.com


Oh Condor – Ohio Band to Know

Oh Condor“We’re like the senior class of the Dayton scene,” says Oh Condor bassist Alan Baker.  An accurate description, I think.  With ten years, 180+ shows, three albums, two EPs, and one name change under their belts, Oh Condor has more than earned the respect they deserve as Dayton’s alt-rock elder statesmen.

Read on for our interview and a giveaway!
Continue reading


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