Posts Tagged ‘chores

07
May
08

KEEP IT ON THE BROWNLOWE: Best “Tragically UnHeard Of” Portland Bands 2008

Em Brownlowe

If you have ever flipped through a Portland weekly music section this past year, it ain’t no surprise that The Builders and the Butchers won the “Best New Band” poll ran by the Willamette Week. We all saw it coming…and I’m sure recent recording sessions with members of The Decemberists didn’t hurt much. I really should have put my money where my mouth was and bet on TBATB’s inevitable success. Not to say they don’t write good songs and put on a fun, interactive live show… In fact, I’m actually listening to them right now.

But…
I tend to root for the little guys/gals, anyways.
Here is how I voted:

(ps. read how the WWeek Best New Band poll works)

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Chores
Listen to “Wine Buzz (live at Holocene)”:
https://gaycondo.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/14-wine-buzz-live.mp3″
I was flabbergasted that Chores didn’t get an honorable mention in the polling. WTF? They have been pretty hot this past year and always put on a high energy live performance. They are also really smart as they proved in the Tragically UnHeard Of spot I did with them a few weeks ago.

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Slutty Hearts
Listen to “Beep”:
https://gaycondo.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/beep.mp3″
Discovering Slutty Hearts is the best local music find this year! They are only two people but manage to play like a 3-4 piece band! Get this: live, they have two minimalist drum sets…one is just a kick drum and the other is a floor tom, crash and snare and they both play them together making the sound of a full kit WHILE they play guitar and keyboards and sing. With a platonic pairing of one guy and girl singing sweet melodies over anti-folk ballads, it is hard not to fall in love with them….and get an urge to do something slutty.

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Autopilot is for Lovers
Listen to “No One Will Know”:
https://gaycondo.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/07-track-071.mp3″
Featuring past/present members of The Builders and the Butchers and receiving a lot of attention from the WWeek over the past 6 months, I was shocked that Autopilot is for Lovers didn’t make the Top 10. Too bad, because this band is effing amazing and deserves all the admiral ears they can get! They play sullen, back woods folk music that is reminiscent of early, still drinking and agitated Cat Power. Guess what? Autopilot is for Lovers has a brilliant new album on Stereotype. NOW GIT AND GO GET IT!

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John Sutherland
https://gaycondo.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/02-track-02-3.mp3″
Unfortunately, John Sutherland didn’t have a chance at winning WWeek’s “Best New Band” because well, he’s not a band. He’s just one guy that is severely talented at finger picking guitar. He makes insanely beautiful compositions that often span over 10 minutes. His style is perfect for a rainy day sitting on the porch drinking wine or used as a soundtrack while driving through the country with someone you love.

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Sick Sick Sister
Listen: “Devilfruit”

https://gaycondo.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/05-devilfruit.mp3″

Sick Sick Sister has come a long way over the years and the current lineup is hot. Gnarly, girl-grunge-grit that flashes me back to the days when I LIVED for Hole’s “Live Through This”.

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The WWeek only lets you vote for 5 bands tops but here are some others I would have voted for if I had more options and if I had known they existed at the time

1. Purple Rhinestone Eagle – Purple Rhinestone Eagle just moved to Portland not too long ago so they need to do more time before they get crowed “Best New Band”….but after that time is spent y’all better lay some money down!

2. Grandpa’s Ghost Stories – featuring an all star queer lineup, GGS, just played it’s first secret show…watch part of it here. They blend metal with catchy vocal melodies….think Pat Benetar meets Black Sabbath.

3. Porches – I so would have voted for this band if I had known they existed at the time! Porches makes covered-wagon pioneer music that will make young men cry into their beards:

15
Apr
08

KEEP IT ON THE BROWNLOWE: CHORES…Tragically UnHeard Of

emBrownlowe

Tragically UnHeard Of
Band O The Week

(from left to right: Matthew White (drums), Eric Mellor (bass), Jada Pierce (guitar/vocals), Lou Thomas (guitar/vocals)

CHORES are fun. Or at least the band, Chores, attempts to transform the mediocre aspects of everyday life into a elated indie rock sound that will hopefully make your day a little easier. Portland, Oregon brought the four members together from various pinpoints of the States. Chores have an eclectic sound that ranges from working class jam band to art rock funk nostalgic to Television or Yo La Tengo. The past year has been quite successful as they self released a 5 song EP, Life Is Hard, have gained a noteworthy collection of local press clips, ventured out of lush Oregon into California and most importantly, have inspired people to dance! Lucky for us, Chores hasn’t let all the excitement inflate their ego and spent a great deal of time providing tragic answers to tragic questions.

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You all have moved to Portland, Oregon from other regions of the United States. What brought you to the fair city of roses?

Lou: I moved here for a dream of cheap rent and good busses.

Jada: When I was a college kid in Indiana, my friend found an arial-view poster of Portland hidden in an apartment she moved into. We both thought it was some kind of message, that we had to be there someday. Now I’m here and she’s working on a funny farm making instruments in Eugene. It also helped when a friend of mine who ran for office on the Socialist ticket here gave me a politically-inspired tour of the place during my first visit seven years ago.

Eric: I moved here for a lady and the slightly misguided notion that I could be a freelance film and video editor.

Matthew: I grew up in Houston, was living in NYC, and first visited Portland for a job. I fell in love with the character of the city and the beauty of the surrounding areas. I was fast becoming a New Yorker with a chip on my shoulder and didn’t want that to happen.

Chores has excellent chemistry on-stage. This musical excitement translates well to your record, Life is Hard. How was this record written + recorded? Was it totally collaborative or was there any sort of leadership throughout the writing process? How was the recording released?

Lou: The on-stage chemistry comes from the fact that we’re all good friends and are on stage primarily because that’s what we do to have fun. I also think that if the band is having a good time on stage the audience can see that, and that good feeling is contagious. It can turn into a feedback loop and just keep growing too.

Jada: I think we all are equally committed to the music emotionally. I know that for me, at least, our music is also very political. I think Lou and I as front people relate in that way, so that probably helps with the chemistry onstage as well.

Lou: We write and arrange collaboratively. Sometimes someone will present an almost finished song, or a part, and then we all mess with it and change it as a band until it starts to feel like Chores song. With the recording, Sam “Humans” Schauer of Modernstate (and Plants) was definitely in charge and did a really good job of capturing our live feeling.

Jada: I think it’s very rare that someone brings in a song that’s completely done; in fact I know I can count on one hand, without thumbs, how many times that’s been the case. And even the few times that has happened, we’ve all re-written the idea. Our music comes from the communal experience of our different minds and ears working together. I take pride in that because it’s an indescribable experience of compromise, but it’s certainly something that’s only possible through the medium of music played in the moment.

I embrace music as an opportunity to take art back to its purest form. – Jada Pierce

Chores play “New New Deal” live April 3rd at Backspace (Portland, OR)

Eric: We’re really into- it’s not exactly jamming, but we often play a part over and over again to see where it goes. For me, through repetition, I start to hear the different ways the parts interlock and then can modify my bass parts accordingly. The album was completely and totally self-released. CD Baby was instrumental in getting the music out to the digital services and playing shows has helped as well. We learned a lot during the whole process.

This next question is all about words! Why the name Chores? Why the name ‘Life is Hard’? Are there notes of sarcasm or should we take the title seriously? Your lyrics seem to be pretty down to earth and tell the tale of the average working class. How do you all write the lyrics?. Are your lyrics derived from real life or do you incorporate your own imaginations?

Lou: The truth is most often spoken in jest. I think there is a way to laugh at yourself and still be honest and completely serious. And goddamnit, life is hard a lot of the time. A lot of the time it feels like the day is taken up but just getting stupid shit done, like chores. When we formed this band and were coming up with a name we had all just moved here and were trying to figure out what the hell we were doing in our late twenties. Was it time to give up on your dreams and just work at your job?

Jada: Chores, they’re what the working class, the middle class, do all of the time. For better or worse we’re married to work. Growing up with the middle class, Midwest work ethic, I have to equate my art with work in order to feel justified doing it. Also, I think there’s a sad beauty in that work ethic, the sad beauty of the mundane.

Eric: At the time the band formed, Lou and Jada and I were struggling with the sort of mundane bullshit that seems to permeate “adult” life and we were wondering how our hopes and dreams had managed to lead us to this point. The name Chores speaks to the mundane realities that we and the rest of the working world have to deal with. “Life is Hard” comes from that same place and is kind of a rebuke to feeling sorry for yourself because you have to deal with all the same bullshit that everyone else does.

Lou: Lyrics tend to be written by either Jada or I, but maybe that will change. We all come from working class backgrounds. My grandfather was a bus driver, my mom worked at the Pepsi plant in Baltimore, and I work at a coffee-shop, so I am writing from that perspective.

I do pull a lot of my lyrics from real life, but I think that peoples fantasies are part of reality, and that to capture a “real” feeling, you got to combine the reality with the fantasies that allow people to make it through the everyday. – Lou Thomas

A good example is the Velvet Underground’s “Rock and Roll” where it’s a very realistic observation of someone listening to the radio, but its the rock and roll that “saves” them, which is pure fantasy. When Lou Reed sings “and it was alright” you just know that it’s not, nothing is alright, Jenny’s life still sucks, and that’s what makes it a powerful line. Rock and Roll can’t save your life, but it sure feels like it can, and it’s that tension and transcendence that makes art so powerful.


Jada: My lyrics ultimately come from a desire to bridge the gap between reality and the imagination; I love surrealism, but I’m married to reality. I’m a realist with an imagination—my lyrics come from that truth. I tend to not like cliché, which probably makes me a terrible lyricist. I went to grad school for an MFA in poetry, but I definitely see the act of writing lyrics as something completely separate from the act of writing a poem. I can write a damn fine poem; I’m still not convinced I can write good lyrics to a song though.

In your bio you have stated that you are a band without pretensions. Why do you feel it is important to note? What type of person do you hope to appeal to? Do you think there are too many artistic facades in indie rock music?

Jada: As an artist I think it’s pretentious to ignore the world around you when you create. If you want to write about birds and flowers, and there’s a homeless woman standing outside gathering discarded beer bottles from your trash, then dammit, that bird better be singing the ugly sound of the empty beer bottle, opened and whistling in the cold wind of her neglected hand. I love, value, and tend to my imagination, but no more than I would the people who occupy this same space and time with me. I like irony as much as the next gal, but to risk sentimentality takes real guts.

Lou: “What type of person do you hope to appeal to” is an uneasy question for me. I tend to like people and hope they’ll like our music, but I don’t really expect them to, even my friends, and then here’s the Marxist axiom, “I wouldn’t want to belong to any organization that would accept me as a member”.

Jada: I hope to appeal to anyone who understands.

Matthew: We’re not a band that’s about to die of ennui. As uninteresting as this may sound, I want to appeal to the people that like our music. I listened to an interview with David Lynch who responded to the question “how do you make your films?” He said that he stays true to his vision of what the film should be. And most importantly he doesn’t second guess the audience. People are finicky and if you start a film (or album) that takes a year to produce, you aren’t going to know how the audience’s tastes will change over the course of that year. So we play music we love to play and hope that it resonates with the folks that are listening.

Eric: It’s a marketing ploy. We actually have tons of pretensions that we keep chained to a radiator in the basement.


Listen to “Shopping” off of Life is Hard https://gaycondo.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/03-shopping.mp3″

To me, your music is an interesting marriage between avant-guard artrock and a rowdy jam band. What influences you musically? How would you classify your own sound?

Eric: I think that’s the best description of us that I’ve heard so far. I mean, when you look at the kinds of stuff we’re all into, either as individuals or as a whole, they all seep to the surface of the music we end up making. I think it’s safe to say that Matthew and I both have an affinity for moodier, spacier and highly produced stuff like My Bloody Valentine whereas Jada and Lou come from more folk-influenced background. That’s a totally generalized statement of which 20% to 80% may not be true.

Jada: That’s the best description of our music I’ve ever heard. I was strongly influenced by Throwing Muses in my formative years. It’s just dumb luck that Kristin Hersh happens to live here now. I really like New Wave punk sounds on the guitar combined with “committed vocals.” I’m borrowing that last term from a review of our own EP; I like that term though. I learned to play music listening to folk songs, but I learned to feel music listening to rock-n-roll.

Matthew: Seriously though, that has to be one of the most concise descriptions of our music. For me I would say that Yo La Tengo is a pretty big influence, just in thematic terms. I don’t think we sound like YLT, but their music is very diverse, like ours.

What is the best thing about rock n roll? Care to tell us about what is next for Chores?.

Lou: We’re recording soon and hopefully will have a full length out by the end of the year. The best thing about rock and roll is that it can save you.

Eric: Rock ‘n roll is like a caged beast, angry and sweaty and hungry for more, more, MORE! Kind of like that girl that Billy Idol sings about. Anyway, it’s that hunger that I like best.

Jada: The best thing about rock-n-roll is that it can be everything, every emotion—sad, happy, sincere, ironic, angry, sarcastic, etc. It’s universal because it can carry every one of those emotions through its sound.

Matthew: The best thing about rock and roll (and music in general) is that it is a way to escape from everyday life. Rock and roll, in particular, provides visceral and immediate experience, uncluttered by theory or strict formalism. It’s instant gratification! (note to editors: maybe this is a bit pretentious. I won’t be sad if my answer is edited out)

Jada: I can’t wait to record our next album. The material is ready; we just all need some sugar mama to come pay for it all…get us the time off work. You know anyone like that?


TRAGICALLY UN HEARD OF ARCHIVES




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