The White Stripes Documentary Under the Great White Northern Lights Is Very, Very Good

Emmett Malloy's White Stripes documentary, Under the Great White Northern Lights, premiered this past weekend at the Toronto Film Festival, where Jack White pulled a Kanye. Wider release dates are still unannounced, but we had a chance to screen the film last week in New York.

whitestripes-screenshot2.jpg

There always seems to be little bit of Bob Dylan lurking behind every Jack White endeavor. This one isn't any exception. A rock-and-roll love letter to D.A. Pennebaker, Canada, pre-Internet music culture, and, above all, the White Stripes, director Emmett Malloy's Under the Great White Northern Lights is like a modernized version of Don't Look Back set in one of William T. Vollman's Seven Dreams. (The Rifles, probably.) You should see it. It's beautifully shot, the audio sounds phenomenal, and, at times, the film even manages to be downright inspiring. It helps, of course, that Malloy picked one of the strangest rock tours of the last decade to document.

More >>

Interview: The Tallest Man on Earth Is Kind of Short, Wants to Collaborate With Feist

"Singing all about [yourself] isn't all that interesting--I don't want to just do that. It's not very fun, and it may be dishonest."

tallestmanonearth-575.jpg
Kristian Mattson

The Tallest Man on Earth is about five-foot-nine. Maybe; wearing the right shoes. Narrowly built, spindly legged, and quietly spoken, the loftiest thing about him is actually his haircut, a swept-way-up look which evokes early Dylan just as helplessly as his songs. Like Dylan, Kristian Mattson is a walking contradiction: a 27 year old Swede whose music takes its signifiers from Harry Smith, its fine-spun guitar-work from Leadbelly and Nick Drake, and who sings in a bent growl that can go sweet or slack, pierced through with a back-porch American twang. Paradoxically, he also may be one of our strangest young lyricists--an idiom-twisting blues scholar whose faltering command of the English language partially accounts for the weird, refracted beauty of his lyrics.

Before his first show at Bowery Ballroom this spring, Mattson spoke to us about his quietly arresting debut Shallow Grave, his poor interview skills, and his deep admiration of Leslie Feist.

More >>

Live: I'm Not There Dylan Tribute at the Beacon Theater

Text by Bret Gladstone

I’m Not There Concert
Beacon Theater
November 8th, 2007

“You know, nobody’s mentioned Bob Dylan yet,” said X man John Doe. This was approximately one hour and forty-eight minutes into the I’m Not There concert— a tribute to Todd Haynes’ new Dylan biopic, and thus a tribute, however meta, to Bob Dylan. “I just want to thank him. He’s not here. He’s probably out there somewhere tonight playing in some club or arena, and I’m glad he is.” Again: This man’s name is John Doe, and the film he was there to celebrate is called I’m Not There. You can’t make this stuff up. Anyway, he was completely right. Nobody had mentioned Dylan. And after that, I could swear no one did again. The idea that this was a conscious, aesthetic choice collectively made by the artists is pretty dubious. Still, it was a completely appropriate way to honor this particular musician. The only way, really. The most essential requirement of a Dylan homage is always that he’s not there. He’s out there.

I haven’t seen Todd Haynes film yet, but even if it’s terrible, the concept—an inevitably hagiographic Dylan study which nonetheless eschews the conventional approach of nailing down his ESSENCE—makes it more keen than 90% of the Dylan criticism out there. Ultimately, one of the best examples of Dylan’s GENIUS—and the greatest testament to how carefully he constructed his artistic smoke-screen—is that the closer he’s studied, the more fragmented and innocuous that ESSENCE becomes. This is a gift.

Here’s an example of what I mean. Last year, I asked Emily Haines what her fantasy musical collaboration was. This is what she said:

More >>

Live: Spoon and the Ponys at the Roseland


You can sorta see the Win Butler comparison, right? This is from the Bowery Ballroom; photo by Sidney Lo

Spoon/The Ponys
October 20th

by Bret Gladstone

Let’s get this out of the way first: CMJ is fucking lame. And I’m not just saying that because I haven’t slept all week and feel miserable. Simply put, to sell local students three-hundred dollar badges that don’t even guarantee them access to the mid-level shows they could plausibly see for fifteen dollars any other week isn’t just a rip-off. It’s kind of insipid. Especially considering that CMJ stands for “College Music Journal”. In the words of the girl standing in front of me at the Spoon show on Saturday: What-evah.

More >>

CMJ: This is Another Piece About M.I.A. at Terminal 5


M.I.A. showed up as part of Spank Rock's entourage on Friday night at Irving Plaza; photo by Rebecca Smeyne

M.I.A
Terminal 5
October 18

by Bret Gladstone

"Fucking interview me man!" some guy shouts in my ear.

"Um, Ok!"

"With that fucking notebook!"

"Right! First question: Why are you wearing a headband and wristbands?"

"I just came from a dodge-ball game."

"How did it go?"

"We killed those fuckers!"

"Ok! Well, thanks."

"M.I.A!"

"Yeah, right, M.I.A!"

More >>

CMJ: Care Bears on Fire at Crash Mansion


Lucio is the one on the left.

Care Bears on Fire
Crash Mansion
CMJ Day 1: October 16th

by Bret Gladstone

“There is something a bit disquieting about all this” my friend Ted whispers. Ted speaks in a clipped British accent, and as a result of this statements such as these tend to feel weightier, graver, and more ominous then they probably would otherwise. (I consider this assessment.)

Across the dimly-lit, vaguely pornographic barroom at Crash Mansion, the neo-punk trio Care Bears on Fire are horsing around beneath one of several flat-screen televisions showing the movie Big. They seem happily oblivious to the club owner’s cloying sense of irony. The dialogue of the film is in subtitles, because the volume is being drowned out by a pop song whose lyrics include the gem “All I wanna do is zooma-zoom-zoom-zoom in ya boom-boom.” If their parents have anything to say on the matter, Care Bears on Fire are still years off from “a zoom-zoom-zooming.” In fact, they haven’t really gone through puberty yet. They’re all eleven and-twelve-years-old.

Sophie (guitarist, singer) and Izzy (drummer) who probably weigh about 150 pounds combined, both wear mini-skirts over black spandex, zip-up boots, and vintage rock t-shirts (the Ramones for Sophie, who’s only slightly larger than the axe she plays). Lucio, the bassist and sole male member of the group, is a lanky Thurston Moore-type who sports a PiL shirt, skin-tight jeans, and curly black hair which falls well over his eyes.

All of the band’s parents are working a merchandise table, and Lucio’s mother comments worriedly on the fact that Sophie’s boots are still unzipped as she climbs onto the stage. “Oh, no she’s going to fall on her. . . bum,” she says. Sophie, whose red and black pinstriped skirt matches her guitar strap, does not fall on her bum. She plays well, even offering up a few pretty cleverly-sculpted solos in between pounding out power chords and yelping lyrics. Most impressively, she’s also apparently picked up an eerily veteran ability to add impressionistic drones to her band’s sound. For about forty-five minutes, Care Bears on Fire play songs from their new CD I Stole Your Animal—straightforward punk-tunes which draw transparently upon influences from their parent’s record collections—bands like the Ramones, the Clash, and Nirvana. Izzy’s clunky drum solos are totally endearing, and Lucio’s bass barely misses a thump. The kids are good. Not autistic-savant good, but really damn good for twelve-year-olds without any cerebral abnormalities. What’s most striking, though, is how completely and fluidly they understand the form of the music they play.


Last week, I wrote something for this blog which dealt partially with accelerated culture in rock and roll. I now kind of regret that. I jumped the gun.

Forget Radiohead.

Up your sodding bums Arctic Monkeys.

This is accelerated culture: a group of pubescent children dressed in indie-rock get-ups, singing proto-punk tunes called “Met You on MySpace (the song, oh thank God, is much less creepy than it sounds), and admonishing us to buy their newly released CD and merchandise after the show. Ted’s right. There is something kind of creepy about this, even if it’s just the fact that the gig is a strictly 21+ affair. But this new type of vicarious hipster parenting is much less grotesque than beauty pageantry, and the Care Bears souls seem to be sufficiently in tact. Mostly, it’s good, endearing fun. Possibly even more: After all, there’s an argument to be made that twelve-year-olds are the only musicians left who are under-saturated enough to play punk music with anything approaching its original spirit. For older bands (take Iggy Pop), a little knowledge has been a dangerous thing. And in this culture, no-one gets “a little” information. Kids like The Care Bears on Fire are in the cat-bird seat of unselfconscious stupidity. The real disturbing question is how long that will last.


“So hey, how’d you feel the gig went?”, I ask Sophie after the set. “Pretty good, I think,” she chirps. “The sound is good in here.” We talk about “cool” bands, and Sophie tells me that she’s currently “re-listening to the Sonic Youth catalogue.” “I go through phases where I get obsessed,” she says, giggling like she's 12. Sophie is pretty adorable. She adds that her favorite Sonic Youth album at the moment is Rather Ripped, and that she also adores Bikini Kill, and that she “loves playing clubs.”

One by one, the parents bring the rest of the group over, wary of neglecting anyone and upsetting the democracy. Izzy wants to talk about consumer culture: “At first I didn’t understand the whole CMJ thing,” she says (Izzy, who wears little pink barrettes in her close-cut hair, is really into Patti Smith and Gang of Four). “I couldn’t get why people were walking out. I was like, 'Why are they leaving? Don’t they like our music?' Everyone had to explain to me how that’s just what people do here. They see a little of one thing, then they leave and see something else. Try a bit of everything. And I guess that’s kind of cool."

Lucio, who’s the oldest and appears to be the most evolved hipster of the group, says he plans on catching Death by Audio at the end of the week, and stoically asks me if I’ve ever heard of them. I say yes. The funny part of this is that I later realize it's a venue, not a band. We stare at one another carefully, then Lucio nods in approval and says that he’s “into noise right now.”

“Cool,” I say.

One thing I notice about the Care Bears on Fire is that they’ll always ask you if you’ve heard the band they’re talking about or are “into right now.” This is a dialogue inherent to “indie-rock” culture. And it makes me realize something: All of the Gen-X musicians who were re-thinking rock and roll in the previous decade—people like Thom Yorke, Jeff Tweedy, and Stephen Malkmus—are creeping into their 40’s now, and many of them have kids (Tweedy’s son Spencer is a talented drummer in a kid-band called the Blisters, who played Lollapalooza last year.) We’re looking at a new generational strain here.

Lucio sucks on the straw wedged into his water-on-the-rocks, making that grainy sucking sound depleted drinks make, and asks me if I’ve heard of about six other “noise” bands on that same bill. One of these groups is called Aids Wolf. I say yes, and I can tell by the look on his face that he knows I’m lying my ass off.

Fuck you too, Lucio.

This Is an Essay About Okkervil River. Kinda.

DISCUSSED: accelerated culture, Okkervil River, Webster Hall, Now That’s What I Call Indie Rock!, Radiohead, balloons, "Sloop John B," plus ones.


Will Sheff at Webster Hall by this guy

Okkervil River
Webster Hall
September 28

by Bret Gladstone

Earlier this year, there were scads of online buzz about the This is Next release of a Indie's Biggest Hits Vol. 1 Review compilation series. Naturally, bloggers found this incredibly funny and interesting. One reason for that was because the idea raised obvious questions about how to define an already laughably vague genre-distinction. Another topic was the irony of how most of the bands reportedly selected for the record had already traveled the undulating curve of e-hipster appeal several times over. Finally, the whole concept seemed to confirm what everyone already kind of knew: Given that the term “indie” is now a construction built on manufacturing cool and selling records, the genre really isn’t that different from pop music at all.

More >>

Most Popular Stories

Sign up for free stuff, news info & more!

Tools

Links

Browse Voice Nation
  • Voice Places

    Voice Places

    Discover restaurants, nightlife, travel, shopping...

  • VOICE Daily Deals

    VOICE Daily Deals

    Get 50 to 90% off every day on restaurants, movies, massages...

  • Best Of

    Best Of...

    More than 10,000 of the BEST things to eat, drink, and experience

  • My Voice Nation

    My Voice Nation

    Join the Village Voice community and get exclusive deals and info

  • Happy Hour

    Happy Hour

    Your local Happy Hour guide at your fingertips

or

Log in or Sign up

Social Connect:

Use your favorite account to access My Voice Nation.


Use your My Voice Nation account to log in:





Forgot password?
or

Sign Up or Log in

Social Connect:

Sign up for My Voice Nation with your preferred network.


Sign up for a My Voice Nation account:



Privacy policy