Archive for the ‘Union Hall’ Category

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The Amygdaloids- Theory of My Mind

August 9, 2010

The Amygdaloids
Theory of My Mind
Knock Out Noise
June 15th 2010

Imaginate by the Amygdaloids

In the Fall of 2005 I walked into Union Hall in Brooklyn to catch a public lecture given by Dr. Joe LeDoux, professor at NYU’s Center for Neural Science. While I have many interests, I always fell short in the sciences, so you can imagine I was quite certain I wouldn’t understand a word of Joe’s discussion of the world of neurons, memory, fear and that little nut shaped region in the brain called the amygdala. But Dr. LeDoux’s lecture was entirely accessible and served as testament to his ability to communicate the business of neuroscience. He has written two books aimed at a general readership, offering not-so-science-savvy folks an avenue towards understanding how their brain works. So one might say that Joe has embraced his role as neuroscience’s public intellectual, ensuring that what goes on in the realm of his discipline does not become too far removed from the questions and curiosities of the people. Think Ted Talks. But LeDoux’s connection to the complex world of neuroscience is not the end of the story. After the lecture, the audience joined LeDoux and a few of his fellow scientist friends up to the first floor of Union Hall where they performed as The Amygdaloids. Right before my eyes I watched these scientists shatter every stereotype concerning the “right brain-left brain” dichotomy. But that was 2005; The Amygdaloids have come a long way since that Union Hall show, releasing their latest record in June called Theory of My Mind.

The two clearest influences that inform The Amygdaloids’ music are the distinct styles of lead guitarist Tyler Volk and LeDoux. Through Volk’s guitar flow accents and power riffs reminiscent of the Monterey Pop Festival of 1967 and the immortal Woodstock that followed two years later. He celebrates the work of Jimi Hendrix and Carlos Santana with his blues laden psychedelia. LeDoux for his part writes songs that project the giest of 60’s dream pop, his songs are products of an ethic that demands good pop be, as Jack Tatum from Wild Nothing said, “catchy but not cheap.” LeDoux is a story teller who, with regard to lyrics and music, is guided by the path set out by the likes of Bob Dylan and The Byrds. The two band members’ influences combine to make a whimsical explication of neuroscientific import embedded in the form and fashion of rock and roll. The lyrics present in Theory of My Mind all hail from the band’s public intellectual ethos. Crime of Passion is a track that explores the question of how much responsibility individuals have when they commit crimes during heightened emotional states. The narrating character of the song croons from a prison cell, recalling the reasons he committed murder and his regrets, singing, “If I could go back, I wouldn’t have killed for you. You’re not worth what I am going through.” Appropriately, to accompany this morose contemplation, Rosanne Cash (daughter of Johnny) sings backup, imbuing the track with a strong sense of sadness.

It is clear from the various titles of the songs that theme of Theory of My Mind is brain science, with all titles in some way referring to motifs of memory, fear, and individual will. Rhythmically, Tyler Volk’s Automatic Mind is a very creative endeavor that diverges slightly from the overall cohesion of the record. This side item song has a style of its own, mixing the choral melody of 60’s pop with the grim and gothic verse of early 80’s British post-punk. The song succeeds as an unexpected amalgamation.

The CD’s title track, Theory of My Mind explores a psychological question concerning when individuals begin to impute mental states such as desires and beliefs to others, and in turn believe that other individuals impute such mental states to them. In essence, when do we feel empathy; when do we recognize the hopes and fears of others and when do we believe they know or think about ours? Often the answers to these questions have been idealized as representative of our most human emotions, but these emotions are not so easily understood. These questions have diffused over a broad field of disciplines including anthropology, primatology, philosophy, etc. Theory of My Mind is a record that explores these and many other questions. Using the language of love, regret, and all the other entries in the lexicon of rock and roll, Theory of My Mind translates the inquisitiveness of the laboratory onto the forceful expression of the stage.

6/9

-FF

http://www.amygdaloids.com/
http://www.myspace.com/amygdaloids

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Vita! Kasher in Williamsburg

January 13, 2009

Cursive

So yeah, Cursive comes to New York…more importantly to Brooklyn. The band is on the road all January and then returns to the Big Apple in March. I can think of no better way to celebrate the birth of Kasher Young than listening to The Martyr on N 6th off Bedford Ave. Their January dates in New York are sold out, but March is coming fast with the Music Hall of Williamsburg already on sale and the Bowery Ballroom beginning sales on Friday.

New York Dates
January 18th UNION HALL
January 19th MERCURY LOUNGE
March 9th MUSIC HALL of WILLIAMSBURG
March 10th BOWERY BALLROOM

The Rest of Cursive’s January Dates
January 14th 2009 Triple Rock Minneapolis, Minnesota
January 15th 2009 Northern Michigan University
January 16th 2009 PSchubas Chicago, Illinois
January 17th 2009 PGrog Shop Cleveland, Ohio
January 18th 2009 Union Hall Brooklyn, New York
January 19th 2009 Mercury Lounge New York, New York
January 20th 2009 Barbary Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
January 21st 2009 Summit Columbus, Ohio
January 22nd 2009 Mojo’s Columbia, Missouri
January 23rd 2009 Slowdown Omaha, Nebraska
January 24th 2009 Slowdown Omaha, Nebraska

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Dance, Alcohol, and Antics: a new treatise on the Eagle Seagull hangover

September 17, 2007

Eagle Seagull- Realto

Eagle Seagull
September 12th 2007 at Union Hall Brooklyn
September 14th 2007 at The Mercury Lounge Manhattan

This past week has been somewhat of a drunken debacle. I drank entirely too much alcohol, spent an unfortunate amount of money, and injured my dancing legs. I blame these mishaps altogether on Eagle Seagull’s impossibly impressive showings in both Brooklyn and Manhattan. Having seen them perform well in Nebraska and then brilliantly in Chicago, I was naturally itching for another fix.

Anyone who knows me well knows I love to dance. This is sometimes sad because I dance crazily and have trouble containing my convulsions and gyrations, especially when whiskey is involved. I imagine that it might seem odd to the musicians in front of whom I dance to see me move around like I do. On occasion I even lose balance and fall over. I know this is a problem, but I simply cannot help it. Just so I am clear, I don’t dance at every show I attend. I mean, usually I am not even compelled to tap a foot or nod my head, but when I do I become completely mentally defective. This happened not once, but twice during Eagle Seagull.

On Wednesday, September 12th, Eagle Seagull hit Brooklyn at Union Hall off the R train in Park Slope. I arrived at 7:30, started my tab at the bar, and awaited the presence of my lovely fiancée while staring at the slightly annoying bocce ball players clacking their pastel spheres. I had decided that my fascination with Eagle Seagull stems from a few different things. First, it is always great to have old acquaintances meet success. I come from the same town, played shows to some of the same people, and drank beer at the same bar. I had become jealous that they committed to their music, while I abandoned it and moved to Chicago. They toured Europe and have shared the stage with countless amazing bands. Beyond the role of home-town-hero hacks, Eagle Seagull have the talent to back-up all claims of greatness.

Hillary arrived and we ordered a few more beers, a Black Label, and a duck confit thin crust pizza. Yes, they serve duck confit thin crust pizza at Union Hall. The venue has a slightly contrived feel to it. The books and wood put in place to achieve an aesthetic of intelligence and sophistication. My spirits, however, were beginning to rise as my anticipation grew. Hills and I spotted Eli sitting with a few of his friends by the door. We said hello, wished him luck, and headed down stairs to lower level stage. It was a small dimly lit room with a cash only bar. A band was finishing, from what I could tell, a lackluster set, when an old friend from home who also migrated eastward appeared in the crowd. I was happily snared in a surreal moment.

As Eagle Seagull began I took a swig of my beer. Hills was all smiles and I began to dance, buzzing my brain with the occasional pull from the scotch in my plastic cup. I looked behind to see that the crowd had grown and people were moving. I danced to every tune with a sort of fanaticism. They hit every beat and every note. Austin asserted his own fanaticism on guitar as Eli performed with grace and conviction, all the while looking very, very hip. The band played all new material, except my preferred oldie Your Beauty Is A Knife I Turn On My Throat, all of which were played true to perfect form.

After their set, in my drunken stupor, I tried to get the band to drink as much alcohol as possible. I figured budgets were being followed and ordered a few drinks for them. Fuzzy clouds descend on my head. They had to go to Massachusetts for the next day’s show in the morning. They left the bar. Hills and I decided to stumble home ourselves, but not before getting on the wrong train and losing ourselves in Manhattan to alcohol induced confusion. We finally popped out of the New York subway system somewhere around Union Square at 5am, so we decided to eat breakfast at Cozy’s Soups and Burger. I had some combination of eggs, sausage, and cottage cheese. I have no recollection of Hillary’s meal.

The following Friday, September 14th, I prepared to re-experience the splendor that is Eagle Seagull. This time I was bringing friends from my Bushwick artist oriented apartment building to The Mercury Lounge. Ben, Dan and I went to the bodega to get some 9.5% alcohol malt beverages. They cost only $1.25 and pack quite the punch. We traveled via the L train and then walked down 1st Ave sipping our brews in brown bags. We arrived at the venue just in time for the first act. After buying more drinks, we stepped into the stage area to give them a listen, reminded by the crowd size that Interpol was contemporaneously performing. The first band didn’t really do it for me so I went back to the bar. It was about that time that I decided that beer alone also wasn’t really doing it for me so I ordered a shot of whisky to shoot before I pissed. We had begun the night off right.

Eagle Seagull has become a staple at many-a-party in East Williamsburg Industrial Park. I was thrilled to introduce my friends to some of the band members, almost as thrilled as I was to be seeing them play twice in one week. The thing about Eagle Seagull is that they are very, very nice people. One conversation led to the next, which ended with Eagle Seagull leaving to perform. My friends and I, faces aglow, went to the front of the stage beer in tow. As the music began, I felt a wave of intoxication flow through my body. The dancing had begun- the fanaticism, the defection, the insanity. The lights were pretty, and the music stunning. The next day, my friend Dan explained to me his impression of their live performance. If one were to cut the center out of a song one might suppose it was chaos. But that from beginning to end the song is constructed, directed, and orchestrated, so that at no time does the chaos seem jarring or does it lack musicality. This is a very apt description of Eagle Seagull’s performance.

As the set progressed I danced harder and harder, surely making those strangers unaccustomed to my wild ways uncomfortable. I myself am uneasy when I think about what I must have looked like. But damn it, I had so much fun. Perhaps it has been too long since I exercised* my dance demons at 80’s Night at Brick Top in Lincoln. Or maybe I simply had too much alcohol. As the show concluded we went back to the bar where I am sure many conversations took place, some of which I may or may not have been involved in. I might have smoked a cigarette. I am sure I tried to buy the band more booze (hey these kids have got to save their dollars for gas, Redbull, and road munchies). At one point near the end of the evening, my own friends long gone for falafel, I tried to convince the entire band that they shouldn’t go get rest. I tried to coax them into eating at Pastis. At 2:00am. Them being the nice folks that they are, they simply declined and bid me farewell.

I walked back to the L and went home, worried that I had been officious and sycophantic. The next day my right calf, more so than my entire body, was destroyed. I had danced with such vigor that I pulled a calf muscle. I wasn’t quite hungover in the classic sense. I had zombie-like vitals, and I did feel sluggish and head-broken, but I realized that my feelings of officiousness and sycophantism were misplaced. I was simply proud of this band of kids from back home who were doing things that other kids will never get to do. They dreamt it, and they did it, and what’s more they fucking deserve it. They have a new album coming out next year and are Playing CMJ in New York on October 17th, which coincidentally precedes fellow Nebraska native Head of Femur’s show on the 19th. Let’s see if I can’t keep my dancing legs in line and my liquor lips shut next month. I know it’ll be tough. For all of you out there who have the opportunity to see this band, do so at your own risk.

9/9

*I exercise my demons, I don’t exorcise them.

http://www.eagleseagull.com
http://www.myspace.com/eagleseagull
http://www.papergardenrecords.com

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Eagle Seagull- Eagle Seagull

September 7, 2007

eagle-seagull.jpg

Eagle Seagull
Eagle Seagull
October 3rd, 2006- Lado
2005- Paper Garden Records

Marquis de Sade would have liked Eagle Seagull. I say this quite afraid that readers will believe that I am implying that Eagle Seagull’s music is lecherous, debauchery laden, sexually perverse, and morally deviant. Well…what can I say? Until now most of the “buzz” concerning Eagle Seagull’s self titled debut mainly deals with…the “buzz” around Eagle Seagull’s self titled debut. Much that has been written speaks of the dark yet poetic mood of the record or the epic vocals of Eli Mardock. Interviews often feature questions asking the band how they feel about comparisons to Clap Your Hands and Arcade Fire. Indeed, Eagle Seagull might be more aptly compared to The Cure, Pulp, or the dim and ethereal Blonde Redhead, but what does this really say about the band? Eagle Seagull will have a long time to define who they are as subsequent albums say more about their longevity and integrity, but their first one was quite a start.

The lyrical mood of Eagle Seagull is not simply dark. It is sinister, morose, morbid, and irreverent. I’ve listened to this record over a hundred times and I still think to myself, “Did he just say that?” The poetics of Lock And Key describe hearts “filled with doom,” and phrases like, “Won’t you just crucify me. Just kiss me and deny me. Drink my blood and eat my body. Come on babe just deify me.” from Hello Never demonstrate the noir themes pervasive in every tune. Holy sings the mantra that we’d all love to believe, that we are holy, that we are all angels. But hidden in short breaths and beautiful bells, Eli says, “You make me want to be a saint…who kills people.” Some tracks aren’t so reclusive in their violence. Your Beauty Is A Knife I Turn On My Throat has simply one of the loveliest choruses of all time. “Your beauty it is a knife…” This record is stunning in its romance with regret. Eagle Seagull’s debut contains love songs written from the recesses of the mind, narrating the human heart at its worst, while detailing its obsessive desire to be new again. This album is a rare feat. It is beautiful.

Also pervasive throughout Eagle Seagull’s basement ballads are deep and visceral melodies. They are heavy, contemplative and gorgeous, pulling the lyrical message out of the gothic darkness. Not since Boys For Pele have such delicate and desperate words been so easy to identify with. It is possible to treat these tunes as if they were buzz worthy pop songs only because the lyrics are matted within such a pleasing context. The guitars imbue the songs with subsurface tension, while the percussions abandon the post-punk model, seeking to add to the musicality rather than operate as a metronome. The intimacy felt in the songs reveal thoughts that we don’t and won’t admit we think. I greatly admire this band.

Eagle Seagull has two shows in New York City. In Brooklyn they’ll be down at Union Hall on Wednesday September 12th. On Friday September 14th they’ll grace the stage of The Mercury Lounge. I’ll be at both shows. I encourage all to attend. The last time my fiancée Hillary and I saw Eagle Seagull was at The Memories Bar in Chicago. As I recall, they followed a series of hard-core acts that blurted trite pleas to “Fuck the Government.” It was a little bizarre to see them play after a toothless 75 year old punk, bobbing up and down with his middle finger flopping around. Aside from Memories, I have not seen them perform away from their home turf. I wish them the best of luck in NYC and I hope that they get all the attention they deserve. Their upcoming record The Year Of The How-To Book, due out early next year, promises to be as phenomenal as their debut. I am not sure that there will be as much tenderness or vulnerability expressed, but I am sure it will not disappoint.

Read Review of NYC Shows Here

8/9

http://www.eagleseagull.com
http://www.myspace.com/eagleseagull
http://www.papergardenrecords.com

Related Sounds
Pulp
The Cure
Blonde Redhead
Wilco

Show Alert:
Union Hall- Wednesday September 12th, 2007
The Mercury Lounge- Friday September 14th, 2007

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