3.26.2009

notes: 3/7/09, Triumph Brewing Company

This was a great time, with a ton of our friends and family out to join Triumph's ever-busy bar scene for just under three hours of music. With Joe's strat-and-tube-amp setup in tow, we packed the setlist with covers in deference to the Saturday-night crowd, took every opportunity to dig in to a tasty jam, and even gave permission for the manager to try out his new lights-and-fog rig, which he did to great (if bar mitzvah-like) effect during Joe's wah freakout in "While My Guitar Gently Weeps." Big thanks to our new friend Ken Adessa, whose expert tambourine held down the rhythm for about 75% of the set (he's a drummer in his own right for a few bands, including NJ soul outfit Enzo and the Bakers).

These Triumph shows can be a lot of fun, although I have to admit that I'm a sucker for the slow stuff that usually gets left out of these setlists. But Saturday night gigs are what they are, and you've got to play to your audience. Have no fear, of course...once I finish cutting up the audio for the decidedly-mellower 3/19 John & Peter's show, I'll be posting some of those tunes here.

For now, enjoy two taped-from-the-audience tracks from the show, "Corinne" (also known by its working title, "The Drunk Girl Song") and an interesting take on the George Harrison classic "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."

(NOTE: To hear full versions of these songs, you must apparently have an imeem profile. I will research different media hosts for future postings, I apologize for any inconvenience. For what it's worth, it takes about two seconds to set up a profile, and I'll vouch for seeing no spam emails or issues arise since I set mine up a year ago)



Corinne (live @ Triumph, 3/7/09).mp3 - Justin Pope & Friends

While My Guitar Gently Weeps (Harrison) (live @ Triumph, 3/7/09).mp3 - Justin Pope & Friends

03.07.09 - Triumph Brewing Company
Setlist:

(^ - featuring Joe Durniak, * - featuring Melanie Snyder, + - featuring Lisa Rich)

1. Saying Whatever (J. Durniak)^
2. Corinne^*+
3. The Birthday Song^*+
4. Carmelita (W. Zevon)^
5. How I Got Through It^*+
6. Dear Azalea Gwen^*
7. The Drugs Don't Work (R. Ashcroft)^
8. Six, Seven^*
9. Bubbles^
10. Swear^*

11. Into the Mystic (V. Morrison)^*
12. Graceland (P. Simon)^
13. The Ballad of Brighter Begins^*
14. I Wonder (The Letter Song) (J. Durniak)^
15. The Sun's In My Eyes (J. Durniak)^
16. While My Guitar Gently Weeps (G. Harrison)^
17. I'm Your Man (L. Cohen)^
18. Drive (J. Durniak)^
19. Black Star (Radiohead)*
20. A Plea To Lara^*+
21. The Sprinter (Avoiding a Marathon)^*
22. Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes (P. Simon)^

(songs by Justin Pope unless indicated. All Joe Durniak songs were sung by Joe, with backup by Justin)

3.21.2009

notes: 2/19/09, John & Peter's

Just pics for this one, sadly. I updated the firmware for my recorder the day before the show, which apparently causes all the user's custom gain/comp/limit settings to reset to default, so it came out clipped and distorted. Adding insult to injury was the revelation that this and other minor gripes I have with the device were just fixed in the new model. Bastards.

I do, however, have audio from this week's show and the 3/7 Triumph show, so I'll post those as soon as they're cut up into tracks. For now, enjoy some snapshots from the 2/19 show at John & Peter's, featuring:

Melanie Snyder - cello/backing vox
Zach Sweet - cello
Steven Nocar - guitar/vox
Steve - electric guitar
Lisa Rich - backing vox

(from l to r: Melanie, Justin, Steve, Lisa, Steve, Zach)

(Steve & Zach)

(Steve)

(Justin & the Steves)

(Justin & Steve)

(Lisa also runs the boards)



3.09.2009

from the vaults #1 - "Prom Song" (2003 Demo)

(the first in a series of blogs featuring old, unreleased material that's been gathering e-dust on my hard drive for years)

Though recorded (properly) for the first time in 2003, this song actually dates back to Stairwell, a band I played with in college (the remaining members of which later went on to form the very talented Throwback). Listening to it now, the stains of Freshman Year are all over this song; every word's an (often too-) obvious effort to cast off the imagined shackles of youth in the name of adulthood (which, as it turns out, has its own shackles). I recorded it with Joe Durniak -- that's him playing drums and bass on this recording -- in a messy, difficult recording session in the summer of 2004, when I realized I was growing out of it and ought to commit the thing to tape before it was too late.

Stairwell @ Battle of the Bands, Just For Laughs Museum, Montreal (2000)

When we started out, our little band was anchored by two fairly well-established talents: an eloquent lead singer and songwriter, and a multi-talented percussionist/beatboxer with a huge stage presence; I sort of felt my way around a lead here and there, held down the high harmonies and sang the occasional cover tune, pretty comfortable in my role as the "Other Guy" at our campus festival gigs and impromptu rez-hall jams. But after we began to expand off-campus and the venues got to be a little bigger, the crowds a little thicker, I wanted to bring something larger and more powerful to our sets than the slow dirges I'd been writing. Compelled by the twin forces of a burgeoning inferiority complex and the aforementioned heady dose of frosh freedom, "Prom Song" (boo-urns to that title on restrospection) was my first (and last?) attempt at writing A Big Rock Song: big chorus, big statements, big images, and big chords, one that would help me stand out in the band and, hopefully, get me laid, perhaps even often.

Stairwell @ Le Swimming, Montreal (2002)

...which didn't exactly happen. In fact, it didn't almost happen (see: guy with Jonas-brother hair above). Though, to its credit, "Prom Song" did spend some time in that coveted, rockers-only Last Song of the Night slot, so mission accomplished, I guess. Though they're largely exaggerated and clumsily-stated, I always liked the lyrics to this one, and for the most part, the performance recorded here isn't bad (minus the terrible "holding on to..." part, which is the only reason this hasn't been shared before, but alas, no master tracks, so no re-dos. Warts and all).

At 27, I sometimes feel like I'm already too cynical to sing this one with any degree of seriousness, so it's disappeared from setlists in recent years. But as I've got all this stuff sitting in folders, I figured I'd start to share it. Enjoy...


Prom Song (2003 Demo) - Justin Pope

2.26.2009

show next Saturday, 3/7


Next Saturday night at Triumph Brewing Company in New Hope, PA, I'm excited to announce the Justin Pope & Friends train rolls back into town for another fun night of originals, choice cover versions and jams galore. This time out (as last) I'm joined by multi-instrumentalist (and singer/songwriter) J. Peter Durniak, as well as a number of our very talented friends, including everyone you see in the photos below and more. Music goes from 10-1 (21 and up, kids), $5 cover, and a fine selection of beers from the area's only true brewpub. This time around, I promise to get audio...

1.28.2009

notes: 1/24/09, Triumph Brewing Company

Best show of 2009 so far, for sure. The energy from the crowd was infectious, the playing by the crew was impeccable, and the setlist kept the vibe sustained throughout a nearly three-hour show. Unfortunately, I picked the setlist as we went along, and didn't record anything*. Boo-urns. So instead, enjoy these photos from what I hope is only our first Triumph show...

(from l to r: Melanie Snyder, Justin Pope, Lisa Rich, Kendra Thatcher, Joe Durniak)

(Kendra and Joe)

(Justin, Lisa and Joe)

(Melanie, Justin and Lisa)

(Melanie, Justin, Joe and Kendra)

*- due to early problems with Triumph's in-house sound system...I really didn't want to ask the already stressed-out sound guy to patch my recorder in, and the crowd noise was too heavy for a decent mic recording, but next time, I swear...

1.17.2009

show next Saturday, 1/24


Next Saturday night at Triumph Brewing Company in New Hope, PA, I'll be joined by multi-instrumentalist (and singer/songwriter) J. Peter Durniak, as well as a number of our very talented friends. Music from 10-2 (21 and up, kids), $5 cover, and some damn good beers (Bengal Gold IPA is the jam) in one of the area's best brewpubs. Good times for all!

1.16.2009

notes: 1/15/09, John & Peter's

01.15.09 - John & Peters
Setlist:

(^ - featuring Steven Nocar, * - featuring Christina Ward, + - featuring Zach the Cellist)

1. The Ballad of Brighter Begins
2. Dear Azalea Gwen
3. The Sprinter (Avoiding a Marathon)^
4. (New Song)^
5. (New Song)^
6. Tonight Will Be Fine (L. Cohen)^*
7. Corinne
8. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright (B. Dylan)
9. Swear
10. Into the Mystic (V. Morrison)

11. The Apartment Song^+
12. House Where Nobody Lives (T. Waits)+
13. (a very messy medley of songs by 4NonBlondes, Phil Collins, Christina Aguilera, Britney Spears & Carrie Underwood)^+
14. I Don't Want To Live on the Moon+

(songs by Justin Pope unless indicated)


1.14.2009

show this Thursday 1/15

It's going to be COLD this week, so thank Mother Nature for giving you another fine reason to drink. And, if you're going to be drinking anyway, please do so with Christina Ward and me (as well as some of our very talented friends) this Thursday night @ John & Peter's, in New Hope, PA.

Music starts at 9:30 and we'll rotate sets all night until 12. 21+, no cover.

1.10.2009

notes: 1/3/08 - The Moose


Deleted Scenes plays a great live show. A good time was had by all. Their album is quite good, as well. Do check it out.

12.28.2008

show next Saturday 1/3

Very exciting show next Saturday night (that's January 3rd, first Saturday of 2009!) at the Doylestown Moose, featuring the excellent indie/Americana band Deleted Scenes (of Brooklyn, NY), talented Philadelphia singer/songwriter Sarah Marie White, and yours truly, rocking one of the most unique venues in the Philly area from 8-12. Come celebrate all the joys a new year brings (a fresh set of vacation/sick/personal days, the impending tax stimulus check our man will doubtless be pushing through Congress, snow days, brown liquors, chicken soup and the NFL playoff season, to name a few) with some great original music from both local and touring up-and-comers. Free admission, 21+.

12.20.2008

list time: best albums of 2008

No grand statements of purpose, no movements to champion, just my top eight for a year where new music made the daily grind grind a little less...

8.) Ray LaMontagne, Gossip in the Grain
Ray LaMontagne can sing just about anything and still portray an auraof world-weary sensibility that’s almost always convincing in its authenticity. As on most of his work, it’s his voice that’s the star on this album. Though his songwriting is only decent—tellingly, the most memorable song here is an ode to the charms of Meg White—it’s the hazy, warm folk/soul atmosphere, his pleasantly scratchy voice, the simple arrangements and easy pace of this album that makes it one I keep returning to.

7.) M83, Saturdays = Youth

Yes, it’s an unapologetic homage to the 80’s. Yes, Anthony Gonzales (and me, and many of you) was likely eating Nilla Wafers on a swingset when the sounds he’s shamelessly biting were popular, but if you can look past all the romantic hindsight of it (it took me a while), this is a great album. The production is fantastic, the arrangements are borderline flawless, and the wide-eyed, cheeseball idealism that songs like “Graveyard Girl” and “Kim and Jessie” conjure up is the stuff
summers are made from.


6.) Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!

There is very little about Nick Cave and his crew I don’t like—his songwriting is top-notch, the Bad Seeds are ridiculously tight and the way he spits out a phrase almost commands the listener to pay some goddamned attention. The sequencing of the songs on this album is great, but “Midnight Man” is definitely my favorite of the tracks. Even if you don’t like Nick’s snake-oil-salesman vocal style, the way the band comes together on the cathartic refrain (“Everybody’s coming ‘round to my place!”) is well worth the long and often difficult journey the rest of the album offers.


5.) TV on the Radio, Dear Science

I saw this made most year-end lists, and usually in a top spot. I don’t know that I really have anything to add to the collective heap o’ praise this band seems to be laying beneath these days except that I really, really like this album.


4.) The Walkmen, You & Me

Lead singer Hamilton Leithauser doesn’t just have one of indie rock’s most recognizable voices, he’s got a few of them—from his adenoidal, Dylanesque croon to his trademark upper-register scream; the man doesn’t simply sing a song, he delivers it to the listener in a changing palette of vocal inflections. And though a voice like his might serve keep many would-be fans away from this band, The Walkmen have maintained an uncanny ability to have a singular anthem on each of their albums that reaches for mass appeal (see: “Wake Up,” “The Rat,” “Louisiana”). You & Me’s soaring “In the New Year” is certainly no exception, and the album that surrounds it is a big step forward for a band that’s been frustratingly mercurial to this longtime fan. This
album is definitely the work of old pros who've grown comfortable with the range of their signature sound—the garage-rock organ, upright piano, trebly, reverbed guitar and That Voice don’t seem quite as at odds with each other as on 2006’s just-okay A Hundred Miles Off. There’s a confidence in the album’s sustained moodiness, all dusty corners and faded postcards, with Roy Orbison reverb and a classic live-in-the-room timelessness that will keep this one from sounding dated like so many of this year’s scene-centered releases. Although the album isn’t without modern reference points—I can’t think of a lyric that better captures the unfounded optimism of late 2008 American consciousness than “In the New Year’s”, “He won by a landslide / our troubles are over!” In my hopeful imagination, we’re all singing along when the ball drops.


3.) Pavement, Brighten the Corners: Nicene Creedence Edition

Admittedly, this doesn’t count as a “Best of 2008” contender, the original album having been released in 1997. However, this newest installment in Pavement’s excellent reissue series is one of only two records on this list for which I waited like a excitable, salivating fanboy (You & Me being the other). This album was my first introduction to Pavement, and I can’t recall having a stronger negative reaction to a song on first listen than when I heard “Shady Lane” blasting from a dorm-mate’s room (correct me if I’m wrong, Kent, but I think I said, “Why can’t they just tune the fucking guitars?”). In the years that would follow, I found myself making peace with their
lackluster attention to the finer points of pitch and tone, and drawn further and further into the spell of SM’s off-kilter lyrical genius and the band’s schizophrenic tendencies toward noisy scuzz-jams and sweet almost-ballads, often in the same song (see “Transport Is Arranged”). This album is a great introduction to the band for casual listeners, showcasing some of SM’s greatest imagery (“There’s no women in Alaska / there’s no Creoles in Vermont / there’s no coast of Nebraska / my mother I forgot”), two of “other guy” Spiral Stairs’ best contributions (“Date With Ikea”, “Passat Dream”), and excellent song sequencing, from the bubbling synths at the intro of album opener “Stereo” to the sloppy guitar heroics that elevate closing track “Fin”
to unabashed anthem status. The additional live tracks and b-sides make this a collector’s item worth having if you’re a fan, but it’s my #3 for reminding me how great it is to be excited about music.


2.) Bon Iver, For Emma, Forever Ago

I know this technically came out in 2007, but like many of you, I only started hearing about it when it was re-released earlier this year. To be honest, I don’t think this would have ended up on my top list if I hadn’t been fortunate enough to catch Justin Vernon with his touring band at a church basement show in Philly this summer. Playing in a literal sauna of sweaty hipster kids, with one working ceiling fan doing little but teasing, the four musicians recreated the desolate-winter-cabin vibe of this excellent album with ease and confidence, even as they joked about heatstroke and cutting the set short for safety reasons. There’s little I can say about this album
that hasn’t been written already, so I’ll just say that this is some great music, and if you get a chance to see the live show, do (here’s a sample courtesy, no doubt, of the very kids I was angry at for blocking my view with their cameras). “Re: Stacks” is the jam.


1.) Vampire Weekend, Vampire Weekend

I know it’s almost too easy to hate on these guys—believe me, I love to Rage Against the Buzz—but they’ve made some incredibly likeable music with this record. More than any of my favorites, this one seems to be the most apt for my #1 spot: serving as background music in our home for most of the year, soundtracking many of 2008’s best dinners and Scrabble games (that’s another list), and containing the catchiest, most upbeat music I heard all year, anywhere, period. It’s so good, in fact, that I almost hope they never make another record, so I can enjoy this one, unspoiled by future disappointments, for years to come.

#9:
Sun Kil Moon, April


Honorable Mentions:

The Hold Steady, Stay Positive
Silver Jews, Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea
My Morning Jacket, Evil Urges
Bonnie Prince Billy, Lie Down in the Light
Flight of the Conchords, Flight of the Conchords
Spiritualized, Songs in A&E
Kaki King, Dreaming of Revenge

notes: 12/18/08 - John & Peters

I was excited to have old friend and musical foil Mike Oravec (in from San Diego for the holidays) join me back on the J&P's stage for the first time in two years. As such, the set leaned heavily on covers from our old open-mic-duo days (including VU's "Candy Says", a recording of which is posted below). As always, Christina Ward and I rotated sets a few times throughout the evening, which lasted three hours, and culminated with a John Popper sighting that, sadly, did not result in an amazing harmonica jam with us on stage. Maybe next time, John?

12.18.08 - John & Peters
Setlist:

(^ - featuring Lisa Rich, * - featuring Mike Oravec)

1. Corinne (the Drunk Girl Song)
2. Mama, You Been on My Mind (B. Dylan)^
3. Into the Mystic (V. Morrison)
4. Cellophane*
5. Candy Says* (V. Underground)
6. Dear Azalea Gwen*

7. I'll Be Home For Christmas (Trad.)*
8. The Ballad of Brighter Begins*
9. Sad Songs and Waltzes (W. Nelson)*
10. F*** Her Gently (Tenacious D)*
11. How Dare You (M. Oravec)*
12. The Sprinter
13. Creep (Radiohead)*

14. Six, Seven
15. Carmelita (W. Zevon)
16. Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes (P. Simon)
17. House Where Nobody Lives (T. Waits)
18. Wave of Mutilation (Pixies)
19. I Don't Want to Live on the Moon

(songs by Justin Pope unless indicated)


live track: "Into the Mystic"(Van Morrison cover)

live track: "The Ballad of Brighter Begins" (J. Pope, w/ Mike Oravec)

live track: "Candy Says" (Velvet Underground Cover, w/ Mike Oravec)