Thanks to everyone who came out to The Abbey Pub last night. Our show was up against a big show at The Empty Bottle with Ga'an, so I do appreciate that a bunch of friends came out to support, especially on the last night of a long, busy holiday weekend! It was a modest crowd that built a bit as the night went on, but it was a far cry from the mood and the energy that I experienced at The Mopery, last summer, which was the last time that I performed a solo set. Last night's set was more subtle, I think, but some really nice feedback frequencies spewed out of the PA as I went along. Thanks to Sean at The Abbey Pub, for having me there, as always. Thanks to Steve, for the excellent sound engineering that I have come to expect from him. Thanks to Scum Ra, Magas, and Richard and Duncan Pinhas. Thanks to Bryan Tholl for the photographs!
Showing posts with label The Abbey Pub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Abbey Pub. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Reader on 5/30
From the Chicago Reader
RICHARD PINHAS
Neil Young may have named his latest album Le Noise, but it's neither as French nor as noisy as Richard Pinhas's recent work. The Paris-born guitarist has been merging rock and electronics since the early 70s, when he founded the group Heldon, and he's run the gamut from bone-crunching, mathy prog to sublimely drifting pieces for looped guitar and sampled speech from philosopher Gilles Deleuze or sci-fi writer Philip K. Dick. He's spent much of his career playing with family (his son Duncan, who will play electronics tonight) and old buddies from Heldon and Magma, but since 2007 he's also recorded with Michigan freak-scuzz combo Wolf Eyes and the dean of Japanese noise, Merzbow. On the new Rhizome (Cuneiform), a live Pinhas-Merzbow duo album, the guitarist's swooping phrases and snaky leads take on a gritty bite that helps them cut through the squelchy gargles and implacable beats emanating from his partner's laptop. But on "Hysteria," the half-hour centerpiece of last year's double CD Metal/Crystal (Cuneiform), Pinhas melts down his instrumental voice till it's inseparable from the roiling maelstrom of blasts and blips from Merzbow and Wolf Eyes—the intimacy of their violent dance is all the more impressive given that the component tracks were recorded independently on three different continents. Though Pinhas just turned 60, an age by which a musician has usually let you know what to expect from him, his field of play has never been more wide open. Opening are Magas, who's debuting new material for analog synth and Roland TR-808 drum machine; Scum Ra, aka Plastic Crimewave of the Reader's Secret History of Chicago Music with Kathleen Baird of Spires That in the Sunset Rise; and Mark Solotroff of Bloodyminded and Anatomy of Habit. —Bill Meyer 8:30 PM, Abbey Pub, $12, $10 in advance.
Sunday, May 22, 2011
Sunday, March 27, 2011
BLOODYMINDED Live 3/22 Recap
BLOODYMINDED
22 March 2011
The Abbey Pub
Chicago, IL
With Cult of Youth, Socially Retarded, Population
BLOODYMINDED
James Moy - Synth + Mix + Vocals
Isidro Reyes - Synth + Vocals
Mark Solotroff - Vocals + Synth
01: LAKE STREET
02: ANGEL OF DARKNESS
03: TROPHY
04: WITHIN THE WALLS
05: GIRLFRIEND ATTEMPTS TO EXPLAIN SCHIZOPHRENIC EPISODE BY REVEALING CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE
06: IN THE MOOD
07: MIND THE GAP
08: PORN LORDS
09: A SONG FOR LISANNE, A YOUNG MODEL
10: LEAK (CADAVER IN DRAG)
11: GENITAL PANIC
12: PRO-ANA
13: BLIND FURY
14: TWO DROPS OF BLOOD
15: VISITING AN EX-GIRLFRIEND IN THE HOSPITAL – AIDS WARD
16: OUTSIDE THE GATE
17: CHALK EATER
18: CHINATOWN
Population kicked off the night with a great blend of coldwave, post-punk (ugh, that term), and death-rock inspired songs. It was great to see them live and I hope to do more shows with them in the future, particularly with Anatomy of Habit. I think that would be a good match-up. I would definitely recommend picking up their CD demo.
Socially Retarded were crushing, this being their first club show, blasting out from a full PA. Brutal hardcore/punk... power-violence? Sure, I guess. But with a strong power-electronics foundation. I got a feeling of Flux of Pink Indians for some reason. Maybe it was the noise element, the non-stop feedback tones, and the vocal delivery.
We had a pretty fast, heavy and loud set. We slid in under the 24-minute mark. Not bad for this set-list. Great sound from Steven, who has mixed Anatomy of Habit a few times at the Abbey Pub, but not BLOODYMINDED. He kept some great rumble in the bass, kept the ring in the more shrill synth tones, and allowed the feedback to blast out. Heber was a no-show, so we played as a three-piece. James is on probation for bringing a Roland SH-101 to the venue. I know we are in pretty rough shape, synth-wise, but that is crossing a line! That said, it sounded excellent. Everything felt good that night, even if the whole show seemed stripped down. No lion taming. No climbing. Just a go-for-it kind of performance .
Cult of Youth put on a great show... Sean is such a good front-man... and it was nice to have a bigger and more enthusiastic crowd for them, compared to their Viaduct Theater show in October 2009, with Anatomy of Habit. It was a pleasure to hang out with Sean, Glenn, Micki, and Christiana, and I am looking forward to the band's quick return visit with Zola Jesus, next month.
Thanks to Sean and The Abbey Pub, for hosting the show. Thanks to Steven for such great live sound all night. Thanks to all of our friends, who made it out to support us on a cold and rainy Tuesday night!
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Friday, March 18, 2011
Time Out previews 3/22 show
From Time Out
Cult of Youth matches intensity and menace with disarmingly tactile, even deceptively delicate arrangements. Long-running local noise-monger Bloodyminded delivers more traditionally aggro synth-rock, with even more agitated postpunk noise and industrial grime from openers Socially Retarded and Population.
Cult of Youth matches intensity and menace with disarmingly tactile, even deceptively delicate arrangements. Long-running local noise-monger Bloodyminded delivers more traditionally aggro synth-rock, with even more agitated postpunk noise and industrial grime from openers Socially Retarded and Population.
Flavorpill on 3/22
From Flavorpill
Editor Pick
"If you're a fan of the Todd Pendu school of event booking, you have most likely encountered Sean Ragon's band Cult of Youth at some point. And while its sound is dark, this band's darkness is decidedly uplifting, its martial rhythms transporting you alternately to the barren West and to the heart of battle. Called a band to watch by Stereogum, Cult of Youth head off on tour shortly after their performance. So catch them before they go. They appear tonight with local noisemongers Bloodyminded, Socially Retarded, and Population. This is music that rises clear and strong above the noise and confusion of your internal battlefield.”
Rozalia Jovanovic, Flavorpill
Editor Pick
"If you're a fan of the Todd Pendu school of event booking, you have most likely encountered Sean Ragon's band Cult of Youth at some point. And while its sound is dark, this band's darkness is decidedly uplifting, its martial rhythms transporting you alternately to the barren West and to the heart of battle. Called a band to watch by Stereogum, Cult of Youth head off on tour shortly after their performance. So catch them before they go. They appear tonight with local noisemongers Bloodyminded, Socially Retarded, and Population. This is music that rises clear and strong above the noise and confusion of your internal battlefield.”
Rozalia Jovanovic, Flavorpill
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Wednesday, March 02, 2011
Plague Bringer - 02-19-11 - Photos
Plague Bringer
Saturday February 19, 2011
The Abbey Pub
Chicago, IL
Plague Bringer:
Greg Ratajczak and Josh Rosenthal
With guests David Reed and Mark Solotroff
Photographs courtesy of Mariah Karson
Slideshow





















Saturday February 19, 2011
The Abbey Pub
Chicago, IL
Plague Bringer:
Greg Ratajczak and Josh Rosenthal
With guests David Reed and Mark Solotroff
Photographs courtesy of Mariah Karson
Slideshow
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Friday, February 25, 2011
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