
The Letmedowns
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
originally published September 17, 2008
The Letmedowns
"I know for a fact that I've let everybody down in my life I've ever come in contact with," says The Letmedowns singer Chris Nix. Frankly, it's hard to tell if he's joking. The lyrically driven tracks on his new release The First to Leave do in fact weave a tale of regret, frustration and failure. When Nix first penned these tunes five years ago, he never thought anyone would really hear them. It was meant to be an emotional release - a solo acoustic project to help him vent during a time of disillusionment with marriage. When the tracks finally made it on to the record, enhanced and altered by his eclectic bandmates, his wife had left him.
All of a sudden the hurt in those five-year-old songs rang with more truth than ever. "People said, 'Damn! You saw it coming, didn't you?'" Nix laughs. Maybe it's a nervous laughter, or maybe he just appreciates the irony of his band's name and his situation, but it does seem like The First to Leave has been a cathartic project for him.
This is by far Nix's most personal songwriting to date. His old power-pop band 6X9 was motivated mostly by "free beer and partying," but Nix and his current bandmates have done a lot of growing up since then, and the events of the past five years have made him re-focus his creative efforts.
Musically The Letmedowns are a puzzling conglomeration. Fellow 6X9 band member Mick Payne is on the drums, while former punk rockers Dom Totino is on bass, and Mike Nickerson lends vocals and guitar.
While Nix is influenced by bands like The Weakerthans, Bright Eyes and Neutral Milk Hotel, he's surrounded by metal heads and punk energy. He insists that despite the seemingly incongruous union of powerpop and punk, the band rarely butts heads.
When Nix first presented his tunes to the rest of the group, the tracks were completely finished, but as soon as his bandmates started contributing parts, the tracks evolved into something very different.
"Mike and Dom... really pushed it in a lot harder direction, and live we're even harder than we are on that CD," he says. "The songs were originally sort of a folky little psychedelic thing, and the punk attitude was brought back to it - thankfully, because the anger has built up harder than it was when we were recording. I'm glad to have that outlet now - to be able to just point at people, and scream and say 'Look, if you really, really listen you'll learn how not to fuck up your life.'"
Perhaps what is most striking about The Letmedowns' sound is Nix's unique vocals. His influences ring clearly in his thin, slightly nasal tones. It's a distinctive voice that fans of bands like The Mountain Goats will find endearing.
"I'm a terrible vocalist; I feel that myself," says Nix. "I just couldn't give my words to anybody else any more."
As a veteran of the Athens music scene, Nix is looking forward to his first show on the new and improved upstairs Tasty World stage. The Letmedowns' last gig at Tasty World, supporting Music Hates You, was in fact the last show ever played on the downstairs stage.
"My first show at Tasty World [with 6x9] was when they had that little bitty stage across from the bar, and people were throwing darts while we were playing. We've seen Tasty World through all its little incarnations, no doubt."
And Athens will soon see Nix continue to develop and grow through his various incarnations. The Letmedowns plan on returning to the studio next month to record two new songs. He feels like the record came out a little too polished-sounding and hopes to amend that on the new tracks. "We're looking to let some of the more edgier sound into the next recording." Look for a 7-inch featuring those two new songs to be released later this year.
Of course, as Nix seems to be living a self-fulfilling prophecy, with a name like The Letmedowns it's uncertain what the future might really hold.
"We always make the joke that if people don't like us, well, we warned you up front!"
WHO: The Letmedowns, Suburban Soul, Scarlet Snow, Zelazowa
WHERE: Tasty World
WHEN: Wednesday, Sept. 17
HOW MUCH: $5
Tighten Up Tighter Now
How Dead Confederate Got Attention, Got Hyped & Got Good
originally published September 17, 2008
Kelly Ruberto
Dead Confederate
Hard work eventually pays off. It’s a commonly repeated mantra in the world of independent music. Bands that have been around for years still struggle just to get a few pairs of feet through a club’s doors, and a night’s hard work can often result in barely enough cash to gas up the van and trudge on to the next unknown. For local band Dead Confederate, though, years of toil with little payoff are finally starting to see some serious returns.
This weekend’s show at the 40 Watt Club celebrates the release of its full-length album Wrecking Ball. It’s the first release from TAO Records, the new management/label project started by legendary industry figure Gary Gersh, who signed Nirvana and Sonic Youth.
Dead Confederate got its start in Augusta, in the mid-‘90s, when its five members were still in their teens. Back then the band was called Redbelly and focused more on open-ended guitar jams and loosely structured improv. The band moved to Athens for a while and played fairly regularly. Some people liked ‘em; most people ignored ‘em.
But a 2006 move to Atlanta allowed the band to refine its sound and develop a tighter, more focused aesthetic, and resettling once again, this time in Athens, has continued that trend as the guys have buckled down and gotten seriously into their guitars. Another wise move was to dive into the at-times-insular Athens music scene whole hog and without ego; the guys offered themselves to benefit shows, made friends with other bands, played DIY venues, found a tireless manager, built personal relationships with club staff, didn’t act like primadonna assholes and generally convinced people to at least check out their band. It took a long, long time, but about a year ago one of the more frequently heard local-music conversations around town went something like this:
“What’re you up to this weekend? Any good shows?”
“Yeah, I’ll probably check out Dead Confederate.”
“Really? I’ve seen them once or twice, I didn’t really li…”
“…No, no, I know, but they’ve gotten a lot better. You should check ‘em out.”
And people did check ‘em out, starting with a fundraiser show where Dead Confederate played a set of Sonic Youth covers. Local musicians started going to their shows, and over the past year the band opened for Dinosaur Jr., was hand-picked by R.E.M. to prep that band’s South by Southwest audience, and signed a record deal thanks to a recommendation from Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools. Dead Confederate just wrapped up a summer tour with the Drive-By Truckers where they also hit up several big summer festivals. On Oct. 10, Dead Confederate will make its national television debut on Late Night with Conan O'Brien, while later this fall there are plans for a European jaunt. Expect to hear some new tracks alongside album tracks on this current tour. Spin and Esquire, among other publications, have both praised the band, particularly for its album knockout track “The Rat.” In a recent “Bands to Watch” article, Rolling Stone spotlighted Dead Confederate and called the song “a slow-burning poke in the eye at Bible-thumping evangelicals.”
“The fact that people are paying attention at all is huge,” says singer/guitarist Hardy Morris, “and you never know until you get to that point - until what you’re doing is really worth doing as far as a full-time career is going - just so you can know whether this music thing can be a career thing or a thing you do on the side. It’s pretty mind-blowing, so that’s real nice.”
Wrecking Ball boasts numerous, killer layered guitar-rock tracks, heavy and lumbering, thanks to Dead Confederate’s foundational rhythm section, yet Morris’ drawl - slowed down, stretched out and turned WAY up - keeps them scorchingly Southern. The tunes call to mind the noisier moments in Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr., with a heavy Nirvana influence on many of the songs’ breakdowns. The technique’s been tightened up while the songs have been opened wide.
Earlier this year, Dead Confederate went down to Texas to work with producer Mike McCarthy, who has notably engineered albums by Spoon, So Divided and …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead.
After touring the Southeast and visiting several swank prospective recording studios, bassist/songwriter Brantley Senn says the band was taken aback by McCarthy’s stripped-down aesthetic, if only at first. “It was just a warehouse shed with amps pointing in all the wrong directions, according to studio norms, and he basically just told us, ‘Okay, go!’ It was like a practice, basically,” says Senn. "His gear’s really cool; it’s all vintage stuff. The first couple days of pre-production he didn’t really change much [with our songs], so we thought he’d whip us into shape, but he just let us do what we were doing. And we’d just spent all this time scouting these nice studios with TVs and bedrooms and minibars, etc. His studio is his own gear, he just takes it around to different places.”
Morris, too, was initially reluctant upon seeing McCarthy’s ramshackle setup. “One of the things I said when we were first a little hesitant,” he says, “was, ‘Well, won’t it be cool if we can make a good record out of that place?’”
Although Wrecking Ball is being pushed as the band’s debut album, it’s more of a “coming out” release. (The guys locally released a transitional album called Petition to the Queen in 2006 under the Dead Confederate name - it was a more Built to Spill-ish, My Morning Jacket-y Southern rock album, but they've put much of the material behind them, although an earlier version of “The Rat” is the album’s second track.)
“I think the whole band just at one point decided we needed to move in a different direction,” says Senn. “We said we’re not going to break up, we don’t like the old band anymore, so we just said let’s come up with a new name, new songs… it’ll be a new band, just with the same members, because we’re all best friends. We couldn't ever not play with each other.”
With a new name and a sonic shift, Senn and Morris took to writing new songs, approaching the tracks with specific results in mind rather than having the rest of the band - keyboardist John Watkins, drummer Jason Scarboro and guitarist Walker Howle - jam things out during the writing process.
“I think our tastes changed,” says Senn. “We did shift gears. We graduated from college, hanging out with different friends, listening to new music and our tastes changed.”
Dead Confederate’s manager asked if I could not mention the guys’ former band in Flagpole. He’s more eager to look forward rather than backward. And sure, I can make that deal - after this article. Because in trying to shape the band’s narrative by turning away from its past, Dead Confederate runs the risk of becoming just any other very good band. What that robs the band of, though, is of what it has accomplished through perseverance, smart decisions and musical growth.
And Athens audiences aren’t like other audiences. One of the more rewarding aspects of our town’s music scene is that we can watch a band develop, change and mature in public and onstage rather than at home in the basement.
“We were fortunate that when we made the leap to something new,” says Morris. “Everyone in the band was on board and wanted to do something new. And even now, I see the next chapter of what we do as something new and different than what we’re doing now.”
“The Rat,” the track that’s getting the band most of its newfound press and Internet attention, is also the oldest song on the album. Dating back to the Redbelly shows, the song’s evolution and continual use sums up the bandmembers’ savvy decisions: they identified what they liked and what they did well; they trimmed the fat; they focused on their strengths and expanded upon them; they found that cohesive core; they believed in the value of what they were doing, and thought other people would, too.
Too many bands try to have it all, writing songs all over the map, but Dead Confederate pulled back. In doing so, the band pushed forward.
WHO: Dead Confederate, Twin Tigers, Kuroma, Gift Horse
WHERE: 40 Watt Club
WHEN: Friday, Sept. 19
HOW MUCH: FREE! (21+), $2 (18+)
Pinback
Indie Fundamentalists
originally published September 17, 2008
Drew Reynolds
Pinback
Over the course of what's coming up on 10 years, Rob Crow and Armistead Burwell Smith IV (also known as, implausibly, Zach) have accumulated a solid breadth of material working under the name Pinback. In fact, some have even said it's the AC/DC of millennial indie rock. And while no one has actually said that, the comparison is justified - Pinback established a solid formula early on (with its helpfully titled debut This Is a Pinback CD) and has pushed outward and upward from within that formula. It's all carefully, patiently interwoven guitar and bass, adroitly melded live-and-mechanical drums and twin vocal melodies you can hang your hat on. The result is a sound that is instantly recognizable and oft imitated.
Yes, imitated, but never duplicated, and that is because Pinback's songwriting fundamentals are solid. In other words, if this was your woodworking class in high school and we were testing the structural integrity of our popsicle-stick houses, Pinback's would stay strong. The architectural fundamentals of anything - much less music - may be all you actually need to make something solid. And these fundamentals were at odds with a notorious performance in Chicago at Touch & Go Records' 25th Anniversary Party in 2005.
"Oh, sorry about that," laughs bassist Smith when it is divulged that a Flagpole writer was present at the Touch & Go show. "That was kind of one of our worst shows. We had rented all the gear, so it was none of our stuff..." In front of a crowd of thousands, Pinback navigated a gig rife with bunk amps and stage jitters (guitarist Crow took questions, mooned the audience, etc.). But strangely, it wasn't a disaster: set against the Chicago skyline at a luminous sundown, it almost had the feel of a weird, synchronistic bonding experience between audience and performer. We were rooting for Pinback to power through, and they did: the set ended with a dramatically wind-blown "A.F.K.," one of Pinback's many odes to subdued disconnect.
It was certainly a rare moment of lost control for a band that has successfully expanded an intimate recording project into a world-touring indie juggernaut. In the late '90s, while on break from their "main" projects - bassist Smith's legendary Three Mile Pilot and Crow's wonderful, underrated ADHD-addled pop group Heavy Vegetable - the pair got together for some casual writing and home recording. As the "main" projects dissolved, one thing led to another, and the once casual Pinback came into the fore, establishing itself as an unlikely purveyor of subtlety coming from the fiery hardcore town of San Diego in the '90s.
"Just because it's quiet doesn't mean it can't come off as... I hate to say it, but powerful," says Smith. Referring to his friends in the insane proto-math rock dieties Drive Like Jehu as "one of my favorite bands of all time," Smith talks a bit about the scene in San Diego in the times when regionalism meant something (pre-Internet). "I really think there was a camaraderie going on back in the '90s with bands like Jehu, Rocket from the Crypt, No Knife, Boilermaker, all sorts of bands that were... instead of competing, it was more like everyone influencing everyone. That's kind of disappeared..."
Pinback is currently touring behind 2007's Autumn of the Seraphs which actually takes Pinback's layered, measured approach into its most aggressive realm yet. Taking a page from punk's do-it-yourself mantra, Pinback has never recorded in a "proper" studio, only preferring to record at the band members' homes. Writing and recording simultaneously, the process of composition, practicing and documenting are all one and the same. "If you were to crunch all the days together, I would say somewhere between six to eight months of real working," Smith says when asked how long the average Pinback album gestates, "...but it takes us over a span of a year and a half. If we weren't recording ourselves, it would cost us way too much money!"
When quizzed for tips for the home recording enthusiast - i.e., your roommate in the dorm with ProTools on his laptop - Smith again returns to one of Pinback's recurring themes: fundamentals. "You kinda turn into this gearhead, it's kind of a scary addiction where you're like, 'Oh, I have to get this microphone pre-amp' and stuff, and what it really comes to down to is - I hate to say it - it's really the song. If you've got a good song, you can record it on a four-track and it's gonna sound good. I would say for people to not fret so much about, oh, I don't have the latest and greatest tube microphone - or the oldest and greatest tube microphone - just worry about the song. Everything else will play itself out."
WHO: Kylesa, Pinback
WHERE: 40 Watt Club
WHEN: Tuesday, September 23
HOW MUCH: $12
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