Ari Picker pays tribute to his late artist mother, who committed suicide in 2009, in “Red,” the first video from the upcoming Lost in the Trees album, A Church That Fits Our Needs (Anti-, March 20). The haunting video features sewing machines, leaves and flowers in a cast-iron bathtub, a woman spinning in a photograph, and a ghostly white gown fluttering behind a pianist. The follow-up to the group’s 2010 debut, All Alone in an Empty House, the new disc also includes such tracks as “Moment One,” “Neither Here nor There,” “The Dead Bird Is Beautiful,” and “An Artist’s Song.” “The album attempts to kind of create a space for my mother’s soul, I guess, to go,” Picker explains in a promotional video, “because I can’t really satisfy myself with just thinking that she went to heaven.” The Chapel Hill band will be in New York City to perform a benefit “Live from Home” concert for Housing Works on February 17 with Daytona ($15, 8:00), then will appear at (le) Poisson Rouge on April 11 with Fleet Foxes side project Poor Moon ($15, 7:00).
Tag Archives: le poisson rouge
JEFF THE BROTHERHOOD

Jake Orrall, shredding it up last year at Santos Party House, will be at (le) poisson rouge with brother Jake on Sunday night (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
(le) poisson rouge
158 Bleecker St.
Sunday, August 21, $18, 7:00
212-228-4854
www.myspace.com/jeffthebrotherhood
www.lepoissonrouge.com
Nashville duo Jeff the Brotherhood, consisting of Orrall brothers Jamin on three drums and three cymbals and Jake on three-string guitar, play a dizzying blend of psychedelic postpunk garage power pop that explodes on record and onstage. Making music since their high school days ten years ago, JTB is on the road in support of their latest disc, the instantaneously affecting We Are the Champions (Infinity Cat, June 2011), the follow-up to their 2009 breakthrough, Heavy Days. Featuring such killer tracks as “Cool Out,” “Bummer,” “Mellow Out,” “Stay Out Late,” and “Shredder” (and no hint anywhere of the overused Queen classic), the brothers Orrall, well, shred their way through thirty-four minutes of unabashed rock-and-roll fury, evoking the Ramones and the Replacements (and even Weezer) as they cut it loose and fast. On “Ripper” they repeat, “I don’t wanna,” but you’re definitely gonna wanna check them out when they play (le) poisson rouge on August 21, curiously sandwiched between legendary doom metal band Pentagram, which just released Last Rites, their first record in seven years, and North Carolina heavy metal acolytes Valient Thorr. When we saw JTB last year at Santos Party House, they tore the place apart, with Jake ripping it up on top of the bar and going deep into the crowd as Jamin kept pounding away on his kit. Sure, they’re playing on a Sunday night at LPR, but as they say on the new album, “I know everybody stays up late,” so don’t worry about work Monday morning and have a blast.
YOKO ONO & FRIENDS: TO JAPAN WITH LOVE

Yoko Ono and a new version of the Plastic Ono Band will play a Japan benefit March 29 at (le) poisson rouge with Patti Smith and Cibo Matto
(le) poisson rouge
158 Bleecker St.
Tuesday, March 29, $100, 10:30
212-228-4854
www.imaginepeace.com
www.myspace.com/officialyokoono
In December 1970, Yoko Ono released Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band, which teamed the Japanese-born avant-garde performer with such friends as John Lennon, Ringo Starr, Klaus Voormann, and Ornette Coleman, among others. In the fall of 2009, Ono celebrated the record’s upcoming fortieth anniversary with a new Plastic Ono Band album, Between My Head and the Sky, which included such songs as “I’m Alive,” “I’m Going Away Smiling,” “Moving Mountains,” “Healing,” and “Memory of Footsteps.” Those titles now seem prophetic as she and the band, consisting of Sean Ono Lennon, Antony, Yuka Honda, Michael Leonhart, Shimmy Hirotaka Shimizu, and Yuko Araki, will play a Japan benefit Tuesday night at (le) poisson rouge. (Ono has also donated her husband’s “Imagine” to the iTunes album Songs for Japan, benefiting the Japan Red Cross.) The bill also features Patti Smith playing with bassist Tony Shanahan and a set by Cibo Matto. Tickets are $100 for a rare chance to see these three great bands together while helping raise much-needed funds,
JOE BOYD AND ROBYN HITCHCOCK: CHINESE WHITE BICYCLES
LIVE AND DIRECT FROM 1967
(le) poisson rouge
158 Bleecker St.
Friday, March 11, $25-$30, 6:30
212-228-4854
www.robynhitchcock.com
www.joeboyd.co.uk
www.myspace.com/lepoissonrougenyc
Since the mid-1970s, acerbic singer-songwriter Robyn Hitchcock has been regaling the world with philosophical, intellectual, and downright funny tales as a solo performer and with such bands as the Soft Boys, the Egyptians, and the Venus 3. His live shows, documented in Jonathan Demme’s 1998 documentary, Storefront Hitchcock, are always unusual and immensely entertaining, anchored by his often hysterically rambling between-song chatter in addition to his immense talent at writing a damn good tune. Always up to something different — in June he’ll team up with the Imaginary Band to play a one-off UK tribute to the recently deceased Captain Beefheart, performing the seminal album Clear Spot in its entirety — he’ll be at (le) poisson rouge on Friday night with longtime friend Joe Boyd, the legendary American producer who has worked with everyone from the Incredible String Band, Pink Floyd, Fairport Convention, Nick Drake, Bob Dylan, and Kate and Anna McGarrigle to Toots and the Maytals, Richard Thompson, Billy Bragg, R.E.M., and ¡Cubanismo! Hitchcock and Boyd are in the midst of a brief tour dubbed “Chinese White Bicycles: Live and Direct from 1967,” in which Boyd reads passages from his recently rereleased memoir, White Bicycles: Making Music in the 1960s (Serpent’s tail, December 2010, $14.95), Hitchcock plays songs by the groups mentioned in the book, the music that influenced him when he was growing up in London, and the two just talk about stuff. “Joe had a hand in creating a world that revolutionised mine,” Hitchcock notes on his website. “If he is Dr Frankenstein, then I’m his monster. Or one of them…” Get ready for what should be one very groovy night.

Robyn Hitchcock gets down to the Lovin’ Spoonful’s “What a Day for a Daydream” at (le) poisson rouge show with Joe Boyd (photo by twi-ny/mdr)
Update: It did indeed turn out to be one groovy night, as Joe Boyd told great stories about hanging out with such seminal figures as Zal Yanovsky and Joe Butler of the Lovin’ Spoonful, Robin Williamson and Clive Palmer of the Incredible String Band, Paul Butterfield (with Boyd suggesting he add Mike Bloomfield to the Blues Band), Nick Drake (not looking forward to his songs being overproduced), and Fairport Convention (as they decided to eschew American folk rock and turn to the English tradition after fearing they could never create something as special as the Band’s Music from Big Pink). He talked about putting together a Syd Barrett tribute that ultimately involved Pink Floyd, about losing out on a one-night stand to Bob Dylan, and about Maria Muldaur and Eric Muldaur falling in love. He gave the show a decidedly New York bent, mentioning many of the haunts they used to go to that were just around the corner from (le) poisson rouge; “This is the beating heart of the sixties,” he said of the city. He also apologized for convincing LPR that he and Robyn Hitchcock should perform in the round, resulting in their backs to much of the audience, which boasted Rufus Wainwright. After each tale, Hitchcock introduced and played a song by the respective musicians, including the ISB’s “Way Back in the 1960s,” Dylan’s “All I Really Want to Do,” the Spoonful’s “What a Day for a Daydream” (flat on his back), Fairport Convention’s “Reynardine,” Drake’s “River Man,” and the Floyd’s “Bike.” The encore was a riveting tale of Boyd being at the center of Dylan going electric at Newport, as the evening concluded with Hitchcock offering up Bob’s spiteful “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue,” followed by Boyd and Hitchcock signing books, CDs, and posters. (For a slideshow of the event, click here.)
DEERHOOF
Europa Club
98 Meserole Ave. at Manhattan Ave.
Tuesday, February 8, $16, 8:00
718-383-5723
www.myspace.com/deerhoof
www.europaclub.com
Deerhoof once again comes to the rescue of the stagnant music world with their latest album, DEERHOOF VS. EVIL (Polyvinyl, January 2011). Following in the footsteps of such previous experimental noise-pop records as THE MAN, THE KING, THE GIRL (1997), REVEILLE (2002), and FRIEND OPPORTUNITY (2007), Deerhoof — John Dieterich, Ed Rodriguez, Greg Saunier, and Satomi Matsuzaki — do what they do best, taking listeners on a twelve-song, thirty-three-minute journey through a multitude of crazy sounds, hard-to-decipher lyrics, and offbeat, ever-shifting melodies that delight while they confound. In songs such as the opener, “Qui Dorm, Només Somia” and “Hey I Can,” it’s as if they’ve added some toys to the mix. Spanish guitar is featured on “No One Asked to Dance,” while beautiful blasts of noise explode in “Behold a Marvel in the Darkness” and “Secret Mobilization.” “The Merry Barracks” goes through so many changes you’ll think your iPod is suddenly shuffling between different bands. Matsuzaki’s dreamy vocals are often more like another instrument, even when she intones, “I’m just a dream, you see” in “Must Fight Current.” The fuguelike “Almost Everyone, Almost Always” brings things to a close, marking the defeat of Evil. “Me to the rescue, me to the rescue,” Matsuzaki sings in “Super Duper Rescue Heads!” Deerhoof will continue rescue proceedings February 8 at Europa with Ben Butler & Mousepad, Buke and Gass, and Nervous Cop. Deeerhoof will also be part of the JapanNYC Festival, playing March 14 at (le) poisson rouge with special guests, including one-man band Ichi and Yuka Honda and Petra Haden of If by Yes.
CANCELED: ABRAHAM INC.
(le) poisson rouge
158 Bleecker St.
CANCELED: Wednesday, February 2, $25-$30, 7:00
212-228-4854
www.myspace.com/abrahamincmusic
www.lepoissonrouge.com
David Krakauer is a busy man, even for a prolific musician. After first making his mark in the disciplined, tradition-bound world of klezmer music, he’s gone on to collaborate with artists as diverse as Yitzhak Perlman, John Zorn, Pee Wee Ellis, and Phil Lesh mentor Luciano Berio. His latest project, Abraham Inc., is a ten-piece reflection of some of his remarkably eclectic tastes. In the same way the biblical figure Abraham is considered the progenitor of three diverse major faiths, the music of Abraham Inc. splits the difference among several genres, as evidenced on their most recent album, last year’s TWEET-TWEET. Krakauer blends hip-hop-inflected funk and the mournful old-country melodies of klezmer with occasional flurries of jazz and rap, the elements converging into a sonic fusillade of powerful rhythm that comes off as organic and uncontrived. Live, Abraham Inc. ply the same sonic ground as such popular outfits as Balkan Beat Box, putting a literal spin on things with longtime Krakauer collaborator DJ Socalled crafting a contemporary groove that is offset by a dynamic horn section. With Fred Wesley, a veteran of George Clinton’s and James Brown’s bands, leading on trombone opposite Krakauer’s clarinet, the pieces somehow all come together to make for a daring, driving, danceable mix. Abraham Inc. was supposed to bring the beat to (le) poisson rouge on February 2, with Igmar Thomas & the Cypher featuring Raydar Ellis opening up, but they’re stranded in Michigan because of the weather, so the show has been canceled.
LITURGY

Brooklyn’s own Liturgy will share the sacrament of pure transcendental black metal at several upcoming local shows
Thursday, January 27, Union Pool, 484 Union Ave. at Meeker, free, 9:00
Thursday, February 10, Glasslands, 289 Kent Ave., $8-$10, 8:00
Saturday, February 26, 285 Kent Ave, 285 Kent Ave. at South First St., 8:00
Thursday, March 10, (le) poisson rouge, 158 Bleecker St., $15, 7:00
www.myspace.com/liturgynybm
Spouting influences from Friedrich Nietzsche to Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Angelo Badalamenti and Glenn Branca to William Blake and Alejandro Jodorowsky, Brooklyn foursome Liturgy lets loose a unique blast of pure transcendental black metal that rattles the eardrums and shakes the soul. Originally begun as a solo project by guitarist and songwriter Hunter Hunt-Hendrix back in 2004 with a homemade demo tape, the group has since expanded to include Bernard Gunn on guitar, Tyler Dusenberry on bass, and Greg Fox on drums, releasing the twelve-inch IMMORTAL LIFE in 2008 and their debut disc, RENIHILATION, in 2009. Not to be confused with a Chicago death metal band also called Liturgy — made only more confusing now that the Brooklyn quartet has signed on with Chicago-based label Thrill Jockey, for whom they’re currently recording their next album, AESTHETHICA — Liturgy mounts epic songs that strike fast and loud, melding Middle Ages elements with ear-melting hardcore and well-thought-out, literate lyrics (at least those you might be able to make out) on such tunes as “Pagan Dawn,” “Ecstatic Rite,” “Everquest,” and “Mysterium” (named after an unfinished work by Russian composer Alexander Scriabin). The songlist for AESTHETHICA, due in May, sounds promising, among them “Tragic Laurel,” “Helix Skull,” “Glory Bronze,” and “Veins of God.” Liturgy will continue to spread the word of ecstatic annihilation at Union Pool on January 27 as part of the Mike Bigel Thirtieth Birthday Bash-a-Thon with Naam, Arms, Your Youth, and a DJ set from Shy Child, at Glasslands on February 10 with Extra Life, Lichens, and Chaos Majik, at 285 Kent Ave on February 25 with Talk Normal, Nat Baldwin, and Cavex, and at (le) poisson rouge on March 10 with the Ex.


