What a great show last night at the Ballroom, where the sound is always perfect!  We got there towards the end of the opener, Jesse Sykes and the Sweet Hereafter, and were pleasantly surprised to hear a top-notch folk-psych outfit who could be Steeleye Span folky one minute and the next, launch into some scorching jams led by electric guitar maestro, Phil Wandscher.  Jesse’s voice is beautiful and hauntingly mesmerizing, and completely set apart from the vocal style that a lot of ‘alternative’-ish female singers are latching onto these days.  Dig their songs on MySpace!

And then it was on to the main event, Black Mountain, who started strong and never let up.  Here’s the setlist…

…and that’s about the best picture I got, since the band likes to keep the stage nice and dark.  They are named Black Mountain, after all!  These guys pound you with heavy riff-filled sound that you can’t help but bang your head to…kinda like Black Sabbath, but more trippily-psychedelic, and with killer proggy keyboards.  They have a female singer with a ‘bleating vibrato’ (a la Roger Chapman…anyone?) and the guitarist also sings.  And the band is at their best when the two are singing together, like in the third song of the night, “Wucan”, a song that puts me in a willing trance every time I hear it.  Check out their video for the song…
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8upxRhff7cE&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&fs=1]

…is that not amazing?  And it was 11 times the badassedness live at Bowery Ballroom last night. There was nary a dull moment.  Other highlights for me besides “Wucan” were “Druganaut” and “Stormy High”.  Check this band out if they come to your town!

I love that there are now bands like this out there playing to indie-rock audiences and reminding them how good a guitar solo can sound.  It seems like the guitar had become just an instrument to make cutesy little jangly sounds on for so many indie-rock bands, as it somehow became unhip to have songs with guitar solos.  Why is this?  Did all the sensitive guys think of a guitar solo as an extension of their penis, which of course they would never want to admit to having?  Or maybe their lyrics were so deep that a guitar solo would only water down their dire message to the world.  Well, I’m happy to say that I’d rather wallow in the guitar-centric new pool of talented psych-rock bands such as Black Mountain, Dungen, Howlin Rain, Wooden Shjips, Earthless, and Jesse Sykes and the Sweet Hereafter.

Check out Black Mountain music on MySpace and, if you dig ‘em, pick up In The Future, an album that I nominated for one of the best albums of 2008 at mid-year.

So, I’ve recently stumbled on some new music that I really like, but of course that’s because it’s music that isn’t afraid to go in new (old) directions. It may sound confusing, but how uncool has it been in the last 20 years to sound like prog-rock at all? Correct, very. But throughout that time I’ve still always harbored a love for progressive rock, in all it’s ‘indulgent‘ grandeur. The argument against prog rock has always been that it’s over-indulgent, which I never understood because I figured music would be the perfect place to indulge. It’s every other facet of life that we must curb our indulgences…but why not let’s make the music freer than we?

All right, now that I’ve confirmed that I’m a dork, I wanted to turn you on to some examples of new Indie bands who aren’t afraid to borrow from some of rock’s taboo past. All of these bands had albums that just dropped this month too, that I recommend any and all of. Let me start with this video from a duo called MGMT, who have a prog thing going on in their music. They’ve got something pretty magical going on…this video will prove that… See the video for “Time To Pretend” here.

And here’s the same song performed on Letterman, with capes, mind you…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqzoRQv2UIU&rel=1]

Now check out this band, Black Mountain, who have a heavy prog thing going on. Their new album, In The Future, is one of my favorites right now. Check out them performing ‘Wucan‘ at ATP…wicked riffin’…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhvE-D9osY8&rel=1]

And here’s Vampire Weekend whose album just dropped today, who are not afraid to use African rhythms, rock-style, like the Talking Heads did…and Paul Simon. The Dirty Projectors kinda have the African thing going on too, but first check out this brand-new Vampire Weekend video, and dig their style…

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_XC2mqcMMGQ&rel=1]

Click on through to the other side, to see the amazing Dirty Projectors video, as promised…

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