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LA Music

Raising The Bar With Hank Fontaine

Hank Fontaine is ready for revolution.

On New Year’s Day, the Los Angeles musician trumpeted a public call for creative reformation:

You’re a creator? Awesome. Create. This idea that you’re supposed to be a living, breathing “brand” is gross and someday it’s gonna look really dated. Whether you paint, write, sing, or complain, own that it’s an extension of your soul, not “content” that you excrete on a daily basis like a robot. Can we please make 2020 the year that branding dies?

Hank Fontaine is a powder keg in an industry bursting with soul peddlers thirsty for fame and power. He refuses to be contained. He is content to stay honest to himself, his whims and his art. Conformity does not interest him in the least. Fontaine is a restless soul forever on the prowl for inspiration, both a citizen and student of the world. Ten years of touring as a guitarist; a lifetime of transience. For the time being, he’s existing in Los Angeles, eschewing that plastic Stepford Wife nonsense.

Living in the City of Angels has only deepened his determination to bring authenticity to his craft, encouraging others to follow suit. He walks the walk. After four years as half of sibling duo The Fontaines, touring with Dylan Gardner and Valley Queen, and resetting his path with a couple of singles, Fontaine released his first solo album in 2019: The Globalist Agenda or: Welcome To Frogtown. It is an eclectic tour de force.

Fontaine’s sound is impossible to pigeonhole, and he likes it that way. There are some echoes of retro influence, particularly in Fontaine’s guitar licks, but his lyrics are firmly rooted in the 21st century experience. He effortlessly weaves elements of Harry Nilsson, early Billy Joel, Supertramp, and Electric Light Orchestra in his sound, through the filters of English music hall, New Wave, and breezy California surf rock. Although Fontaine is primarily known for his guitar chops, he is a powerful and emotive vocalist who croons, growls, whispers and fearlessly falsettos.

Photo: Alice Teeple

Hank Fontaine’s strength lies in his curious voyeurism and refusal to mould himself to a false concept. He takes that kid-in-a-candy-store approach to sound, reminiscent of Odelay-era Beck. His self-penned Spotify bio cheekily mocks the industry push to brand musicians, which he sees as a limiting force on creativity. Not a single song on this album sounds like any other, but all work together in a sonic crazy quilt as varied as the people who influenced them. The Globalist Agenda was inspired by people Fontaine met while living in the Frogtown neighborhood of Los Angeles.

“I like to pretend to be other people when I’m writing. I think that’s gonna get me in trouble someday,” he quips.

Fontaine’s love of Seinfeld shines through in his observational lyrics: always wryly wondering, “what’s up with that?” This is best exemplified in his debut single, Bad Love, which sounds like a powerful breakup ballad, but was in fact about a time he got cut off in a Trader Joe’s parking lot. “I asked, what happened to this person to make them like this?” Fontaine explains. The ethereal, forlorn Hope Don’t Leave Me Now was inspired by a compulsive lottery ticket gamber at his local 7/11.

The album was a collaboration with his friend and producer Jason DeMayo. The pair recorded all the instruments together, one at a time.

“It was a very freeing way to work that I never tried before,” says Fontaine.

Fontaine headlined the Troubadour in LA to celebrate the release of The Globalist Agenda, and then took off the rest of 2019 to focus on writing. He’s in NYC for a few months doing an artist residency, working on a new EP of songs he wrote in his hometown of Paris.

Keep your eyes and ears on this one in 2020. Hank Fontaine is just getting started.

You can purchase The Globalist Agenda Or: Welcome To Frogtown here:

https://hankfontaine.bandcamp.com/releases

You can stream it here (but consider buying it, he’s completely independent):

Can’t Give It Up Single

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Album of the Year: Civilian by Frank Tovey

Clan of Xymox Materializes At Le Poisson Rouge

Blake Charleton Keeps It Fresh

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

Adrian Sexton Draws The Death Card

Categories
Music

Album of the Year: Civilian By Frank Tovey

2019 has been all so overwhelming, hasn’t it? Being trapped in this infinity loop of crisis and pundits, all at our fingertips? We mindlessly scroll through the drone of Facebook, greedily lapping up salacious headlines and fretting over our future. Is anything changing for the better? Has the ennui always existed? Humanity loves believing in a simpler past. The deluge of programming and movies rebooting old material and old scripts is played out so heavily now one wonders if innovation is allowed anymore, or if we’re just going to keep pacifying ourselves with cozy familiarity. The 1980s seem as much of a utopia now as the 1960s did when The Wonder Years premiered in 1988.

Frank Tovey saw right through the excess, saccharine and glamour of the Reagan/Thatcher era, and, much like the soothsayer of Julius Caesar, went ignored by the masses. There was no room for nostalgia here.

Fad Gadget, photo by Florence Doorgeest

Frank Tovey’s proto-industrial band Fad Gadget, the first signed to Mute Records, boldly steered electronic music into the realm of industrial sound. Eschewing the stationary, robotic playing of his early synthwave contemporaries, Tovey shocked audiences with intense art performances: ripping out body hair, crowd surfing, being tarred and feathered, climbing rafters with a microphone stuffed in his mouth, often seriously harming himself with head gashes, black eyes and snapped tendons.

Fad Gadget albums were an eclectic mix of electric drills, drumming, Orff-inspired vocal arrangements, musique concrete, and shrieks. Tovey’s message and notorious reputation clearly threatened the suits; his lyric material found more sympathetic bedfellows with The Pogues, the Kinks, and Billy Bragg, by way of Einstürzende Neubauten and Iggy Pop. Tovey’s message was highly confrontational, bitterly anti-commercial, and deeply vulnerable. As most pop stars crooned about romantic love spats, Tovey operated on a different plane: warning humanity of the dangers of late capitalism.

Photo by Anton Corbijn

Despite never making Top of the Pops, Frank Tovey still wielded tremendous influence in the UK and West Germany. A fledgling Depeche Mode were entranced by his early performances, and signed to Mute soon after. The entire industrial genre owes him a tip of the hat, with artists like Skinny Puppy, NIN, and Marilyn Manson snatching the relay baton.

By the late 80s, however, Tovey pulled an about-face with his sound. He tucked the chaotic Fad Gadget in bed for a long nap, picked up an acoustic guitar, and penned brand new protest folk as Frank Tovey. After 1986’s Snakes and Ladders, which retained many sonic elements of Fad Gadget, and a side project called MKultra, he released the extraordinary Civilian in 1988.

The sonic switch confused his fans, the press and even his own label, but his fundamental message remained. The irony was, Tovey had always been a folk musician, albeit one with a synthesizer. His lyrics delved into humanity, the human experience, and the Everyman existing in a technologically-fueled fascism. Much like Bowie, Tovey found inspiration from various collaborators.

“It was never about transitioning from electro to folk with Frank,” says John Cutliffe of The Pyros, with whom Tovey would collaborate on his final albums. “It was about songs and sound and the musicians he surrounded himself with. His influences had always been eclectic, and his love of manipulating sounds electronically inspired so many, but that is also what we were doing with the more traditional folk and rock instruments. We would push the limits of what they could do and play…Frank didn’t care if it was a banjo or a synth. The song mattered, and the layers of sound we could use to draw out the emotion of the song was the only thing that was relevant.”

Over thirty years later, Civilian remains as prescient as ever as it slips into 42-minute slow motion tumble of Western civilization’s house of cards. This was not a world Tovey wanted for his beloved children.

Civilian is a hypnotic channeling of rage at corporate greed and corruption. The album opens with New Jerusalem, a screeching cacophony of crowd chants and a droning, nightmarish recounting of a fascist police state and street violence. It is a bleak, paranoid scene of innocents falling victim to the militaristic whims of “big enterprise.”

Ultramarine bitterly attacks the Hollywood glorification of the American military complex:

Liberation comes

In jeans and Coca-Cola

Liberty this bullet’s

Got your name on it

You make the films

And you’re making history

Napalm burger bars

Popcorn victory

Tovey darkly closes Ultramarine with his own Wonder Years-style monologue, recounting a childhood memory of watching a Buddhist monk die by self-immolation on live television. So much for the veil of nostalgia.

From The City To The Isle of Dogs examines the gentrification of London neighborhoods already present by 1988, the continuing erasure of local culture, and the demise of the middle class. The jaunty banjo number Bridge Street Shuffle wryly predicts the horrific spectacle of human suffering via reality television.

I’ve got two tickets, front row seats
For the riverside
We can take a picnic
And watch the suicides

The Brotherhood lambasts the corrupt patriarchal power of fraternal societies. Diana echoes the wrenching pleas of infidelity forgiveness. Unknown Civilian explores the post-war home front, and the silent suffering of shell-shocked veterans.

Civilian as a whole is a horrifying, clairvoyant glimpse at Western society on the precipice of complete breakdown.

In 2002, Frank Tovey’s earnest heart suddenly gave out, and he shuffled off this mortal coil. By then, however, he had already tilled the parched earth for the greedy saplings of a post-9/11 dystopia. Too bad no one heeded his warnings when Civilian was first released, but it deserves a fresh listen. You won’t find a more perfect soundtrack to close out these chaotic 2010s.

Mute Records would be wise to re-release this treasure. It’s time. Fad loves you.

Bridge Street Shuffle:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jRD6ba1JPZo

Ultramarine:

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Clan of Xymox Materializes At Le Poisson Rouge

Blake Charleton Keeps It Fresh

Virginia Marcs Goes “Wild” In Stunning New Video

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

Adrian Sexton Draws The Death Card

Categories
Culture Featured Music

Clan of Xymox Materializes at Le Poisson Rouge

By Alice Teeple

Photos by Alice Teeple

Eyeliner? Check. Black lippie? Check. Mesh, lace and platform combats? All present and accounted for, with a gloomy rainy night for good measure.

It was undeniably a Clan of Xymox concert down in the rumbling subterranean catacombs of Le Poisson Rouge in the West Village. The venue found itself stuffed to the gills with New York City’s goths, punks, leather daddies, kohl-eyed Gen Xers, telephoto-wielding photographers…and most wonderful of all, a genteel-looking mama jacked up on Bud Light. She was over the moon to introduce the music of Xymox to her daughter. “I’m from the South, honey!” she shrieked with delight, waving to frontman Ronny Moorings. “We make our performers feel WELCOME!” She hugged everyone within her immediate radius, bumping the enthusiasm levels right up to eleven. What a fantastically eclectic crowd at this show.

NYC’s own Pawns and Chicago’s The Bellwether Syndicate (led by William Faith of The March Violets and Faith and the Muse) riled up the crowd with their outstanding sets. Thunderous, energetic, and gothic as hell, these two darkwave outfits were terrific choices to support Clan of Xymox.

Clan of Xymox
Ronny Moorings

For the uninitiated, it was a real treat to see this new material live as well as the members in great spirits. The Dutch band, featuring Moorings, Sean Gøebel, Mario Usai, and Daniel Hoffmann, made a blessed final stop in New York, wrapping up this leg of their Days of Black Tour. Clan of Xymox was finally completing a cross-continental schedule of shows. If they were fatigued from the series of sold-out gigs, they certainly showed no signs of it.

Continuously playing in various incarnations since their formation in 1981, Xymox still sounded fresh and prescient with their philosophical lyrics and screeching synths. Xymox rolled out their old tried-and-trues like A Day, Obsession, and Muscoviet Mosquito, but introduced plenty of newer tracks as well.

Moorings, with his wonderful mop of jet-black hair, was in fine form, making wry political jokes. He mischievously taunted the audience and encouraged clap-alongs, as synth player Sean Gøebel went hog wild on a melodica. At times Gøebel appeared almost otherworldly as he serenaded the crowd, twisting and turning like a mohawked, German Expressionist Pan. Hoffmann and Usai kept up the pace, basking gleefully in the stage fog. The real surprise of the night was an inspired cameo appearance by their friend Curse Mackey of Pigface.

Xymox wound up the evening with two encores, and finally sent the children of the night off to their lairs with Going Round. The set lists were divvied out to the devoted, and the Southern mama’s daughter triumphantly snagged one of  Mooring’s abandoned guitar picks.

“This will make a nice Christmas present for Mom. Maybe a necklace or something,” she said, just before the duo tackled Bellwether Syndicate’s William Faith in the lobby with big hugs and good ol’ Southern hospitality.

Yes, ma’am!

Clan of Xymox: A Day

Vixen In Disguise

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Blake Charleton Keeps It Fresh

Virginia

Marcs Goes “Wild” In Stunning New Video

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

Adrian Sexton Draws The Death Card

Categories
Culture Featured Music

Blake Charleton Keeps It Fresh

By Alice Teeple

Photos by Alice Teeple

What sounds blare from passing cars as you walk down the street? The wham-boom of eardrum-shattering bass. Monotonous mumble rap. The prefab autotune wasteland beckoning erstwhile partygoers. The dreamy music of Blake Charleton (Akudama, Poison Party) is a melodic breath of fresh air.

Charleton is currently one of NYC’s most prolific songwriters, a one-man Tin Pan Alley, who performed a gorgeous set this fall at Downtown’s World Trade Center music festival. The genial, energetic Charleton is responsible for a staggering repertoire, ranging from mythology-inspired folk, to psychedelic disco, to Baroque pop. He is a master of his craft and The tarot’s Fool, incorporating choirs, musique concrete, and samples from classic films.

“My biggest influences are Paul Simon, Lindsey Buckingham, Karen Carpenter, the Gilberto family that recorded The Girl From Ipanema, even the Wu-Tang Clan,” Charleton notes.

Blake Charleton has been pursuing music since age eleven, after discovering an ability to remember lyrics to songs from movies and the radio.

Blake Charleton

“I grew up very isolated,” he muses. “I would feel emotion, romanticism, and desperation in melodies. Music was the only thing that made me feel those feelings, and as a lonely child it was comforting, almost like an imaginary friend.”

Charleton made good on his childhood ambition. He penned songs for his four bands, as well as eight solo albums. As is the case with most geniuses, however, Charleton endured his share of struggling artist tropes. His music frequently explores darker themes with the veneer of Old Hollywood. Charleton oozes authenticity and pathos, with a sonorous bass reminiscent of Neil Hannon of The Divine Comedy.

He once found himself shocked by the power of his own voice: “I was playing a house party, and two of my peers had begun striking each other in the face. This brawl was getting bloody, fast. I screamed into the mic for them to stop, and without missing a beat, the two boys paused. I felt completely control of my surroundings. It was intoxicating.”

Charleton admits working democratically can be challenging but rewarding, and welcomes collaboration. “Creativity comes from all people, not just from the famous or those considered to be talented,” he adds.

“I take long breaks and step away from songwriting more often than not. I don’t ever seem to find myself working on something big, like a concept album. I’ll wake up with a melody in my head, and then add music to it, feel it out, write lyrics, and voila! It becomes something.”

What’s next for Charleton? Film scoring. He admits to being an avid people-watcher.

“I can see an expression on someone’s face and hear a melody, “ he says. “My mind works in mysterious ways when dealing in music. I love seeing someone noticeably happy, just on top of their shit, alongside someone that struggles to smile or keep it together. I start to create a story in my mind of what their private life must be like.”

But he’s in no hurry to jump into the next phase. “I’m just taking it one day at a time, kinda stepping back and letting life unfold.”

Blake Charleton is completely independent and his entire solo magnum opus is available for purchase here.

Blake Charleton

Videos:

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Virginia Marcs Goes “Wild” In Stunning New Video

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

Adrian Sexton Draws The Death Card

Niabi Aquena of Searmanas Comes to NYC

Categories
Culture Featured Music

Virginia Marcs Goes “Wild” In Stunning New Video

By Alice Teeple

Photos by Alice Teeple

Virginia Marcs is a force to be reckoned with in her stunning, unsettling new release, Wild.

This collaboration with famed MTV VMA award-winning director Alexander Hammer (Beyoncé, Lizzo) unleashes a spectacular recollection of a manic night of excess on the “road to ruin.” She draws from her own tumultuous life experience and steps away from her usual power belting in favor of a more introspective approach. She asks through reflection, what damage does excessive partying do to one’s psyche? When does the cycle become an ouroboros?

“Self-destruction is the intoxicating swan song of the artist, the lover, the young,” says Marcs. “I lived it, loved it, blamed it, hated it, survived it, watched it unfold all around me…and made peace with it.”

Virginia Marcs

Virginia Marcs’ gorgeous operatic soprano transforms into veritable banshee howls as she runs in slow motion through an empty mansion and the nightlife of New York City. The slurry feeling of too much, too soon; the wild looks of determination to take it to the next level. She is non-judgemental and unrepentant. Hammer’s cinematic visuals lushly illustrate her memories of chaotic youth as a surreal dreamscape. We bear witness to her dirty deeds done dirt cheap, as Hammer peppers the video with subtle nods to the truth behind the mask. Is the lie of nostalgia, after all, just another high?

Marcs delivers a unique brand of art-pop, combining her opera and jazz vocal training with solid guitar chops and a passion for raw storytelling. She credits Kate Bush, Tori Amos, and Jeff Buckley as inspiration, first catching the ears of Idlewild Magazine in 2016. Since then she has released her first album, Climbing The Wall, and played all over New York City, as well as taking her show on the road with tours in Florida and New England.

Wild is her second video collaboration with Hammer from Climbing The Wall.  Marcs is currently running a crowdfunding campaign for the production of her forthcoming EP, Reckoning.

Virginia Marcs

Marcs performs at The Bitter End on 12 December at 8 pm, in partnership with the NYC Mayor’s Office for a showcase devoted to bringing awareness to gender-based domestic violence. This is a subject very close to Marcs.

“It’s a disgusting and preventable cycle,” she says. “You grow up in an abusive home, then as a woman you are twice as likely to end up in a similar relationship. It’s a poison. It’s one thing to drink it yourself, but when you feed that poison to your child…I was that child….it’s about survival, letting go of the past ever-changing. It is not about absolution.”

Forgiveness is a subject Marcs still finds challenging. “I wasted a lot of time and my life trying to get there,” she admits. This video demonstrates the importance of self-empowerment following a chaotic life experience; to become a phoenix rising from those unfortunate ashes.

Downtown is thrilled to debut this “dazzling generational tale of self-destruction.”

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Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

Adrian Sexton Draws The Death Card

Niabi Aquena of Searmanas Comes to NYC

Lauren Light Unleashes Dark New Single, “Run”

Categories
Culture Featured Music

Christine Smith Waits On The Far Side Of A Star

By Alice Teeple

Photos by Alice Teeple

Christine Smith takes a drag from her well-deserved cigarette outside the Bowery Electric. She’s just wrapped a spectacular solo performance for her sophomore album release, Meet Me On The Far Side Of A Star. It’s fitting this album made its debut in the intimate Map Room: its twinkling, celestial backdrop placing Smith in a sort of netherworld somewhere between Weimar Berlin and Major Tom’s shuttle. 

“Oh dear! Looks like I’m molting,” she chuckles, as several wisps of black marabou feathers float from her dress to the sidewalk. She stamps out her smoke, signs a CD for a fan, and warmly greets old friends who came to see the songstress on her former stomping grounds. 

The Bowery is foggy, with a damp chill in the air: the kind of weather that reluctantly welcomes nostalgia and melancholy. This night, Smith served as the ferrywoman, steering the boat with electric piano keys and a small red Spanish accordion, through an emotive display of loss, longing, and regret. Christine Smith treads the line between days gone by and harsh modernity. She ruefully gazes back at the storms of the past with wry observation, hard-fought wisdom, and persistent optimism. She is a seasoned warrior armed with wit, poetic dreams and a delicious glass of red to calm those tides. 

Smith’s seen her fair share of touring and recording over the last twenty years, having played with Crash Test Dummies, Jesse Malin, and Ryan Adams; as well as sharing the stage with Bruce Springsteen, Pogues frontman Shane MacGowan, Lenny Kaye of the Patti Smith Group, and H.R. of Bad Brains. 

With such a punk/rock background, it’s astonishing to hear Smith’s own gentle, conversational voice and classic piano plucked straight out of a 1930s cabaret. It turns out that during her early days living as an ex-pat in London, Smith supported herself playing jazz standards. From there she served as the musical director for Newsrevue (London’s longest-running satire show). 

There are strong elements of the Great American Songbook in this album, but Smith proudly wears her other influences on her sleeve – echoes of Petula Clark here, some Patti Smith there, some Simon LeBon flair, sprinkled with a bit of Angelo Badalamenti and 1950s doo-wop. She is a shining result of her eclectic tastes and influences. Her autobiography will be one hell of an incredible read one day. 

Meet Me On The Far Side Of A Star began as a collaboration with Texas singer-songwriter Victor Camozzi, who shared Smith’s passion for 1930s-40s American classics. A year and some massive life shifts later, Smith’s “achingly beautiful” masterpiece was finished. Meet Me On The Far Side Of A Star is an artistic triumph. Rolling Stone recently praised her track Happily Never After (featuring Tommy Stinson of the Replacements) as a top ten Country/Americana song of 2019. One hopes that Christine Smith keeps exploring her own voice and draws more from her deep well of experience and compassion.  

The album is available for purchase here.

It can also be streamed here:

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