MOUNT EERIE with CRINKLES and SWALE MOUNT EERIE with CRINKLES and SWALE :: POSTER Mount Eerie Crinkles Swale
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Bygone Shows

MOUNT EERIE with CRINKLES and SWALE

Mount Eerie :: Anacortes, Washington

Crinkles :: Burlington, VT

Swale :: Burlington, VT

Saturday, October 11, 2008 : Doors 8 pm

At The Bakery, Burlington, VT
$9 In Advance : $9 At Door

SPECIAL NEWS: Phil is going to do a second set tonight!  So if you didn't get a ticket, please show up around 10:15 and we will charge you 9 dollars and get you in to the second show!!!  Woohoo!

 

 

Mount Eerie :: Anacortes, Washington
Label : K Records
Website : www.pwelverunandsun.com

The fantastic Phil Elverum is best known for his music under the names "The Microphones" and "Mount Eerie," though he is also a visual artist , selling a variety of books, music, and
other beautiful items through his label, P.W. Elverum & Sun, ltd.

Elverum is making a lucky, solo stop in Burlington before his tour with Julie Doiron, with  the release of their new album together, "Lost Wisdom."

Crinkles :: Burlington, VT
Myspace : www.myspace.com/crinkleswrinkles
Website : browntowndotcom.com/CRINKLES
Album Review By Dan Bolles [05.28.08] (Self-released, electronic download) Ah, the Internet age. As physical music conveyances such as CDs, records and tapes — remember tapes? — go the way of the dodo, electronic downloads are becoming more and more popular as an inexpensive, efficient way of distributing music. The ease and accessibility of online distribution means more artists than ever before have the opportunity to be heard by larger audiences. It is unquestionably a great advance for musicians and their fans. The downside? More bad music. With the overwhelming flood of auditory options now available, any delusional hack with a six string and a computer can unleash his or her latest bedroom recording on our unprepared ears. Sifting through the detritus can be an intimidating and frustrating task, which makes finding that proverbial "diamond in the rough" — such as the self-titled debut EP from Burlington-based quartet Crinkles — all the more satisfying. The album begins with the lilting "Real Science." It's a mellow tune with lazily strummed acoustic guitar and minimal percussion. Drummer Jonathan Campolo handles vocal duties and delivers Sam Pettibon's lyrics with an easy charm reminiscent of Belle and Sebastian's Stuart Murdoch, but minus the dour Scotsman's propensity for gloom. "Nightlife" follows with guitarist Nicholas Campolo — who penned the lyrics — taking over front-man duties. It's a more driving number than the opener, and Nicholas Campolo's delivery has more in common with The Magnetic Fields' Stephin Merritt. The change is a touch jarring on first listen, but it works well on repeated plays. Nicholas Campolo also wrote the next track, "Minds Do Go." Here, the band opens up a bit with a slow-burning, harmony-driven tune that eventually resolves into a nifty little jangly guitar indie-rock nugget. The mournful instrumental "Lost Pet" follows and serves as decent interlude, setting up the album's final cuts, "Red Raspberry" and "Sugar on Snow." The former, also an instrumental, begins with a quirky MIDI line that eerily recalls the melody from the traditional French children's song, "Frère Jacques." The tune essentially blends into the closer, which is the finest cut on the record — can we still call it a record? Jonathan's Campolo's pleading tenor delivers strikingly poetic lyrics while the band surrounds him in a wash of delicate sound. Here, each piece of the puzzle that is Crinkles comes together perfectly, as if the rest of the EP is meant only to frame the final act. It's an intimately affecting and oddly uplifting number and wonderful curtain call for a true gem of an album.
Swale :: Burlington, VT
Label : Icebox Records
Myspace : www.myspace.com/swale
Website : www.swalesong.com

Swale has found a way to extract and express the chaotic elements of peacefulness through unexpected orchestrations of drum, guitar, piano, prepared noise, and voice. When main songwriters and partners Eric Olsen and Amanda Gustafson sing together, they create a complex voice that tangibly entwines weary raggedness with wide-eyed innocence. When performing live, all three members share the front of the stage, set up virtually on top of one another, a collective huddle centered around the untiring engine that is drummer/songwriter Jeremy Frederick. Their textured and manipulated sound, culminating in puissant highs as well as staggering moments of tranquility, makes watching this band nothing short of entrancing.