CMJ 2014 IN REVIEW: Bands to Watch

cmj

Attending a weeklong music festival featuring more than 1,000 bands can be intimidating. Sometimes you’re torn between going to see artists you’re familiar with and the ones you have yet to discover. Going to a show of a band you’ve seen before is a safe bet, but venturing out to see someone new is exciting and can be quite rewarding if you end up liking them. During my time of discovery during CMJ this year, I found three bands I fell in love with and I’m sure will be heard from again.

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MOTHXR
It’s unwise to dismiss this band just because the lead singer is former Gossip Girl actor Penn Badgley. I showed up at their Marlin Room at Webster Hall show because of him, because I was intrigued to see if a band could be lead by a celeb. Turns out this one can. Badgley played it cool during the performance, but also seemed to play up his appeal to the ladies. Unsurprisingly, we all crowded around the microphone, where Badgley was crooning away to the group’s slow-burn funk songs. Badgley spent most of the show swaying his hips to the beat, and his movements really embodied their sound, cool, collected, raw and funky. They’ve only been playing together (and not even as an official band) for about a year, so I’m sure there’s much more to come.
Song to listen to: “Easy”
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Gossling
OK, I admit I had actually heard of Gossling before I went to see her. Last year, I had meant to see her at the Australia showcase at The Delancey, but got there too late. So I was determined to see her this year, and was not disappointed when I did at Glasslands. In the last year, she’s put out an EP and a full-length album and honed her sound so that it’s become a solid, electro-pop that you can’t help but to get into. There are few more fun things to listen to than Gossling’s Aussie accent as she’s crooning out in the new tracks.
Song to listen to: “Wild Love”
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Colony House
This band I wasn’t expecting to like. As the boys ascended the stage, I figured it would be just another indie-pop band, looking like they had just stepped out of a frat house in California. Their music definitely has that carefree Cali vibe, but it’s so much more. It’s a great indie rock, perfectly produced and catchy as hell. They’re an incredibly fun, put-together high-energy band that gives you exactly what you want even though you didn’t know you wanted it. They had the packed crowd at Glasslands jumping and singing and buying into them completely, and it wasn’t difficult to see why.
Song to listen to: “Silhouettes”
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VIDEO REVIEW: Pet Sun “Gimme Your Soul”

Pat Sun band

Pat Sun band

Toronto-area garage rockers Pet Sun released the excellent Feel Like I’m Going Away, their debut EP for Sleepless Records, last September. Now, there’s a new video for “Gimme Your Soul,” equally seizure-inducing and psychedelic.

The video flashes back with 90’s MTV illustration-style bats, flying eyeballs, pulsating brains, and splattered blood. Lasting just over a minute and a half, these Hamilton dudes give us a little look into their rockin’ performance on a roof : high energy, short, nothing sweet, yet a whiz-bang of craziness. “Gimme Your Soul” is a late-night television epileptic fit that makes it hard to look away. Heavy, trashy guitar (courtesy of Sam Rashid Stephane Senecal-Tremblay, who also handles insolent lead vocals), crashing drums from Parth Jain and Nic Arbour’s rollicking bass add to the visual stir of the band as they schlep gear around Hamilton’s streets, shove pizza in their faces, or goof off in the studio.

All in all, it’s a lysergic little window into what it’s like to be Pet Sun right now at this very moment. They are the lively bunch you’d want to bum around with during downtime on their current show streak, much like how video director Scott Waring must have felt. Fresh off a stint supporting Black Lips, Pet Sun are rolling through CMJ Music Marathon as we speak.

TRACK REVIEW: Dilly Dally “Green”

Dilly Dally

DillyDally

Formed in Toronto in 2009 by teenage besties Katie Monks and Liz Ball, Dilly Dally debuts with noisy, fuzzy, lo-fi gem “Green,” their belated and amplified angst blasting through speakers. The duo recently brought in Benjamin Reinhartz (of Beliefs) on drums, as well as adding bassist Jimmy Billy Rowlinsonin (of Mexican Slang) after hosting a rotating lineup for a while, but the main mission stands strong — to pump out raw feeling in the form of messy words and loud instrumentals.

“Green” hearkens back to those garage days, or to last Saturday’s punk rock kegger, tapping into grungey vibes that never seem to get old. Even if you’ve outgrown your sloppy haircut and ratty flannel, “Green” isn’t so easy to discard. The track starts out a bit subtle, with discordant, distorted strains of Berlin’s “Take My Breath Away,” enough to induce a trance if only for a few seconds. Then come the jangly guitars and crashing drums, with lyrics equally creepy and flirty and slurred vocals that sound like a weird mix of Courtney Love, Bob Dylan and Stevie Nicks. The rest of “Green” seems to hum, screech, yawn and yelp while the instrumentals stay carefully upbeat and consistent, an anxious pop of ear candy.

Dilly Dally are playing two CMJ shows on Friday (12pm at Baby’s All Right & 4:40pm at The Studio at Webster Hall) and one on Saturday (7pm at Bowery Ballroom). Check out “Green” below!