July 11, 2011

Artist Interview: Mickey Avalon

by Tom “Wonderboy” Roth

USD Radio got a chance to speak with LA artist, Mickey Avalon before his Portland stop. Read on for Mickey’s thoughts on strip clubs, record labels, and his new album, On the Ave.

USD RADIO: How are things going in the studio?

MICKEY AVALON: Good. I’m actually lying on the floor in a towel because it’s so hot in here. I got a bunch of records already done. There’s just all the politics of getting my masters back and stuff but I’m working on finishing up another album… so we’re on a little tour right now, just a mini one, but we have two days off so we’re home to take care of some business and record and then tomorrow, we go to Portland for two days in a row at Dante’s, and then Seattle for the Showbox and then Boise. So that’s what we’re doing.

USDR: You used to live in Portland. Will coming back to Portland allow you any time to check out some of your old hangouts?

MA: I’m from here in LA, but I lived there for a few years. When I was young, I got married and had a kid and we thought that that was a good place to raise her. I don’t have many friends there and if I did, they’re probably not alive anymore, but there is a place I like to hang out called the Magic Gardens which is my favorite strip club in the whole world and I’m sure I will go there because we’re gonna be there for two days. We have the second day to hang out all day and after the show. Its walking distance from Dante’s so we usually walk over there. It’s kinda cool because now when I go there, all the strippers know me and they’ll dance to my songs when I walk in. I was also friends with the dancers when I lived there but I had no money or anything and there was a $2.50 minimum because you had to buy one beer, and scrounging up that $2.50 was always really difficult so it’s cool to go back there in better times.

USDR: You have few people on stage with you in your live performances. Who’s who and how do you know them or how do your recruit them?

MA: The thing with rap music – for the most part – a live show isn’t so good all the time because there’s no band but then adding a band doesn’t always solve the problem. Actually, a lot of times, it makes a whole bunch of other problems… I mean, there are a few people who pull it off. So, right off the bat I knew from being a fan of other people we had to do something different to be entertaining and fun. So we would do different types of stuff like on my first show, I had this big, black bodybuilder just lifting weights the whole time. I’ve had trannies do weird stuff and then we just started doing dancers. I met a few different ones so, basically, the crew I have right now is… I got three dancers. For big shows, we use all three. We usually use two, and on the road, usually we take one more just for budget reasons. Stephanie and Hannah are like the two main ones and they’re kinda like bookends to me. They look real similar. They’re skinny with, like, olive colored skin and short hair. Then Jillian is this white girl with a big, fat ass. It’s not so much like dancing dancing. It’s like live-performance art and it just kinda fills up the stage and they work good with me. Then there’s the DJ, who’s Mikey Clark, and he sets the music. There’s a lot of girls at the shows so I think it’s nice to have girls on stage because for the guys at the shows, it’s nice to have something to look at and I also think it makes me look better if there are hot chicks around me. I like to look at them on stage too. Sometimes, I’ll just be zoning off for a second then I’ll just look over and it wakes me up. They’re pretty scantily clad especially for the 21 and over shows where they might be barely wearing anything, just pasties and some garter belts so it’s pretty hot. I like it.

USDR: You had a few stops in Australia. Was the reception there different than the reception in the States?

MA: Oh its way crazier out there. They riot, basically. We’ve been going out there every year for the last five years and I think I actually have a bigger fan base in Australia than here and they’re way nuts. It’s funny you ask about that because we’re working on a song right now with this guy, Kid Mac, who’s from out there. He’s super dope and we’re doing this song for his record right now that we’re recording and I dunno if you’ve heard of the Brah Boys but they did a documentary on them. It’s these guys from Arubra, these surfers, and he’s from that crew and, yeah, we’re writing this song right now, it’s called “Lunatic”.

USDR: Another recent stop was at the Roxy in LA. Those home shows must be different from all the rest.

MA: Oh yeah. For me, all the other shows kinda get in a blur but I always remember those shows because it’s nice to be home and I love the Roxy and that was the first place I ever played and, you know, we just put a lot into it. So for that show, we had all three of the dancers and it was just fun. It was sold out and got pretty crazy. I try to give it my all at all the shows but for home, its home so you can’t really compare anything to that.

USDR: You said the Roxy was your first show. Was that the show where Rod Stewart was in attendance?

MA: No, that was my second show and that was at the Hard Rock Café. That’s when the Hard Rock was still there, it’s not even there anymore… the Hard Rock at the Beverly Center that had the ’59 Cadillac  up in it. So yeah, he was there. That was flattering. I do a lot of work with this one guy who produces a lot of my songs and he was dating his (Rod Stewart’s) daughter at the time, Kimberly, so I think that’s what brought him to the show.

USDR: After the tour ends in Austin at the end of July, what do you have planned?

MA: Well… I don’t talk much about it because I’m a fan of music and I know I don’t really like hearing artists talk about all the politics and record label stuff but I’m really just trying to get my masters so I can get my record out. Once I get my record out, these are all just kinda make-shift little tours that are like, places that will have me back and that I sell out really easily and stuff, and I can’t really do a real tour until I get my record out. I mean, once I get my record out, then I can tour the whole country and go to all the cities that people write on Facebook, like “Why don’t you come here?”. Its like, “I can’t. No promoters will really have me out there until I get my record out”. It’s been way over due and I’m not holding back because I’m making a Chinese Democracy record or anything… it’s ready to go and if it takes much longer we’ll just have to jump to the third record which doesn’t have any politics around that because that was done after I left Interscope. So I just think, you know, you’re a writer and in telling a story, if you’re writing a book, you kinda want the second chapter to come out before the third chapter. But if it really gets to be too much of a pain in the ass… then I’ll just have to leak the second record and put out the third record legally. That’s kinda all I’m dealing with. So what’s next, I guess, is just getting this damn record out and then doing everything I gotta do to promote it. I do have a good team behind me now that I just kinda put together in order to do all this. I got a new lawyer, a new manager, and they should hopefully prove worthy and get all this stuff done sooner rather than later. The record’s called On the Ave.

USDR: How is On the Ave going to be different than your first record? On your first album, you dealt with a lot of personal hardship via humorous lyrics. How is On the Ave going to change from that?

MA: Well, this one’s a lot more similar to the first one than the [forthcoming] third one. Same producer, similar sound, same cast of characters as the first one. I mean, I like to deal with things on the lowest common denominator basis so I think it’s pretty similar. It’s still personal but I’m not trying to go back to a time that’s not relevant anymore. I’m talking more about other people than myself but there are a few with me in the song. There’s one called “Mickey’s Girl” which is kinda like a New York tale and I’m in the middle of that and then there’s even some that were written at the same time as the first record and just didn’t make the first record. Not that they weren’t good enough, they just didn’t fit in that group of songs whereas this time around, they fit.

I think it’s very similar to the first record. It’s kind of a segue between the first and the third record so, again, in a perfect world, I’d like to put them out in order because I think that leads into the third record better than the third record coming after the first. That’d be a big jump with a big void in the middle.

I think there’s the same kind of humor. The difference is some of the songs are more… When I wrote my first record, I hadn’t performed live yet so now when I write a song, I kinda think about how it would be taken by the crowd and now, I’ve even had a chance to play the songs on the [third] record in my shows so I get to see which songs people like and how they react to them. So I’ve already tested a lot of the songs and they’ve worked. People always say, “it’s just like the first album, but bigger and better” but I really think it is like that which is a little more… you know some of the songs could really rock an arena just as well as a little club. I’m proud of it and I’ve been listening to it for almost a year now and I think it was ahead of its time before so now it’s just getting ready to be relevant now.

USDR: You had a hand in Ke$ha’s early exposure. Does seeing her current fame and success give you more of the proud-father feeling or the that-should-be-me feeling?

MA: No, neither. Definitely not the latter and as far as the former, I didn’t really do anything for her. I knew that that was about to happen because of the people that were involved in putting her out. There is a so-called “button” that can be pushed by the right people if those people are behind you and I knew that that was about to happen. She just needed to get her feet wet and get some practice. I was working with those people and kind of had a falling out so if I was involved with those people, I would be there. I was willing to jump through the hoops, it just didn’t really work out and if something doesn’t fit, then you can’t do it and to me it just didn’t fit. I tried to write certain songs in a kind of way and they just didn’t sound good and I didn’t like them. It wasn’t like a surprise that when the tour was over that she got huge. They were already doing all this stuff behind the scenes so when she came on tour, her song was already out but no one could really put a face with the name. No one really knew her at the shows even though a handful of people knew the song but then once the tour was over and they were really ready to push the button, then they did that and she got huge.I could lie and say that I had a hand in it, but I didn’t so that why there’s not really a proud-father thing and then as far as the jealousy thing, that’s not there because we just have different lives.

I’d be okay with having that kind of success but I can’t know what’s gonna happen until I get this record out so without a record, I can’t really have anything. I tried to get with the big producer and all that stuff and it just wasn’t really a good fit. Not only did I not like it, no one really liked it. It wasn’t like “Oh, I’m not gonna sell out” or “I’m not gonna do this”. I tried. It just, honestly, was garbage. That group of songs? I have no problem leaving them at Interscope. Those aren’t the masters I’m trying to get. It’s all the other stuff that I was recording at the same time and before and after. Not only do I like those songs more, all my friends and fans like those songs more too. I just think it would’ve been a bad move to put that other stuff out when it sucked.  It wasn’t even a case of losing my original fans. It would be losing everyone (laughs). My original fans and my new, potential fans. I would’ve just lost everybody. Now I’ve got labels interested in putting this record out, it’s just that we can’t do nothing until I get the masters. I would put out a record illegally and leak it or whatever but no one wants to put a few hundred thousand dollars behind something that isn’t legal so you know, we have to go about it the right way and deal with the legal aspects of it.

I’m proud of her… for her. You know, to go back the the Ke$ha thing. No matter what anyone wants to say about anybody, you know, music or models… people say “Oh, that’s so easy”. Nothing on that big a scale is easy. There’s work that goes along. The travel and all that stuff. The so-called haters find it so easy to talk shit about people but if it’s like, “If it’s so easy, why aren’t you doing it?” I know that these people that say these things who are probably telemarketers or something would trade their right arm to be in that situation so if it’s so easy, why don’t they get up and do it?

There is a fun part. Yes, it is a better job than most jobs. You won’t hear me complaining about my job but it’s definitely a job. The recording part is fun and the performing part is fun but there’s all the in-betweens. Luckily for me, most of my fans are really cool and I don’t have to have a fake image or do any of that stuff so it’s easier. Even like people that interview me, like you, those people are pretty cool. I don’t have people trying to cut me down or something so I get a better version of it but it is a lot of work.

With Ke$ha, it didn’t happen overnight. She did do a few years worth of work and she was writing for other people. I’m proud of her and I’m thankful to her because I think she just said something good about me in People magazine or something big like that and she was willing to take me out on tour but the money wouldn’t have really made sense for me. It wasn’t like “Oh, I’m not gonna go. She just opened for me, I’m not gonna [open for her]”. It wasn’t an ego thing. It would’ve been cool to get some new fans and stuff but when I go out myself I make a lot more money. It probably would’ve ended up costing me to go so it wouldn’t have really made sense.

USDR:You’re right about the full-time job bit. I’m glad that we can include that because it’s something that people don’t realize. The amount of appointments, travel, meetings, and that’s just on top of the recording and performing.

MA: Yeah, and maybe some people like doing that stuff. Even the corniest of corny reality shows… think of someone like Kim Karadashian. She probably goes to, like, a hundred fucking meetings a fucking day and she might like it, but as far as the hours of work, its tons.

USDR: And then where’s your personal time?

MA: They joke that the painter’s house is never painted. Since my job is in clubs, it becomes not so fun to go do that stuff. So whereas when someone’s not working, that would be something they would go and do, I don’t really wanna do that because that’s how I spend my working hours. So I like just kind of staying at home and chilling but we do go to some local bars and stuff like that. Not so much like Hollywood nightclub stuff but just like go to a bar that’s walking distance.

USDR: Or the strip club in Portland.

MA: (Laughs) Portland has the most strip clubs per capita. They’re nude with drinking. We (California) have the worst strip clubs. They’re not even nude. They wear, like, fucking bikinis or something. You can’t drink if it’s nude. That’s even creepier. Just a bunch of fucking horny dudes sitting around looking at fuckin’ pussy without drinking. Being at a bar without drinking is just creepy by itself. So yeah, if we had a strip club like that here I’d probably go every once in a while. There, it’s really nice. The thing that’s awesome about that place is from the looks of the neighborhood and the building and everything, you would think it was some crack-head dancers who are dancing to pay for their crack habits but you go in there, and it’s, like, the hottest chicks and they’re literally putting themselves through college. It’s like the fantasy thing you see in movies that you don’t think really exists. These are healthy girls that don’t do drugs and are just open-minded and… hot. And that’s their job. It’s just this crazy thing what you think is gonna be in there and what’s really in there. It’s kinda cool.

USDR: Last question: Harvard University asks you to speak at commencement. What do you tell the world’s future business and political leaders?

MA: They’ve already gotten through the hard part which is getting through college… especially a college like that. I guess, take the world by the balls and do it your way. Make a change. It can’t get any worse.

Click here to see the all of Mickey’s upcoming shows

Song Review: “Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall” by Coldplay

By: Tom “Wonderboy” Roth

Just when it seemed Foster the People had locked up the unofficial award for Song of the Summer with their inescapably catchy “Pumped Up Kicks”, Coldplay swooped in to have the last word on the matter.

Released on June 3rd, the group’s new single, titled “Every Teardrop is a Waterfall” is expected to garner as many as 100,000 digital downloads in its first week of availability. The track is a potential candidate for inclusion on the British group’s forthcoming untitled fifth studio album, a follow up to 2008’s double-platinum certified Viva La Vida: Or Death and All His Friends.

Coldplay debuted the song live on the day of the track’s release at Nuremberg, Germany’s Rock Im Park Festival. During the same performance, the rockers performed new tracks “Hurts Like Heaven”, “Major Minus”, “Us Against the World”, and “Charlie Brown”, additional candidates for the new album, expected out by the end of 2011.

The title of Chris Martin and Company’s latest single, may not roll off the tongue quite as smoothly as “Pumped Up Kicks” but the introductory synth pulse combined with Martin’s monotonic chanting creates a distinct sound that will give Mark Foster’s best effort a run for its money.

Johnny Buckland’s celebratory guitar twangs round out the summery feel but it is the song’s uplifting lyrics “I turn the music up/I’m on a roll this time/and heaven is in sight” that define Coldplay’s seasonal tune. Already a darling of the radio, expect “Every Teardrop is a Waterfall” to be ubiquitous this summer.

Artist Review: Foster the People

 

The new band from LA, Foster the People, is causing a stir

By Tom Roth

It’s always exciting to watch a band rise to stardom and that’s exactly what is happening with indie LA band, Foster the People.

Formed in 2009 by Mark Foster, Mark Pontius, and Cubbie Fink, the group has blown up in the last few months. Starting with a spot at last month’s South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas. Thanks to a strong following on music blog Hype Machine, the group has burst onto the national scene and was even featured on Spin’s  (SXSW’s sponsoring organization) event mixtape.

The group’s horizons broadened further at California’s Coachella Valley Music Festival in mid-April. With a largely local crowd, Foster the People successfully made a case for their upcoming album, Torches, due out on May 24.

Currently, they have one self-titled EP release, featuring three tracks “Houdini”, “Pumped Up Kicks”, and “Helena Beat”. Pontius’ rhythm-heavy tracks are graced with Foster’s falsetto vocals and supported by Fink’s bass groove. On “Houdini”, the beat and melody are unpredictable throughout, presenting pleasant surprises at every turn.

At first listen, Foster the People sounds like the West Coast’s version of MGMT. That particular brand of sound is undeniably popular and based on FtP’s recent success it seems to be taking hold in the ears of listeners across the globe. Here’s hoping it sticks.

Click here to listen to “Houdini” on Hype Machine.

 

Foster the People - EP - Foster the People

 

Album Review: Atmosphere, “The Family Sign”

 

The Family Sign: Atmosphere's dark new album

 

By  Tom Roth

It is impossible to do a casual review of Atmosphere. In fact, approaching Atmosphere casually in any regard is almost as inappropriate as describing Inception as a movie about dreams. With a canon of albums reaching back to 1997, Atmosphere established themselves as one of the most important underground rap unions a long time ago – a legacy which continues with their latest studio album, The Family Sign.

A casual approach is also something Atmosphere doesn’t do well, particularly on The Family Sign. This is their Guernica; the album features dark tales of abuse and disparagement with no respite to be found. The head-banging beat heard in “Shotgun” from their latest EP release, To All My Friends: Blood Makes the Blade Holy is absent, replaced with the likes of “Bad Bad Daddy,” an account of modern day poor-parenting. The downward spiral continues on “If You Can Save Me Now,” in which the blood and broken glass of a car crash are par for the course. On each, Slug brings the listener into the story with a first-hand account of events, a surefire way to catch any listener’s attention.

The lyricism for which Atmosphere has become famous is clear on many tracks as Slug addresses heavy topics of death, insincerity, and even domestic violence. Most times, the attack is frontal, but in true Atmospheric fashion, it sometimes blindsides the listeners such as on “Became.” Listen closely. You’ll be surprised.

To listen to all fourteen tracks is a struggle simply because of the weight of issues addressed. The Family Sign exacts an emotional toll on the listener. This one’s not for the faint of heart.

Listen to “The Last to Say” here

 

The Family Sign (Deluxe Edition) - Atmosphere

 

Concert Photos: Jessie J at the Dubai World Cup

 

Concert Review: Jessie J at the Dubai World Cup

Jessie J performs at the conclusion of the Dubai World Cup on March 26, 2011 (photo by Tom Roth)

On March 26th, Tom Roth covered the the world’s largest horse race, the Dubai World Cup, for the USD Vista. Jessie J’s performance was the culmination of the race day events.

As a man, there are certain things I am not supposed to appreciate. Purses, nail polish, People magazine, and any movie starring Sarah Jessica Parker. Jessie J is also on that list. She typifies all that audiophiles detest about pop music. She came out of nowhere and suddenly has a chart-topping single with a big-name guest appearance. She is on an international tour. She was featured on Saturday Night Live just four weeks after the release of her first single. All of this before her debut album was even released. In sum, she is the archetype of Corporate Pop Music.

So why do I have three of her songs bookmarked on my web browser?

I chalk it up to the “guilty pleasure” factor. Everyone, regardless of musical preference, has those songs hidden away in his or her collection. They are seldom mentioned but often enjoyed, usually through the safety of headphones so as not to attract attention to one’s peculiar musical taste. I admit, Jojo, Kelly Clarkson, and at least three one-and-done “Jerk” artists have made it into my library and after seeing Jessie J perform at the Dubai World Cup, I can confidently say that she has become my newest guilty pleasure.

I take comfort in the fact that Jessie’s performance had the same effect on everyone in attendance. During her set, even the stuffiest of race-goers could be found jumping in time and singing the chorus to a catchy pop-tune they were hearing for the first time in their lives.

When she first pranced out on stage following the conclusion of the day’s races, Jessie was wearing a stylish get-up that screamed “modern pop”. Bangles jangling and outfit billowing, she lightheartedly chatted at the crowd as a performer who hasn’t yet been jaded by the business of touring and performing might do. I took a mental note: extra points for charisma.

As the gargantuan LCD behind Jessie lit up with swirling graphics and shimmering calligraphic styles that dispelled any doubt as to who was performing, she sang her way through one track after another off of her forthcoming album, Who You Are.

Wait.

She what? She sang? Yes, indeed. She sang every note. In today’s world of lip-syncing and cop-out performances (the court will now summon Sean Kingston) I was flabbergasted to hear that Jessie J actually has some pipes. The first comparison that comes to mind is Christina Aguilera. If Jessie J weren’t British, she’d have done well with “X-tina” and friends in the Mickey Mouse Club. Her up-beat pop sound certainly fits the mould nicely.

Between tracks, Jessie petitioned the technicians to light up the crowd. “I want to see you guys!” or “Turn up the lights! I’m scared of the dark!” The crowd laughed. However, the reaction would surely have been different had they known Jessie is susceptible to anxiety attacks and had to duck-out of a show in 2010 when she was forced to perform on a blacked-out stage. Turns out her petitions for more light were sincere.

While Jessie may currently have the number one hit in the UK, her show was unpretentious. For starters, she was the only performer. One microphone on stage says a lot about an artist, even if the rhythm track coming through the speakers is pre-recorded. Her 45 minute set went by quickly and as the who’s-who of Dubai nodded and swayed in their showy dresses and immaculate suits, the chorus of “Price Tag” reverberated through the night air: “It’s not about the money, money, money”. Wrong crowd, Jessie. In Dubai, it is all about the money, money, money.

Jessie kept things short and sweet. Her repertoire is limited (only thirteen tracks on her album) and she performed most of them in a single, 45 minute set. Less to remember, more to retain, is my theory. As I walked away, her catchy tunes stuck in my head the entire ride home. Unsurprising. After all, she is the song-writer responsible for Party in the USA” and we all know how easily that embeds itself in your brain. Guilty pleasure, anyone?

- by Tom “Wonderboy” Roth

Artist Interview: Train

Train takes a bow after headlining the 2011 Dubai International Jazz Festival. Photo by Tom Roth.

The following includes information from USD Radio’s exclusive interview with Train before their headline performance at the Dubai International Jazz Festival. Interview by Tom “Wonderboy” Roth.

“I didn’t know we were a jazz group”.

This was Pat Monahan’s response when asked what it felt like to headline the Skywards Dubai International Jazz Festival. He’s right. A search online will yield more results categorizing the California group as “rock” than anything else. But not so fast, wasn’t their Grammy last month for Best Pop Performance? However you slice it, Train is rolling along towards music history and their recent performance in Dubai is just one of this locomotive’s many stations.

Despite taking a hiatus after 2006’s, For Me, It’s You, Train has pulled a little-engine-that-could maneuver and scrambled back to the top of the musical heap with just one (albeit wildly successful) studio album. Their first single in three years, “Hey, Soul Sister” off of their latest album, Save Me, San Francisco earned them their most recent Grammy award and the band has been selling out venues ever since its release in August 2009.

In discussing the album, Monahan mentioned the group has been touring for the past two years. When inquired about getting the opportunity to spend time at home, he said everyone was looking forward to some downtime before heading to South America. How much downtime? One week. Better than nothing. In his inimitable positive manner, Monahan pointed out that “there’s a lot left in this album” and the group would tour until that energy is spent.

The solemnity and penuriousness one would expect from international rockstars is absent with Train. In fact, they’re a pretty grounded bunch who enjoy a dry joke or two mixed with some slapstick to keep it interesting. Has any of the stardom gone to their heads? What must it be like to get up in front of a thousand different people in a hundred different cities every night? Monahan said they don’t take it for granted. In fact, according to Pat, he and the guys “have the best jobs in the world”.  “Seeing a five year old girl singing ‘Hey, Soul Sister’ with her mom” he says, “is powerful. Seeing them sharing that moment is something special”.

And those moments can happen at any time. Even in California. The group originally formed in Los Angeles in 1994, eventually relocating to San Francisco so the Golden State has had a significant influence on the band. How does it show through in their music? “Tolerance”, says Pat. “In California, everyone is invited”. Judging by the number of stops on their international tour, it seems that, yes, Train is indeed inviting everyone.

Will Train be bringing their talents home to California anytime soon? While Monahan wouldn’t confirm it, he did mention that they were “routing a summer tour that will make stops at big outdoor venues”. If they do stop in SoCal along the way, you can be sure they’ll be visiting their favorite hangouts, Pat’s being the surfing spots in San Onofre. As for drummer Scott Underwood, he prefers the Encinitas area while guitarist Jimmy Stafford opts to relax up north in Marin County.

Before our California-in-Dubai rendezvous wrapped up, I inquired what was currently on everyone’s iPods. Monahan rocks out to a little Tame Impala; Jimmy to Beach House; and Scott to Band of Horses, Taylor Swift, and Black Keys.

Sounds like a pretty good line-up for a “big outdoor venue”, if you ask me.

To learn more about what Train is up to, check out Pat’s blog, http://patblogahan.com.

Groove of the Grove

Bedford Grove takes PETCO Park bv storm. (photo by Tom Roth)

While shooting a photo assignment recently, I was approached by one of the vendors at the event. A few minutes of conversation brought us to the topic of music. My acquaintance had been in the music industry before her current line of work as a fashion designer. As conversations regarding music sometimes go, we began trying to impress one another by naming off local artists, some more obscure than others. When it came my turn to wow her with my musical awareness, I mentioned Bedford Grove. She looked at me like Pavarotti would look at Justin Beiber, that is, with an expression mixed with amusement and pity. She gently told me that everyone who is anyone in the San Diego music scene has heard of Bedford Grove. Attempting to save face, I changed the subject.

As mentioned, Bedford Grove has been an integral part of the San Diego music scene since its formation in 2006. In a relatively short span of time, BFG has made more than a name for itself by sharing the stage with the likes of Pat Benatar, Macy Gray and John Legend. Not bad for a group of 20-somethings playing the occasional show with only one album out. Not bad at all.

“Welcome to Our Side of Town”, the group’s debut album, put BFG on the San Diego music scene’s radar. (check out USD Radio’s album review here). With its soulful sound infused with rock and R&B, the album stuck in enough minds to snag a Best Local Record nomination in 2008’s San Diego Music Awards.

Since then, BFG has been creating and performing new pieces. I sat down with Marc Gould, frontman and vocalist for Bedford Grove, after the group’s recent show at PETCO Park’s Western Metal Theatre where they played with Macy Gray and John Legend. The concert featured several new titles including “Jellybean”, “Saturday Night”, “Cherry Pie” and “Risk Taker” all of which had the crowd toe-tapping and head nodding.  Such catchy tunes can be found on the group’s upcoming sophomore album, due out this spring.

Tracks off of the album have become favorites with audiences throughout the area. On a regular basis, BFG can be found rocking the stage at Anthology in the Little Italy neighborhood but the big shows are the ones grabbing the headlines. Marc explained that much of the group’s exposure has been a result of self-promotion. For example, a series of pre-show interviews on San Diego’s KUSI, CW and FOX5 stations were personally organized by Gould and the band (see FOX5’s interview with BFG here).

Keep an eye out for Bedford Grove. If the success of their debut album is any indication, whatever they’ve got up their sleeves will be big.

“My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy” Album Review

When mountain climbing, don't forget to bring your $300K chain and microphone

When I was three, I took a black piece of construction paper, drew a line down the middle with a white crayon and told my teacher I was finished with my art project. Fifteen years later, I saw the same piece of art, by a different artist, for sale in a Seattle art gallery for $15,000. The artist’s early works are entirely different from his current stuff. Instead of trendy modern pieces like the white-on-black I described, his first pieces are beautiful landscapes that are much more intricate than his current fare.

Now let’s talk about Kanye West.

Just a few years ago, Kanye was new on the scene with hits like “Through the Wire” and “Jesus Walks”. He rocked pink polos. He drank Cristal. He was a rapper.

Now, he shows up at the VMA’s wearing a $300,000 chain shaped like Horus with a matching pyramid style knuckle-ring. He wears a crown of thorns on the cover of Rolling Stone. There’s an entire episode of South Park dedicated to his douche-baggery.

So, how does his latest album “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy” fit into all of this? Well, in cases like these, it usually helps to check out the first track. “Dark Fantasy” sure as hell ain’t your typical rap. Sure, Ye talks about his “Murcielago”, his “bravado”, and “Chi-town where the Nines flow” but the hook sounds like a guest contribution from Queen with its epic chanting sound. In that regard, “Dark Fantasy” does a good job of setting up the rest of the album, which on the whole is pretty epic.

It’s undeniable that West’s increased celebrity has given him tons of pull when it comes to guest appearances but unlike his debut album “The College Dropout” in which guests were limited to hip-hop artists like Ludacris and Talib Kweli, “MBDTF” showcases the talents of artists from many genres. Among the stars: John Legend and Bon Iver. The third single from the album, which Ye described – in typical big-ego fashion -as being “completely seamless and completely ghetto as f***” has contributions from Rihanna, Alicia Keys, Elton John, Fergie, John Legend, The Dream, Tony Williams, Kid Cudi, Charlie Wilson, Ryan Leslie, and La Roux’s Elly Jackson. Keep in mind, all those people are on just one track out of the album’s thirteen.

West gets the album’s singles out of the way early with “Power”, “Monster” and “All Of the Lights” coming within the first six tracks. For those searching for the Kanye of old, look no further than these three cuts. With their rap guests and catchy hooks, they typify the sound that made Kanye famous. However, the meat of the album comes from cross-genre tracks like “Runaway” and “Lost in the World” which serve to induce much head scratching as opposed to foot-tapping.

Just like that artist I encountered in Seattle, Kanye has become famous enough to do basically whatever he wants in regards to his music. “My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy” is definitely a departure from what hip-hop fans have come to expect from well-known rappers but maybe that’s a good thing. As a recorder and producer, West has been known to push the envelope more than others. Let’s let him do his thing and see what he comes up with. If we don’t like it, we can always turn off the “Power”.

Album Review: Man On The Moon II: The Legend of Mr. Rager by Kid Cudi

In contrast to a latter track title off his premiere mixtape “A Kid Named Cudi”, Kid Cudi is by no means “spazzin’” anymore. On his most recent studio album “Man On The Moon II: The Legend of Mr. Rager”, Cudi’s wild side which was so prevalent on AKNC is eclipsed by his mild side on Moon 2. Whether this is Cudi straying from the style that helped him find fame or his natural maturation is up to the listener but either way, Moon 2 stands on its own legs.

Cudi makes it clear from track one that Moon 2 is not simply a continuation of any of his previous albums except by title. Bringing on Cee-Lo Green and his trademark gospel sound, “Scott Mescudi vs. The World” pays dual tribute to Cudi’s unconventional style of rapping and a certain recent Hollywood box office failure. Subsequent tracks come straight from the Cudi mould of marching rhythms and catchy melodies that are slightly odd enough to make them stick in your head for a few minutes after you hear them.

The normalcy lasts all of three tracks before Cudi gets into some strange territory with “We Aite” that has more in common with Buddhist prayer chants than anything else. “Marijuana”, “Mojo So Dope” and “Ashin’ Kusher” all tread in the realm of stoner-raps but track by track, emerge from the hazy nether-regions of experimental rap.

It’s with “Erase Me” (featuring Kanye West) that Cudi pays the bills. Like it or not, this is the banger that’s made for the airwaves. Catchy hook? Check. Simple melody and lyrics? Check. High-profile guest appearance? Check.

“The Mood” and “Maniac” sustain Moon 2’s dark feel with sinister beats and Cudi telling tales in the lowest voice possible. An early line from “Maniac” sums it up nicely: “I am the maniac. I am the ghoul. I am the shadows in the corner of my room”. Other fun terms to mesh with the unicorns-and-rainbows theme: cloak, coffin, unruliness, darkness.

Sound like your cup of tea- erm, black coffee? If the prospect of a cross-genre rap that borders on the experimental gets you all hot and bothered, Moon 2 is worth a listen. Sound a little too strange? Don’t worry; Cudi’s just pushing the envelope.