Wednesday, February 22

Cut of the Day: M. Ward, "Primitive Girl," A Wasteland Companion

Music It's good to have M. Ward back. After years galavanting with Hollywood types and teaming u... More

Feb 22, 2012 11:02 am by CASEY JARMAN  | Comments 0
 

PDX Charts

Top Selling Albums in Portland for Feb. 13-19

Music What were you listening to last week, Portland? Here are the top selling albums from local record st... More

Feb 21, 2012 04:00 pm by Ruth Brown  | Comments 0
 

Photo Review: Polica and Copy, Feb. 18 @ Bunk Bar

Music It's always great to catch a band live just as its buzz is building, which was exactly the case when... More

Feb 21, 2012 03:25 pm by NILINA MASON-CAMPBELL  | Comments 0
 

Let's Get It: Free Albums From Luck-One and Sapient Out Today

Music These days, it's more surprising to hear of someone actually paying for an album than it is to hear ... More

Feb 21, 2012 12:25 pm by CASEY JARMAN  | Comments 0
 
Tour diary

Loch Lomond Tour Diary: Hearts on Fire (Big Sur/San Francisco)

Music This is the final installment of the Loch Lomond tour diary (going up a bit late). We'd like to than... More

Oct 10, 2011 10:40 am by Loch Lomond  | Comments 1
 

Loch Lomond: Bathroom Sipping is Not a Crime (Santa Barbara/Visalia)

Music Almost everything is bigger in California. We pulled into Santa Barbara to play the Mercury Lounge. ... More

Oct 3, 2011 04:30 pm by Loch Lomond  | Comments 1
 

Nurses: Martial Arts and Drug Dogs

Music This is the first entry in Nurses' tour diary. We are super-stoked to have them, no matter how brief... More

Oct 3, 2011 04:10 pm by Nurses  | Comments 0
 
 
 
October 27th, 2011 By ROBERT HAM | Music | Posted In: Cut of the Day

Cut of the Day: Log Across The Washer, "When the Ghosts Come to Give us our Invitation" (Self-Released)

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Time to fess up to something that could get me blacklisted here in my hometown: I never have liked And And And all that much. I sincerely get the appeal of our 2011 Best New Band, but it has yet to strike a real chord within me.

That said, I also confess to be fairly surprised that I've been so enamored with the solo work of that band's former co-leader Tyler Keene. His project, Log Across The Washer, has a amorphous quality and an adherence to lo-fi recording techniques that sends prickles of joy through my spine.



Take this track, for example. Despite its title, it is no Halloween-themed monster mash. The song (found on a two-track digital single free for download from the LATW site) rattles like a washing machine that keeps slipping in and out of alignment. The drums feel like they are going to spill over into a heap even as they try to keep a beat. It's a nice warning for that point midway through the song when it sounds as if the kit has started to fall apart and the players is trying desperately to keep some noise going.

The rest of the instrumentation follows that same path of devolution. It starts with a steadiness garage pop groove that smears into disarray over which Keene wails the song's title behind a curtain of reverb. Not creepy enough to put the fear into young trick-or-treaters, but ghostly enough to keep the goosebumps on your skin.

 
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