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Grimace Federation’s Biweekly Residency “Popular Science” Kicks Off at KFN July 18

It seems that Grimace Federation has a flair for adventure. The Jaga Jazzist-esque combination of prog-jazz and post-rock from their 2010 release On Velvet reminds me of the original Rainbow Road. The wonder and grandness of the music recalls a vast expanse of stars, a black sky that stretches on forever juxtaposed against a dreamy splash of color. Since On Velvet, they’ve paired down to a trio with Chris Wood still leaving his drums bruised and battered, Jim Calvarese holding down the low-end, and Wes Schwartz tinkering with his laptop and electronic toys over his electric guitar, moving them further into the realm of grandiose electronica. New songs like “Auroville” and “LIGHTSABERTEETH” sound like they could be scoring modern two dimensional adventure games like Braid and Fez. This video-game parallel I’m drawing may seem a little out-there, but the way Grimace Federation’s music engrosses reminds me of the way a good video game engrosses: It conjures an alternative realm filled with wonder and adventure.

That adventure begins tonight at Kung Fu Necktie, where the band and their “Popular Science” series have taken up a biweekly residency. With a slew of different openers scheduled to accompany them each evening and Grimace Federation’s exciting new sound, the show ought to be reminiscent Daft Punk’s Discovery and Tron: Legacy, equal parts danceable and thoughtful. Get out there and save the princess, heroes. Kung Fu Necktie,1250 N. Front St., 8 PM, $8, 21+ - Adam Downer  

 
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June 2013
Arrah and the Ferns
Make Your Mind

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Arrah and the Ferns may have sweetness and light in abundance, but the undercurrent of frank lust in their new album is both new and old hat for these folk rockers. Since their last offering, they’ve adopted growing pains as a lyrical source, to varying effects. While the album relies heavily on much of the same wistfully-ornamented indie delicacy, there’s simultaneously an explicit element, and a successful one at that. Romance isn’t dead on Make Your Mind, it’s just got a mouth on it.

The woozy, low guitars at the beginning of album are one of many instrumental stunners, which we’ve long known to be a touchstone for the Ferns. There is some spectacular guitar and drum work on the album, but for most part, the music and the vocals go head to head in friendly tandem - never trying to outdo one another.

Arrah Fisher’s honeyed vocals push through the knot of winding guitars on the second track, “Go Back,” inciting her band to back her up when she half-purrs, half-belts “I see the way your body moves me - but you don’t have to touch me.”

“Triangle” is a list of questions, an effecting device used by Fisher to protest the coming of a different stage of adulthood - one in which commitment is inevitable and freedom to do as she wants a relic of immaturity. “I wanna meet the man on the other side,” she murmurs, seeing her free-spirited inclinations in danger, and then, with a bravado outburst, demands to know “Why do I have to grow up and be a married schmuck - when all I want to do is fuck...fuck...fuck...fuck...fuck!” The unbridled sexuality is startling, but when you think about it, the turbulence is a perfect underlining for sweet-sounding music about growing up and moving on.

The band then counters that song’s thinly-veiled hedonism with the role-reversing “Hang Up,” whose slow-dance 50s rock balladry finds Fisher imploring her lover to throw himself wholeheartedly into a new life. “This is where I hang up, start to pack my stuff up. I will come to you this time...I don’t want to have you on the side. I just want to have a normal time, have a normal life.” Is she embroiled in an affair? Is she coaxing him out of another relationship? Maybe, but it would seem heartless to resist her sincerity.

Make Your Mind has a welcomed, bouncing energy that picks the album up from its wispy, low-tempo tone halfway through. There’s a uniformity of pace, with most songs choosing a leisurely amble over an all-out rush, but the variance of tone and instrumentation saves the album from tedium, and adds up to an invigorating (and possibly final) effort from Arrah and the Ferns. - Alyssa Greenberg

 
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