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indie
pop, mellow core
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avant
indie,
post rock, post punk
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indie
rock, noise rock
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alt
rock, power pop,
emo
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garage,
punk, glam + other revivals
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alt
folk, alt soul
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songwriters
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Photo Recap: Kensington Picnic 2012
The Kensington Picnic probably had the coolest of locations compared to all of the other music gatherings in Philly this summer. The back lot of Liberty Vintage Motorcycles was the quarters of this multi-sensory music picnic, and went well beyond sundown, which was a plus for attendees. The brighter hours of the picnic housed some very easy-listening acts, with captivating guitar work by Chris Forsyth and Steve Gunn, a rad harp/synth combination from Mary Lattimore and Jeff Zeigler, and Meg Baird wooing men and women alike with her siren songs. A pathetic fallacy vibe reflected from Blues Control’s set, having its trippy, futuristic psychedelia on the forefront of nightfall, and only seen by the picnic lot’s questionable light source - it kind of felt like something out of Ridley Scott’s 1982 Blade Runner. Birds of Maya started once the rain set in again, and it certainly didn’t hold them back. The crowd stood close and banged their heads to the monster jams, while an elderly woman, whose backyard conjoined with the lot, shook her fist at the frenzy.
Liberty Vintage Motorcycles was a great host for the picnic, providing its plumbing for gatherer’s potty breaks, and plenty of dusty motorcycle and vintage car eye-candy during the wait. Plus, there was a lady dangling and artistically maneuvering from the ceiling via strands of satin. The Kensington Picnic was a great day of music and community, and you could measure its success on many levels - pushing through a hefty rain delay, positive crowd response, and segueing very different sounds in one place, to name a few. Mission accomplished. Check out some of our photos from the hang HERE!
Published on August 13, 2012
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May 2013
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Restorations
LP2
For those who decide whether to come or go based on the first forty seconds of an album, Restorations’ LP2 is practically tailor-made for snap judgments. After a chiming, anthemic guitar opening, the band already known for fist-raising jams lets all hell break loose with “D,” their most unrestrained opener yet. The drum kit-mauling, earth-shaking bass lines and ascendant guitar riffs can only be described as complete sensory overload, and make it clear that the following eleven songs are going to be fueled by pure viscera. If your preferences run towards structure over huge sound, this release may leave you cold; LP2’s predominant means of exploring the band’s wealth of ideas are stadium-sized instrumentation and endless waves of atmospherics, as well as a dose of ennui.
This is a murkier, more inward-looking Restorations than we’re used to. Everything that was there before, musically, is blown sky-high this time around. They’ve managed to pack ideas into every iota of the song list, aided by Jon Low’s miles-deep production; the density of the music itself is offset by an album-long meditation on place, belonging, and the ramifications of leaving the familiar behind, which makes the outsized sound that much more of an interesting direction. Juxtaposing the existential discomfort with more sophisticated, complex forays into Restorations’ sonic wheelhouse.
The spiraling guitars, one of the album’s specially prominent features, are everywhere, serving various purposes in each song. “Kind of Comfort”’s jittery glam rock aspirations accompany lyrics of searching and wanderlust. Even the more downbeat cuts (“In Perpetuity Through The Universe,” “New Old”) are propelled beyond their subject matter by the songs’ barely-concealed restless energy. At its more pensive moments, like the folk-inflected “Civil Inattention,” there is a restless undercurrent of texture and volatility that never quite lets up.
Album closer “Adventure Tortoise” is all monster buildup laced with extraterrestrial effects, kicking off into a sort of requiem for the band’s neighborhood. “I’d really like to stay to help this place,” growls Jon Loudon through his teeth, but the allure of letting it all go is too strong to resist. The longing for a place “where nobody knows your name” isn’t quite all-consuming enough to inspire real action, but it is definitely the new paradigm Loudon means.
It takes guts to pull off a release that feels ten minutes long but contains more emotional and musical texture than most records. Restorations cover a whole lot of ground on LP2, and for the most part, pull off their ambitions. A bit too sanguine for shoegaze, and maybe too heady for punk, Restorations’ second full-length album brings an intriguing palette of aspirations to their open road-ready sound, prepared to try anything and everything. - Alyssa Greenberg
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