SOUNDTRACK: CLOUD NOTHINGS-Live at Massey Hall (October 4, 2017).

Cloud Nothings are, to my knowledge, the first non-Canadian band to be featured on this Live at Massey Hall series. The band (which was at one time the solo project of Dylan Baldi) is from Cleveland.
Baldi talks about growing up in Cleveland, Rush and cover band and then putting music online and getting found out.
“Pattern Walks” opens with a great rumbling loud bassline from TJ Duke. This is without a doubt the loudest show of the series (so far). Baldi has a great rock singing voice that falls somewhere between Kurt Cobain and Paul Westerberg.. The music for this song is fast and loud with some great ringing out guitars from one of the guitarist while the other plays some melodic sections. The backing vocals (from Duke) just help to bring the melody forward. The nonstop pounding drums (from the utterly remarkable Jauson Gerycz) keep up the relentlessness. I love that both guitarists (Baldi and Gris Brown) play a squalling feedback solo at the same time but also independent of each other.
The end of the song is kind of feedback jam which Baldi describes (they intercut his interview) as “lots of parts that are sort of free-form…live we can just go off into more self-indulgent occasionally boring things. And that’s what I like. Hopefully it’s not too much. That kind of stuff is more fun for me than playing the same song every night.”
Psychic Trauma is a bit more poppy/Replacements-sounding. Even when it thumps in double time for the chorus, it’s still petty clean.
“Modern Act” is the catchiest so far. Midway through the song Brown plays a solo and its fun to watch him manipulate the sound by playing with the dials on his pedals.
Duke says to the crowd that Neil Young Live at Massey Hall 1971 is one of my favorite records of all time so I’m a little freaked to be here. Thank you all.
“Fall In” is a thumping pounding track with a whaling guitar solo. Once again Gerycz is just a flurry of activity. While “I’m Not Part of Me” is really catchy. The middle has a fun section that sounds like a great lost Replacements bridge.
“Wasted Days” is the last song. It opens with both guitarists playing different thing until the drums pounds in. And once again the drums are amazing throughout. The song lasts about 3 minutes when it slows down to a slapping drum and Baldi manipulation effects pedals while he continues to solo. Brown plays with high notes. The propulsion during this jam seems to be controlled by the drummer who is going fast and slow intermittently until he exhausts himself. Meanwhile, Duke plays a steady two-note bass over and over. After two minutes of that the band jumps aback up and starts again. After nearly ten minutes incredible minutes, the final chorus returns.
It’s an amazing show.
[READ: February 1, 2018] “The Clockmaker”
I had a really hard time following this story at first. Partially because I didn’t know what an animacula was–and whose fault is that?
A carafe filled with water has been sitting on a table for a week. The animacula (microbial creatures) “had attained a great antiquity.”
These creatures delighted in astronomy and philosophy. They based the theory of their world on everything they saw around them–light from the windows and of course the giant clock that sat across from them. One philosopher thought of a clock maker theory of the world–a giant anilaculum of unheard of bigness who did something to the clock every day.
This version was widely accepted as the truth. They identified the giant man with the sun and began to think of him as the Clockmaker.
Of course, others disputed this–how could the creator of everything move outside of the water (it was clear that outside the carafe was not water).
Others argued that if such a Clockmaker existed he must be frivolous. Then one day the Clockmaker came in and wound up the clock and upended their entire world.
The final paragraph is utterly hilarious.

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