SOUNDTRACK: LANDYLADY-Tiny Desk Concert #657 (October 6, 2017).

As I started watching this video I said to myself, Is that Son Lux’s drummer (Ian Chang)? Look at the way he is drumming, it must be him. And it is!
I had never heard of Landlady but I was instantly intrigued that Chang was playing with them.
The Brooklyn-based band’s songs are the initial creation of leader Adam Schatz, who observes the world with fresh, almost alien eyes. Landlady is also a band of brilliant musicians who carefully craft their playing to serve the songs. Each player on their own might seem to be making quirky sounds or playing odd rhythms, but together they create head-turning tunes.
The opening track for Landlady’s Tiny Desk performance, “Cadaver,” has its origins in a friend of Schatz’s who went to medical school, and the years she spent examining a single cadaver over and over and even more specifically about a tattoo on that cadaver’s buttocks.
“Cadaver” opens with prepared piano sounds although the song quickly resolves itself into a kind of quirky Steely Dan vibe. I love that Chang is using big soft bright blue brushes on the drums and that he even plays the desk and everything else around him during the slightly noisy middle section.
After the song, Schatz is very funny. “Thanks for coming to work today I think a lot of us are actually very impressed by people who actually go to work. Afterwards we’ll have all sorts of questions. So know that while you’re looking at us wondering how do they do it. Know that we’re looking back at you… wondering how do we do it.”
“Solid Brass” opens with some lovely guitars. This song feels like something Gabriel Kahane might have constructed. The chorus begins with just the piano and him singing “My voice is lower in the morning” over and over. And then the whole band joins in on that simple sentiment. That chorus melody is repeated but with other different simple ideas: “your legs are shorter in the evening.” After that chorus, the guitarist Will Graefe plays some wildly distorted noises while the piano has stopped and only Ryan Dugre on the bass is there to keep it going.
For their Tiny Desk Concert they came in as a foursome but also recruited the Washington D.C. string quartet, Rogue Collective to flesh-out their sound on the third song, “Electric Abdomen.” That cut, which seems to be about being uncomfortable in your own skin, sounds like it came from a long-lost tape from The Beatles during a session for Abbey Road, full of wonder and, like this Tiny Desk performance, worth digging deep into.
Schatz introduces the quartet: “These are our new friends Rogue Collective.” [Alexa Cantalupo (violin); Livia Amoruso (violin); Deanna Said (viola); Natalie Spehar (cello)]. One of them jokes: “Not Rouge Collective.” Schatz quickly replies: “That’s us.”
He tells us: “They learned all the music. That was very nice of them. This is hard. You get nervous when you’re not used to being nervous. So I thought I’d say that out loud. A lot of people come here and they don’t seem nervous. Top artists of today… Who are some of the…. Like John Philip Sousa. Guys like them they act all macho and they think they can just nail it. But its hard and it puts us in a vulnerable place and I think that’s the point of this.
“So I want to say ‘Thank you, Bob and everyone for putting us in this compromising position.’
“I’d like to dedicate this last song to one of the most important pieces of Public Radio that was ever produced. A program that changed the world and you can’t imagine the world before it existed. So I’d like to dedicate this song and the rest of our lives to Car Talk, which basically raised me. They were like to extra parents.”
“Electric Abdomen” opens with the sound of vibes and prickly guitar. Then the strings fill in and the guitar sounds great and. And, yes, it has s decidedly Abbey Road feel to it–the guitar sound especially.
I enjoyed this set immensely and watched it many times. And I was only saddened to discover that Landlady (and Okkervil River) played a show in Philly the night before I watched this video. Sigh. That’s a lovely pairing.
[READ: January 24, 2017] “My Guilty Pleasures”
Many times in short New Yorker pieces, the jokes are topical, which means they don’t always hold up well. And, sometimes, they get stuck in one thing and don’t really move beyond that.
George Saunders is usually pretty good at getting his topical jokes to move beyond whatever he is spoofing.
But he also likes to really hammer home one idea for a while. Like this one, in which his guilty pleasure is watching reality shows (all based around The Bachelor). (more…)


