Monthly Archives: December 2009

Final Fantasy: December 1, 2009 Webster Hall – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 16, 2009
By


[photos taken for nyctaper by Kate Ehle – many more here]

John Darnielle of the Mountain Goats has a tremendous knack for selecting instinctually perfectly-matching opening bands for his tours. Recent openers have included John Vanderslice and Kaki King, but for the just-finished tour the immensely talented Canadian artist Owen Pallett was selected. Owen’s solo project Final Fantasy builds each song as a musical mosaic, layering individually played samples of violin, keyboards and effects into his own solo symphony. Like the Mountain Goats, Owen’s lyrics create a little world within each song and use intentionally exaggerated metaphor to convey complex internal emotions often with a satirical edge. While onstage he appears as the proverbial serious musician, its the lighter and off-beat edgier side that makes Owen’s music so interesting. Accompanied on this tour by the guitarist Thomas Gill, Final Fantasy performed an exceptional forty-five minute set at Webster Hall which featured five songs from his much anticipated January release of Heartland.

Final Fantasy returns to NYC to perform at Bowery Ballroom on January 18.

We recorded this set from the same location as the Mountain Goats set, but used the DPA microphones in combination with the stereo soundboard feed to maximize the room feel. This is another outstanding capture of this amazing night of music. Enjoy!

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Final Fantasy
2009-12-01
Webster Hall
New York, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + DPA 4021s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2 x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2009-12-16

Setlist:
[Total Time 42:26]
01 [introduction]
02 Keep The Dog Quiet
03 The Great Elsewhere
04 Flare Gun
05 The Butcher
06 He Poos Clouds
07 The CN Tower Belongs To The Dead
08 Independence Is No Solution (The Blankket)
09 Many Lives -> 49 MP
10 Lewis Takes Action
11 Midnight Directives
12 Lewis Takes Off His Shirt

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Final Fantasy, visit the website, visit the MySpace page, and pre-order Heartland (January release) from the Domino Records website [HERE].

O’Death: December 12, 2009 Brooklyn Bowl – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 13, 2009
By


[photos courtesy of Maryanne Ventrice]

On a night of celebration, O’Death played an energetic and thoroughly entertaining set in what may be their last show for quite some time. Last night at Brooklyn Bowl, the band headlined a show that was both the holiday show for The Music Slut blog and a birthday celebration for TMS’s founder Jen. Apart from the surroundings, what made this show special was the extraordinary effort of one member of the band — a truly remarkable exercise in courage and fortitude. O’Death drummer Dave Rogers-Berry is fighting cancer and will be going through another series of procedures this coming week. If any of the fans attending the concert were unaware of this fact, the music coming from the stage would not have given them a clue. Dave played as he has always performed at O’Death shows, enthusiastic and indefatigable. In their fifty-minute set, the band split the setlist evenly among their two excellent full-lengths, Head Home and Broken Hymns, Limbs and Skin, and finished the set with a rousing “Allie Mae”.

We recorded this set with a four-channel mix of the soundboard and two microphones set back at the board cage. The room noise (bowling!) was not nearly as loud as the last time we visited this venue. Nevertheless, the mix is 70% board and 30% audience, and the potential delay or drift was remedied in post production with a time shift. The result in a superb capture of an outstanding concert. Enjoy!

This Recording is now available for Download in FLAC and MP3 at Archive.org [HERE].

O’Death
2009-12-12
Brooklyn Bowl
Brooklyn, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + Neumann KM-150s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2 x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2009-12-13

Setlist:
[Total Time 49:37]
01 Underwater Nightmare
02 Adelita
03 On An Aching Sea
04 Only Daughter
05 Spider Home
06 Fire On Peshtigo
07 Mountain Shifts
08 Legs To Sin
09 Home
10 Lowtide
11 Down To Rest
12 A Light That Does Not Dim
13 [tuning – banter]
14 Allie Mae Reynolds

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT O’Death, visit their website, visit their MySpace page, and purchase their latest CD from the Store at the O’Death website [HERE]

Fiery Furnaces: December 11, 2009 Music Hall of Williamsburg – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 13, 2009
By


[still photo from this video]

The video linked above is from the Bowery Ballroom last night, the second of two shows the Fiery Furnaces played this weekend. After trips to Europe and the West coast, the Furnaces returned home to play Music Hall on Friday night. In a venue with which the band is intimately familiar — they’ve played here going all the way back to its existence as North Sixth, and friends of the band actually live in the building — Fiery Furnaces displayed the incredible musical interplay that has developed within the band. Throughout the night, Matt on guitar and Jason Loewenstein on bass prodded and cajoled each other, at times jokingly misplaying the downbeats (“Automatic Husband”) and during other number expanding the music to newer and deeper places (“Japanese Slippers”). The setlist was somewhat similar to the November show at Maxwell’s, and while this is the eleventh time we have recorded Fiery Furnaces for nyctaper, its the first time we have ever seen “Crystal Clear” and only the second time for “Asthma Attack”.

This set was recorded from the front left corner of the soundboard with the four-microphone rig and the sound quality is outstanding. Enjoy!

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Fiery Furnaces
2009-12-11
Music Hall of Williamsburg
Brooklyn, NY USA

Four-Track Digital Master Recording
Recorded from Front of Soundboard Booth

Neumann KM-150s + DPA 4021’s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2x 24bit 48kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced
by nyctaper
2009-12-12

Setlist:
[Total Time 1:23:28]
01 Rub Alcohol Blues
02 Charmaine Champagne
03 Duplexes Of The Dead
04 Automatic Husband
05 Ex-Guru
06 Chris Michaels
07 The End Is Near
08 Keep Me in the Dark
09 Up In The North
10 Staring at the Steeple
11 Drive to Dallas
12 Evergreen
13 Crystal Clear
14 Cut The Cake
15 Ray Bouvier
16 Worry Worry
17 [encore break]
18 Japanese Slippers
19 Navy Nurse
20 Two Fat Feet
21 Asthma Attack
22 I’m In No Mood / Candymaker’s Knife / I’m In No Mood
23 Tropical Iceland
24 Here Comes The Summer

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT The Fiery Furnaces, visit their website, and purchase their official releases from the Thrill Jockey Records site.

J. Tillman: The Interview by Jarrod Dicker

December 11, 2009
By


[photo courtesy of David Wells]

Shortly after J. Tillman performed at Bell House in Brooklyn, a concert recorded by nyctaper, the writer Jarrod Dicker interviewed Josh for the site. This is the third installment of Jarrod’s interview series for NYCTaper.

Josh Tillman doesn’t really listen to that much music. His creative influences span beyond any restrictive constraints within a specific artistic genre and thus produce a product dissimilar to a lot of the music throughout the scene today. However, for someone who doesn’t listen to music, he sure as hell produces a lot of it.

Year in the Kingdom released on September 22nd and marks the seventh studio album written by Tillman since 2005. Not only that, this is his second album released this year following the January release of Vacilando Territory Blues. J Tillman is a music making factory and has no intentions of slowing down anytime soon. “I’m already writing another album,” he explains to me. “I’ve been working on a lot of songs for that.”

So what else is there to know about the mysterious Fleet Fox? Jarrod Dicker spoke to J about the fan reception of the new album, the recent tour and the philosophies and motives that propel the man behind the beard to continue to create beautiful music.

Meet J Tillman

Jarrod Dicker: Hey Josh, Jarrod Dicker here.

Josh Tillman: How’s it going man?

JD: Good Good

JT: Nice

JD: I’m just going to get right into it if you’re cool with that.

JT: Cool

JD: How has the audience reception been so far on tour performing the songs from Year in the Kingdom?

JT: Sometimes it goes over really well and sometimes there’s a bit of confusion. I think, with a good show, there’s usually a potent combination of the two. The live arrangements are so drastically different at times than the album versions aesthetically. But when it works it works really really well. I’ve been overall pleased with it.

JD: Where did the inspiration draw from to immediately create another record after the release of Vacilando Territory Blues in January?

JT: I think it’s just in line with the writing cycle that I’ve been doing. I’ve kind of been putting out albums at that pace for a few years now. Really for me, it just feels like a natural pace or cycle. It didn’t really feel like a novelty. It was really the pace that I’ve kept. I think it’s really as simple as it’s what I love to do. It’s not like I tour and do promotional stuff at a volume that prevents me from recording as often as I’d like. It’s not like I’m going to make an album and then go on tour for a year and a half straight or anything. I didn’t even tour behind the last record.

JD: I’ve noticed and read that your voice sounds different on this record than the previous six. Was this due to a different recording style or is it meant to translate a different feeling/tone unlike your prior releases?

JT: My voice has changed. I’m a pretty slow learn. We definitely used a different production style on this record as far as close mic’ing everything and going for more pure tones. That was something that was an interesting prospect to me. Just the process of learning what you can and can’t do with your voice and trying different deliveries. I never really knew how to sing properly and you get a sense of that on my first few records. But yea, it’s a work in progress.

JD: Cool… on this album you play most of the instruments on the tracks. What is your live performance set up like? Do you include many band members? And do you also lug around the many instruments used on the album like the Hammered Dulcimer, Banjo, Recorder, etc?

JT: No, we kind of transposed all of those things. We do have a bunch a symbols, a gong and other stuff. But for the most part I really just kind of transposed all the arrangements into the parameters and the instruments that my friends play. I’ve never really been too interested in recreating an album exactly as it is into the live setting. I like the freedom of being able to just use the live show as an opportunity to more so deconstruct what’s going on in the album than to recreate it, you know?

JD: Definitely and that seems to make for a more exciting and innovative feel in the live setting. And now since you’ve participated in both solo work and a group (Fleet Foxes), do you favor leaning in one direction over another?

JT: They both serve very different purposes. My role is so drastically different in each one that they aren’t even comparable in my mind. I couldn’t really say. I enjoy doing both for very different reasons.

JD: What mindset do you have when you enter the studio? It seems that your albums are very artistic and visual, taking on more than just a familiar melodic structure.

JT: Yea. You can’t really do anything creative without a source of inspiration. Do you mean…

JD: I’ll rephrase. For this specific record and set of songs are they just a group of songs you assembled together or were they meant for the album because they all share an common theme?

JT: Right…Right…Yes the songs all sprang out in one kind of condensed period of time. It wasn’t like I just had a bunch of songs lying around. I think the songs serve; well to me the album is a very singular thing. The songs really only exist in concert with each other. I think the songs are representative of something other than just myself and the fact that I write songs. I don’t think that was the reason they came into existence.

JD: And now I think your brother’s band is backing you on this tour. Do you enjoy collaborating with your brother Zach and how did this particular touring marriage materialize?

JT: We’ve toured together in Europe a few times now and there’s really just nobody else I’d rather do it with. I had to call his manager and get clearance from his booking agent and our promotional firms thought that it would be a good cross synergy situation to have us opening for each other. And just to get cross marketing going on and cross branding for both of our brands. [laughs] Nah I’m just kidding…

JD: Damn I was just thinking, “What the fuck these guys are brothers?”

JT: Yea it was just like the most natural thing in the world, a very natural situation and organic scenario.

JD: You made an album, Long May You Run and I know that the Fleet Foxes have played with Neil Young. On top of that, many reviewers compare your sound to that of the Laurel Canyon 60s crowd. What does Neil mean to you and is he your BIGGEST inspiration musically?

JT: Yea I think as far as a musical influence for sure. A lot of my influences exist outside the realm of music. I don’t really listen to THAT much music. I have a few things that I like and Neil Young is one of them. But even with him it’s more of a philosophical influence. Just the way he conducts himself and his creative integrity; the narrative art that exists in his albums. All of those facts have been a big influence on me. Certain things like putting out two albums in one year, etc, that idea of, “Well if that’s what you feel like doing, do it.” There’s so much bullshit that you can allow to be a factor in your decision making process and the way that he has never let that contaminate what he does artistically has always been a big influence on me.

JD: Your music, to me, brings a sort of minstrel 1700s quality to it that I find incredibly unique. Where does the inspiration come from to incorporate harmonies and strings to your music?

JT: I’m not sure if I view it in that way. There’s an influence in all modern music within the 12th century troubadours when people started writing ballads about earthly love and unrequited love; using music as a way of expressing romantic feeling. That’s kind of a pretty vital mean in the development of modern music. But I don’t feel any kinship musically to 17th and 18th century times. Definitely some of the schools of thought from the 17th and 18th century are an influence on me, like Decartes but not musically.

JD: You grew up in a religious household that, I’m sure, barred particular music from entering the housing gates. How were you able to access the music that led you to want to lead a life as a musician?

JT: Hmmm…When you’re a kid you listen to music in such a different way. I don’t know if it’s all that important; what you’re listening to as a kid. It’s all kind of the same. Granted there’s some stuff I DID NOT like as a kid but I fell in love with music nonetheless. When you’re a kid it doesn’t matter how cool or artistically viable the music that you’re listening to is. You either fall in love with music or you don’t. Some people grow up around cool music and much can be made of that if you want it to. But I know for myself, I came into the music that I listen to now in my adult life like anybody else does, regardless of what you grow up around. I mean there’s not really much of interest there that I can speak to. I fell in love with music that probably wasn’t that cool or great to me as a child.

JD: What should we expect from J. Tillman going into the New Year?

JT: I’m going to make another album. I’ve been writing a lot for that, kind of more of the same. Slogging it out and shoveling dirt.

JD: Best of luck with that. Thanks so much for your time Josh.

JT: No problem

JD: Adios

JT: Thanks for your time man

J. Tillman: November 16, 2009 Bell House – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 11, 2009
By


[photo courtesy of David Wells]

J. Tillman was interviewed by Jarrod Dicker for nyctaper (see above), so we will defer to Jarrod’s excellent interview for the biographical data regarding the artist. On this November Monday night at Bell House, Josh was backed by a band of Pacific Northwestern “best friends”, including brother Zach. The setlist drew almost exclusively from his two 2009 albums Vacilando Territory Blues and Year In The Kingdom. While the quieter numbers focused on Josh’s authentic and almost mystical rich vocal skills, the band numbers highlighted the tight structure of a country-folk unit well versed in the genre and with each other.

We recorded this set with a four channel feed from the audience and soundboard. The sound quality is quite excellent during the band numbers, but almost too quiet during the solo songs. A large enhancement of volume during the solo numbers did bring out some ambient noise from the room, which does not significantly detract from the listening experience. Enjoy!

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

J. Tillman
2009-11-16
Bell House
Brooklyn, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + Neumann KM-150s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2 x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2009-12-10

Setlist:
[Total Time 1:35:59]
01 All You See
02 When I Light Your Darkened Door
03 No Occasion
04 Firstborn
05 With Wolves
06 Vacilando Territory
07 [banter – tech problem]
08 Vessels
09 Howling Light
10 Crosswinds
11 Though I Have Wronged You
12 Barter Blues
13 Master’s House
14 [banter]
15 There Is No Good In Me
16 New Imperial Grand Blues
17 [encore break]
18 James Blues
19 The Last Black Sea
20 Year in the Kingdom

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT J. Tillman, visit his MySpace page, and purchase his official releases from the Bella Union Records website [HERE] and the Yer Bird Records website [HERE].

Ted Leo: December 6, 2009 Bowery Ballroom – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 10, 2009
By


[photo courtesy of Jeremy Arambulo]

Acidjack reports:
Ted Leo & the Pharmacists came out to play on a cold Sunday night, sort of for no reason. They aren’t on tour, and they don’t have a new album out (as they pointed out). Luckily, nobody told them this might not be a proposition for a packed house. In fact, Bowery was sold out and very, very full with the type of fans that make Sunday night shows among my favorites. Much like the Dirty Projectors’ Sunday night tour closer at Bowery that we featured on the site earlier this week, this show brought out fans who came to enjoy the music, knew the songs, and showed the band enthusiasm, friendliness and respect. Leo and the band returned the favor, giving an approximately 90 minute set (comprising, as you will see, a ton of songs, 23 to be exact) that never sagged. The band debuted a number of new (and “new new”) songs as well as older classics and covers. Leo proves that three-chord punk music doesn’t have to be stupid or lo-fi — his stage banter and lyrics are witty and intelligent, and his guitar tuning breaks (due to the last minute substitution of a finicky guitar) this night were frequent. Younger bands take note: Sometimes, giving something more than a sloppily-tuned 40 minute set – even when your songs are all in the 3-4 minute range – can be pretty cool.

I recorded this set from a pole clamped to the left side of the soundboard cage, with the mics about 8′ from the floor with the DPA 4021s. The sound quality is excellent.

Thanks to Ted Leo, Touch and Go Records, and the Bowery Ballroom for allowing the recording, and Kevin and the rest of the Bowery team for their assistance.”

We recorded Ted Leo almost exactly two years ago at Music Hall [here].

Download the MP3 and FLAC files and stream the entire show on the Live Music Archive [HERE]

Ted Leo and the Pharmacists
2009-12-06
Bowery Ballroom
New York, NY USA

An ACIDJACK master recording

Recorded and produced by acidjack
Hosted at nyctaper.com

Equipment: DPA 4021>Marantz PMD 660 (Oade Concert Mod) (16/44.1kHz)
Position: Pole clamped to left side of SBD cage, 8′ total height, DIN
Mastering: 16/44.1kHz WAV>Audacity (set fades, tracking, amplify each channel)>FLAC ( level 8 )

Setlist
01 Heart Problems
02 Me and Mia
03 The One Who Got Us Out
04 tuning
05 The Mighty Sparrow
06 The Ballad of the Sin Father
07 Where Have All the Rude Boys Gone?
08 tuning
09 Even Heroes Have to Die
10 The Stick
11 I’m A Ghost
12 Army Bound
13 tuning/banter
14 One Polaroid A Day
15 The High Party
16 Parallel or Together?
17 tuning/banter
18 Counting Down the Hours
19 Where Was My Brain
20 tuning/banter
21 A Bottle of Buckie
22 Under the Hedge
23 tuning/crowd
24 Bottled and Corked
25 The Crane Takes Flight
26 Last Days
27 encore break
28 [unknown cover song]
29 Timorous Me
30 Biomusicology

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Ted Leo and the Pharmacists, visit their website, and purchase their official releases from their website [HERE] or from the Touch and Go Records website [HERE].

The Ropers: November 14, 2009 Bell House – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 9, 2009
By


[photo courtesy of Jessica Amaya and Stereogum]

It must have been quite rewarding for Slumberland Records Mike Schulman that at the 20th Anniversary concerts, bands seemed to come out of the woodwork to play for him. The Ropers released one album and few 7″ records for Slumberland, but had broken up in the mid-90’s and had not released any new material since 1995. But at the anniversary concerts, as they opened with “Waiting” from their debut 7″, The Ropers sounded very much like they had fifteen years ago — tight, melodic dream-pop music.

This set was recorded as have been all the other ones from this show, and this particular mix is quite excellent. Enjoy!

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Ropers
2009-11-14
Slumberland Records 20th Anniversary Concert
Bell House
Brooklyn, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + Neumann KM-150s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2 x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2009-12-09

Setlist: (setlist help via)
[Total Time 26:56]
01 Waiting
02 I Don’t Mind
03 Sweet Lord I Know
04 Revolver
05 Home
06 Empty Bottle
07 Please Understand
08 Paste

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT The Ropers, and purchase their releases which are still available from Slumberland Records website [here].

Sloan: November 30, 2009 Maxwell’s – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 8, 2009
By


[photo by Jordan]

Of Sloan’s two local shows last week, Monday night at Maxwell’s was a much more intimate and loose show. The band worked quickly through some of the setlist and spent much of the night chatting and joking with the fanatics. When it came time for the encore segment, instead of performing just a couple of numbers, the band decided to employ the “Sloan Jukebox” and performed fast and furious sections of fan-requested songs. Teetering on the edge of cacophony, Sloan finished the set strongly with a rousing “Good in Everyone”.

Acidjack recorded this set from the standard location in this venue, in front of the right side of the soundboard. The DPA mics captured an excellent recording, rich with the band’s music and interplay with the crowd. Enjoy!

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Sloan
2009-11-30
Maxwell’s
Hoboken, NJ USA

Digital Master Recording
Recorded from front of Soundboard Booth

DPA 4021’s > Marantz PMD-660 (Oade BCM) > 16bit 44.1 wav > Soundforge (set fades, crossfade, level boost) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded by Acidjack
Produced by nyctaper
2009-12-08

Setlist:
[Total Time 1:04:49]
01 [introduction]
02 Take It Upon Yourself
03 Burn For It
04 Don’t You Believe a Word
05 Autobiography
06 [banter]
07 Stand By Me, Yeah
08 Who You Talkin’ To
09 Believe in Me
10 Fading Into Obscurity
11 The N.S.
12 [new song]
13 [banter]
14 The Great Wall
15 Where Are You Now?
16 Another Way I Could Do It
17 [encore break]
18 Marcus Said
19 [banter / aborted song]
20 Live On
21 Witch’s Wand
22 Bells On
23 [banter]
24 So Beyond Me
25 The Good In Everyone

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT Sloan, visit their website, and purchase Sloan’s official releases, which are all available via digital download at the website in mp3, apple lossless and FLAC [HERE].

Dirty Projectors: November 22, 2009 Bowery – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 8, 2009
By


[photo courtesy of Amanda M. Hatfield]

Acidjack reports:
“The Dirty Projectors are the band you’d get if some Ivy League music majors decided to convert their acappella group into a rock band. Or perhaps, they are, almost, the band we *did* get. If you don’t own Bitte Orca, their excellent album from this year, go out and buy it now, before you don’t own the album that will top all of this year’s “best of” lists.

Experiencing this band live, it is even more striking just how *musical* this band is. Quite frankly, I lack the music theory vocabulary to explain what it is they’re doing up there, but the complexity in their compositions – from the vocal harmonies to the song structures – is evident to even the untutored ear. This night, closing out an almost weeklong run in their home town, saw the Projectors in fine form, playing a nearly 90 minute set (including an acoustic set) that closed out with special guest star David Byrne, as well as an appearance by The Roots. Not since Kid A has a band moved rock music this far forward this quickly, and, like Kid A, challenged the most basic notions about what “rock” music is – and could be.

I recorded this set in the center with my new DPA 4021s. Thanks to the combination of the band’s extremely talented sound engineers, the respectful crowd, and the top-flight equipment, the sound is excellent. Enjoy!”

NYCTaper would like to acknowledge and thank David Longstreth and Domino Records for their kind permission to post this recording.

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

[edit: some formats are having problems extracting track 08 of the mp3s due to the syntax of the multi-song title. An alternative Track 08 is here]

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

The Dirty Projectors
2009-11-22
Bowery Ballroom
New York, NY

An ACIDJACK master recording

Equipment: DPA 4021>Marantz PMD660 (16/44.1)
Position: FOB, center, halfway back
Mastering: WAV>Audacity (tracking, amplify channel, set fades)>FLAC ( level 8 )

Tracks
01 Imagine It
02 Ascending Melody
03 Cannibal Resource
04 crowd
05 Wittenberg III
06 crowd
07 Fucked For Life
08 Gimme Gimme Gimme>Rise Above>Thirsty and Miserable
09 Two Doves
10 crowd
11 Spray Paint the Walls
12 The Bride
13 Stillness is the Move
14 No Intention (with the Roots)
15 Remade Horizon
16 Useful Chamber
17 encore break
18 Temecula Sunrise
19 crowd
20 Knotty Pine (with David Byrne)

If you email nyctaper for access to this recording, we expect that you will PLEASE SUPPORT The Dirty Projectors, visit their website, visit their MySpace page, and purchase Bitte Orca directly from the Domino Records website [HERE].

Sloan: December 4, 2009 Bell House – Flac and MP3 Downloads

December 8, 2009
By


[photo by Jordan]

Sloan is currently on tour to support their new five-song EP Hit & Run, and the Canadian alt-rock legends were in town for two local shows this past week. At Bell House on Friday night, Sloan bassist/vocalist Chris Murphy remarked that since the band only had to learn five new songs, the setlist would include a bunch of older numbers. As the packed-to-the-rafters crowd chanted their never-ending “Sloooooann” and sang along to every word, the band performed material dating back to 1996’s Juno Award Album of the Year One Chord or Another and best album nominee 1998’s Navy Blues, while selecting only a handful from their late 00’s output. The rowdy crowd demanded an encore and the band ultimately returned for four of them.

We recorded this set from our usual location in this venue and combined the audience microphones with a soundboard feed. While the crowd is abundant on the audience feed, the mix of the two sources reduces the crowd noise to a level that captures the feel of the venue without distracting from the listening experience. Enjoy!

Acidjack recorded the Maxwell’s show at that recording will be posted tomorrow.

Direct download of MP3 files (HERE)

Download the Complete show in FLAC [HERE].

Sloan
2009-12-04
Bell House
Brooklyn, NY USA

Digital Master Recording
Soundboard + Audience Matrix

Soundboard + Neumann KM-150s > Edirol R-44 (Oade Concert Mod) > 2 x 16bit 44.1kHz wav files > Soundforge (level adjustments, mixdown, set fades) > CDWave 1.95 (tracking) > Flac Frontend (level 7, align sector boundaries) > flac

Recorded and Produced by nyctaper
2009-12-06

Setlist:
[Total Time 1:25:32]
01 [introduction]
02 Take It Upon Yourself
03 At The Edge Of The Scene
04 Believe in Me
05 Autobiography
06 It Is Never
07 Don’t You Believe a Word
08 Keep On Thinkin’
09 Money City Maniacs
10 The N.S.
11 [new song]
12 The Great Wall
13 Where Are You Now?
14 Midnight Mass
15 Oh Dear Diary
16 Friendship
17 Witch’s Wand
18 Fading Into Obscurity
19 Everything You’ve Done Wrong
20 Who Taught You To Live Like That
22 [encore break]
22 The Other Man
23 C’mon C’mon (Were Gonna Get It Started)
24 Chester The Molester
25 The Good In Everyone

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