Broadheds

Broadheds

Eastern Conference Champions, Toy Bombs

Tue, April 9, 2013

Doors: 8:00 pm / Show: 9:00 pm

Bootleg Bar

$8.00

This event is 21 and over

Broadheds - (Set time: 9:00 PM)
Broadheds
The thing about chapters — as any bibliophile will tell you — is that one has to end before a new one can begin.

That's where Peter Walker found himself one afternoon, as he waited to pick up his nephew at his alma mater. His previous outfit, Eulogies, had reached its logical conclusion — but Walker's artistic journey was nowhere near finished. The page just needed to be turned.

Strangely, it was the literal turning of pages that helped accomplish just that. As he killed time, Walker reached for a book with an interesting cover and a curious title — the young adult novel "King Dork."

"It looked like the cover of 'Catcher in the Rye' that'd been erased and covered in graffiti, like someone would do in a high school class," he says. "So I picked it up and started reading it and I loved it. I started getting into more teen fiction and it got me really thinking about those years of my life and I started writing songs. I started to conceptualize this whole project based on that kind of experience."

And so Broadheds was born. Armed with words about angst, innocence, hope and infatuation, Walker went back to his own adolescence when creating the music. "I knew it was going to be this Ramones kind of aggressive thing because that's where I was at when a was a teen – that kind of awkwardness and discomfort and the tough growth that happens. It just seems like it needs that kind of power."

It also required the right group of compatriots to execute Walker's vision – serious professionals who could commit themselves to the freedom and abandonment of a project whose guiding principles were lack of pressure, simplification and not looking beyond a one-off, studio-based art project.

Finding those individuals wasn't hard. Drummer Denny Weston, Jr. had been in Walker's orbit since the first Eulogies album, and his time playing in The Kooks made him the perfect candidate for the project. Bassist Justin Meldal-Johnsen (who has toured with Beck and Nine Inch Nails, amongst others) was brought in to help produce and quickly became a crucial ingredient. And after unsuccessfully imagining how to get a clarinet happening on an indie-rock/punk record,Walker wisely set his sights on a sax player. Fitz and the Tantrums' James King was the obvious choice.

Getting all four players in one room proved to be the tricky – yet essential - part. After briefly considering having Meldal-Johnsen overdub his parts, it was decided to wait until the stars (and schedules) aligned. As a quick listen to the recordings attests and as cliché as Walker knows that it sounds, the amazing energy and fun created in two half-days of rehearsals and three half-days of recording – of letting go and not over-thinking – was magic. The violence and beauty of raw teenage energy was achieved.

The entire album bristles with the jittery restlessness of adolescence, reverberates with the jaded hopefulness of youth, occasionally bursts with frustration – and comes together with the easy, almost relaxed assurance of four musicians at the top of their game. Check out the unhinged nature of the sax in "Outta Reach," the ease of how the band gels together (gang vocals included) in "Pick Me Up" and the ska/rock (or is that punk?) fusion between the verse and chorus of "Tomorrow I Might Feel The Same" for starters.

It should be duly noted that the album was also inspired, encouraged and eventually documented by the visual artist Mark Todd. Not only is his artwork featured in the 64-page book that accompanies the album (and works nicely as a stand-alone piece); he was an integral part of the recording process, providing an evolving visual landscape in the studio as the record was recorded.

The release of the album was intended to be the end of this chapter, but sometimes the conclusion is a surprise – even to its writer. Walker's no-pressure experiment produced such a rush of creative energy that his cohorts demanded that they perform the material live, visuals included.

"That was the best feeling – the best thing they could've given me or that could've happened," Walker beams. "Just that they felt that way. That was like I had gotten my reward."

And while he states that a handful of live shows will now serve as the end of the Broadheds chapter, Walker's story is nowhere near The End. "The next thing — I don't know what it's going to be," he muses, "but I'm working on that now, just writing."

Stay tuned...
Eastern Conference Champions - (Set time: 10:00 PM)
Eastern Conference Champions
Eastern Conference Champions made waves last year when they were tapped to contribute an exclusive song “for the third installment of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse. The unsigned act was chosen from more than 400 bands competing for the coveted soundtrack slot, and the resulting song, "A Million Miles An Hour," received rave reviews and raised the band’s profile considerably.

Eastern Conference Champions are returning with their first album of new material in four years.  Speak-ahh will be released on April 26th on RockHampton Records. 
Toy Bombs - (Set time: 11:00 PM)
Toy Bombs
Toy Bombs’ infectious sound, dynamic show and strong DIY passion has landed them many gigs at major festivals and concerts including SXSW, Sundance Film Festival, NYC's CMJ Festival, The Joint (Hard Rock Cafe, Las Vegas) and Salt Lake City's X96 Big Ass show. They have appeared in SPIN and Variety magazine and have had many news and radio appearances, including KEXP Seattle. Toy Bombs has been able to share the stage with great artists like Snow Patrol, Ben Kweller, Sea Wolf, P.O.S., St. Vincent, Neon Trees, Islands, Voxtrot, Ghostland Observatory and 100 Monkeys.

Toy Bombs creates music that pulls from the likes of Spoon, the Kinks, and David Bowie. It has familiarities of the classic rockers since the birth of the electric guitar and unpredictability of modern music. Listeners are dazzled with infectious melodies carried by both poppy and aggressive instrumentation. Their style has earned them comparisons to Arctic Monkeys, Hot Hot Heat, Cold War Kids, the Strokes, the Killers, the Rolling Stones, Pavement and the Clash.

Toy Bombs is Cole Barnson and Brandon McBride. Toy Bombs moved from Salt Lake City to Los Angeles in 2009. They have since toured extensively through all of the U.S., parts Mexico and Canada, and received positive reviews from numerous magazines and blogs for their unmatched live show. They released their debut EP, “Feed the Wolves” in December 2010 and followed it up with “Will Work For Free” in March of 2011.

Toy Bombs’ eclectic sound and high-energy show captures the attention of all generations and crowds.
Venue Information:
Bootleg Bar
2220 Beverly Blvd
Los Angeles, CA, 90057
http://foldsilverlake.com/