ev2bk Music: Passion Pit – Manners

Passion Pit wasn’t really supposed to be a band. Back in 2008, Michael Angelakos made a bunch of songs as a Valentine’s Day gift to his ex-girlfriend, which eventually wound up as the six song Chunk of Change EP (released in Sept. 2008). By then word started to spread about the Boston band’s falsetto crooning, clean synth-driven dance pop tracks, and Passion Pit began playing shows all around the Northeast.

My first encounter with the band was at the Mercury Lounge during the CMJ Festival last year, when I tried to ask my sister a question at the bar and she got pissed at me for ruining her conversation with “the lead singer of Passion Pit.” Oops! I quickly checked them out on Myspace and became briefly obsessed with uber-danceable “Sleepyhead:”

Then this February I happened to be in London and managed to catch them playing at Cargo, since our good friends Bear Hands were also on the bill (and are definitely also worth checking out!). The show was sold out and the venue was absolutely packed, but this didn’t stop anyone from getting down with some serious booty shaking/sing alongs, and the entire set was really high-energy and enjoyable:

Passion Pit @ Cargo, London - Feb 09

Passion Pit @ Cargo, London - Feb 09

Passion Pit @ Cargo, London - Feb 09

Passion Pit @ Cargo, London - Feb 09

Passion Pit @ Cargo, London - Feb 09

Passion Pit @ Cargo, London - Feb 09

After the European jaunt, the band hit up a little U.S. tour, including some dates at SXSW, which leads us up to this week and the release of their first full length album, Manners (Frenchkiss Records). To celebrate, on Tuesday the boys played what looks to have been a raucous and celebratory show on a boat cruise in the Hudson. Apparently, the band has really tightened up over the past few months, especially on the new tracks from the LP. Even MTV was there filming! Val Loper, the bassist from Bear Hands, was at the boat show and told me last night that they were “fucking amazing.”

To be honest, I wasn’t sure what to expect from Manners, especially after “The Reeling,” the album’s first single, sounded hella over-produced. After the first listen I was thinking I was maybe right. But so far each listen has only made me get more into this expanded sonic repertoire. Sure, the lead singer’s voice can get a little grating/distracting sometimes, like in the chorus of “Folds in Your Hands,” interrupting an otherwise charging opening. But there are lot of nice surprising touches that I guess come from working with a big label producer, like the funky baritone sax at the end of “To Kingdom Come,” or the kid choruses (in “The Reeling” and “Little Sectrets”) ala Pink Floyd.

The standout tracks for me were “Little Secrets,” “Swimming in the Flood,” and – even though the LP version seems to me to be essentially unchanged from the EP – “Sleepyhead” is still a dope song. A lot of the other joints seem to me to suffer from too much ambition or good beginnings gone awry into spacey-synth jams and too-high vocal flights. But overall I’d say that the disc is pretty solid and worth more than a few spins.

-Drew

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Jam of the Day – Fossils or Creator?

After much anticipation (mostly by me!) we went to a preview of the EXTREME MAMMALS exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History last night… and it was AMAZING! You have to go check it out for yourself.

Some of the highlights were the Sugar Glider, the Uintatherium, and the ultra-huge Indricotherium, which you get to see, and walk under, as you enter the exhibit. Weighing up to a massive 20 tons as an adult, these poor guys died out when the existing vegetation could not sustain their appetites. The smallest mammal that ever lived, Batodonoides, were particularly creepy looking. They were so small they could sit on the edge of a pen and the exhibit claimed that they “could be sitting right on your shoulder and you would hardly know it.” Yikes.

Timed perfectly with this exhibit, the news broke yesterday that the missing link in the human evolutionary chain has been found! A 47-million-year-old fossilized skeleton of this ‘lemur-monkey’ hybrid has “human-like nails instead of claws, and opposable big toes” which places her “at the very root of human evolution…”

All this talk about extinction and evolution got me thinking that to dispute that we’re all just animals evolved from other animals is pretty insane. With this further compelling confirmation of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, how can we claim humans were dropped on this earth buy one Creator?

Santigold – Creator:

For those of you who don’t know Santigold – you can check her out on myspace here. Her debut album, Santogold, was released in April, 2008.
(Editor’s note: She has gone back and forth with the spelling of her name – currently it’s Santigold but it was Santogold for the album.)

-Melissa

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Jam of the Day – Baby You Can Drive My Fuel-Efficient Car

Today President Obama announced a new national fuel-efficiency and auto-emissions policy for the auto industry that will result in an average fuel economy standard for all new cars and trucks of 35.5 mpg by 2016, which could ultimately save almost 2 billion barrels of oil over the life of the program. Not too shabby, Big O.

As numerous sources point out, this new policy also represents a consolidation of 3 previous standards (state standards, the EPA, the DOT) into the one national policy, which closely resembles the policy that California has been seeking to implement for some time now. The Department of Transportation Secretary, Ray LaHood, goes so far as to say:

“President Obama is uniting federal and state governments, the auto industry, labor unions and the environmental community behind a program that will provide for the biggest leap in history to make automobiles more fuel efficient…This program lessens our dependence on oil and is good for America and the planet.”

Great, although I would point out that my own auto emissions have been close to ZERO for about a decade living in NYC. But I guess not everyone can live here, and any steps in the right direction are to be encouraged.

The Beatles – Drive My Car:

Beep beep, beep beep, yeah!

-Drew

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Jam of the Day – Sex and Neck-Biting

Advertising is already covering phone booths throughout the city to promote the second season of HBO’s True Blood, but after just watching nearly all of the first 12 episodes on demand, I am left wondering what the appeal is here and how there is call for seconds. As far as I can tell, the basic ideas driving the show are twofold: 1) SEX! and 2) Neck-biting! And also: Sex and neck-biting…at the same time!

The story mostly revolves around Anna Paquin’s character Sookie Stackhouse as she befriends and boyfriends vampire Bill (played by Stephen Moyer). Also getting tons of screen time (including most of the naked romp scenes) is Sookie’s sex- and drug-addicted brother Jason Stackhouse, of the “so pretty but so dumb” male variety. All sorts of craziness starts happening in this small southern town after the world’s vampires decide to come out of the casket since the Japanese have invented TruBlood, a form of synthetic blood that theoretically can replace real blood as sustenance for the vamps.

Now I’ve never read the books, but this is a pretty wild premise for me to casually accept as a television viewer. But let’s not stop there: Sookie can read minds, her bartender boss is a shape-shifter (preferred form: dog), and who knows what else may hit the sceen next.

This is just asking me to suspend too much disbelief! I refuse. I am no rat in a cage. Check out Billy Corgan and the rest of these guys rocking the vampire aesthetic way back in ’96!

Smashing Pumpkins – Zero:

-Drew

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ev Restaurant – Tonda

Tonda BarWhen Tonda opened in late-March, they claimed that they would have New York’s “best fire-baked pizza.” True to their word, their menu highlights, including the thin-crust pizzas, paninis, foccaccia, flatbreads, and calzones, are all baked on a rotating stone pivot in an 8-foot-wide wood-burning oven (which maintains 1,000-degree temps). Located near the corner of 4th Street and Avenue B, Tonda has taken over the large space previously inhabited by the now-shuttered restaurant, The E.U. The rustic layout of Tonda makes it an inviting space with tables for different-sized parties, a small lounge area, and a large bar located adjacent to the wood-burning oven. To take advantage of the warmer months ahead, they also have tables set-up on their front-patio (i.e. sidewalk with an awning) with enough room to seat 26.

We first checked out Tonda in March and the authentic Neapolitan pies did not disappoint. The margherita pizza and the prosciutto di parma and arugula pizza were both delicious and both featured an excellent tomato sauce base. They were so good in fact that we went back to sample some more of the goods this past weekend. Unfortunately, we did find a few things lacking this time around. The arugula and parmesan salad which was stellar last time, was over-salted and oily and the white pies that we tried (one featuring sausage and broccoli di rape and the other featuring fresh cherry tomatoes) were both a little dry. Having tried these different styles, I would definitely recommend going with one of the traditional tomato-sauce-based pizzas. Overall, the place is worth checking out even if there are high and low notes on the menu because, in a neighborhood of some pretty stiff pizza competition (Artichoke and Luzzo’s to name a few), Tonda is offering something unique. The thin-crust of their pies is authentic and outstanding.

Their head-chef Michele Sceral was flown in from Naples to supervise the creation of the menu “in the tradition and high standard he garnered at the Napolitan Pizzaiolo Association” as their press release claims. Michele Sceral has 15 years of experience and the Tonda website explains that he uses “mostly locally-sourced nutritious ingredients and flours.” … and “special water will also be used to make the crusts for all menu items.” I’m not sure what kind of “special water” this is but that crust sure is tasty.

Owner Bob Giraldi collaborated on the Tonda concept, menu, and hospitality staffing with restaurateurs Luigi Comandatore and Dario Milanin, with whom he is partners in the popular Bread Tribeca restaurant located downtown.

Tonda also has a wine list offering primarily Italian whites, reds, and rosés. Delivery in the immediate neighborhood (lucky me!) is also available. You can check out the menu here.

In a creative marketing decision, Tonda has also launched their own blog on which they are posting information about their owners, their menu updates, and are seemingly trying to create some general buzz for the new eatery.

Tonda
235 East 4th Street
New York, NY 10009
212.254.2900
www.tondapzza.com

-Melissa

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Coldplay live album – free download

Coldplay is giving away a live album as a “thank you to [their] fans.” Download it here. Enjoy your Saturday!

(thanks to brooklynvegan.com)

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