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| CITY PAGES PICKED 2 CLICK AND RADIO K PRESENTS ...FIRST AVENUE’S BEST NEW BANDS OF 2007 FEATURING |
| A NIGHT IN THE BOX, BLACK AUDIENCE, GAY WITCH ABORTION, GOSPEL GOSSIP, M.ANIFEST, MOUTHFUL OF BEES, and TO KILL A PETTY BOURGEOISIE |
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By CHRIS RIEMENSCHNEIDER, Star Tribune
Consistently one of the best nights of local music every
year, First Avenue's Best New Bands showcase earned a much-deserved
promotion.
The 2007 edition of the annual music-scene mingler moved to Friday
from its traditional Wednesday slot. With the day change in mind, we
thought we'd do a little switcheroo of our own. Here's a Sunday guide
to the selected bands, most of which have been covered in our Scene
section on Friday:
A Night in the Box: Led by three high-school pals who dream
of becoming hobos more than rock stars, it earned a buzz with its
debut, "The Hustle, the Prayer, the Thief." Their vagabondian
story-songs sound like the White Stripes set to banjo and other
acoustic instruments.
Black Audience: Another rustic acoustic band, this one's a
family act featuring Robin Kyle of the pop-rock group Valet, his wife,
Jayanthi, and his brother Luke, plus their well-known pal Mike Gunther.
They play old-timey gospel, blues and folk tunes with Jayanthi belting
out the vocals and the guys backing her on banjo and bodhran.
Gay Witch Abortion: This all-oomph guitar/drums duo, with
ex-Chariots member Jessy Bottomley out front and Chooglin's Shawn
Walker behind the kit, churns out mostly instrumentals that somehow
sound louder and more monstrous than many quintets do. The drums and
guitar become one during their Stooges-meet-Sabbath jams.
Gospel Gossip: These college kids from Northfield, Minn.,
sound like a college-rock band from England in the late '80s with their
swirling guitars and ethereal synth parts. Frontwoman Sarah Nienaber,
in particular, charmingly echoes singers such as Tanya Donnelly (of
Belly/Throwing Muses). The quartet's droning but hook-filled debut,
"Sing Into My Mouth," came out in November.
M.anifest: What's a rapper from Ghana who's as smart as Talib
Kweli and as funky as Kanye West doing in Minnesota? Who cares? As
proven on his just plain entertaining debut CD, "MaNIfestations," (No.
5 on our recent year-end Twin Cities Critics Tally), the 25-year-old
African transplant is as at home laying old-school rhymes and
Afrocentric grooves as he is at keeping up with the Joneses (as in Nas
and Mike), and his songs are positive and thought-provoking.
Mouthful of Bees: Siblings Chris and Katelyn Farstad were
fresh out of high school this time last year when their playful, punky,
mumbly quartet issued a home-made album called "The End," which was
actually just the start. The Current and Radio K put their
guitar-weaving CD opener "The Now" on the air. City Pages gave them the
top spot in the annual Picked to Click poll. And bigger and bigger
crowds watched the quartet get even better on stage.
To Kill a Petty Bourgeoisie: The second album ("The Patron")
was the charmer in the case of this whirring, ethereal electronic
boy/girl duo, which comes off like Everything But the Girl minus the
dance beats and plus loads and loads of Radiohead-like sonic layers.
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