Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Some Local Stuff


This Story

So, in case anyone didn't know, there is some damn good indie music here in the midwest. So, today, I thought I would talk about a few of the really good local bands there are. Let us start with This Story.

This Story makes their home in Muncie, Indiana and are probably one of my favorite artists overall. They have released one album, Darling It's War (buy) and have a sound that I would call what would happen if Bright Eyes and Sufjan Stevens had a jam session. I'm also a sucker for male/female harmonies, something that This Story employs all the time.

When the band plays live, they can barely fit on a stage, they have so many members. So, naturally, the music sounds busy. But oddly, This Story has found away to make it not too overwhelming. Colorful banjolin lines mix with chiming bells and jazzy trumpet mixes with bluesy guitar, but it all...fits. Once you listen, you will understand. By the way, these guys are amazing live. Oh, and here is their myspace.

This Story-Old Slave Hymnal
This Story-Mothers In Kitchens
This Story-Something Before Death

A surprising off-note is that each individual member of the band actually recorded their part seperately. I have no idea how they made it blend like they did.



Arrah And The Ferns
is a Muncie three-piece that is derived from former This Story members. The brand brings a poppy mix of music that they hope will bring a smile to everyone's face. Although they have just three members, they often give off a sense of business just like This Story. They also employ the banjolin to juice up their songs. All three members can play many instruments. It is just a beautiful mix of indie folk that is hard to pass up. Check out their myspace.

Arrah and the Ferns-Science Books
Arrah and the Ferns-Problems



Margot and the Nuclear So So's is another large Indiana indie folk band. With nine members, the band composes what sometimes comes out as a light catchy pop sound and other times a more ambient kind of post-rock. The band employs traditional rock instruments (guitar, bass, drums, piano, etc.) along with violin and trumpet. The sound is noticably less busy than the two previous bands' sounds can be. They have one full length album out, The Dust of Retreat (buy.) I have never seen this band live, but intend to as soon as possible. Check out their myspace.

Margot and the Nuclear So So's-A Sea Chanty Of Sorts
Margot and the Nuclear So So's-Jen Is Bringing The Drugs
Margot and the Nuclear So So's-Quiet As A Mouse



I went to Wiux's Culture Shock a few weeks ago (which, by the way, was amazing.) I went in pumped to see Sunset Rubdown and Xiu Xiu. I came out dazed by the ridiculous talent I had seen that day from the math-rock group Maps and Atlases. Normally a four-piece, the Chicago act's fourth member, one of the guitarists, was still on the road when the band performed. And let me tell you, it didn't hurt them at all.

All three members had ridiculous talent, from the bass player who tapped half the time to the guitarist that shredded as fast as I have ever seen live while he was singing, to the drummer who was the backbone of the band, thumping out complex, pounding rhythms all show long. The songs are flurries of fantastically fast guitar parts mixed with some extremely unique vocals.

The band has released one album, Tree, Swallows, House (buy.) Check out their myspace.

Maps and Atlases-Everyplace is a House

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