Start marking your calendar...

Bear in Heaven at Brillobox, Pittsburgh, PA.

… And start saving some dough.  These shows coming to the Columbus, Cleveland, and Pittsburgh areas in 2012 are sure to melt some faces. [Click band names in listing to be lead to the artist’s full schedule] Personally, I’m looking forward to seeing Jack in the Pocket interviewees Twin Sister, Bear in Heaven and Neon Indian again! TONS of other bands are in the process of releasing their 2012 touring schedules so keep checking back for updated concert dates.


JACK IN THE POCKET’s
CONCERT CALENDAR
WINTER//SPRING 2012

February 11, 2012 - Other Lives - The Basement - Columbus, OH

February 14, 2012 - Sharon Van Etten - Wexner Center - Columbus, OH

February 18, 2012 - Twin Sister - Beachland Tavern - Cleveland, OH

February 19, 2012 - YACHT- The Basement - Columbus, OH

February 20, 2012 - Zola Jesus - Skully’s Music Diner - Columbus, OH CANCELLED

March 11, 2012 - Born Gold - The Basement - Columbus, OH

March 20, 2012 - Andrew Bird - Southern Theatre - Columbus, OH

March 27, 2012 - Fanfarlo - Skully’s Music Diner - Columbus, OH

March 27, 2012 - Miniature Tigers -  The Club at Stage AE - Pittsburgh, PA

March 29, 2012 - Of Montreal - Beachland Ballroom - Cleveland, OH

March 29, 2012 - Night Beats - Ace of Cups - Columbus, OH

March 30, 2012 - Bear in Heaven - The Basement - Columbus, OH

April 4, 2012 - Neon Indian - Grog Shop - Cleveland, OH

April 7, 2012 - Lovedrug - Rumba Cafe - Columbus, OH

April 9, 2012 - Cloud Nothings - Outland Live - Columbus, OH

April 10, 2012 - Caveman - The Basement - Columbus, OH

April 18, 2012 - White Denim - The Basement - Columbus, OH

April 25, 2012 - Portugal. The Man - Newport Music Hall - Columbus, OH

April 29, 2012 - Oberhofer - The Basement - Columbus, OH

April 30, 2012 - Real Estate - Newport Music Hall - Columbus, OH

May 8, 2012 - St. Vincent - Newport Music Hall - Columbus, OH

Jack in the Pocket's TOP 10 ALBUMS of 2011

Let me break it down for you guys… I normally avoid making “Top” lists. First, because I suck at describing why one album is musically superior to another.  I’m the type of person who listens to something and I either love it or hate it.  I don’t enjoy analyzing their qualities. Music is so tightly wound with my identity, I find it almost impossible to be objective. Secondly, I tend to feel bad for all of the other albums I have enjoyed throughout the year.  Yes, I have tendencies to project feelings upon inanimate objects…

I find it is similar to the emotional struggles of my stuffed animals when I was a child.  I had two favorite toys, a bear and a bunny (creatively named “Bear” and “Bunny”).  I cuddled with them every night, until, one evening, I noticed the other stuffed animals sadly staring at me from their perch on top of my radiator. My nightlight reflected off of their glassy eyes, creating the illusion of tears of sad, neglected children. For months after that, I kept a rotating schedule of which stuffed animal I slept with for the night. But, that was when I was 4 or 5 years old.  Now that I’m 26, I have to call it like it is.

So, without further ado, here follows the list of my top 10 albums of the year accompanied by a personal note on each.


#10 - Radiohead - The King of Limbs

As with many of the latest releases by Radiohead, you either loved or hated The King of Limbs.  Thom York and company continually push themselves and this short but amazing album is no exception. I can attest to this album’s golden road trip qualities.  Especially during night drives, The King of Limbs lingers in dark corners, and oozes sticky trails.  Keep an eye on the road, that may be a deer in the middle of the highway or it may be a Radiohead induced hallucination.

Watch: Lotus Flower by Radiohead.


#9 - Kurt Vile - Smoke Ring for My Halo

I had a moment with this album during my first ever solo drive over 8 hours to Memphis to visit my best friend.  I have been a Kurt Vile fan since YVYNYL included Overnight Religion on his Floating out to Sea Mixtape back in September of 2009.  However, Kurt never caused me to cry, or stir up physical signs of emotion until (as cheesy as it sounds) Baby’s Arms came over my stereo system.  Dawn was just breaking, I was driving through the Kentucky hills, the red and orange leaves were peaking through the mist. My mind immediately went to my boyfriend, who was at home, sleeping soundly in Columbus.  I suddenly felt homesick, and wished he could share this beautiful moment on the road with me.

Watch: Baby’s Arms by Kurt Vile.


#8 - Twin Sister - In Heaven

I love everything about Twin Sister. They are, hands down, some of the nicest, sweetest, quirkiest human beings on earth.  Their music reflects the same.  This 10 track album is woven equally with threads of innocence and darkness, humor and honesty. I constantly add Bad Street to my playlists because I can’t get enough of its silliness. The 1/4th Japanese side of me also applauds their reference to Japanese horror films in their music video for Kimmi in a Rice Field.

P.S. Readers, these guys are awesome house guests, so if you are able to open your home to them while they are on the road, do so.  They have my hostess stamp of approval.

Read Twin Sister’s Jack in the Pocket Interview

Listen to Bad Street by Twin Sister.


#7 - M83 - Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming

The 22 tracks on this album are all pretty great.  The only problem is, I can’t pick out but two or three favorite tracks because they all sound much better if played consecutively.  That factor is what pushed me add Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming to my top 10.  One of the signs of a truly talented artist is the ability to craft an album that stays cohesive from beginning to end.

Plus, this formula is like the first time they put chocolate and peanut butter together.

Listen to Intro by M83.


#6 - Gauntlet Hair - Gauntlet Hair

Everyone knows, I’m a sucker for music with heavy percussion and glitched out guitars.  I can’t resist flailing like a wild banshee whenever I put this album on (which can be quite dangerous while listening in heavy traffic).

You can watch the special last minute interview SpoonfeedColumbus.com and I got with Gauntlet Hair just a few weeks ago here.


Listen to Top Bunk by Gauntlet Hair.


#5 - The Kills - Blood Pressures

I. love. Alison. Mosshart.

Need I say more?  Well, I guess I should elaborate.  I’ve been closely following The Kills since my freshman year of college (2004).  I had the pleasure of seeing them perform at a small 300 cap venue that year as well, and since that night, I’ve had a major crush on Alison. Jamie Hince ain’t so bad himself, but I think even the thought of entertaining a double crush would blow my mind. Besides, he’s married to Kate Moss, so there go my chances. Blood Pressures is an amazing follow-up to Midnight Boom. It’s filled to the brim with The Kills sexy angst… mmm. 

I saw the pair perform in Detroit in May, and even managed to squeak out a mousy, “Hello..” to Alison when we ran into her at the restaurant next to the venue. 

Listen to Nail in My Coffin by The Kills.


#4 - St. Vincent - Strange Mercy

Dear Annie Clark,

How do you manage to be so lovely, with your curly hair, elegant style, and cherry red lips?  How do you manage to be so badass? From the way you wail on that guitar, to the way you craft a song, you make for one sultry songstress.  All the men want you, all the women wish they could be you.  Strange Mercy should be added to a list of “Rock Albums Every Woman Should Own.”  Keep singing, my dear. Keep rocking. I adore you. Adopt me?

Listen to Cruel by St. Vincent.


#3 - Washed Out - Within and Without

Ernest Greene has come a long way from his days of being a Myspace “chill-wave” mystery.  Thank goodness for that.

Within and Without was without a doubt one of sexiest releases of the year.  I mean, just look at the album art! You’re obviously supposed to have the bump-and-grind on yo’ mind when you let these tracks tickle your ear drums. It’s also an awesome album to blast in your car during the warm summer months. For those of you who live in warmer climates, roll down your windows, and let your arm ride the wave of wind, and let the music take you away.  For those of us stuck in weather below 40 degrees, you may want to don a thick coat, mittens, and blast your heat before you try it out.  Or, you could wait until summer, but who wants to do that?!

Read Washed Out’s Jack in the Pocket Interview.

Listen to You & I by Washed Out.


#2 - Neon Indian - Era Extraña

As to be expected, Era Extraña made it into my top 2 albums of the year.  I mean, goodness gracious everyone… it better have!  I saw Neon Indian live 3 times just this year, 6 times total.  I can’t help it. I’ve been a musical admirer of Alan Palomo since Psychic Chasms' kaleidoscopic sounds clobbered my ears that night that changed how I listen to music forever. (If you read the interview linked below, you'll quickly figure out why it sounded so different.)

Era Extraña is a album chock full of songs that take you through the stages of crush, longing, and inevitable heartbreak. I have to claim Suns Irrupt as my favorite track.  It undulates with the same swagger of confidence as Palomo does when he’s performing.

Read Neon Indian’s Jack in the Pocket Interview.

Listen to Polish Girl by Neon Indian.


#1 - Panda Bear -Tomboy

I can’t even begin adequately explain how excited I was for Tomboy to drop. 

That fateful night in September of 2010 at Ottobar in Baltimore, MD in the company of Jimmy from Headunderwater.com and the boys from Everybody Yay turned me into a super-stellar-intergallactic-crazed fan of Panda Bear.  No other artist has ever made a room disappear around me, created sounds that seeped into every pore, and left me feeling simultaneously confounded and elated. My eyes fluttered opened when Afterburner faded out, and I looked around me, grabbed Jimmy’s shoulder and said, “What just happened?!” I had only consumed 3 drinks over the course of 2 hours… what was this audible magic?!

When I listen to Tomboy in the proper environment (lights out, headphones on, bass pumped, laying in bed) I can recreate that moment.  I can’t help but imagine myself as a white feather riding on expanding and contracting waves of sound, through a dark and peaceful forest every time I listen to  Scheherazade. I have no doubt in my mind Noah Lennox will go down as one of the greatest masters of electronic music in history.

Listen to Afterburner by Panda Bear.


Wax Warpin’ Weekend
About a year ago, Kyle from Lost Weekend Records in Clintonville was kind enough to find me a copy of Future by The Seeds only to discover the vinyl was badly warped.  He gave it to me for free and tracked down another copy…

Wax Warpin’ Weekend

About a year ago, Kyle from Lost Weekend Records in Clintonville was kind enough to find me a copy of Future by The Seeds only to discover the vinyl was badly warped.  He gave it to me for free and tracked down another copy in excellent condition.  So, what to do with the wobbly wax?  How about melt and mold it into a Christmas gift?  Here’s a quick and fun way to put scratched, warped, or unwanted vinyl to good use. 

What you’ll need:

- Vinyl Record
- Oven
- Cookie Sheet
- Glass bowl

1.)  Preheat your oven to 200 degrees.

2.) Place overturned glass bowl onto cookie sheet, balance vinyl on top of bowl, place in oven.

3.) Keep a close eye on the vinyl.  After approximately 6-10 minutes, the record should start to collapse over the bowl.

4.)  Take out of oven.  Mold the record into desired shape.  Move fast!  The vinyl cools in about 10 seconds.

Voilà! Happy wax warpin’ y’all.

1,2,3 | September 16, 2011 | Rumba Cafe | Columbus, OH

Concert photos by Miharu Kato
Interview photos by Laura Shaffer

I was pleasantly surprised to find Rumba Cafe packed to the ceiling to see 1,2,3 on that cool September evening.  (To be honest, I’m always surprised if a show is packed because of the finicky tendencies of Columbus audiences.  Some small bands like 1,2,3 pack rooms, others like Gauntlet Hair hardly draw a crowd, yet both are equally awesome, and similar in sound.) I had been following these boys since I heard Confetti in 2009, so I was antsy to finally see them live.  They did not disappoint.  Everyone had smiles plastered on their faces, drink in their hands and were hopping, flailing, waving, stepping in convulsions of merriment as 1,2,3 ripped the stage.  I had broken out in a decent sweat by the end of their set.

We gathered on the back patio of Rumba Cafe just as bartenders were already herding the crowd into the main room.  Josh and Nick were discussing the TV show, Breaking Bad and how it’s conclusion could make or break the series. 

"LAST CALL!  TAKE YOUR DRINKS INSIDE!!!" shouted a bouncer.  We decided to get down to business…

KP: The first time I heard about you guys was almost a year ago, today.  I know you guys got press from the Guardian, We All Want Someone, Pretty Much Awesome….

Josh: Yeah, that was last year… early last year.

KP: I love the single version of Confetti, that is what really turned me on to your music. 

Nick:  Yeah we like it better!  We do prefer the original version better.

KP: What was your recording process like for your album New Heaven?

New Heaven

Nick:  It’s always different.  There isn’t like one, singular process.  I could take you through the entire album and tell you, but I’ll walk you through a couple scenarios.  Work was the first song I recorded on ProTools.  It was instrumental… we recorded a kick drum loop and a tambourine loop.  There were two different versions of music that happened, and I didn’t care for either of them.  So, I changed it completely.  I played it for Josh about a year and half after later after I had messed around with it for a while…

Listen to Work by 1,2,3.

Josh:  It was really that long? A year and a half??

Nick:  Yeah! It was that long ago, dude!  [laughter] So, Josh really liked it and I was like, I can’t figure out what melody to sing over top of this.

Josh:  It was just music, that’s all we had.

KPWas it just you two in the beginning?

Josh:  Yeah, we were in a band before this and…

KP: Takeover UK?

Takeover UK

Josh:  Yeah! And, it grew increasingly volatile and also our record label dropped us.  Also,  Takeover had two songwriters and singers and they kept going separate ways.  I had been friends with Nick for like, 15 years.  I didn’t get along with the other guys at all.  So, we decided to break the band up. Nick had a handful of songs that were vastly different.  One night we got drunk and he had me listen to the songs, asked me what I thought and if I wanted to break the band up.  I was like, ‘Let’s do it.’  So we broke up Takeover UK.  We did some closet recordings for like, six months just fuckin’ around.  I guess I’m kinda getting ahead of the original question but…

Nick: I mean, uh, yeah a lot of us started in ProTools but -

Josh:  We piece it together! The old band would take a song and write it in one instance.  We wrote the music, and thought of ideas for songs… premeditated. This band is much more pieced together.  It started out just the two of us…

We were interrupted by shouts of “LAST CALL!  GET OFF THE PATIO!” Bartenders started shooting unappreciative looks our way…

NickLonesome Boring Summer I wrote on my iPod.  I got an app that I enjoy thoroughly and just wrote a song around it.  Sorry, Soldier I wrote when I was 19 years old during my freshman year of college.

KP: How old are you guys now?

Nick:  I’m 27, Josh is 28.

Laura (photographer):  That was about a decade ago that you wrote that song.

Nick:  Yeah, almost. But then there’s 20,000 Blades which we wrote a week before going into the studio. 

Josh:  There’s a few newer ones.  The songs on the album range from 10 years ago to about 2 weeks before going into the studio.  It was a compilation of the best things he had done that didn’t fit our last band —

Again, we’re interrupted by desperate attempts by the bartenders to shut the patio down…

Nick:  Yeah.  We should probably move on to the next question though…

Josh: … before we get kicked out.

KP: Let’s see, let’s talk about growing up around Pittsburgh and your musical journey growing up.

Nick:  Me and Josh became friends in Junior High.  He was two years older than me which is like, a vast difference in Jr. High.  My dad had studied abroad in college and he came back with all these punk 7” from the late 70’s. The Clash, Sham 69, Ian Dury… all sorts of really awesome punk music.  We were the only kids in our school who were actually into that stuff.

Josh:  I had blue hair!

[laughter]

KPDid you really?!

Josh:  Yeah!

KPDo you have old photos of that you can send me?

Josh: No, unfortunately.  I had a house burn down, so everything from 16 back was lost.

KP: Oh, man.  Sorry.  Damn it!

Josh:  Yeah.  So, we were both punk rockers.  My parents got divorced so I moved away from Pittsburgh and came back… it’s a weird story.   My sister was dating Josh’s best friend, so I found out he needed a drummer through her.  We hadn’t talked in 2-3 years, which was really weird.  So we came back around, our musical influences grew together. It was uncanny.  We were both punk rockers and then we were like, “Hey, I like the Beatles, I like Creedence Clearwater Revival…” 

Nick:  In some weird way we went from punk rock to classic rock -

Josh:  - together! Without knowing each other during that time. It was fuckin’ weird. When I joined his band, I didn’t know how to play drums.  I had glorified buckets, basically. I could keep a beat.  My mother was a dancer so I think I got the rhythm from her, or something. Nick and I learned how to play our instruments together.

Nick:  I played bass originally.  We’ve been in… several bands.

Josh: For about 12 years. 

Nick:  Probably about 6 bands.  Hardcore bands, punk bands, prog bands.

Josh:  So we grew as musicians together and it just kinda stuck.  Pittsburgh is just one of those cities where we grew up lower-middle class.  And you know, there are the jocks, the nerds, and the musicians.

KPYou’re finding your life paths are running parallel to each other…

Josh:  Yeah, it’s weird now that I think about it.  Never really thought about it that way but, yeah.  I mean, I could have gone and listened to free jazz or some crazy shit. [laughter] You know what I mean?

KP I noticed when I was reading articles about you guys online, a lot of people were comparing you to T-Rex, The Beatles, and Dylan…

Josh:  Fuck yeah! We love all that stuff.

Nick: [sighs] Dylan’s my boy, you know?

Josh:  His voice does sound like Marc Bolan, at times.

Nick:  People tell me that, but it’s not intentional by any means. Don’t get me wrong, I love T-Rex!  I love Marc Bolan.  It just happens that I sound like him at times.

KPYou guys have been 1,2,3 for how long now?  Over a year?

Josh:  In November it will be 2 years.  But we didn’t play shows until about a year ago.  Our first show was in L.A. our second show was in London.  We’ve played more shows in London than we have in our hometown of Pittsburgh.

KP:  And you’ve played Columbus as many times as Pittsburgh now.  And people love you here, so make sure you keep coming back.

Nick:  We plan on it!

Josh:  Yeah, Columbus is sweet.

KPWhat were the major differences between your first two shows, the one in LA and the other in London?  Did you find it completely different.

Nick: [laughs] Yeah…

Josh:  We played at Koko which is in Camden in London.  We played NME night there.

KPI LOVE Koko! 

A photo from one of my many times at Koko during my time in London in 2008.

Josh:  We played some smaller clubs in London.  We played a couple industry parties too.  We also played the Great Escape in Brighton…  I fucking loved England.  I tried to miss my plane on purpose because I didn’t want to come home.  We had moved to LA for a while. And, sorry to our LA fans, but we hated it. 

Nick:  I’ll be honest, I kind of regret moving back. I know you have different feelings on it but I wish I would have given it more time.  I honestly do. I really, really do.

Josh:  It was a weird city and a weird situation.  My ex-girlfriend and I were living with each other and Nick was sleeping on our couch.  Just a weird thing.  It was also expensive as fuck to live in LA. We went to London, and I felt more at home there than I did in California.

KPI feel the same way about London. I felt so at home there. I loved Koko.  It’s such a great venue.  But, Columbus is an awesome place to be in the U.S.

Josh:  We played with Sting’s daughter that night.

Nick:  Ironically enough… what was their name?

JoshI Blame Coco

[laughter]

NickI Blame Coco… yep. 

Josh:  We have a rotating band member who lives in LA who was at that show with us.  4 o’clock in the morning, drunk, he goes up to her and asks, “So, how’s your dad doing…?”  She said, “I don’t live with him anymore…”  You don’t talk about celebrity parents with their children… 

I Blame Coco

KPI ask this question every time I talk to a band who has played in London, especially in Camden.  But, when you guys were there, did you ever have a drink called Snakebite Black?  It’s half lager, half cider, and a splash of black current liquor.   It’s illegal in parts but some bars serve it in Camden. 

Nick:  That sounds delicious!

Josh:  How is that illegal?!

KPIt makes men extremely violent. 

Josh:  If we’re gonna talk about drinks for a second… the most fucked up drink in the U.S. is something in San Francisco called Tokyo Tea.  It’s a pint glass full of every kind of liquor. 

Nick:  They take like, 4 different types of liquor and then pour on a splash of this green…

Josh: …This sweetener that’s so sweet that you can’t taste the alcohol.  I drank two of them!  TWO! Blacked out, woke up the next day and was puking blood in the dressing room before our show.  It was horrendous.

I proceeded to ask them the dreaded question, (What is the craziest thing that has happened to you guys since you’ve been on tour?) which was met with some groans from Nick and an initial statement that their tour life has been pleasant since they quit Takeover UK.  Josh then chimed in with a mention of their trip back from SXSW last March…  Listen to one of the BEST tour stories I have heard in the history of JackinthePocket.  For those of you viewing this interview in your Tumblr dashboard, visit JackinthePocket.com to listen.


1,2,3 is back in Columbus TONIGHT at The Summit!  Event details can be found HEREFor everyone outside of Columbus, visit 1,2,3’s official website for tour dates and other information.