Music Blogs

More Now Than Retro: Erik Davis On Lysergic Blues Rockers The Entrance Band

Posted Thu Mar 13, 2008 3:19pm PDT by Erik Davis in The ARTHUR Blog

A few nights ago I swung by San Francisco's Café Du Nord to catch the Entrance Band, a psychedelic trio from LA that is riding a wave equally composed of fuzz and buzz. It's the Noise Pop festival up here, and the crowd was full of groovy twentysomethings moving and shaking, in denim and suits and skirts, with thin-brimmed fedoras making a particularly notable showing. I hunkered down in front of the stage with my pint of bitter, chatting with bearded young men who were most psyched for what we were about to witness.

Trios are the most musically honest of rock combos: the singing is often secondary, and the guitarist has to carry a huge load. All sorts of interesting modulations between riff and solo are possible, with the wank potential of the latter restrained by the need to sustain the flow with a thickness of tone and a rhythmic sinuousness. In a trio, everyone has to be up to snuff, and all three of these characters--guitarist Guy Blakeslee, drummer Derek James, and bassist Paz Benchantin--were up to their nostrils in the stuff. Ferocious entertainment.

Usually I only stick around past the first couple songs if the drummer is actually saying something, or at least respects the groove and does not rely on cymbals and bash to conjure up energy. Derek James was definitely on--he played with intensity but without slop, he held the beats tight while shifting the center within and between songs. But I didn't really pay a lot of attention to the guy because I was getting all weak-kneed before Blakeslee's guitar.

A lanky lefty with long hair and skinny wrists, Blakeslee's one of the best young rock players I have seen in a while. His restless intensity is balanced with a methodical cool, and he managed to fuse far more eras and styles than your more typical devotion to '60s blues-rock requires. Along with reviving the bends and boogie of Fillmore West lysergia, he also explored a raft of later metal and psych styles, including some minor key and middle-eastern modes that added witchiness to the bemushroomed killin floor. He also milked much fun from dense clusters of melodic hammer-ons that reminded me of, believe it or not, Eddie Van Halen (and that's a compliment, chumps!). And while Blakeslee coaxed lots of delicious analog-sounding spooge out of his rack of FX, he was also perfectly willing to exploit the more crystalline echo labyrinth of fully digital effects.

Looking past the long hair and the classic Fenders, I saw a band that was way more Now that retro. Just the way that Brett Morgan's new animated doc has rebranded the Chicago Seven as the Chicago Ten, the Entrance Band has rebranded ‘60s political and sonic clamor into something that a slicker, media-saturated era can embrace. Their riffs are not pop, but the band has an infectious charm that will, I hope, take them beyond the velvet ghetto of contemporary psych.

I mostly chalk up to this charm to their sense of the beat, which has definitely passed through the eras of disco and New Wave and survived. Bassist Paz Leenchantin, who both fulfilled and transcended the archetype of the chick bassist, devoted herself to a steady pulse that communicated both conviction and pop propulsion. A couple times, and without the usual feel-good grin, she raised her hands over her head to clap out the beat with the crowd. There was something almost communal about it, like she wanted to draw the audience back into the Movement through shared fusion in the beat. The band's political lyrics--"M.L.K.," etc.--were similarly earnest but mostly seemed kinda dumb to me. But I didn't care. I just sipped my ale and waited for Blakeslee's squalls to bust their moves. Okay, I clapped along with everyone too.

Erik Davis has a pretty spiffy website at www.techgnosis.comwww.techgnosis.com. He writes a column for Arthur Magazine called "The Analog Life."

1 Comment

1. Yahoo! Music User -
Did this ever get proofread? E Davis has impeccable taste, but here's wishing he'd give some of his subject matter a little of his Yale pedigree. "Blakeslee's squall bust a move"? With his interests so rich, I would expect more from his faculties of observation. There's a new energy in the air and perhaps he could save his Young MC references for his next piece on early nineties Rainbow Gatherings....
Leave Your Comment
You must sign in to leave a comment
Select a Blog Posts
And The Winner Is...
by Wendy Geller
23
As Heard On...
by Lyndsey Parker
31
Chart Watch
by Paul Grein
109
Framed
by John Kordosh
98
GetBack
by Shawn Amos
235
Hip-Hop Media Training
by Billy Johnson, Jr.
130
List Of The Day
by Rob O'Connor
309
Maximum Performance
by Jeff Miller
144
Musictoob
by Andy Pemberton
89
New This Week
by Dave DiMartino
101
Reality Rocks
by Lyndsey Parker
431
Rock's Backpages
by Jon Savage (1979)
153
Stop The Presses!
by Billy Altman
78
That's Really Week
by Lyndsey Parker
105
The Blender Burner
by Blender Magazine
27
The MOJO Blog
by Bill DeMain
70
The NME Blog
by Luke Lewis
41
The Spin Blog
by David Marchese
61
The Y! Music Playlist Blog
by Robert of the Radish
425
Video Ga Ga
by Billy Johnson, Jr.
60
Viva NashVegas
by Wendy Geller
10

Jackson was loving and attentive father, many say

AP
Sat Jul 4, 2009 5:17am PDT

AP - When Rabbi Shmuley Boteach brought his children to play with Michael Jackson's kids at Neverland Ranch some eight years ago, the rabbi's youngsters naturally made a beeline for the fabulous rides — the Ferris w… More »

More Music News