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Middle of the Map Recap – Fun is true to its name, locals impress

Posted on 10 April 2012 by Bethany Smith

Whomever says that cool things never happen in Kansas City clearly has never been to one of the Middle of the Map Festivals. Middle of the Map is kind of like a miniature version of Austin’s SXSW festival, but with a spotlight on Kansas City/Lawrence bands. This year’s festival kept the Westport setting of last year’s debut, featuring over 100 bands spread across 10 venues. Middle of the Map expanded to include a third day to accommodate even more bands than last year. In addition to an extra day of music, an interactive forum with movie screenings was even added. Headlining bands from across the nation such as the catchy Fun., a reunited Mission to Burma, the chill Neon Indian and the wild Fucked Up were part of the draw, but a stellar local lineup featuring bands such as Quiet Corral, Cowboy Indian Bear, Making Movies and Capybara made the ticket price a steal. It’s with little surprise that the festival sold out nearly all three night.

Thursday at Middle of the Map Quiet Corral at Riot Room at Middle of the Map Fest in Kansas City

Thursday kicked things off with an abbreviated lineup. Making Movies proved that they’re one of the hardest working bands in Kansas City by playing a two hour set over at Gusto: the first of two sets during the festival. Whether you could understand the oft Spanish lyrics or not, their fun Latina beats got everyone moving. Meanwhile, over at the RecordBar punk fans excited to see Molly Maguire filled the venue. Midcoast Station caught a bit of a Cher UK – a local KC/Austin act that had a bit more of a classic rock sound. Our Midcoast crew spent most of the night bouncing between The Riot Room and The Union. The Union is a cave-like bar, but it created a fittingly moody ambiance for the bands performing there. We were impressed by The Loom – an indie rock group that beautifully incorporates the French Horn and other instruments that don’t get the attention they deserve by other groups. We also enjoyed the folk rock of Christopher Paul Stelling. And despite the technical problems that plagued their set, we were glad to close out our night with locals, Old Canes. However, as great as all these other venues and lineups were, the place to be this evening was hands down the Riot Room. Here we got swept away by the lyrics of Hospital Ships and we danced to Hooray for Earth – an eclectic sounding band think electronica-indie-rock with a nasally singer. That description doesn’t do Hooray for Earth justice, but they’re great, trust us. Local electronica act Parts of Speech got the crowd warmed up with their own dance tunes, but we would like to see them to a leaf from Hooray for Earth and become more adventurous with their music.

Of all the bands to play Thursday – national and local – there was one show stealer: Quiet Corral. These guys just get better with each performance. This Americana six-piece band from Lawrence has some amazingly talented musicians. I think it must have been a rule upon joining the band that each member must know how to play drums, sing and play at least two other instruments. The guys are constantly switching around between keys, guitars, banjos, and tom & snare drums. Their show always steals breath when they break out the big instrumental group drum section near the end of their set. However, tonight’s most impressive moment wasn’t when everyone drummed, but instead when everyone save the lead singer set down their instruments and gathered around the microphones to sing a beautiful, soulful six-piece harmony song. As they sang about going down to the ‘river’ and ‘following the path,’ I was reminded of those old Civil War era songs – “Follow the Drinking Gourd,” etc. If you close your eyes and forget that these are young, college age guys, then their music has this classic, aged sound – as if their tunes have been passed down through the ages. For how young they are (both in age & time spent as a band), they’ve already flawlessly mastered a timeless sound.

Friday at Middle of the Map Capybara @ Beaumont Club in Kansas City at Middle of the Map Fest

Friday was an even bigger day. We started out with some local acts at the Beaumont Club. Ad Astra Arkestra had a pretty different lineup the last time we saw them at the Crossroads Music Festival a couple of years ago, so we were curious how this large group had evolved. It was a bit tricky to see who all they had participating in the band as half the members were crazy monkey-like masks. From who we could identify though, we could see that the lead vocal duties were being filled by The Grisly Hand’s Lauren, and she brought a more soulful folk sound to the band. The multiple percussion performers in the band though kept the old tribal beats the same and people danced as wildly as before. KC’s Capybara kept the energy high with a set that mostly featured songs off their newly released album, Dave Drusky. Some describe them as ‘tribal,’ but I’m not quite sure that’s the right word – if anything, the ‘tribal’ sound is due to the extra drums…Is there some rule that KC area band members must all know how to play drums? There’s a definite trend, but it is a trend that we love. This is another band with multi-talented members that were able to switch around instruments and vocal duties with ease. Speaking of talented bands with extra drums, Lawrence’s increasingly popular Cowboy Indian Bear followed with their more relaxed, but just as danceable, indie pop. The Beaumont’s sound made it a bit hard to hear Katlyn’s keyboards (a reoccurring problem at this venue for keyboards throughout the weekend), but we could still crisply hear her vocals layer against her male bandmates’ vocals. We took a break from the Beaumont to check out Owen at Riot Room – the place was packed, but it was almost eerily quiet as we walked in. It took a second to realize that Owen was playing acoustic guitar at the front and crooning softly over the instrument. The audience was politely listening quietly, leaning in to hear his every word and strum. From here we bounced around to see as many locals as possible. The stage tucked away behind Westport Coffee House housed two indie rock favorites: Fullbloods & Everyday/Everynight. We watched a slightly harder rock, but very high energy set from Apples for Archers down at Firefly. Gusto had folkier indie rock from Ghosty and indie pop from the ACBs. Of course, it wasn’t just KC area bands that played Friday. Back at Beaumont we watched husband & wife duo Mates of State. The keyboardist and drummer couple were backed by two touring musicians, one of which added a great brass effect. Again, we had trouble hearing the keyboards in Beaumont, but it was still an enjoyable, light-hearted set. We particularly enjoyed when MoS dedicated a song to Cowboy Indian Bear. From indie dream pop to Americana rock, the old Southern sounds of Murder by Death came next. They’re not your typical Southern rock band though thanks to the incorporation of a cello. Who knew that instrument could be used so diversely?

To end out the night, we swung by RecordBar for one of the most buzzed about bands at the festival: Mission to Burma. RecordBar was running about an hour behind, which meant we also got to catch three-piece The Life and Times, who impressed us with their moody rock. While we respect Mission to Burma’s lightly punk, classic rock, it wasn’t our cup of tea and we didn’t know them in their heyday to feel nostalgic for their tunes like many in the club. So we ventured down to Gusto for our final band of the night and this evening’s show stopper: The Beautiful Bodies. This is one of those bands we’ve seen a lot on larger stages for radio shows, and admittedly, we didn’t get the appeal. But in a small venue, completely surrounded by people, we finally got it. Their high-pitched rock and roll still isn’t quite our cup of tea, but we are officially in love with their live show. In the small corner they were crammed into, they found room to climb on counters, equipment and even people. Their high energy set literally (yes, we do mean literally and are using this word correctly) brought down the roof. It was a spectacular way to end the night.

Saturday at Middle of the Map fun. @ Beaumont Club in Kansas City @ Middle of the Map

Other commitments prevented us from making Saturday’s daytime festivities, but we arrived in time to catch plenty of great acts during the festival’s final night. Venues risked (and eventually did) capacity, so you had to be a lot more choosy about what you wanted to see to make sure you got in. We opted to hole up in the Beaumont Club for the night, but we still made it to a few other venues beforehand. We caught the new folk act She’s a Keeper at RecordBar. They were fun and adorable. Despite a few rough moments and wrong notes here and there, they show a lot of potential. With how much Quiet Corral is taking off, then paired with She’s a Keeper, KC/Lawrence is really developing itself as a folk/Americana town. While at RecordBar, we also caught the Olympic Size reunion in all its keyboard and male/female vocal harmony goodness. We made it to Riot Room twice for indie rockers The Casket Lottery and later the very different, hardcore rock act Fucked Up. Again, not our usual type of music, but the energy was high and the band was a blast – the singer his worked his way through the packed crowd to dance or sing with as many people as possible. It was a fun venue to be in for that. For those looking for some calmer bands, McCoy’s had a nice folk, Americana lineup and we caught the night’s final act, Blackbird Revue there.

As we mentioned earlier, many venues hit capacity Saturday night, so you could do some venue hopping earlier in the evening, but you really needed to choose one place to stay for most of the night. We stayed at the Beaumont, which ended up being a great choice not only because one of the nation’s hottest bands was headlining there, but because it had an all around solid, and very diverse, lineup. Local band Making Movies opened for this venue and while we had already caught them once at this fest, they were just as fun the second time in a weekend – they even managed to keep the set fresh. Next was the female-fronted rock band Sleeper Agent. If multiple drums was one theme from this weekend, the other motif was powerful females, and this band brought that trend to light. The following act, Friends, also had a strong frontwoman. They were a quirky, glam rock band – I found them a blast, but I don’t think their sound is for everyone. Their frontwoman did a great job interacting with the crowd regardless of what people thought of their sound – she played around her bandmates, entered the audience to start a dance party and even invited a kid up on stage to dance in order win a stuffed bunny…no joke. So like I said…quirky. Chillwavers Neon Indian followed and again, the synth/keys sounded mushy in this venue, which is a shame because this band sounded great through the RecordBar’s system when they were here a few months ago, The ho hum sound quality didn’t faze the audience from dancing along though and this was still a fun set.

The mood in the Beaumont was a gleeful buzz as everyone eagerly awaited the headlining act, Fun. “We want fun! We want fun,” was chanted all through the band’s set up and when singer Nate Ruess and company came bouncing out, the Beaumont practically erupted. I was worried that since “We Are Young” is the big radio hit and this being a festival, that the audience wouldn’t know any of the other songs by this band, especially the older ones. Boy was I wrong. Everyone was dancing, singing and clapping along with the band. Most of the band’s songs are big, bombastic, trumpet blaring numbers, but when the beautifully simple “The Gambler” was performed, the audience respectfully listened. The crowd really made this experience extra great. And though they’re a national band, it was like a homecoming for a local band. Touring bassist Nate Harold is from Kansas and it was great to see him smile widely at a “Weskan” sign (his hometown). As for the other Nate, Ruess claimed he was suffering from Mono, and he apologized to the front row for being in the spray zone. But if Ruess hadn’t said anything about being sick, no one would have ever guessed it. His voice never wavered as he swept all over the vocal scale and his energy was unmatched as he jumped around the stage. He’s easily one of the best  live singers in rock music: a distinct voice, wide range, dynamic control, and smart lyrics. Fun.’s success has been a long time coming and as this performance showed, its well deserved.

Fun. Set List
One Foot
Walking the Dog
Why Am I
All Alone
All the Pretty Girls
Barlights
Carry On
The Gambler
Some Nights Intro
Some Nights
At Least
We Are Young
//
All Alright
Take Your Time

//

All in all, this was a great weekend and it was great to have been a part of it. We’re already eagerly looking forward to next year.

 

Middle of the Map Fest in Photos:

Day 1, Thursday – Hooray for Earth, Quiet Corral, Hospital Ships, Cher UK, Christopher Paul Stelling, Making Movies, Old Canes, Parts of Speech, The Loom

Day 2, Friday – Mates of State, Mission to Burma, Capybara, Murder by Death, Owen, The Life & Times, The ACBs, Ad Astra Arkestra, Apples for Archers, Beautiful Bodies, Cowboy Indian Bear, Everyday/Everynight, Fullbloods, Ghosty

Day 3, Saturday – fun., Neon Indian, Making Movies, Olympic Size, Friends, She’s a Keeper, The Casket Lottery, Blackbird Revue, Sleeper Agent

Visit our friends, lostinreviews.com and iheartlocalmusic.com for even more coverage and photos from the event.

Bethany Smith

I'm a geek; I love music, technology and grammar.

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In Photos: Middle of the Map Fest Day 3 featuring fun., Neon Indian, Friends, Making Movies & more

Posted on 09 April 2012 by Bethany Smith

Bethany Smith

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Stream our Middle of the Map Fest playlist on Spotify

Posted on 29 March 2012 by Bethany Smith

April 5-7, 2012, national and local acts will be taking over venues in Kansas City’s Westport neighborhood for the second annual Middle of the Map Festival. Middle of the Map Fest dates

The three-day lineup is presented by Ink KC & local label The Record Machine. National acts include fun., Neon Indian & Mates of State, while local acts include Capybara, Cowboy Indian Bear and Jaenki. This year, the festival has expanded its hip hop presence with acts such as Steddy P & Max Justus. There’s also an added technological portion. The full lineup and tickets are available at middleofthemapfest.com.

With the festival just around the corner, we wanted to help get you acquainted with some of the performing acts. We put together a Spotify playlist of as many of the artists as we could share (not everyone is offered on the Spotify service, but we encourage you to listen to them on the Middle of the Map website or their own sites).

To hear our compilation,  click: http://open.spotify.com/user/1212215607/playlist/39l5XA1C0DYTeMi9oCs1fF.

Bethany Smith

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Middle of the Mapfest announces 80+ band lineup featuring Mission of Burma, Neon Indian & fun.

Posted on 02 February 2012 by Bethany Smith

Kansas City’s Middle of the Mapfest has announced its 80+ lineup set for 8 venues April 5-7. Middle of the Mapfest poster

The headliners feature Mission of Burma, fun. and Neon Indian. Many local acts are also scheduled to appear such as Capybara and Soft Reeds. Molly McGuire is also reuniting for the fest. Full lineup is below.

A three-day pass is just $35. Single and 3-day passes are now available at middleofthemapfest.com. You can also stream all the bands on the site. If you are one of the first 500 tickets sold, you get access to Thursday night pre-parties at the Riot Room and recordBar on April 5.

Middle of the Mapfest Lineup*:
Mission of Burma
Neon Indian
fun.
F***ed Up
Murder by Death
El Ten Eleven
White Denim
Deastro
Coalesce
Hooray for Earth
Acid Mothers Temple
Casket Lottery
Owen
The Life and Times
Keep Shelly in Athens
Chad Valley
Jonquil
A Lull
Elite Gymnastics
Mr. Gnome
Gold Motel
Friends
Capybara
Cowboy Indian Bear
Soft Reeds
Molly McGuire
Reflector
Minus Story
The Esoteric
Season To Risk
Hospital Ships
Nerves Junior
Phantasmagoria
Broncho
Beacon
Ad Astra Arkestra
Thee Water MoccaSins
Deadringers
La Guerre
Motorboater
Everyday/Everynight
Maps For Travelers
Spirit Is The Spirit
Max Justus
Sam Billen
Believers
Akkilles
Beau Jennings
Christopher Paul Stelling
Baby Teardrops
Saintseneca
Sleepy Kitty
Unicycle Loves You

*Lineup is subject to change and more bands are expected to be added.

Bethany Smith

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Stream Midcoast Station’s ‘Best Music of 2011′ on Spotify

Posted on 29 December 2011 by Bethany Smith

Midcoast Station listens to a lot of music and 2011 had lots of great hits to cover our every mood and diverse loves of genres.

Synth heavy electro pop acts like M83, Charli XCX, Neon Indian and The Wombats got us dancing. We fell in love with the beautiful sounds of folksy acts like Typhoon, The Civil Wars, Lindi Ortega, etc. We found some guilty pleasures in pop rock with Hot Chelle Rae. We loved the mad rhymes and beats of rap and hip hop groups such as Childish Gambino and Gym Class Heroes.

To help share our 2011 favorites, we’ve put together a Spotify playlist with 50+ songs from artists/albums we fell in love with in 2011. Sure the regular blog favorites made it on here, but you might find a few surprises as well. The songs are in no particular order as they’re all great tracks (we didn’t want 50 #1 songs) and you can see all the song titles and artists below.

You can listen to our full mix at Spotify here. Best of 2011 music Midcoast Station

Track Listing:
1. “Up Up Up” – Givers
2. “Lonely Boy” – The Black Keys
3. “For You, And Your Denial” – Yellowcard
4. “One, Two, Three, Oh” – Quiet Corral
5. “The Honest Truth” – Typhoon
6. “Stuck in My Id” – Reptar
7. “Midnight City” – M83
8. “Glass Table Girls” – The Weeknd
9. “Every Teardrop is a Waterfall” – Coldplay
10. “Tongue Tied” – Grouplove
11. “Lost in My Mind” – The Head and the Heart
12. “Usual Suspects” – Ha Ha Tonka
13. “Little Lie” – Lindi Ortega
14. “Cough Syrup” – Young the Giant
15. “It Grows It Grows” – Beauty Feast
16. “Rally ‘Round the Fool” – The Get Up Kids
17. “Heartbeat” – Childish Gambino
18. “Sidewalk Safari” – Chairlift
19. “Nuclear Seasons” – Charli XCX
20. “Polish Girl” – Neon Indian
21. “Techno Fan” – The Wombats
22. “Sail” – AWOLNATION
23. “Calgary” – Bon Iver
24. “Rave On” – Cults
25. “Carry On” – Hospital Ships
26. “Little Hell” – City and Colour
27. “Rolling in the Deep” – Adele
28. “Georgia” – Yuck
29. “Shake It Out” – Florence + the Machine
30. “Better Off Without You” – Summer Camp
31. “The First Hit” – Kevin Devine
32. “Born Under a Bad Sign” – Fairewell
33. “Hurting” – Friendly Fires
34. “Dominican Fade” – Battles
35. “Stereo Hearts” Gym Class Heroes feat. Adam Levine
36. “Living America” – Dom
37. “White Nights” – Oh Land
38. “Belispeak” – Purity Ring
39. “Houdini” – Foster the People
40. “My Racing Thoughts” – Jack’s Mannequin
41. “Tonight, Tonight” – Hot Chelle Rae
42. “Young Blood” – The Naked and Famous
43. “Julius” – Starfucker
44. “Don’t Move” – Phantogram
45. “Lemonade” – Braids
46. “Cruel” – St. Vincent
47. “I Follow Rivers – The Magician Remix” – Lykke Li
48. “Gangsta” – Tune-Yards
49. “True Loves” – Hooray for Earth
50. “Simple Math” – Manchester Orchestra
51. “Barton Hollow” – The Civil Wars
52. “Jack Sparrow” – The Lonely Island feat. Michael Bolton
53. “Young Hearts Wanna Beat On Their Own” – The Jane Doze

Bethany Smith

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Neon Indian’s chillwave gets Kansas City dancing

Posted on 14 October 2011 by Bethany Smith

Kansas City hipsters lined the sidewalk outside of the RecordBar for the Neon Indian show, checking their smart phones’ with frustrated faces. An hour delay is a bit long to wait for anything, but the annoyance was quickly forgotten and forgiven once Purity Ring began their bizarrely beautiful indie music.

Purity Ring is a duo spun-off from the even stranger Gobble Gobble. Singer Megan hypnotized the audience as she slowly moved her arms under the low-light lamp below her head. The deliberate hesitation of her arm movement let tension build before she broke it by hitting a propped up bass drum. Megan has a gentle, ethereal voice that was distorted through various echo and fade effects. Her partner in crime, Corin, contrasted Megan’s slow dance with some fancy fast moves on…pipe bulbs? Corin had some sort of pipe contraption with light bulb tips wired through an effects board. He played on these pipes bulbs with drum sticks – it was like a really fancy way to play a synthesizer without a keyboard.

With their haunting sound and unique set up, Purity Ring was a tough act for anyone to follow. Though Com Truise‘s instrumental chillwave makes for some great music to sit back and close your eyes to, it was a bit dull to watch in a live setting. Much of the audience still bobbed along to the vibes and they did have some impressive beats, but after a few songs, I began to wonder when Neon Indian would take to the stage.

Neon Indian was in Kansas City in the early summer, opening for the strikingly different Sleigh Bells. I kind of felt like they stole that show, so their return to Kansas City in a headlining spot was quite welcome. Smooth bass lines, fun little electronic pops and, of course, Alan’s vocals make for a solid and fun show. Kansas City is notorious for being poor dancers, but Neon Indian did a good job getting some bob in place action going on. Though the band just released a new album, Era Extraña, Psychic Chasms made up quite a bit of the set – “Deadbeat Summer” was one of the highlights of the set with its synthesized whistle-like riffs. Neon Indian’s relaxed, but upbeat sound gave Kansas City the perfect end to a Tuesday night.

 

Bethany Smith

I'm a geek; I love music, technology and grammar.

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