Showing posts with label Intelligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intelligence. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Awesome Show Alert


Three great bands under one roof. Night Marchers, The Intelligence and Mrs. Magician will be playing together this Friday (February 22, 2013) in Los Angeles, CA @ The Satellite.
Doors: 8:30 pm / Show: 9:00 pm
Ticket info HERE.

Friday, December 28, 2012

Revolver Guide To NYE 2012/13.


A number of Revolver bands will be playing "Auld Lang Syne" next Monday night / Tuesday morning. Here's a complete list of NYE events.

BROOKLYN, NY
Holy Ghost! - Brooklyn Bowl
Kid Congo  - Home Sweet Home

CHICAGO, IL
Bad Sports - Empty Bottle

DENVER, CO
Slim Cessna's Auto Club - Oriental Theater

NEW ORLEANS, LA
Black Lips - One Eyed Jacks
Leftover Crack - Siberia

NEW YORK
Com Truise - The Gramercy Theatre

PHILADELPHIA, PA
Purling Hiss - Johnny Brenda's

SAN DIEGO, CA
Drop the lime - Ivy Nightclub @ Andaz

SAN FRANCISCO, CA
Fresh & Onlys - The Chapel
Pins Of Light - Hemlock Tavern
Vetiver with Howlin Rain - Cafe Du Nord

SEATTLE, WA
The Intelligence - Neumo's

TUCSON, AZ
Nobunny - The district (260 E congress)

AUSTRALIA
HOBART, TAS    
Sharon Van Etten - Falls Festival Marion Bay

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Intelligence Take The Cover Of The Seattle Stranger.

Jul 11 - 17, 2012
Vol. 21, No. 45

West Coast Tour starts in Seattle this week!
7/19    Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile
7/20    Portland, OR
@ East End
7/21    Eureka, CA
@ The Shanty
7/22    Sacramento, CA
@ Townhouse
7/24    San Diego, CA
@ Soda Bar
7/25    Costa Mesa, CA
@ Avalon Bar
7/26    Los Angeles, CA
@ The Satellite
7/27    San Francisco, CA
@ Hemlock Tavern
7/28    Oakland, CA
@ Hearts And Palms

New album Everybody’s Got It Easy But Me is out now on CD, LP or MP3 download.  Pick it up HERE.
 

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Intelligence Summer Tour Poster.

In support of Intelligence's new album, Everybody's Got It Easy But Me, Lars Finburg and Co. will be hitting the West Coast this July.


7/19 Seattle, WA @ The Crocodile
7/20 Portland, OR @ East End
7/21 Eureka, CA @ The Shanty
7/22 Sacramento, CA @ Townhouse
7/24 San Diego, CA @ Soda Bar
7/25 Costa Mesa, CA @ Avalon Bar
7/26 Los Angeles, CA @ The Satellite
7/27 San Francisco, CA @ Hemlock Tavern
7/28 Oakland, CA @ Hearts And Palms

Monday, January 14, 2008

7.2 Intelligence Review on Pitchfork Today.

The Intelligence
Deuteronomy
[In the Red; 2007]
Rating: 7.2
Original review

As a title for the Intelligence's third album, Deuteronomy hints that it's time to lay down some laws in frontman Lars Finberg's recurring dystopian mayhem. Most notable for contributing vitriolic vocals to post-apocalyptic fetishists the A-Frames, the multi-instrumentalist Finberg has quit his job as doomsday herald to devote undivided attention towards Intelligence, which had previously subsisted on scrappy home recordings and spotty touring. Recorded in an actual studio, Deuteronomy's easily Finberg's tidiest, most civilized work, and it even retains most of his signature post-punk bile. Whereas his previous catalog glorified a cinematic, Terminator-like take on the future, here he's channeling something more like Total Recall or "Futurama"-- society's not succumbing to chaos, but it's rife with some pretty fucked up elements.

Finberg's clearly earned his lambskin from the school of asshole rock, and recent tour dates with the Fall have only amplified his Mark E. Smith malaise. Deuteronomy's filled with uncharacteristically catchy songs for Finberg, many of them reminiscent of the Fall circa Grotesque (After the Gramme), the Cramps' mutant rockabilly, or Brainiac's surf cyborg wipeout. However, despite an array of ear-grabbing instrumentation and Finberg's frugal use of yelling and screaming, the vocals make a concerted effort not to touch upon any accessible melodies. The easy-going ditty "Tubes", for example, bops along an organ vamp copping "96 Tears", but instead of climaxing at a hummable chorus, the song peaks with Finberg shrieking a nasally "Fuck!"

Oddly enough, Finberg cites the Zombies and Bee Gees as Deuteronomy's key influences, a statement that initially sounds ridiculous until you realize how loose and playful the album is in relation to earlier works. "Secret Signals" begins like so much garden variety post-punk getting exorcised these days-- the drums/bass/guitar arrangement sterile and predictable, the rhythm stubbornly four-on-the-floor-- but then Finberg unleashes a bluesy, chopped-up chorus that's probably his best approximation of a song like "Care of Cell 44"'s complex chord changes. Some tracks here, when stripped of their strident noise rock exterior, even resemble some of rock's earliest and kookiest personalities. The eerie haunted house organ on "Block of Ice" and "How to Improve Your Hearing Without Listening"-- coupled with Finberg's crazed howls-- channels Screamin' Jay Hawkins, while the cosmic surf riffs on "Our Solar System" and "The Outer Echelon" recall so many 60s sci-fi program themes.

Despite the newfound color in his songwriting, Finberg's still pissed off as ever. Unlike previous releases, though, Deuteronomy doesn't feel like one homogeneous rant, but rather a newly reformed psychopath hesitantly giving society a second chance. His scowl's always been equal parts tongue-in-cheek and fury, but Finberg really sounds like he's having fun here and, when the rhythm moves him, sexy to boot. Rising from the ashes of Finberg's apocalyptic oeuvre, the revamped Intelligence has become the best display of the journeyman's talents to date, worthy of being elevated from pet project to full-time gig.
-Adam Moerder, January 14, 2008