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Dark Dark Dark July tour dates!

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Dark Dark Dark have returned from Venice, where they spent the past month as part of Swoon’s Swimming Cities Of Serenissima (http://www.swimmingcities.org for more info, videos and pictures) – and they are doing a little bit of US touring with Hurray For The Riff Raff to celebrate!

July 2nd – Minneapolis, MN – The Bedlam Theater
July 3rd – Minneapolis, MN – 7th St. Entry
July 4th – Chicago, IL – Heaven Gallery
July 5th – Bloomington, IN – Boxcar Books
July 6th – Columbus, OH – The Shelf
July 7th – Pittsburgh, PA – The Nerve
July 8th – Ardmore, PA – Milkboy Coffee

without Riff Raff:
July 9th – Brooklyn, NY – Sycamore (Hooves On The Turf Presents)
July 10th – Manhattan, NY – Le Poisson Rouge (with Son Lux)

Dark Dark Dark – LIMITED Vinyl EP shipping now!

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

Dark Dark Dark’s “Love You Bye” available now!

There’s only 250 of these in existence, and S&D was lucky to get our hands on a few. Go here to place your order today!

Vandaveer 7-inches available next week!

Happy New Year from S&D! New Press, January SADTape

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

It’s 2009! Happy (14 days late) New Year from Supply And Demand Music! Divine ‘09!!

2008 saw the start of the label, the release of Dark Dark Dark and Between The Pine’s albums, and European and US tours for Dark Dark Dark. S&D’s plans for 2009 will start to be announced in the coming weeks, with European releases for our albums, more tour dates, and new artists to be signed!

Thank you so much for all your support. 2009 will be a big year for S&D, so stay tuned!

Check the Press Section for all the latest album reviews, interviews and show reviews for Dark Dark Dark and Between The Pine!

As promised, here’s the latest SADTape, a monthly mix of stuff that we’ve been listening to:

Lo-Fidelity All-Stars – Kasparov’s Revenge
Animal Collective – My Girls
Songs Ohia – Being In Love
Brian Eno – Baby’s On Fire
Many Mansions – Oneness
Shane Hall – Astronaut
David Bowie – Here Comes The Night
Blondie – Heart Of Glass
Television – Venus
Ween – Dr. Rock

Interview with Marshall of Dark Dark Dark from Culture Bully

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

originally posted at http://www.culturebully.com/interview-with-marshall-lacount-of-dark-dark-dark

Prior to the band returning home to the Twin Cities from an extensive European tour, Culture Bully’s Jon Behm was able to catch up with Dark Dark Dark’s Marshall LaCount. Set to be joined by Dosh, who also appeared on the band’s recent album The Snow Magic, the band will be playing at The Cedar Cultural Center on December 27th.

Jon Behm: As a (relatively) new band it is kind of surprising that you are already in the midst of your first European tour. What prompted that?

Marshall LaCount: We were travelers before we were a “touring band,” and it feels good to be traveling with a project or some sort of intent, it helps us avoid permanent “tourism.” So our art and river raft collective, The Miss Rockaway Armada, got invited to the Netherlands for a project, and we had previously released an EP in France on What A Mess! Records, in Toulouse, and it seemed like two good excuses to play music. Tour is sometimes used with license, because when it is not formally organized, it can be very unpredictable and ragtag in terms of performances. We treat “official” shows and “unofficial” shows pretty equally, unless there is a dog that has fleas in the venue, or there is beer spilling on us, then we act more like rock stars and get mad. Fortunately, Euro-tour 2008 is organized by someone that knows what they’re doing. He runs the label that released the EP for France and Europe.

JB: Your press release says that you draw heavily from the “long tradition of wandering musicians and those who have lived deeply.” What is it about the nomadic lifestyle that informs your music, and are you finding it on your current tour?

ML: It seems like right now we are in a sort of “endurance traveling” mode, where we’re out for eight months, working on five different projects. We gather stories, we hang out with people, we stay in any number of strange circumstances, see lots of beautiful and ugly things. I guess I don’t really remember the difference. We’ve gotten pretty good at trying to stay healthy on the road, physically and spiritually, but life on the road is hard, as you’ve heard in all those country songs. We’ve traveled so hard in the last couple years, that our family is spread out all over the place, so we’re often visiting family while on tour. We probably are finding “‘it” all the time. Also, our projects have lives of their own now, and we have to keep up with them.

JB: As far as songwriting goes, are you more productive on the road or when you are back in your (semi) permanent home of the Twin Cities?

ML: Nona and I would do anything to have one room for each of us, a permanent one. I would prefer mine was in Minneapolis, she may not. Jonathan and Todd are more reasonable, so they have rooms outside of our van, Vanny White. I personally don’t understand my productivity, because its always tricking me and doing the opposite of what I anticipate. Right now I am patient with that process and ready with a pen. Nona has been writing some hits lately!

JB: Now that you are headed back here, will you plan on staying awhile?

ML: Funny question, but Nona and I are planning some semi-quiet writing time in New Orleans for January and February – Todd will be editing his film in New York, and Jonathan will be making electronic art in Minneapolis.

JB: How did you end up hooking up with Martin Dosh and Rob Skoro to record The Snow Magic? (And did you ink the deal over beers at the 331 Club?)

ML: Well, Robert actually invented a drink at the 331 for me that is alcohol-free, called the Sizzler Special, its loaded with juices, primarily mango. Marty can’t handle the wheat, so if you see him, don’t buy him a beer, only hard cider. I think Nona and Todd prefer cranberry juice or something, and Jonathan will usually have a nice dark beer. Skoro and I became friends a few years ago, have some mutual friends, love to party, and have worked together in the past. He’s a great man. Marty might still be a mystery. I think a few years ago I dreamt it, and then he turned out to be as nice in real life as he is amazing on the stage. Marty isn’t full-time, but if we find a drummer or any other instrumentalist, its pretty important that they understand hip hop and experimentalism, as well as tradition. Have you heard Wolves and Wishes? I think its really come together again in a new way.

JB: The Snow Magic kind of makes me want to quit my job, grab a knapsack, and hit the road. Do you have any travel recommendations for a drifting vagabond?

ML: Respect yourself and the places and people you meet, wear fresh socks everyday, I don’t care how hard it seems to wash them, eat spinach or kale everyday, the summer is better than the winter for swimming, swim everyday in the summer, unless you’re in NYC, you will still need money, so you better have a skill on the road, like music or web design or tattooing.

JB: Do you have any particular recent adventures that you would like to share?

ML: Shooting Todd’s (the bassist) movie. Check it.

Dark Dark Dark interview from chiefmag.com !

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

originally posted at http://www.chiefmag.com/issues/16/profiles/Dark-Dark-Dark/

Warm and gypsy-like, on their latest release, The Snow Magic, Dark Dark Dark use instruments normally reserved for VFW halls to create a sound that cruises downstream along the Mississippi from Minneapolis to New Orleans. Chief sat down with band members Nona Marie Invie and Marshall LaCount shortly before they embarked on their European tour to talk about banjos, accordions, and Americana adventure.

Nona: My name’s Nona and I play accordion.

Marshall: I’m Marshall and I play the banjo.

Chief Magazine: So I noticed your website says you’re from Minneapolis and New York, and listening to your new album, a lot of your music has some loneliness, and sadness to it. You mention that a lot of it was written on cold dark nights in Minneapolis in a short amount of time. Do you think that living there, being there, and recording there had a lot to do with that?

Marshall: I think it’s probably shaped our personalities in a way, and I also think that we gather stories from traveling and they’re not always—I don’t think our music is very regional—but it’s definitely part of a genre probably that happens in Minneapolis, and the other places that we spend a lot of time: New Orleans and New York.

What do you think you pick up from these places?

Marshall: In New Orleans—

Nona: There’s liveliness in New Orleans; that I get inspired by. Just the quantity of music is crazy. Everywhere, everybody plays, and they play really well, and they write a million songs. And they know how to play a million songs, and there’s a definite spirit of liveliness.

So how much time have you spent in New Orleans, and how did you end up there?


Marshall: A couple of months. It happened at a time when both of us were learning our instruments, so it had a big impression on us. It’s not that we spent years there, but definitely our new friends there helped shape how we play music.

Nona: Our instruments—the accordion and the banjo—have such stereotypes. In Minneapolis, there are accordion and banjo players, but they are more often traditional. Bluegrass for banjo, or something accordion is like polkas and waltzes. Things that are fun to listen to and great to learn about. But then we went to New Orleans and [people were] playing our instruments in a way we’ve never heard before and we realized, ‘Oh this is what we’ve been doing,’ and for me, this is why I don’t totally understand why I don’t fit in with the traditional accordion players, because there is just so much more going on.

I think in listening to all the tracks off your older EP, and listening to the track you have out on your new album, you hear the banjo and the accordion, and it’s so beautiful. And it’s not the polka and it’s not the banjo you hear in bluegrass. But how did you two wind up picking up these instruments?

Marshall: My first banjo was loaned to me. I was babysitting it. And I just felt I played other instruments, and I’m attracted to the percussive element, and the millions of ways you can play rhythm on it. I treat it like a hip hop instrument.

Nona: I played piano growing up for like ten years or something, but I never got very good at playing the piano. I never really cared about it. And then I moved in with someone who had an old, stinky—like literally stinky—accordion, and started just like goofing around on it. And then I started to realize, ‘Oh, I’m actually getting good at this! This is fun! I love this thing!’

So how long have you been playing it?

Nona: About two years.

Marshall: Same.

So how did you guys come up with Dark Dark Dark?

Marshall: I returned from traveling and started playing more music with Nona in Minneapolis. Both of us were between projects or between lives, and felt a lot of musical chemistry, which doesn’t always happen. I’ve played with a lot of people, and I think both of us have weird ways of understanding music. But the name story is kind of long. I just finished traveling with a bunch of people, the Miss Rockaway Armada people. And you know, people pull out songs to play around the fire, and I always felt like my songs were sad, or darker, obviously. They weren’t fun-time-camp-party songs, so I was telling someone that I was self conscious about that, and she assured me that I shouldn’t be, and I should continue writing the way I do, and even more so, and really just push it. So I think I kind of laughed to myself and came up with that name, Dark Dark Dark.



And how did you to end up getting together, musically or as friends?

Nona: We were in the same circle of friends in Minneapolis, I don’t know how. The people I was playing with moved to San Francisco, and I think I was really lonely. But someone and Marshall had a little studio, and they said I could go there.

So you’re coming out with The Snow Magic in the end of October, under your own record label, Blood Onion.

Marshall: It’s actually being nationally released under a label out of Providence [Supply and Demand] and it’s a co-release with our label.

So how did you decide to have your own label, in conjunction with someone nationally releasing it?

Marshall: We are just really consistent about controlling a lot of things. Like I was telling you about being media-critical about things. We’re really into experimenting, and we’re open to working with this new label, as well as having our name on there also, but we’ve always done everything ourselves, and we don’t know a lot about anything else but that.

Nona: I think that we have the capacity, and access to recording studios and all the equipment and everything we need to make good recordings, but we’re doing so much. I mean, I call Minneapolis home, but I haven’t been there in six months, you know? We don’t have the capability of actually putting our music out there beyond the people we talk to.

Marshall: That’s why it’s good to work with the Tom at Supply and Demand, also.

Nona: It’s just one guy. He’s our friend, and he is very nice. We’re very high-maintenance.

Oh really? In what capacity high-maintenance?

Nona: We just have these four control freaks in our band, and we all have different issues, so he does a good job of meeting our demands.

That being said, do the four of you work well together, coexist together? I mean, I understand that you guys work on a couple of different projects other than being in a band, but being apart of the Rockaway Armada, and being a part of [Swimming Cities of] Switchback Sea. Despite the fact that you’re control freaks.

Nona: [laughs] It’s just a small part of all of our characters.

Marshall: I think that somehow we found each other, and I think if we tried to bring someone new into it, it’s very difficult for all four of us to agree, but somehow we all communicate well musically. It’s important that we’re all—it’s us. Todd’s [Chandler-Upright Bass] working on a movie too.

Right, so you want to tell me more about the movie, and how you guys play a part in it?

Marshall: Um…Nona?

Nona: Well, Todd is a brilliant filmmaker, Todd Chandler. He’s worked on a lot of movies in the past, but this is his first big thing, big fictionalized drama piece. And all four of us are in it in different ways, and we play music together. Our friend Ryder—Todd’s in another band called Fall Harbor and Ryder is in there—and the five of us play music together in the film, and build this raft, sort of this barrel raft for the movie, which is the barrel raft for the swimming cities project, and then that’s how those two projects combine; and that’s what we’ve been spending our time on all summer.

It seems to me that building a raft that’s entirely navigable on the water, on a river is a daunting task. Do you guys have any experience doing that, or did you decide just to wing it?

Marshall: A lot of people on that project got their experience from being involved in Miss Rockaway, and on that project, people were winging it, and learning from other people who had done similar things, [the] Floating Neutrinos; Poppa Neutrino… Miss Rockaway taught a lot of people a lot about that. And the switchback project is dealing with much more specific water conditions: tidal, the nature of the river, more vessels, and more engines. Crazier everything.

Nona: And like a short period, like fixed deadlines, because we have the performances. So there’s always this weight on people’s shoulders. ‘We have to fix this because we have to make it to Nyack for the performance!’

Marshall: We never missed a show.

That’s impressive. What kinds of problems did you run into along the way?

Marshall: There’s many [pause]… That’s not a concise answer [laughs].

Nona: Minor mechanical issues that our brilliant mechanics always fixed.

Working along the river seems like an American adventure, an adventure that not many people do anymore. So what was it like to explore the Mississippi and the Hudson, and explore all the towns along the way? Was it an interesting adventure? Was it scary? What were your feelings about it?

Marshall: Well it’s really—it’s awesome. There were times in the Midwest when I was actually scared, but everyone doesn’t feel that way. There were times when the community was extremely welcoming, and giving and open to what you’re doing, and at times, totally closed. The performances we did are something we offered to the community in trade for taking up space. And usually people are pretty excited, and other times people are very critical, people with different values were saying things about us. We’re any number of derogatory things.



Where do you think were the most welcoming places? I’d think New York or New Orleans; but were there any surprises along the way? Places where people were really excited, or where they were really responsive?

Marshall: There’s too many to name.

Nona: On the Hudson every town was great. I didn’t feel any kind of bad feelings. Usually word kind of slowly travels back down the river to us, but I haven’t heard anything [negative].

Marshall: It might be the Bible Belt that’s the most scary. I heard second hand—I wasn’t on the raft for the most southern parts of the river between Illinois and St. Louis—but there’s a few stories that came from that region.

So what is the  Project Heartland in Europe about?

Marshall: The woman came to the Miss Rockaway installation at Mass MoCa, and she came to our opening there, and invited us there, because the museum there and some other galleries there are doing a heartland-themed season. It opens the weekend of November 7, 8, 9, so it coincides with election time here, and I saw that they have Low, the band play. They’re having some pretty big things there that I’d like to check out early. Miss Rockaway suspects the reason we were asked is—we kind of have two theories. One is the water engineering similarities, the water engineering problems in Holland and Mississippi. The other is that we made an attempt at an community, an autonomous community, right in the middle of the U.S., and that we’re a bunch of freaks floating down the river.

So what kind of group things are you talking about? I know that you guys put on a performance at the Deitch projects in Long Island City. What was that performance?

Nona: We performed at all the towns we stopped at along the way. It was a play by Lisa—Lisa DiMoore—and it was a series of monologues, with a bunch of action in between by all the crew members on the boat. It was a really beautiful thing about nostalgic boat life, looking at the historical voice.

Marshall: Kind of mythologizing it, the people who live on and navigate their boats.

So being a part of it, was it a kind of romantic, reminiscent of the adventure of traveling by boat?

Nona: There are parts of it that are very romantic, like floating up to Bannerman Island and running around castle ruins, cliff jumping in a quarry, sleeping outside at night.

I was going to ask you about that—living and sleeping arrangements on a floating raft of, well, essentially garbage.

Nona: We camped. People slept on the boats. There were always people on the boats in case they floated away, and other people too.

So what happens to [the boats] now?

Marshall: Well the installation lasts a month [September], and I think there are any number of plans that could happen. I don’t know if that’s really our place to talk about that. It’s more Swoon’s place.

So after the Heartland project, there are a number of dates all around Europe. Is this the first time you’ve toured Europe at all? Are you looking forward to it?



Marshall: We’ve had friends report back that people are excited for us to come. We did the Love You, Bye EP professionally recorded for us in a small record label in France called What a Mess! records: What a Mess, exclamation, records. And he organized our whole tour and it’s really fantastic. He’s helped a lot of our friends play. He seems very busy. We haven’t met him personally yet.

So it’s just through e-mail and phone calls? Great! So then after you come back you have more tours like through here and Ypsilanti Michigan, and lots of other places. So how do you go about that, do you have a bus or are you just figuring it out as you go along?

Marshall: We have a van, [laughs]. I don’t know how we got so good at this. Necessity? I’m so sick of living in a van. I’d love to have a room somewhere. We’re usually traveling with too much stuff: crafting supplies and art supplies, carpentry tools and our instruments.

So you’re making art projects while you’re touring, constantly making something.

Marshall: Definitely [would] like to have a room somewhere to put some stuff.

So any other future plans at the moment, besides touring consistently, and promoting your new album?

Marshall: After Europe, we’ll take a break in New Orleans. Then we’ll be back in Minneapolis, thinking of how to tour a live soundtrack with Todd’s movie; and think about another record that’s not related to that.

So is Todd’s movie finished?

Marshall: It’s still [in production]. The majority of it is there, there are a couple more shoot dates, all around New York, Vermont a little bit.

Have you ever run into problems filming, with permits, or any legal problems, or issues with the public?

Nona: There was this one time was got kicked off a property. We were filming a dumpster diving scene [laughs] we staged and someone came out and said we couldn’t film. There’s no problems really, people are usually…

Marshall: It’s not a big enough crew, it’s not like a New York crew that take up an entire block with trailers. We get to go around; were small enough to get to do what we want. It’s taking up millions of terabytes.

Terabytes? I don’t even know what that is!

Marshall: It’s HD digital.

So is there a set group of songs that you really enjoy playing, or performing for people, or are they all favorites?


Marshall: It changes with the space and how we can perform—if we can play quietly. I feel that when we have a lot of control over the sound, and people are really there to listen, then we have the freedom to play very quiet or very loud, and very expressive. But I think all of our songs are favorites in a different way, like i don’t have a favorite.

Nona: Right now I like playing ‘Cloud Story’ a lot. We played it on the river, and I feel we’ve gotten familiar with it, since we played it like five million times this summer. I have an intimate relationship with that song now, which is nice.

And who writes the songs, or is it a group effort?

Nona: Me and Marshall write the songs. We write the melody and the words, and everyone writes their own parts.

Do you have any shout-outs you’d like to have or projects you’d like to mention? I’m sure you have some things going on that we haven’t even mentioned.

Marshall: If we do any more shout-outs, we’ll have to talk about other projects, and it’ll go on forever

Coming from a place like Minneapolis—based in the ‘Heartland of America’—do you have any objection to being grouped into that classification?

Nona: I think that I feel pretty heartland-y a lot; I think it’s okay. I have a total accent, I have total passive-aggressive tendencies. It’s nice to travel, and it’s nice to be out here where everything is a little bigger and a little brighter; I feel like I think a little bigger and a little brighter now, which is nice.

And why don’t you like that term?

Marshall: I guess I don’t like the stereotype, or I wouldn’t see us getting that. I mean I do know about horses, and I do know about flannel shirts, and I do know about corn. But we know about other things as well. So I guess I probably fit into that.

Dark Dark Dark in Minneapolis reviewed by howwastheshow.com

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

originally posted at http://howwastheshow.com/index.cfm/action/reviews.view/reviewKey/1085

Dark Dark Dark

“It’s been a really great year,” Dark Dark Dark banjoist Marshall LaCount announced towards the beginning of their set at the Cedar Cultural Center Saturday night. LaCount went on to say that it was also great to be home, an understandable sentiment considering the band had been on tour in Europe and the U.S. since before Halloween and spent a good chunk of 2008 on the road.

And that time spent on the road really shows in their performance. In October they released a full-length album, The Snow Magic. The album was produced by Robert Skoro and was the first release for Supply And Demand Music.

Dark Dark Dark, who hail from both Minneapolis and New York, are Nona Marie Invie (accordion and vocals), Marshall LaCount (banjo), Jonathan Kaiser (cello) and Todd Chandler (stand up bass). They play haunting, dreamy and dark eastern-European sounding music with influences from the cabaret and folk traditions.

One of the first things that strikes you about the band live is their earnestness. There are similar-sounding groups that go for over-the-top antics and are as much a barroom brawl at times as they are a band. Though the inevitable dark carnival atmosphere pervades Dark Dark Dark’s music on disc, watching them live is as enchanting watching a classical string quartet. Perhaps the pin-drop quietness of the sold-out Cedar during songs contributed to that feeling. But it’s also there in the tone the band purveys from the lush warmth of the cello and bass flanking LaCount and Invie. This band is deadly serious about their music and it shows.

“We’re the least rock and roll band we’ve encountered on the road” LaCount said later in the show, pointing out that they can actually be a little shy, especially in their own hometown. The Cedar crowd showed their love for the band and their Twin Cities shout out, rising into a slight cheer when they sang the line, “It’s too bad there’s no ocean in Minneapolis” from the song “Colors” which appears on their new disc.

Saturday the band was not joined on stage by Martin Dosh who contributed drums to the album, but they were joined by friend John Davis on bass clarinet.

Dark Dark Dark goes back out on tour after the first of the year with a show at CBGB in St. Louis. LaCount also talked a little bit about a movie Todd Chandler has been working on in NYC that may surface within the year. (Watch the teaser here.)

Playback:STL reviews Dark Dark Dark!

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

originally posted at http://www.playbackstl.com/content/view/8361/157/

In the mood for a little tense, back-alley Eastern European gypsy folk shot through with existential angst and prominently featuring accordion and banjo? Not a chance, you say? Well, too bad for you, ‘cause you’ll miss hearing one of the most original and daring albums to come out this year, even if the commercial odds are stacked against it. The Minneapolis-based quartet, Dark Dark Dark, have chosen a name that some might call pretentious — and it’s arguably even misleading, as this intimately rendered, worldly music is no soundtrack for slitting your throat. Rather, it’s energetic and throbbing with life, even if the themes do explore loss, pain and the difficulties of survival. But the contingent of listeners who’ll come running to check out an album where accordion and banjo are lead instruments (and drums are largely absent, as well) is a small one.

So, DDD are likely not chart bound, but for fans of compelling, original music, this recording is a stunner. The two primary vocalists—Nona Marie Invie and Marshall LaCount—both have memorable pipes, which they blend in haunting style on tracks such as “Ashes,” “Colors” and “New York Song.” LaCount’s voice sparkles with intelligence and conviction; timbre-wise, it’s pitched somewhere between Thom Yorke’s lower range and the cool sophistication of Norway’s Sondre Lerche.

Invie, however, is a force to be reckoned with. Hers is a raw, emotive instrument that delivers every bit of pain, disillusionment and an “I don’t suffer fools gladly” attitude that’s likely at the forefront of her psyche every day. It’s not always comfortable listening, in other words; no laid-back prettiness or showstopping big moments are on display here. But Invie is a powerhouse vocalist if you like music that’s totally authentic, where the singer sounds 100% invested in what they’re sharing with you. I don’t know what this woman grew up listening to, but she sure doesn’t sound American, and her aesthetic is miles away from anything as ordinary as radio-friendly pop. All that said, this is utterly hypnotic stuff.

“A Cloud Story” and “Colors” are riveting tracks that constantly build in intensity, taking you somewhere you can’t predict. The eccentric “Ferment in Dm” finds Invie unleashing one of her most memorable vocals, and you can make of this verse what you will: “You’ve got a strong fermenting body/ You’ve got a body made of lead/I want to hold you under water/And calculate your next breath.” Yikes!

But there are a lot of “yikes” on this album, and that’s meant as a compliment. It keeps you off balance throughout, even as it encourages you to twirl for release on such movers as “New York Song” and the aptly named “A Spell for Letting Go.” Another standout track is “That Light,” a sort of delerious mad waltz on which piano, saw and cello vie for attention with Invie’s voice. “Where’s that light you’re reaching for?” Invie sings repeatedly, as Robert Skoro’s stellar production hits another high with its equal attention to every sound in the mix. Hard to say what “light” Invie is referring to here, but in terms of inspiration and fierce originality, just about everything is illuminated in this Dark Dark Dark gem of a debut. B+ | Kevin Renick

Dark Dark Dark review from Crawdaddy Magazine

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

originally posted at http://crawdaddy.wolfgangsvault.com/Review/Dark-Dark-Dark-The-Snow-Magic.html :

On stage, Dark Dark Dark lives up to their name with an anti-charismatic presentation that’s nonetheless riveting. Nona Marie Invie cradles a giant accordion on her lap, squeezing out gloomy, minor key chords that complement the stygian rumbling of Todd Chandler’s bass and the mournful counter-melodies of Jonathan Kaiser’s cello. Marshall LaCount’s banjo supplies the brightest accents, but they come from some dark hollow where the bluest elements of bluegrass dance with the clanking rhythms of the Balkans. The band dresses down with a wardrobe that suggests clothing acquired from a late-’80s Seattle—comfortable plaid shirts, faded jeans, Doc Martens, and tattered footwear, the timeless garb of student radicals, street musicians, and working class youth with low-paying jobs. Invie’s face is barely visible behind her accordion. She peers over her instrument and her large eyeglasses give her the look of a librarian well-versed in arcane tomes full of forbidden secrets. LaCount dresses in black from head to foot, with a black cap on his head, looking like a turn of the century Wobbly or an American anarchist ready to hit the road and fight the good fight for truth, justice, and the American way. They all have the rumbled look of hobos that just stepped out of a cross-country boxcar ride, and that impression isn’t too far from the truth.

Dark Dark Dark’s principals met on the road. Invie had indeed hopped freight trains and wandered aimlessly around the United Stares and Europe playing music and soaking up the sounds that surrounded her on her sojourn. LaCount had run away from home and spent time drifting down the mighty Mississippi on a homemade raft singing for his supper at myriad ports of call. When they met, they recognized each other as kindred spirits and began writing original songs in an effort to busk their way down to New Orleans. They played anywhere they could—smoky bars, the homes of kindly strangers, student lofts, and street corners, developing a sound that blends the dark folk music of American and Eastern Europe. Kaiser and Chandler joined up somewhere along the way as the band crisscrossed America on a never-ending, impromptu tour that honed their sound into a singular, haunting style that suggests the freedom and loneliness of the wandering musician looking for a worm place to stay the night and a sip of something to warm the bones and keep away the melancholy. After two years of travel, they settled down in Minneapolis long enough to record The Snow Magic, a powerful collection that lives up to the band’s chosen moniker.

The album opens with the startling wintertime clatter of “Ashes”, a skewed waltz that blends gypsy exuberance and Appalachian fatalism into a tale that likens romance to attempted murder. Invie wails, “You won’t scatter my ashes,” while the band surrounds her with a wall of bracing discord. The rest of the album is almost pastoral in comparison, but the landscape that the band paints is bleak, gray, and inhospitable, with muted tones of loss and solitude. “Colors” uses a marimba, played by guest drummer Martin Dosh from Andrew Bird’s band, and bowed cello and bass to create an ominous mood. Boy meets girl and then they merge into an explosion of psychedelic desire and frustration. The vocals of Invie and LaCount are full of longing, but they’re soon overwhelmed by brooding bass and cello lines that obliterate the moment.

“Dig a Grave” is a mysterious lament played on banjo and accordion, with intimations of murder and suicide, a wrenching performance with Invie’s weeping harmonies and sinister sustained notes from the cello adding to the song’s chilling ambience. “New York Song” is another waltz, this one mellower, a salute to winter in the city that dreams of the coming joy of springtime, even as it nods to the summer suicide of two hopeless lovers. “Trouble No More” lives up to its ironic title, starting out as a jaunty “Babe, I’m leavin’ you” country song before slipping into a hopeless, self-destructive dirge. LaCount and Invie end the tune with wailing Southern gospel harmonies full of dispiriting gloom. There’s nothing really uplifting on the album, but the music of Dark Dark Dark weaves an inviting psychedelic web, all the more powerful for its reliance on acoustic instruments. The album’s organic feel makes these desperately poetic grievances perfect companions for long winter evenings in lonely candlelit rooms.

Between The Pine available NOW! DDD tour and December SADTape

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

“upon closer listen, the meticulous craft and delicately balanced melodies and ambiance of Friends reveals that Jim Diotte has a rewarding ear for detail” – CMJ

available NOW! Click here for the CD, here for the 320kbps MP3.

You can also get a special combo deal right now – Dark Dark Dark’s “The Snow Magic” and Between The Pine’s “Friends, Foes, Kith and Kin” together for $18, US shipping included! only $4 more for international shipping. Click here to buy the combo.

Dark Dark Dark’s tour started last night in Madison, WI, and after a session at Daytrotter today (more on that when it’s posted!), they head to Heaven Gallery in Chicago. Click here for the remaining tourdates.

AND finally, the December SAD Music Mixtape is up! here’s the tracklist:

Between The Pine – The Great Intoxication (David Byrne Cover)
Uke Of Spaces Corners County – This Old World
Callers – Rone
Deer Tick – Baltimore Blues No. 1
Smog – Held
The Tallest Man On Earth – Steal Tomorrow
Bert Jansch – I Have No Time
Gracious Calamity – The Song That Grows Like A Vine
Vandaveer – However Many Takes It Takes
Rodriguez – Sugar Man

Dark Dark Dark US Tour Dates!

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Dark Dark Dark are prepping for their first tour in support of the S&D release “The Snow Magic“! This two week tour takes them from the midwest to the east coast and back in 12 days, and is capped with an appearance at Dosh’s annual “World Of Dosh” holiday show. West coast tour dates will follow in the late winter, to be announced soon.

Dec 10 2008 – The Frequency, Madison, WI
Dec 11 2008 – Heaven Gallery, Chicago, IL
Dec 12 2008 – The Elbow Room, Ypsilanti, MI
Dec 13 2008 – Visible Voice Books, Cleveland, OH
Dec 14 2008 – Morning Glory Coffeehouse, Pittsburgh, PA
Dec 15 2008 – Frisby House, Baltimore, MD
Dec 16 2008 – The Cake Shop, Manhattan, NY
Dec 17 2008 – The Whitehaus, Jamaica Plain, MA
Dec 18 2008 – AS220, Providence, RI
Dec 19 2008 – Union Pool, Brooklyn, NY
Dec 21 2008 – Skull Alley, Louisville, KY
Dec 22 2008 – The Cinemat, Bloomington, IN
Dec 27 2008 – Cedar Cultural Center, Minneapolis, MN (with Dosh)