
Matt Costa may be one of the most unpretentious exports of Orange County, and as a result he has avoided and far surpassed the common SoCal artist pitfall of localism (it also helps that he writes some damn catchy songs).
Unfamiliar Faces is Costa’s second album out on Brushfire Records and the follow-up to his 2005 debut Songs We Sing. While seemingly a continuation down the path first cut by Songs We Sing, Tom Dumont back at the helm of production and a video for the first single featuring a disheveled Costa dancing through various landscapes, Unfamiliar Faces is actually a sophomore album squarely inline with the progressive tradition of so many past artists who clearly influence him. Simply put it’s more mature.
Yes, that’s a cliché, but in a time when it’s more and more common for an artist to creatively max out after only one release or commoner still, to rehash the same material over and over, I think it’s an important quality. I’m not suggesting a leap from Meet the Beatles to Abbey Road, but a noticeable progression of style and maturation of substance is a welcome attribute and a sign of true talent.
“Mr. Pitiful” is the opening track on Unfamiliar Faces, and a perfect example of where Costa has steered his bright and bouncing style further from the likes of Donovan and more towards that of Harry Nilsson or the McCartney penned [White Album] songs. But just as on his previous release, there is no way to fit all the songs on Unfamiliar Faces into the same peg hole of references and influences, it’s a mixed bag. Songs such as “Lilacs” and “Cigarette Eyes,” are grounded in a more contemporary sound that one finds in the singing-surfer ilk Costa commonly tours with, while “Never Looking Back” and “Miss Magnolia” appear as more of a throwback to a time when the only songs that mattered had a harmonica and mandolin part and were written in a Laurel Canyon cabin.
Really there is almost something for everyone on Unfamiliar Faces, and I don’t mean that in a soulless retail Wal-Martesque kind of way. There is real diversity on the album, evidenced particularly by a song like “Vienna” which rides along with a smooth Brazilian jazz flavor ala Astrud Gilberto (Ray Barbee would also be a fitting reference, and a better known one in the skating crowd), and ultimately I believe it is that variety which makes Costa successful. He takes a blend of genres, eras and styles and filters them all through his own unique interpretation.
So don’t be surprised if you find yourself at one of his shows surrounded by Fashion Island princesses, Brohym tattoos and bespectacled record nerds like myself, they’ll all be there - of course that is if you can even get in.
Matt Costa plays two sold-out nights at The Troubadour February 1st and 2nd.
Dowload “Mr. Pitiful” (mp3) from Unfamiliar Faces
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Blackstrap - Steal My Horses and Run

Initially released in Europe in October 2006, Blackstrap’s second full length, Steal My Horses and Run, is finally seeing it’s official release in the U.S. via New York’s Tee Pee Records.
At first pass it would be easy to write off Steal My Horses and Run as just another retread of the JAMC and My Bloody Valentine catalogs, that is if it weren’t so well executed and/or if you weren’t able to make to the last quarter of the album where the band really opens things up with some more diversified song writing. Coming across much the same as Black Rebel Motorcycle Club did on their first album, Blackstrap wear their influences (Velvet Underground, My Bloody Valentine, Neu!, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Stereolab and Suicide) on their sleeve, writing songs that would fit on any of the aforementioned bands’ albums, only with much better production.
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Triclops! - Out Of Africa

Made up of former and current members of Bottles and Skulls, Fleshies, Lower Forty-Eight and a drummer who is in too many other bands to list, San Francisco’s Triclops! are a veritable hybrid of the Bay Area underground punk/hardcore scene.
Triclops!’s “trademark” are their vocals, which for about half of Out Of Africa are run through broken solid state amps with a phaser explosion - achieving a sound that I can only describe as how the Mars Volta’s Cedric Bixler-Zavala would sound singing underwater. While slightly off-putting on first listen, the phasered vocals effects - delievered by Fleshies’ Johnny - become pretty aurally addictive over the course of the album, so much so that when the effect is not being used, I found myself anxiously awaiting it’s return.
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Princeton - Bloomsbury EP

Yes, basing songs upon classic literary works and-or their creators at first always seems pretentious, even ColinMeloyian, but hey, if it was good enough for the likes of Iron Maiden and David Axelrod who are we to disagree. Enter Bloomsbury, the new 4-song EP from Eagle Rock, CA’s own shaggy academes turned shaggy indie rockers, Princeton. All glib - borderline sarcastic introductions aside, Bloomsbury is well put together and accessible, surprisingly so when you consider the lyrical focus on early 20th century London intellectuals and the long list of instrumentation.
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Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul - Collectors Edition

Otis Blue: Otis Redding Sings Soul is arguably one of Redding’s best albums, if not one of soul music’s best. It presents a cohesion beyond the usual collection of singles and b-sides common of the time, and it also set the stage for what would become his most recognizable and influential yet ultimately tragic song, “(Sittin’ On) The Dock of the Bay”. In many ways Otis Blue is the last Otis Redding album, not technically as there’s his duet album with Carla Thomas and the posthumous Dock of The Bay, but in terms of an album that’s Otis through and through, not to mention proof of what could have been to come from the young Georgian, this is the one.
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The Heavy - Great Vengeance Furious Fire

heav·y; Of great intensity, Having great power or force, Indulging to a great degree, Of great significance or profundity…
Not since the The Clash has a band’s name been as succinct and appropriate as The Heavy. These four guys and one gal hailing from the town of Bath (UK) have an arsenal of sweet baadasssss songs that transport you back to a time when blow was big, hair was bigger and Dracula was black. However you slice, dice, cut or sort it, their album Great Vengeance and Furious Fire, released in the UK last year and here in the states just a few weeks ago, is one goddamn heavy piece of work.
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The Black Keys - Attack and Release

It can be an all-too-common occurrence for those whose musical tastes extend beyond, or completely avoid, commercial radio, that a band who one champions as underappreciated gets the recognition they deserve… but for the wrong album! And then subsequently tours ad nauseam until releasing another album to a fickle public who may or may not care anymore. Too many examples spring to mind, but my elitist and ultimately meaningless point is that while I was worried the same fate laid waiting for The Black Keys with 2006’s Magic Potion, I was thankfully wrong. It’s not that MP wasn’t a good album, it just wasn’t the album (see; Rubber Factory), but now with their latest release I can rest calmly with the assurance that The Black Keys’ (Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney) upward trajectory is analogous with the mastery that is Attack and Release.
...continue reading »
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Feb 5th, 2008 at 4:07 pm
Matt Costa is touring with the equally talented Johnathan Rice.
Further North was hands down the best album of 2007 (that didnt belong to Kanye West)
check out the soulful sounds of Mr. Rice and let me know what you think!