Most Popular
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Deadbeats Ho!: Did you pay your tax bills last year? Of course you did unless youre called out in this story.
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OldestProfession2.0: A new generation of local "providers" and "hobbyists" create a virtual red-light district
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Cheesesteak Quest: Can Ian find a decent Philly cheesesteak in St. Louis? Yes, he can!
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Stone Temple Pilots
2 p.m. Sunday, June 8. Verizon Wireless Amphitheater, 14141 Riverport Drive, Maryland Heights.
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Bet the Ranch: What were the odds? Lumière Place has a steak house!
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Paintless in St. Louis? St. Louis Alderwoman Donna Baringer wants to treat cans of spray paint like they're handguns. (11)
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Rare On Air: St. Louis' own RiverfrontRadio.com is changing the way Web radio is done (8)
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Cheesesteak Quest: Can Ian find a decent Philly cheesesteak in St. Louis? Yes, he can! (6)
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Magnum Pi: Can Ian make peace with Provel? Solve for Π. (4)
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OldestProfession2.0: A new generation of local "providers" and "hobbyists" create a virtual red-light district (4)
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Stone Temple Pilots
2 p.m. Sunday, June 8. Verizon Wireless Amphitheater, 14141 Riverport Drive, Maryland Heights.
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Midwest Mayhem
7 p.m. Thursday, May 22. City Museum, 701 North 15th Street
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RFT Music Awards Nominees: St. Louis' Best and Brightest
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Rare On Air: St. Louis' own RiverfrontRadio.com is changing the way Web radio is done
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Forever Changes: Chick Corea's Return To Forever reunites and shows neo-jazz fusion groups how it's done
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Loop's Moonrise Hotel to Open April 2009
01:17PM 06/18/08 -
Hump Day Slow Jam of the Week: The Pointer Sisters, "Slow Hand"
02:26PM 06/18/08 -
Rushing Molina into Line Up Could Be Huge Mistake
08:52AM 06/18/08 -
Hell's Kitchen: Episode 12
04:03PM 06/18/08
What we are writing about
- 7-Up
- A Closer Walk with...
- Araka
- Central West End...
- COCA
- Cory Spinks
- Craft Alliance
- foie gras
- Kevin Kline Awards
- Ludo
- Mensa
- Mexican cuisine
- Mosaic
- musicals
- Othello
- Playstation
- RFT DJ Spin-off
- sexual harassment
- St. Louis theater
- The Black Rep
- The Ghost of the Forest
- Three Monkeys
- Tuesdays with Morrie
- University City
- Vashon High School
- Washington University
- White Flag Projects
- Wii
- Xbox
- ~scape
Recent Articles By Christian Schaeffer
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Chicago/Doobie Brothers
7 p.m. Sunday, June 22. Verizon Wireless Amphitheater, 14141 Riverfront Drive, Maryland Heights
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Via Dove
Twilight (Might Be Time)
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Wye Oak
9 p.m. Monday, June 16. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Avenue
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Jumbling Towers
Classy Entertainment EP
(self-released) -
Turn It Up
New Line rocks out
Recent Articles By Annie Zaleski
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B-Sides makes sense of Iron & Wine while Lemuria continues to Get Better
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Ladytron/Datarock
8 p.m. Monday, June 16. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard
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Mates of State/Headlights
9 p.m. Sunday, June 8. The Bluebird, 2706 Olive Street.
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Twangfest: Charles Walker and the Dynamites
9 p.m. Thursday, June 5. Blueberry Hill's Duck Room, 6504 Delmar Boulevard, University City.
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Twangfest: Ha Ha Tonka
Opening for Waco Brothers. 9 p.m. Saturday, June 7. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Avenue.
National Features
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Westword
Dr. Eternity
If Terry Grossman lives forever, he wants you to be there to see it.
By Joel Warner -
Dallas Observer
The Man Who Would Be King
Freddy Haynes seemed a shoo-in to lead the NAACP. Then Obama's pastor came to town.
By Jesse Hyde -
Phoenix New Times
Visions of Allison DuBois
There's no proof the real-life Medium has ever cracked a case, but her fans don't care.
By Megan Irwin -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Shark Huggers
Tourists can't wait to get next to them--even though they're eating machines.
By Amy Guthrie
B-Sides gets historical with Theodore and finds power-pop heaven with Tight Pants Syndrome
By Christian Schaeffer and Annie Zaleski
Published: June 18, 2008
The local quartet Theodore excels at writing heart-rending folk songs and deconstructing them to their breaking points. Last year's Songs for the Weary introduced the band members as musicians adept at swapping instruments and genres, while their live shows meld austere acoustic strains and peals of electric feedback. This week Theodore celebrates the release of its new album Defeated, TN on vinyl (which includes a free download of the MP3 files) with a show at Off Broadway. The band sat down to discuss the origins of the new album and the need for releasing it on an antiquated format.
B-Sides: Why did you go vinyl-only for the new release?
Andy Lashier: I think it had a lot to do with how we recorded it, which was at Penny Studios and all-analog. I think we wanted it to be an older-sounding record.
J.J. Hamon: It was supposed to be a seven-inch, maybe three songs, and then it turned into a full-length.
Jason Torbitzky: I always thought it had to be on vinyl from the first because we just found a whole bunch of records in the house that these songs are based on.
Justin Kinkel-Schuster: There wasn't any choice from the beginning. I don't think anyone doubted that it would be on vinyl for the reason of the material, but also since we all just love vinyl and the sound of it.
How were these songs written?
Kinkel-Schuster: In January of '07, we went on our first tour, and we had an off day and were driving through Tennessee. And it was pretty early in the morning, and Jason was driving and a couple of us were asleep, and we kept seeing all these abandoned buildings. Someone thought of the idea of stopping and poking around. And after a couple of hours of driving, we just happened to be driving past this house and we decided to stop.
The house was completely abandoned and decrepit, and we can see all the possessions just strewn everywhere as if the family left yesterday. We started poking around and looking through the debris of this family's house. And then we came upon a little cardboard box full of letters and cards and all this correspondence. And reading it, it was some of the most intensely moving things, written mostly from a husband and father to his wife and kids, mostly from jail. It was like, "What are the odds?" It was pretty incredible. I think we were pretty stunned for a while — we couldn't believe what we found. It was just a treasure trove of human misery and suffering that had been poured out and forgotten. It was like reading real-life country songs.
Hamon: I always thought of Justin's songs as being like walking down the street and finding a Polaroid in the mud, and this is like finding someone's half-full photo album and trying to write that song.
Kinkel-Schuster: The odds of finding that stuff and being in that place at that time — to get a glimpse and snapshot into this human struggle — it's a privilege, really. I guess we were just trying to honor it, in a way.— Christian Schaeffer
8 p.m. Saturday, June 21. Off Broadway, 3509 Lemp Avenue. $7. 314-773-3363.Theodore: "I always thought of Justin's songs as finding a Polaroid in the mud."
Singles Going Steady
Elusive local power-pop/'60s-rock aficionados Tight Pants Syndrome have finally been captured on disc with Singles. As its name implies, the album collects tunes written and recorded between 2004 and 2007 with several different lineups. Unlike many odds-and-ends compilations, though, Singles is incredibly cohesive — from the Sloan-like power-pop of "Cool Bad Cherry" to the '80s indie-rock shambling of "John's Niece is Very Pretty" and drowsy harmonies of jangle-psych gem "Your Buzz Is Safe With Me." Now settled in as a quintet, Tight Pants Syndrome recently played its first out-of-town shows, which included an appearance at International Pop Overthrow Chicago. Vocalist/bassist Brian McClelland — a member of the band since 2005 — checked in with B-Sides on the eve of Singles' release.
B-Sides: How does it feel to finally hold a CD in your hands after all this time?
Brian McClelland: Of the fourteen songs on the record, I'm involved in the last five or six. The first batch of tunes I think is from 2005? 2004? I was such a big fan of those guys, I always wanted them to compile their stuff even before I was a band member. I think everyone's really excited about it. We've already started recording the next batch of songs, an actual record where everything is being made at the same time, instead of over a five-year period.
I bet that's a very different feeling.
This lineup has really been fun so far. Our live show is so much improved, I think — just a lot more vocals.
Erin [Hogan] is the newest member, right?
We basically have three lead singers; Tim [McAvin] and I and Erin [Hogan] are all doing lead. Tim actually found Erin on Craigslist, which I thought was a very modern way of [finding her]. [Laughs] She is a locally based actress. Most people, when they get a new member, you want them to feel like they're being a part of the creative process, so you try to let them shape their own parts. But she comes in and says, "Tell me exactly what you want to do, and I'll do it, no problem." She likes to be directed. We tell her exactly what we need, and she makes it sound great.
What struck me about listening to the collection, was how cohesive everything is, despite being written over so many years with so many different people. I was impressed by that.









