Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Orpheans 7 inch!

The Orpheans 7inch Single is available at Neptoon Records in Vancouver right now!

The A side; Elissons Tomb an eccentric, Howlin' Wolf esc blues stomper, and the B Side; Keep It slow a dreamy blue eyed soul ballad to the likes of Television, John Bonham, and Janis Joplin, the most solid single this side of the millennium. This is raw and real from this beautiful power trio.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Veteran busker D. B. Buxton comes in from the cold | Vancouver, Canada | Straight.com

Veteran busker D. B. Buxton comes in from the cold | Vancouver, Canada | Straight.com

Veteran busker D. B. Buxton comes in from the cold

You’ve probably seen D. B. Buxton outside the Commodore and other venues, pounding on a stomp board, slashing at a rectangular Gretsch “Big B” guitar, and belting out super-fried electric garage blues in a voice that he apparently pilfered from Captain Beefheart.

There’s always a crowd around him; Buxton is a totally possessed creature who looks a bit like Michael Gothard’s superhuman zombie from the trippy mod horror flickScream and Scream Again, but cuter. And weirder. You can’t tear your eyes or your ears off him. He raises the art of busking to high trash, he’s been doing it since he was 14 years old, and he’s actually making a living at it.

But that’s the day job, so to speak. After relocating to Vancouver from Edmonton last year—“I played through all those minus-30 winters,” the 29 year-old says with a grimace, “on the streets, getting frostbite, getting older. It wasn’t feeling so good anymore”—Buxton found himself opening for the Green Hour Band at the Fox Theatre in May of 2009.

A short courtship followed, and eventually Buxton had himself a rhythm section in the sartorially magnificent shape of the Green Hour Band’s Randy Kramer (who switched from guitar to bass) and freakbeat drummer Nick Eccleston.

Thus were the Orpheans born. In a month or so, depending on how quickly the pressing plant pulls its thumb out of its ass, the three-piece will release a 7-inch single on the extremely boutique Neptoon Records label. Check the band’s MySpace for a preview of what captivated Neptoon store owner Rob Frith so much that he coughed up the cash for their debut slab of hot wax: a three-minute mutant blues stomper called “Ellison’s Tomb” and the shape-shifting heartbreaker “Keep It Slow”, which balloons from a dark and muddy Spencer Davis Group vibe into a wickedly thrilling, orgiastic, out-of-phase freakout.

There’s also a totally demented video of Buxton covering the Troggs’ “I Can’t Control Myself” on the band’s blog. He attacks the song like a transmogrification of Reg Presley, Steve Marriott, and a hysterically aroused capuchin monkey after two weeks of astral-planing in a sensory-deprivation tank.

“I think the nature of great performance is to be pretty out-there, and to be outside of your skin,” Buxton tells the Straight as he plows into a panini at Our Town CafĂ© off Main Street.

It’s an impressive understatement from a man who counts Screamin’ Jay Hawkins as a “huge influence”, although Buxton’s broader tastes and activities reveal an obsessed, self-taught musicologist without boundaries. Prince is his “number one guy”, he says.

“One side of me is classic pop,” Buxton continues. “Motown, classic rock ’n’ roll. On the other side you have Blind Willie Johnson, Son House, Thelonious Monk, Coltrane, and early music like John Dowland and Johann Sebastian Bach. That was the kind of stuff I was immersing myself in, as well as stuff like Captain Beefheart.”

Buxton says he spent five years “woodshedding” after Edmonton’s indie-rock scene dried up in the late ’90s. Before that, having been kicked out of school, he pounded the pavement, worked the coffeehouses, and snuck into clubs as a sideman for various acts, encouraged by a dad who “loved music but couldn’t pursue it”. When the work dried up, he discovered his inner muso and learned to appreciate everything from Lenny Breau to Cyndi Lauper.

“I thought her singing was brilliant,” he says of Lauper, “and I’d never heard another singer before or since that can do what she can do, the way that she can twist her mouth and create harmonics that punch you in the face. I love that sort of thing. I studied throat singing, for instance. I was just into any instrumental or vocal technique, the more eccentric the better.”

Considering that Buxton was also producing hip-hop during this period, and that he’s about to release a dance album on the Dirty Whore label called D.B. Buxton’s Dirty Disco Party—“I’ve been told it sounds like a cross between Prince’s Black Album and Lou Reed’s Street Hassle,” he adds with a broad grin—you might think that the relatively straight-ahead nature of the Orpheans would be limiting. For his part, Buxton views it as another challenge.

“This band is blues- and soul-music-based, and I figured out early on that the simpler I made it, the better. And that there are certain things that I would avoid. Like when I play a minor ninth chord, I can just feel the discomfort in the air. Not necessarily coming from Randy and Nick, but from the entity. From the vibe itself.”

Most importantly, Buxton feels that he’s finally picking up speed on a long road littered with talented but unsung wreckage. And make no mistake, Buxton is monstrously talented. “It’s been this clichĂ© for the last two years, everywhere I’ve been,” he says. “ ‘You’re gonna be doing so awesome, you’re on the verge, you’re so hot right now, someone’s just gonna scoop you any second.’ This has been the last two years of my life. But this moment in time is the first moment when I can kinda see that, yes, things are moving a little bit. And, as for the Orpheans, I love it.”

The Orpheans play the Biltmore Cabaret on Wednesday (March 10

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Short documentry

BY Katie Weldon

A little story on how the Orpheans came to be.


Monday, February 1, 2010

Songs, 7 inch, Fun



Hey, were putting out a 7 inch with the help of Rob from Neptoon records and lots of thanks to Tanya from Skinny Magazine for showing him our material. So right now we currently have to work on some art work for it to make it look somewhat interesting.
The 7inch is going to consist of the songs "Keep it slow" and "Ellison's Tomb".
  • We are playing at the Astoria(769 East Hastings Street, Vancouver) on February 5th, its a friday and its an event called Damaged Goods(Djs Jake , Dustin, and Jordan).
  • And another at the Pub 340 on February 13th with the Manipulators.
  • We also Playing READY! SET! GO! at the Biltmore Cabaret On March 10th, with DJ John Cougar and David Love Jones, spinning superb tasting soul records. I went there last time and it was bloody awesome.









Friday, January 1, 2010

New Years

 
Some photos from new years eve night in chronological order.

10:30pm


12:30 am


2:00am Elliot's Room

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Demos

The demos are almost completed. There is one up now called Turn out the lights.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

12/04- 12/05 Recording demos and the Rickshaw theatre show

This is us recording demos in our practice space. We are recording some songs that we just finished over the couple months. We share the practice space with mostly metal bands and "Nickelback wanna be" a style of music that really haunts Vancouver ever since Nickelback hit it big. Hundreds of bands trying to ride the wake of their fame trying to cash in on the fan base they've created, its all rubbish music really. Its such a cash grab that the CFOX radio station made a ridiculously bias "festival" designated specifically for that style of music specifically called the "SEEDS Festival".
Anyways back to the point that it actually makes it hard to record a decently dynamic song when some guy is screaming a demonic-overlord voice and drummer that has chops to serve satans supper a door down from you.

Liam Gallagher articulates this the best...


Jeremy, Mya
Nick
Daniel, Randy
Photos Courtesy of Charlie Korzenoski
-Randy