Musical
Mix-Up
Mash
notes bring Subtle harmony BY
ZACH KLASSEN
Subtle,
Black Moth Super Rainbow (pictured), DoublePlusGood. 9 pm Saturday,
Sept. 22 • WOW Hall • $12 adv., $15 door
Combining rap and rock music is a volatile endeavor.
Over the past few years this fusion has produced a mixed bag of
results, ranging from the very enjoyable to the painfully absurd.
Now, I'm not going to name names, but let's just say that past efforts
which have failed to marry the two genres successfully became an
open invitation for Yankee-capped meatheads and their anger-suppressed
opuses of chin music alongside fellow juggalos. But flaccid baked
goods and circus acts aside, bands like Rage Against the Machine
and the classic collabo of Run-DMC and Aerosmith have proven that
the rap/rock mash-up doesn't have to end up in disaster. Enter Subtle
— the Oakland-bred sextet which manages to bring both rap
and rock influences into harmony with an eclectic array of instrumentation.
Adam Drucker, Jeffrey Logan, Jordan Dalrymple, Dax Pierson, Alexander
Kort and Marton Dowers make up the ranks of Subtle along with their
stripe-faced mascot, Hour Hero Yes. Yes — an aspiring rapper
— is a recurring conceptual character who is mentioned in
Subtle's current albums and often embodied as a bust onstage at
shows. The group's latest, Yell and Ice, is a collection
of remakes looking to re-approach the original lyrics and music
from their last album, For Hero: For Fool. The new album
features collaborations with Why?, Chris Adams of Hood, Markus Acher
of the Notwist, Wolf Parade's Dan Boeckner and Tunde Adebimpe of
TV On the Radio.
From the other coast, Black Moth Super Rainbow
emerges from the woods of Western Pennsylvania armed with a Rhodes
piano, bass, drums, monosynth and an Atari. Their most recent effort,
Dandelion Gum — an escape into psyche/pop and folky
electronica — is said to be loosely based on witches who make
candy in the forest. Tobacco, Power Pill Fist, Father Hummingbird,
The Seven Fields of Aphelion and Iffernaut are the artists behind
BMSR's unique sound, described by Music-News.com as a "soothing,
exhilarating and mysterious, 'tranquilizer meets energy drink' universe."
Joining BMSR and Subtle is Eugenean-turned-Portlander DoublePlusGood,
aka electro-pop singer-songwriter Erik Carlson.