"It’s Real" is a slice of sunny exuberance from New Jersey’s Real Estate from their upcoming Days LP. Bright guitar riffs and nostalgic lyrics keep the track jauntily optimistic and wistful. The "woo-oo-oo" refrain really nails it. Grab a cold beer, kick back, and relax. --Jasmine Zhu, Altered Zones
Days won’t drop until October 17, but be sure to pick up the “It’s Real” mp3 through email download, courtesy of Domino Records
Alex Bleeker of Real Estate says:
John’s Children were one of the most reckless punk bands of all time; and they were undoubtedly ahead of their own. The Brit psych-mod rockers had their LP banned in the US before it was even released. Multiple singles were deemed unplayable by the BBC, and they were ultimately kicked off a German tour with The Who in 1967 for inciting riots. They are probably best knows as Marc Bolan’s first band (pre-Tyrannosaurus Rex), which is ironic because he was only a member for a few months. Still, the few existing John’s Children recordings are undeniable.
I think that I’m genetically predisposed to value “soul” in a band way before technical ability. John’s Children were making records in a radically different music industry. Seeing as they were a British psych pop band in 1966, I can only imagine that they had dreams of striking it big. Poor musicianship could not yet be stamped with a “slacker” label and squeezed into some kind of big money mold. From a manager/producer’s perspective, technical incompetence was not only uncool; it was unacceptable.
And so, Simon Napier-Bell, the group’s slick, big money manager, did everything he could to disguise the band’s musical inability. Their most identifiable song, "Smashed Blocked"-- the title of which allegedly refers to getting high on pills--, was recorded in a studio in LA, by session musicians. Afterward, Andy Ellison overdubbed his shaky amateur lead vocal. The resulting recording is actually really cool. Though it was recorded by fancy LA studio bros, the ramshackle and chaotic John’s Children ethos stuck to the composition. After a tumbling psych-intro, the song just explodes into its righteous, anthemic chorus, before settling into a syrupy ballad.
The ACTUAL band was eventually allowed to enter the studio to record their only LP, ORGASM!, but Napier-Bell was still wary of the group’s ability to produce a quality product. In an attempt to fabricate an artificial live record, he took it upon himself to layer the entire album with fake crowd noise, lifted directly from A Hard Day’s Night. Conceptually, I think the idea is pretty cool, but after about a minute-and-a-half it is super annoying and a total detriment to the record. Shockingly, I have not heard of any efforts to put out a "naked" re-release.
Through the layers of unbalanced shrieking, ORGASM! is still a powerhouse-- a weird relic of what might have been. My personal favorite is "Jagged Time Lapse." Candy-kane “la la la” refrains are traded with tumbling and relentless drum fills and bass runs. This song is a gem, a poppy garage rock anthem whose playcount is steadily rising on my iTunes.
[Woods' Jarvis Taveniere and Jeremy Earl at Rear House, Brooklyn, NY]
By Jenn Pelly
It would be almost impossible to find 229 Bushwick Avenue if it weren't for the flashy, neon awning of the bodega next door. Past the front entrance of this non-descript, East Williamsburg tenement building and down a narrow, paint-chipped hall, a back door opens to a hidden courtyard littered with dirty snow and garbage bags, a ragged couch, a broken stove. Seven paces further, up a cement staircase, is Rear House, home to the recording studio Woods drummer Jarvis Taveniere started in 2007. A "Recorded at Rear House" label has since become a seal of quality for fans of ramshackle indie pop à la Woodsist and Captured Tracks.
It's a Monday evening in early January; outside Rear House, the air is strangely silent. No telling if the doorbell works; nothing about Rear House looks like it's been updated since 1970. Inside, the Vivian Girls/Woods garage-pop collaboration The Babies is tracking handclaps, finishing up a B-side for a 7" on L.A. label Teenage Teardrops. Their debut full-length, also recorded at Rear House last year, drops February 8th on Shrimper.
Up on the second floor, down a dark, tapestry-clad hall, Jarvis mans the board in his tiny production room: an 8 x 8-foot glorified closet that used to be his bedroom. He sits at his desk, within arm's reach of the tape machine to his left, a collection of 33 1/3 books on a tiny bookshelf to his right, and the '60s lipstick-red Farfisa organ behind him (an eBay gem). Nearby, Woods/Babies guitarist Kevin Morby, who sleeps in the bedroom next door, picks at an acoustic guitar.
MP3: Woods: "Blood Dries Darker"
Chūbu region, Honshū, Japan (img credit= Matt Mondanile)
By Jenn Pelly
Long a breeding ground for J-Pop and hi-fi noise, Japan would seem, at first glance, an unlikely destination for lo-fi pop bands from the American Northeast. But that’s where Real Estate and Woods went last month, following an invitation by Tokyo promotion group Contrarede and indie label Plancha. In addition to eating udon and gazing at Mount Fuji, the bands played 300-capacity rock clubs in Tokyo and Osaka, visited records stores that had Underwater Peoples releases on display, and stumbled into a bar where a DJ was spinning Matrix Metals at 2 a.m. Intrigued by Tokyo’s indie culture, AZ caught up with Real Estate drummer Etienne Duguay at his home, Brooklyn DIY space Market Hotel, to talk Japan and time travel. Then we dialed guitarist Matt Mondanile-- a few hours before he moved to Greenpoint from Ridgewood, NJ-- for more on the trip, and some words about his forthcoming Ducktails record on Woodsist.
AZ: What prompted the trip, and how did you hook up with your tour guides?
Matt: This small label in Japan called Plancha, a division of a bigger label called Art Union, offered to put out the Real Estate and Woods records over there, and they asked us to tour there together. This guy Oshi put them out. He did a couple of other things too, like a record by Dustin Wong from Ponytail. This guy Tak runs a promotional company called Contrarede; he drove us around and organized the shows.
Etienne: Oshi was the man. A lot of bands come through with Tak. Right after us was the Bon Iver band. They’re also bringing Deerhunter, Ariel Pink and Blonde Redhead over.

