4B - Thursday, September 11, 2014 the b-side The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com 4B - Thursday, September 11, 2014 the b-side The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom COURTESY OF ALEJANDRA O'LEARY Alejandra O'Leary recorded her new album, Heartspoce Timepiece, in Novi, Michigan. L I Srggle is Clha ni WMpi(oiisZof A2 Five years ago, O'Leary was that she thinks of her albums playing singer-songwriter sets as colors), is another example. in New York City, but she was The song has all the makings of always a fan of rock bands and a carefree acoustic strummer, never liked being a solo act. complete with bright piano and When her then-boyfriend-now- girl-group backing harmonies, husband got into law school at but the subject is a person whom Michigan, her first priority was everyone except the song's to make a band, which she was narrator falsely believes is a able to do by using Craigslist. cool, fantastic person. O'Leary Through the site, she met doesn't sing with scorn, though. musically proficient Champions She sounds very content with such as Jamie Church, a herself and her own convictions Plymouth native with plenty and seems almost amused at the of previous experience in the wrongness of others. local music scene, and Jimmy The influence of the Motor Sindelar, who was getting his City also shines through with bachelor's in biology at the the new material. The cover of University. Their front-and- Heartspace Timepiece (or "The center guitars are a huge part Red One," if you're O'leary) of the latest record's charm, and features apaintingofthe historic they were able to fill in on other Art Deco-style David Stott instruments when needed. Building in Downtown Detroit. Heartspace Timepiece is the "It was very important to me to result of work put in during be near a big city," O'Leary says, one of the most difficult times. "We always like to go to Detroit of the band members' lives., to see music and play music and The Champions of the West look at Detroit because the way practiced and played enough it looks is something I'll never high-profile shows to be able to get tired of contemplating." get money to record, but about On the night of the show, the halfway through, O'leary had to eight or so different Champions leave Michigan to care for her (depending on how many ailing mother in Washington, instruments the song requires) D.C., leaving Church to finish up are squished up against Crazy the recording sessions. He had Wisdom's window overlooking to takecthelead inthe studio, and Main Street. O'Leary jokes that the two mostly communicated "it's like my first apartment over the Internet as Church in New York." Space is at a mixed the parts together and premium, and with no risers or added more instrumental stage, the band is at equal height tracks. O'leary flew back about with the audience, making every month or so to record for a very intimate concert. what was left. Jamie Ascenzo, who recorded Documentation of this time Heartspace* Timepiece at his is found mostly in the lyrics studio in Novi, stands at the of Heartspace Timepiece, not back of the crowd, where they're the pretty, Beatles-influenced serving tea. Jimmy Sindelar is melodies. "I think I'm a very unfortunately nursing broken positive person, and I want to fingers, but he works on the see positivity, and that's what sound and helps out by playing music is for me," O'Leary says, the Omnichord on a few songs. "But I also think that I can't help O'Leary seems extremely being devastated sometimes in comfortable in this setting. my life, so you need to get both She's mastered that sort-of-self- in there or it's not a complete conscious, humble, shy type figure." On songs such' as the of audience banter, but she's up-tempo rocker "Positive excited and smiles a lot. And Drag," she croons lines like . l en she has the opportunity "being hurt by you was worth to ditch her guitar, she takes my time" among barbed guitars, full advantage of it. When The but her sweet-sounding voice - Champions of the West cover even if it is tinged with a bit of the old standard "I Put a Spell a Liz Phair drawl - makes for on You," O'Leary completely a very catchy contrast. "When intensifies her demeanor, Will They Learn?", a song from singing in a deep, husky voice the last record ("The Blue One," while putting both hands on the O'Leary calls it, explaining mic stand and leaning on it as hard as she can, before taking an open seat right next to where the band is playing and letting them jam. When she introduces and explains the songs, most of them seem to be about falling in love, out of love or both, but an exception here is "Beat Ohio." The track on Heartspace Timepiece with the most clearly Ann Arbor-inspired name, "Beat Ohio" is also one of the new record's highlights. The song opens the show and also gets a reprise in the second set, before which O'Leary explains that it's about "never being able to be from here." Syrupy sweet, O'Leary's vocals sing-song over aguitarthat's essentiallysoloing for the entire song. Mandolin, piano and the mellow trot of the drums join in as O'Leary seems to criticize someone who'd rather be from the East than the Midwest, telling him "you're doing it wrong." This night at Crazy Wisdom is bittersweet for O'Leary, Church and the band. "This is closing the book on a chapter tonight," Church says. He's been really busy with the band and his fap- ily, but is finishing up a solo project that he's been wanting to do for a long time. Sindelar and Martin Maginity, The Cham- pions' drummer, are also play- ing together in a separate band called The Landmarks. Most dramatically, though, O'Leary now lives in North Carolina. But they remain confident that they'll continue to work togeth- er, once the timing gets better. In explaining the album's name, O'Leary says Timepiece comes from the fact that the year in which the record was made was seared into the band's brain, and the album is "a document of a very specific time in our lives." Heartspace, she says, "comes from whenwe were talking about being stressed out by personal tragedy, and how we didn't have the headspace to think about music sometimes and how sad that was for us, and I was like, 'It's not even our headspace, it's heartspace.' Our heartspace is not big enough to encompass all this tragedy." However, now that the band has lived through the tragedy, O'Leary says "I will never undo the pain of that time, but I feel triumphant." Poignant lyrics propel dedicated band By ADAM THEISEN Daily Music Editor To open her second set, Alejandra O'Leary decides to performacoversongwithouther band. Wearing a denim jacket over a farmers market t-shirt and jeans, she sits on a stool with her acoustic guitar as the packed-in coffeehouse crowd watches her play a stripped- down cover of the normally bombastic, over-the-top "No Surrender," a Bruce Springsteen song whose words, O'Leary says, "perfectly express how I feel about this band." With all of the attention focused on her, she sings, "We made a promise we swore we'd always remember. No retreat, no surrender." This show on the upstairs level of Crazy Wisdom, a spiri- tual bookstore on Main Street, is a homecoming for O'Leary. Less than a week after the release of her new album, Heartspace Timepiece, she's already staring down a new chapter of her life. But the Crazy Wisdom show allows her to bring together everyone who played on the record, to celebrate the fact that they've all made it through diffi- cult times to produce the fantas- tic finished product. "It's like the butterfly that lives for one day," O'Leary says. She and her band, The Champions of the West, only rehearsed three times for the nearly two-hour show, but aside from occasional feedback from the amps (probably more the fault of the unconventional venue than the band), the group sounds tight, mostly playing an old-school style of rock 'n' roll, with odder instruments like the mandolin mixed in. The fact that Mich Rickman plays his bass upright on some songs is indica- tive of the classic authenticity of the band's aesthetic. Led by O'Leary and guitarist Jamie Church, The Champions com- municate well and never step on each other's musical toes. Their love for music and playing in the band shines through. TRAILER REVIEW MUSIC VIDEO REVIEW 0 Jake Gyllenhaal is awe- some. There's literally nothing to dislike about him - he's a wonder- fully versatile actor who Nightraler seems t.31 like the Bold Films kind of guy you1 wouldn't mind knocking back a couple of beers with. He can rock a great beard and all the women fancy him. He's got it all. Coming across as a real creep is a surprising addition to Gyllenhaal's repertoire, but he performs it with aplomb in the trailer for Dan Gilroy's next film, "Nightcrawler." "My motto is - if you want to win the lottery, you've to make the money to buya ticket," says his character, reminding you of that overeager know-it-all The more detailsthat emerge about Tyrannythe upcoming album from Julian Casa- blancas +The Voidz, the more Where No it becomes clear E that Casablan- cas is trying to Julian distance himself Casablancas from the specter + ThVol& of The Strokes as much as possible. Cal Take the new video for "Where No Eagles Fly" and compare it to the now 12-year-old video for "Someday." The still-amusing "Family Feud" interlude not- withstanding, the "Someday" video is mostly a collection of nostalgic shots of The Strokes and their buddies just hang- ing out at a bar and having a good time. Contrast that with "Where No Eagles Fly." The grainy, found-footage quality of who sits in at least one of your classes. He's desperate for any job, and jumps at the chance to become a TV newscaster, doing whatever it takes to pro- vide the scoop before anyone else. But how far will he go in his quest to do and be some- thing? While promising themes - the ethical issues of providing headline-grabbing news and the intoxicating nature of suc- cess that began with despera- tion - are shown to be the focal point of the film, the trailer itself is poorly constructed. A clumsy montage of clips dilutes the tension with unnecessary comedy and even the lip-sync is way off in some places. Still, the trailer makes it look like a watchable film, and then again - a little bit of Gyllenhaal never hurt anybody. -MAYANK MA THUR the video - as well as the fact that Jules somehow doesn't look any older -means that it could almost come from the early days of The Strokes. But the shots fea- ture strobe lights, cheap-looking dripping-blood on the screen and'80s public-access-show- style effects. Watching, "Where No Eagles Fly," you're not going to get the warm fuzzies like you do when you listen to "Is This It?." Taken with the "Someday" clip, it'slike the New York of "The Warriors" compared with the New York of "Friends." It is cool, though, that Casa- blancas is following this new weird, abrasive style. The depar- ture from his normal, more popular sound may be jarring at first, but it'll be interesting to see and hear where Casablancas takes this aesthetic when Tyr- anny is released. -ADAM THEISEN I TV TRAILER REVIEW The trailer for "AmericanA Horror Story: Freak Show"A is a bit of a let down. After weeks of vague (but B creepy) fifteen-sec- and teas- Horror' ers, FX's Story:Freak full-length trailer Shows is disap- Oct.8 pointingly FX ambiguous. Like the Fx series itself, this trailer is Through the peephole, we get But all is rectified when a showcase for fancy edit- glimpses of most of "Freak Queen Supreme Jessica Lange ing and good talent, but is Show" 's main players - the steps from behind the curtain. ultimately unthrilling and aforementioned bearded Ultimately, it 's Lange's without substance. (For a Bates, strongman Michael show, and the trailer rectifies show called "American Hor- Chiklis, triple-breasted Ange- all its flaws in the end by ror Story," the trailer offers la Bassett, promiscuous Evan reminding us what makes no actual scares, unless you Peters and finally, Sarah Paul- "American Horror Story" so count Kathy Bates' beard.) son as a very unconvincing compelling - the campy glory The trailer offers a cool, two-headed lady. (Seriously, of seeing Jessica Lange under voyeuristic peek through seg- what is the deal with those the big top. ments of the big circus tent. shadows on her neck?) -CHLOE GILKE SINGLE REVIEW Sam Smith had a big sum- mer. Two of his songs, "Stay with Me" and "Latch" (a collabora- tion with C Disclo- Im Not the sure) have become hits Only One so inescap- SamSminthft. able that even your A$APRocky mother Capitol prob- ably knows every word. His debut album, "In the Lonely Hour," features soulful ballads that highlight the British singer's impressive range. Smith's music has pop sensibilities, with earworm hooks that get stuck in heads for days, and lo-fi tendencies that show off tender song- writing. Smith's latest single, "I'm Not the Only One," gets a refreshing makeover cour- an already enjoyable song, tesy of Harlem rapper A$AP and should continue Sam Rocky, who sounds at home Smith's summer of domina- rhyming over luscious key- tion well into the fall. This boards. The two-part guest collaboration works seam- verse features Rocky at his lessly, and it suggests that smoothest, who once again Smith should handle hook sounds like the coolest guy duty on more rap songs, aila in the room with his non- Frank Ocean, to broaden his chalant flow., audience and to showcase This odd couple pairing his tremendous vocals. works to pump new life into -JOSHFRAZIER 0 0