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Pre-teen punk
Fugazi's Ian MacKaye takes on toddler rock, plus Daughters at the Palladium and more
BY CARLY CARIOLI

With Fugazi on "family leave," Ian MacKaye has been casting about for new ways to make music for the kids. No, really, for the kids — his latest work skews to the pre-school set. Point your browser to www.pancakemountain.com and you can see MacKaye’s new acoustic duo, the Evens (with the Warmers’ Amy Farina on drums), performing their soon-to-be-smash "Vowel Movement" — imagine a cross between "Waiting Room" and "C Is for Cookie" — complete with dancing toddlers in alphabet shirts! It’s part of the DC-based Internet-only children’s show Pancake Mountain, which also features a cameo by Bob Mould and a themesong composed by Fugazi/Rites of Spring dude Brendan Canty with former Bikini Kill gal Kathy Wilcox. You can ask Ian all about it when he conducts a Q&A session to benefit the fabulous Flywheel Arts Center at the White Brook Middle School (413-527-9800) in Easthampton on Sunday afternoon.

Amy isn’t making the trip with Ian, but her brother, Karate frontman Geoff Farina, is on a solo tour with former Spinanes frontwoman Rebecca Gates. They’ll play Friday at the Space Gallery (207-828-5600) in Portland; Saturday at Evos Arts (978-441-1063) in Lowell; Wednesday at AS220 (401-831-9327) in Providence; and next Thursday, April 1, at the Middle East (617-864-EAST) in Cambridge. Meanwhile, the Butchershop Quartet (featuring members of Songs: Ohia and Nad Navillus) perform their rock-band arrangement of Stravinsky’s Le sacre du printemps, a feat that even Rites of Spring never attempted (Mike Miliard’s review is in "Off the Record"), at the Space Gallery on Saturday, at Zeitgeist Gallery (617-876-6060) in Cambridge on Sunday, and at AS220 on Monday.

Providence has produced scathing avant-metal (see Lightning Bolt) and scurrilous frag-punk (see Arab on Radar), but it took the RI quintet Daughters to combine the two; their recent Canada Songs (Robotic Empire) sounds like a Converge-ian quagmire in a Locust-ridden minefield. Daughters play the Palladium (800-477-6849) in Worcester on Saturday and AS220 on Sunday. They’re not to be confused with Sons and Daughters, a Glaswegian group featuring former Arab Strap members Adele Bethel and David Gow whose new Love the Cup (Ba Da Bing), a loosely themed concept album about Johnny Cash, is a gristled folk-rock disc with hints of Zeppelin (but only the Zep songs with mandolin). Sons and Daughters play the Loft (802-254-5832) in Brattleboro, Vermont, on Saturday and the Middle East on Monday. And speaking of Arab Strap: current member Malcolm Middleton does a solo set at the Paradise (617-423-NEXT) in Boston on Sunday opening for the Delgados.

In what you can think of as a tune-up for the New England Metal and Hardcore Festival, Providence’s Living Room (617-521-5200) hosts a metalcore rampage on Tuesday with Scarlet — whose new Cult Classic (Ferret) rages against the machine with unrelenting, Dillinger Escape Plan–ish thrash and macabre, Trent Reznor–like melody — along with the advanced-placement-Pantera riffs of Every Time I Die.


Issue Date: March 26 - April 1, 2004
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