
Audio By Carbonatix
Artist: Gospel Claws
Title: C-L-A-W-S
Release date: October 26
Label: Common Wall Media
Gospel Claws are a local band (Tempe, I’ve been told) that is currently enjoying a little bit of national exposure, residing in a reasonably high position on some relatively obscure indie-rock-tallying chart. I’m glad somebody’s listening because their debut record, C-L-A-W-S, offers a lot to like — not the least of which is track number two, a song called “Summer Nights Lakeside.” It’s a tune I like so much that I’ll be putting it on the short list of my favorite songs of the year (according to my iTunes, I’ve listened to 2,290 songs this year, and there’s still eight more weeks of Nothing Not New to go).
“Summer Nights Lakeside” seems to be an effortlessly rendered paean to rallying friends for a night of hanging out, drinking, and playing rock ‘n’ roll. These guys really nail it with such evocative lines as “I brought my tent and some cheap American beer in case you wanna spend the night” and, even better, “We can set up on the beach because loud is how we like to play.” And musically, on this song, the fivesome melds the trendy sounds of bands like Beach House and Morning Benders with the timelessly primal thump ‘n’ strum of Mo Tucker and Lou Reed.
But it’s the other lyrics, and the casually sad way they’re delivered, that make this song what it is, an acknowledgement of the powerlessness and sense of defeat felt by over-educated, under-employed, early-20-something dudes in the 21st century, presumably like the guys in Gospel Claws and their ilk.
The song’s oft-repeated and seemingly carefree opening line, “No worries, no school, it’s summertime” is juxtaposed with the exceedingly dark first line (sung twice and revisited later in the song) of the first verse: “If you take me down to the lake, I’ll drown you if you ask me to.” As desperate young men in the early 21st century, will they go to extremes (even if that means an act that inflicts pain and suffering) to get something, anything — from our employers, from women, from an increasingly fractured and extremist society?
Though still young, these guys are men, and men tend to want to fix things — including their women’s problems — by taking control of situations. In “Summer Nights Lakeside,” the narrator desperately wants to be in control but knows he can’t do a damn thing about it. He’s so neutered, he’d even consider offing his gal if she wanted. For Gospel Claws, it’s easier to accept the “no worries, it’s summertime” mantra than be a man in today’s society. The Minutemen put it best in 1984, “Maybe partying will help.”
In classic, American male, I-can-fix-this-situation fashion, they sing later in the verse, “I know you’re sad and you wanna die, but I know I can change your mind,” before painfully accepting their helplessness in this scenario, “Well, I can call our friends and they can bring the girls, they’re only half an hour away.” The narrator knows that only the girlfriends have the answer. Guys, with their hubris and big egos, are just gonna fuck things up worse than they already are — because it happens all the time. The answer? Set up on the beach and make some drunken noise. In a go-nowhere economy with limited opportunities, living off Mom and Dad’s insurance until age 26, it’s an emasculating time to be a young man. Sure, it sucks, but “no worries, no school, it’s summertime” makes living in 2010 a lot more palatable.
C-L-A-W-S is steeped in the Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds. To me, the lasting message from that classic record is Brian Wilson’s explaining how he wasn’t made for this world. With “Summer Nights Lakeside,” I think Gospel Claws have tapped into that sentiment, not that they’re geniuses or ahead of the times (as Wilson was in 1964) but that they are simply existing in an era that doesn’t suit them.
Nothing else on C-L-A-W-S touches “Summer Nights Lakeside,” but there are more far more high points (including “Need for Speed,” which sounds like Jan & Dean on cough syrup, and “Avenues,” a Velvets-meets-Surfer Blood mid-tempo tune) than low points. The record loses steam after 35 minutes, but it’s a more-than-worthy entry in the catalog of local releases in 2010. And, it bears repeating, I’d put “Summer Nights Lakeside” up against almost any song I’ve heard this year.
Summer Nights Lakeside by Gospel Claws
Best song: “Summer Nights Lakeside”
Rotation: Medium-heavy
Deja Vu: Snake! Snake! Snakes! If you told me S!S!S! and GC shared at least three members, I wouldn’t be surprised.
I’d rather listen to: The Minutemen’s Double Nickels on the Dime.
Grade: B+
“Nothing Not New” is a yearlong project in which New Times editorial operations manager Jay Bennett, a 41-year-old music fan and musician, will listen only to music released in 2010. Each Monday through Friday, he will listen to one new record (no best ofs, reissues, or concert recordings) and write about it. Why? Because in the words of his editor, Martin Cizmar, he suffers from “aesthetic atrophy,” a wasting away of one’s ability to embrace new and different music as one ages. Read more about this all-too-common ailment here. The “Nothing Not New” Archives
November 1 — Elvis Costello: National Ransom (C)
October 27 — The 88: The 88 (B)
October 26 — Warpaint: The Fool (B+)
October 22 — Screaming Females: Castle Talk (A-)October 21 — Junip: Fields (B)October 20 — Kelley Stoltz: To Dreamers (B+)October 19 — Kings of Leon: Come Around Sundown (C)October 18 — The Extra Lens: Undercard (B+)
October 15 — Sufjan Stevens: The Age of Adz (D)October 14 — The Corin Tucker Band: 1,000 Years (B-)October 13 — The Moondoggies: Tidelands (C)October 12 — Belle and Sebastian: Write About Love (B)October 11 — The Old 97’s: The Grand Theatre, Volume 1 (B)
October 8 — Deerhunter: Halcyon Digest (A)October 7 — The Walkmen: Lisbon (C)October 6 — The Gay Blades: Savages (C-)October 5 — Grinderman: Grinderman 2 (A)October 4 — The Vaselines: Sex with an X (B-)
September 30 — John Legend & the Roots: Wake Up! (B)September 28 — No Age: Everything in Between (A-)
September 15 — Superchunk: Majesty Shredding (B+)
September 9 — JP, Chrissie, & the Fairground Boys: Fidelity! (D-)September 8 — Interpol: Interpol (C-)September 7 — Ryan Bingham & the Dead Horses: Junky Star (B)
August 31 — Sonny and the Sunsets: Tomorrow Is Alright (B)
August 26 — Ra Ra Riot: The Orchard (C-)August 25 — Dead Confederate: Sugar (D+)August 24 — Nothing Not New: Podcast #9August 23 — Magic Kids: Memphis (C)
August 18 — Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan: Hawk (A-)August 17 — Street Sweepers Social Club: The Ghetto Blaster EP (C+)August 16 — Lissie: Catching a Tiger (B)
August 13 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: Chely Wright, Tom Jones, Norman, and moreAugust 12 — Jimmy Eat World: Invented (C-)August 11 — Snake! Snake! Snakes!: Snake! Snake! Snakes! EP (B) August 10 — The Budos Band: The Budos Band III (A-)
August 5 — Arcade Fire: The Suburbs (B)August 3 — Wavves: King of the Beach (B+)
July 29 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: Cowboy Junkies, Winnie Cooper, and moreJuly 28 — The Goodnight Loving: Supper Club (A-)July 27 — Menomena: Mines (B+)July 26 — Best Coast: Crazy for You (D+)
July 23 — Vitamin String Quartet: Performs Lady Gaga (C)July 22 — The Books: The Way Out (B+)July 21 — Francis and the Lights: It’ll Be Better (C)July 20 — Secret Cities: Pink Graffiti (D)July 19 — Sun Kil Moon: Admiral Fell Promises (C-)
July 16 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: Liz Phair, Steel Train, Kylie Minogue, and moreJuly 15 — Mystery Jets: Serotonin (B+)July 14 — Authority Zero: Stories of Survival (C+)July 13 — Danger Mouse & Sparklehorse: Dark Night of the Soul (B+)July 12 — Crowded House: Intriguer (B)
July 8 — Ty Segall: Melted (B+)July 7 — Pierce the Veil: Selfish Machines (D-)July 6 — 13 Must-Hear Songs from the First Half of 2010
July 2 — Katzenjammer: Le Pop (B)June 30 — Wolf Parade: Expo 86 (B-)June 29 — Scissor Sisters: Night Work (B+)
June 24 — Foals: Total Life Forever (D+)June 23 — Pernice Brothers: Goodbye, Killer (A-)June 22 — The Roots: How I Got Over (B+)June 21 — Danzig: Deth Red Sabaoth (D)
June 18 — The Chemical Brothers: Further (B+)June 17 — Eyes Set to Kill: Broken Frames (C)June 16 — Devo: Something for Everybody (B+)June 15 — The Gaslight Anthem: American Slang (C-)June 14 — Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers: Mojo (C)
June 11 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: The Dig, The Cringe, Delta Spirit, Stereo Total, and moreJune 10 — Gemma Ray: It’s a Shame About Gemma Ray (A-)June 9 — Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti: Before Today (B)June 8 — Against Me!: White Crosses (C)June 7 — Blitzen Trapper: Destroyer of the Void (B-)
June 4 — The Melvins: The Bride Screamed Murder (B-)June 3 — Crystal Castles: Crystal Castles II (B-)June 2 — The Cool Kids: Tacklebox (B-)
May 27 — What Cheer? Brigade: We Blow You Suck (D)May 26 — Stone Tempe Pilots: Stone Temple Pilots (C)May 25 — Karen Elson: The Ghost Who Walks (C+)May 24 — Damien Jurado: Saint Bartlett (B)
May 21 — Woven Bones: In and Out and Back Again (B-)May 20 — Band of Horses: Infinite Arms (B-)May 19 — Sleigh Bells: Treats (D-)May 18 — The Black Keys: Brothers (B+) May 17 — LCD Soundsystem: This Is Happening (A-)
May 14 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: CocoRosie, Natalie Merchant, The Sadies, and moreMay 13 — Male Bonding: Nothing Hurts (B)May 12 — Flying Lotus: Cosmogramma (B-)May 11 — The Dead Weather: Sea of Cowards (A)May 10 — The National: High Violet (B+)
May 7 — Shapiro: Shapiro (C)May 6 — Gogol Bordello: Trans-Continental Hustle (C-)May 5 — Broken Social Scene: Forgiveness Rock Record (A-)May 4 — The New Pornographers: Together (B-)May 3 — The Hold Steady: Heaven Is Whenever (A-)
April 30 — Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings: I Learned the Hard Way (A)April 29 — Hole: Nobody’s Daughter (D+)April 28 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: Toro y Moi, Merle Haggard, Freedy Johnston, and moreApril 27 — Unnatural Helpers: Cracked Love & Other Drugs (B+)April 26 — Harlan T. Bobo: Sucker (A-)
April 23 — Roky Erickson and Okkervil River: True Love Cast Out All Evil (A-)April 22 — Caribou: Swim (D)April 21 — The Apples in Stereo: Travellers in Space and Time (C-)April 20 — Jakob Dylan: Women + Country (D+)April 19 — Cornershop: Judy Sucks a Lemon for Breakfast (C)
April 16 — Frightened Rabbit: The Winter of Mixed Drinks (B+)April 15 — Coheed and Cambria: Year of the Black Rainbow (D-)April 14 — Foxy Shazam: Foxy Shazam (D, later changed to a B)April 13 — MGMT: Congratulations (B+)April 12 — Odds ‘n’ Sods: Robyn Hitchcock, RJD2, Scorpions, and More
April 9 — Murder by Death: Good Morning, Magpie (B-)April 8 — Harlem: Hippies (C+)April 7 — Slow Club: Yeah, So (B)April 6 — Black Francis: NonStopErotik (B+)April 5 — Growing: Pumps! (F)
April 2 — Holly Golightly and the Brokeoffs: Medicine County (B)April 1 — Dum Dum Girls: I Will Be (A-)March 31 — The Dillinger Escape Plan: Option Paralysis (B+)March 30 — Local Natives: Gorilla Manor (B)March 29 — The Bird and the Bee: Interpreting the Masters: Hall & Oates (C)
March 26 — Eddy Current Suppression Ring: Rush to Relax (C+)March 25 — Let’s Wrestle: In the Court of the Wrestling Let’s (B)March 24 — Goldfrapp: Head First (D)March 23 — She & Him: Volume 2 (A-)March 22 — Broken Bells: Broken Bells (C+)
March 19 — Locksley: Be In Love (B)March 18 — jj: jj no. 3 (C-)March 17 — Xiu Xiu: Dear God, I Hate Myself (D+)March 16 — Drive By Truckers: The Big To-Do (B-)March 15 — April Smith and the Great Picture Show: Songs for a Sinking Ship (C)
March 12 — The Morning Benders: Big Echo (C+)March 11 — Black Rebel Motorcycle Club: Beat the Devil’s Tattoos (B)March 10 — Acrassicauda: Only the Dead See the End of War (C-)March 9 — Titus Andronicus: The Monitor (B+)March 8 — Ted Leo and the Pharmacists: The Brutalist Bricks (A)
March 5 — Liars: Sisterworld (A-)March 4 — Gorillaz: Plastic Beach (A-)March 3 — Johnny Cash: American VI: Ain’t No Grave (B+)March 2 — High on Fire: Snakes for the Divine (C)March 1 — Joanna Newsom: Have One on Me (C)
Feb. 26 — Freeway & Jake One: The Stimulus Package (D)Feb. 25 — Past Lives: Tapestry of Webs (B-)Feb. 24 — Shout Out Louds: Work (B)Feb. 23 — Brian Jonestown Massacre: Who Killed Sgt. Pepper? (B+)Feb. 22 — Shearwater: The Golden Archipelago (D+)
Feb. 19 — The Strange Boys: Be Brave (B+)Feb. 18 — Tindersticks: Falling Down a Mountain (A)Feb. 17 — Lightspeed Champion: Life Is Sweet! Nice to Meet You (C-)Feb. 16 — Adam Green: Minor Love (B-)Feb. 15 — Juliana Hatfield: Peace & Love (B+)
Feb. 12 — Massive Attack: Heligoland (C-)Feb. 11 — The Watson Twins: Talking to You, Talking to Me (C-)Feb. 10 — Hot Chip: One Life Stand (B+)Feb. 9 — You Say Party! We Say Die!: XXXX (B+)Feb. 8 — Allison Moorer: Crows (B)
Feb. 5 — Joe Pug: Messenger (C)Feb. 4 — The Soft Pack: The Soft Pack (A)Feb. 3 — Polysics: Absolute Polysics (B-)Feb. 2 — Pierced Arrows: Descending Shadows (A-)Feb. 1 — The Brunettes: Paper Doll (B-)
Jan. 29 — Basia Bulat: Heart of My Own (C)Jan. 28 — Priestess: Prior to the Fire (B)Jan. 27 — The Magnetic Fields: Realism (B)Jan. 26 — Four Tet: There Is Love in You (D)Jan. 25 — Delphic: Acolyte (C+)
Jan. 22 — The Hot Rats: Turn Ons (B+)Jan. 21 — Los Campesinos!: Romance Is Boring (A-)Jan. 20 — Midlake: The Courage of Others (D-)Jan. 19 — Laura Veirs: July Flame (B+)Jan. 18 — Beach House: Teen Dream (C)
Jan. 15 — Charlotte Gainsbourg: IRM (B)Jan. 14 — OK Go: Of the Blue Colour of the Sky (D)Jan. 13 — Eels: End Times (A-)Jan. 12 — Spoon: Transference (B)Jan. 11 — Editors: In This Light and On This Evening (D+)
Jan. 8 — Surfer Blood: Astro Coast (B+)Jan. 7 — Yeasayer: Odd Blood (C-)Jan. 6 — Cold War Kids: Behave Yourself EP (B+)Jan. 5 — Vampire Weekend: Contra (D+)Jan. 4 — Texas Tornados: Está Bueno! (B)
Jan. 1 — Scanners: Submarine (B-)