WHAT WEEKLY

CMJ Crowd Discovers Indie Immigrants of Oz

16 November 2014

★ Abts & LAbts

By Mother’s Day Orphan Productions. Writers: David Leigh Abts, Aja Becher, Leslie Blodgett. Photos: Elizabeth A. Abts

 

Immigrant Union Plays CMJ

Keep Jim Morrison dead. An Aussie by marriage, Immigrant Union frontman Brent DeBoer is better known as The Dandy Warhols’ drummer, but watching him onstage with Bob Harrow and their band, he reminds you that tuning a guitar is something to get wet over. He spends half his time with these guys in Melbourne, Victoria, and they’ve just wrapped up their North American tour. Not to blow sunshine up the rear ends of true artistes, but this set is a ladder to the sun at the CMJ Music Marathon.

Immigrant Union’s second album, Anyway, is self-described as country-alt-folk-psychedelic rock. New Yorkers had the rare opportunity to see them up to three times on this tour. They played the CBGB Showcase at Pianos in the Lower East Side, and had a late-late midweek slot at CMJ as well. So by Friday, they’ve developed a crowd of fans that all try to pack in to Pete’s Candy Store for the last New York gig of the tour.

The venue is already hot and sweaty from previous bands. I have a chance to talk to the band before they go on stage, but I only have time for one question. I dig in: “Are you pumped for your set?”

Drummer Paddy McGrath-Lester responds with a story of his own. He’s at the Rod Laver Arena in Melbourne, and Ozzy Osbourne is winding up for his final song. He screams out to the crowd, “This is going to be our last song. Unless you really lose it, then we’ll come back out and do another.” The fans respond with a tepid golf clap. Ozzy comes back for an encore anyway.

Perhaps that humility, or lack thereof, made an impact. Immigrant Union takes the stage and suddenly you can let go of all your genre expectations. Your dad can get down, your mom can pop a hip, and even the toughest wallflowers around me start to shake down. The set list sounds like some fantasy radio DJ: psych rock, folk country, and indie pop no longer require a different station for each tune.

Damn catchy and lyrically-bound, these indie immigrants remind us we are all united in the here and now from different places – in life, in love and in music.

On this tour the five-piece saw the Northeast from Boston to the Jersey shore to Philly; charged across to Detroit, Chicago, and Cincinnati; and ended with a West coast leg, hitting Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle.

Everywhere they have gone, the band has left more than a few people wondering: When will you be coming back? The New York Times says, “Immigrant Union revived the folk-rock wing of psychedelia.” The track “War is Peace” is praised as a favorite new song by NPR Music.

The fun has ended (for now) with a show in DeBoer’s hometown of Portland Oregon.

Also pictured: Peter Lubulwa on keyboard and Ben Street on bass.

Bonus: listen to “Pixie Crib,” a track from Immigrant Union cofounder Bob Harrow, here.
Check out Immigrant Union online here.

This has been another Mother’s Day Orphan Production, www.mothersdaystories.com
Photos by Elizabeth A. Abts.



fashion

Giordano’s Giant Nudes

Giordano’s project may have done more than anything else to commemorate thirty years of Artscape, and it wasn’t even part…

The Interrupted Show

Designs by Stephanie Bradshaw

Fashion Photographer Sean Scheidt

Dyed For You

Startup Sheik :: The Swavor Story

nightlife

New Year’s Eve 2010

Farida Shourbaji at Red Maple on New Year’s Eve 2010-2011. Photo by Theresa Keil New Year’s Revolution The New Year…

Emily Wells: Symphony 1 In the Barrel of a Gun

Peace Spore

Sick Weapons Last Show at Golden West

Murder Ink at Single Carrot Theatre

Boite: Show and Tell

social innovation

#SaveADopeBoy

“You know, people look at the young drug dealers in this city like they a menace. Man, these are kids.…

788 Washington Blvd.

The Baltimore Algebra Project

Primal Guerrilla Marketing

A Dream in Cherry Hill

Baltimore Social Innovation Journal Launches

artist profiles

Big Fat Bawlmer Wedding

Last weekend we attended My Big Fat Bawlmer Wedding, a yearly fundraiser for The Baltimore Art & Music Project. The event…

They’re Not Making Art Anymore :: An Interview with Fred Lazarus IV

Gemini Moon

Navasha Daya: Rebirthed Above Ground

The Blind Biker

BROS

sustainability

Strange Folks at Ash Street Garden

Urban gardens are sprouting up all over Baltimore. If you don't have a small plot of land for growing food,…

Big Green Pirate Party

Baltimore Free Farm

Welcome to the Free Farm

Farmageddon

Fixing The Future