Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Do It Together Boston :: 2010 Review, Part II



On a snowless day in January, I moved to Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. Since the previous summer I had been working to promote and prepare releases with an art collective called The Whitehaus Family Record. Through the group and other associated collectives, I saw most of my favorite shows of 2010 and the Whitehaus even had a hand in one of my favorite records of 2010.

My new apartment was just down the street from their four story house that is best explained as a living and breathing art project. Junk, toys and broken instruments dangle from every corner and every chandelier as an ongoing dumpster diving piece. The place houses anywhere from ten to fifteen people, stacked high on homemade bunk beds or sometimes even living behind a curtain under the stairs. They are any manner of artist including poets, musicians, and visual artists. On any given day, one could walk into the house and find them performing a number of rarities: from remixing the audio from children’s VHSs on a floor littered with pedals to eating extremely salty oysters and preparing a living beverage called Kombucha.

What makes the Whitehaus and also the other musicians in Boston all the more interesting is that they tend to share a collective ethic both musically and spiritually. At the Whitehaus they call it The Yes Wave, and it also serves as their genre to subvert categorization. Sure, it’s based around openness , inclusion, and anti-elitistism, but it’s really about addressing and accepting everything that comes your way. To welcome whoever or whatever comes to your door and wants to play in your living room, to be open to whatever someone is trying to show you.

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Thursday, April 15, 2010

Breakfast of Champs Records


Syrup slides down the fretboard of a guitar and fills in the crannies of the waffle resting in the acoustic's sound hole. Pancakes are impaled on a high hat, hash browns bounce on a snare drum, and bacon and sausage are lined up along the keys of his synthesizer. Or, at least that's one way of imagining how Breakfast of Champs began.

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Sunday, February 07, 2010

The Whitehaus Family Record Family Record



"A hootenanny captured in vinyl"

The artists of Jamaica Plain collective, The Whitehaus Family Record, present an onslaught of the best tracks from label artists and friends. This sampler reflects their shows called ‘hootenannies,’ which feature a wide spectrum of audible enjoyables, from slam poetry to acoustics to psychedelics. It’s a little ‘hoot’ captured in the grooves of this vinyl only double LP.

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Wednesday, February 03, 2010

The Whitehaus Family Record


On any given weekend night in Jamaica Plain, by some fleeting word of mouth from friends of friends of friends you might wander up the dim wooden porch that is decorated with polaroids or a gutted antique radio or other found art projects. Upon entering this house you’ll realize that it might be the strangest and most interesting place you could’ve gone tonight. Creativity is strung from the ceilings and walls as a dumpster diving collage of broken instruments and equipment, random knick knacks and toys. The house itself buzzes and croons, becoming an amplifier for anything from sloppy, silly, sensitive folk to psyche piercing digital experiments. Its white rooms transform into a stage, a screen and willing host to various performance and projection anomalies. It’s more than just a living art project, a venue, a DIY record label or an art collective; it’s the Whitehaus Family Record.

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Thursday, August 06, 2009

Weirdstock Presented By The Whitehaus Family Record

The Whitehaus Family Record is an impressive DIY artists collective/record label/music venus/nonsense anonymous based out of Jamaica Plain. They've got some amazing bands that will be storming the country very soon, including Many Mansions, Gracious Calamity, Manners, Peace, Loving and many many more. I'm going to do a feature on them soon.

For now, I've got some news about an upcoming annual experimental, noise and psycadelic festival called Weirdstock. The event will take place on the 40th anniversary of
Woodstock weekend, and will feature 50 experimental acts from
different parts of New England and beyond. Three days, fifty bands, all ages.

Aug 14th-16th
YMCA Theater
820 Mass Ave.
Cambridge, MA
$7 for one day, $12 for two days and $15 for three days.
Here's the semi-official line-up and set times:

FRIDAY AUGUST 14
6:00 Jacob Mashak S
6:30 TBA
7:00 George Myers S
7:30 Skeletons Out F
8:30 Behavior S
9:00 White Limousine and Impatient Truck with Special Guest F
(chris cooper of Fat Worm of Error)
9:30 Harry Merry S
10:00 Julian Lynch S
10:30 Mudboy F
11:00 Keith Fullerton Whitman + Geoff Mullen S

SATURDAY AUG 15
1:00 Grass Tower S
1:30 Dick Heaven S
2:00 Psych Fam F
2:30Casey Rocheteau S
3:00 The Great Valley S
3:30 Invisible Circle F
4:00 The Hard Nips S
4:30 Tooth Ache F
5:00 Son of Salami/Psychic Vagina S
5:30 Many Mansions F
6:00 INTERMISSION
6:30Eat Cloud S
7:00Guatemala City F
7:30Lord Jeff S
8:00 Quilt F
8:30 Tempera S
9:00 White Light S
9:30 Sore Eros F
10:00 Kurt Weisman S
10:30 Harmonizer S (Greg Davis)
11:00 Dreamhouse S?

SUNDAY AUG 16
1:00 Concord Ballet Orchestra Players F
1:30 Ppalmm S
2:00 Fractillian F
2:30 Color Guard S
3:00 Cave Bears F
3:30 Sacred Harp S
4:00 Metal and Glass F
4:30 Omnivore S
5:00 Duck That F
5:30 Robert Stillman S
6:00 INTERMISSION
6:30 Goat of Arms S
7:00 Cursillistas S
7:30The Human Hairs F
8:00 Ricardo Donoso S
8:30 Peace, Loving F
9:00 Radio Wonderland S
9:30 Truman Peyote F
10:00 QFWFQ Duo S
10:30 Animal Hospital F
11:00 Devil Music Ensemble S


http://whitehausfamilyrecord.com/

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