Black Plastic Bag: Washington City Paper's Music Blog

Author Archive

Oxford Collapse @ Black Cat

My favorite songs usually never get me the first time around. And bands are kind of the same way with me.

On Saturday night, Oxford Collapse herded us like sheep at the sold-out Black Cat and proceeded to rock, spazz, joke and howl their way into my stern little heart. It was my first time seeing the band live, and while I had little doubt they would bring their famously blistering rock, I was secretly prepared for the band to be high on Brooklyn hipster lyrical irony, and low on the kind of heart found in bands who can weather the gauntlet of the music industry for more than a few buzz-surfing years.

As the trio took the stage, five minutes of disorder ensued. Then with a loud and jarring “Neighbors! Neighbors!” opening chant, Oxford Collapse jolted the audience stage-ward, compelling the crowd to zero in on them with an impressive sense of duty.

The band plowed through their set, featuring old favorites, along with new tunes off of the forthcoming Bits (released Aug. 5—that’s tomorrow!). Between songs, they stopped only long enough to catch their breath. Frontman Mike Pace even had the boyish gall to openly berate a fan for the fashion faux pas of wearing the shirt of the band he was going to see. By the middle of their set, it was clear their strengths lay in Adam Rizer’s driving bass grooves overlaid with Pace’s jagged, crunchy, riffy guitar. Their songs switched gears at the drop of a dime, from spasmodic punk rock—played in the kind of tumultuous lock-step that would compel DC’s earliest punk bands to croon “What a Wonderful World”—to melodic lulls that were pretty in an understated way. All of this was peppered with Pace’s infectious yelps of “ooh hoo hoo!” and loud sing-along choruses fit for an arena.

The set’s highlights included “Electric Arc,” the opening track off of Bits, on which Pace and Rizer took turns repeatedly pleading: “I can’t remember things/I can’t remember things/I just don’t know what to do hoo hoo.” I felt little empathy the first time around. The fourth time around, I found myself anxiously entangled in the fray of this post-modern memory crisis, if only by sheer power of their award-winning, earnest delivery. The crowd pleaser of the night, however, was a brotherly beer-chugging number on which We Are Scientists’ Keith Murray guested. Before taking their leave, the band roared through “Please Visit Your National Parks,” best known for an inscrutably cute and strange video starring sheep on a farm and vintage cassette tapes.

It’s been said that Oxford Collapse was born of a joke. Certainly, music has every right to be downright fun, but it also ain’t a joke. It’s a tough balancing act that the Brooklyn boys of Oxford Collapse managed to pull off in ramshackle style, brandishing their equal parts charm and pure indie pop earnestness.

Oxford Collapse Get Up and Do It Some More

Four full-length records in about four years … don’t America’s indie rockers have TVs anymore?

But it’s clear that Oxford Collapse are having too much fun not to be churning out their raucous, sing-along pop tunes on automatic. The Brooklyn-based art pop trio are best known for keeping alive the poignant embers of guitar-driven ’80s college rock and “jangular” pop.

Oxford Collapse’s forthcoming album, Bits, is a departure from the trio’s past efforts. In Sub Pop-inspired PR poetry, the band’s previous work “reflected an almost preternatural awareness of the ['80s college-rock mindset] and was/is excitable and bounding against prison walls of their own device.” Um. Well that’s a charming way of saying that the new record sees the the band loosening up the creative process, overthinking things less and writing songs with greater urgency and compulsion.

In fact the band had 30 songs worth of material going into the studio for this record, forcing some spillage of the surplus exuberance onto two separate vinyl releases (the Spike of Bensonhurst 7-inch on Flameshovel Records and the Hann-Byrd 12-inch on Comedy Minus One).

If that doesn’t tide you over until Aug. 5, when Bits is released, then go see their joyous, blistering live show this Saturday, Aug. 2 at Black Cat, alongside We Are Scientists and Frightened Rabbit. Expect to be entreated with soaring melodies, frenetic guitars, and some of the noisiest heartfelt songs you’ve heard in a long time.

Here is Oxford Collapse’s video for “The Birthday Wars,” a track off of Bits:

You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

Inauguration Housing
DC SEARCH
calendar
restaurants
movies
classified
personals

Find an Event

Select the type of event, and the particular day this week below.

Submit your event to the City Paper's Event Calendar.

Find a Restaurant

Enter a restaurant name, or select a cuisine and neighborhood below.

Find a Movie

Select a movie theater in the box below to see a list of all movies at that theater.

...Or view a full list of theaters, films, and showtimes.

Search Classified Ads

Post a Classified Ad

Find It

Find a Match

Age range: to
Find It

Who saw you? Check I Saw You
Looking for something kinky? Wild Side

City Paper Newsletter
advertisement
CarTango

Get a Car

Search inventory on the City Paper's CarTango website:

CP Events

Come take a walk

This Week

Current Issue
The Issue of Nov. 20 - 26, 2008

This Week in
City Paper History

  • Slum Kind of Wonderful
    For nearly two decades, working-class tenants in a Columbia Heights building suffered through rats, water leaks, and a notorious slumlord. A deed transfer should eliminate all of the above.
    Nov. 14 - 20, 2003
  • The Office
    Plenty of bosses have taken on the DCPS headquarters and failed. Will Michelle Rhee be any different?
    Nov. 15 - 21, 2007
  • What Does $26,790 Buy Your 4-year-old?
    At Sidwell Friends, kids wash down their organic veggies with a humble Quaker sensibility.
    Nov. 15 - 21, 2007
advertisement
advertisement