School of Rock: The Leftovers, Playing with the Queers at Respectable Street on Saturday


School of Rock is a new weekly column on Crossfade filling you in on acts playing in town that may be flying under your radar, but shouldn't. Click here for past installments.

When I was but a young teenage wannabe punk rocker, the Queers appealed to me straight away. First, and maybe most importantly as an entry point, they had a name that made parents frown. But more importantly as a sticking point were the Queers' sweet, sweet melodies. They were just rough enough around the edges to make you feel suitably snotty and aggressive by listening to them. But their harmonies and pop structures did a lot to fill the gaping hole created during that awkward teenage period when it was no longer cool to sing along to your parents' Beach Boys records. (Ah, the self-conscious folly of ultra-youth.)

Yes, there was a time when "pop-punk" meant all that -- beachy melodies and choruses over, you know, actual punk rock. Not all these bands with overly complicated names, forced "goofy" promo photos, and ugly neon shirts with huge letters. Seriously -- these are the hair bands of this era, all those musicians and their fans will be embarrassed by it in under two years.

Still, luckily there are still some bands making music that fulfills the original pop-punk promise: a fast-paced, updated digestion of the Ramones and all the delicious power pop, a la the Cars and Costello, that came after it. 

One such act is the Leftovers, who hail from Portland, Maine. (Seems kind of weird to us outer-space city slickers, but the Queers themselves come from B.F.E., New Hampshire, after all). Their new album, Eager to Please, is out now, and it's full of the kind of repetitive, catchy, sub-three-minute songs that would have fit in perfectly with everything in the heyday of the sadly defunct Lookout Records. If none of that rings a bell, and you miss Weezer when they still sang about surfing and weren't writing crappy novelty hits, you will also probably dig the Leftovers.
 
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School of Rock: Glass Candy 101

Categories: School of Rock
glass_candy.jpg
Ida No and Johnny Jewel of Glass Candy.
If you're planning to stop by the Vagabond tonight to check out Portland duo Glass Candy, you are definitely in for a disco-laced treat. But if your knowledge on the pair is pretty much equivalent to your knowledge of quantum physics, let us give you the cliff notes on Glass Candy.

While they've been making music as a pair since 1996, the duo released their debut Smashed Candy in 2001. However, it wouldn't be until the release of 2007's B/E/A/T/B/O/X when they would become critic darlings. Pitchfork, which gave the album an 8.1 rating, said "Glass Candy's previous false starts can now be dismissed as pulled punches, or a band in its genesis; either way, this record marks a flat-out improvement."

Singles like "Beatific," "Candy Castles," and "Digital Versicolor" insured the duo weren't only critical favorites but dancefloor staples as well.

But enough notes. Let's let the music speak for itself. After the jump, check out the video for "Digital Versicolor" and a live performance of "Beatific" at this year's Coachella.
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