Pony’s Tale
Baltimore's Ponytail talks sugar, Halloween costumes and vocal technique
Started as a class project while studying at the Maryland Institute for Contemporary Art, Baltimore quartet Ponytail has quickly gathered a devoted following and media praise for their unique and energetic rock, sounding something like a hyperactive Don Caballero fronted by a scat-singing Ari Up. In front of a feeding-frenzy of guitar interplay and bursting drums, tiny lead singer Molly Siegel stands tall by bringing an extra intensity to her live performance.
In the live setting is where they shine brightest. At a sold-out performance at Brooklyn’s Bell House earlier this year, with Molly decked out in a Ray Lewis jersey and eye black, I witnessed first hand just how strong their performances can be. From start to finish, Ponytail exploded with a jolt of electricity that surged through the entire audience, resulting in one huge party.
On Saturday, Ponytail returns to Brooklyn for a headline gig at Music Hall of Williamsburg, where the band is sure to continue building their ongoing reputation as one of the most exciting young bands in music.
Vocalist Molly Seigel and drummer Jeremy Hyman took the time to answer a few questions.
New York Press: Molly, how did you begin singing in this scat-like non-lyrical style? And are you ever tempted to sing in a more conventional manner?
Molly Siegel: When we started I mentioned I might be interested in singing but I was pretty nervous. Dustin took me aside and suggested we meet alone and jam. We did and I started doing some crazy vocalizing—kind of operatic—and we both thought it could work. I started doing it at practice. It took me awhile to get comfortable for sure. I always knew I didn't like what a lot of vocalists were doing and wanted to do something less traditional. It also just fit the music to me. I do want to do more traditional singing and I feel like I am already doing more on Ice Cream Spiritual.
Ponytail has quickly become known for the energy of the live performances. What is the biggest challenge in capturing that energy in the studio?
MS: I think the studio by definition is a more sterile environment and just knowing you can do it again puts you in a calmer and more critical space. I mean, just not having an audience to play off of is huge too. We tried to do as much of the recording as possible live playing together in the studio. I had to be in an isobooth though which was weird but kind of amazing. It was a really reflective and meditative space, which felt really different than being in front of people. It wasn't reflective because of them it was because I was actually alone.
Jeremy Hyman: The last record was recorded live for the most part. I was set up in a big room with two smaller adjoining rooms in one of those rooms were Dustin and Ken’s amps, they were in my room with their cables snaked under the door, so we could look at each other. Molly’s room had a glass door but we kept it open so she could here the drums a bit more naturally. That along with J. Robbins pretty much made it pretty easy.
You've played a great many shows in New York over the last few years, which has been the most memorable, and why?
MS: Hmmmm hard one. I think our first show, at the Cakeshop, is really memorable because it was the first—we were all pretty nervous. The Halloween show at Danbro Studios was really memorable too, I mean even if I hadn’t have played and I had dressed up as the Kool-Aid Man anyway, it would be pretty memorable for me.
JH: Halloween at Danbro Studios was a big one for me—Molly was the Kool-Aid Man, I was George Washington, Dustin was a soccer ball and Ken was Jerry Seinfeld. We made this big wall out of paper and set it up at the front of the stage before we played, and a minute into the first song Molly busted through. It was our blockbuster moment.
Are you naturally as energetic people in everyday life as you are when performing?
MS: Yeah, but we gotta save our energies ya know? Tour sluggin’.
JH: Dustin once said something like, ‘If people acted the way they do on stage in real life that would be fucked up.’ We are all positive people, but there isn't sweat bursting out of my face every second, or Molly just spazzing down the street. That would be really funny though.
What do you do in order to prepare to play a concert? Lots of sugar? And which band member is the first to wear down?
MS: Oh man I actually used to eat sugar on stage back when I went more crazy. I play Tony Hawk and smoke tons of weed. . . No not really. I just do vocal warm ups and stretch and boring stuff like that. We all just mill around drinking beer or caffeine.
JH: I like to stretch and maybe have a little coffee in the hour before we play, but I think most of the getting psyched happens mentally. I probably get worn down pretty fast too.
Who are the bands who have been most inspiring to your music approach both live and on record?
MS: For me I have to say the Pixies first because I actually thought about their vocals a bunch while recording. I know the guys would say Lightning Bolt, The Who and The Boredoms. Also The Slits, big time.
JH: Talking Heads, Metallica, Devo, Beach Boys, the Pixies, Can, Donna Summers, Fleetwood Mac, Squarepusher.
What's your favorite "on the road" meal?
MS: In the U.S. it’s breakfast. In Europe, everything except breakfast.
JH: We really love food. I try to eat healthy but I can't resist a big Mexican-style breakfast.
What can fans expect next from Ponytail?
MS: Dark slide all the way. . .
JH: I have no idea!
Live Picks: Thursday, April 23
Thursday, 4.23 - Lou Reed (Metal Machine Trio) @ Gramercy Theater - 7:30 PM - 16+ - $50
Live Pick: Wednesday, April 22
Wednesday, 4.22 - Shilpa Ray & Her Happy Hookers, Depreciation Guild, Hooray For Earth, KiNo @ Bell House - 7:30 PM - 21+ - $10
Sometimes the Deleted Scenes are the Best Part
Deleted Scenes
The Studio @ Wesbter Hall, 4.18.09
While preparing to write about Deleted Scene's excellent performance at The Studio at Webster Hall on Saturday, I came across a press release with the band's own guide to how to write about Deleted Scenes:
It’s Easy To Write About Deleted Scenes
1. A DIY bootstraps story. Band (Deleted Scenes) from a town (Washington, DC) that made DIY into a religion begins booking its own national tours, and sets off in a shitty van to play one sparsely attended show at a time. Months after releasing their debut album to little fanfare and no press campaign, a lucky Pitchfork review (“brave and ferocious,” 8.0) suddenly makes people listen. Band does it the hard way, develops as a live force over three years, and is said to deserve every kind word. Yards of local column inches tell the story of a band “doing it right,” in the words of Washington Post music editor David Malitz.
2. An experimental pop odyssey. Band draws from disparate sources (Radiohead’s restlessness, Dischord’s angst, Morrissey’s sadness, Modest Mouse’s not-mere cleverness) to produce something heart-crushingly fun. Preparing to record its first CD (Birdseed Shirt), band discovers an obscure album of monster songs (The Rude Staircase’s Sookie Jump) and is compelled to hunt down its mysterious creator-the ingenious, first-nameless L. Skell-to recruit him as producer. After recording basic tracks with DC icon J. Robbins, the band holes up for nine painstaking months in a bedroom studio with the socially abhorrent Skell, hacking and screwing together this beast-a thing made less of chords and rhythms than of hair, wire, and skin. They release it on Skell’s own tiny What Delicate Recordings label-a record company run more like an art gallery, with Skell and Andrew Becker (Dischord Records) as its curators.
3. An existential coming of age. A former creative writing student quits fiction, and starts singing what he knows-spiritual despair, hope, disgust, and manic-depression. He goes on to create a confessional coming-of-age work that defies easy summary. Suffused with sadness, humor, self-loathing and post-post-modern self-dismissal, his lyrics are notable for contradictions that transcend simple irony. Lines like “I don’t mind you lying to me / If you think you’re right, you must be” (“Fake IDs”) and “you can fake whatever it takes” (“Get Your Shit Together For The Holidays”) offer problematic solutions-the only kind he can begin to accept. Other songs explore moral hypocrisy, romantic disappointment, and loss of faith with statements that double over on themselves: “If the water should rise, I’m going on a vacation” (“Mortal Sin”); “If you were counting on ideals or a dream / Stay awake, she will steal them in your sleep” (“One Long Country Song”); “Got God, got boring/ Lost God, stayed boring, got drunk” (“Got God”).
4. A band of bros. Four high-school friends put funk-rock on hold, part ways for college and/or shitty jobs, and reconvene, a few years older and more adventurous, to start Deleted Scenes. The musical rapport they developed as kids comes back as naturally as if it had never left, and the band is a unit. It plays like one, garnering one fawning live review after another. Songwriting pair Dan Scheuerman (guitar/vocals) and Matt Dowling (bass/keys/vibes/flexotone) explores a tendentious partnership-Dowling a dynamic rhythmic thinker and Scheuerman a quirky melodic one-and develop into a symbiotic unit, contributing equally to each song. Thoughtful and powerful drumming by Brian Hospital, and polyrhythm-heavy guitar playing by Chris Scheffey complete the Deleted Scenes sound.
From the looks of the crowd at The Studio, it's surprising that this is a band recently praised by Pitchfork. Usually that sort of indie cred will pack a room, but the crowd was mainly there for The Life & Times. Kansas City natives, The Life & Times put on a really solid performance, but it was Deleted Scenes who stole the show. Their blend of indie pop rock sounded fresh, with enough variety in the songs to make each song memorable.
It's surprising that their name isn't already all over the place, but in due time it will happen.
They'll be back in town on May 18, for a show at Pianos.
Live Pick: Tuesday, 4.21
Tuesday, 4.21 - Drink Up Buttercup @ Bruar Falls - 8:00 PM - 21+ - $tba
The New Yorker Mentioned My Show
149 7th St., between 2nd and 3rd Aves., Brooklyn (718-643-6510)—April 22: Shilpa Ray & Her Happy Hookers. Following the demise of her previous band, Beat the Devil, Ray has struck out on her own, further showcasing her seemingly indestructible vocal chords. She screams, growls, and snarls her way through the screeching muck of oil-stained garage rock and backwoods blues, cresting just above the waves of a sonic tumult that threatens to consume her minuscule frame. This tenuous command of a raucous sound makes for a volatile breed of rock and roll.
Live Pick: Monday, 4.20
Monday, 4.20 - Bloody Panda, Immanent Voiceless, Tropic of Nelson, Liturgy @ Public Assembly - 8:00 PM - 21+ - $7
Daytrotter: Paul Maziar
Fleeting Galleries Made Permanent
Apr 19, 2009
Words by Sean Moeller // Illustration by Johnnie Cluney // Sound engineering by Mike Gentry
The words that Paul Mazier writes are for real consumption, for people to eat like ripe strawberries and explosive oranges that shoot bullets of juice out like sniper fire, splattering onlookers or bystanders, depending on what the surrounding parties are up to. The words are the best burger that you’ve ever had and they’re like a dessert that within the first half-bite a person just closes their eyes and rolls the mouthful around to get all of their taste buds a flavor as the vocal cord lets out a satisfied groan. The thing about even the best of food is that no matter how memorable it is, the taste fades rather quickly, only to be unleashed again when recounted or elicited, recounted again in another meal...
To continue reading and download the Daytrotter session, head to Daytrotter.com.
Live Pick: Sunday, 4.19
Sunday, 4.19 - Dredg, Torche, From Monument to Masses @ Highline Ballroom - 6:00 PM - All Ages - $22.50a/
$25d
Live Pick: Saturday, 4.18
AON Sessions: Deleted Scenes, "Ithaca" from All Our Noise on Vimeo.
Saturday, 4.18 - The Life and Times, Deleted Scenes, Robots and Empire @ Studio at Webster Hall - 7:00 PM - 21+ - $10a//$12d
Live Pick: Friday, 4.17
Friday, 4.17 - Of Montreal, Janelle Monae, Ladybug Transistor @ Music Hall of Williamsburg - 8:00 PM - 16+ - $20
Wild Light Photo Published in Boston Globe
Wild Light gets crowd dancin
By Sarah Rodman
Watching the members of the Boston-by-way-of-New-Hampshire band Wild Light bounce around the stage at Great Scott Wednesday night, it was easy to see why the Killers thought the group would make an ideal opening act on their upcoming spring tour.
The buzz-building quartet offer top-shelf musical goods in an attractive package: energetic songs with earworm hooks, singalong choruses, and rhythmic swagger that can kill at a club - as it did at Great Scott - but will also hold up well in a hockey rink full of people waiting for the headliner to come on.
Live Picks: Thursday, 4.16
Thursday, 4.16 - The Walkmen, Beach House, Wild Light @ Webster Hall - 7:00 PM - 18+ - $20
Live Pick: Wednesday, 4.15
Wednesday, 4.15 - ada Surf, Holly Miranda, Underground Railroad @ Bell House - 7:30 PM - 18+ - $15
Live Pick: Tuesday, 4.14.09
Tuesday, 4.14 - Crooked Fingers, Wye Oak @ Bell House - 7:30 PM - 21+ - $12
Live Pick: Monday, 4.13.09
Monday, 4.13 - Neko Case, Crooked Fingers @ Nokia Theater - 7:00 PM - 16+ - $30
Live Pick: Sunday, 4.12.09
Sunday, 4.12 - Crippled Black Phoenix (members of Mogwai), Ascent of Everest, Charles Atlas @ Mercury Lounge - 7:30 PM - 21+ - $10











































