Listen: Ra Ra Riot on NPR's Mountain Stage

Since they first met as students in Syracuse, New York, Ra Ra Riot has put a decade of experience performing under its collective belt. They draw influence from the experimental side classic rock like The Police and Talking Heads, but they also feature a small string section, which sometimes leads to their music being called “chamber pop,” like in this performance of “Water.”

This week’s broadcast also features performances from Walter Martin, I Draw Slow, Overcoats, and West Virginia’s own indie rock sensation Ona.

Like what you hear? Download the entire show right now on the Mountain Stage podcast (just look for Ep. 864). While you’re at it, make sure to subscribe, leave us a rating/review and send us a tweet with your favorite song: we’re @mountainstage

Tu(n)esday Wrap-Up: J'Ona, 'A Change of Tune' Posters & Movie Music Magic

Missed out on last week’s ‘A Change of Tune’? Don’t know what to expect in the week to come? Here’s your Tu(n)esday Wrap-Up.

Interview(s):

Last Sunday’s Mountain Stage was a dream. Between our good friends Ona making their Mountain Stage debut to seeing our first indie music crush Ra Ra Riot synth-pop it out to crushing over Overcoats’ unsigned folktronica sound, the show was our favorite musical moment of 2016 (so far, that is). The show will be available on VuHaus and NPR Music in the near future. In the meantime, you can hear our chats with Ra Ra Riot and Ona on our website and listen to Overcoats on our past show playlists.

Credit Josh Saul
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Joni Ona = J’ona

‘A Change of Tune’ Feb. 21 Playlist / Downloads:

Speaking of playlists, check out last week’s #achangeoftune playlist below and find downloads for most of the songs from our West Virginia public library friends on Freegal.

Alabama Shakes vs. Rolling Stones- “Don’t Want to Miss You No More”

Santigold- “Chasing Shadows”

Francis- “Horses”

Andrew Bird- “Capsized”

DIIV- “Is the Is Are”

Matthew White- “Cool Out” feat. Natalie Prass

Qiet- “Daddy’s Too Old”

The Sea The Sea- “Set Us Free”

Ra Ra Riot- “Foreign Lovers”

Rostam- “Wood”

Weezer- “Thank God for Girls”

Thao and the Get Down Stay Down- “Nobody Dies”

Alex G- “Mary”

Hannah Grace- “Keep Your Love”

The Tulips- “Heroes” (David Bowie cover)

The Week to Come:

– We’re proud to announce that ‘A Change of Tune’ will present our #WVmusic friends The Sea The Sea and Qiet‘s double album release show this Saturday, February 27 at the Clay Center in Charleston. Find out more about the show here and pick up your tickets here. (Did we mention we’ll have ‘A Change of Tune’ Qiet/The Sea The Sea posters for sale?)

Credit J. Travis Morton
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– Speaking of Qiet, we had the pleasure of sitting down with the eclectic rock band’s frontman to chat music and mountains. Keep an eye on our page and our socials for the complete chat when it goes live this Friday.

– In honor of this Sunday’s Oscars ceremony, ‘A Change of Tune’ is heading to the movies! Tune in this Saturday from 10-11pm on West Virginia Public Broadcasting to hear movie music tunes and to win tickets to the West Virginia International Film Festival’s spring film festival and their February 28 Oscar Party.

– Have any music rec’s? Send them our way! You can reach the show @achangeoftune on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. And if you’re a fan of #WVmusic discovery, support ‘A Change of Tune’ by becoming a member of West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

WATCH LIVE: Mountain Stage feat. Ra Ra Riot, I Draw Slow, Overcoats, Walter Martin & Ona

This Sunday, February 21, point your browser to MountainStage.org at 7pm EST to watch a LIVE recording of Mountain Stage with Larry Groce via VuHaus.

Sunday’s performance at Charleston’s Culture Center Theater marks Mountain Stage’s 864th episode and features performances by seminal indie rockers Ra Ra Riot, five-piece Irish bluegrass band I Draw Slow, folk soul duo Overcoats, The Walkmen’s Walter Martin and West Virginian rock’n’rollers Ona. Our radio listeners will hear this episode on over 150 NPR stations via NPR Music starting April 15.

For those of you watching along online, make sure to share your listening/watching experience with us! Use #MountainStage and #gotowv.

Tag Mountain Stage on Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr and Facebook. Find VuHaus on Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr and Facebook.

Watch more Mountain Stage performances on VuHaus.

Not Baroque Pop, Not Indie Rock: Meet the Reconstructed Ra Ra Riot

Valentine’s Day is just around the corner, and although we tend to celebrate it by sharing candy, chocolates, and even #NPRvalentines, A Change of Tune’s going to share something else with you: our first indie music crush.

In 2007, this band released their self-titled debut EP that we immediately fell in love with. In 2013, they changed musical directions and did something a little bit more dark, a little bit more futuristic. And the weekend of February 19, 2016, they will release their fourth full-length Need Your Light and make their second appearance on a sold-out Mountain Stage in Charleston, West Virginia.

Ra Ra Riot’s frontman Wes Miles sat down to talk about the band’s new record, their history with Vampire Weekend’s Rostam Batmanglij (who announced his departure from the band shortly after this interview), Ra Ra Riot’s “indie baroque pop” label, and how David Bowie plays a quiet but important role in their music.

Ra Ra Riot will release Need Your Light via Barsuk Records on February 19, and they’ll appear on a sold-out Mountain Stage in Charleston, West Virginia that Sunday. Don’t have a ticket? Watch the performance LIVE Sunday, February 21 at 7pm EST on mountainstage.org. And to hear more of from Ra Ra Riot, tune in to A Change of Tune, airing Saturdays at 10pm EST on West Virginia Public Broadcasting.

Interview Highlights

On David Bowie’s influence on Ra Ra Riot:

He doesn’t have an easy-to-hear influence on us. Listening to our music, I’m not sure you would hear it. But when I was in high school, I was really, really into Hunky Dory; I listened to that record all the time. He definitely had an impact on me and how I perceived music and what I thought was cool. The one thing I remember when I was in high school, the thing I thought that was really cool (well, one of the things I thought was really cool) about [David Bowie] was that he was a sax player, and I also played saxophone. Back in high school, when you’re in concert band, it’s like, “Ugh, playing wind instruments isn’t that cool.” But when I found out he was a sax player, I was like, “Huh, yeah, that is cool. Saxophones can be really cool. David Bowie plays saxophone!” I just thought that was really neat.

On the passing of the Ra Ra Riot’s first drummer:

Early on [in Ra Ra Riot], our drummer passed away. John Pike. He was a huge influence on our first record in a concrete way. Obviously, a lot of things I do were changed by the way he saw music. He was a good friend of mine since freshmen year of college. He was a really special musician, one of those people that could hear something and repeat it in their own style, almost without thinking about it. He had a really imaginative sense of melody and lyrics. He was a very important person in my musical life and in the band’s creation, concretely in the first record and everything after that, too.

On Ra Ra Riot’s reputation of being a baroque pop band:

Yes. Yes, I am very sick of it. But that’s ok because I also don’t particularly like indie either. I think it’s misused a little bit sometimes, especially when people call a band on a major label indie. If any musician or artist really wants to express themself and find something that hasn’t been done before, it’s going to be tough to describe in words. Probably part of what changed us is that we wanted to destroy everything Ra Ra Riot was before and start building it up from scratch. And I think Beta Love was kind of the destruction of all that, and of course we alienated a few people and maybe made some… but a lot of people stood by us as well! And that made us feel really great. So Need Your Light is the reconstruction of who we are and the things that we want to do.

On working with Rostam Batmanglij (producer of Need Your Light and former Vampire Weekend member):

I met Rostam through Ezra [Koening, Vampire Weekend’s frontman]. Ezra and I went to elementary school through high school together, and we were in maybe a dozen or 15 bands together throughout that span. So when we went to different colleges, and I would come back to visit him, that’s when I met Rostam. And I think being all musicians, we would send each other stuff and I sent Rostam and Ezra an early demo of “Can You Tell” in 2004 or 2005. And I think pretty soon after that, Rostam made a new version of it and sent me a track. And that was kind of the beginning of Discovery [Rostam and Wes’ side project], which sort of predates Ra Ra Riot and Vampire Weekend by a few months or maybe a year. But it took us a lot longer for us to finish [Discovery’s debut release LP] than either of the bands’ first records.

On being a part of Vampire Weekend (the movie):

Vampire Weekend was originally going to be a movie that we were working on [laughing] with Ezra. I think it was… there’s a trailer on Vimeo, maybe on YouTube, too… but in the trailer it says “Christmas 2005.” It would have been a vampire movie about a boy trying to get to Cape Cod so he could be the mayor.

https://vimeo.com/28464″>Vampire Weekend Trailer from https://vimeo.com/ezra”>ezra on Vimeo.

On his <3 of Ra Ra Riot:

It’s probably when I’m happiest in my life, when I’m singing. I always wanted to be a musician, but I never studied it formally. I studied physics in college, and I thought about being an engineer or doing theoretical physics. You know, all of these things that pass through your mind when you realize you’re a senior in college and don’t have any idea what you’re going to do next year [laughing]. So I’m very glad because I think all of those things would have been interesting but [I don’t think I would have been as happy]. Performing the way we do is kind of what gives me purpose in life, I think.

On Ra Ra Riot’s fourth full-length release Need Your Light:

It’s warmer. It’s got a warmth that Beta Love didn’t have, by design. But it’s also, I think, my best vocal performance from start to finish on a record, and especially on the songs that Rostam and I worked on [“Need Your Light” and “Water”]. Those are definitely two of (if not the top three or top five of) the best vocal performances I’ve ever done. It’s like you said: it’s not getting back to our roots, necessarily, but it’s a warmer, brighter view of the world.

On Ra Ra Riot’s last appearance on NPR’s Mountain Stage with Larry Groce in 2011:

I have a memory of drinking some moonshine from the first show. Yeah, that’s imprinted in my memory forever. It’s something I had never done anywhere else: drinking homemade liquor of any sort, let alone moonshine. Yeah, that was pretty cool.

Mountain Stage After Midnight: November 8 & 9

Remember, remember the 8th and 9th of November… for another revolutionary edition of “Mountain Stage After Midnight!” Broadcast from 1am-5am Saturday and Sunday mornings here on West Virginia Public Radio, “Mountain Stage After Midnight” takes the best episodes from the show’s 31 year history and shares their memories and songs with our late-night listeners. Each week we’ll hand-pick two of our favorite episodes that’ll alternate order each night.

Experience  a bit of funk and a bit of rock Saturday November 8 and Sunday November on “Mountain Stage After Midnight.”

First up is a June 2011 show featuring Nashville indie rocker Tristen, talented upright bassist Amy LaVere (who is returning to Mountain Stage later this month), musical partners-in-crime Martin Jones & Don Dixon (the former of which is performing in the same Mountain Stage show as LaVere later this month), Irish indie pop-rock group Bell X1 and the legendary Blind Boys of Alabama.

Credit Brian Blauser / Mountain Stage
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Ra Ra Riot brought their baroque pop-rock to Mountain Stage in 2011.

Next is another 2011 show featuring the desert blues diva Khaira Arby, the “Empress of the Unexpected” Susan Werner, coffehouse folkers Elizabeth & the Catapult, Southern blues rocker JJ Grey and legendary indie rock group Ra Ra Riot. 

Did you hear that Mountain Stage has a shiny new website with all the music news and events you’d ever want? You can learn more about the show’s past, present and future over on FacebookTwitterTumblr, and Instagram. And if you’re in the mood for more great jams, make sure to subscribe to The Mountain Stage Podcast to hear why Mountain Stage remains the home of live music on public radio.

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