The Eye on the Triangle team went out to cover the annual Shack-A-Thon fundraiser on the NCSU Brickyard. Also in this episode: An interview with student body president Kelly Hook, the Gardening Minute, Restaurant Review, and analysis of NCSU’s 3-0 start to the football season.
Author: WKNC Admin
Stone Temple Pilots have announced a change in tour dates for a handful of their upcoming shows, including two in North Carolina. Previously scheduled to play Tuesday, October 5 at the Raleigh Amphitheater, Stone Temple Pilots will now perform two weeks later on Tuesday, October 19. The October 6 show at Charlotte’s Road Runner Mobile Amphitheatre will now be October 20. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club will still open for both Live Nation shows. All purchased tickets for the original dates will be honored for the rescheduled shows.
WKNC will also have tickets to the rescheduled show to give away the week of October 11.
Durham-based signer/songwriter Brett Harris will be playing a free live acoustic set this Thursday (9/23) at the WKNC shack in the Brickyard at NCSU. The set will start at 7:30pm, and donations for Habitat for Humanity are greatly appreciated!
Shack-a-Thon is an annual fundraiser for Habitat for Humanity in which participant student groups build shacks on the Birkcyard to be consistently occupied by their members for the entire week. The WKNC shack is located at the far west edge of the Brickyard. Parking will be available on Hillsborough Street and throughout campus.
(If you have flashlights or a lantern– they will be greatly appreciated, as power cords are FORBIDDEN at Shack-a-Thon.)
It’s beginning to be my favorite time of the year— it’s starting to cool off, classes are in full swing, and there are lots of LOCAL SHOWS!
This week, we have some giveaways for these local shows, including:
9/23: Jenny and Johnny at Cat’s Cradle
9/25: James Dunn w/ Kennebec at The Pour House
10/26: Muse with Metric at The RBC Center
Other giveaways:
Movie tickets: Resident Evil: Afterlife at Crossroads Cary
CDs: Colour Revolt
Of course, to win these tickets, you must listen to WKNC.
For more information on local shows, check out our rock report.
Also, come out to Shack-a-Thon in the NCSU Brickyard Thursday, 9/23, for a free show by Brett Harris!
WKNC @ Shack-A-Thon
For those of you unfamiliar with the Habitat for Humanity annual tradition, Shack-a-Thon, it is a week-long fundraising event for Habitat for Humanity of Wake County. Campus organizations build a shack and live in it all week, 24/7, panhandling for donations to Habitat.
WKNC is present this year at Shack-a-Thon, providing publicity, T-shirt making, cornhole, and a concert by Durham local Brett Harris. He will be performing September 23 at 7:30 p.m. in the WKNC Shack/Stage.
Come and check out the awesome shack in The Brickyard near Bostian Hall!
Pictures will be up soon. Stay tuned to hear about all the shenanigans occurring this week. As always, listen to WKNC for updates, live streaming from Shack-a-Thon, and the best in independent music!
Come down to Tir Na nOg and WKNC’s Local Band Local Beer night on Thursday 9/23 to see Veelee, Motor Skills, and Cassis Orange! As always there will be delicious local beer on tap. BY THE WAY the pub just recently got Big Boss’s famous pumpkin ale, Harvest Time on tap… Yum yum yumm! The show is FREE and starts at 10 p.m. Ages 21+.
“To put it plainly: Three Sides, the debut EP from Chapel Hill duo Veelee, joins Wood Ear’s The Hard Way and Bowerbirds’ Danger at Sea as recent short, self-made Triangle debuts that are alarmingly, stop-what-you’re-doing-and-memorize-this good.” – Grayson Currin, The Independent
My favorite local duo. Matt and Ginger are the two sweetest musicians I know. If you didn’t catch them at Hopscotch or at our LBLB day party last Friday, here is your chance! The hottest Raleigh sensation!
Motor Skills
“Motor Skills debuted last year with “Right as Hell,” one of several stunning surprises on the excellent North Carolina compilation, Hear Here: The Triangle. Pitting a skittering electronic beat reminiscent of late Radiohead against a steely-eyed, dark-lined anthem as addictive as anything Interpol has ever written, “Right as Hell” put Motor Skills high atop the must-watch list.” – HopscotchMusicFest.com
With the addition of two new band mates, this poppy, electronic-ish group is sounding better than ever. Three cheers for these guys.
“The result of Cassis Orange’s ode to loneliness was a keyboard-laden four-track self-titled indie pop E.P., which upon being released onto an unsuspecting Internet, became a blogosphere sensation, garnering glowing reviews…” – The Fayetteville Feed
This is one of my new favorties in local music. Not sure where exactly these guys came from, felt like nowhere! But apparently they hail from Carborro, NC. This band does feature a member of Motor Skills but they both have their own unique songs. Check out Cassis Orange’s track “Listen Heartbeat” on their myspace page. Awesome song, I hope they play it this Thursday!
I’ll also be having Cassis Orange and Motor Skills at the station this Thursday for live interview. Some music will be played… perhaps some giveaways? Tune in 7-8 p.m. before you head out to the pub!
“Libraries” by The Love Language
88.1 WKNC’s Pick of the Week, written by Drew St. Claire a.k.a. DJ SWITCH
When I was just a newborn, my mom would sit in this old rocking chair and cradle me while she sang her favorite Beatles songs, instead of the traditional lullabies. I’m guessing my dad’s renditions of Led Zeppelin didn’t quite make for good bedtime music. So, while I was listening to The Love Language’s newest release, Libraries, I couldn’t help but see a similar scene playing out in my mind—some trendy Triangle couple crooning this local band’s latest release to their little bundle of joy. It’s just got that same kind of simple beauty to it.
A couple of years ago, the Love Language’s frontman, Stuart McLamb, was more likely to be found lying in a Raleigh back alley than rocking the big stage at the Hopscotch Music Festival. After a turbulent series of personal events, McLamb created a new band (The Love Language) and put out a self-titled album about his struggles. Libraries comes out just a year after that debut self-titled album and is a very solid follow-up. If the Love Language hasn’t proven themselves to be heavy hitters in Raleigh’s thriving indie rock scene yet, this album will certainly solidify them as such. The first track, “Pedals,” starts out with a quiet piano intro but then crashes into this rich melody with all sorts of layers to it. Those are going to be the keywords for Libraries: “rich” and “layers.” “A season for the both of us, a reason that rose off the coffin”—those are the first bold words from Stuart McLamb, the lead singer and guitarist. He has a bit of Morrissey (from the Smiths) in his voice, and it works well echoing out over the rich ebb and flow of the music. With those symphonic-like buildups and crashes from the instrumentation, I also got a pretty definite Arcade Fire vibe as well. That lovely riff running throughout “Pedals” sounds just like the outro from “Intervention,” but with a beautiful tragedy that is all its own. Another quick standout for me was certainly “Horrorphones.” This was The Love Language track WKNC included on the Hear Here compilation, which was reviewed by yours truly a few issues back. I still stand by what I said about this song back then—a melodic headtrip that’s equal parts I’m From Barcelona and the Beach Boys. Tracks like “This Blood Is Our Own” and “Anthophobia” give off an almost beach-vibe with their bending and sliding guitar solos. This underlying feeling became so pervasive to me that I checked out the band’s website and, sure enough, I see crashing waves and faded photos of wholesome girls in one piece bathing suits. Songs like these, and ones like “Blue Angel,” put me in what I think a 1950’s prom would have been like, but with a much more hip twist to it (and none of the embarrassment). The album closes out with “Wilmont,” which I assume is an allusion to the historic apartment building just down Hillsborough Street. Like the building it references, the song has plenty of heart and soul, made manifest by an acoustic intro and McLamb’s sincere lyrics, “I want you to be with me, ‘cause I’ve got a big heart to feed.” With songs like that, maybe it’s not too far-fetched for Libraries to become lasting lullaby material. Maybe one of those little babies will even grow up to write CD reviews of The Love Language’s next release.
88.1 WKNC Pick of the Week is published in every Friday in the print edition of Technician, as well as online at technicianonline.comwknc.org. and
Band of Horses/Magic Kids

WKNC’s Top 30—Week of 9/6
Each week, the WKNC music directors tally up spins for new releases and submit their top 10s to CMJ.
CMJ Radio 200 from WKNC’s Daytime Rock
Artist | Album | Label | |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | CEO | White Magic | Modular |
#2 | TWIN SHADOW | Forget | Terrible |
#3 | DARKER MY LOVE | Alive as You Are | Dangerbird |
#4 | SOCIAL STUDIES | Wind Up Wooden Heart | Antenna Farm |
#5 | REBEL SET | Poison Arrow | Silver Hornet |
#6 | GRASS WIDOW | Past Time | Kill Rock Stars |
#7 | J. RODDY WALSTON AND THE BUSINESS | J Roddy Walston and the Business | Vagrant |
#8 | RICKOLUS | Youngster | Circle into Square |
#9 | CHIEF | Modern Rituals | Domino |
#10 | SOMEONE STILL LOVES YOUR BORIS YELTSIN | Let it Sway | Polyvinyl |
CMJ RPM from WKNC’s Afterhours
Artist | Album | Label | |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | CEO | White Magic | Modular |
#2 | TWIN SHADOW | Forget | |
#3 | !!! | Strange Weather, Isn’t It? | |
#4 | FOUR TET | Angel Echoes (Remix) | |
#5 | BATHS | Cerulean | Anitcon |
#6 | BORGORE | Borgore Ruined Dubstep [EP] | |
#7 | RUSKO | O.M.G.! | Mad Decent |
#8 | BLUE SKY BLACK DEATH | Third Party | |
#9 | CROOKERS | Tons of Friends | |
#10 | DEAMEND | So I Ate Myself, Bit by Bite | Graveface |
CMJ Loud Rock from WKNC’s Chainsaw Rock
Artist | Album | Label | |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | DEATH ANGEL | Relentless Retribution | Nuclear Blast |
#2 | CEPHALIC CARNAGE | Mislead by Certainty | Relapse |
#3 | ACCEPT | Blood of the Nations | Nuclear Blast |
#4 | BLIND GUARDIAN | At the Edge of Time | Nuclear Blast |
#5 | DAWN OF ASHES | Genocide Chapters | |
#6 | MOSE GIGANTICUS | Gift Horse | Relapse |
#7 | ABSENCE | Enemy Unbound | |
#8 | ABIGAIL WILLIAMS | In the Absence of Light | Candlelight |
#9 | KATAKLYSM | Heaven’s Venom | Nuclear Blast |
#10 | LORDI | Deadache | The End |
We talk about this year’s Mercury Prize winner, Morrissey’s controversial comments on the Chinese, and review new albums from Band of Horses and Magic Kids.