David Vandervelde – The Moonstation House Band

vandervelde-moonstation.jpgDavid VanderveldeThe Moonstation House Band (Secretly Canadian)

Every fan of rock should go through an obligatory T-Rex phase and, if the moment suits you, the aforementioned phase should take you through the trifecta Bolan landmarks of Electric Warrior, The Slider and Tanx. It might even take you through the film Born To Boogie which wonderfully documents the height of T-Rextasy and captures Bolan at that perfect apex, immortalizing him as that sexy legend who whimsically tiptoed his way into stardom and influenced countless musicians.

David Vandervelde has done a lot more than merely picking up a few T-Rex album that document his own Bolan phase; he’s picked up a few instruments and barricaded himself in Jay Bennett‘s studio to record the most honest-to-god T-Rex album since Dandy In The Underworld.


Before you either 1.) call bullshit on me or 2.) get hot and bothered about the idea of the second coming of Marc Bolan, understand that Dandy In The Underworld wasn’t even that good of a T-Rex album and, by understanding that, it should reassure you that Chicago’s David Vandervelde is nowhere close to becoming the reincarnation of Marc Bolan.

The Moonstation House Band tries hard to pretend that it’s 1971 again and on a few occasions you’d swear that Vandervelde has indeed invented a time machine. Hell, even the refreshing eight song total harks back to an era of “side a” or “program 4” depending on your format. The thing is, out of those 8 tracks (pun intended) only the first three (“Nothin’ No,” “Jacket,” and “Feet Of A Liar”) manage to start the DeLorean. And out of those three, only “Nothin’ No” qualifies as an eerily wonderful T-Rex outtake that never was.

Which again points to the genius that was/is Marc Bolan. For a guy who made some of the most simplistic rock songs ever, we’ve yet to hear another artist that can match the track-by-track genius that was his incredible three album run in the early 70s. For Vandervelde to effectively channel one tune is pretty impressive. The fact that he managed to do it three years ago, on one night and at the tender age of nineteen makes “Nothin’ No” a special track worthy of praise and examination. It also places The Moonstation House Band as a piece of early naiveté in a potentially long and fruitful career.

MP3s:

David Vandervelde – “Nothin’ No”

David Vandervelde – “Jacket”

Stream the whole album.

David Vandervelde – “Jacket” video directed by Iqbal Ahmed

TOUR DATES

09/15/07 Wiltshire, UK – End of the Road Festival

09/17/07 London, UK – Luminaire

09/18/07 Nottingham, UK – The Social

09/19/07 Glasgow, UK – The Barfly

09/20/07 Belfast, N. Ireland – Club Radar at Speakeasy

09/21/07 Dublin, Ireland – Radiator at the Hub

09/22/07 Manchester, UK – Night and Day Cafe

09/23/07 Bristol, UK – Thekla Social

09/24/07 Brighton, UK – The Prince Albert

09/25/07 Paris, France – La Maraqoniere

09/26/07 Brussels, Belgium – Ancienne Belgique

09/27/07 Utrecht, Netherlands – Ekko

09/28/07 Malmo, Sweden – Inkonst

09/29/07 Stockholm, Sweden – Debaser

10/01/07 Oslo, Norway – Cafe Mono

10/02/07 Gotenborg, Sweden – Pusterviksbaren

10/03/07 Aarhus, Denmark – Voxhall

10/04/07 Hamburg, German – Haus 73

10/06/07 Groningen, Netherlands – Take Root Festival

10/07/07 Amsterdam, Netherlands – Paradiso

One thought on “David Vandervelde – The Moonstation House Band”

  1. Beyond the purported T-Rex authenticity of this album, I think that as a whole, it’s pretty strong, especially given that Vandervelde is so young, and that I guess he played all of the instruments on it. There’s no doubt that “Nothin’ No” is a great track, but besides the other two tracks mentioned here, I really liked “Can’t See Your Face No More” and “Murder in Michigan”. Overall, we can only hope it gets even better from here, but regardless, this album is a good listen.

    I also read recently that Vandervelde contributed to Jay Bennett’s new solo album, which I believe is due sometime in September.

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