VIDEO REVIEW: Kids of the Apocalypse “Better Life”

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There isn’t enough thought put into what happens to the children once the apocalypse hits (step up your game, The Walking Dead), but Kids of the Apocalypse took the idea and ran with it, particularly in the video for their single “Better Life.” There’s symbolism for a world run by capitalism, it addresses love in an apocalyptic way, oh, and it also features astounding Gorillaz-esque graphics. It’s a chill rap song full of melodies and gloom with the cartoons to match that mood, the brain child of producer/musician Stefan Storm and animator Ernest Desumbila.

Sit back and watch this fascinating video—it’ll disturb you a bit, but it’ll also definitely resonate in a way that’ll have you wanting to watch it over and over again.

INTERVIEW + LIVE REVIEW: White Mystery Plays Market Hotel

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Taken from the whitemystery.com press photos page
Taken from the whitemystery.com press photos page

Seeing a show at the Market Hotel can feel like gaining access to a secret club. Though obviously, anyone can go, you’ll pass a few confused first-timers milling around Mr. Kiwi before they spot the side entrance on Myrtle. If the show is sold out, you have to wait on a narrow staircase as the bouncer waves patrons in a few at a time, controlling the flow of the crowd. But once you make it inside, you’re privy to a unique view of the JMZ, the tracks of which wrap around the venue’s walls of windows, silently racing past the bands.

It feels like a different world. That’s why it was the perfect place for last Thursday’s show, which featured three garage rock bands with a very vintage lean: Shannon And The Clams headlining, Big Huge opening, and in the middle, White Mystery.

A brother and sister duo from Chicago named after an Airheads flavor, White Mystery are Alex White on guitar and vocals and Francis Scott Key White on drums. Their seamless live performance is due to their bond as siblings as well as their rigorous tour schedule, which they’ve documented extensively on the band’s website in a dizzying, endless list.

Alex has a voice that is high and piercing, seemingly from another dimension: a shocking ray of pure sound that defies tone and pitch. She materializes riffs, chords, and licks from her Rickenbacker with an effortless air, incredible considering the power behind her playing. During “Sweet Relief,” she and Francis switched places, with Alex taking a seat at the kit to provide a bass drum beat to her brother’s turn at the mic during a fast-paced monologue. Rarely has a band been so determined to make sure that every single person in the audience was having the time of their lives. Looking around, it seemed like everyone was.

Before their show, Alex answered some questions via phone about touring, gear, and her role as Vice President of the Chicago chapter of the Recording Academy. Read our conversation below: 

AudioFemme: When was the last time you played in Brooklyn?

Alex White: I think we counted that we’ve played Brooklyn almost 50 times in the last nine years. We’re from Chicago, so it’s kind of a blur, but I’m pretty sure the last time we played was at the Archeron.

You’ve definitely done a lot of touring.

For eight years, yeah. We’ve played almost a thousand shows.

In videos of your performances, I’m always surprised how full your songs feel considering there’s only two of you. As a duo, is it ever a challenge to fill space when playing live?

I would say the biggest struggle with being a two-piece is tackling the long drives when you’re on tour. That’s why for this one, we brought two people from Chicago with us to split up those drives. Filling up sound… being brother and sister, it’s natural to us. We have a musical dynamic where when Fran goes high, I go low, and vice versa. With good songwriting, you could be one person and make something sound really full. 

Is the Rickenbacker your main guitar?

Yeah, although this year, I played this 1971 Gibson SG for a couple of shows. The Rickenbacker I got when I was 15 years old, and I bought it brand new. It’s definitely an awesome instrument. Rickenbacker still makes everything here in the United States… they’re very fine instruments and I’m 31 now so I’ve had it for, like, 15 years. It might also have to do with that full sound you were talking about- on that guitar, you can really squeak out a lot of different sounds on it.

Do you use a  certain effects/pedal setup?

Yeah, actually, this year White Mystery released a guitar pedal called Fire Keeper. It’s a fuzz pedal I helped design with Daredevil pedals. That’s the only pedal I use. There’s a cool article in She Shreds about it.

I know you’ve previously listed a lot of classic rock influences like The Who, MC5, and T. Rex. Are there any particular artists you’re really into right now?

Yeah, I’ve been listening to Creedence Clearwater Revival quite a bit… kind of on repeat, you know? Where you find these songs that really work for you, like “Down On The Bayou” and “Fortunate Son.” I’ve also been listening to the Troggs a lot. They’re a 1960’s garage band and they were highly influential to bands like The Stooges. And now here we are in 2016 – way later – and they’re still such an influential band. 

You’re the Vice President of the Recording Academy‘s Chicago Chapter. What does that job involve?

I got elected into the position, for the second time. The Recording Academy is an organization that’s for music professionals; engineers, producers, full-time musicians can join, and it has a lot of benefits. There’s MusiCares, which is a charity part of the music academy for musicians who are in need; like their instruments were stolen, or their house burns down. Quite a lot of it too is that we lobby Congress for musicians’ rights… Just trying to make sure that the musicians are able to continue making a living, so it can be an actual career and not just a hobby. And a lot of that has to do with fair pay. [/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][I] just try to be a good leader for that community. And for the Chicago chapter, that actually covers the whole Midwest, from Minnesota to Ohio, Michigan down to Missouri. We’re just trying to improve the quality of people’s lives, basically. That’s the goal. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BgmHCS0Undc[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

NEWS ROUNDUP: Apple, The Pixies & SXSW

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  • Apple Gets Rid of the Headphone Jack

    I am practically attached to my earbuds, yet I misplace them a million times a day. So it was with absolute dread that I learned that with the iPhone 7, Apple is trying to phase out normal headphone jacks (unless you want to buy an adapter). Instead, we’ll wear AirPods, which don’t attach to the phone, or to each other. It’s a change that seems to bring few, if any benefits, and a major drawback which is you’ll probably lose one or both or the pods and have to shell out $159 to replace them. Change is good, but sometimes this adage only applies to doing laundry.

  • Watch The New, Creepy Pixies Video

    What do you think of the new, Kim Deal-less Pixies? On the one hand, they seem more mature, and tamer, not always in a good way – you might find yourself switching it off to listen to Surfer Rosa instead. On the other hand, they’ve been around a long time and there’s probably few things more annoying than an old band getting flak for deviating from their old sound. Whatever your opinion is, the video for “Tenement Song” is worth a watch:

  • First Round of SXSW Artists Announced

    It’s only the first round, but it’s a pretty long list that includes Brooklyn bands such as Yoke Lore, Pastel Ghost, Lazyeyes and San Fermin. Check out the full list here.

  • Listen to “Ten Year Tenure” by halfsour

    The frantic, catchy song is about the difficulties of being an artist when your home is a big city, specifically the band’s, Boston. Their upcoming Charm School comes out 10/14 via Disposable America and Too Far Gone. Check out “Ten Year Tenure” below:

ONLY NOISE: An Anthem For The In-Between

spiritualized

Drift.

Verb:

To be carried slowly by a current of air or water.

Noun:

A continuous slow movement from one place to another.

These are dictionary definitions of the word-a couple, at least. Though if I were to define what it means to “drift” I might say to float, to dangle…to exist in the great in between. To be forever en route.

So much of contemporary music is labeled, stuffed into Sharpied Rubbermaid containers: the “love” song, the “break up” song, the “political” song, etc. And yet over the years I have noticed that some of my favorite cuts have a bizarre, genre-less similarity between them: they seem to be about being neither here nor there. These songs seem to recognize the swirling unknown surrounding them, and accept it as such, neither good nor bad. This lack of specificity has strangely anchored me at some of my most specifically difficult times. They have been the land I spot when out to sea, so to speak.

One of the first songs that made me realize I was headed for a hard drive full of existential playlists was Pavement’s “Range Life” from their 1994 masterpiece Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain. Stephen Malkmus has always been the king of nonchalance and blasé, putting boredom on a stick and somehow making it seem appetizing. “Range Life” is nowhere short of delicious in its absolute lack of zeal. You can almost picture Malkmus coasting through a blurred-out suburb on his skateboard, never losing or gaining acceleration.

“After the glow, the scene, the stage/The sad talk becomes slow but there’s one thing I’ll never forget/Hey, you gotta pay your dues before you pay the rent/Over the turnstiles and out in the traffic/There’s ways of living, it’s the way I’m living, right or wrong/It’s all that I can do and I wouldn’t want to let you be”

“I want a range life if I could settle down/If I could settle down then I would settle down”

“Out on my skateboard the night is just humming/And the gum smacks are the pulse I’ll follow if my walkman fades/Well, I got absolutely no one, no one but myself to blame”

Perhaps it is merely my interpretation of these tracks that garners such a feeling of warm nowhere-ness. Maybe if Steve Malkmus read this he might say: “Actually, that song was about being on tour.” To which I would say, “being on tour is an in between place.” But Steve Malkmus probably isn’t going to read this, so I am free to project all the existential dilemmas on his music that I can muster.

A true anthem for the unmoored, Bill Callahan’s room temperature “Riding For The Feeling” from 2011’s Apocalypse is a favorite for listless days. It is, one of the most solitary songs I have ever heard, yet somehow manages to evoke both heartbreak and liberation. Again, it is neither here nor there, and reminds me of the pointless joy that can be found in driving for no particular reason or destination:

“It’s never easy to say goodbye/To the faces/So rarely do we see another one/So close and so long”

“All this leaving is never ending”

“In conclusion leaving is easy/When you’ve got some place you need to be”

What if I had stood there at the end and said again and again/An answer to every question/Riding for the feeling/Would that have been a suitable goodbye?”

When Callahan sings, “all this leaving is never ending” I can’t help but picture a ceaseless swinging door, one that no longer knows the difference between coming and going. One that opens to concrete people and places, but exists in that in between space: in between jobs, and relationships, and albums. To ride “for the feeling” is to drift, to coast for the sake of it, to float on the unknown. I’m not sure what it says about me that is my favorite part of the entire song, and if I somehow miss it I must rewind to carefully consider those six words:

“All this leaving is never ending”

The music video for this track could be considered a meditation on that one line. It is Zen with its unrelenting sameness: six minutes and fourteen seconds of a continuous ski jump over paper mountains. “Riding” is one of the few videos I have seen that deals strictly with the in between. No beginning. No end. Just the little skier coasting infinitely.

“Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating in Space” by Spiritualized is a far more literal hymn for feeling un-tethered. Most will know it from the 2004 dystopian-romance film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, which alone could cradle the song in a whole different context. But for me, “Ladies and Gentlemen” is a song for the sensory deprivation tank. It is so buoyant, so expansive in its ambience that it creates the exact feeling its title suggests-floating in space. Lyrically the track is no more exacting:

“I will love you ’til I die/And I will love you all the time/So please put your sweet hand in mine/And float in space and drift in time/All the time until I die/We’ll float in space, just you and I”

“Baby I love you today/I guess that’s what you want/And I don’t know where we are all going/Life don’t get stranger than this/It is what it is/And I don’t know where we are all going”

This is the kind of song that was made for feeling small and powerless in the best way possible. I know that sounds depressing, but if you really think about it, its kind of nice…like staring at the ocean and forgetting about your overdue electric bill.

If there was one bard of the great abyss, I can’t imagine anyone could handle the job better than Bob Dylan, whose catalogue is almost as overwhelming as existential dread itself. “Going, Going, Gone” from 1974’s Planet Waves is a true ballad for not knowing where the fuck life is going to take you. Though the original cut featuring The Band is a prime piece of audio, I have to be honest and reveal that my introduction to it was via the 1982 Richard Hell and the Voidoids cover. It is in a way a perfect marriage. Hell sprung from the nihilist punk scene that didn’t consider its own past or future, that only existed in the moment, much like the voice in Dylan’s song:

“I’ve just reached a place
/Where the willow don’t bend/
There’s not much more to be said/
It’s the top of the end
/I am going
/I am going
/I am gone”

“I am closing the book/
On the pages and the text
/And I don’t really care
/Of what happens next
/I am just going
/I am going/
I am gone”

“I been hanging on threads
/I been playing it straight
/Now I’ve just got to cut loose/
Before it gets late
/So I am going
/I am going/
I am gone”

“I been walking the road/
I been living on the edge
/Now I’ve just got to go
/Before I get to the ledge/
So I am going/
I am just going
/I am gone”

It is the ultimate track for drifting, for nuzzling into the unknown. Because sometimes all you can do is just be.

VIDEO PREMIERE: LOVECAT “Song For Eternity”

LOVECAT 3©Christian Stemper _ FabriqueRecords

From LOVECAT, the DIY synth-pop project from Viennese producer David Haering, comes a new video for “Song For Eternity” off his forthcoming album, The Great Catsby. Featuring singer Jill Possible, the minimal and delightfully irreverent video shows the two artists seated on a couch, almost entirely shot in grey scale, with dashes of color for red heart-shaped glasses and a bored applause sign. Despite Jill donning the heart-shaped glasses in the video, the message of the song is poignantly accurate on matters of love.

“In “Song for Eternity,” LOVECAT explores how affairs of the heart can be complicated, how love and hate are often close neighbors, and how resignation lurks behind every corner,” reads a press release. Despite the optimistic initial associations upon hearing a title such as “Song for Eternity,” Haering and Possible deliver cold realities, such as “You won’t remember my name, this song is not for eternity” all the while riding an undercurrent that the good times are worth the bad, displayed by use of smoke machines, disco balls, and candid moments loaded with bubble machines.

The Great Catsby comes out September 9, listen to “Song for Eternity Below.”

PLAYING DETROIT: Nydge “Lemme Know” (Feat. Joshua)

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Detroit has always been the dark horse holy ground for musical exploration and long-term contribution to music at large. Assemble Sound, a collective of collaborative artists as well as a full-fledged recording studio nestled in a historic church in Detroit’s Corktown district, is redefining the music community and blowing the glass ceiling off of possibilities for local artists.

In the spirit of collaboration, Assemble forged an idea that would allow artists to experiment with each other’s sound as well as find a home for whatever mashup is born from that session. The Sunday Song Series (which stipulates that the song must be a collaboration and go through the peer review process and, of course, must be recorded at Assemble Sound). It’s an “all-hands-on-deck” situation at Assemble, but not because there aren’t enough hands to start with. Rather, an extension on Assemble’s philosophy which is deeply rooted in exploration of creative freedom while still focusing on the formalities of how to succeed in the industry. At the end of summer, Assemble will release a 12-track album of all the Sunday Song Series and as summer comes to a close, we are gifted song 11 from the series which is a collaboration between Nydge (producer and soundsmith Nigel Van Hemmye) and Joshua (one half of trip-hop duo Gosh Pith) titled “Lemme Know.”

A trippy love ballad that begs for another chance and bounces around like teenagers flirting at the mall, “Lemme Know” is a playful plea and a totally danceable account of an impending heartbreak. The shimmying synths and periodic chimes give a montage feel; from first kiss, to meeting the fam, to growing disinterest to a bold “take-me-back” 80s John Cusack worthy gesture. The song is quick but satiated; Joshua’s verses are sleepily distressed until the chorus builds to a hopeful plan to “keep this love alive” where his vocals climax. The production is radio ready and could easily squeeze a female vocalist to duet the cat and mouse fluctuation of who loves who and how hard. But the track is effective with Joshua’s singular bright side desperation as Nigel’s fashion show runway mixtape vibe clashes to form pop purity at its funnest.

Listen to the collaboration below and click here if you want to know what’s happening at Assemble.

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VIDEO REVIEW: Ex Reyes “Bad Timing”

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Beautiful cinematography, chill vibes, and impressive Mardi Gras costumes and makeup are to be found in Ex Reyes’ recent video for his single “Bad Timing”—meaning, it’s a video worth watching. It gives a dark spin to the otherwise celebratory NOLA holiday, with standoffs and groups of people chucking guns into a burning police car as Ex Reyes hangs out in the periphery the entire time. Oh, and there is a lion mascot and baton twirlers that probably dance better than most people you know, too.

Mikey Hart, aka Ex Reyes, showcases his smooth falsetto vocals in this relaxed out single alongside crashing cymbals and an entrancing saxophone breakdown. It’ll have you wanting to hang with the cool kids (pretty much every single person in this video) while also inspiring you to head to New Orleans ASAP to see these festivities for yourself (as if you need further encouragement, though).

You can catch Ex Reyes on tour through October this year with How to Dress Well. Watch “Bad Timing” below.

PREVIEW: Von Sell + Human Heat @ Manhattan Inn 9/7

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Electro-pop artist Von Sell and indie-electronic artist Human Heat are bringing their awesomeness under one roof at Manhattan Inn in Brooklyn on September. 7.

Hailing from Berlin, Germany, Von Sell has come to Brooklyn with his smooth voice and wondrous synths. His recently released singles “Ivan,” “I Insist,” and “Stay” demonstrate his moderately upbeat and dreamy musical style.

To get a feel for his sweet tunes, listen to his the latest of the three singles, “Stay” below.

Human Heat is the new project from Alex Schaaf, formerly in Yellow Ostrich. His new music is inspired by a more introverted electronic sound that makes listeners create their own narrative, with the use of minimal lyrics. Human Heat’s songs send out arousing vibes, given off from his well-crafted beats. Check it out his latest EP below.

https://soundcloud.com/humanheatusa/sets/ep2

This show is presented by LPR, and 21+. Doors open at 9 p.m.!

 

NEWS ROUNDUP: Aviv, CMJ & Cherry Glazerr

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  • Aviv To Close In October

    According to a Facebook post, the Greenpoint DIY venue will be closing when its lease expires at the end of October. The owners promised they would set up shop elsewhere at some point, but before it’s gone forever, check out some of their last upcoming shows: Parlor Walls (9/15), Pharmakon (9/17), Slingshot Dakota (10/10) and this weekend’s Summer’s End Music Festival, featuring Sonnymoon, Guerrilla Toss, Pill, Honduras, Surf Rock Is Dead, and more.

  • Watch Cherry Glazerr’s New Video

    “I’d Told You I’d Be With The Guys” is a track brimming with fierce intensity, that stresses the importance using female solidarity to escape everyday sexism. Singer/guitarist Clementine Creevy lounges in all white, as an endless parade of middle-aged men in red polos and khakis infiltrate the room the band plays in.

  • What’s Up With The CMJ Festival?

    After a series of articles that speculated CMJ wouldn’t happen this year due to lack of funds (to be fair, dates/lineups haven’t been announced yet), CEO Adam Klein sent Pitchfork a statement regarding its future. It read, in part, “We are all totally committed to protecting CMJ’s unique and ‘live’ heritage while adapting to the ever changing demands of artists, fans and the music industry….. A little patience and a whole lot less wild and unsubstantiated speculation is what we need right now.” So is it happening? Kinda maybe.

  • Watch Angel Olsen On ‘Colbert’

    I know, I know, there’s been a lot of Angel Olsen coverage lately. But, she’s amazing and her My Woman is finally out, today. Right now! You can also watch her perform “Shut Up Kiss Me” on The Late Show, below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RGAHeeFr_E&feature=youtu.be

ONLY NOISE: Coney Island, Baby

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As the glad hand of summer tightens to a fist, I feel hungover. These three hot months we wait for all year melt us into believing that we can live this way forever; damp and in torn jeans, drinking beer at 2pm and eating hot dogs at 2am. Perhaps summer to others is less slovenly, but it’s hard to be fresh-faced in the New York sun, which radiates off black pavement and carries the scent of freshly baked garbage up your nostrils. Where else in the country does summer = hot garbage? Better yet: hot garbage juice, which I’m sure we have all stepped in, wearing sandals.

This of course, isn’t everyone’s summer in New York. Portions of the Upper East Side and Park Slope seem to be refuse-free. And while many would find the above description noxious, there is one place in New York that seems to spin all that trash into colored candyfloss every summer: Coney Island.

Coney Island was a place I loved long before I walked its busted boardwalk, jutting upwards like misaligned teeth. It was a place I knew from song, as it has been immortalized in many. It seemed to be a perpetual place of interest for Tom Waits, who recorded a salty version of “Coney Island Baby” for 2002’s Blood Money. The beachside town has achieved an honorable mention in Waits’ “Take It With Me” from the 1999 LP Mule Variations, and it seemed the rakish balladeer perhaps knew the place better than anyone else.

Yet the artistic fascination with Coney Island doesn’t start or stop with Waits. The Ramones bopped about it in “Oh, Oh, I Love Her So” from 1977, singing about going “on the coaster and around again” in the grade C theme park. The only coaster they could mean is the treacherous Cyclone, which has provided thrill-seekers with whiplash since 1927. In the same decade Coney was fetishized by the Ramones, films like Annie Hall and The Warriors tipped their hats as well. While its use in the former merely provides a comical backdrop (Woody Allen’s character grew up in a house beneath the Cyclone, hence his neuroses), the latter catapulted the area into cult status. Where Waits had provided a mood, The Warriors affronted with a forceful visual of dueling gangs in leather vests and headbands.

I knew far more about Coney Island than I should have prior to moving to New York. I knew about the Wonder Wheel, and the Freak Show, and Nathan’s Hot Dogs. I knew that it was most likely filled with large women, and men named Frank. But I didn’t fully understand the allure until I first went for myself in 2009. By then I had discovered another “Coney Island Baby,” the classic Lou Reed track off of his 1976 album of the same name.

Something churned within me as I got off the F train that summer…and I realize now that same feeling can be explained by Reed’s lyric:

“Ah, but remember that the city is a funny place/
Something like a circus or a sewer
/And just remember, different people have peculiar tastes”

It was right then that I grasped the elusive beauty of Coney Island: it is an absolute shithole. It appeared that all of the collective enthrallment with the neighborhood was very aware of this fact. What’s more, the contradiction between the dirt and depravity of such a hood and it being a place of magical, family entertainment only seemed to increase the morbid fascination.

“The city is a funny place/Something like a circus or a sewer.” This rotated in my head as I walked past a portly, sun-baked woman, the length of her strangled in a fluorescent pink fishnet bodysuit. To my left, children were running through sprays of water generated by large blow-up palm trees punctuating the beach. Seagulls dove through the mist as old men wetted their balding heads, no one discriminating against the offerings of the plastic foliage. A boom box accompanied a saxophonist blowing away to Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely” and pieces of garbage floated past my feet, though none of the famed “Coney Island Whitefish” I’d heard so much about, a.k.a, used condoms.

While I can’t say the same of many places, Coney Island is exactly what I’ve always wanted it to be; and it maintains its appeal almost eight years later. When I went the other day it was waiting for me, running up to say hello with a hot dog in one hand and a beer in the other. I accepted and sat on the cement benches at Nathan’s, listening to “Year Of The Cat” by Al Stewart and innumerable Fleetwood Mac tracks. Neither of these made any sense, and I wish I could say something like Reed or Waits was playing, but I was happy to choke down shameful food to something familiar, something un-Carly Rae Jepsen. And that is what this place is all about: shame, pleasure, and familiarity.

Perhaps the kernel of Coney Island’s appeal possesses the same molecules as comfort food, guilty pleasures, and poorly produced music. It isn’t so much about the overt, qualitative aspects of a thing, but the gut reaction it elicits. Did that hot dog feel good in my gut? No. But did it feel good in my gut’s heart? You betcha.

After waddling out of Nathan’s, where I once watched the world famous Fourth of July hot dog eating contest (to the tune of Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’”) in another bout of poor taste, I made my way to MCU Park to take in my very first Brooklyn Cyclones game. Blaring out of the shoddy sound system were soundtrack versions of Disney songs: “Bippity Boppity Boo” and “A Whole New World” and the like.

Because Coney Island can only get weirder every time I go, the game is themed: it is princess and pirate night at the stadium, and there are hoards of terrifying children literally screaming for ice cream in sparkly pink dresses, tiaras, and pastel eye shadow. Large men with robust Brooklyn accents address their families with jovial shouting, which is later directed at the baseball team, only less jovially. As it turns out, the Cyclones are a pretty terrible team. A man behind me begins heckles the athletes while wearing a Cyclones shirt: “Come ON! My daughter hits betta than you!” he blurts. A princess-disguised hellion stands behind me, prodding my neck with something. I turn and realize it’s a chicken finger.

If it weren’t for Princess Poultry I may have stayed for the last two innings, but my companion and I were growing heavy from the heat and hot dogs. We laughed at the absurdity of such a place, and that a baseball game could be so comically bad. “You know what though?” my friend asked. I completed the thought before he could, “we would have been disappointed if they were really good.”

When I am asked to defend my bad taste, in the same way I must when my dad inquires about my preference for crappy bars as opposed to slick ones, I never have a ready-made reason at hand. But I think that it is the unrefined things that possess the most endurance. It is the rationale that against all of the information I possess about the health detriments of hot dogs, I still adore them. I know that Bob Dylan does not technically have a beautiful singing voice, but I will continue to love it. So when asked why in the hell I love Coney Island so much, I can’t help but counter:

“Ah, but remember that the city is a funny place/
Something like a circus or a sewer
/And just remember, different people have peculiar tastes”

PLAYING DETROIT: Frontier Ruckus “27 Dollars”

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A summer fantasy written in the thick of a Michigan winter, Detroit’s favorite folky foursome Frontier Ruckus delivers a new track “27 Dollars” from their forthcoming LP, just in time to instill premature longing for a summer that still has a few hours on the clock.

Singer-songwriter Matthew Millia is no stranger to volunteering his vulnerabilities by means of his pleasantly troubled troubadour dance with intimacy to the rich, extensive Americana fabric of the Frontier Ruckus catalogue. Joined by David Jones, Zachary Nichols  and Anna Burch, Milia and company have tapped into a beloved era of mid-2000’s indie with a modern emotional intelligence that is fit for timelessness. A little Belle & Sebastian, a tad Okkervil River with a dash of seasonal repression and hopeful ennui, “27 Dollars” is an upbeat anthem for restless hearts and empty pockets; a true midwestern cocktail. The track bounces with banjo twang and swaying synths, eliciting a backseat tour through pot hole, pock marked streets with a cracked phone screen that you check incessantly despite finger tip splinters.

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REVIEW & INTERVIEW: A Place Both Wonderful and Strange @ Morbid Anatomy Museum

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On Friday, August 19 at Brooklyn’s Morbid Anatomy Museum, occult-feminist-doom-gaze-dance-pop (possible the best descriptors in the universe) group A Place Both Wonderful and Strange released their new record The Laura Palmer Deviations in the form of a visual performance, featuring a bloody, beautiful, and naked (both in literally and in emotion) dancer. Married with the music and on-screen visuals, the dancer brought to life the presence of Laura Palmer.

In the basement of Morbid Anatomy, one of Brooklyn’s spookiest gems, the night began with a Twin Peaks lecture by Stefano Black, providing intellectual foreplay for the Lynchian night of terror, catharsis, and realization. A beautifully ghostly island of an album, The Laura Palmer Deviations is a record that is best enjoyed as independently as possible, although all of the the group’s releases are worthy of a listen. If you’ve missed A Place Both Wonderful and Strange’s visual performance of the album, paired with “lost/found footage, known snapshots, and ephemera,” please enjoy it from start to finish, allowing the noise to transport you to “the terrifying last hours in the short and tragic life of Laura Palmer.”

Formed by Russ Marshalek, in A Place Both Wonderful and Strange’s current incarnation Russ is joined by Shanda Woods, formerly of We Are The Wilderness, now solo under the guise of OKTI as a member of the Hathor Collective, and Laura Hajek, who also performs as “indie-pop terrorist” Edith Pop. Their newest record was recorded in a haunted fever in a shambolic cabin in upstate New York during a blizzard. In the best of ways, the ghosts present in that cabin inhabited the music, transmitting the pungent possession through the band’s live performance. By both sound and vision, the audience at Morbid Anatomy was transfixed. And, for the band’s experience of the night, read on.

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A Place Both Wonderful and Strange performs at Morbid Anatomy

AudioFemme: Tell me about the album, The Laura Palmer Deviations.

Russ: The record serves as a soundtrack-of-sorts to our audio/video/movement piece Keys Open Doors: The Hidden Life of Laura Palmer. After performing it many times, with each time being completely different, it just made sense to release a “version” of the “soundtrack”, as it is, since I’ve always considered our music to be soundtrack music anyway, very much sounds to put on in the background and then find yourself lost in. What became The Laura Palmer Deviations is actually a hybrid of four different takes of the performance, recorded in a suuuuuper haunted cabin in upstate New York in the middle of a blizzard in February. The sessions and the entire situation were incredibly intense and highly emotionally charged, and I feel like that comes through in some of the more punishing moments. Our friend and co-producer/mixer/masterer/general sound magician Bunny then took all the recordings and placed them against the video component and helped us stitch together the best possible audio story, and thusly the record was born.

How did the concept begin?

Russ: The Laura Palmer Deviations/the Hidden Life of Laura Palmer show came out of a Lynch Foundation commission for his Philly art opening, and it’s continued to evolve. The idea is “the last hours in the short and tragic life of Laura Palmer”, so there’s a LOT to unpack in there, in terms of black and white magic, abuse, familial structure, dissolving trust and finally imperfect redemption.

How does it differ from some of your earlier work?

Russ: Every APBWAS record should be treated as its own thing – by the time the first record came out we’d moved on to more longform noise pieces, and now that this is out we’re working on reining that it for more pop-oriented noise. I’m not personally very good at writing pop songs, but that’s where Laura and Shanda come in.

How is performance tied into the piece?

Russ: It’s an added facet, and one that’s pretty vital IMO. Whether it’s our dancer or what we’re doing, it’s all both tightly choreographed and completely different each time.

Shanda: I feel like it’s a very visceral expression of whats happening visually and thematically. Each time the performance changes depending on the energy of the day, or of the room, and I think that’s what makes this piece very unique and special. It’s a way of exploring anger, sadness, violence, regret, and all of the darker parts of our souls we don’t ever really want to look at, but are always present. And in that, a catharsis happens and I lose all sense of my physical self.

How did the concept for the release show come about?

Russ: Honestly, I can’t think of a better place to do this show at Morbid Anatomy. We try to be careful about where we stage the Laura Palmer show; it’s a complex piece of work, and not something we can just throw together at a dive bar in Manhattan on a Wednesday night. We’re really lucky Morbid Anatomy took the journey with us.

How did you think it went? The audience had a great time, what about you guys?

Russ: What a tough question. The show is intense, cathartic and really emotional, so I sort of never know “how it goes” I know we have a journey, and it’s a good journey to take, and we’ve worked hard to put it together, so I’m just grateful of anyone who accepts our invitation to come along for the ride.

Shanda: I had a great time as far as I can remember. I definitely cried, and a close friend said it was INTENSE. As a performer, if I cannot remember stretches of time, and am just left with a feeling of euphoria, I consider that a success. Not ever really sure how to gauge an audience response to something like this, but if they felt SOMETHING no matter what emotion it is, then we’ve done our jobs as artists.

Laura: The performance of The Laura Palmer Deviations at The Morbid Anatomy Museum was a great experience and the support and interest of the audience really resonated throughout the whole space. I wouldn’t necessarily call it fun as much as cathartic.

Listen to The Laura Palmer Deviations below:

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VIDEO REVIEW: NENA “Genau Jetzt”

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NENA, who you may know from her world famous single, “99 Luftballons,” has recently come out with a new video for her latest song “Genau Jetzt” (“Right Now”).

The video showcases different people, both by themselves and interacting with loved ones. With NENA’s powerful vocals over the video, you don’t need to speak German to feel impacted by this pop anthem. It’s a track where you can go from feeling empowered and inspired to dancing around the room completely lost in the music.

NENA will be embarking on her first U.S. tour starting in September where she’ll hit San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York City. If you’re looking to experience this German pop legend and hear “Genau Jetzt” live, then this is probably exactly what you’ve been waiting for.

ARTIST INTERVIEW: White Sun

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White Sun is releasing their second studio album today, and it can best be described as a sweeping exploration of New Age, through the lens of the Kundalini Yogic tradition, incorporating elements of world music, gospel and pop. The arrangements are thoughtful and intricate, and the production quality reflects a level of expertise rarely heard on albums these days. The players who came on board to collaborate are unbeatable in their respective fields and include Julia, Maxine and Oren Waters as back-up singers, as well as Mamadou Diabate who is arguably the best Kora player in the world. The core band is comprised of Adam Berry on Guitar, Keyboard and Bass, Harijiwan on Gong, and Gurujas, who we got the pleasure of interviewing here, on lead vocals. New Age is having a definitive resurgence in the mainstream, and White Sun’s new album reflects this trend – not only in its convergence of Eastern and Western musical legacies, but also the ways in which it defies  existing stereotypes around a genre that has become all too easy to dismiss as hokey. Each track is entrancing and meditative, taking the listener through hand picked chants passed down through thousands of years of Buddhist lineage. Gurujas’ vocal melodies are addicting to say the least, and weave effortlessly through the musical underpinnings of the songs. Though her mantras may be foreign to the listener, the songs feel wholly formed unto themselves, written almost like traditional pop tracks in their structure, containing hooks that could rival any, and instrumentation that is as complex as it is compelling. The music is simultaneously sophisticated and accessible, prayerful and ruminative, without pretentiousness. Yet ultimately, it is simply catchy: at several points throughout the album I had that “Oh! I think know this song!” moment. This speaks volumes on the substantial talent that went into producing it, and perhaps indicates a new direction for new age music, with White Sun leading the charge.

We got to speak with Gurujas about the effort that went into making this beautiful new full-length, right down to the hand-designed mandala that their album art brandishes. Read below and enjoy, AND PLEASE Go grab a copy of the album here or here.

Audiofemme: We’re excited about this album, Gurujas! We’ve been listening to it non-stop since you gave us the download and I have a million questions for you, but first, I want to know how you got started with music?

Gurujas: That is a good question. Well, I grew up in a musical household. My mom played music growing up. She was into piano and studied concert violin in college. So, I started playing piano at a really young age. One of my music teachers in elementary school thought I had perfect pitch. So she called my mom and told her I had to try out for The Cleveland Orchestra Children’s Choir (I grew up in Cleveland.) Itwas really cute! So I tried out for it, and I got to sing with the Cleveland Orchestra. Those were my first performances. I think I was about eleven years old in this choir, and it was so amazing, singing with the orchestra, classical music, seasonal music, stuff like that. So it was really something I pursued when I was younger. When I got to college it was definitely only a hobby. I was just too wrapped up with everything else. So then, a little bit later after I moved out to LA after college,I was singing a little bit of backup and eventually I started singing lead in this band White Sun formed by Harijiwan.

Audiofemme: So the band has existed for a while. I haven’t done that much research on them.

G: Yeah, well there’s not a lot you’d be able to find out about them. I don’t think there’s a lot online. We decided not to do a wikipedia entry and instead lay low a little while. Harijiwan formed the band I think in 2009. I didn’t start singing as the lead singer until 2015, I guess, or 2014, my dates are a little bit wobbly. We released our first album in 2015, and I had released a couple singles in my name before that.

Audiofemme: I’m psyched about new age music! I feel like it’s having a resurgence right now, and we don’t have that much coverage of it on the site, but I think that it’s really beautiful. I want to talk to you about all the pieces that went into this. Like how did you guys get all of these players together. I know there’s a lot of people playing on this album. That must have been an immense undertaking to get everybody in the studio.

G: Yeah. It was immense! But it felt very natural. This album felt like a flow. It really flowed out of us. And it was a labor of love. It took a year to make, but at the same time that it was very intense it was also very easy, if that makes any sense. It seemed to come together in a really graceful way. Sort of effortlessly. The Kora player is really interesting. Because I’ve been a fan for a while. He’s an incredible player – definitely one of the greatest players in the world. There’s no doubt about it. It was very hard to get in touch with him, because the contact form on his website didn’t work, and he doesn’t have contact information listed anywhere else. There’s another musician who he’s played with before who plays the balafon whose name is also Mamadou. And so I contacted him and I think I was sort of hoping that he was the Kora player and he wasn’t! But he was like ‘if you’re looking for the Kora player here’s his email.’ It was a stroke of luck! A stranger that I accidentally contacted gave me Mamadou’s phone number and email. So that was helpful.

Audiofemme: What is he like as a person? What is your band like in general?

G: He’s such a special person, after getting to know him. It’s  funny, with the band…we have this thing andI haven’t really worked out why this is, but everyone is massive, besides me. Adam is built like a linebacker. Mamadou is bigger than Adam. Adam has a blackbelt in jujitsu and he’s enormous. I really don’t know how tall he he is. He’s just like a big person, you know. And then Mamadou…

Audiofemme: Like almost so tall that you can’t measure it anymore…?

G: Exactly! And then Mamadou is the same. He has to be taller than 6’4”, because I think Adam is 6’4” and he’s taller than Adam. But I don’t know like, they’re just huge and they make me look like a midget! There’s this other guy that we play with, Arjuna, and Arjuna is huge too. We were looking at musicians working on album number three, and we were looking at different possibilities, and Adam pulls up this guy on the screen, and we’re listening to him play, and he is towering over his band members…I’m like ‘what is this!?!’

Audiofemme: You could also just form a football team if you wanted to…

G: Exactly. There may be something about White Sun that just requires you to be huge, I’m not really sure.

Audiofemme: So does Adam write all the songs? Does he do the arrangements?

G: So I write the melodies for the songs. I’ll  come to the studio and I’ll have the song written and I’ll play it on the harmonium. Sometimes it’ll just be a skeleton… And then sometimes it’ll be fully formed, from start to finish. But I don’t write any of the string sections. Adam really fills it in. He writes the majority of the instrumentation. We also have players come in and write their own parts. Abhiman, our Tabla player, he comes in and he puts his head together with Adam and come up with ideas, but will also have his own ideas and he create his own parts. And then Gabe Witcher, who played Fiddle on this last album totally created his own parts. He just came in and played whatever he wanted because he’s such an incredible musician. He’s just amazing. Same with Mamadou. He had the chords with the original melodies but he played all his own parts. But Adam has these beautiful auditory visions that he really wants to hear so yeah, musically, Adam does the majority of the instrumentation, unless there’s a player that comes in and we really want to hear what that person comes up with… It’s a really beautiful collaboration. And then Harijiwan has a really incredible ear for what fits and what doesn’t fit. He really helps refine the direction of the tracks, not only musically, but energetically. He can really hear if something needs to be tweaked to match the rest of the song, or if something’s too heavy for a particular vocal, it’s like the bass needs to be moved a couple of DBs, he’ll hear these really subtle things inside the music.

Audiofemme: That’s great. It’s a really good way to collaborate because he (Adam) is obviously the anchor of the band but can give people the freedom to add their own personal contribution…Oh! And you had gospel back up singers coming in, which is amazing. I was researching them, it’s incredible that you got them.

S: They’re so incredible! What happened with them is that they’re there’s this lady Bobbie Page, and she works in LA and she’s a music director. So Adam’s known her for years, and he called her and told her that he wants some gospel singers in the studio. And she goes okay great! And she literally showed up with Carmen Carter, Julia, Oren and Maxine Waters, I mean, she showed up with all these people. And we were like ‘Oh, hi! Julia!? Can I get you some water, Carmen Carter?’ It’s so so cool.

Audiofemme: It’s so cool that you had no idea that that was even going to happen.

G:Yeah, I really didn’t. I love working on these melodies on these songs, and then all these different elements come together for it…Its incredible to hear it humming in my head, and then to hear it with all these incredible back up singer legends on it, it’s amazing.

Audiofemme: It really is like, so many people don’t get the opportunity to work with world class musicians. It’s like, you can hear the difference, of course, but it’s also such a great experience to get to do that.

G:Yes! It’s the best experience ever. Sitting there and soaking it in and watching them, listening with the headphones on…

Audiofemme: That’s so great. Yeah so with these chants, how did you curate that? Which ones to use?

G: Well that’s a great question! And actually the answer is very simple because very little thought goes into which mantra i’m going to chant. I know a lot of them from my yoga practice so I’ll sit down with a harmonium – that’s how I compose – and I’ll start playing some chords, and I’ll just start playing some notes. And it’s really just whatever I want to hear is what I’ll play. Whatever sounds good to me. And some days, nothing sounds good to me, and other days everything sounds good to me. The melody will dictate the mantra. So something will fit, and it will usually be the only thing that fits. It’ll be something very specific. And like I said I’m familiar with them anyway. So, I don’t have to go look for them.

Audiofemme: That’s amazing. The songs sound so meditative when you listen to them. I also love the ordering of the tracks. It sounds like you were intentionally bringing us on a whole journey with the album.

G: Oh thanks for noticing that! We really tried to do that. We really wanted to take the listener on a journey, and we did work had on the track order, so I’m glad that you noticed.

Audiofemme: No, it’s palpable, it really is, you can tell. It’s nice to listen to something that’s cohesive. A lot of music nowadays, is very disaggregated, especially in how bands throw an album together. I like yours is both esoteric and accessible at the same time.

G: Yeah, that’s the music that we write because that’s the music we want to listen to. I would get bored if I was just chanting the same thing for seven minutes, and if you were listening to that, you’d be bored too. We try to make music that we like. And there’s nothing wrong with chanting the same thing for seven minutes. But there’s something wrong with me chanting the same thing for seven minutes because I just won’t be entertained by that song. Other people can do it and they pull it off and they love it. It’s just not my style. At least, in music. I chant stuff all day long all the time, but it’s different for me in music. We have to make music that we love. I think that what’s nice about it is I don’t have to write lyrics, and I’m not coming up with the mantras myself. They’re prewritten by yogis 5,000 years ago. They have a vibratory frequency and a vibratory musicality, and that’s what makes them feel meditative. It took them 5,000 years to come up with this stuff. It was channelled and it was taught and it was passed down orally. It came from scriptures, and all these different places and all these different practices and all these saints and sages and monks and yogis and masters that put this stuff together. I can’t do that, and I’m not going to try to do that. And all I have to do is repeat the words and they have a specific vibratory field. And when they’re chanted correctly, it’s palpable and you can feel the meditative effects of it. So, all I have to do is make sure I’m pronouncing it right, and it gives people a feeling that normal pop music doesn’t give you!

Audiofemme: You can definitely feel that energy. It’s good to have your explanation of it, because a lot of people might not even know what they’re tapping into when they listen to this. It’s really really cool.

G: Yeah it’s such a science. These old yogis understood the neurons in the brain, they understood the atoms, they understood how the body worked on a very intimate, deep level. And they understood the science and technology of it. Western medicine is still figuring out the science. There’s studies that are being done on the effects of mantras and meditation in the brain and stuff like this. But the yogis of old really understood how these things can have a healing effect on the mind and body.

Audiofemme: Yeah, I do feel like we’re catching up here. I was telling you about a friend who teaches a graduate course at UCLA on mindfulness…I think that people are finally acknowledging it as scientifically plausible.

G: Exactly! That’s what I love about it is that it is a science. And I think that there’s a misconception that it’s religious or something like this. But like you said, your friend at UCLA is figuring out and doing research to prove that it is a science, it is a technology, because it has an exact cause and effect. And that’s all we’re interested in. To make people feel better, to make them feel better as quickly as they can.

Audiofemme: So I love the album art, I was going to ask you about that as well. I want to hear about how you went on this trip, to have this monk design this for you, and where the inspiration  for it came from, and the meaning behind your logo… It sounds like it was an incredible part of this process.

G: Oh wow that’s really cool! You’re the first person to ask me that, about the logo. And it sort of blows my mind that people haven’t asked that. Harimander, who is my husband, was going really deeply into the teachings, and the energies of the sixteenth Karmapa. The Karmapa is the head of the Kagyu school of Tibetan Buddhism. So he’s similar to the Dali Lama in that the Dali Lama is also the head of one of the schools of Tibetan Buddhism. So the Karmapa is a very high being… Harimander felt that he had some kind of energetic upgrade, I’d guess you’d call it, on this day. And then he started messing around on the computer, and this logo came out of his head. And we didn’t know at the time what it was. Was it a logo? Will we use it? We don’t know. But it really has a power to it. And it really moves and flows.

And the mandala, i’ve always loved Thangka paintings, I’ve been fascinated by them for a long time. How beautiful they are, how intricate they are, how people spend a lifetime perfecting them and how the technique has been passed down for thousands of years. In Nepal, I connected with some Thangka painters and there were these two in particular that I thought were incredible. And I commissioned a thangka from one of them that I have hanging on my wall, and the other did this album cover us. We worked for months and months on this. Well, he did, and we went back and forth with sketches and exactly what it would look like. I would take pictures of things and send it to him, and we worked through a translator Raju. Raju’s my hero because he made it all possible. And then this thing came in the mail one day and I almost fell over when I opened it…It sounds a little bit woo woo, but I really feel that there’s a lot of energy around this project that I can’t see, and I feel that we have a lot of support energetically. The fact that this stuff comes together the way it does, it’s sort of miraculous to me.

Audiofemme: No, it’s definitely very — every little detail fits with the greater whole, I’m so impressed. I can’t say it enough!

G: Thank you so so much. I’m so so grateful for that! We are super new, our first album was only released last year, so if you say something like that it makes such a big difference. It really…

Audiofemme: I think it’s gonna do really really well. It sounds like you’re already getting some really good press on it.

G: Yeah I think that we are. We’re getting some great feedback on it, and some great press, as you said. In particular talking to you, and talking to audiofemme is really incredible to me and to us, because I love who audiofemme is, I love your website, I love your writers. I think you’ve done an incredible job. I think the music you review is so authentic and really the type of music that you wouldn’t usually associate us with, but I think that we belong with.

Audiofemme: Aw, thank you!! Really sweet of you. I was going to ask you, as one of our round-up questions. I wanted some recommendations on who you’re listening to in that community right now, so we can check some of it out.

G: Yeah, totally! Gosh. I’ve met so many incredible people, I’m struggling with where to begin. One person you should check out is Ricky Kej. I love what he’s doing. He released a new age album, and this year he just released a world music album. He’s really using his music to change the world. That might sound melodramatic, but it’s true in his case. There’s an artist named Peia who I think has an incredible voice and is doing a lot of beautiful things. 

And I also love normal artists. I’ve been listening to a lot of Bob Dylan. Because he’s a storyteller, and he’s the best storyteller of all time arguably. I’m also fascinated to be grouped into new age, because, like most artists, I never thought of myself as belonging to a category, because I never framed it in those terms. But the fact that we write yoga music and the recording academy defines yoga music as new age music means that we are a new age band! Which we totally embrace. It’s just like we never made the decision to make new age music.

Audiofemme: It’s kind of by default. Well I think that’s wonderful. And I think that it’s good to shift people’s misconceptions about it as being cheesy.

G: Like elevator music!

Audiofemme: Yeah exactly. I think it’s good that you can move the dial on that a little bit. Do you guys play live? Do you tour or anything?

G: Yeah we are going to tour. But right now we decided to work on album number three. SO we’ve been in the studio working on number three, and i’m really excited about number three. I mean, I think that we did better on number two than number one, but number three is coming up at the moment. So we’re not going to tour until that’s done.

Audiofemme: Do you guys have a timeline for the third album? Are you using the same structure, bringing in players to collaborate with you on it?

S: Yeah I think so. We’re not exactly sure when it’s going to get done. We don’t have a calendar for it, we didn’t have a calendar for this one, and then we released it. SO we don’t hold ourselves to a schedule. But we are going to bring in some players, and I have some things in mind. I love our tabla player. I’m very attached to him and his particular sound, as well as the sound of his tabla. But there’s some new people I want to introduce to the mix.

Audiofemme: We’re super excited for it! Please keep us posted on your progress. We should wrap up – I’m sure you have a million things to do, but thank you so much for talking with us, it was an honor!

G: Such an honor for me too!

***Keep up to date on White Sun by following them on Facebook here, and order/Download your copy of the new album here or here.***

White Sun

NEWS ROUNDUP: Sad13, Angel Olsen, & Sweet Synths

news

  • Sadie Dupuis’s Announces Solo Project, Sad13

    Sadie Dupuis of Speedy Ortiz has announced a solo album and single under the name Sad13. “Get A Yes” is a shimmery, pop departure from her band’s 90’s rock sound, full of synths and electronics. It explores the idea of consent. As Dupuis told NPR, “How many kids learn about sex from pop music? And how many fun-sounding pop musicians do a heinous job as sex-ed teachers?… [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][like] ‘Blurred Lines,’ in which the narrator presumes to know what his partner wants?”

    Slugger comes out 11/11 via Carpark Records. Check out “Get A Yes” below.

  • Watch Angel Olsen’s “Sister” Video

    Continuing her steady stream of amazing new songs and videos from the upcoming My Woman, Angel Olsen released the single “Sister.” Not as wildly defiant as “Shut Up Kiss Me” and “Intern,” “Sister” paces along steadily and gracefully with images of Olsen walking through a Los Angeles desert landscape.  The video breaks the fourth wall at the end, with Olsen running over to a friend on the beach who asks, “Are you shooting a music video?”

  • Turn Your Laptop Into A Synth-Making Machine

    We just told you about cool music by other people, but maybe now you want to make your own? Here’s a unique, new way to do it. BlokDust is a website where you can program your own song, using a kind of visual synths system. You drag and drop and different effects and sounds onto your screen, and turn your laptop keyboard into, well, a real keyboard. The program, which “makes use of Tone.js as an audio frame,” was developed in the UK and is a collaborationn between Luke Twyman, Luke Phillips and Edward Silverton. Check it out here!

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ONLY NOISE: Poison Pen – The Discretely Vicious Songs of Elvis Costello

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The best insults are those that fly over our heads. Those that for a minute maybe sound like praise. Those that strike with a delay…like a cut from a sharp blade that doesn’t begin to bleed until several moments after incision. An insult that can walk away from its victim, turn its back and laugh as the brunt of the joke stands, stammering for a comeback. There are, in my book, four contemporary masters of this caliber of lyrical affront: Bob Dylan, Morrissey, Leonard Cohen and Elvis Costello. It is the latter that I praise today, for turning the act of insolence into an art form. I originally thought this could be a great Valentine’s Day piece, being the grumpy bastard that I am, but instead I will salute Costello on his birthday, which is today.

There are a cargo truck’s worth of reasons why Costello is one of my favorite songwriters of all time; that unmistakable snarl of a voice that could make “Three Blind Mice” sound subversive, his unflinching command of pop music, and those glasses…I’m a sucker for anyone on the Buddy Holly spectrum of things. But one of the most compelling things about Costello is his wicked mastery of the English language. His lyrics are often love letters printed with poison, at first seeming sweet, and only after consideration revealing themselves to be cruel reprimands.

It is this very contrast that I find so intriguing, and it is an attraction that occurs outside of my musical fanaticism as well. There is nothing more entertaining and refreshing to me than those who break the behavioral pattern people expect of them. When old ladies curse, when my kindest friends reveal their deep hatred for someone, when parents admit that their child is an asshole…these all tickle my deeply-rooted, contrarian nature, and the same can be said for Costello’s work.

His songs work in a similar, sneak-attack fashion to hard liquor; it’s smooth going down, but catches up to you later. The insatiable pop licks Costello brandishes overwhelm, while a guerilla faction of snide remarks injure from the side. Songs like “I Hope You’re Happy Now” from 1986’s Blood And Chocolate is a prime example of this dichotomy, especially given the misleading title (he really doesn’t hope you are happy now).

“He’s a fine figure of a man and handsome too,” Costello sneers. “With his eyes upon the secret places he’d like to undo.”

He goes on to describe a comically abysmal bloke that his former flame is bedding, wishing them both well with a sturdy middle finger.

“He’s got all the things you need and some that you will never/but you make him sound like frozen food, his love will last forever. Still, he knows what she wants and what she don’t allow/and I hope that you’re happy now.”

“He’s acting innocent and proud still you know what he’s after/Like a matador with his pork sword, while we all die of laughter/In his turquoise pajamas and motorcycle hat/I hope you’re happy now because you’ll soon put pay to that.”

The fun continues with tracks like “Miracle Man” off of 1977’s debut My Aim Is True, in which Costello proves his aptitude for the backhanded compliment (those going through breakups, take note).

“Yet everybody loves you so much, girl
/I just don’t know how you stand the strain/Oh I-I’m the one who’s here tonight/And I don’t want to do it all in vain.”

I used to wish that during every breakup, I could magically summon Costello, like some sort of mean genie to rattle off insults to romantic wrongdoers in my life. Perhaps he could hide in a tree and speak into a tiny mic hooked to my invisible earpiece, feeding me lines like “I knew then what I know now, I never loved you anyhow.” If only life worked like that.

It seems that even Costello’s “love songs” are not what they seem. One of his most iconic ballads, “Alison” has often been looked to as a slow dance, anniversary type of love song-something deeply romantic, when in fact it sprung from a far more depressing reality.

In Costello’s recent autobiography, Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink, he describes the impetus for writing the track: “I wrote the song “Alison” after seeing a beautiful checkout girl at the local supermarket. She had a face for which a ship might have once been named. Scoundrels might once have fought mist-swathed duels to defend her honour. Now she was punching in the prices on cans of beans at a cash register and looking as if all the hopes and dreams of her youth were draining away.”

I wonder if there were a few who read that book and wished they hadn’t; their wedding song ruined forever.

A friend of mine in high school who was also a massive Costello fan found solace in the song “Different Finger” from 1981’s Trust when she got mixed up in the age-old conundrum of infidelity. While most songwriters would exalt their new lover, or self-flagellate with guilt, Costello is cold and despondent atop a knee-weakening melody. All he asks is that the affair be carried out sans wedding bands, revealing little to no emotional investment. 

“Please put your rings on a diff’rent finger if you meet me tonight/’Cause I can’t stand those suspicious glances/’Cause I know the things they’re saying are right.”

“I don’t want to hear your whole life story/Or about my strange resemblance to some old flame/All I want is one night of glory/I don’t even know your second name.”

“Different Finger” is an honest song and a song without honor all at once. We can learn from its vulnerability and imperfections-it so clearly exposes all of the possibilities inside of us, that really we are all capable of anything given the correct cocktail of circumstance.

Of all these venomous love songs, “Little Triggers” off of 1978’s This Year’s Model takes the proverbial cake. It is one of the most heartrending songs of all time, with nods to doo-wop vocal melodies and the haunting pulses of Steve Nieves B3 organ. But despite the songs potential for glorious love-balladry, it is an extreme close up of an imperfect relationship, and all of the sour miscommunications that come along with.

“Little triggers that you pull with your tongue/Little triggers I don’t wanna be hung up/Strung up when you don’t call up/Little sniggers on your lips/Little triggers in your grip/Little triggers, my hand on your hip

“Worryin’ about the common decency/When it is only a question of frequency/When you say okay but you’ve got cheek to be/Sayin’ you’re tired of me when you don’t even weaken these/Little triggers that you pull with your tongue/Little triggers, I don’t want to be hung up, strung up/When you don’t call up.”

“Little Triggers” makes me wonder if the trigger-happy lover isn’t in fact Costello himself. It’s hard to imagine that any partner of his could be more sharp tongued than the insult-wielding musician. Or perhaps, his songs are merely some attempt at wish fulfillment. Maybe in real life it was too painful to put up a fight, so he brought the fight to music instead. I wish we all could siphon our pain into chart-topping songs. In the meantime, we have Elvis Costello.

FESTIVAL PREVIEW: Basilica SoundScape 2016

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Basilica Hudson is a “non-profit multidisciplinary arts center” in Hudson, NY that supports “the creation, production and presentation of arts and culture while fostering sustainable community.” They’re also throwing a killer music festival September 16-18, called Basilica SoundScape.

Wow, that sounds great! You’re probably thinking. But I have so many questions! Of course. Like, will there be after parties? Yes, at the nearby Half Moon barHow do I get to this Hudson Place? It’s two hours from NYC, by rail or car. Where will I stay? There’s camping nearby! And hotels. What else do they have besides music? Friday and Saturday pop-up shops, including one by Sacred Bones Records. How much does this cost? $75 covers a ticket for the weekend music festivities, $125 for the weekend + camping. Single day passes are also available. But let’s get to the most important question: Who’s playing at this thing?

Angel Olsen – Friday 

Angel Olsen’s new material from her upcoming My Woman is a bright and bold reinvention of this folk singer’s persona. “Shut Up Kiss Me” and “Intern” have shown a wilder and playfully sardonic side of Olsen, making her an act you won’t want to miss.

Bell Witch – Saturday

The Seattle duo is a gloomy, atmospheric doom band that brings a unique approach to metal. Using just drums, bass and, vocals, their sound is eerie and minimalistic. You might not get much head thrashing done during their set; if that’s your scene, just check out Cobalt on Friday.

Mary Lattimore- Friday

At The Dam, the harpist’s May 2016 album, creates its own little world with gentle, twinkling melodies that is delightfully easy to get lost in. If you camp at Basilica SoundScape, hopefully it will be much harder to lose your campsite.

Explosions In The Sky – Saturday

Bringing your dose of moody rock is Explosions In The Sky, scheduled to play on Saturday. Obviously, the nature friendly festival is the best place for them to play their latest album, The Wilderness. SoundScape’s organizers have described its lineup as “heavy,” and Explosions In The Sky is an ideal band to balance things out.

Deradoorian – Saturday

Angel Deradoorian is a former member of Dirty Projectors who has started a psychedelic solo project under her last name. A year ago, her Expanding Flower took us on quite a strange trip; read the review here.

PLAYING DETROIT: Dear Tracks: “Aligning with the Sun”

 

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Grand Rapids-based dream pop duo, Dear Tracks, excites with their politely warped and shimmery new track “Aligning with the Sun” which debuted earlier this week. Matt Messore and Victoria Ovenden found a way to give a soundtrack to dust particles colliding within a shaft of mid-afternoon light.

The arrangement, which is synth heavy, glitters without much deviation or elevation and manages to avoid sounding monotonous. A refreshingly melodic warble, “Aligning with the Sun” could easily be inspired by the tilt-a-whirl motion of a cassette tape being tangled within the cassette player, dancing with distortion.

The firecracker percussions and the twinkling, distant guitar paired with Ovenden’s misty vocals keeps Dear Tracks in good musical company, such as Real Estate and My Bloody Valentine. The opposite of anxious, the duo’s first track off of their anticipated debut LP (due out on The Native Sound records) is a bitter sweet (though, mostly sweet) end-of-summer breeze.

Daydream with Dear Tracks latest below:

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TRACK REVIEW: All Boy/All Girl “Pastels”

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With a seven-piece band, sometimes a voice or instrument can get lost in the mix. But with All Boy/All Girl, that’s absolutely not the case. Particularly with their latest single “Pastels.”

The track features shimmery vocals from Danielle Lovier over a backdrop of various acoustic instruments (cello, bass, viola, and ukulele). Each shines through in a unique way, creating a dreamy melody that’ll make you want to close your eyes and sway. “Pastels” has an ethereal spirit, from the layered vocals to the wispy notes that seamlessly flow through your ears; it’s the sort of track that makes you want and need to see what a live performance entails. It’s the first single released from their upcoming full-length Slagroom, and it’s got us excited for more.

TRACK OF THE WEEK: Cool Company “Slice of Paradise”

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Cool Company is bringing us a bit of smooth jazzy hip-hop in their new single “Slice of Paradise.”

This Bushwick-based duo is full of genre-mashing hits that make you want to move around a dance floor. Their new track holds elements of sexy, passion-packed soul music with raw hip-hop breakdowns, a juxtaposition that’s both unique and completely entrancing. If you’re looking for a song to chill out to after a long week, this should be your go-to—it’ll get you humming and relaxed in no time. They’re planning to release a full-length in September, so keep a tab on these cool fellas.

#NEWMUSICMONDAY: Black Coast “Sleep Alone”

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New York-based producer Blackcoast is back with another exquisite electro-pop track to get you in a turbulent daze.

“Sleep Alone” is his first single in eight months, making this his first label release under Ultra Music. The track is radiant, taking you through the narrative of sleeping alone and not being at terms with it, calling out for the one you love to come back. The song features the ethereal vocals of Soren Bryce, singing raw and honest lyrics:

“Could you come back home?
Be my melatonin?
Give me crazy dreams?
We’re off in the morning”

There’s an alluring irony in this track, with Blackcoast’s upbeat production that is paired with the sort-of sad undertone of Bryce’s words. This song will take you back to that dreamy feeling of watching your favorite 80’s movie scene, and being inspired to reach towards excitement – whatever that may mean to you.

Let this one play and carry you to the place of your crazed dreams.

TRACK REVIEW: Zula “Basketball”

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Feel like taking a musical voyage? Zula has got you covered with their psych pop jam “Basketball.”

While figuring out exactly what their genre is (experimental? psych pop? synthpop?) might not be entirely possible, it’s fun to get lost in their sound. It’s the sort of music that swirls around in your headspace, leaving you temporarily lost in the music—it’s the perfect place to forget about your daily worries and just relax. Their rhythms are intricate, their synths are plentiful, and their vocals are entrancing. This Brooklyn group is one you want to get familiar with, especially before the release of their full-length Grasshopper on August 26.

PREVIEW: Omni @ Shea Stadium & Mercury Lounge 8/20-8/21

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Atlanta-based indie-rock band Omni are playing two shows in the New York area this weekend.

Sat. Aug. 20 || Shea Stadium purchase tickets here.

Sun. Aug. 21 || Mercury Lounge purchase tickets here.

The band was started by guitarist Frankie Broyles, and former Carnivores members, vocalist/bassist Philip Frobos, and drummer Billy Mitchell. Their debut album Deluxe is chock-full of tightly wound, lo-fi guitar jams that channel the late 70s and early 80s.

Omni brings you back to an era where any sane person was reeling from the unfulfilled promise of the Space Age and the looming threat of “Morning in America.” It pushes the roots of rock & roll to its limits, still remaining in vogue. Deluxe serves as a fresh reminder that rock music can work outside of blues rooted, formulaic progressions without playing it safe behind a wall of effects.

Check out Omni’s rad visuals for “Wire” below.

 

NEWS ROUNDUP: Rock Shop & Featured Events

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  • The Rock Shop Is No Longer A Music Venue

    In today’s weekly installation of “what’s changed with local venues,” we have some bad news. As Brokelyn reported, The Rock Shop, one of the only music venues in Park Slope, will no longer have live music. Instead, the first level’s stage area will be become a game room. Its last show took place on Wednesday night and featured a Weezer cover band. Stay tuned for next week, when we tell you which of your beloved music hubs will be turned into a condo (hopefully not).

  • What’s going on this weekend? 

    Lots of stuff. Here’s some music we strongly suggest you see:

    PILL – Friday @ Park Church Coop

  • Surf Rock Is Dead – Saturday @ (le) Poisson Rouge

  • Far True Fest – Saturday @ Governors Island

    Featuring artists such as Wolkoff, Hannibal King, JBDK, Conrad Clifton and more!