Archive for the ‘MUSIC’ Category

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Galdre Visions is a Leaving Records supergroup comprised of Olive Ardizoni (Green-House); South Asian-American sitarist, vocalist, and composer/producer Ami Dang; Diva Dompé (Yialmelic Frequencies, Diva & The Pearly Gates); and harpist/composer Nailah Hunter. These four artists were drawn together during 2020’s pandemic to remotely create collaborative music reflecting this unique and uncertain moment in history. Hunter describes the group’s dynamic: “Each member of the group provides a unique sonic lens with which to view the realms beyond this world. Each member’s music recalls the sound of organic life in a different way.” Collectively inspired by Celtic mysticism, outer space, and New Age both classical and modern, Galdre Visions have crafted a powerful and timely document of the exploratory, healing power of music.

Ardizoni states, “Well, we are going through some extremely difficult times so there is no way that this project has not been influenced by that. I find that with writing music during difficult times you don’t really become aware, sonically, of the impact of that time until you listen to it way down the road. Writing this kind of music has always been a means of transmuting my pain into joy so that the listener can experience that by proxy.” Album-opener “Living Space Station (Bad Dream)” conjures an ominous atmosphere of strife, its lyrics alluding to unusual, unsettling, and nightmare-like events unfolding seemingly every day. Dang reflects, “Even though we’re all stuck at home, the world is ripping itself apart right now, and all of this chaotic activity makes me feel like I’m slowly making my way through a thorny thicket, but I’m only moving in circles. The trees and animals look more menacing at every turn. But the music keeps me going, and it reminds me that there will be a clearing, that the darkness will turn to light, that a crystalline waterfall lies somewhere beyond this cycle of madness. We will only reach this place through continuous movement, change, and protection.” Stunning album-closer “The Sun Will Rise Again” ends on a positively ebullient note of optimism, a transcendent vision of hope and things to come. According to Ardizoni, “It acknowledges and validates this feeling of melancholy that comes from experiencing this seemingly never ending suffering while being able to maintain the awareness that it will be better again some day. We will be together again, building the communities that we need to build with a new sense of purpose.”

The transition from negativity to positivity serves as a central theme of the album. Hunter states, “To me, ‘New Age’ art often illustrates human reconnection to the earth and the ancestors as the portal to a bright new world.” Dompé adds, “I look around and see that the dysfunction and unsustainability of our society is being put under immense pressure and its flaws becoming undeniable. But with this project I have been experiencing collaboration through an awareness of mutual support … I think we have the potential to function more like this on a larger scale in our society if we could heal the issue of worth being tied to productivity.” Ardizoni writes, “For me, another theme of this project is pride. I’m proud to say that I have had the chance to collaborate with these amazing musicians. I’m proud to say that we are a group of people who are oftentimes underrepresented voices in the music industry, and here we are doing an awesome project together.”

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Glasgow four-piece Lemon Drink are preparing to release their latest track, following on from the success of last year’s EP. The band released Better Run in 2020, complete with singles in the shape of Manic, Gomez and A Song for You. Lemon Drink are a 4-piece indie outfit exploring the sometimes challenging and often humorous aspects of modern life as a 20-something woman.

And they will be kicking off 2021 with the new song Demon Child, which will be released through Last Night From Glasgow.

“Demon Child” was recorded at La Chunky Studio and mixed by the very lovely Andy Monaghan (Frightened Rabbit). Big love to Last Night From Glasgow for unleashing “Demon Child” into the world, as well as pressing it on a beauty of a  7” vinyl,

Lemon Drink are Kirstie Cunningham, Vocals Lauren Peters Bass Guitar: Drums: Harry Smith Guitar: Sophie Bartholomew Guitar:

The single will be available from Friday, February 12th,

bob marley live roxy, bob marley roxy, bob marley live album, bob marley assassination attempt, bob marley one love peace concert, bob marley smile jamaica concert, bob marley live

When Bob Marley and the Wailers made their way to the United States in the spring of 1976 to tour behind their eighth studio album, Rastaman Vibration, they were well on their way to becoming one of the world’s biggest bands.

While Robert Nesta Marley was already becoming known as a visionary artist in Jamaican and U.K. music circles, Rastaman Vibration marked the turning point in Bob’s public perception as he went from reggae favourite to global pop sensation, bringing the sounds of Jamaica into the mainstream along with him. It became the first Marley release to crack the top ten of the charts, peaking at number eight.

As Rolling Stone‘s Robert Palmer wrote in his initial review of Rastaman Vibration, “The sensitive, careful listener will learn from Rastaman Vibration something of the pain, rage and determination of Shantytown, Jamaica, and perhaps something of the community’s political and cultural fragmentation as well. Those who don’t care to listen carefully will still get the celebratory, life-affirming message of the sound and the beat. Perhaps that sound and beat are the ‘positive vibration’ Marley talks about at the beginning of the album, and his apparently inconsistent stand halfway between revolution and the Hot 100 masks an underlying unity of feeling and purpose which only the music can express. In any event, as a pop record Rastaman Vibration makes perfect sense.”

Marley took his surging, new-look Wailers (Bunny Wailer and Peter Tosh had split from the group in 1974) on tour that spring for a run that would help catapult him to superstar status and bring his unique mix of positive vibrations and rebel laments to a global, mainstream audience.

One performance from the Rastaman Vibration tour, at Hollywood, CA’s The Roxy on May 26th, 1976, was broadcast live on KMET Los Angeles and subsequently made the rounds in growing fan circles by way of bootlegs. The majority of the show was released officially as part of the Rastaman Vibration: Deluxe Edition in 2002, but the full performance—including its remarkable, twenty-eight-minute encore medley of “Positive Vibration” and “Get Up, Stand Up”/”No More Trouble”/”War”—was not officially issued until June of 2003, when Tuff Gong released Live At The Roxy.

Perhaps due to its anachronous release, Live at the Roxy often does not receive the same attention in hindsight as Marley live records like Live!(from London’s Lyceum Theatre, 1975) and Babylon by Bus (recorded over three nights in 1978 and released soon after). When viewed with historical perspective, however, Bob Marley Live at the Roxy captures a pivotal moment for both the man and his music—and the success of the tour it spotlights emerges as the proverbial bridge to Marley’s final act.

Later that same year, Bob Marley planned to perform at a concert in his native Jamaica in an attempt to quell recent political violence in the island country. While Marley officially maintained a neutral stance and agreed to play a single song for the December 5th show so long as it remained unpolitical, public opinion had him pegged as supporting sitting prime minister Michael Manley and his democratic socialist People’s National Party.

Two days before the planned concert, the violence came to his front door, instead. On December 3rd, 1976, seven armed men raided Bob Marley’s home. Marley was shot in the chest and the arm, with three others also sustaining gunshot wounds. Miraculously, none of the shooting victims were killed, and the shooters were later tried and executed. Prior to his execution, one of the shooters even claimed that they had been hired to kill Marley by the CIA in exchange for guns and cocaine.

On December 5th, just two days later, a defiant Bob Marley hit the stage at the Smile Jamaica Concert as planned, performing a full set instead of his planned single song despite the wounds he had sustained in the assassination attempt. More than just a living musical legend, Marley had now become a living political martyr, as well.

Following the attempt on his life, Marley moved away from Jamaica and resettled in London. He went on to release Exodus and Kaya while living in England, but as his political clout and commercial musical success continued to rise, his health began to unravel. In 1977, he was diagnosed with a malignant melanoma under one of his toenails. Citing his Rastafarian belief in keeping the body whole, Bob Marley declined medical advice to have the toe amputated.

The final albums he released during his life, 1979’s Survival and 1980’s Uprising, leaned even further into his increasingly prominent religious and activist beliefs, continuing to elevate him from famous musician to cultural hero. In 1978, Marley returned to Jamaica for the One Love Peace Concert. In a momentous moment of reconciliation, at Marley’s request, Manley and his political rival, Edward Seaga, came onstage to shake hands during Bob’s performance.

By 1980, the cancer had spread throughout his body, prompting him to step away from touring amid a U.S. arena run. By May 1981, five years after the Live at the Roxy show, Bob Marley had died at the age of 36. When he passed, the world mourned a legend, a leader, a revolutionary—and rightly so.

The Live at the Roxy performance serves as a time capsule for a more innocent time—a snapshot of the peak of Bob Marley’s rise to global musical stardom. In the time between that tour and his death five years later, Marley would be thrust into the heart of the conflicts he referenced in his music, shifting his classification in the cultural pantheon from musician to social icon, his image and his words becoming synonymously intertwined with the fight against persecution and the spirit of his homeland.

On Live at the Roxy, we hear the creative, exuberant seeds from which his cultural legend grew—Bob Marley, the observer, the leader, the rebel, the artist, eyes on the future but still largely untarnished by the very unrest and persecution he decried.

It’s only been three or so weeks since she unveiled the brilliant “The Baby Reimagined” a remix version of her album “The Baby” but Samia is already back in our ears by way of “Questions.” Featured on the upcoming Sister James EP I Hate It Here, Pt. 1, it’s a quiet-loud ripper that channels “Where Is My Mind?” if mainlined with millennial malaise.

NY-based multi-instrumentalist Quinn McGovern, aka Sister James, has spent much of his coronavirus lockdown working on new music. He’ll be sharing some of it as a new EP, “I Hate It Here Pt. 1,” due out April 16th via KRO Records, the label founded by Lawrence and Yves Rothman, to which Sister James just signed recently.

The EP’s first single is a collaboration with Samia, a striking track called “Questions.” It begins with a droning, shoegazey swell before descending into a sweet but sluggish acoustic melody, as Quinn sings softly, painting a picturesque image of a dream-like, ethereal countryside. Soon, the drums pick back up, signaling Samia to accompany Quinn on the chorus.

The collaboration between the two NY musicians came to fruition after Samia heard and enjoyed the track when Quinn played it in a Portland backyard while she had been touring with his band. “I was totally blown away,” Samia recalls. “Quinn has influenced so much of my song writing over the past 3 years; we’ve written together and demoed most of my songs together. I feel very lucky to get to be a part of this song three years later, after it’s already inspired so much of my work and feels like such an integral part of our music community.”

“Hearing her music since we met on that tour has given me so much of the inspiration that I have depended on while approaching my own music,” Quinn says of Samia. “I couldn’t imagine an easier artist to work with, and the idea that her voice is gracing one of these silly songs is so special to me.”

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Los Angeles duo Girlhouse practice the art of surrender on their latest single “the fatalist.” “I think I’ve learned that the only way to feel control in a shitty situation is to find a way to laugh about how we have no control over anything at all,” explains vocalist Lauren Luiz of the bittersweet chugger, which finds a kind of quiet liberation in letting go.

Rising artist Girlhouse, duly reflected through her latest single “The Fatalist”. Not afraid to explore and emote a dizzying headspace, Girlhouse impeccably captures the intimidation of feeling a lack of control over yourself and the world around you–something particularly relatable in everyone’s own personal current contexts.

Confessional in her lyrical style, Girlhouse’s ability to be unapologetically raw elicits a deep catharsis that feels freeing–it’s as if she’s giving everyone the greenlight to follow in her footsteps and be intrepid enough to be brutally honest too. Unabashed vocals that hold a certain authority meet soft-grunge sounds for an apt pairing that feels like they pull inspiration from the past to present a contemporary artifact.

The track continuously builds momentum, leaving you at the four-minute mark not only completely enraptured in the sonic universe of Girlhouse’s deepest cogitations, but also longing for more. With a tenacity that feels almost tangible, Girlhouse is an artist that proves the worth in being your most sincere self and we can’t wait to hear more.

The Orchard Music

Cheval Sombre’s new single ‘Curtain Grove’ is out today on all digital platforms. The incredible video by Chris Tomsett (Innerstrings) It is taken from Cheval Sombre’s third album, “Time Waits for No One”, which is released on February 26th. Produced and mixed by Sonic Boom and featuring backing vocals by Britta Phillips and strings by Gillian Rivers, it’s a majestic few minutes; a folk melodrama in miniature at the mid-point between Mickey Newbury and Spiritualized.

‘Curtain Grove’ grew out of a strangely productive, fragile month,” says Cheval Sombre, aka Chris Porpora, about how the song came about. “I was down with pneumonia but there was a piano in the house  on which all kinds of melodies came to me  during those silent afternoons, when everything was still. I then had to translate all to guitar, which took some patience and learning. But after this, it was astonishing – Gillian Rivers brought sweeping, orchestral strings, Pete [Kember] got hold and laced it with elegant melody, Britta whispered these elusive, lovely backing vocals.

‘Curtain Grove’ reminds me that much beauty can still come together despite difficult days. Innerstrings’ stirring video gracefully handles the play between darkness and light that we each of us inevitably encounter in which wonder ultimately prevails.”

“Time Waits for No One is Cheval Sombre’s first solo release for over eight years, following 2018’s critically acclaimed collaboration with Galaxie 500 and Luna frontman Dean Wareham, and the first of two new albums he has scheduled for 2021. It ushers in his most prolific period, and serendipitously the world has finally slowed down to his pace. This is no lockdown record, but Cheval Sombre’s reclusive, reflective music is its perfect soundtrack.

The new single from Cheval Sombre, produced by Sonic Boom. Backing vocals by Britta Phillips. It’s taken from the new album ‘Time Waits for No One’, which is released on February 26th.

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They recently clocked up over half a million streams on their breakthrough single “Fuck You Heather,” and today, Boyish are returning with “Superstar.” “You’re a superstar/I might drown in the way that I feel/But I guess I’m just a fan,” sighs India Shore on the ode to obsession, her vocals reflecting back at us like staring into a melancholic puddle.

Released February 5th via Invertebrate, “Superstar” arrives as Boyish’s first single of 2021 and the follow-up to last February’s spectacular sophomore album, Garden Spider. The duo of India Shore and Claire Altendahl, Boyish was formed “after feeling the need to start over, graduating college, and having no idea what is going on.” Their music is hypnotically contemplative – full of space, lush guitars, and vivid lyricism. Shore’s gorgeous, aching vocals help make every song an enchanting listening experience, but it’s Shore and Altendahl’s stunning chemistry that ultimately makes Boyish’s music so special: They dress their songs in just enough timbres and tonalities to evoke what they want us to feel, and nothing more. Unassuming yet limitless in its expression, Garden Spider truly is a work of art.

A sweetly seductive indie pop enchantment, Boyish’s new single “Superstar” is just the kind of dreamy indulgence we need to reignite our passions in in 2021.

Official Video for “Superstar” by Boyish

Mush: Lines Redacted: Signed Clear Vinyl

The Leeds-based art-rock trio, Mush, release their feverish second LP, “Lines Redacted”. The new release, which finds the group recruiting Lee Smith (The Cribs, Pulled Apart By Horses) on mixing duties, arrives just under a year after their debut LP, 3D Routine, capping off what has been an obviously tumultuous, but remarkably prolific year for the band. With any prospect of live shows decimated, the group, led by songwriter, Dan Hyndman, has found the time to release two EPs (‘Great Artisanal Formats’ and ‘Yellow Sticker Hour’) and now a duo of full-length albums.

Mush, comprised of Hyndman (guitar/vox), Nick Grant (bass/vox) and Phil Porter (drums), present their own sonic idiosyncrasy. It’s a sound that blurs the lines of abstract surrealism, existentialism and social commentary; utilising guitars as tools in 2020 to stave off malaise whilst simultaneously commenting on the nation’s ability to fall into such dire straits. It’s a sensory overload of wiry tones that zig-zag between punk, prog and sardonic-funk with a relentless ability to reflect society’s faults and apathy in a unique and acerbic manner. Whereas the band’s debut was very much a product of its time, something part-inspired by the political atmosphere of mid-2019 and a genuine moment of optimism when the prospect of a socialist government in the UK was on the cards, this new record uses tongue-in-cheek cynicism as a coping mechanism for the environment that we now find ourselves in.

From one song to the next, Lines Redacted introduces a string of different narrators with each providing a different reflection on the Armageddon scenario that we are slowly entering, whether that’s bemoaning it or gleefully willing it along. 3D Routine presented a bed of scathing political jibes latching onto themes and decisions of the time. Lines Redacted mutates these ideas into something slightly more sinister whilst maintaining all of Hyndman’s razor-sharp wit that permeates the album.

The Leeds-based art-rock trio, Mush, are set to release their feverish second LP, Lines Redacted via Memphis Industries on February 12th, 2021. 

Sadly, there are many examples of these famous recordings being leaked to the public, but not in the way that the artist intended. Sure, in your heart you can enjoy what you’re hearing an be somewhat satisfied that your long search is over, but often, you know that this isn’t the same as hearing an officially released version that mimics the true vision of the artist. Such is the case of Hail And Farewell, Gothenburg, by The Mountain Goats.

Hail and FarewellGothenburg” is an unreleased album by the Mountain Goats that was supposed to be the sequel to their 1995 release Sweden. It had remained unheard by the general public until 2007 when it was leaked onto the internet without John Darnielle’s permission.

This is an unreleased recording and was supposed to be the sequel to Sweden but for whatever reason wasn’t released. Someone close to Darnielle leaked it around 2007. Here’s what he had to say.

John Darnielle, has said that the album “is mastered too fast, by the way – the voice and guitar on it are about a full tone higher than they were actually performed.” Due to leaks like this one, he now destroys any masters that he does not want to escape without his blessing. This includes about fifteen songs that did not make the cut for All Hail West Texas.

Which is really very sad because All Hail West Texas is fucking amazing. Transitive Property states that those songs would’ve been amazing instead of fucking amazing.

Originally recorded in 1995, the record was reportedly mastered at an incorrect speed by The Mountain Goats’ frontman John Darnielle. While he had fully intended to re-master the album and release it later, the album leaked out into the public without his consent, and was shared around by an excited fanbase, keen for more music.

Disheartened by this leak, Darnielle abandoned the project, with no intention to release it as he had planned. While we have a version of this album available to listen to, it is in no way the same record that John Darnielle wanted to release. As a result of this leak though, Darnielle has stated that he now destroys the master tapes for any works he doesn’t wish the public to hear.

All songs by John Darnielle, except for “You’re So Vain” written by Carly Simon.

1. “Hello, Old Rabbit” 2. “You’re So Vain” 3. “Four New Trees” 4. “I Love You. Let’s Light Ourselves on Fire” 5. “Milk Song” 6. “Ghosts” 7. “Red Choral Diamond Spray” 8. “Ending the Alphabet” 9. “Crane” 10. “One Frozen River”

Minor Moon, the Chicago-based cosmic Americana group led by multi-instrumentalist Sam Cantor, have an upcoming third full length album “Tethers”, out March 26th via Ruination Record Co. & Whatever’s Clever. On his newest song as Minor Moon, Chicago multi-instrumentalist Sam Cantor takes on a feeling that has become all-too-familiar over the past year: a nebulous sense of confusion and loss, most debilitating because of how difficult it is to even recognize, let alone put into words—or music, for that matter. Cantor manages that last bit admirably on “Under an Ocean of Holes,” the second single from—and the creative key to, as he explains—his cosmic country project’s forthcoming third album “Tethers”, out March 26th on Ruination Record Co. and Whatever’s Clever.

Chicago-based multi-instrumentalist Sam Cantor has released the third full-length from his cosmic Americana project Minor Moon, Tethers, via Ruination Record Co. and Whatever’s Clever. Lead single “No Lightning Fix,” which features a pair of Cantor’s Windy City peers in V.V. Lightbody and Ohmme’s Macie Stewart, arrived alongside the album’s announcement in January, while second single “Under an Ocean of Holes” in February and “Hey, Dark Ones” arrived earlier this month. Cantor drew inspiration for Tethers’ 10 tracks from an intense period of personal discovery that began with him being thrown for a loop by the end of a long-term relationship, using his music as an outlet for the powerful feelings entangled with his experiences. “Minor Moon songs have always had this arc of discovery and I’ve always used them as a way to dive into really personal, philosophical, or emotional problems,” says Cantor. “It’s about finding some truth looking inward.” We’ve praised Cantor and his collaborators for making a “sprawling and complexly arranged” album that “imbues warm Americana with an otherworldly hum” while managing to find a deep-seated joy in life’s lack of easy answers.

Having previously shared the unhurried No Lightning Fix, the band have now offered up a second taste from the album in the shape of the simmering Under An Ocean Of Holes.

So, if a healthy amount of Midwestern twang, some engaging Neil Young style grooves, eye-opening atmospherics, and warm psychedelia are up your street you should check out both asap.

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Releases March 26th, 2021, All songs written and produced by Sam Cantor 

Sam Cantor – vocals, electric and acoustic guitar (all), synth (3, 5) and upright piano (5)
Nathan Bojko – drum kit (all except track 5)
Michael Downing – electric bass guitar and vocals (all except track 5)
Colin Drozdoff – Wurlitzer electric piano, organ, grand piano and Prophet (all but track 5), additional synths (1, 6)
Konstantine Stebliy – lap steel guitar (all but track 5)

Additional musicians:
V.V. Lightbody – vocals (1, 2, 3, 9), flute (2, 3, 4), piano noise (5)
Macie Stewart – violin (2, 3, 4, 6, 10), vocals (3)
Nora Barton – cello (2, 3, 4, 6, 10)
Sean Mullins – percussion (all except track 8)
Alex Blomarz – tenor and baritone saxophone (2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 10)
Nick Broste – trombone (3, 6)
Dorian Gehring – pedal steel guitar (5)