Archive for the ‘MUSIC’ Category

When first arriving on the San Francisco Bay Area music scene in late 2014, Pllush made a dent with a powerful set of tracks that fit nicely within the rising wave of shoegaze/dream pop revival bands at the time. However, due to an undeniable song writing prowess that extends far beyond convoluted pedal-board setups or louder amps, Pllush had elevated themselves into a league of sonic mastery, not dissimilar from obvious touchstone influences (i.e. Mazzy Star, Slowdive, Portishead). The quartet’s second batch of songs, furthered their growing following and replaced their initial gravitation towards maxed-out guitars and splashed cymbals with an eerie, groove-filled bent, channeling Drop Nineteens at their most tender, and imbuing Grass Widow-esque layers of harmony into songs already dense with melody.

As the world around the band has changed in the interim between releases, they have followed suit- they added an “L” to the name, and undergone the whirlwinds of personal flux that naturally occur in such extended periods of time. But rest assured: the only dynamic of the band that has changed is by each member doubling down into the personal qualities that made this group so special in the first place. Which brings us to the year 2018, and the release of Pllush’s debut LP, “Stranger to the Pain”.

Whereas on earlier releases, singer/guitarist Karli Helm merely teased her abilities as a singer, here she fully embraces her natural pop-tinged mastery of the human voice, now sounding far more like a contemporary of Kate Bush and Alicia Keys on standouts like “Restart”, pushing the boundaries of the Rock and Roll genre while layering dizzying harmonies over an instrumental track that Built to Spill would kick themselves for not thinking of first. Meanwhile, Eva Treadway provides a perfect foil with an effortlessly cool approach to laying her sometimes light-hearted (“Ortega”) and frequently heartbreaking (“Fallout”) lyrics over her more driving style of guitar playing, as indebted to Slanted and Enchanted era Pavement as it is to the best work of The Donnas, seamlessly working clanging guitar abrasion into pop gems. Dylan Lockey and Sinclair Riley fill out the rhythm section on drums and bass, respectively, with Lockey’s snap-tight precision guiding the mood and tempo of the record (i.e. highlights such as “3:45”), and Riley’s complex bass work constructing a rich and deeply melodic backbone for Helm and Treadway to build upon. Stranger to the Pain is the kind of record that reintroduces a band whose previous catalogue stands assuredly on its own as a new and fresh face- and like a conversation with an old friend, once it’s over, you will want to restart. 

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Pllush! Stranger to the Pain is an emotional rollercoaster. Good for long drives on a dark highway, blurry street lamps, that kind of vibe. I’m not sure if it’s my album release week or the state of the world or my own biological workings, but I’ve been feeling particularly emotional lately. These Pllush songs have a keen way of pulling me out of my anxiety spiral and laying the feelings bare in front of me, creating a container for growth to occur. A great reminder that big emotions are not the exception, they can rule.

Originally released June 8th 2018

“I can’t find the answers for myself/ It’s easier to help somebody else,” Laura Fell laments on ‘Cold’, the second single from her upcoming debut album, “Safe from Me”. A psychotherapist by day, it’s perhaps no surprise that the London-based artist’s music is imbued with a sense of vulnerability and keen self-awareness, but it also serves as a subtle means by which to challenge some of those assumptions – the record is less about finding answers than the discoveries that arise simply from the process of introspection, and ‘Cold’ is a stunning embodiment of that.

The song started as a spare arrangement before it took on a new shape in the studio, and the final result is lavish and engrossing as Fell’s quietly elegant vocals crawl around layers of ominous percussion; ‘Bone of Contention’ unravels with a similar kind of mystical beauty and poetic suggestion as Fell explores a love triangle gone wrong.

The instrumentation throughout Safe from Me is wonderfully organic and refined, with Fell having recruited a group of classically trained musicians to help realize her artistic vision, but it’s the songwriter’s knack for penning empathetic, nuanced folk songs and wrapping them around her enchanting voice that renders it such a compelling listen.
A psychotherapist by day, Laura Fell’s upcoming debut album, ’Safe from Me’, is a search for answers from a woman always expected to have them to hand, and the self-punishing frustration that assumption brings. Fell’s dedication to this journey of self-discovery was unquestionable from the off, so much so that her peers questioned her sanity. Holding down three jobs to fund the record, Fell was determined that the songs would go far beyond their acoustic guitar genesis, assembling classically trained musicians and their flugelhorns, cellos, saxophones and double bass to fully realise her vision. Lead single ‘Bone of Contention’ was the first of those fully fleshed-out arrangements to be shared. Incredibly refined, ‘Bone of Contention’ shares the elegance of a painting that stands proudly at the top of a stately home staircase, more hidden details emerging with each glance – the airy synths, sweeping strings and the richness of Fell’s Aldous Harding-echoing vocal dawning on you with every play. “Bone of Contention” is an exercise in anger. I’ve always struggled to feel anger without also feeling out of control, and therefore disempowered. What this song is about is allowing myself to sit with my anger, and ending up finding clarity and power within it,” Fell explains.

Originally from Brescia in Northern Italy, and now based out of Manchester, Julia Bardo has had a busy year, releasing “Phase”, an EP of her own music back in March, before following that up with a covers record, The Raw EP, featuring her takes on tracks by LCD Soundsystem, Silver Jews and Fleetwood Mac. Continuing an unusually productive 2020, Julia has this week shared a brand-new single, “It’s Okay (To Not Be Okay)”.

Described as a contemplative song about survival, self-acceptance and positivity, Julia has suggested It’s Okay (To Not Be Okay) is a, “journey of the self”, a song about learning to be okay with who you are, breaking negative cycles and not letting other people’s opinions weigh down upon you. There’s a beautiful battle for the musical soul of this track, as the delightful vocal harmonies sit in perfect contrast to the deceptively noisy backing, resplendent with driving rhythms and loose Velvet Underground-like guitar clatter. With each new release, Julia Bardo seems to further refine her sound, gradually honing in on something rather magical and uniquely her own.

It’s Okay (To Not Be Okay) is out now via Wichita Recordings.

It’s hard to believe it’s been over six months since the release of For Their Love, and what a crazy six months it’s been! Hope you have all managed to stay safe and well. As the year draws to a close, we cast our minds back to sunnier, happier times in Sicily where ‘For Your Love’ was written. We’re proud to release the original demo versions of the songs from the album…
After the 2016 election, Kim and I decided it was time to take a break from the USA. After a long road trip through Europe we ended up in a small town on the island of Sicily called Castellammare del Golfo. There we found such peace and a way of life that inspired putting down the computer and getting back to a more basic form of song writing. The result was the sketches of what would become For Their Love. We hope you enjoy these early musings. Kim & Jesse.

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“Sicily Sessions” on Cassette – limited to just 100 copies via the band’s store.

“After the 2016 election, Kim and I decided it was time to take a break from the USA. After a long trip through Europe we ended up in a small town on the island of Sicily called Castellammare del Golfo. There we found such peace and a way of life that inspired putting down the computer and getting back to a more basic form of song writing. The result was the sketches of what would become For Their Love. We hope you enjoy these early musings.” – Kim & Jesse

Released December 11th, 2020

From Johnny Thunders’ personal tape archive, this recording is among hundreds of live, studio and writing session tapes he stored away for safe keeping in a box simply labeled ‘Thunders Tapes’. Cleaned up and mastered, our attempt is to reveal the recordings Johnny felt worthy of keeping and to release only the best audio quality and performances that live up to his musical legacy. In the debut release, we hear Johnny and his band performing at a Swiss radio station in 1985. The digital version includes extra songs not on the vinyl.

Spectacular sound. Great set. Production note: The producers have endeavored to attribute and credit all work contained in these recordings. Any omissions brought to their attention shall be corrected in future releases.

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Released October 28th, 2020

Previously released in a truncated form on a CD in 2010, now George Thorogood and the Destroyers’ legendary Boston 1982 show now arrives in its complete form (with 12 previously unreleased tracks) and on vinyl for the first time. This limited pressing is presented on red marbled vinyl alongside a poster and liner notes. It’s all part of Craft recording’s celebration of Rounder Records’ 50th anniversary. “1982 was an absolute high-water mark for us,” Thorogood said in a statement. “Everything was going our way and it shows in this recording…This is George Thorogood and The Destroyers at our best!”

This 2020 reissue of Live in Boston, 1982 adds 12 never-before-available live tracks to the previously released material. This live set captures the remarkable high point in the band’s career, having just come off of a tour opening for the Rolling Stones. The power and focus of the band at this point in their career can be heard in every track. This live release is also a fitting exclamation point to the Destroyers’ breakthrough days with Rounder Records. This release is available for the first time on vinyl and comes as a 4-LP set.

Live in Boston, 1982: The Complete Concert

Maiah and I wrote this song during the first lockdown and recorded, produced, and released it ourselves (so thank you to all of you on Bandcamp who continue to support independent musicians – this is very meaningful to us and allows us the privilege to continue doing what we do).

When we wrote this song back in late March, we had no idea we would be going into a second wave and a second lockdown when this song was released, on November 20th, 2020. For us, the delivery of this song into the world at this particular moment, is aligned with our intentions. We wrote this song as a tribute to the non-linearity of time and love, which is to say: 2020 has been a year of distance, but those who are in our hearts are there forever, regardless of time and space, and we will see each other on the other side of this.

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As we dip into the holiday season, which is likely a more charged time this year than others as many of us will not be with loved ones celebrating, we hope this song reaches you, lifts your spirits, reminds you that nothing is forever, and we will get through this and be together again.

Released November 20th, 2020
Written and performed by Doe Paoro & Maiah Manser

Elizabeth Cook is a Nashville-based singer-songwriter from Wildwood, FL– the New York Times lauds her “a sharp and surprising country singer”. A veteran SiriusXM Outlaw Country Radio DJ, Cook has hosted her own show, “Apron Strings”, for over 10 years. “Aftermath£ addresses love, heartbreak, addiction, death, resurrection. This is another breakthrough for this artist that I’ve known and loved for so many years. She’s telling us things we need to know. We’d be best served to listen.

Elizabeth Cook titled her new album Aftermath . It’s unclear if she meant this in tribute to the Stones’ record or if this was just coincidental. However, like the British boys, Cook often looks at the more sombre aspects of life. Her songs are different in one crucial respect. The Stones expressed themselves as passive observers to the world in which they lived. They were going along for the ride and offering commentary. Cook’s 12 self-penned songs take things a step further. She reflects on what has passed and continues as a protagonist who has been changed by experience. She’s not willing to accept what is. The “aftermath” will be of her own making.

The songs on Cook’s Aftermath are sonically very diverse, from the martial beat of “Bones” to “Daddy (I Got Love for You)” to the lively “Perfect Girls of Pop” to the folkie talking blues of “Mary the Submissing Years”. The album was produced by Butch Walker (Green Day, Weezer, Taylor Swift) and recorded at his Ruby Red Studios in Santa Monica. Cook’s band features Steve Duerst (bass), Herschel Van Dyke (drums), Aaron Embry (keyboards), Andrew Leahey (guitar), and Whit Wright (pedal steel, dobro). Walker’s productions give the songs a tight structure from which the players and Cook can loosely deliver the goods.

Official Video for Elizabeth Cook’s “Thick Georgia Woman” from the upcoming album “Aftermath!” begins with a strong, repetitive guitar line that implies the title character’s toughness. When Cook breaks free of the instrumental limits by singing overlong lines, it sounds as if she’s breaking the rules. And that’s the point. The thick woman doesn’t bend to fit the mould. Her strength comes from a natural place. She’s got “a basket of peaches under her clothes”, and that’s not all. Cook sings the descriptive lines with a slurred Southern accent as she identifies with the title character.

Cook has a husky voice that she uses to stress the realism of what she’s singing. By realism, this does not the mundane details of actual existence as much as the psychological truths we tell ourselves. She gently mocks the pretensions of pretty girls who croon sweetly on “Perfect Girls of Pop” but doesn’t fault the singers as much as empathize with those who haven’t yet experienced pain (“they never had their heart slammed in a door”). Cook lets the listener know that she’s familiar with making “Bad Decisions”, telling fibs (“Two Chords and a Lie”), and being ashamed (“When She Comes”), but she doesn’t express regret because she has learned from her mistakes.

Cook also has a sense of humour that prevents her from taking herself too literally. The album’s funniest song works as a tribute to John Prine. He wrote an imaginative song about Jesus’ missing years. She creatively addresses Jesus’ mother and her “submissing years” with a wry panache that would make the Singing Mailman proud. The women who populate Cook’s album range from the Virgin Mary to “Half Hanged Mary”, a woman accused of witchcraft in the 1680s who was hung from a tree but survived and lived another 14 years. Many of the other tunes appear to be autobiographical, with Cook herself as the good/bad lady who lived to tell the tale.

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Last month, we threw a Save Stereogum livestream event for our VIP crowdfunding donors. One of the performances was from DIIV, who offered up a brand-new cover of Psychic TV’s “The Orchids,” which appears on the band’s 1983 album Dreams Less Sweet. The band has now shared it for all to watch and it comes with a tribute to Psychic TV leader Genesis P-Orridge, who passed away earlier this year: “truly one of the most revolutionary and inspiring musicians of the century.”

Recorded for Stereogum’s ‘Save Stereogum’ livestream, here is DIIV’s cover of Psychic TV’s 1983 song ‘The Orchids’.

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Having made a ripple of acclaim flow out across the pond, a new American band were given their first UK television appearance on the acclaimed music show ‘The Tube’—that band was Michael Stipe’s R.E.M and they would go on to give a career-defining performance.

R.E.M. were ready to make the newly found glistening stage their own when they were invited for a three-song slot in 1983. The band would take two numbers from their “Murmur” album, ‘Radio Free Europe’ and ‘Talk About The Passion’, Stipe and the group would also give a sneak peek of the upcoming 1984 album “Reckoning” with new track ‘So. Central Rain’.

It culminated in an extraordinary performance in the bubbling creativity of Britain. In 1983, the nation was still reeling from the dissolution of punk and was struggling to find their new sound. R.E.M’s arrival alongside indie acts like The Cure and The Smiths would herald a new age of alternative rock and roll. No longer flash and fashion orientated—R.E.M. offered something new and heartfelt.

“We’re not from Atlanta… We’re from Athens.” – Michael Stipe  
On November 18th, 1983, R.E.M. made their first-ever UK TV appearance performing “Radio Free Europe,” “So Central Rain (I’m Sorry),” and “Talk About The Passion” on Channel 4’s influential but short-lived program, The Tube. The performance marked the beginning of three decades of tour stops, festivals, album recordings, TV & radio appearances, and a lasting admiration for the people and places of the British Isles.

R.E.M. live on The Tube 18th November 1983