Posts Tagged ‘Anti Records’

Japandroids will release their highly-anticipated new album “Near To The Wild Heart Of Life” on January 27 via Anti Records and today the band has shared another new track “No Known Drink or Drug”.

Near To The Wild Heart Of Life, the follow-up to their incredible 2012 album Celebration Rock, was written clandestinely throughout 2014 and 2015 in Vancouver, Toronto, New Orleans, and Mexico City. It was (mostly) recorded by Jesse Gander (who had previously recorded both Post-Nothing and Celebration Rock) at Rain City Recorders in Vancouver.

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A pre-order for the album is up now at Japandroids’ website, with the option to buy the special 7″ edition of the title track single featuring a B-side cover of Talking Heads’ Love GoesTo A Building on Fire.

Near To The Wild Heart Of Life is out January 27 on Anti-

If ever a lyric summed up an entire album then these  words, taken from the title-track from John K Samson’s new solo album, is it. First there’s the brooding, philosophising of time and place and our role within it:

“And no one knows we’re anywhere we’re not supposed to be, so stay awhile and watch the wind throw patterns on a field. ”

such a staple of Samson’s work with The Weakerthans – then there’s the nod to his surrounding environment, and the wheat crop that so inspired this new album; one that hides throughout the winter only to thrive again when the warmer weather arrives.

Also diverting from these two somewhat vague arms to take in tales of drug treatment centres, technologies advancement on our daily lives, psychotic episodes at local quiz nights, and even the return of his feline character, Virtute, who dropped in and out of The Weakerthans back-catalogue, ‘Winter Wheat’ is a poignant, beautiful, and wonderfully compelling album, resonant and warm magnification of what’s often overlooked, so rich in detail it feels like entering the world of some great novel; vivid, detailed, and one that stays with you for far longer than the running time.

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All lyrics and songs C 2016 by John K. Samson,
except 17th Street Treatment Centre and VPW 13 Blues,
C 2016 by Christine Fellows and John K. Samson

Antlers frontman Peter Silberman recently released the solo single “Slips Away” after revealing that he would release his first proper solo album at some point. The album details are finally here, and it turns out that “Slips Away” is not on the album, but the new nearly-nine-minute single “Karuna” is. If you like The Antlers’ atmospheric, melancholic pop, you’re probably gonna like this too. The album is called Impermanence. Here’s what Peter says about it:
Much of what distinguishes Impermanence from its forebears can be attributed to an unexpected injury, which forced me to consider the finite. A few years ago, I developed a hearing impairment that resulted in a temporary total hearing loss in one ear and an excruciating sensitivity to everyday sounds, including my own voice. In order to find rest and quiet, I left my Brooklyn apartment for a secluded setting in upstate New York.
It would be some time before I experienced silence again, thanks to a constant blizzard of tinnitus. Once silence ceased to be available to me, I came to think of it as the luxury of well-calibrated perception. We mistakenly perceive it as nothing, but it’s precious, a profound entity. It became obvious to me why many prayers are silent, performed in immaculately quiet spaces.
As the sensitivity and static began to subside, I gradually re-introduced sound into my world, gently playing my nylon-string acoustic guitar and whisper-singing. Eventually songs emerged— ”Karuna”, “New York”, “Gone Beyond”, “Maya”, “Ahimsa”, and “Impermanence”— each sparse and minimal. I was conscious to only say what needed to be said. The six songs have an economy of expression, the spaces between the words as important as the words themselves. I often thought of the Miles Davis quote: “It’s not the notes you play, it’s the notes you don’t play.”
As writing neared completion, I linked up with my friend and collaborator, Nicholas Principe, to record at his People Teeth studio in Saugerties, NY. Together, we carved out a sacred sonic space, elongating the distance between notes, between chords, utilizing minimal arrangements to allow breathing room. With the help of mix engineer Andrew Dunn, we repeatedly ran tracks through aged tape until the songs themselves decayed.
But the album goes beyond experiments in ambience. It traces the stages of healing, as I experienced them. The sequence mimics the challenges in facing unexpected obstacles, charting a circular course between pain and peace, in which both are passing phases.
Impermanence illustrates our uncertain world, where everything and everyone is a temporary participant. It provides no remedy for the unpredictable, but instead offers another way to think about changing circumstances. I hope it can provide some comfort to those of us grappling with transition, which is, undoubtedly, all of us.

Here is a note from my label, Anti- records to whom I’m very grateful to for understanding my desire to release this song sooner than later: CHRISTOPHER PAUL STELLING DELIVERS RESPONSE TO UNCERTAIN TIMES

Tumultuous times inspire passionate art. It’s how our humanity fights back. Singer-songwriter Christopher Paul Stelling has delivered an appropriate response during one of the most divisive and angry years in modern American history. Listen to his electrified new single called “Badguys” .

“We’re gonna round ‘um up and put‘m in the stew. what you hear is not me, it’s just some horse-shit fantasy that they cooked up now they’re selling it to you.” he intones hauntingly before the rousing chorus confirms what we all fear, “the darkness has taken over again. Let us not forget that we are merely children of men – only thing worse than original sin, is the knowledge that the bad guys always, bad guys always win.”

Stelling commented: “At first I wasn’t sure where this song came from and honestly, i don’t have much of a recollection of writing it but i remember it frightened me. i assume it was written at the beginning of the political circus we’ve all been living through, and the end of which we thought for a time would bring us some relief. I’ve always been one to hope for the best and prepare for the worst… and of course to never underestimate the ignorance of the uninformed and easily manipulated masses. I’ve been traveling non-stop now for two years. I’m writing this from Sardinia. What i’ve learned from my travels and talks with people all over Europe is that this is about so much more than just America… We’ve placed ourselves in this position as a global power, and our behaviors and action reach far and wide… We are better than this. We owe it to ourselves and to the rest of the world to set a better example… Everyone now is left with such a feeling of uncertainty. We have to be certain about something though, and that is that history tells us it never works out to just “wait and see”. it’s time to fight for our souls. there is too much at stake.”

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Following on from his work with The Antlers, Peter Silberman has written and recorded an instrumental piece titled Transcendless Summer. Taking only an afternoon to put together, back in August 2013, it is available digitally today and will be released on cassette on 8th October.
The following message comes directly from Peter,

“I’d been spending the better part of the summer of 2013 in Portland, OR, during a pause midway through the Brooklyn-based Familiars sessions. One evening, as an extension of a thought-experiment, Nicholas Principe match-made engineer Tim Shrout and me, and we chose a date to track something.

Biking across town to the session a few days later, I had no agenda. When I encountered the studio’s vivid arsenal of vintage gear, I didn’t have any concrete ideas. And when Tim (who had so generously donated his time, space, and expertise) asked me what I wanted to do, I didn’t really have an answer. I only hoped to liberate the pent-up potential energy of the moment.

Listening to its twenty minutes now, I experience a fleeting era distilled into a single day. I hear the first few miles of a long ride, hands released from handlebars’ grip, arms splayed out to the sides, coasting with abandon, rounding a blind corner without worry for what might slam into me beyond the immediately visible.

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In the three years since Transcendless Summer’s spontaneous birth, the colors bled and faded some, filled in with a wiser vibrance only time could provide. These tracks have felt three summers melt away, relearning the same cruelty each year: that summer’s start initiates a countdown to its end, that the first day’s light stretches infinitely outward before shrinking back from a dilating night.”
Peter Silberman

Peter Silberman will also be performing two shows in London in December for which tickets are available at the links below,

Wednesday 7th – The Forge, Camden (Tickets)
Thursday 8th – The Forge, Camden (Tickets)

“Best Kept Secret” by Case/Lang/Veirs from the self-titled album, available June 17th. is a one a of a kind album from Neko Case, K.D. Lang, and Laura Veirs. from three phenomenal, self-driven artists:
avant-rock icon Neko Case, legendary musical nomad K.D. Lang, and indie folk star Laura Veirs.These three women wrote all 14 songs and shared lead vocals equally, sometimes even within the same track. Full of stunning harmo¬nies and spellbinding rhythms, case/lang/veirs travels through aches and eras, torch songs and tributes to the undersung.

The self-driven artists:  Neko Case, legendary musical nomad and four-time Grammy winner k.d. lang, and indie folk star Laura Veirs. ANTIrecords is sharing the album’s lead track “Atomic Number,” which features vocals by all three singers, today.

“case/lang/veirs” the album will be released June 17th on ANTI- Records with an extensive tour to follow. Dates already confirmed for the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles, The Newport Folk Festival, and Brooklyn’s Prospect Park among others.

‘case/lang/veirs’ features fourteen original songs written by Neko Case, K.D. Lang and Laura Veirs over a period of two-and-a-half years. Full of stunning harmonies and spellbinding rhythms, ‘case/lang/veirs’ draws inspiration from alluring, mysterious subjects: a supermoon, the tumbledown story of 70s singer Judee Sill, and the “best kept secret” in Silver Lake, to name but three.   It was recorded in Portland, OR where Lang and Veirs both live, and produced by Tucker Martine with the group. Sessions commenced in Lang’s loft with a view of Mount St. Helens, and in Veirs’ dining room and backyard studio.

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“The Magician” by Andy Shauf from the album ‘The Party,’ available May 20th on Anti Records(World Excl. Canada) and Arts & Crafts (Canada),

Andy Shauf is a gifted storyteller. Earlier this year the Saskatchewan-based singer-songwriter put out one of 2015’s most breathtaking albums, called The Bearer Of Bad News — an appropriately titled collection of mostly grim tales about small town drug addicts, murderous lovers and other weary underachievers.

Shauf has been touring in support of the album for much of the year and got the attention of Anti- Records. The label has just added Shauf to its lineup with a separate deal on Arts & Crafts in Canada.

Andy Shauf joins a roster of artists at Anti- that includes Wilco for the band’s recently released Star Wars album, Deafheaven, and one of Shauf’s biggest influences, Elliott Smith (for the posthumously released From A Basement On The Hill). Shauf is at work on a new record for Anti due out sometime next year.

Singer-songwriter Andy Shauf has signed with Anti and released the new single, "Jenny Come Home."

Beth Orton Kidsticks album cover art

She’s been revered in singer-songwriter circles for a very long time, but longtime listeners know that Beth Orton got her start in the 90s UK electronica scene, lending her voice to big-beat compositions by the likes of The Chemical Brothers.

This spring, Beth Orton will release her seventh LP, “Kidsticks”, and it’s a return to form in that it sees Orton backing her music with driving techno rhythms, though her songwriting and vocals stunning as ever remain in the forefront. The record was co-produced by Beth Orton and Andrew Hung (a Bristol-based soundscaper who fronts the duo Fuck Buttons) listen to the lead single, “Moon,” rocks a totally infectious groove. “Moon” is a dance heavy track with atmospheric sound effects and a pulsating beat. The driving rhythm lays under Orton’s shimmering vocals, and the celestial lyrics match the song’s cosmic vibe.

Opening on a bassline reminiscent of The White Stripes’ “The Hardest Button to Button,” the song kicks into high gear at the midway point as Orton uses the moon as a metaphor for clarity and connection: “I see the light and it’s bright, keeps me up all night / I feel the light burning bright.”

Kidsticks is out on ANTI- Records on May 27th.

 

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“High Note” by Mavis Staples from the album ‘Livin’ On A High Note,’ available February 19th,

The indie Staples Singer is back with a new joint, and a documentary on HBO, to boot. Mavis Staples, the legendary soul and R&B singer that came up with her family’s band The Staples Singers, signed to ANTIRecords almost a decade ago, and has made records with the likes of Ry Cooder and Jeff Tweedy. Her latest, Livin’ On A High Note, features production from M. Ward and contributions from Bon Iver, Neko Case, Nick Cave, and Merrill Garbus (tUnE-yArds), among others. The first single, “High Note,” has a pleasing enough tele tone and Staples aching croon, but we’re hoping her 79-year-old pipes are still strong enough to flex a little harder on the rest of the record. Look for Mavis!, an upcoming HBO documentary on her life, premiering February 29th.

new bermuda cover

Deafheaven – New Bermuda
Released October 2nd ANTI Records) remember that Deafheaven is a substantially different band than the one that churned out “Sunbather” two years ago. the sense of urgency derived from a dire economic situation that permeated the band’s critically-acclaimed breakthrough album may be subdued, but this is a creative force bent on melding genre confines into a fluid product. at the very least, New Bermuda will not fall short on intrigue. Yet again fusing shoegaze, post-rock, and several strands of metal, the passion that Deafheaven had searched for was right before them. The box others have created for the band is ravaged by the beast that is George Clarke when he screams for the world to surrender to blackness (“Brought to the Water”). New Bermuda is a land with the blackest nights and the most beautiful suns

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