Posts Tagged ‘Brooklyn’

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Charly Bliss, a Brooklyn based four-piece, is far from the first band to revel in the glory of the 90s, but their debut, “Guppy” is infused with something more nuanced than just nostalgia. Guppy is ten songs of churning guitars, lead singer Eva Hendricks’s candy-sweet voice, and impossibly catchy melodies. There’s sheer joy here; if you’re not dancing around your room to these songs, you’re at least nodding your head along to the beat as the music blasts out of your headphones. There’s real poignancy as well; even on songs that seem silly, or downright ridiculous.

Take “DQ” for instance: the song starts out being about Hendricks’ jealousy of her boyfriend’s dog: “Does he love me most now that his dog is toast?” But somehow, in Charly Bliss’s hands, a song with the chorus, “I’m four years above sixteen/ I bounced so high, I peed the trampoline/I’m too sad to be mean/ I’m gonna end up working at Dairy Queen,” ends up capturing the self-doubt, the anxiety of growing up, and the reluctance to abandon childhood for the nebulous realm of adulthood better than anything in recent memory.

Guppy has an interesting origin story, in that it was recorded once years ago, thrown out, and then recorded again. The band, which consists of Hendricks, her brother Sam and longtime friends Spencer Fox and Dan Shure, has been touring for years (opening for acts such as Veruca Salt and Sleater Kinney) and wanted to bring the same kind of vivacity to their record as their live shows. “We felt our live show was really strong, and those recordings just weren’t doing them justice. We’re a pop band. We weren’t sounding as accessible as we thought our music could be,” guitarist Dan Shure said in an interview with Bandcamp Daily. As a result Guppy feels incredibly structured and fully-formed, without ever once sounding tired.

Charly Bliss is not a band that uses words simply as fillers in their sonic soundscapes, like some of their 90s loving contemporaries. Like all of the best albums, there’s a world inside Guppy, a frenzied, chaotic whirlwind where everything is happening at once. “Well, I think I’m still breathing/ While my parents are sleeping/ I am sick, but I’m speaking/ My boyfriend is freaking/ My conscious is fucked and my judgement is leaking,” Hendricks sings in album opener “Percolater.” It’s reminiscent of the kind of marathon days of youth, going from party to party, coming into work hungover, skidding from place to place on momentum alone –moments where you think your life is a mess but that in retrospect were the best times. There’s not much time set aside for reflection; instead it gets wrapped up in everything else.

Guppy contains odes to a cast of characters, ranging from Eva’s therapist (“Ruby”) to her ex-boyfriend’s girlfriend (“Julia”), to another ex who left her for his own cousin, (“Westermarck”). The songs don’t sound terribly different from one song to the next, but they definitely don’t blend into each other and fade away either; Guppy is consistently engaging, energetic and entertaining. This is not an album for passive listening; this is one to replay all night long.

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Catching Up With Beach Fossils, New York’s Resident Daydreamers

You don’t need to be familiar with N.Y.C. to understand Beach Fossils’ long-time-coming new album, Somersault. But it doesn’t hurt. The rock band’s already-classic 2010 eponymous debut was hinged on a sleepy yearning for the pastoral, and their follow-up Clash The Truth channeled the jittery energy of a weird millennial house party. But Somersault, due out June 2nd on frontman Dustin Payseur’s own Bayonet Records label , is the aural equivalent of riding across the East River in a rickety subway car at sunset. It just feels like life in New York.

Here, the band’s usually cloudy production is crisper, and the arrangements are bigger than ever. That’s at least partly because the typically overprotective Payseur, 31, found himself more receptive to collaboration: with his bandmates Jack Smith and Tommy Davidson; and with a slew of guest musicians, like a string trio and indie rapper Cities Aviv, whose presence gives the record a cool, cavernous feeling.

You could imagine many of these songs — the twangy “May 1st,” or weightless closer “That’s All For Now” — being played on a big stage in Central Park, at the kind of concert where you could buy a loose pre-rolled joint without having to try too hard. , Payseur was at his small studio in Brooklyn to talk about depression, non-romantic friendship songs, and what it’s like making softer-sounding punk in politically fraught times.
Is “Down The Line” about a friendship?
It’s a lot about myself, I guess. It’s about me facing depression head on. I was trying to work on music and I was feeling so fucking low. Just like, in the dirt. I couldn’t get anything to happen. My creativity was completely zapped. I was kind of breaking down. I hadn’t really been sleeping. I started working on this song, and I really liked how it was feeling. I put lyrics down. I did the whole song really fast. It was one of the only songs on the record that I did in one or two sittings. I realized if I just kind of faced how I was feeling, I could use it to my advantage. I could let it out.

I remember reading once that William S. Burroughs considered all of his books part of one universe, and one story. They work all together; they’re not really separate. That’s what the songs that I’ve written for Beach Fossils are like. A very consistent theme throughout is me being open and honest about my personal life. It’s about my life, and about my friends

I think this one is me being more open about my own shortcomings and flaws. And kind of like, dealing with that. I’m not offering any sort of answer or solution — it’s just me, how I’m living now. These are the things I’m dealing with, with people in my life right now. It’s open and honest in a different way.

Beach Fossils “Down The Line” from their album “Somersault” out June 2nd, 2017.

There’s some big, baroque-sounding songs on the record. How did the string arrangements come together?

We wrote the string parts ourselves, in one session. It was completely insane and I can’t believe we actually did that. We spent 17 hours writing the sheet music. None of us had written it before, and we had a very, very basic knowledge of sheet music. We only had a few hours to sleep before we went to the studio, and I couldn’t really sleep be cause I kept thinking, Okay, I’m going to go into the studio, show these professional musicians this sheet music and they are gonna have no fucking idea what this is supposed to be. It’s gonna be a mess. But then they started warming up, and they started playing the parts. I was like, Holy fuck, that’s what I wrote. It was a very emotional moment for all of us.

Band Members
Dustin Payseur
Jack Doyle Smith
Tommy Davidson

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When bands play at Third Man Records in Nashville, the shows are usually recorded to be released on vinyl as part of their Live at Third Man series. If you are fortunate enough to be in attendance, then at the show you can preorder a special Black & Blue split vinyl attendee version of the night’s performance.

Right now on Third Man Record’s site you can order the Black & Blue version of the recent performance by the great Brooklyn band Woods. The order page lists it as in stock, but the performance was just earlier this month and the usual turnaround on the Black & Blues is months and months. So, be forewarned that this may actually be more of a preorder.

As far as I know this is the first time that Third Man Records has sold the Black & Blues online outside of the refresh-athon sale they held a few years back.

Certain bands in this supersaturated, hyper-fragmented, temperamental internet era that rise above ephemeral popularity not because they perpetually reinvent themselves or stay ahead of trends or make headlines with crazy antics or write a mega hit or have a super dreamy frontperson… there are certain bands that rise above because of one characteristic that trumps all others: consistency. Woods is one of those bands, and their wheelhouse is a decidedly mellow blend of folk, psych, soul, and funk that’s wise beyond its years in timbre and lyric. It’s a comforting kind of music Woods makes. It doesn’t take you anywhere you don’t want to go, even if they world they depict is less and less hospitable with every passing day. It’s a soundscape reflective of the world it was created in, and its lack of call-it-action and angst makes it endlessly listenable for those of us with regrettably overactive minds. With over ten years and nine studio records under their belt, this Brooklyn band also runs their own label and 2-day festival at Big Sur, and has carved out a loyal legion of appreciators who extol their steadfast artistry and work ethic. We got to see the Nashville Chapter of this legion, as well as a whole slew of new members, at their live taping in our Nashville Blue room, Monday May 2nd. All captured on their Live at Third Man Records LP.

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Today, the Brooklyn-based, genre-defying band Woods released the physical copy of their latest album, and the lyric video for the album’s penultimate track, “Hit That Drum.” The video, filmed from a highway with a skyline view of New York City, slowly pans in black and white across the city’s urban topography.

The song hums with an acute melancholy—the song and album are written about Woods’ process of adjusting to the Trump years. in a press release shared by the band:

There will be parts of life where we will watch as events unfold and we will feel helpless. We will not be sure of the future. On good days, we’ll have each other. On the bad ones, we’ll turn to the art that helps us feel something. Love is Love is a document of the new world we live in, proof that light can come from despair and hope is still possible. We just need a little help remembering it exists.

Half Waif is the 80’s influenced indie electronic project of Nandi Rose Plunkett. She refers to the material as a “search for a sense of place” and that search is reflected in her confessional lyrical content. Rose Plunkett uses echoing synth modifiers and pelagic keyboard tones to amplify the emotion revealed by her arresting delivery of these intrapersonal tunes. “Half Waif brims over with sounds: underwater echoes of Celtic melodies; mossy, blinking electronic soundscapes; the ultra- sad chord changes of 19th-century art music; and eternal, unending bhajans. A finely crafted glass menagerie of song…”

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Band Members
Nandi Rose Plunkett – Vocals, Nord Electro 5D Keyboard and Korg Minilogue Synth
Adan Carlo – Bass and Vocals
Zack Levine – Drums, Roland SPD-SX and Vocals

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Love Is Love was written and recorded in the two months immediately following the election, but it’s not a record borne entirely of angry, knee-jerk reaction to what America is becoming. Instead, it’s a meditation on love, and on what life means now. Taking cues from last year’s City Sun Eater In The River Of Light, it feels very much like a record made from living, shoulder to shoulder, in a major city: weaving psychedelic swirls of guitar between languid horns reminiscent of the best Ethiopian jazz – Love is Love is a distinctly New York record. It is a document of protest in uncertain times and an open-hearted rejection of cynicism in favor of emotional honesty. It is bright, and then, unexpectedly, a little dark sometimes too. We argued about what we thought would happen. We preached understanding. We advocated for anger. Some people said that we’d at least get some incredible art, other people said that was a small view of a world we were quickly realizing we’d misunderstood. Everyone was right. Everyone was wrong.

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Art made in precarious times matters as much as we let it matter. There will be parts of life where we will watch as events unfold and we will feel helpless. We will not be sure of the future. On good days, we’ll have each other. On the bad ones, we’ll turn to the art that helps us feel something. Love is Love is a document of the new world we live in, proof that light can come from despair and hope is still possible. We just need a little help remembering it exists.

LP – Black Vinyl with Download.

LP+ – Limited Clear Vinyl with download. Limited to 400 copies – Rough Trade Exclusive.

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The Brooklyn-based indie-rock outfit Big Thief made the trip to the Late Night Show With Seth Meyers to perform the title song from their aptly named album “Masterpiece. The band seemed at home on set, with frontwoman Adrianne Lenker even busting a few moves on stage. Even more exciting, however, is Seth Meyers promise at the end of the show that the band has a new album in the works, to be released this comimg summer.

2017 is off to a busy start for Big Thief ! Last night they performed the title track from last year’s beloved album “Masterpiece” on Late Night with Seth Meyers

They also captivated a massive crowd at NPR’s SXSW 2017 showcase earlier this month. You can now watch the entire set recorded at Stubbs BBQ..

For Big Thief, fragility and power come inextricably intertwined. Singer and guitarist Adrianne Lenker may let her songs sit and seethe for long stretches, but those slow builds only maximize the catharsis of the big, loud, high-volume bursts of force that follow.
Onstage at Stubb’s BBQ in Austin, Texas — recorded live Wednesday as part of NPR Music’s SXSW showcase — Lenker brought a mix of new material and songs from last year’s terrific Masterpiece. Throughout the set, Big Thief’s sound billowed out in grand waves, matching the large stage and open-air setting, and by the end of “Masterpiece” (the band’s signature song so far), Lenker was on her back, lost in the intensity of the moment. It felt like just the beginning for a band with a big, bright future.

Set List
“Orange”
“Real Love”
“Vegas”
“Shoulders”
“Paul”
“Shark Smile”
“Parallels”
“Masterpiece”
“Mary”

Now we’re excited to announce their first release of 2017, the “Mythological Beauty” , which will hit store shelves this Record Store Day (April 22nd). The RSD Exclusive version of the 7” is limited to 700 copies on opaque yellow vinyl and features the tracks “Mythological Beauty” and “Breathe in My Lungs.” Be sure to head out to your favorite local record store on April 22nd to pick up your copy!

Big Thief also have a long list of tour dates in the coming months. 

Shilpa Rays first solo album, It’s All Self Fellatio, hit stores back in 2013, issued via longtime fan Nick Cave’s own Bad Seed LTD. Now, the Brooklyn singer-songwriter is back with a followup LP due on May 19th through Northern Spy Records. “Last Year’s Savage” spans 11 tracks and is previewed today with the powerful opening number “Burning Bride”.

Here, Ray’s vocals glow like smoldering embers, as she leads an eerie mix of organ, guitar, and glockenspiel. The palpable darkness that emanates from the track can be traced back to a fiendish, forbidden ritual which Ray tackles head-on. “Bride-burning is a banned practice in Hindu culture where they burn the wife alive after her husband has died,” .

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“In the olden days, priests set up some rules about a woman’s role and duties to her husband and god as a way to manipulate people into honoring this ritual, however the actual reason the priests did it was to obtain the wealth and property of the deceased. I had to take this story — the image of it — and use it to write about getting fucked in the ass during modern times.”

Last Year’s Savage Tracklist:
01. Burning Bride
02. Pop Song for Euthanasia
03. On Broadway
04. Johnny Thunder’s Fantasy Space Camp
05. Oh My Northern Soul
06. Nocturnal Emissions
07. Colonel Mustard in the Billiard Room
08. Sanitary iPad
09. Moksha
10. Pipe Dreams Ponzi Schemes
11. Hymn

Tamko: “Part of the appeal of making underground music is you can figure out your voice as you’re performing."

At a Vagabon show in February at Baby’s All Right, in Williamsburg, 24-year-old Lætitia Tamko stood onstage dressed in black, toting a sunburst Fender Stratocaster and facing an audience who looked nothing like her. A handful of Black faces in a sea of white ones. Still, the place was packed, and the crowd was there to experience her.

Tamko uprooted from Cameroon to Harlem at the age of thirteen, then again to the suburbs of Yonkers. She started writing songs in high school, after her parents gifted her with a guitar and she used an instructional DVD to teach herself how to play. She spent her time at the City College of New York studying electrical and computer engineering — a career path with enough promise and practicality to appease African-immigrant parents. But Tamko picked up pen and guitar again, secretly crafting her album while working full-time. She quit engineering, moved to Brooklyn, and stumbled into the New York’s indie rock scene, forging her own space there.

The chords she once played in the dark took the spotlight that night at her album release show. The stage is where Tamko’s passion and skill meet, and where her worlds collide.

The familiar yet fresh music of her debut, Infinite Worlds, revolves around the nostalgic sound of alternative rock from the Nineties to the early millennium. It’s charged by songs that take us inside her outsider world. She’s hiding, revealing, traveling, unpacking, and affirming that the discomfort of it all is worth the journey.

The delicateness of her speaking voice is matched by the soft strength of her singing, which she calls a “learned skill.” “I taught myself how to be good,” she said. “I don’t think I was bad but, like anything, it can be learned. And part of the appeal of making underground music is that you can kind of figure it out — you can figure out your voice as you’re performing, as you’re making music. You don’t have to be as seasoned. I haven’t taken vocal classes. I’m sure they’re super helpful, but I have found a way to use my voice the way that I want to.”

The bellows, yelps, and harmonizing on Infinite Worlds were a product of her dedication to honing imperfections. Tamko played nearly every instrument on the album — guitar, drums, synth, keyboard. On the surface, it’s indie rock. Underneath, something different is happening. Tamko doesn’t subdue her narrative, nor relinquish the weight of it. Growing up, Tamko didn’t see artists she could identify with, who looked like her and represented the skilled, unpolished musician. But the subtleties in her vocal riffs, polyrhythms, guitar strokes, and synths reflect the inner layers of the music she consumed through the years. The discography of her childhood included everyone from Cameroonian songwriter and novelist Francis Bebey and Malian guitarist Ali Farka Touré to Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston, and Mariah Carey. These days, she plays Migos on repeat, vibes out to Solange, and takes in as much pop music as she can, too.

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LAS ROSAS – ” Boys “

Posted: March 13, 2017 in MUSIC
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The words “Brooklyn” and “Garage” might as well be peanut butter and jelly in Austin; we can’t tell you how many groups of long haired kids with trust funds stop wearing deodorant and buy tight jeans as a “fuck you, dad!” statement of internalized otherness. But Brooklyn’s Las Rosas succumb to none of that shit. The autumns of teenage years often pass unhurried, like a languid river, unaware of its eventual violent end down a crushing waterfall. In this metaphor, Las Rosas are three shed leaves, floating and bobbing on the water’s surface, edging closer to the muddy banks, then climbing out of the water, walking along the road on their little brown stems, piling into their sea-foam-green van, driving away, and releasing “Flower in the Sun” and “Ms. America” (Dizzybird Records 2015). They’re the little leafs you see driving around the USA, playing rock shows far and wide, with their little guitars and drums. No autumn leaf, if you bothered to check, ever stops moving.

Catching them opening for King Khan was one of that week’s greatest surprises, and the band performed their paisley, catchy numbers with all psychedelic cohesion of a multi-sensory acid test cavalcade. Las Rosas also channel the swinger-iffic swagger of Khan, serving up soulful pop tunes fit to soundtrack a night of boogie.

Band Members
jose boyer, christopher lauderdale, jose aybar