Posts Tagged ‘Brooklyn’

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Summer’s here and the time is right for the BBiB 2016 Summer Jam Sampler! And this one’s even got two never-heard-before tracks from the brand-new mutant progressive rock band, Drakkar Nowhere, and the psychedelic folk guitar-picking duo, Elkhorn.

The Jam Sampler is FREE…BUT anyone who pays at least $5 for the download will be entered to win one of three killer prizes: the new BBiB “Music For Heads” t-shirt, a Myrrors “Entranced Earth” test pressing, and a Heaters “Baptistina” test pressing! Get in there…

Founded in 2002, We are a Brooklyn/NY based record label. We have releases by: Surfer Blood, Grizzly Bear, Chairlift, Fear of Men, Beverly, Pinact, Flowers, Leave the Planet, Eternal Summers, September Girls, Flowers, Bleeding Rainbow, Beach Day, Splashh, BRAIDS, The Depreciation Guild, Young Prisms, Four Volts and more. 

Kanine Records is an independent record label based in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, New York started at the end of 2002 by Lio and Kay. Their first release, NY: The Next Wave, was a 20 track compilation featuring mostly unsigned and emerging acts from the area. From there, they started to sign local bands and release CD EPs, 12 inch vinyl and eventually full length records. The label continues as an independent and continues to grow due to the continued success of artists like Grizzly Bear, Chairlift and Surfer Blood. Recent and upcoming releases include albums by The Blow, Bleeding Rainbow, Eternal Summers, Beach Day, Fear of Men, Valleys and Splashh.

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ALL ARTISTS 

wherever you live

If you have yet to be dazzled by Heliotropes, because now’s the time. Falling in love with their first full-length album—”A Constant Sea”—in 2013 was easy to do, as the Brooklyn natives breathed fire into everything vocal they produced. Having taken a peak at the work that is to come, I can say without question that we are all about to fall in love all over again. I will note that the band has gone through a bit of a transformation since the first album, with Jessica Numsuwankijkul still acting as the fearless leader of the project, with a rotating band of brothers that—at present—includes Gregg Giuffre, Richard Thomas, and Ricci Swift.

Their sophomore album—titled Over There That Way—is on its way, and we’ve got the newest single “Wherever You Live” available exclusively to Impose readers.

Pressing “play” on “Wherever You Live,” we find ourselves as Marty McFly, transported back in time to a decade far classier than our own. We can totally see ourselves slow dancing to this track, or enjoying it over brunch or a backyard party. It’s a love song for the masses, with widespread appeal from Jessica’s gorgeous vocals and lyrics to the saxophone solo mid-track. Very much digging on the throwback vibes, the sincerity of the lyrics, and Jessica’s voice as she croons, “Hey wherever you live is where I live, until the end/Hey wherever you rest I won’t contest, I’ll just be.” I’m sure we’d like to fall in love to this song.

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Leslie Hong has the ability to sound vulnerable and completely unfuckwithable simultaneously, an attitude that translates into an explosive and engaging live show. The Brooklyn trio has been voted one of the Hardest-Working Bands in New York, and it’s clear all of that work is paying off. 

Judging by the Brooklyn-based Haybaby’s forthcoming EP, Titled Blood Harvest, the trio might want to try their hand at psychological thrillers. The band play with suspense on the five-track release, came out back in April 29th via Tiny Engines, through ever-foreboding melodies and fluctuating murmurs and howls. Following their debut full-length, 2015’s Sleepy Kids, the EP takes the group’s melodic construction two steps further, harnessing their slop-rock stylings while amplifying intensity, drawling honestly and disinterestedly, “I’ll get over it when I feel like it.”

We’re premiering the track Blood Harvest now, but before you give it a spin, make sure you’re prepared for the continuous build-up that will leave you wondering when the squeals and heavy riffs will hit. 

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A wonderful video for a beautiful song. I love this visual symbol for a “head in the clouds” (or, in this case, on a lake). Mutual Benefit always impresses. Brooklyn’s Jordan Lee has grown a sound that’s lush and deeply sympathetic over the course of several years. With a full moat of instrumentalists to surround his lulling voice, he constructs songs that feel like gentle reminders to the self. After taking time to tour following 2013’s breakthrough Love’s Crushing Diamond, he’s poised to release a follow-up, Skip a Sinking Stone—this one a reminder of impermanence and failure.

While the first half of the Skip a Sinking Stone deals with a time Lee was in love and touring constantly, the latter is about living in New York and the subsequent downturn in that love. “The Hereafter” is the final track on the new album, and it marks a resolute comedown. Resolute, but hopeful: Lee says, “The first song on the album is about being scared that things won’t work out and ‘The Hereafter’ is about learning to let go and finding peace in ‘murky depths where light is found’ when they inevitably don’t.”

It’s instantly calming, with descending pentatonics—the sound of a guhzeng, a Chinese zither, that Lee picked up at a friend’s studio. Lee’s voice hangs on a precipice as he asks, “What’s to say when we break / when the skin that was bending melts away?” Piano blooms out into a stirring orchestral arrangement, and with mention of swaying reeds and dragonflies, it feels too ethereal to have its roots in a place as unsanctimonious as Brooklyn, but that’s sort of what Lee’s getting at—there’s light hidden in the darkest of places. He asks, “Can love die / or does it come back and find us every time?” The answer to his question is embedded in the heightened sound that follows, and it’s promising.

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Jordan Lee’s work as Mutual Benefit has been nothing short of impeccably intimate thus far, and tastes of his forthcoming full-length suggest no such deviation from this path.  “the hereafter” closes out skip a sinking stone, out may 20th via Mom+Pop Records, replete with bucolic counterpoint that eventually coalesces into an ornately orchestrated outing.  staying constant amidst the evolving textures is Lee’s vocal, ever-soothing as he tentatively stretches into his upper register and resounding as he ventures back down to deliver the song’s central thesis.  get lost in “the hereafter”

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The most reliable thing about New York City’s music scene is that you can’t rely on it at all. The members of Sunflower Bean, brought up on all-ages DIY shows and waterfront warehouse parties, have already seen their share of changes—and they’re only 20. Trends have come and gone, venues have closed, and rock music has drifted further from the mainstream than ever. But guitar music will never not have a place in the city, and Sunflower Bean’s tripped-out songs and wild live shows are proof of that.

For a new video, the trio spent some time in Brooklyn, and then later in Lower Manhattan, where they played a landmark sold-out show at Bowery Ballroom. Hit play for a glimpse into their version of the city: a place where rock & roll never went away. Sunflower Bean performs “This Kind of Feeling” for a World Cafe Session with host, David Dye. Recorded at WXPN Studios in Philadelphia on 3/7/16.

 

The Blessed Isles

Brooklyn’s The Blessed Isles  have given us the video premiere for ‘Caroline’ the lead track from their debut LP Straining Hard Against the Strength of Night which is forthcoming on Saint Marie Records. Watch it below, its evocative tidal wave of shimmering guitars are sliced by the evocative hazy plaintive vocal harmonies of Aaron Closson. While beats and sensuous baselines erect modernistic dynamics within classic shoegaze sounds, like the expansive soundscapes of early M83 or Slowdive colliding with New Order‘s post-punk tremble and wistful melodies

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band

Friday night at their show at the Barclay’s Center in Brooklyn, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band opened their show with a tribute to Prince, performing “Purple Rain.”

The Boss wasn’t the only musician to cover Prince since his passing last Thursday. At the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, LCD Soundsystem covered “Controversy,” Ellie Goulding covered “When Doves Cry,” Sufjan Stevens teamed up with Gallant for a cover of “Purple Rain,” and Mavis Staples performed an a cappella version of the song.

Springsteen’s version with Nils Lofgren playing the now classic scorching guitar solo.

R.I.P. Prince
I had to do this video even though the video sources were all pretty bad and I am waiting on at least one proper 4k shoot but I wanted to get this one out. Purple Rain is one of my all time favourite albums. The song played by my favourite artist as a tribute to Prince is very special , Bruce and Prince shared many things. ….Prince and Springsteen have longed been connected, as both artists hit their commercial peaks in the Eighties; Prince’s Purple Rain and Springsteen’s Born in the U.S.A. arrived within weeks of each other in the summer of 1984.

That is how musicians say goodbye to one another. Prince always said that he thought Bruce Springsteen was a great band leader and someone that he learned from. Like Bruce, Prince expected his band to be talented enough to remember many many songs and be able to “change it up on a dime”. Both of these men appreciated perfection and we were the benefactors of their creations. Thanks for the music Prince. I hope you enjoy this rough mix. An upgraded mix with at least one additional great camera angle in the mix and proper audio coming later we hope.

 

WOODS – City Sun Eater – CD / LP / CS

Woods‘ excellent new album City Sun Eater in the River of Light is out April 8th via Woodsist Records and in addition to vinyl, CD and cassette, you can also get it as a skateboard. The band have partnered with Habitat to create a deck with the new album’s artwork that will come with a download of the album.

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As far as the BV team goes, I think I’m in the minority for never really caring about Woods. I usually check out each new album, think it’s fine, and never return to it. But City Sun Eater In The River of Light has the band exploring some new ground, and it’s the first one that’s had me itching to play it again. It’s not a major departure from their usual ’60s-psych revival, but it definitely pushes Woods’ sound past its usual comfort zone. The band brings in bold horns on “The Take” and album opener “Sun City Creeps,” the former of which is backed by hand drums and a funky bassline, and the latter of which takes a guitar solo straight from the Summer of Love. The album’s most distinct (and possibly) finest moment is “Can’t See At All,” which has the kind of reggae/funk that’s usually saved for the jam band world these days, and a melody that feels nicked from Odessey and Oracle. Singer Jeremy Earl’s falsetto is a main draw as always, and it’s not crazy to suggest he sounds better than ever. He’s also melodically sharp, as he shows off on the addictive chorus to the folky “Morning Light.” They shine when he’s not singing too. On “I See In The Dark,” they’ve got extended jams that find the middle ground between hypnotic, driving krautrock and the free-form soloing of early psych. If you didn’t think Woods had any growth left in them, this album crushes that belief.

3rd Single from the new Woods album, City Sun Eater in the River of Light, out April 8th, 2016 on Woodsist.

The band have also just released a third track for the album, “Morning Light,” which is more what most people expect from Woods than the horn-filled first two released singles. It’s a lovely bit of West Coast sunshine and you can stream it below.

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Woods’ are on tour with Ultimate Painting starts in April and will hit Brooklyn’s Music Hall of Williamsburg 

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“Woods have always been experts at distilling life epiphanies into compact chunks of psychedelic folk that exists just outside of any sort of tangible time or place. Maybe those epiphanies were buried under cassette manipulation or drum-and-drone freakouts, or maybe they were cloaked in Jeremy Earl’s lilting falsetto, but over the course of an impressive eight albums, Woods refined and drilled down their sound into City Sun Eater in the River of Light, their ninth LP and second recorded in a proper studio. It’s a dense record of rippling guitar, lush horns, and seductive, bustling anxiety about the state of the world. It’s still the Woods you recognize, only now they’re dabbling in zonked out Ethiopian jazz,  and tapping into the weird dichotomy of making a home in a claustrophobic city that feels full of possibility even as it closes in on you. City Sun Eater in the River of Light is concise, powerful, anxious—barreling headlong into an uncertain, constantly shifting new world.