Posts Tagged ‘Brooklyn’

There was a mystery guest who came out, sat down at his keyboard and mumbling in such a way between songs that the entire stunning set went by and the only way we found out who we were hearing was when he said he’d recently been on tour with James Vincent McMorrow. We looked James’ dates up and finally realized that we were seeing Kevin Garrett. His EP is the record I’ve listened to a lot. There’s an element of Justin Vernon or James Blake in these love songs, but there are plenty of ingenious bits to these gorgeous pieces to show that there’s an original voice here.

http://

Kevin Garrett is a singer and songwriter from Brooklyn, New York. His poignant lyricism and musicianship have been showcased in numerous projects over the past several years. The Pittsburgh native has spent much of the last decade performing his original work, sharing the stage with James Vincent McMorrow, Emily King, Norah Jones, and Maps & Atlases among others. Kevin recently released his debut EP Mellow Drama, which includes the singles “Coloring” and “Control,” as a small part of a larger body of work that signifies a new direction and highlights his versatility as a songwriter. The EP has earned considerable attention with single features on Spotify’s New Music Tuesday and Viral 50 lists. Kevin Garrett has so far had a busy 2015 including more shows with James Vincent McMorrow, a Communion Music residency, and wide acclaim for Mellow Drama.

Lifting fog reveals a cloaked figure in crooked moonlight and it is shown — The Closing Door — the Blur of spirit passing through — Proven Water Rites burning effigies of past selves — demonstrations from beyond a lifting veil. First, the listener dims the lights, burning all candles found within the dwelling. With eyes open toward the ceiling, the listener feels dull heat from the candles in front of them. Eyes closed now, the listener begins to regulate their breathing and in time presses play on their device. Eyes open again, the listener reaches their hands to hover above the nearest flame for the duration of the first passage. The listener stares directly into candle’s flame, regulating their breathing. At the dawning of the second tune, the listener lowers their hands to hold and protect the candle in front of them. A new kind of light is shown now, and the listener’s thoughts may begin to wander & blur, but they continue to stare. At the end of the second passage, the listener blows out all of the candles without hesitation. In near darkness now, the listener is left to sit, breathing the remnants of fire and thoughts that drift about the room. This is the final song.Out now via Double Double Whammy & Run For Cover Records.

Pressing Info:
Bone with Bronze Haze / 300
Milky Clear + Black color in color / 500
Sea Blue / 700

released 16 July 2015
LVL UP is Greg Rutkin, Nick Corbo, Dave Benton and Mike Caridi.

http://

Garage rock outfit Sharkmuffin may officially hail from Brookyln, their roots started over in nearby Asbury Park, New Jersey. It was there during an inspired jam session in 2012 that guitarist Tarra Theissen and bassist Natalie Kirch realized their musical chemistry and decided to perform together. The next year they’d surge into their career, releasing a self-titled 7-inch and two EPs. After another year of hard work, they’re set to release their debut album, Chartreuse, on August 7th via State Capital/Little Dickman Records.

http://

Thiessen and Kirch have been the group’s two consistent members, with a slew of drummers coming in and out of the band. For Chartreuse, they enlisted former Hole and current Death Valley Girls drummer Patty Schemel. A press release describes Schemel’s contribution as marking “a whole new era in their style of music,” adding, “The noise-punk-meets-psychedelic power pop group has evolved their sound on the new album and the result is a full length filled with ten tracks of commanding hits.”

The 10-track album poses the band as new punks with old school sensibilities. Songs transition feverishly, jumping between distorted romps to skittering anthems. Theissen and Kirch never linger on an idea too long, most clocking in around two-minutes. Tracks like “Tampons Are For Sluts” and “First Date” show just how brash and unapologetic they are. As their name implies, this is a vicious band with plenty of teeth.

“Chartreuse is about Natalie Kirch & my favorite color and explores the theme of secrets that are hidden in plain sight,”

http://

Debut 7″ vinyl single from Sunflower Bean, due out 24th July 2015.

Pre-order the limited edition 7″ on Fat Possum Records,

We’ve already posted “Stalker”, the flip side to “I Hear Voices” by Brooklyn’s neo-psych rockers Sunflower Bean.

Now here is the A side in all its hazy, spring-heeled glory that is making good on all the hype the band are generating.

The LAMC series is back in action this summer and No. 15 Jeff The Brotherhood / Colleen Green is up for pre-order RIGHT NOW! This record is a real dream come true: the bogus bros on the A-side with a gold star garage shredder “A Dog” and on the B-side Colleen Green brings a fuzz-pop slammer “Hellraiser” recorded during her full-band “I Want To Grow Up” sessions. For those of you who act fast, we’ve got Gold & Milky Clear A/B vinyl with Black Splatter (LTD to 250) & Gold vinyl (LTD to 500). For you audiophiles we’ve got the virgin black vinyl available as well. Our LTD color-ways tend to go quick and this is going to be no exception – don’t wait! Like always both tracks will be available on the July 7th release date at our bandcamp page for “pay what you like.” 100% of the proceeds from the digital sales on our bandcamp go to the Save The Music foundation – who provide funding for music education in public elementary and middle schools that do not currently have an instrumental music program in place.

The opening line of Colleen Green’s latest album goes, “I want, I want to grow up, oh yeah” is certainly not the most original line ever committed to tape, but it’s does go against one of rock’n’roll’s oldest adages, “I hope I die before I get old.” Growing up and growing old are often seen as the scourge of creativity and spirit, but in reality an awful lot of people go through the whole growing up thing and find they actually prefer life at the end of it, not that growing up ever ends of course!

As John Lennon put, in the now rather tragically ironic, Grow Old With Me, “grow old with me, the best is yet to be” and many artists have echoed his sentiments; life changes and evolves, but if the best isn’t still to come, then what use is a future anyway. Jarvis Cocker has always been a man who looks forward, on the omnipresent Disco 2000 he envisaged a future when, “we’re all fully grown” while on Help The Aged, he was even imploring the youth of today to, “help the aged, don’t just put them in a home, can’t have much in their all on their own.”

It’s not just men of course who think about ageing and dream of a different future; on Garbage’s excellent When I Grow Up, Shirley Manson sang of how, “when I grow up I’ll turn the tables” whilst on Better Version Of Me, Fiona Apple sang, “oh mister wait until you see, what I’m gonna be.”

Our favourite song about growing up though, well it has to be Mr Tom Waits, nobody has quite mastered refusing to get old quite like Tom, he was 43 when he sang:

“I don’t wanna have to shout it out
I don’t want my hair to fall out
I don’t wanna be filled with doubt
I don’t wanna be a good boy scout
I don’t wanna have to learn to count
I don’t wanna have the biggest amount
I don’t wanna grow up”

We guess not everyone is quite so sure that growing old is all it’s cracked up to be!

COLLEEN GREEN
cgmain

Who?
Thirty year old Colleen Green is, as you could probably guess a solo artist, she recorded her latest album alongside Jake Orrall of JEFF the Brotherhood and Casey Weissbuch of Diarrhea Planet – the latter taking his place behind the drums in her current live set-up as well.

What?
The Line Of Best Fit rather brilliantly described Colleen as, “a one-woman Bikini Kill/Garbage cross-breed”. That said there’s probably more variety than that would suggest from the Weezer recalling pop-punk of Things That Are Bad For Me (Part 1), to the California Sunshine-Pop of Wild One; with shades of Best Coast, the Breeders inspired grunge of I Want To Grow Up and even dance floor electronics, via the excellent Deeper Than Love, which has shades of a sadder Le Tigre or Fischerspooner.

Where?
Colleen is from Los Angeles. The second biggest city in the United States, cleverly located on a massive and very active tectonic fault line. LA is home to people from more than 140 countries speaking 224 different identified languages, which might explain just how varied and wonderful their musical history is. The jazz of Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette, rock bands from Buffalo Springfield to Guns’n’Roses, metal from Slayer and Tool, rap from Dr Dre and 2Pac, and then there’s Beck who is pretty much a genre in his own right.

When?
Colleen started recording music back in 2010, following a few singles on a variety of small labels she signed to Hardly Art Records. She released the “Green One” EP back in 2011, before putting out her debut album for the label Sock It To Me at the start of 2013. Her second album, I Want To Grow Up, came out again via Hardly Art in February this year.

Why?
There’s something delightfully retro to Colleen’s sound, all dirgy gritty guitars, simplistic metronomic drums and lyrics about growing up and discovering what life has to offer. That said there’s enough variety and nuance to lift this way beyond a grunge meets punk-pop parody.

TV may lyrically bring to mind Jimmy Eat World, being an ode to the company of the idiot box, but it’s delivered with a thrash of drums and walls of scuzzy guitars The Pixies would be proud off, whilst the jump up to the high note in the chorus does bring to mind emo-heroes Saves The Day.

Grind My Teeth is the more serious side of ska-punk, Pay Attention has shades of Nine Black Alps or Weezer whilst Some People is a gorgeous, nostalgic slab of indie-Pop, like Camera Obscura’s Californian cousin, it’s littered with heartbreaking lyrics such as, “could there really be someone out there who’s perfect for me? Oh some days it’s hard to believe.” Perhaps the best is saved to last, the laid-back, lightly electronic Whatever I Want, is the joyous conclusion to an album of angst, a moment as she joyously revels in her new found freedom noting, “the world I live in is a design of my own.”

Whilst unquestionably the bright poppy moments are beautifully delivered, it’s when the album steps into the shadows that it becomes even more thrilling. The dirgy, Things That Are Bad For Me (Part 2) is a tense and claustrophobic number, Colleen singing, “I wanna do drugs right now, I wanna get fucked up, I don’t care how” a moody brooding track, it even has hints of Nine Inch Nails in the heavy scuzz of guitars. Probably the albums stand out track, Deeper Than Love, is unquestionably its biggest departure, low buzzing electronics, synthetic drums and vocals processed to a robotic, emotionless delivery that recalls the cold-electronica of Liverpool’s Ladytron, lyrically it’s equally dark, from the opening line, “someday I hope for a lover to kill me, it’s the closest I can hope to get to anybody, it’s the closest I can come to being really free” we’re in maudlin territory already, but as it unravels it becomes clear it’s more a track about fear of commitment and intimacy, “is there anything stronger than biology? Is love being ruined by technology? Nowadays commitment seems like a burden to carry” and latterly, “the closest to true love I ever came, was with someone I kept many miles away, cos I’m wary of eliminating distance, this could surely be the death of any romance.” The whole track is as beautifully delivered as it is miserable, the gently meandering guitar solo towards the end, the perfectly judged processed beats and in particular the beautifully treated vocals, occasionally they seem to crackle with a touch of feedback that renders them almost entirely inhuman, it’s rather brilliant!

Why Not?
“I’m shitty and I’m lame and I’m dumb and I’m a bore and once you get to know me you won’t love anymore” her words not ours and suffice to say we don’t agree at all!

http://

Best Behavior have also crafted their own mix of surf and garage-rock with a playful ’60s vibe.

Inspired by heartbreak and a not-so-sunny prediction made by an astrologer, frontman Alex Gruenburg wrote the band’s debut LP in under a month, and went on to play and sing every part himself. The album, “Good Luck Bad Karma”, is due out August 14th on Money Fire Records.

http://

We are loving the lead single Buried On A Mountain, which features melodic vocal harmonies awash in a sea of reverb and jangling guitars. It sounds like it was plucked wholesale from a tripped out hippy beach party in 1967 and given a modern makeover.

the first single from Oberhofer’s upcoming new album “CHRONOVISION” out 21st August,

Brooklyn’s own Brad Oberhofer will return with a new album under his Oberhofer moniker. Chronovision, due out through Glassnote Records, serves as his sophomore LP following 2012’s Time Capsules II. Recorded and produced in cities all across the US — including New York, Los Angeles, and his hometown of Tacoma — the 12-track effort’s the result of countless hours spent in the studio and a whopping 106 demos. Ben Allen, known for his work with Animal Collective, Washed Out, and Cut Copy, mixed the record in Atlanta.

A press release describes Chronovision as Oberhofer’s “signature amped psych-pop with orchestral flourish, New Wave flare, and grungy fuzz, but multiplied with his intensity that only time and life’s gut checks can enhance.” Life’s “gut checks” make a bold appearance on our first preview of the LP, the ramshackle “Memory Remains”. Led by Oberhofer’s wistful croon, it’s a noise pop cut that juggles sweet and sour melodies with surprising balance.

http://

The most appropriate word to describe Gabrielle Smith’s solo project Eskimeaux might be “togetherness.” The band founded Brooklyn songwriting and art collective the Epoch in 2011 along with several of their friends, but this sense of mutual support and do-it-together philosophy has long been a part of Smith’s M.O. She originally formed Eskimeaux in 2007, all the while happily joining her peers’ and fellow collective members’ bands Bellows, Told Slant, and Frankie Cosmos. Smith’s songs reflect this type of profound concern for the well-being of those around her, an eagerness to take a backseat when others need her and a longing to still express her own sharp meditations on love and loneliness.

Several of the songs on O.K. are new versions of previous recordings, but this time around Smith has scaled back to outline each melody in clearer brush strokes. Where certain tracks on 2013’s Igluenza were monotone or drawn out, they graduate to fully formed pop on this release. Before, “I Admit I’m Scared” felt flat despite its visually compelling lyrics (“Everything I said spewed like sparklers from my mouth/ They looked pretty as they flew but now they’re useless and burnt out”), while here it’s one of the album’s strongest moments. Subtle harmonies slowly coax Smith’s gentle alto into a confident soar over Felix Walworth’s galloping drum fill. She casually divulges secrets as though her arm is already on your shoulder, her quiet relatability spiking upwards at the climax (“If I had a dime for every time I’m freaking out/ We could fly around the world or just get out of your parents’ house”).

Sonically, O.K. is the most fitting pallette for Smith’s work. In the past she’s played around with drum machines and broken synth beats, which weighed her down in gloomy, droning noise. This LP finally matches Eskimeaux’s illuminating presence. She slips from sparse indie-folk to ethereal pop throughout the record, each arrangement rich and meticulously composed. The band never overpowers Smith’s celestial vocals, and she’s able to keep up with the slow-burning tension when it eventually detonates. Walworth’s attentive drumming is a welcome addition that swells and retracts to complement Jack Greenleaf’s twinkling synth arpeggios.

‘No No No’ by Beirut, the title track from the new album released 11th Sept. 2015,

Zach Condon is back with a new Beirut album, No No No, arriving September 11th via 4AD Recordings. The title track, which was performed live at a gig in Brooklyn last year, can be heard below.

The follow-up to 2011’s The Rip Tide was recorded last winter in Brooklyn by Condon, bassist Paul Collins, and drummer Nick Petree. According to a press release, its creation followed a physical and mental breakdown Condon suffered in Australia in 2013, as well as a divorce. “I had completely broken down and my body was making me pay for it,” Condon said in a statement. “For the first time in my life, I was facing extreme self doubt. I had hit rock bottom.” But the start of a new relationship provided Condon with a new outlook on life. “Having a positive presence like her both provides a healthy guiding force and shines a light on all the negative things in your life,” he said. “I definitely wouldn’t be where I am now without her.”

http://

Sunflower Bean is a band consisting of three people barely scratching the age of 20, but their grasp of neo-psych rock influences and their tightness as a unit belies their age. This is a band that looks, acts, and performs as if they were a veteran unit in their thirties. Perhaps this is because Sunflower Bean is also relentless in playing live — , they are statistically the hardest working band in NYC in 2014 having played the highest number of live gigs. We caught one of those gigs back in November when they opened for Dream Syndicate and really knocked it out of the park in a pretty sizeable venue and a notable gig. Fortunately, it wasn’t too long before they showed up on this excellent bill at Baby’s All Right, opening for Fat White Family and PC Worship . I decided it was a good idea to check them out from up close at the stage lip and see if my first instincts were correct — and yes, they were. Julia Cumming and Nick Kliven share the vocals and each delivers a different but effective edge to the material. Kliven’s tasty multi-pedaled guitar work is supplemented with Cumming’s powerful bass and anchored by Jacob Farber’s meticulous percussion. Sunflower Bean is just a damned good band and there’s really no telling how far they can go. They will release their debut EP “Show Me Your Seven Secrets” in January and the EP release show will be at Baby’s All Right 

Sunflower Bean
20/12/2014 at the venue Babys All Right Brooklyn, NY USA

Produced by nyctaper

Setlist:
[Total Time 31:20]
01 [new song]
02 Tame Impala
03 I’m A Ghost
04 Call The Doctor
05 Wall Watcher
06 Rock and Roll Heathen
07 Tarot Card