Posts Tagged ‘California’

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The Molochs are a Sixties Rolling Stones-esque rock ‘n’ roll band that would fit into the Austin Powers’ soundtrack . You’d be forgiven for thinking that this was actually recorded back in the day, there’s nothing to suggest that they’ve heard any music since 1972 and it’s a hell of a lot of fun to take in.

First, let’s meet a Moloch. the personal antagonist of singer and songwriter Lucas Fitzsimons, who named his band the Molochs because he knew he’d have to make sacrifices to get what he needed, and because he always wanted a reminder of the Ginsbergian monster he’d be fighting against. And so this is how you make a record right now: you fight for every piece, and when Moloch takes apart your relationships and career potential and leaves you sleeping on couches or living in terrifying apartments and just about depleted from awful people involving you in their awful decisions, put together another song. And once you do that eleven hard-won times in total, you get a record like America’s Velvet Glory: honest, urgent, desperate and fearless because of it.

Fitzsimons came to his calling in an appropriately mythic way, born in a historic city not far from Buenos Aires and raised in L.A.’s South Bay—just outside of Inglewood—where he was immersed in the hip-hop hits on local radio. The summer d before he started middle school, a close friend got an electric guitar, and Fitzsimons felt an enirresistible inexplicable power: “I’d go back home and I’d look up guitar chords on the internet even though I had no guitar—and just imagine how I Would play them. I was slowly getting obsessed.” When he was 12, his parents took him back to Argentina, and on the first night, he discovered a long-forgotten almost-broken classical guitar in the basement of his home: “It sounds made-up, but it’s true,” he says. “I didn’t put the guitar down once that whole trip took it with me everywhere and played and played. When I got back to L.A., I bought my first guitar practically as the plane was landing.”

This started a long line of bands and a long experience of learning to perform in public, as Fitzsimons honed intentions and ideas and tried to figure out why that guitar seemed so important. After a trip to India in 2012, he returned renewed and ready to start again, scrapping his band to lead something new and uncompromising. This was the true start of the Molochs: “It didn’t make any sense to not do everything exactly the way I wanted to do it,” he says. “I was so shy and introverted that singing publicly sounded like a nightmare come true. But I didn’t have a choice—I heard something inside of me and I needed to be the one to express it.”

The first album Forgetter Blues was released with Fitzsimons’ guitarist/organist and longtime bandmate Ryan Foster in early 2013 on his own label—named after a slightly infamous intersection in their then-home of Long Beach—and was twelve songs of anxious garage-y proto-punk-y folk-y rock, Modern Lovers demos and Velvet Underground arcana as fuel and foundation both. It deserved to go farther than it did, which sadly wasn’t very far. But it sharpened Fitzsimons and his songwriting, and after three pent-up years of creativity, he was ready to burst. So he decided to record a new album in the spirit of the first, and in the spirit of everything that the Molochs made so far: “I wanted to spend less time figuring out How we were gonna do something and just actually do it.”

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The result is America’s Velvet Glory, recorded with engineer Jonny Bell at effortless (says Fitzsimons) sessions at Long Beach’s JazzCats studio. (Also incubator for Molochs’ new labelmates Wall of Death and Hanni El Khatib.) It starts with an anxious electric minor-key melody and ends on a last lonesome unresolved organ riff, and in between comes beauty, doubt, loss, hate and even a moments or two of peace. There are flashes of 60s garage rock—like the Sunset Strip ’66 stormer “No More Cryin’” or the “Little Black Egg”-style heartwarmer-slash-breaker “The One I Love”—but like one of Foster’s and Fitzsimons’ favorites the Jacobites, the Molochs are taking the past apart, not trying to recreate it.

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You can hear where songs bend, where voices break, where guitars start to shiver and when strings are about to snap; on “You And Me,” you can almost hear Lou Reed’s ghost call for a solo, and on “I Don’t Love You,” you get that subway-sound guitar and find out what happens when Jonathan Richman’s G-I-R-L-F-R-E-N goes wrong. And of course there’s the charismatic chaos of bootleg basement-tape Dylan—always Dylan, says Fitzsimons—and the locked-room psychedelia of Syd Barrett, especially on “Charlie’s Lips,” Fitzsimons’ ode to those times when he felt the bleakness completely: “Then a bird lands on a branch nearby, you hear leaves fluttering, you hear a child laughing … all of a sudden things don’t seem so bad anymore.”

So Moloch might still be out there, devouring his sacrifices, but the Molochs are still fighting, too. And that’s why Fitzsimons picked the band name—it’s so he remembers what he’s up against. He’s not celebrating the destroyer of youth and individuality and creativity, he says: “I’m just keeping him in sight so that he doesn’t win.”

the Band
lucas fitzsimons
ryan foster
cameron gartung
derek cowart
mateo leonardo

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Emma Ruth Rundle is a doom-folk/ambient folk singer/songwriter and visual artist from Los Angeles. You may know her from her work with the post-punk bands Marriages and Red Sparrowes. She’s also released a few solo recordings. First was the Electric Guitar One EP in 2011. That record is thirty minutes of continuous instrumental ambient electric guitar in six chapters. It was written and recorded during the Red Sparrowes tour of Europe in 2010. In 2014, she released her first proper solo record called Some Heavy Ocean. That one is still plenty ambient, but leaning towards folk. In some ways, it’s reminiscent of the first two Mazzy Star records.

Emma Ruth Rundles lives in LA and participates in music (Marriages, Red Sparowes, The Nocturnes – but alone) and visual/video art. Managed by Sargent House.

In September of this year, she released her sophomore album “Marked for Death”. As the album title suggests, there’s a lot of death imagery and other explorations on the issue of mortality. It’s dark and a bit heavy, but it’s a lovely record that demands a thorough listen. A lot of the songs are about a relationship gone wrong. The word on the street is that all of the songs are connected by that thread, and that it’s actually a narrative about the same failing (or failed) relationship. Frequent readers of the blog know that I’m a real sucker for that kind of sad gal stuff. I’m reminded a little bit of Cat Power, and also of the great Torres.

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The whole record is really good, and I think it should be listened to, with no distractions. That said, I really like this song:“Protection” by Emma Ruth Rundle.

I like the fact that it’s low-end heavy. I love the chorus or delay or whatever on the vocals. I adore the fact that it’s relatively quiet for each of the verses, but louder in the chorus, and at the end of the chorus, it’s thunderously loud and fuzzy. I love that loud and fuzzy bit, but what I love even more is when it comes to a rapid halt and is juxtaposed right up against the quiet verse. Rundle’s voice is beautiful, soft and sweet, but also very strong. We shouldn’t lose sight of that even with all the talk of the glory of the noise and the fury brought on by the effects pedals.

 

Marked for Death was released on September 30th via Sargent House Records. You can buy physical copies via Hello Merch here. It’s also available for download from Bandcamp here.

thanks to https://thisisthatsong.wordpress.com

Tony Molina speaks a plain truth rarely considered by modern musicians. He’s not going to waste your time pontificating on sentimentality when he knows that the very sentiments that power his music will stay with you long after the songs end. The West Bay guitarist’s background in hardcore, metal, and punk., The songs are like some Lennon-McCartney or George Harrison inventing a mode of sincere, world-beating pop expression and concentrating it into a span of seconds. That’s what’s happening here — a resourcefulness that is typically at odds with the kind of guitar mastery you’ll hear within.

You could fit the contents of Tony’s previous releases on Slumberland and Matador onto one side of a 90-minute cassette and still have room left over for the eight offerings on “Confront the Truth,” but would you want it any other way? When Tony sings about “trying to move on but I just don’t know how,” no extension of the time it takes for him to bring that feeling across is going to solve the problem at hand. You’re immediately thrust into the orbit of these songs.

The eight offerings on “Confront the Truth” notch a significant advancement in his style and approach. Almost completely absent from these new songs are the overloaded guitar crunch replaced by gentle acoustic balladry, tasteful Mellotron and piano backing, the kind of musicianship that often takes a lifetime to master. The sadness of this music has precedents in pop’s past, Tony found in those influences that shaped his experience; years upon years of focus and isolation in developing his guitar skills to speak to these truths.

The record’s coda, a highlight reel of Thin Lizzy’s “Banshee,” indicates that the Tony you knew is still in there, but the game has changed, and the rules are entirely his own. Tony Molina is in complete control of his own destiny, and we should all care about where he’s going.

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This is a record that decisively indicates what’s to be found within then duly delivers with a thundering, fearsome bout of heavyweight indie rock. Marked for death? You better damn well believe it.

Something like Cat Power battling her way through the heaviest of thunderstorms, the new record is a marked stride forward in to the abyss from her 2014 ‘Some Heavy Ocean’ LP, the eight tracks on ‘Marked For Death’ positively burn with intensity, even before you dig in to the wildly striking set of lyrics that accompany these dramatic compositions. Indicative of the soaring, stifling nature of the record as a whole, the opening, and title, track stands as one of the year’s most ominous tracks; “Who else is going to love someone like you that’s marked for death?” Emma Ruth Rundle bellows with all the fiery ferocity of someone who sees the world a little differently to most. A monumental effort not for the weary-hearted; but a monumental effort all the same.

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Emma Ruth Rundle lives in Los Angeles and participates in music (Marriages, Red Sparowes, The Nocturnes – but alone) and visual/video art. Managed by Sargent House.

Maheekats is a dream rock band out of California comprised of Clara Efrona and Craig Camp. They blur the lines between rock, folk, ethereal and psychedelic creating a unique groove. They cite diverse influences such as Sun Ra, XTC, Yes, The Specials, Phoebe Snow, and Killing Joke. While the influences are so seemingly random, it makes perfect sense with their overall vibe. Efrona’s sweet vocals range from delicate, swooping falsettos to bluesy growls. Paired over luscious melodies of psychedelic and post-punk influenced guitar, bass and drums, Maheekats sound is distinctly modern and yet feels so wonderfully familiar.

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Some of the best bands are the ones that I’d want to call friends. Kilo Tango is a prime example of that – their magical garage rock is so effortlessly fun that it makes me want to befriend each of the band’s four members. And if their gritty and glittery pop wasn’t enough for you, then frontwoman Katie Mitchell vocals are a perfect pop vocal.

Their newest single “Psychedelic Heart” might sound lighthearted on the surface but is about things getting tough and needing to run away from all of life’s problems. Coasting along by with surfy guitar riffs , terrific drum sound and jangly tambourines, this escapist song makes for the ultimate summer dream.

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Vocals/Guitar: Katie Mitchell
Backup Vox/Rhythm Guitar: Brianna Peterson
Drums: Caden Clinton
Bass: Dadolfo Calero

bnb-hazele

Hazel English songs are far too easy to get lost in. That’s not necessarily a bad thing because the dreaminess of her shimmering aesthetic is supposed to have that effect, but you can easily gloss over some exquisite vulnerability because it’s expressed so plainspoken and unassuming. But she cuts through ever so gently and it registers much more forcefully upon a few listens. It’s a good thing her Never Going Home EP is easy to keep on repeat

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bnb-hazele

Hazel English songs are far too easy to get lost in. That’s not necessarily a bad thing because the dreaminess of her shimmering aesthetic is supposed to have that effect, but you can easily gloss over some exquisite vulnerability because it’s expressed so plainspoken and unassuming, enveloped by that transcendent glimmer. But she cuts through ever so gently and it registers much more forcefully upon a few listens. It’s a good thing her “Never Going Home” EP is easy to keep on repeat.

Make It Better is the second track off my EP “Never Going Home”

Music for Listening to Music to is La Sera’s fourth album and its first with singer/bassist Katy Goodman’s husband Todd Wisenbaker officially on board. Produced by Ryan Adams, it finds its way to a blend of Adams‘ alt-country and their winsome take on alt-rock. Goodman says Adams’ excitement about taking La Sera into the analog realm inspired her to embrace the back-to-basics approach. Considering that, it’s the slower, more spacious tracks — like the spare and moody “Begins to Rain” or the grunge-kissed closer, “Too Little Too Late” — that best illustrate how far La Sera’s come since 2011’s self-titled bedroom-pop debut and 2012’s brighter (if still emotionally overcast) Sees the Light. Goodman’s knack for swoon and gloom, first heard via Vivian Girls, is only enhanced by the addition of Wisenbaker’s voice. As she sings on “A Thousand Ways,” arguably Music For Listening to Music To’s dreamiest song, “Love can do all of these things.” Knowing Goodman there’s a sly wink in there, but it’s easy to imagine, if only for a beat, that the carefree flame of the oldies La Sera hold so dear still burns here

Tracklist:
1. High Notes (0:00)
2. A Thousand Ways (2:07)
3. One True Love (5:01)
4. Begins to Rain (7:58)
5. Take My Heart (10:51)
6. I Need An Angel (15:12)
7. Time To Go (19:01)
8. Shadow of Your Love (21:02)
9. Nineties (24:16)
10. Too Little Too Late (27:37)

La Sera’s 4th full-length album, Music For Listening To Music To, released March 4, 2016 (produced by Ryan Adams).

These guys opened for Dilly Dally a while ago and they definitely caught everyone’s  attention. This is a kickass collection of Alternative/Grunge  out of Los Angeles that sounds as if it teleported straight from the early 90’s. It’s unique while sounding so familiar at the same time, and catchy in all the right places. I love this EP. Can’t wait to hear more from Goon! , Everything written, performed, recorded, mixed, kinda-mastered and painted by Kenny Becker. Dusk of Punk, the sludgy, twangy, grunge-addled debut EP by his band Goon. Except for Gay Rage and Merchant Hall in which Caleb Wicker played that br00tal lead guitar and heavily aided in the recording process. Also Teddy Bresson sings (beautifully) on Merchant Hall.

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The six-song output, which drops September 16th, marks a sincere exploration of their sound’s malleable boundaries, from drop tunings to drum machines—not just for listeners, but for Becker as well, due to a medical condition that periodically impairs half of his senses—a bit of an undertaking for someone who has played music his whole life.