Posts Tagged ‘Cool Thing Records’

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Indian Queens have done something that every band should do before releasing their first long player: they have built very strong foundations for it to stand on. The balance of rough and delicate vocals, the hard-edged, almost trance-like bass lines, the lively changes of rhythm dictated by drums. It is a sound very specific to this band, which plays heavily in creating an atmospheric mood but doesn’t shy away from harsher sounds when they are needed. In this sense, “God Is A Woman”, the band’s debut album out in early April, is the logical culmination of a fairly linear trajectory. It is certainly a very “Indian Queens-sounding” album, but with a number of imperfections now whittled down and removed, and some additional depth. The vocals still preserve their peculiar quality of being fluid in places and scratchy in others, but they are now generally more full-bodied; the haunting bass is still there, even more noticeable than in the past, also thanks to a very tight and attentive production.

The sense of familiarity is increased by the fact that live gig attendees will immediately recognise a number of favourites in the track list. The intense, almost hypnotic ‘I Get No Rest‘ gets an airing, placed in a core point at the centre of the album, and so do old singles ‘Pretty Little Thing,’ featuring one of the trademark riffs of this album and some beautifully dirty guitars, and ‘Us Against The World,’ which only deceptively seems a lighter piece compared to the intensity and complexity of other tracks. Indian Queens have always had a fairly wide range of nuance and this record is a good display of that: from the more delicate touches offered by tracks like ‘Concrete Lips‘ (which, in spite of the title, has a very soft touch and airy atmosphere, aided by an excellent interplay of vocals) to a bold use of distortion in songs such as ‘Warning Sign,’ which starts with an almost outlandish sound and then plays with more subtle touches of dissonance around its guitars, or ‘Shoot For Sexy,’ which has an inventive, immediately recognisable opening and a very bold command of high notes, and is one of the most original songs on this record.

They are also a band of many influences, and it is an interesting experiment to try and track them all, as pleasant as it also is to just jump in without too much cerebral thinking and go with the flow. There is something distinctly grunge in the choices made with the rhythm section, particularly in the bass, and a touch of psychedelic rock, ’80s style, in tracks like ‘You Came Over Late‘. A tinge of blues emerges also in some of the slower songs, and is possibly openly alluded to in the title of ‘Some Kinda Blue,’ one of the tracks where it is felt the strongest. The Beatles surface here and there, and one could argue that they are a background presence throughout the record, and they’re directly quoted, lyrically and musically, in album opener ‘Bubblewrap‘ which leads the listener into the record with a very bold statement: all else aside, Indian Queens remain first and foremost a rock band, and they’re not going to let anyone forget it. It is not by chance that the two songs that go harder on the rock mood are the first and the last on the album the latter, ‘Walk,’ featuring very throaty vocals and somewhat of a ’60s vibe.

“Who wants to start a revolution?” asks title track ‘God Is A Woman‘ (another very Beatles-y song, but with a very grunge bass line, fittingly; it almost sums up the entire record). This is not just a throwaway line as much as it is a statement of intent for the whole record. What kind of revolution Indian Queens are aiming to start, remains to be seen, but it’s easy to have some suspicions: to start with; one in which female vocalists are not pigeonholed in an imaginary ‘female-fronted music’ category that is bound to sound in a very specific way. The takeaway from this album, ultimately, is that Indian Queens sound like Indian Queens, and no one else – female-fronted or otherwise.

It is a debut that has the band’s fingerprints all over it, and in a way it feels like the end of something as much as the start of something new. It’s a starting point, but also the culmination of a chapter in the personal history of a band that now feels quite ready to go and explore more, new directions. They move forwards from a very strong position, and it will certainly be an interesting ride.

God Is A Woman was released April 3rd on Cool Thing Records.

BAIT

We’re loving this debut track from BAIT, which appears as part of the Alternative Occupations EP. Released on December 2nd via Cool Thing Records on limited edition 12” white vinyl, it also features new tracks by Asylums, The Horse Heads and Petty Phase.

The band Asylums know how hard it is for new talent to get recognised in this industry. So the Southend group have set up their own label, with Cool Thing Records aiming to uncover and support new artists.

New EP ‘Alternative Occupations’ gathers a host of fresh talent, with Asylums acting both as curators and lead artists. One of the bands featured are BAIT who donates this cut ‘I’m Still Here’ to the project, and it pits skeletal post-punk against some skittering, hypnotic beats.

BAIT: “To me visual art is just as important as music and this is something that I think Cool Thing does very well. I’m an artist and Cool Thing is run by artists. There seems to be an endless stream of creativity flowing from Cool Thing and I want to be part of it. Limitation is a powerful tool. A lack of resources or funds will force you to use what you have… If you have an idea, you have it all”.

Over thrumming, post-punk percussion surreal lyrics about Keith Harris, melting milkmen and Timmy Mallet abound. Curiously during his Radio Oxford days in the 1970s, Timmy Mallet was engaged to my cousin and once gave me a lock of his green hair and a shit 7″ by Gonzales. I didn’t keep either.

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aslums

Asylums – Killer Brain Waves (Track by track)

1. Second Class Sex
Musically we wanted a heavy opener that set the tone for the attitude of the album, in the back of my mind I had ‘Holidays In The Sun’ by Sex Pistols, ‘Feel Good Hit Of The Summer’ by Queens Of The Stone Age, ‘Search & Destroy’ by Iggy & The Stoogies and ‘Line Up’ by Elastica as vague references. We wanted a track that exploded into life. Lyrically its in a different place altogether, dealing with gender, sex and prejudice. I was thinking of Barbra Kruger’s big bold beautiful statements inspired by advertising slogans.

2. I’ve Seen Your Face In A Music Magazine
During our fourth ever gig we were heckled by a frontman from a band that had been popular a few years ago. To be fair to him we were still finding our feet but as the night progressed he got progressively more aggressive and drunk and we all found it quite sad and disturbing. In the morning I went up to my loft and fired up the 8 track and this song just came out. I was thinking about the aftermath of fame, the weight of expectancy an artist can feel and the strange personas that emerge as coping mechanisms. To me this song set us on the path to ‘Killer Brain Waves’

3. Joy In A Small Wage
This was the first song I demoed for Asylums and its still one of my favorites. It started on piano, and it took months for the lyrics to formulate and solidify. When I transferred all the music over to guitars, bass and drums it just came to life….it had a real vibe, Elvis Costello, Mudhoney, Blur maybe even Orange Juice. The line that best summarises the themes in that song is “there is a purity you see in the absence of wealth”. It was the first Asylums track to be playlisted on Radio 1 thanks to BBC Introducing.

4. Bad Influence
I’ve been a musician and artist my whole life in various projects and set ups but just prior to starting Asylums everything I had been doing musically came to a natural end, I got the classic guilt and self doubt that most artists get but this time in a big way. One Sunday I was visiting my Granddad and I think he could sense I was in need of some advice. He took me into the back bedroom and quietly gave me £1000 pounds in cash and said “don’t stop, I’m proud of you”. I was flawed by this unexpected generosity and I decided to use the money wisely, we all started Cool Thing Records with it and made the first Asylums recordings. This song is my homage to him and his belief that there is always something better around the corner.

5. Wet Dream Fanzine
A full on psychedelic trip comprised of disposable erotica, soft drink advertising, phallic ice cream cones and social anxiety. It was written very quickly after I’ve Seen Your Face In A Music Magazine, no time to think, it sent us further down the rabbit hole of surf guitars and weird sounds. Its so fun to play live and when we toured with The Vaseline’s it was Francis favourite song of ours.

6. The Death Of Television
During the first 6 months of working on Asylums I took a much needed break from Social Networking, no checking in sporadically, absolutely nothing, I think I was hiding from the world a bit. It was extremely calming and after a while it got me thinking about how much arbitrary information I was absorbing a day, a week, a year. What a distraction it had become from my true passions, writing, making art, reading and listening to music. When I was a child everyone told me TV would rot my brain, so what was Social Networking doing? Microwaving it? Around that time Jazz our guitarist was around my flat and he picked out a Dischord Records box set I had, we started revisiting Nation Of Ulysses, Rites Of Spring and Minor Threat as musical inspirations. I had the title written on my wall and it just happened.

7. Monosyllabic Saliva
This song was one that Jazz really helped shape and bring into focus, I had the riff and chorus but he got hold of it and added all these cool atmospherics and lead lines. I remember sitting my bedroom surrounded by records, lyrics, mess and dirty clothes and just watching him cook up the vibe like a madman. Lyrically its a little darker than some of the other tracks, its just about ignorant people really, about hearing opinions around you that are hateful on a daily basis and not agreeing with them in the slightest.

8. Born To Not Belong
This was the last song we worked on for the album, I finished it the day before we went on a long tour with Ash in December 2015. We worked it up on the road in soundchecks and recorded it on the 2nd January 2016. Its one of two songs one the album that reveal a bit more personal and emotional side, its about our community at Cool Thing Records all the people including myself that dont fit in anywhere apart from with each other.

9. Necessary Appliances
This was mostly written during the general election of 2015 and developed in the months that followed. We are probably at our most angular on this track, thinking of bands like Clor, Strangers, Walkmen, Gang Of Four and Weezer musically. Mike delivers some of his best bass playing on this one. Lyrically themes of consumerism, austerity and community are obvious but there is also a strange link made between contemporary political party leaders and disposable household appliances that aren’t built to last.

10. Sunday Commuters
We all still work day jobs and the music that we make happens outside of the 9 to 5, touring can be hard but we make it work. The recording for our album was made in Watford and many times we found ourselves commuting on weekends, evenings and bank holiday to get it finished. Sunday Commuters is partly about swimming against the current, getting up at 6.30 on a Sunday to make a recording session at 9.00 miles from your home…..its about walking through the deserted financial district at the weekend and feeling like an alien. Musically it owes a lot to Blur and Smashing Pumpkins and features some of the coolest harmonies on the record thanks to our drummer Henry.

11. Missing Persons
This is another one of our more emotional tracks, it was written on piano as a ballad and is about new beginnings. I had it for a while before I worked it up for Asylums but it only snapped into focus after a night in with my dog. In late 2014 my wife brought a dog back from a rescue home, never having had a pet before I was stressing. The first night we spent in alone bonding we played games, hugged and listened to two albums: Teenage Fanclub’s Bandwagonesque and Nirvana’s In Utero. The next day I took this ballad and gave it a bit of a college rock makeover then showed it to Jazz. It was his favourite demo I had played him, we took it from there. Dogs are inspirational and wonderful friends.

12. Slacker Shopper
This is probably our most extreme sounding track on the record, its about buying products online and not supporting the shops in your home town, there is also some observations about the music industry in there. I had the music for 6 months before I knew what to do with it lyrically, in that time SOUTH RECORDS opened in our home town and totally changed the listening habits of the young people in the area, they had access to great vinyl, community spirit, advice and a sense of preserving something special: the record shop. Slacker Shopper is very much influenced by that and how wonderful it is to see young people enjoying music and artwork in the physical format.

Butterfly (Secret Track)
Artistically we didn’t want to do a slow song in the main body of the record, it wasn’t about that for us. We wanted it to be full on, like life is in 2016. Go go go.
But the idea of a secret track was appealing and it seemed like a cool way to bring the pace down after we had said our bit. Butterfly is about virility, I sang it with a stinking cold at some point in 2015. It probably hints of things to come for Asylums musically. To me it has a Syd Barratt quality and after 35 minutes of full on energy we wanted to give people something to soothe their minds.

Killer Brain Waves

Asylums are classic 90s kids. The Southend-on-Sea band are saractasic, manic, and grossly disenchanted. Like many of us, Asylums have come of age to the sound of global markets crashing. Since the rules of previous generations no longer apply, current acts have had to find ways to break into the creative industries on their own terms. Asylums have got it down to a fine art. Their debut album Killer Brain Waves has been two years in the making, with the band taking the DIY route the whole way. The album presses songs about austerity and inequality alongside adolescent daydreams of sexual fantasy, capturing Generation Y’s current situation in a neat package.

There’s something nostalgic about Killer Brain Waves, more the guilty, twenty something nostalgia of watching mindless TV and eating cereal in the afternoon while the world falls apart outside. The sharp, stabbing guitar riffs of “Bad Influence” and “Necessary Appliances” paired with lyrics like “laying in the bed they’ve made, conformity becomes a cage” calls back to the American pop punk scene that exploded a decade ago, before it put on blue eyeliner and warped into emo. At times, this same effect makes Killer Brain Waves seem a little like a throwback album.

The record is critically present day in the topics that it deals with, as “The Death of Television” rails against the disconnect of the social media generation. The track confirms that – for Asylums, at least – it was Aldous Huxley who correctly predicted our dystopian future, while the rest of us were waiting for something a bit more George Orwell. Similarly, “Sunday Commuters” tackles obsession with capitalism and the unending drive for wealth.

However, the album’s real highlights are the chirpier, less socially minded moments. Early single “Wet Dream Fanzine”, a jumpy study in sexual attraction, is a clear stand out. Likewise, the youthful runaway song “Missing Persons” will probably cement Asylum’s place as ones to watch on this year’s festival circuit.

Overall, Killer Brain Waves is a fun DIY record that reminds us of our teenage years.

Release: 29th July 2016, Cool Thing Records