Posts Tagged ‘Dustin Payseur’

“Clash the Truth” is the second studio album by American indie rock band Beach Fossils. It was produced by Ben Greenberg (formerly of The Men) and songwriter Dustin Payseur. It was released on February 18th, 2013, through Captured Tracks, After recording the first Beach Fossils album in decidedly lo-fi fashion and mostly by himself, Dustin Payseur decided to make a change for the group’s second album, 2013’s Clash the Truth. First, he teaming up with producer Ben Greenberg (of the Men) and headed to a real studio (then another after the first one flooded during Hurricane Sandy). He also replaced the drum machine he’d been using with a real drummer, Tommy Gardner, and recorded the bass and drums live together. For many bands that start out as intimate bedroom recording projects, this kind of shift signals the beginning of the end as the very things that made them interesting (intimacy, weirdness, and immediacy) are discarded in favour of fidelity and some degree of professionalism. In Beach Fossils‘ case, moving to a studio with better sound has served to strengthen the impact of the music. Payseur and Greenberg don’t change the basic reverb-heavy sound or the surf-riding guitars or the general feel of the music; instead they make it a little clearer and more punchy, which helps the songs hit harder. I originally preffered their first two EP’s, but fell in love with Clash the Truth because of the substance and depth it has in comparison to their early stuff.

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The live bass and drums, too, give the songs a raw energy that their previous recordings didn’t have. Gardner turns out to be an ideal addition to the sound, never just playing the beat robotically but colouring it in with crisp fills and strong cymbal work. Payseur sings a little louder and with more force too, delivering some aggression on the up-tempo tracks and giving the slower, more introspective ones some extra depth. There’s a nice bit of variety, as well, with quite a few songs that stretch the Fossils‘ range. While most of them fall right into the sweet spot of hard-charging, underwater indie pop — with a couple (“Careless,” “Shallow”) sounding like modern reverb-pop classics — there are diversions into acoustic balladry (on the absolutely beautiful “Sleep Apnea,”) jittery post-punk (“Caustic Cross”), and best of all, a wonderfully atmospheric shoegaze dreamer that features Payseur sharing wistful vocals with Blonde Redhead’s Kazu Makino. All in all, Clash the Truth is exactly the record Beach Fossils should have made at this point, reinforcing all the things that made them good while adding some excellent new wrinkles and boosting the production values.

Originally released February 19th, 2013

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To celebrate his birthday, Dustin Payseur of Beach Fossils released a cover of Yung Lean’s “Agony,” and shot an impromptu video while “walking around in a haze,” as he phrases on Twitter, early this morning. The group transforms Lean’s version, adding layered instruments to the otherwise naked track. Payseur’s swoony arrangement basically transforms “Agony” into a really good Beach Fossils song and, oh no, suddenly we have all these feelings.

“Agony” originally appears on Yung Lean’s Stranger, with Lean stretching his voice over somber piano keys, conjuring up Beauty and the Beast imagery of dancing with candlesticks. For a group with roots the DIY scene, the cover might seem kind of weird on its face, but Payseur and his pals have always been voracious listeners. In addition to his robust collection of 80s UK hardcore, he and the band spent a fair amount of time around the release of their last album Somersault talking about how its patchwork construction was inspired by 90s rap and its production’s sample collagework. Also, for what its worth, sometime in the months since the release of Somersault they’ve apparently become friends with Post Malone after repeatedly @-ing him on twitter

The long-awaited return of Brooklyn’s Beach Fossils, “Somersault” showcases a band in bloom. Augmented with more complex instrumentation, including string arrangements, piano, harpsichord, flute, and sax, the new songs offer multi-layered pop guided by sharp, poignant, and honest lyrics.  These songs pulse and pull, capturing a blend of promise and heartache. It’s beautiful and layered, a refined, sweeping creation that threads together numerous styles, textures, and themes into a refreshing, singular vision. [Limited edition red color vinyl pressing also available.]

Launched in 2009 as the solo project of singer-songwriter Dustin Payseur, Beach Fossils has since expanded to become a full-on rock quartet. On previous albums Clash The Truth, released in 2013, and their self-titled 2010 debut, the band have fleshed out Payseur’s delicate, melodic compositions, amassing a solid catalogue of songs that toe the improbable line between dreamy and anthemic.

On their latest full-length, Somersault, Beach Fossils add even more nuance to their brand of melancholy guitar pop. While the music is bright and playful, the lyrics find Payseur struggling through loneliness, underscoring the impermanence of personal relationships.

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The heady, mid-tempo, piano-pop groover “Saint Ivy” combines a bouncy rhythm with dynamic classical strings, as Payseur’s lyrics touch on both cynicism and hopefulness. With its weaving bassline and the chorus’s gently-circling guitar, “Sugar” could be an outtake from a lost 4AD record. Underneath the gauzy instrumentation, Payseur’s vocal refrain—“On the outside, change your mind, feeling nothing”—hints at detachment and alienation.

The album closes with the softly-jangling “That’s All for Now,” which opens with sorrowful lyrics: “It’s new regret / Isn’t it funny how we forget?” Payseur sings. Eventually, the song’s mid-tempo groove gives way to tender, wilting slide guitar, as Payseur advises: “Keep moving on, keep moving on.” It’s a fitting end to an album that reconciles the immediacy of heartbreak with the transitory nature of life and love.

Beach Fossils “Social Jetlag” from their album “Somersault” out June 2, 2017.

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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Today Beach Fossils roll out their new single “Saint Ivy.” The video pays homage to New York City artists.The featured dancers have all grown up through the NYC school system. Merrie Cherry is a Brooklyn-based drag queen. The directors and the band themselves are all based in NYC as well.

Beach Fossils encourage fans and viewers to make donations (if they are able) to two incredible organizations: National Endowment for the Arts and Center for Arts Education NYC (both falling victim in recent times to our current administrations’ budget cuts).

Brooklyn’s Beach Fossils traded the breezy, minimalist indie rock of their debut for a more aggressive, punk-inspired sound. Now, it seems, they’re opting for something both poppier and more heartfelt. On June 2nd, the band will release their third LP, “Somersault”, an album with which the band has, according to a press release, “channeled years of experimentation into expansion and reinvention.”

Strings aren’t the only new instruments you’ll find Somersault. Beach Fossils has also heavily incorporated piano, harpsichord, flute, and saxaphone into their arsenal. The album will be released on Payseur’s own Bayonet Records.

Along with the announcement comes the band’s first single, “This Year”, which elevates the jangly dream-pop of yesteryear with stirring string arrangements that reflect the band’s “expanded sonic palette” while providing an added heft to frontman Dustin Payseur’s hushed vocals. Of the song, Payseur says it’s about facing mistakes you’ve made, aiming to work on it and better yourself, but ending up making the same mistakes again. It’s kind of an endless loop. People always aim to make New Year’s resolutions, get a fresh start, but ultimately fall back into these old bad habits.”

Beach Fossils “Saint Ivy” from their album “Somersault” out June 2, 2017.

Image may contain: one or more people, people on stage, people playing musical instruments, guitar and concertWhen Dustin Payseur’s band Beach Fossils began making waves, they were lumped into the low-fi indie genre that seemed to be dominating underground music in both the UK and across the pond.

With bands like Wavves, Best Coast and Wild Nothing music critics worldwide were collectively housing them under type,collectively the fact that each of them were glorified bedroom musicians. Here we had a new wave of artists that were producing and releasing track after track for next-to-nothing usually from their own recording studio, they could craft a record all by him/ herself without the need for a big budget. Gone were the days of plush recording studios and a heap of session musicians to pad out your arrangements. These artists were breathing new life into the music industry .

Some of these bands  capitalised off the back of their initial success, by going on to gain a cult following worldwide and, while not selling out arenas, released an assortment of singles, EPs and LPs that are still cherished today; one of these bands are Beach Fossils.

When you listen back to the band’s self-titled debut (2010), there’s still an air of excitement and a raw, nostalgic quality to their music. if you caught them live, line-ups would often change, with guest appearances from fellow musicians within the scene with the likes of DIIV;s Zachary Cole Smith regularly jumping in to assist on drumming or guitar duties. There was a similar aesthetic on their EP, What A Pleasure (2011), with an airiness to each composition and, again, guest appearances from their pals on Captured Tracks; the hip independent label to whom they were signed at the time. Production, however, was much crisper on “What a Pleasure” and there was a sense of a band wanting to explore their overall dynamic further.

2013’s “Clash the Truth” exposed the band’s grungier side and, while the song structures were almost identical to the ternary form heard on their debut, there was still a clear progression. As a listener, you could hear a seriousness and professional quality now to the songwriting that Payseur was producing; tracks such as “Caustic Cross” and “In Vertigo” (feat. Kazu Makino)” were standouts.

That brings us to their latest release; “Somersault “(2017). Clocking in at a comfortable 36 minutes, each track is still in the typical Beach Fossils format. All but one (“Be Nothing”) stays beneath the four minute mark and once again follow the basic verse – chorus – verse – chorus structure. Opener ‘“This Year” sets the tone for the album and sees the band mellow out quite dramatically in comparison to Clash the Truth. In-keeping with their current trend, the production seems even more polished with an array of heart-warming acoustic and clean guitars. The key focal point, however, is the introduction of the string section; it sounds amazing!

Finally, Beach Fossils seem to have shaken themselves loose from the shackles of their indie dream-pop days, revealing a band in their prime; Payseur at the peak of his songwriting career. The string section reappears on numerous tracks across Somersault, each time providing ear-cleansing, harmonious arrangements that diatonically compliment the music and guide the listener throughout a euphoric journey.

Somersault wouldn’t be a Beach Fossils record if there weren’t a few collaborations though and, as expected, there’s no exception here. “Tangerine”, features Slowdive band member Rachel Goswell, has a much dryer feel with dominant acoustic guitars and, again, that sexy string section in the chorus beneath Goswell’s distant vocals. “Rise (feat. Cities Aviv)” sees the band branch out and explore R&B, with saxophones and a lazy kick/ snare pattern. This is a first for Beach Fossils, but you wouldn’t think it and, weirdly, the track doesn’t seem alien to the album; it fits in nicely. “Sugar” is a killer track its aching synth progression and floating nature.

Overall, the most amazing aspect about Somersault is that it still has that bedroom-composed feel. While Payseur has matured dramatically over the last decade, he still manages to consistently produce records that reflect his roots and he highlights just how easy it is to create a catchy, successful LP .

with three members from different bands, Jack Tatum (Wild Nothing), Dustin Payseur (Beach Fossils) and Andreas Lagerstrom ( Holograms)

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