Posts Tagged ‘Fortuna Pop Records’

Let’s hear it for part-time punks: the musicians who go to work by day so they can get to work at night, and who give the man 40 hours a week rather than let him dictate the terms of their art. It’s a sacrifice most of us won’t make to pursue our passions, especially when it’s so much easier to consume than create.

Martha is one such band trying to balance the desire to keep it DIY with the demands of increased popularity. The British pop-punk group — Nathan Stephens Griffin on drums, Naomi Griffin on bass, J. Cairns and Daniel Ellis on guitars — released one of the best guitar albums of 2014 in Courting Strong, and has spent the two years since touring the U.K. while holding down day jobs and school obligations. It’s been exhausting but necessary for a band determined to operate outside the traditional music industry.

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Martha are from a small, former mining village in this case, sentimental anarchists Martha, from a town in Durham that is literally called “Pity Me,” write from a working class experience that often gets sidelined by London-centric politics. Whether it’s falling in love with someone at the supermarket after seeing them “getting bollocked” by their supervisor, forging passion “under a four pound box of wine,” or something as simple as name-dropping Countdown or saying “mam” instead of “mum,” Martha’s punk-laced pop singalongs are both playful and devastating depending on how long ago your last breakup was.  At the heart of it, Martha are as lovesick as the rest of us. They just know how to express it in ways that make you want to drink some unfavorably cheap booze and have a dance.

 Martha’s new album, Blisters In The Pit Of My Heart, doesn’t disappoint in that respect. Protagonists range from twentysomethings stuck in “neoliberal precarious employment” (“Precarious [Supermarket Song]”), 20th-century anarchist Emma Goldman (“Goldman’s Detective Agency”), envious outcasts (“The Awkward Ones”) and Catholic-school queers (“St. Pauls [Westerberg Comprehensive]”). And, thankfully, Cairns and Ellis haven’t outgrown the cathartic three-chord punk burners that made Courting Strong so much fun (“Christine,” “Chekhov’s Hangnail”), either.

What do Queen Elizabeth II, psychiatrist Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, author Harper Lee, actress Marilyn Monroe and musician Big Mama Thornton all have in common? Well they were all born in 1926 of course, and what’s the relevance of that? Well don’t ask us, we didn’t write a song about it, but Chorus Girl did.

The London quartet have this week shared the video to Girls Of 1926, one of the many stand out moments on their self-titled debut album, that came out last year on Fortuna Pop! The video, produced by Bad Baby Production is a delight, two pre-teen renegades in matching pastel knitwear break into Dungeness Power stations in pedal powered cars and generally have a whale of a time. The video taps into Girls Of 1926’s spirits of youthful planning and unerring friendship. The track is musically superb, all swooping vocal harmonies, glistening guitar lines and a sublime driving bass line, so it’s wonderful to see it getting some deserved attention, now roll on some brand new material please!

Directed by Christina Hardinge. Produced by Bad Baby Productions. ‘Girls Of 1926’ is the 3rd track from Chorus Girls debut album on Fortuna POP!

There’s not enough English lo-fi twee pop out there anymore. This Newcastle, U.K.-based duo’s release includes romance, politics and the politics of romance, all with drums, guitar and boy/girl back-and-forth vocals. Songs like “Heterosexuality is a Construct” use a Billy Bragg-like electric guitar plaintiveness. “Girl in Brackets” is the story of trying to figure out what you call that person you’re sleeping with. This album is for the pop-punk anglophile in you

Milky Wimpshake return with a brand new album of melodic punk indie-pop, splattered with Pete Dale’s wry lyrics and simple, direct guitar riffs. The album features several duets with Sophie Evans, who sings on over half the songs, adding both a sweetness and a sassyness to their sound. These duets show different sides to relationships from shyness to bickering and from lust to indifference.

The album also sees a return to “political” (as opposed to purely romantic) concerns on songs like ‘Le Revolution Politique’Pete’s first ever song written in French, calling for political revolution, ‘Coming Soon’ – a hymn to the messianic arrival of anarcho-socialist revolution, proposing that there can be no war but the class war, and the cover of Onsind (featuring members of Martha)’s ‘Heterosexuality is a Construct’. As Pete explains: “The song is pretty unambiguous: love is not a crime and homophobia should never be tolerated. Ever.”

The album title Encore, Un Effort! is an old Marxist slogan popular in France and used by, for example, Situationist René Viénet in his 1977 film Chinois, Encore Un Effort Pour Etre Révolutionnaires (One More Effort, Chinese, If You Want to be Revolutionaries). To some extent, though, the ‘encore’ is Milky Wimpshake’s: who would have thought they would still be going some twenty odd years since the first tape and 7” singles? This LP is an added extra for the die-hards who’ve stuck with the band – or, continuing with our french, a port manteaux for those who have never come across the band before.

Milky Wimpshake were formed by Pete in 1993 with Christine Rowe joining the band on bass in early 1994. A number of drummers have appeared over the course of half a dozen LPs, but the latest drummer Mike Walsh will hopefully be a permanent addition. The newest member of the band, Sophie Evans, wasn’t even born when the band played their first gig but she is not the only one who has grown up coming to Milky Wimpshake shows: the band has a small but enthusiastic cult following.

The band have now been recording for Fortuna POP! for 15 years and they love the label more and more as the years pass: Pete recently declared that “Fortuna POP! is the best label in the UK, bar none!” and went on to say; “it is obvious that the likes of Spook School, Martha and Joanna Gruesome are amazing, thus it is an honour for the band to stay on Fortuna POP!”

To which we say, nous vous aimons trop Milky Wimpshake!

taken from the latest album “NEW GODS” new album from Scottish singer songwriter, Dan Willson, better known by his stage name Withered Hand,  he is a Scottish indie rock musician. His first studio album, Good News, was released in 2009 in Scotland, and was re-released on 15 March 2011 on Absolutely Kosher Records in the United States. His new album, entitled New Gods, was released in March 2014 through Fortuna Pop Records in the UK

 

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Let’s Wrestle the album Let’s Wrestle on Fortuna POP Records had great tunes with rough edges and pained lyrics is what Let’s Wrestle tend to specialise in and that’s never more so the case than in this album which saw them enter a new phase of maturity and sophistication and gave frontman Wesley Patrick Gonzalez a forum to showcase his songwriting talents and love of classic pop.
Let’s Wrestle have released their greatest collection of songs yet. Introspective, poignant and eloquently honest lyrics and generous strings around the indie sound show that this is a band maturing very well indeed.