Posts Tagged ‘Glasgow’

WHITE – ” Step Up “

Posted: December 7, 2016 in MUSIC
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After the upbeat “Fight The Feeling,” Glasgow five-piece White plunge into darkness on their latest single “Step Up.” Featured on their forthcoming EP Cuts Don’t Bleed, the song is three minutes of unrelenting dance-punk, with pummelling basslines and angular guitar riffs set against frontman Leo Condie’s whisper-to-shout vocals (“Wake up and start again!”). Think a more creepy LCD Soundsystem and you’re almost there.

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Suse and Julie, Tuff Love

Tuff Love released their three EPs as one 15-track compilation on January 29th via Lost Map Recordings, ‘Resort’ brings together sell-outs ‘Junk’ & ‘Dross‘ – both now unavailable – and the more recent EP ‘Dregs’. The band discuss some of the tracks and their origin.

Sweet Discontent

Suse – This was the last song we finished for ‘Junk’. We had the other 4 songs totally finished by the time we started this one. It came together nice and easy, when I listen back to it now I think, “oh… it’s just basically one big chorus” and then it makes sense it was chosen as the first single I guess. When Julie was playing the chords initially it was really swingy, but we ended up straightening it out more, and then put driving drums on top that were as straight as they could be really.

Julie – The chorus had been around for a year or so. It had been folkier, almost swingy. One day I wrote some verses and barred the chords. Suse said, there should be a solo here, something like “duh duh duh duh duh duh, duh duh duh duh duh duuu… da duh duh duh duh duh duuuh, duh da da duuuh” and I played that on the guitar. Someone came up to me after a gig once and said she liked the simplicity of the solo, that it wasn’t a big macho show-off solo. If I had the ability to do one of those, I probably would.

Flamingo

SuseJulie had this riff for ages, it was one of the first songs we jammed out when we met up to start playing together, in 2012. Initially it was an acoustic folk song, with many different variations of the chorus. Then we scrapped the chorus and instead put in some sort of bass riffs.

Julie – It started out with the opening guitar bit, probably written after listening to lots of Townes Van Zandt. We recorded it with the lyrics that are there, some of them sort of place holders I thought I would get around to changing. but in the end they stuck. Although they are very flawed, I’m kind of at peace with them now, and they carry meaning for me.

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Copper

Suse – I think this was the first song we started and wrote together as Tuff Love. I really like that D, A, C, D chord progression, it’s kind of bubblegummy but then I guess that’s kind of offset by the drone-like guitar in the verses. This song sounds really ‘contained’ recording and structure wise I think, I was pleased when we finished it!

Julie – We wrote this together in Suse’s flat. It think it has a bit of a Pixies vibe to it. It’s composed of snapshots of a day. It’s kind of sad, I think maybe about dislocated relationships. Some parts are kind of nauseating, where values meet feelings – there are images in there that I associate with that clash.

Poncho

Suse Julie had had this riff for ages too, and this song also went through many different chorus variations before we decided to make it a nice simple C to Bb with some oooooooo’s on the top heheh.

Julie – I think this is sort of about recklessness and the lightness and heaviness of falling for someone. It’s awkward to listen to at times. There’s a bit in it where the person speaking doesn’t recognise her reflection when she sees it. The whole thing is about moments where you don’t have to look at yourself at all and you get to embody action. The bit with the mirror is about being brought back to self-consciousness. It took us a long time to finish Poncho for some reason. I remember being really really nervous when we first put it up online.

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Penguin

JulieTheJuliere was around a year between starting this song and finishing it. I don’t think we listened to it at all during that time. It was another one where we struggled with a chorus. At one point we had one that sounded like Earth Song . Fortunately, after some reflection time, it came together quite easily. I wrote the lyrics on the overnight bus to london. When I think of it I imagine a penguin waiting for a bus in the middle of the night on the motorway. I also associate it with the process of overcoming all sorts of fears – like performing and being exposed. It was after we finished Junk that I played my first gig.

Slammer

Julie – We wrote this quickly. It was fun. It’s about the frustration of being up against it. The feeling of not being heard and not being seen. I suppose it’s kind of about losing faith in society. As opposed to people individually. That’s what it’s about to me. It’s a bit much really.

Suse – Yeah when  came round and played the riff for the song I was like OHHH yeah! We fleshed it out there and then, and then tried a vocal melody and harmony part over the chorus section. I think we knew it would be a single as soon as we finished it.

That’s Right

Julie – I wanted to write something different. Something not about feelings. Suse had the chorus as “That’s Right” and in my mind I could see those words written on a packet of pills, like pro plus or something. I took apart bits of directions from painkillers. Probably a combination of Lemsip and ibuprofen by the sounds of it.

Suse – I’d had this idea floating around since 2013 or so pretty much filled out with guitar bass drums and we had played it live a few times. I wanted it to sound bubblegum pop but really thick.

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Sebastian

Suse – We played a variation on this song live for a while, before ‘Dross’ came out. It was much heavier, then in the end we decided to strip it back and remove the intense fuzz and heavy drums.

Julie – This is about taking the moral low-ground and finding redemption. Or something. It was written after I was accused of great villainy. I was spending a lot of time thinking about goodness and badness. I suppose coming to the conclusion that when people start getting intoxicated on a strong sense of superiority, that’s when things really start to go to shit, no matter what the original intention is. I think our preoccupation with blame can be dangerous. It makes everything look simple. It goes in hand with an awareness that the more I personally try to do “right” and tiptoe about thinking I’m being careful, the more I seem to find myself doing harm.

Doberman

Julie – We wrote this together. It happened quickly. It uses the theme of dog breeding to talk about control and the illusion of freedom. It’s about wanting the best for others as long as our desires are fulfilled. It’s about how we’re all horribly manipulative.

Suse – Yeah I like this cos we wrote this together in the same room, starting from a bass riff/chord progression. I like that it’s angular and more spacious than our other stuff. It’s really hard to play live cos the singing is hard. It’s my favourite one off the album I think.

Cum

Julie – This is a love song. It’s about regret – compassion and understanding coming too late.

Duke

Suse – I think this was the first song that came together off the 3rd EP, ‘Dregs’. Julie sent me a demo of it and we worked on it from there. I had imagined it might be a washy dreamy song, but when we were trying drums in rehearsal it was getting heavier and heavier. I like the way it turned out, but would like to try making another version that’s a bit softer and spacier.

Julie – When the idea first came about, I thought it would sound hypnotic. But it ended up being quite rocky. I was thinking about family or what we see as family. People with whom we share a past and knowledge of our own insanities and the madnesses of our elders. Finding ways to carry on despite patterns that seem ingrained.

Crocodile

Suse – I was playing around with a chord progression and came up with this. I used a synth flute as a place holder for vocal melody when writing and demo-ing it, and it ended up staying in, which i am glad about. I like that sound, mmmm flute.

Julie – I sat with Suse while she played this on guitar for the first time. It’s one of my favourites. I don’t remember what I was thinking when I wrote the words. Looking at them, I think of what Genesis P Orridge says Lady Jaye would say about the body being like a cheap suitcase. I think about the Pre-Raphaelites and Elizabeth Siddal in the bath and my friend Bridget telling me that story. Also of As I Lay Dying and William Faulkner. But the images come now like remembering a dream, and I don’t know what the original thought was.

Threads

Suse – We had this song for a while, before it came out on ‘Dregs‘. We re-recorded it for the 3rd EP though, changing the chorus and stuff. My brother told me he thinks it has an REM vibe which is a nice compliment. It’s really fun to play live because it’s got a few different bits/different dynamics. Although the chorus low harmony is way lower than my range I don’t know how I managed to do it on the recording!

Julie – This was originally called sea foam, which was a better title. It’s about getting older. Giving ourselves and then being left to rot. I really love this song, it’s poppy and catchy at the same time as being slightly unnerving and aggressive. I can find it quite a struggle to play live though because there are some difficult singing bits.

Amphibian

Julie – I liked this when it first came about, then I stopped liking it, but now I like it again. I was thinking about shedding skin, metamorphosis and the idea of return to some kind of original state. Getting older sometimes feels like regression but not in a negative way. I always feel like I’m trying to reach something, some state that is hidden far back in the past.

Suse – It was the last song to come together for ‘Dregs’. I was panicking about this song because it’s quite different from other stuff and I didn’t want it to be different, but I don’t know why. We kind of rushed to get it finished and recorded. I played drums on it because we were rushing. I suppose because it was a little different, the basic song I mean, I felt like it was harder to record and stuff. What sounds should we use for the guitar etc? It turned out to be more psychadelic than our other stuff – more delay and reverb, which is cool actually. Variation is nice.

Carbon

SuseJulie sent me a demo of this a few months before ‘Dregs’ was released and we fleshed it out and came up with the sounds together. I played drums on it while Julie played guitar along which we hadn’t ever done before. This one was also a bit rushed to get finished, which isn’t the nicest feeling. But sometimes time restraints are good because you can’t think about it too much, you just have to use your instinct about the song for how you think it should sound etc. Anyways I’m pleased with the outcome, although keep hearing another harmony/melody line in the final chorus that I wish was there…

Julie – I like to play this. It has gentle bits and bigger bits. It brings back ideas about family and our identities within and without that structure. Thinking about the person you are in relation to others and that you have to be something independent of the role you play in a community. Because there’s so much scope to get completely lost.

‘Resort’ is out now on CD/LP via Lost Map Records. 

The Ninth Wave – a 4 piece band from Glasgow, with an exciting and fresh sound.

Latest EP title “Only The Young” out on cassette 5th Dec.

We have supported acts such as holy Esque and Bwani Junction, and have played many of our own headline shows at venues such as Oran Mor, Garage Main Stage, Stereo, and more.

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PAWS – ” No Grace “

Posted: December 2, 2016 in MUSIC
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In the summer of 2015 PAWS kick-flipped out of our sad world of boring realities, into a dream-land that pretty much any pop-punk fan who remembers the 90’s and early 00’s would be extraordinarily psyched about.

In helping produce their third album, blink-182 bassist Mark Hoppus caused much joy and – if first single and title-track No Grace is any indication – injected even more American-ness into the trio’s punk sound. Not to say that’s a bad thing, in fact No Grace absolutely froths with skater-boy emotion, channeling contemporaries like Cloud Nothings and Japandroids in a way that evolves from PAWS’ first two albums, 2012’s Cokefloat! and 2014’s Youth Culture ForeverNo Grace will be released this year via FatCat Records, .

“No Grace” by PAWS from the upcoming album ‘No Grace’ available on Fat Cat Records.

There’s a certain something special about twins in bands, isn’t there  Take, for example, The Breeders, Tegan and Sara, even our own Biffy Clyro and The Proclaimers.  There seems to be a special bond between these band mates who’ve already spent their whole lives together.  Glasgow’s The Van T’s are no exception and their strong debut EP Laguna Babe further proves this idea that having your twin sibling by your side in your band can lead to some awesome results.

Sisters Hannah and Chloe Van Thomson lead the surf rock 4-piece, enlisting Joanne Forbes on bass and Shaun Hood on drums to help them perfectly execute their genre- and decade-hopping music, as evident throughout the new record.  the twins’ music harks back even further to 50s rockabilly and 60s surf and garage rock, not to mention the subtle goth and post-punk elements .

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As with all good openers, lead single Growler sets the tone for the EP and establishes The Van T’s slick and entrancing sound with moody guitar and lyrics lamenting the superficial complexities of teenage relationships.  Laguna gives the false impression of a more subdued effort before morphing into one of the most upbeat tracks on the record, alongside follow up Feel, Touch, Feel.  There’s an unmistakable energy between Hannah and Chloe as they shift effortlessly between singing in unison, harmony and spoken word together.

Closer Another Sun is very reminiscent of the recent influx of 90s revival outfits, especially bands like Wolf Alice.  It’s a bright, sunny end to an otherwise delightfully dark and sleazy record, showing yet another side to this multi-dimensional band, in the form of their love for pop.

Nostalgic yet thirst-quenchingly fresh, it’s brilliantly executed surfgaze for sure.  But their gaze here is not planted on some overloaded pedal board. Having already played T In The Park, Wickerman and Electric Fields, Laguna Babe only proves something which everyone already knew:  The Van T’s are set for big things.

Laguna Babe Art

Members
Chloe Van Thompson
Hannah Van Thompson
Joanne Forbes
Shaun Hood

The VAN Ts – ” Fun Garcon “

Posted: October 31, 2016 in MUSIC
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Four-piece surf rock band The Van T’s, are back with a bang as they get set to release their reverb-drenched single “Fun Garçon”, out on 25th November via Bloc+Music.

2016 has been a breakout year for the Glaswegian surf-rock band having released their EP A Coming of Age to critical acclaim in July. Gaining premiere’s on Huw Stephens BBC Radio Introducing show, The garage act The Van T’s released their latest EP back in July, and are keeping up the good work in the form on this new single.

The Glasgow band, made up of Hannah (guitar, vocals) and Chloe Van Thompson (guitar, vocals), Joanne Forbes(bass) and Shaun Hood (drums), have a sound which recalls the early days of The Raveonettes, but balance any thoughts of darkness with a youthful exhuberance and a hint of bubblegum playfulness.

“Fun Garçon” has overdriven guitars drenched in reverb, booming drums and enough punch in Hannah and Chloe’s vocals to know this is a band not to be messed with.

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The single will be released on 25th November via Bloc Music .

As a staple of the Glasgow live music scene The Pooches are a band to cherish, even if they perhaps don’t cherish themselves as much as they should. This self-titled debut album is as charming as it is riddled with self doubt. ‘I’ll be Gone’ is the perfect example of knowing your own qualities but not having the confidence to show them and by the time others realise it’s already too late. I can definitely relate. This record is absolutely bursting with indie-pop gems. Pure guitar pop crammed with melodies and all put together to sound uncomplicated and straightforward as the best pop music usually is. The album is often reminiscent of any number of 60s guitar bands and the sensitivity of the Vaselines. If you like nice things in your life get the The Pooches.

“The Light” off of The Pooches self titled debut LP out 9/9 on Lame-O Records

Scottish duo Honeyblood guitarist Stina Tweeddale and drummer Cat Myers have shared the title track from their new album ‘Babes Never Die’, and rather a good one it is too.

Out November 4th via FatCat Records, it follows the great track ‘Sea Hearts’ and ‘Ready For The Magic’ in displaying that same infectious, feisty spirit of big guitars and singalong chorus.

Honeyblood are on tour in the UK dates in November at the Bodega Nottingham, with the added extra of Manchester band Pins as support .

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It’s only just over a year since C Duncan released his swooning, Mercury-nominated debut ‘Architect’. The Glaswegian folk artist’s second album sounds more experimental: on lead single ‘Wanted To Want It Too’ he’s delving into synth territory. The Glaswegian sound architect may be inspired by ’60s sci-fi TV classic “The Twilight Zone”, but the sleeve art depicts the stairway from the flat in which he both lives and records. These however both seem peculiarly apt, as ‘The Midnight Sun’ has an uncanny knack for summoning the otherworldly in the everyday. Whilst his choral vocal passages and electronic soundscapes may summon a pastoral kind of chill, his melodic nous and songwriting skill memorably anchor the moody atmospherics, offering an eerie and affecting work likely to offer succour to fans of James Blake and The Blue Nile both.

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This Glaswegian duo do feisty, fuzzed up indie rock that sticks two fingers up at heartbreak.

If you’re not familiar with Glasgow duo Honeyblood, it’s OK, but right now is the time to play catch up. Next month they release their second album, Babes Never Dieand their latest taster is the song “Sea Hearts,” premiering below, it definately does not disappoint.

It’s fuzzed up, 90s-indebted indie rock that’ll make you wanna mosh and destroy stuff and do shots and headbang and run real fast and ride your bike with your hands nowhere near the handlebars.

“Sea Hearts” is about that intense sort of friendship that makes you feel invincible,” says Stina. “Together you can weather any heartbreak and in turn, cause havoc.” I’m sure you have too Stina.

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