Posts Tagged ‘New Zealand’

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From Auckland, New Zealand’s Fazerdaze, Amelia Murray’s project which becomes a quartet live, has already attracted attention overseas as well as Down Under.
Now Murray brings her intimate, bedroom guitar-pop out on first single, the bittersweet ‘Lucky Girl’ from the upcoming debut album, ‘Morningside’, due out on May 5th via Flying Nun Records. The New Zealand native Amelia Murray readies her debut LP as Fazerdaze with legendary label Flying Nun. Here’s the lead single, currently rising up as one you need to listen too now “A perfect burst of swooning, happy-sad bedroom guitar-pop sunshine,”

“I wrote and recorded this track while I was living in a room that had no windows except for a skylight which I eventually had to block out to stop my room from overheating,” reveals Murray. “It was so dark in there and I slowly began to feel sad, like the walls were enclosing on me – that’s how I got the idea for the first lyric”

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Fazerdaze will be in the UK in April/May. Catch them :
April
29 Leeds – Live At Leeds
30 Manchester – Sounds From The Other City Festival

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Tasmania-bred, Adelaide-based singer-songwriter Bec Stevens has been building renown for the past few years, but especially so in recent months, garnering herself a growing, committed grassroots following around her excellent debut EP, which she released back in June 2016.

Bec Stevens has been a consistent performer since she was regularly gigging on the Apple Isle, but it’s really been the last little while that has seen a significant uptick in her recognition. Blessed with a killer voice, a penchant for intelligent, introspective lyrics and an endearing, earnest attitude, Bec Stevens is in a prime position to keep building on her existing groundwork and assume her rightful place on everyone’s radar.

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The seeds of Nadia Reid’s song writing were sewn while she was growing up in Port Chalmers New Zealand. Bob Scott, from The Bats, was her guitar teacher for a while but the pivotal moment came a little later. Reid and Hannah Harding, who plays under the name Aldous Harding, started to sing and write music together. One summer they had lived together. That led to performing together, and Nadia’s course was then set.

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Proving that Australia isn’t the only Oceanic island capable of producing a surprising array of alt-country and Americana, is New Zealander, Nadia Reid. Early this year, Nadia will release “Preservations”, the follow-up to her 2015’s debut, Listen to “Formation, Look for the Signs”, this week ahead of the release she’s shared her new single, “The Arrow & The Aim”.

The Arrow & The Aim walks a path through deathly, gothic-country, this track takes Nadia’s music into considerably more expansive territory than fans of her previous output might imagine. The chorus is huge, a swell of bombastic percussion, huge soaring guitar solos and constant naggingly beautiful piano chords; it’s pitched perfectly in the beautiful middle ground of Bill Callahan and Marissa Nadler. Whether this marks a departure in grandiose and intriguing new realms, or just serves as a stand-alone moment of darkness in an album of quiet beauty, well we can’t wait to find out. Getting the feeling that this new Nadia Reid album is going to be one that surprises me and I end up totally enamored with.

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The Arrow & The Aim is taken from the new album ‘Preservation’ out 3rd March 2017

One last push in Australia. It’s been bloody great. Thank you, Sydney for being so kind to an over-tired, over-caffeinated New Zealander. Brisbane'ers can find tickets for tonight on the Junk Bar website. Or on the door at The Junk Bar, $15. Please...

New Zealand singer/songwriter Nadia Reid’s debut album dissects a relationship whose end illuminates new layers of failure and hidden motives with each re-examination. Reid’s outlook on love may be hopeless, but her blunt words are cocooned by the warmth and unusual hookiness of the varied arrangements.

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Nadia Reid is a folk artist based in Port Chalmers, New Zealand. The 24-year-old singer-songwriter has spent the better part of the last decade writing the songs for her debut album “Listen to Formation, Look for the Signs”  a ten-track collection of folk, blues and alt-country.

Throughout the album, Reid presents a maturity that reflects on love and life’s blazes with a measure of intricacy and courage within melancholy.

Recorded in 2014 by Ben Edwards (of Lyttelton Records) with Reid’s band consisting of bassist Richie Pickard, guitarist Sam Taylor and percussionist Joe McCallum, the album was originally given limited release to New Zealand and Australia in early 2015. After catching international attention, Listen to Formation, Look for the Signs now out via Spunk Records and Scissor Tail (U.S.). Reid is currently in Melbourne, opening a series of shows for fellow New Zealanders Tiny Ruins.

Nadia Reid
Listen to Formation, Look for the Signs
Scissor Tail / Spunk

 

I seriously thought I was listening to Swell Maps when Good Luck with That started playing. Really great melodic post-punk! Classified as “punk” but pure melody in the perfect way done so lovingly by these Kiwis.  So looking forward to the full-length album. If I *had to* describe them I’d say feels like Viet Cong/Preoccupations meets the darker side of Cloud Nothings…

From Auckland, New Zealand’ s Trust Punks’ new album, Double Bind, aggressively consolidates their strengths as one of the most exhilarating young acts out there – blisteringly sharp, smart and spry. From the cold water surf of surging opener ‘ Paradise/angel-wire’ , the band is on a tear through an Australasia that’ s a precarious and nasty place for the young and the restless. Whether they’ re adopting the snarling id of suburban nationalists, or casting a harsh eye on the American way of life, incarceration and death (as on the incongruously sprightly ‘ Good Luck With That’ ) theirs is a serving of wit and fury in equal measure.

They’re also willing to turn the gaze on themselves, as bitter, discordant exorcisms give way to an unbearable sweetness. The stridency of Double Bind’s opening 1-2 leads into the poignant jolt of ‘The Reservoir’ , as Alexander Grant pleads“ I’m not bold enough”. On ‘Riding It Out’ , Joseph Thomas grips crippling depression by the horns and rides it over a grinding Krautrock beat. Grant’ s see-sawing melodies and Thomas’ s belting rasp are Double Bind’ s yin and yang – each a reminder of the challenging terrain post-punk was meant to stake out.

Double Bind ticks all the boxes. It’ s angry for all the same reasons you are, but it’ s also involving and intricate, a record to get lost in. And like the best records of its kind, it seeps into your brain, your feet, and your being.

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Trust Punks are Paul Brown, Alexander Grant, Lliam Powell, Joseph Thomas and Maté Vella
Additional guitars and synthesiser by Lawrence Goodwin

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New Zealand songwriter Nadia Reid’s debut album begins with the kind of Zen-like certainty that only comes after taking stock. “When I hit the ground in all my glory/ I will know where I have come from,” she sings on “Runway”, its opening track. Listen to Formation, Look for the Signs finds the 24-year-old Aucklander dissecting a relationship whose end illuminates new layers of failure and hidden motives with each re-examination. Reid’s outlook on love may be hopeless, but her blunt words are cocooned by the warmth and unusual hookiness of the varied arrangements.

Listen is a soothing, folky Americana album that recalls the work of Laura Marling and Gillian Welch. Reid isn’t reinventing anything, in other words, though Listen is itself more inventive than many records of its ilk. Its main mode is a kind of glowering hush made up of gentle acoustic guitar, glints of pedal steel from Sam Taylor, and Richie Pickard’s glacial double bass, very occasionally chased by Joe McCallum’s spindly drums. The band changes the pace with waltzing rhythms that evoke rural dance halls (“Just to Feel Alive”), or pare back the already-ghostly instrumentation to let Reid’s nimble voice come to the fore (“Ruby”).

The stormy weather of “Reaching Through” is broken up with sparkling, ascendent layers of Reid’s voice and strings; the bowed guitars and clanking metallic chords of “Seasons Change” .  The gorgeous “Call the Days” marries the poppier sensibility of Reid’s heavy songs with the grave palette of her more candlelit numbers. Throughout, she shapes her words into characterful, sticky hooks, which feels rare for this genre of music.

Not to underestimate the experiences behind Reid’s lyrics, but the loss of faith that unravels throughout the record comes off a little grave, reminiscent of those fogged post-heartbreak moments where it’s impossible to believe you’ll ever be happy again—the kind you look back on and laugh. And some of these songs are seven years old, written in her teens, which may explain why love is a “fiery black disease” and delusion, marriage is a convenience, and she can’t even believe other people’s happiness. “Bittersweet I am when it comes to young love,” Reid sings on “Ruby”,

But there are also beautiful, revealing turns of phrase: on “Reaching Through” Reid admits, “If I am bound for something, honey won’t you know, that I always take the shortest fucking road.” “Seasons Change” sneaks a crushing truth into the lifespan of a relationship: “It’s good to love a heart who surely understands/ The coming of the day/ The beauty of the land/ The act of being sorry/ The breaking of a man.” “Call the Days” feels like the resolution to all the heartache and anger, Reid declaring, “I threw out my winter coat/ I cut the sleeves off all I’d known.” Although by no means the finished article, Reid’s acute understanding of where she’s been sets her up nicely for what happens next.

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Listen to formation, Look for the Signs was recorded in July 2014 at the Sitting Room in Lyttelton, New Zealand. Players on this record were Richie Pickard, Sam Taylor, Joe McCallum and Anita Clark.

Kane Strang’s first proper album, Blue Cheese, picks up on the rough disaffection of his earlier demo collection, A Pebble and a Paper Crane, which he recorded in a WWII bomb shelter in Germany. Back in his hometown of Dunedin, New Zealand, Strang spent two curious months alone, housesitting for his parents. Re-nested, yet still isolated, Strang composed all of Blue Cheese over those quiet days. Lead-off track “The Web” channels pummeling bass lines punctuated by a twinkling synth that calls upon microscopic pop principalities of restlessness (“Yeah, I met someone else / Without leaving my little house / No, I haven’t held her yet / I met her on the internet”). Its abrupt ending parallels Strang’s own disconnect.

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“She’s Appealing” weaves Day-Glo guitar motifs into distant, detached ’80s garage pop vocals. “Never Kissed a Blonde” is driven by a slapping delay on both vocals and guitar. Strang’s path toward a melody is always surprising, and he never misses a hit-on-the-head-obvious-in-retrospect memorable line. Strang amassed a band and has started playing his distinct psych-pop live. He will tour the United States in 2016.

girlboss

Lucy Botting’s latest project, Girlboss, has the genial slackness that’s long been associated with kiwi guitar music. It’s perhaps telling then, that she only recently learnt to play the guitar and is already writing and producing quality music.  On her latest single, “Kind Face”, she sings about a compliment she once received from a stranger, and constructs a simple guitar melody to revel in the selfless, spontaneous act.  She explains, “I was at this gig and a girl I didn’t know came up to me and said, ‘you have the kindest face’. She was going on about how I have a kind face and I was just taken aback – it’s such a specific compliment to pay someone.”

The song delivers the same joy you might get from listening to Teen Dream-era Beach House, there’s plenty of jangle, a hint of reverb and a snoozy vocal melody.

Lucy tells us that the name Girlboss was inspired by a self-employed friend, who she saw hashtagging #Girlboss on Instagram. “I didn’t know much about the girlboss thing until my friend started hashtagging. She’ll be recording her debut album over the South Pacific summer with her friend, musician and producer Jon Lemmon. But for now, you can listen to  “Kind Face”, right here.

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Written by Lucy Botting
Guitar by Lucy Botting and Darian Woods
Drums by Olivia Campion

shifting-sands

Dunedin, New Zealand’s The Shifting Sands released their second album, Cosmic Radio, last year. It’s a record of gorgeous guitar pop that owes some to Dunedin’s indie rock heritage — The Clean’s David Kilgour plays guitar on the album — but forges its own path.
The Shifting Sands are going to be touring the U.S. soon and it’s a trip that was actually inspired/encouraged by Sharon Van Etten. She says, “I fell in love with The Shifting Sands music a while back, and while on tour in New Zealand last year, I met the band members who ran a venue called Chick’s Hotel in Dunedin (RIP). We became fast friends and stayed in touch and I encouraged them to make the trip to the US.”

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