Posts Tagged ‘Seattle’

With summer lying in wait, Lisa Prank is coming out of hibernation and embracing the sun. Robin EdwardsSeattle-based solo project has gained a dedicated following thanks to her bubbly sound and all-too-relatable lyrics. Following 2014’s exceptional Crush on the World, Lisa Prank returns with a breezy but focused collection of meticulously crafted bedroom pop gems. “Adult Teen”, the project’s forthcoming record, is dominated by bruised romanticism, introspective longing, and a palpable sense of desire, building a sound heavily influenced by 90s pop punk and the decade’s lighthearted culture.

Robin Edwards performs all of the Lisa Prank songs live with an electric guitar and a Roland MC-505 drum machine, delivering memorable performances with ease. Thanks to that fact, Lisa Prank has become a project that’s frequently celebrated among Edwards‘ peers, some of whom, including Bree McKenna and Emily Nokes of Tacocat, Julia Shapiro of Chastity Belt, and Andrew Sullivan and Ian Dugas of The Trashies contributed performances to the record. Lisa Prank has shared the stage with bands like Waxahatchee, Tacocat, and Pony Time. She also contributed vocals on Childbirth’s Women’s Rights album for Suicide Squeeze Records. “Adult Teen” was recorded and mixed by Eric Randall (Tacocat), mastered by Carl Saff, with artwork by Faye Orlove.

Adult Teen is out now with a limited cassette release on Miscreant Records.

Lisa Prank performing live in the KEXP studio. Recorded July 21st, 2016.

Songs:
Luv Is Dumb
Starting Again
Turn It Up
Take It All

Lisa Prank - Adult Teen

The history of one-person pop-punk bands is not exactly a long and storied one.  Lisa Prank, from Seattle, is carrying the flame for one-person pop-punk bands, and she’s doing it beautifully.

Based on the punny name, you’d expect Lisa Prank, whose real name is Robin Edwards, who plays live with a guitar, a drum machine, and no other human beings. And she’s not averse to lyrical cleverness. The rickety home-recording setup is just as catchily tinny . But she’s much less about schtick and much more about exploring messy relationships and romantic miscommunications. There’s a fair amount of Coleen Green or maybe Waxahatchee in what she does, though it’s filtered through a childhood immersed in the arena pop-punk of the late ’90s. (She covers Blink-182’s “Dammit” live.) And there’s a young, fucked-up romanticism to what she’s singing: “When I’m not falling, I am looking for a ledge / And then you kiss me, and I’m jumping in your bed.”

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Edwards’ great influences might be bands like New Found Glory and Jimmy Eat World, but in what she does, I hear something slightly older: Edwards is quick to make a self-effacing lyrical joke, the type that takes someone else down with her: “I stick my tongue in your mouth to keep your words from coming out.” Like them, she has an endlessly sharp sense of melody that shines through even though her whole recording setup is pretty rudimentary. And as with those bands, her real greatest weapon is a sense of vulnerability that shows through when you might not be expecting it. “You say you’re not still drinking / You just started again,” she sings on “Starting Again,” the first track on her new “Adult Teen” album, and she stretches “again” out to maybe eight syllables, hiccuping over the second half of the word and wringing all the heartbreak out of it. And then: “I swear I don’t still miss you / I just started again.” When it hits you the right way, it’s heavy stuff.

Edwards started the Lisa Prank project at home in Denver, and then she moved to Seattle at the urging of the band Tacocat when she realized she didn’t have much else going on. These days, she lives in a Seattle punk house with a couple of members of Tacocat, and that band’s Eric Randall produced Adult Teen. It’s a cheap, shiny record, but it’s much more cleaned-up and listenable than Crush On The World, the hissy, scrappy lo-fi cassette EP that she released two years ago. (A couple of Crush On The World songs show up, rerecorded, on Adult Teen.) With the sharper production, Edwards’ lyrics and melodies get to glow, and a relatively mellow jangle like “Turn It Up” takes on a resonance that reminds me of prime Beat Happening.

This is still a scrappy, home-recorded take on pop-punk music, but the songs and the hooks and the feelings are all very much there. Part of me hopes that, next time around, Edwards finds herself out in front of a full-on band, so maybe the drums won’t sound so dinky and maybe the songs will get a chance to sound as huge as I know they can. But it’s also cool to hear someone bringing the one-person pop-punk band forward into a new decade and doing it in an entirely non-gimmicky way.

Adult Teen is out june 24th via Father/Daughter Records on vinyl and Miscreant Records on tape. Stream it at Bandcamp.

Getting a tattoo can certainly be an occasion for regret. Getting a tattoo that has an intentional misspelling in it could potentially lead to more opportunity for regret. Naming your debut album after your intentionally misspelled tattoo pretty much sums up the “No Regrets” attitude of the Seattle-based band Chastity Belt.

There certainly could have been moments for regret — from singing songs about “how a guy is hot” to playing in creepy little venues in the middle of nowhere, to making the decision to abandon their fields of study after graduation and go all-in to the uncertain and unstable music industry, but the band collectively agrees that they wouldn’t change a thing. Chastity Belt visited the KPLU performance studio to play a couple of songs, including one not available on any album,

The most important thing about pop-punk — the crucial thing that people forget all the fucking time — is that the “pop” has to hit as hard as the “punk.” This song remembers that. “Starting Again” is transparently a home recording, with a dinky click-track standing in for actual drums, but it’s still bold and bright and loud and hooky. Robin Edwards, the person behind the project, has a tough seen-it-all growl and a great mocking na-na-na delivery. But on “Starting Again,” she’s still vulnerable and real, pining over old memories and aching for some asshole who can’t tear himself away from his bad habits. It’s an intense and personal song, but one that could also make for a big-room screamalong. It is, in short, what a pop-punk song should be

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SHMOHAWK – ” Shmohawk “

Posted: January 28, 2016 in MUSIC
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Power-pop done right, from a new band, is harder to find than it sounds. So, Shmohawk’s eponymous album really caught my attention in a good way.   Featuring a comfortable cast of songs featuring rollicking rock guitars, soothing power-pop twangs, and flavorful harmonicas, John McFarland’s vocals add a constantly engaging element that acts like a mixture of Tom Petty’s suave infectiousness and Alex Chilton’s anthemic fervor. The first two tracks, in particular the crunchy chorus of “Herding Sheeple” and the longingly contagious “Everything I Want Is Nothing I Can Own”, showcase what to expect from the rest of the album — hook-filled greatness not common in today’s rock music. I made some lofty comparisons when I first heard them – to the likes of The Byrds, Big Star, The Replacements – and those still stand.

 

Electro-rock band Ever So Android is exploring rich sonic territory – that of precursors like Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Siouxsie and the Banshees, where guitars seer over rigid electronic beats and vocals howl. Main howler Hope Simpson’s voice is at its best when the pace is slowed down, like on sexy tracks “Good Intentions” and “Better Days” from their 2015 release Disconnect. After performing mostly as a two piece – Simpson and her musical partner Drew Murray – the band has evolved in to a full band of four, resulting in a captivating live sound. Watch for these guys to gradually gain more attention throughout 2016 as they tour.

Filmed with Samsung cameras, Seattle-based Ever So Android perform their single ‘Moment’.

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We Used To Be Hunters’ methodical alchemy was recorded in an old wooden church in the historic seaport of Anacortes by Nich Wilbur (Mount Eerie, Lake, Anacortes Unknown Festival). “We used the church as an instrument, capturing the open acoustics of the building as we performed together in the space. Wind Burial are spellbinding live. They are powerful. They are elegant, poetic, explosive and tender. Their debut LP We Used to Be Hunters dropped in April and flexed psych, shoegaze, folk, and classical muscles all at the same time. No matter how melodic, a looming sense of doom inhabits every song.
Mixed by Randall Dunn (Earth, Sunn O))), Marissa Nadler, Rose Windows), the album was finished at Avast!, illuminating the fiery urgency and magical realism of our new songs.”

This is the third album by the Seattle experimental ambient pop singer/songwriter. Her first two albums were self-released, but she joined the Jagjaguwar Records family for this album. In a separate development, she joined forces with st, who has produced records for Sigur Rós. So she’s got better production, she’s got label support, and she had a significant tour to support the new album, which came out on August 21st. Because of her sweet voice of an angel-child, she’s compared to the late Trish Keenan out of Broadcast, and to Jessie Stein out of The Luyas. As much as I like both of those bands and both of those singers, I like this even more. Again, this was an album that wasn’t really all that well-received by critics, .

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Briana’s lyrics are forceful, and throughout her second album, ‘All Around Us’, traditional song structure gives way to plainspoken declarations that pull back the record’s shroud. Her first single,“Surrender” is musically delicate at first, with flickering blips and chords that float into earshot like fireflies. “Take Care of Me” is the album’s brightest and most immediate song, a buoyant celebration of friendship with a skittering beat and a warm, sweet melody. And title track “All Around Us” is a stark but inspiring beauty, built on the memory of a family member of Briana’s who passed away, and the sadness of not being able to say “goodbye” or “I love you” one last time. It is the balance of the abstract and the intimate that makes Briana Marela and ‘All Around Us’ so special.

Utterly beautiful collection of heartfelt & dreamy songs, perfect for an evening of emotional self-indulgence

Before he tragically and suddenly died at 25 years old, Ariel Panero was a staple in New York’s vibrant DIY scene. The young promoter’s involvement stretched far and wide, ranging from his work with record label Famous Class to performing with his band Tough Knuckles. Perhaps most notable was his Less Artists More Condos (LAMC) concert series, which saw Panero booking bands to play unique venues around the city.

After his death in 2010, Famous Class took to honoring his legacy with a series of singles named after LAMC. The A-side of each 7-inch features an unreleased track by a band the label likes. That artist then gets to choose another up-and-coming band they like to be included on the B-side. The 16th edition in the LAMC canon features Seattle surf-noir outfit La Luz backed with Brooklyn garage rockers Scully and will hit stores August 25th. Before the physical release, La Luz has shared their contribution, “Believe My Eyes”.

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The track was recorded during the band’s sessions with Ty Segall for their excellent new album,  “Weirdo Shrines” . Much like the LP, the song smolders with hazy guitar tones and otherworldly harmonies. Frontwoman Shana Cleveland coos mysteriously overtop Lena Simon’s thumping bass line. Keyboards and lead guitar lines intertwine, merging into the surf rock mist. It’s a lovely mix of pop prowess and unsettling fever dream.

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In Spanish, La Luz means “light” and that’s the perfect thing to evoke when your songs give the illusion of veering in the opposite direction. But lift out most any lyric—which is a good excuse to give a closer listen to the delicate, four-part harmonies that are fast becoming the band’s signature—and you’ll find that the aches and pains of love and loss, of living in a world where no foothold is ever a promise—all this is delivered with a nuanced dose of perfectly timed exhilaration, like the whole thing might just be worth it in the end. It’s Alive is the debut LP from Seattle’s La Luz.

 

MOTORPONY – “

Posted: December 19, 2015 in MUSIC
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In the summer of 2014 Motopony went into Bear Creek Studios in their hometown of Seattle with producer Mike McCarthy. This was the beginning of a 6 month recording odyssey that took them from Austin to LA to NYC to London’s Abbey Road Studios. After traveling halfway around the world to India and back, the band had finished the record with some new friends they met abroad, including sitarist Joel Clayton and mixer Guy Massey. The result is the new album “Welcome You”

We are nearing the top of this 5 year upward hill battle of music industry roller-coaster bliss.   The crest is nigh, but not close enough yet for us to see where this crazy ride ends up.  Six months into our first rush, after re-releasing our first album with an outfit from the big apple, the previous label declared bankruptcy and left us in charge.   We parted ways with our manager, a few members of the band and quite frankly started from scratch.   Three babies, two marriages, four divorces, six day-job changes, seven promises to the fans of new music and eight recording studios later… we present you with the blood, shit and tears we are calling, “Welcome You.”