Posts Tagged ‘the Antlers’

Antlers frontman Peter Silberman recently released the solo single “Slips Away” after revealing that he would release his first proper solo album at some point. The album details are finally here, and it turns out that “Slips Away” is not on the album, but the new nearly-nine-minute single “Karuna” is. If you like The Antlers’ atmospheric, melancholic pop, you’re probably gonna like this too. The album is called Impermanence. Here’s what Peter says about it:
Much of what distinguishes Impermanence from its forebears can be attributed to an unexpected injury, which forced me to consider the finite. A few years ago, I developed a hearing impairment that resulted in a temporary total hearing loss in one ear and an excruciating sensitivity to everyday sounds, including my own voice. In order to find rest and quiet, I left my Brooklyn apartment for a secluded setting in upstate New York.
It would be some time before I experienced silence again, thanks to a constant blizzard of tinnitus. Once silence ceased to be available to me, I came to think of it as the luxury of well-calibrated perception. We mistakenly perceive it as nothing, but it’s precious, a profound entity. It became obvious to me why many prayers are silent, performed in immaculately quiet spaces.
As the sensitivity and static began to subside, I gradually re-introduced sound into my world, gently playing my nylon-string acoustic guitar and whisper-singing. Eventually songs emerged— ”Karuna”, “New York”, “Gone Beyond”, “Maya”, “Ahimsa”, and “Impermanence”— each sparse and minimal. I was conscious to only say what needed to be said. The six songs have an economy of expression, the spaces between the words as important as the words themselves. I often thought of the Miles Davis quote: “It’s not the notes you play, it’s the notes you don’t play.”
As writing neared completion, I linked up with my friend and collaborator, Nicholas Principe, to record at his People Teeth studio in Saugerties, NY. Together, we carved out a sacred sonic space, elongating the distance between notes, between chords, utilizing minimal arrangements to allow breathing room. With the help of mix engineer Andrew Dunn, we repeatedly ran tracks through aged tape until the songs themselves decayed.
But the album goes beyond experiments in ambience. It traces the stages of healing, as I experienced them. The sequence mimics the challenges in facing unexpected obstacles, charting a circular course between pain and peace, in which both are passing phases.
Impermanence illustrates our uncertain world, where everything and everyone is a temporary participant. It provides no remedy for the unpredictable, but instead offers another way to think about changing circumstances. I hope it can provide some comfort to those of us grappling with transition, which is, undoubtedly, all of us.

Following on from his work with The Antlers, Peter Silberman has written and recorded an instrumental piece titled Transcendless Summer. Taking only an afternoon to put together, back in August 2013, it is available digitally today and will be released on cassette on 8th October.
The following message comes directly from Peter,

“I’d been spending the better part of the summer of 2013 in Portland, OR, during a pause midway through the Brooklyn-based Familiars sessions. One evening, as an extension of a thought-experiment, Nicholas Principe match-made engineer Tim Shrout and me, and we chose a date to track something.

Biking across town to the session a few days later, I had no agenda. When I encountered the studio’s vivid arsenal of vintage gear, I didn’t have any concrete ideas. And when Tim (who had so generously donated his time, space, and expertise) asked me what I wanted to do, I didn’t really have an answer. I only hoped to liberate the pent-up potential energy of the moment.

Listening to its twenty minutes now, I experience a fleeting era distilled into a single day. I hear the first few miles of a long ride, hands released from handlebars’ grip, arms splayed out to the sides, coasting with abandon, rounding a blind corner without worry for what might slam into me beyond the immediately visible.

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In the three years since Transcendless Summer’s spontaneous birth, the colors bled and faded some, filled in with a wiser vibrance only time could provide. These tracks have felt three summers melt away, relearning the same cruelty each year: that summer’s start initiates a countdown to its end, that the first day’s light stretches infinitely outward before shrinking back from a dilating night.”
Peter Silberman

Peter Silberman will also be performing two shows in London in December for which tickets are available at the links below,

Wednesday 7th – The Forge, Camden (Tickets)
Thursday 8th – The Forge, Camden (Tickets)

In London 2 x 12"

Pre-order the limited edition 12″ here: http://shop.transgressiverecords.com/

Transgressive Records are proud to present The Antlers In London a limited edition vinyl only release, which will not be issued digitally. The deluxe double set captures the entirety of their sold-out Hackney Empire show, centered around the glorious album Familiars released last year to rave reviews.

Album tracks Palace, Refuge and Hotel are extended into blissfully engaging pieces, reflecting different angles to the record, whilst classics from well-loved albums “Burst Apart” and “Hospice” are seamlessly incorporated into the lushly arranged set. The reverence of the audience is palpable, and the majesty of the Empire’s environment etched into the grooves.

The Antlers – “In London”
Recorded live at the Hackney Empire, London, 24th October 2014
Limited edition 2×12” set.

Tracklisting:

1. Palace
2. Doppelgänger
3. Hotel
4. Kettering
5. No Widows
6. Director
7. Revisited
8. Parade
9. I Don’t Want Love
10. Surrender
11. Putting The Dog To Sleep
12. Refuge
13. Epilogue

The Antlers vinyl only limited edition 12″ Live LP ‘In London’ via Transgressive Records.

The deluxe double set captures the entirety of their sold-out Hackney Empire show, centered around the glorious album ‘Familiars’ released last year to rave reviews.

Transgressive Records and The Antlers have issued some new live footage of them performing “Refuge” ahead of the release of their double 12″ later this year. Pre-order the limited edition 12″ here: http://shop.transgressiverecords.com/

In London 2 x 12"

Transgressive Records are proud to present The Antlers In London a limited edition vinyl only release, which will not be issued digitally. The deluxe double set captures the entirety of their sold-out Hackney Empire show, centered around the glorious album “Familiars” released last year to rave reviews.
Album tracks Palace, Refuge and Hotel are extended into blissfully engaging pieces, reflecting different angles to the record, whilst classics from well-loved albums “Burst Apart” and “Hospice” are seamlessly incorporated into the lushly arranged set. The reverence of the audience is palpable, and the majesty of the Hackney Empire’s environment etched into its grooves. The Antlers are an indie rock band based in Brooklyn, New York. The band’s lyrics are written and sung by Peter Silberman. Their music is composed and performed by Silberman, Darby Cicci (trumpet, upright/electric bass, keyboards, synths, vocals) and Michael Lerner (drums). The Antlers’ makeup has developed from a lo-fi, bedroom recording folk project into a heavily lush and orchestrated rock group with an aptitude for melodious experimentation and layering. The instrumentation consists of vocals, electric guitar, keyboards/synths, drums and an array of other instruments including piano, horns, strings, and electronic elements.[1] Silberman has said that the band’s name is taken from The Microphones‘ song, “Antlers”.

The Antlers – In London
Recorded live at the Hackney Empire, London, 24th October 2014
Limited edition 2×12” set.

Strictly limited to vinyl only, the live collection chronicles last year’s show at London’s Hackney Empire, where the session was also filmed; you can check out our emotionally-charged galleryhere.

The album is focused mostly on last year’s Familiars, but also includes tracks from throughout their back catalogue (find out exactly what further down the page).

Tracklist:

1. Palace
2. Doppelgänger
3. Hotel
4. Kettering
5. No Widows
6. Director
7. Revisited
8. Parade
9. I Don’t Want Love
10. Surrender
11. Putting The Dog To Sleep
12. Refuge
13. Epilogue

Live In London is released 15th June on Transgressive.

Check out the video of them performing “Refuge” and then check out the LP’s tracklist .

The ANTLERS – ” Hotel “

Posted: December 13, 2014 in MUSIC
Tags: , ,

I am not sure what I expected from The Antlers, but stately horns and a pretty piano lines weren’t amongst my expectations. Still, I’ve come to love the heart and melancholy on this record like all other releases from this fine band . Peter Silberman sings like a man who’s found his voice; it’s comforting and cool and best of all he seems comfortable singing out of falsetto style, which makes him able to be expressive in so many more diverse ways. The horns often take the center here, casting a yearning warmth on this philosophical record. The words are clear, the thoughts are complex. It seems to be about letting go or at least looking at what is familiar in different ways. I’m not sure, but I’m going to listen again and again. Sometimes I just drift away in the atmospherics of “Familiars”, other times I get a glimpse of someone searching. this is just a beautiful record .

The Antlers, play the song “Palace” for the AB Session, recorded live and acoustic at AB Backstage in Brussels, As with all the Antlers’ material, their set always has a lot of emotional gravity, and after playing through new tracks, “Palace,” “Hotel,” and “Refuge,” the set felt like a solemn chamber of reflection. Looking around after the performances, everyone who helped record this most recent session looked like they were in a distant place, transported by the Antlers’ brand of poetic, introverted rock.
Let the Antlers music fill your ears, heart, and soul,

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This is a truly beautiful remix from Daniel Lanois,

The Antlers is an “Indie Rock Band” currently based in “Brooklyn” New York City. The band’s lyrics are written and sung by Peter Silberman. Their music is composed and performed by Silberman, Darby Cicci (trumpet, upright/electric bass, keyboards, synths, vocals) and Michael Lerner (drums). The Antlers’ makeup has developed from a lo-fi, bedroom recording folk project into a heavily lush and orchestrated rock group with an aptitude for melodious experimentation and layering. The instrumentation consists of vocals, electric guitar, keyboards/synths, drums and an array of other instruments including piano, horns, strings, and electronic elements.
This is the Antler’s 5th full-length studio album entitled “Familiars” was released on June 17, 2014 via Anti Records in the U.S. and Transgressive Records in the U.K./Europe. The album was recorded and produced by the band in their Brooklyn based studio, and mixed by Chris Coady. On March 31, 2014, after releasing a Cryptic video teaser the week prior, the band announced the release of the nine-track album along with a music video to the album’s first single “Palace”. The video was directed by Hana Tajima. Darby Cicci designed the artwork for the album.”Familiars has received rave reviews from publications such as “Rolling Stone” who commented that “Familiars” finds the Antlers on a new, magnificent level of heavy songwriting.” Many critics alluded to the growth of The Antler’s artistic approach on the album. Mojo magazine called the work “another existentially-minded beauty…turning agony into something approaching ecstasy.” may be the defining work of the band’s stamp on the modern indie rock scene. “Loud and Quiet” also commented on the record’s success: “Slow-burning, poised and richly beautiful… The Antlers have been responsible for a handful of the most soul-shifting moments in guitar-based indie rock over the last few years, and this should see the band cement their place in the genre’s upper echelons.
 

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from the forthcoming album “Familiars” produced by the band themselves stark piano and simple drum back beat and Silbermans haunting anguished vocal just announced dates i the UK.

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the-antlers-palace
the wonderful ANTLERS from Brooklyn release a new album FAMILIARS June 16th.

 

the Antlers announce a new album titled “Familiars” due to be released in June , recorded at the bands own Brooklyn Studio, “Palace” will be the new single and its full of the bands usual beautiful soundscapes, a delicate piano and Pete Silbermans vocal.