Posts Tagged ‘Warren Hildebrand’

It’s alarming to note the number of rock genres that have roots in a specific compilation album. The 1960’s folk revival sprang to life as a result of Harry Smith’s Anthology of American Folk Music; punk rock got a jump start by Lenny Kaye and Jac Holzman’s Nuggetsindie pop became a new shorthand after the release of the NME’s C86.

Following in this legacy is Orchid Tapes co-founder Warren Hildebrand, who has been championing bedroom pop artists through his New York-based label since 2010. “Radiating Light” is Orchid Tapes’ second compilation—it gets its name from a lyric fromYohuna’s “Badges,” which was featured on the first comp. Each of its 13 songs is composed by a different artist, but each one also hews close to the label’s defined aesthetic: electronic-leaning, lo-fi pop.

But despite this general overlap, there’s a clear split between the glitchy, experimental electronica of Katie Dey, Ricky Eat Acid, the aqueous synth ballads proffered by Hildebrand’s Foxes in Fiction and the more straightforward pop of R.L. Kelly, Infinity Crush, and Owen Pallett.

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The one constant is a general propensity for introspective, backward-looking lyrics. The album’s three standouts—Soccer Mommy’s “Memories,” R.L. Kelly’s “Mad,” and Yohuna’s “Geese Outside”—form a constellation of isolation; “Mad” ends with R.L. Kelly singing, “I can’t remember the person I used to be,” atop a solo guitar while “Geese Outside” begins with Yohuna singing, “I don’t remember a time / when I was happy, gracious, or kind.” The songs on Radiating Light not only define bedroom pop, but provide a compact introduction for future listeners.

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Warren Hildebrand is a busy guy, between recording and touring as Foxes In Fiction he runs the label Orchid Tapes – who have released some incredible albums this year – it just happens that “Ontario Gothic” is the best of that bunch. Hildebrand has synesthesia, which means he experiences sounds as tones, colours and textures, which if you’ve heard the album will make perfect sense to you. It’s an album with zero conflicts, a beautiful technicolour lens to view the world with; you could call it dream pop, but that’s a genre tag to often assigned with a sarcastic curled lip, and what Hildebrand has created, with orchestration from Owen Pallett, deserves so much more than that.

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Foxes in Fiction is the musical project of Warren Hildebrand, a Canadian singer-songwriter based in Brooklyn, New York. He released his first album Swung from the Branches in 2010 on Orchid Tapes, and has since released the EP Alberto and a 7″ single. Among his collaborations are a single with Benoît Pioulard, released in 2014.  In 2012 Hildebrand moved from Toronto to Brooklyn, settling down in the neighbourhood of Bushwick. Brian Vu joined Orchid Tapes later that year, helping expand the roster and the label’s scope, which introduced Hildebrand to a number of future collaborators. He occasionally masters albums for other musicians on the label.

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When he’s not running the Brooklyn-based label Orchid Tapes, Warren Hildebrand moonlights as Foxes In Fiction, and that’s a very good thing. His sophomore album under that moniker is meditative and comforting; it has no edges. Ontario Gothic” is a smart album too, because it’s self-referential, sourcing material from previous album cuts and early singles. Throughout the LP, Hildebrand never lets the feeling stray from one of warm, misty comfort. There’s a bruised sadness to it—Hildebrand calls it healing pop for a reason—but it’s a pleasant, reflective kind of sadness. Ontario Gothic doesn’t keep anything at a distance; its strength comes from always being right there .

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