Monday, January 18, 2010

SEAN BONES




It all started with swim trunks, a Summer Reading ‘zine and sunscreen. Oh, and a 7-inch; we can’t forgot that part. “I’ve always wanted to do my own record,” explains Bones (ne Sullivan), referring to the solo single he released as part of the limited “S/S FRIENDS” fashion line. “I never thought it’d be reggae, but then last summer happened.” Ah, last summer. At the time, Sullivan was getting restless over the looming release of Sam Champion’s Heavenly Bender LP, so he set aside some no-frills studio time. The two-sided result, “Easy Street” and “Act So Casual,” became an easy, breezy mission statement for Sean Bones, a project Sullivan describes as “music that might cause people to scratch their heads a bit, only to realize that scratching their heads would make a good dance move.”

Indeed. Just ask the folks over at RCRD LBL, who got behind Sullivan early on and wrote, “Canvas shorts and reggae music sound like summer spent by the water being lazy. Sean
Bones is not lazy.” Sure enough, Sullivan spent many late nights crafting the dirt-encrusted reggae that drives Sean Bones’ Frenchkiss debut Rings.

Named after the pervading influence of such speakerimploding ‘60s/’70s standards as the Congos, Desmond Dekker and Lee “Scratch” Perry, Rings was first recorded live to a 16-track tape machine with one malfunctioning slot. 

“We were working with limitations from the start,” says Sullivan. “I also told the engineer (Jay Braun, who’s also worked with the Stills and Jon Spencer Blues Explosion) to track the music in a way that hit the tape hard, stressing it out and giving us a gritty sound.” The result is a funky reggae party with feeling. From the sturdy rocksteady groove and sly Phil Spector nods of “Cry Cry Cry” to the dub flavor of “Instigator” to the twilight zone reggaeton of “Smoke Rings” – Bones’s debut seem tailored to summertime-in-the-city.

And then there’s “Dancehall,” a friendly sparring match between Barrington Levy and latter-day Blur. So yeah—this ain’t Legend: The Fourth Generation here; it’s something much stranger. “Even when it’s poppy, reggae is heavy and weird,” says Sullivan. “Especially the early stuff—it’s done on primitive equipment and it’s better for that. To me, that’s punk, and I love it.” He’s not alone.

Remember that early “Easy Street”/“Act So Casual” single? When Sullivan tried to book a Sean Bones show to recoup the costs of vinyl pressings and canvas shorts, he ended up signing a record deal instead. Not to mention scoring the starring role— without auditioning, mind you—in Wah Do Dem, an indie film with loose connections to The Harder They Come and Rockers. My character is this hapless guy named Max who wins two cruise tickets, but gets dumped and has to go on this trip alone,” explains Sullivan. “He spends a week on a Senior Citizen’s cruise before getting robbed and lost in Jamaica on his daytrip there. Somewhere along the way, he gets taken in and sees the ‘real Jamaica’.”

You might recognize Max’s ex as a certain Norah Jones. While her character may ditch Max early on, the Grammy winner wound up contributing vocals to the album closer “Turn Them,” a song catered to the film’s storyline. Landing such a high profile guest begs one question, of course: what’s next, beyond a spring 2010 S/S FRIENDS collection involving ponchos and galoshes? “I’m not closing any doors,” says Sullivan of his past projects, “but when the idea to record my own reggae single came to me, I was so excited I had to stand on my fire escape. It feels right to be doing this.”





GROWING

 


BIOGRAPHY

In 1999 Joe DeNardo moved into a house in Olympia, Washington. It just so happened that a musically inclined individual named Kevin Doria also lived there, and a few months later the pair began playing guitars in the basement under the name 1000 AD.

Their early two-guitar sound stressed repetition, physical volume, sustain, and harmonic density. After self-releasing a tape that was recorded during Wynne Greenwood’s (TRACY + THE PLASTICS) brief stint on keyboards, the band changed their name to GROWING in 2001 and began playing with drummer Eryn Ross.

In 2002, that incarnation recorded The Sky’s Run Into the Sea with engineer Stefan Simikich (HAMBURGER EYES) on a non-existent budget. Around this time GROWING began incorporating spatial elements into their song structures as the process of recording in a studio allowed them to push their boundaries further than ever. Shortly after completing the album the band sent a copy to Kranky Records. The label graciously agreed to release it and its follow-up LP (now minus Eryn Ross), The Soul of the Rainbow and the Harmony of Light, which was recorded in Portland with Rex Ritter in 2003.

At this point the band began to develop its use of layering and recorded much of the raw tracks at home, relying on Ritter’s studio to help reorganize, reamp, and embellish the music. Early in 2003 MOGWAI invited GROWING to play at Camber Sands as part of ALL TOMORROW’S PARTIES. Joe moved to New York following the SRHL sessions. Late in 2004 the duo played ATP again by invitation of Jake and Dinos Chapman.

By then Kevin had joined Joe in New York and the guys were gearing up to record His Return at Junkyard Studios in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, for Troubleman Unlimited’s underlabel Megablade. His Return articulates both incredibly minimal structural progressions and a sort of “folk music”-inspired traditionalism, while remaining very thick.

In 2005 the pair recorded Color Wheel in Montreal in The Pines studio run by Dave Bryant (GODSPEED! YOU BLACK EMPEROR) and Craig Bowen. The Pines granted the band the first opportunity to truly utilize the studio as an instrument in their recording process. In the spring GROWING played with friends SUNN 0))), BLACK DICE, GANG GANG DANCE, and OOIOO on the Australian What Is Music? tour.

The band returned to the PINES in 2006 to record Vision Swim, their final record for TMU. This record and Color Wheel widened the spectrum of what listeners could expect from the duo as they explored electronics in new and less categorical ways.

As a testament to the quality inherent to The Pines studio, GROWING returned there in the summer of 2007 to record some new tunes for The Social Registry. TSR released a 7" in December and an EP in February of 2008 called Lateral. Both releases balance abstraction, pure sound, and melody without the crutch of unnecessary premeditation.

In the winter of 2007/8, the band began recording another record at Ocropolis Studio in Brooklyn with friend and studio engineer Barry London. They then toured Europe in April ’08 with BORIS and played ATPNY in September. After the Ocropolis sessions were released as the full length All the Way in September, the band toured the east coast with HOT CHIP. GROWING wrapped up 2008 by adding new member Sadie Laska (IUD, EXTREME VIOLENCE), who has increased the depth of the act’s sound with varied electronics, samples, and vocal parts.

In 2009 GROWING played at Netmage in Bologna, Italy, and travelled to Japan for the first time for shows in Tokyo and Osaka. The band started work on another full length titled Pumps in March 2009, again at Brooklyn’s Ocropolis in with engineer Barry London.

Ocropolis is a great big pile of warm lights, effects boxes, synths, drum machines, and a live room overflowing with amps, cabs, guitars, optogons, etc. It’s a nice place to relax and tinker with all sorts of sounds, i.e. a perfect environment for GROWING to develop their sonic vocabulary. The initial tracking took only four or five days, but the extremely intensive processing and mixing processes weren’t completed until October 2009. However, the extra time proved fruitful because it allowed the trio to rework songs multiple times and, in some cases, write completely new, transformed versions of tracks they no longer felt were as strong as originally intended. Drum-machine rhythms and layers of vocal and guitar textures drive the new jams, and the band was able to integrate a lot of new processing techniques. It made GROWING’s sound fuller and more developed. It also allowed more time to integrate Sadie into the recording process, and gave her more opportunities to fine-tune her contributions.

After finishing Pumps, GROWING toured the US with Fuck Buttons and began the working relationship with Vice Records, who will release Pumps in April of 2010. 


BAND MEMBERS :
 
JOE DENARDO
SADIE LASKA
KEVIN DORIA


For More Info :

http://www.growingsound.com/

http://www.myspace.com/growingsoundnyc

LULLABYE ARKESTRA




Official video for "Icy Hands" from their latest release Threats/Worship. 
The video was released as part of Scion A/V Video. Directed by Dylan Reibling.

BIOGRAPHY

Lullabye Arkestra is Kat Taylor-Small and Justin Small. Brought together by love, they are bound by and to the music. It’s music by lovers, for fighters. When Kat picks up her bass and Justin gets behind the drums, the result is dirty, swaggering rock ‘n’ roll. The result is beautiful. The result is Threats/Worship.

Formed in 2001, Lullabye Arkestra has always had the heart, soul and sweat of Kat and Justin at its core. While past incarnations have found up to a dozen people adding to the sound, today the Arkestra is stripped down, back to the core. This is a duo who knows when to scream, when to pummel, and, at the perfect moment, when to let the vulnerabilities show.

The paradox of the band’s name is intrinsic to the songs they sing. They scream and wail, but just when you think the onslaught is relentless, they turn on a dime and let Kat’s sweet voice take over. Or Justin let’s loose with a string of “Baby, baby, baby…” The centre only seems softer because of the hardness that protects it.

After self-releasing a CDR-EP, Lullabye Arkestra’s first official album, Ampgrave (2006), was released on Constellation Records. Since then, they’ve torn up stages in North America and Europe, playing gigs with bands as diverse as Bison B.C., Blood Ceremony, Fucked Up, Plus/Minus and Monotonix.

Now, after signing to VICE Records, they are unveiling their latest album, Threats/Worship. The first chords are heavy, almost foreboding. It’s an introduction, but only a welcome for those willing to risk entrance. The drums kick in and the tension eases, but only slightly. Lullabye Arkestra is asking – no, insisting – that you “Get Nervous”.

The first voice you hear is that of drummer Justin Small. It is the voice of someone who loves rock ‘n’ roll and who is going to make you love rock ‘n’ roll, too. He drums like a guy who is bouncing off his seat, driven to just get up, jump into the crowd and dance. This is not music for the inhibited. Or maybe, it’s the perfect soundtrack to finally letting go of whatever was holding you back in the first place.

When Kat Taylor-Small screams, it’s genuinely bone-chilling. Then, she punctuates her wail with a bass line that is absolutely gut-rumbling, just to make sure you don’t miss the point. The effect is stunning and life-affirming, even as, or maybe because, it’s also a little scary.

And therein lies the beauty of Lullabye Arkestra. There’s hope amongst the pain. There’s love and truth and passion and warmth; there’s life. The wolves may come, but they’re nothing insurmountable. So, even when the music is at it’s heaviest and seemingly darkest, it’s the light that makes the Arkestra transcendent.


BAND MEMBERS
KAT TAYLOR-SMALL - Vocals/Bass
JUSTIN SMALL - Vocals/Drums

For More Info :













PIERCED ARROWS




Descending Shadows







Official video for "Paranoia" from their upcoming release Descending Shadows. Available February 2nd, 2010 on VICE Records. 

PIERCED ARROWS - Paranoia mp3


To call Fred Cole a “living legend” is like saying, “Yes, and water is wet.” A true frontiersman without peer, Fred has blazed his own sonic trail for over 45 years, resulting in leaving his own unique, indelible stamp on nearly every genre imaginable. And if he wasn’t directly part of a particular scene or musical aesthetic, you can be damn sure he was at least an influence on it. His musical career took root as “Deep Soul Cole,” singing blue-eyed soul with an all-black backing band. After that he fronted The Weeds, who produced a regional hit in the Northwest (Fred’s adopted home) with the slate-hard “It’s Your Time.” Lord Tim Byron, The Weeds’ manager who they shared with The Seeds, told Fred and co. to change their name as they couldn’t be sharing bills with a band whose name rhymed with their own. They settled on The Lollipop Shoppe (a less appropriate moniker seemingly unavailable) the band reached the murky depths of the Top 100 with one of punk’s finest moments: “You Must Be a Witch.” To this day, their follow-up LP bursts forth with moody, angry psych/garage scorchers that are as dark and strong as your favorite cup of coffee.

Fred would soon unleash his unique take on the hard rock sounds of the 70s with groups like Zipper and Kingbee. But the musical tide was turning, and, as before, he was determined to ride that wave into oblivion. Now joined by his wife, Toody Cole, on bass and vocals, Fred formed The Rats, who became a popular live act. They also put out several fine punk rock/new wave LPs (at the time the two genres were basically one and the same).

Eventually The Rats mutated into Dead Moon, arguably the end result of all the rough-and-ready sounds the Coles had produced in the past, boiled down to a single, perfectly aimed shot. The blood-red raw rock ’n’ roll of Dead Moon answered to a call of rage and hope. The band took hold in Western Europe, much of it the then-Soviet Bloc, and then proceeded to storm America in a non-violent coup (barring mental violence, that is). One could say that Fred had peaked and could rightfully rest on his laurels when, after a staggering 20-year campaign and a fervent fan following, Dead Moon called it a day.

But that’s not how our story ends.

While some of Dead Moon’s more ardent fans went into mourning, figuratively waving rosaries and holy cards, Fred and Toody were already auditioning drummers in search of someone who could not only keep a good beat, but someone who would be willing to follow them in a new direction. After agreeing on drummer Kelly Haliburton, Pierced Arrows was born.

The new name seems to evoke the saying “If you cut me, I will bleed.” Not that any of us want to see that literally happen, but Pierced Arrows, just like Fred’s previous bands, bleeds all over their performances and records with such wrought emotion it only took one 45 to prove that the band was the worthy successor to Dead Moon. Ma and Pa Cole’s General Store has reopened for business, producing “rock ’n’ roll that’s rough, ragged, and honest,” as Fred once described their predecessor’s collective output. It’s both a new sound and an inheritor of tradition.

A Pierced Arrows performance is a form of communion. They are there to see you just as much as you are to see them. You are not likely to find them cowering in a backstage corner. Though they are there to work, and work hard, don’t be surprised to find them hanging with friends and fans, checking out the opening act. Fred and Toody have always done it their way. This is their life’s work, and life is just the beginning if you really believe.


BAND MEMBERS
FRED COLE - GUITAR AND VOCALS
TOODY COLE - BASS AND VOCALS
KELLY HALLIBURTON - DRUMS





Rigas



Artist: Rigas
Web page: rigas.blackside.org
Myspace: www.myspace.com/rigasthemoron
Contact: rigas@brilliant.nu


Discography:

Let's Get Gone
It's a Shame EP
The Born Not To Run EP
The Hardest Pocket to Pick
This year has been good to me
the moron


Rigas feat. Anna Maria Espinosa - Ghosts from Landström & Westerberg on Vimeo.




Track taken from Rigas' highly anticipated third album, Let's Get Gone, out march 10th on Flora & Fauna.
Directed by Landström & Westerberg


Monday, January 11, 2010

The official music video for Blind Man's Colour

Blind Man's Colour - The Warm Current's Pull
from the album Season Dreaming on Kanine.



Directed by Kevin Chapados & Chunwoo Kae
Cinematography by Jon Miller & Ryan Demler

Femme En Fourrure – Plump Biscuit (video by Miikka Lommi, 2009)

Femme En Fourrure - Plump Bisquit from miikka lommi on Vimeo.

The Dodos Video for "Longform"

Dodos Longform from Jenn Dorn on Vimeo.



Band: The Dodos
Song: Longform
Label: Frenchkiss Records

Director: Jenn Dorn
Assistant Director: Brandon Moore
D.P.: Brandon Moore and Mike Solidum
Editor: Jenn Dorn
Color Correction: Daniel Heard
Producer: Jenn Dorn
Actress: Veronica Pavia

YEAR LONG DISASTER



Download an MP3 of “Show Me Your Teeth” from Year Long Disaster’s Black Magic: All Mysteries Revealed [Volcom Entertainment]

YEAR LONG DISASTER’S 2007 self-titled debut landed them tours with The Cult, Velvet Revolver, and the Foo Fighters, as well as praise from critics and fans alike, including Motörhead’s Lemmy Kilmister (with whom they also toured), who told Kerrang! Magazine that "YEAR LONG DISASTER plays rock and roll music like rock and roll should be played."

At the close of 2008, with two years of international touring behind them, the band secured Grammy Award-winning producer Nick Raskulinecz (Foo Fighters, Alice in Chains, Rush, Marilyn Manson) to produce their forthcoming album, Black Magic: All Mysteries Revealed.
Based loosely on the early 20th century Russian novel, “Master and Margarita,” by Mikhail Bulgakov, Black Magic is a landscape peopled by figures—whores, despots, lovers, traitors and dreamers—liberated from the myth that innocence is exalted but haunted by the perpetual threat of spiritual disappointment and emotional disaster that experience has taught them to expect.

The album is fueled by howling vocals and blistering guitars that flirt with the limits of control, only to be disciplined back into order by unexpected melodies and the band’s famously tight bass and drum section.
Of course the band’s pedigree makes their skill set less of a surprise. Guitarist and vocalist Daniel Davies is the son of Kinks’ Dave Davies, bassist Rich Mullins plays in West Virginia instrumental hard-rock trio, Karma To Burn, and drummer Brad Hargreaves moonlights in eight-time platinum-selling group Third Eye Blind.

Since their formation in late 2004, Year Long Disaster have channeled the bastardized muddy blues stomps of their forefathers and overlaid them with their own flash and drama.


Press Quotes:


“One of the best new bands” - Rolling Stone

“If the recognizable names in Year Long Disaster don’t get your attention, the familiarity of the L.A. trio’s riffage will – tight, bluesy metal that sounds as if they swaggered into the middle of a Led Zeppelin-ZZ Top bar fight.”
- Los Angeles Times


“YLD sounds like a dream mash-up of Led Zeppelin and Jeff Buckley sporting some of the best hooks I’ve heard in months!” - Guitar World
“It’s literally rocking stuff.” - LA Weekly

“The hooks on this album are big enough to catch whales…They just plain kick ass!” - Outburn


“Not since we heard AC/DC’s Back in Black for the first time have we been so rocked by an album.” - Hustler


“YLD delivers mind-numbing body blows throughout their first LP” – Big Takeover


“Channeling classic rock, heavy riffs, and, at times, the ghost of Axl Rose, Year Long Disaster has bridged the great divide and come out ready to conquer.” – Thrasher


“They’ve recorded one of the best debuts of the year.” - Metal Maniacs


For More Information:

http://www.myspace.com/yearlongdisaster
http://www.yearlongdisaster.com/
http://www.volcoment.com

Friday, January 1, 2010

Pretty Much Amazing’s Best Albums of 2009






source : pretty much amazing

2009 was an exceptional last year in an exceptional decade for music. In 2009 we were bombarded with solid release after great release after epic release throughout the entire year (upfront: I didn’t listen to every album released in 2009), so narrowing my picks for the best albums of the year was not easy. Nonetheless, I have here Pretty Much Amazing’s 25 best albums of the 2009.

At the end of this list, you will have the chance to enter the last PMA contest of 2009. I will be giving away — courtesy of my wallet, unless someone wants to sponsor ;) — a copy of every album on this list on vinyl (or CD, at winner’s request) in a Vinyl is Forever Tote Bag, along with a poster featuring one of the listed artists of their choice, and a custom one year subscription to Paste Magazine. More details on that at the end of the list.

I want give a big shout out to Brian Kuperman for designing this awesome artwork for our list. I also want to thank the wonderful contributors to this blog who reviewed most of these albums throughout the year for PMA and helped me share the music I love with all of you; and thank you for reading and coming back and subscribing to PMA in 2009. I look forward to starting 2010 with all of you, but before we do, here’s one last look at our favorite albums of the 2009 :

25. Fanfarlo - Reservoir
24. Various Artists - Dark Was The Night
23. fun - Aim and Ignite
22. Harlem Shakes - Technicolor Health
21. Lady GaGa - The Fame Monster
20. Florence + The Machine - Lungs
19. Yeah Yeah Yeahs - It’s Blitz!
18. Music Go Music - Expressions
17. Passion Pit - Manners
16. Camera Obscura - My Maudlin Career
15. Röyksopp - Junior
14. The Very Best - Warm Heart of Africa
13. Discovery - LP
12. Dan Deacon - Bromst
11. Sunset Rubdown - Dragonslayer
10. Freelance Whales - Weathervanes
09. Japandroids - Post-Nothing
08. jj - jj n° 2
07. The xx - xx
06. The Big Pink - A Brief History of Love
05. The Antlers - Hospice
04. Dirty Projectors - Bitte Orca
03. Phoenix - Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
02. Grizzly Bear - Veckatimest
01. Animal Collective - Merriweather Post Pavilion

Sajama Cut – New Year Ends EP [Free Download]



Sajama Cut - New Year Ends


Sajama Cut - Butter Common = Hexx

Sebagai tanda terimakasih atas support fans-fans Sajama Cut yang setia & sabar menunggu mereka untuk merilis album terbarunya, Sajama Cut merilis sebuah surprise single secara free pada hari terakhir di tahun 2009, dengan judul “New Year Ends.”

Track instrumental ini menunjukan luasnya musik Sajama Cut, khususnya dengan menunjuk ke arah musik genre ambient yang dibuat terkenal oleh musisi-musisi seperti Steve Reich dan Brian Eno. Ada juga sedikit unsur Field Recordings di rilisan gratis ini.

“New Year Ends” juga menghadirkan B-side dengan judul “Butter Common = Hexx.” Kedua lagu ini TIDAK akan berada di album Sajama Cut terbaru yang akan dirilis pada 2010.

Identity Theft - Baby Scream



PREORDER: Release date 1.05.10

Juan Pablo Mazzola, the singer/songwriter behind Baby Scream, got his idea for the title of their latest CD “Identity Theft” following a very traumatic period of his life during 2008/2009 when, he says, “I felt some people wanted to take a lot of things away from my life”.

The tracks on the CD reflect his deep emotion and were mainly inspired by personal experiences during that time. Unlike their previous album “Ups and Downs” which was much more pop orientated the lyrics of the songs on this album have a deeper, darker side. Juan worked with Muddy Stardust on five of the songs, having worked with him on two tracks on “Ups and Downs” – “The Riots” and “Morning Light” The CD opens with a track titled “Be”, a short intro song about liberty and freedom.

It is followed by the emotive “Dead Woman Walking”, about the despair of a woman who doesn’t want to live anymore. Juan added his own English lyrics to the sixth track “Ojos Orientales”, written by Rinaldo Rafanelli, whom he describes as “a great Argentinian composer”.


The music on the CD was influenced and inspired, in Juan’s own words “ by traditional rock and roll from the 70’s era, like early Paul McCartney solo stuff and of course John Lennon’s lost summer days (there is a reference to this in the last track, a song called “Mucho Mungo/Mt. Elga” from the Pussycats L.P. that Lennon and Harry Nilsson did together)”.


The CD cover continues this theme with artwork and text evoking a 70’s image, by Argentinian artist Laura Zóccola. Juan’s vocals which have been likened to John Lennon and Marc Bolan, have a plaintiff cry to them which works perfectly with the emotions captured by his evocative lyrics, resulting in a CD which consists of deep feelings in beautiful songs.

Tracklisting:

1. Be

2. Dead Woman Walking
3. Nicole

4. Memories
5. Underground Blues

6. Ojos Orientales

7. Mucho Mungo - Mt. Elga



Wakey!Wakey! Debuts “Brooklyn” on One Tree Hill, Releases Single



New York based singer-songwriter Mike Grubbs, aka. Wakey!Wakey!, performed his moving piano-driven single “Brooklyn,” on The CW’s hit show One Tree Hill on Monday night. Grubbs
is no stranger to the show, having had his song “War Sweater” featured during last season’s finale.

The season capping usage was so well-received that the OTH writers decided to
invite Grubbs to join the cast. Earlier this season, he was introduced to the universe of the show (under his own name, no less!) as the new bartender at the show’s famed music venue, The TRIC.

In this week’s episode, Grubbs sat down at the piano in the deserted TRIC and played “Brooklyn” in its entirety. With his character having just been “outed” as
a musician, we’re hoping that some exciting storyline developments may be in the works for the remainder of the season, à la Kate Voegele. (The pop sensation took a similar route in 2008, playing the character “Mia” on the show, which in turn launched her career.) We’ll just have to keep tuning in on Monday nights to find out what’s in store for Grubbs!

For More Information:
http://thefamilyrecords.com/wakeywakey/
http://www.myspace.com/wakeywakeymusic
http://twitter.com/wakeywakey
http://grubbs.tumblr.com/