tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-58418322024-03-07T21:31:16.565-05:00.news, reviews and opinion since 2001 | online at clickyclickymusic.com | "you're keeping some dark secrets, but you talk in your sleep." -- j.f.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.comBlogger2201125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-83449320522460490642017-04-21T07:10:00.000-04:002017-04-21T07:10:38.122-04:00R.I.P. Clicky Clicky (2/18/06 - 1/17/2017)<img alt="R.I.P. Clicky Clicky (2/18/06 - 1/17/2017)" src="https://c1.staticflickr.com/3/2815/33790767010_c4d9c0717a_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
I wasn't going to do a goodbye post, but I really wanted another reason to post this photo of me and Eddie and Dill. Will there ever be a greater photo? No. No, there will not. We're all doing other things in other places right now (anybody have any advice about teaching kids to ride bikes?). The <a href="https://www.facebook.com/ClickyClickyMusicBlog/">Clicky Clicky Facebook page</a> continues its work spotlighting the hot and the new and the old and the awesome apace. Jay is filing pieces periodically with <a href="http://www.vanyaland.com/author/jay-breitling/">Vanyaland</a>, Dill is with <a href="https://thump.vice.com/en_us">Thump</a>, and Eddie is cooking up still more awesomeness with <a href="https://lubec.bandcamp.com/">Lubec</a> and <a href="https://wettrident.bandcamp.com/">Wet Trident</a> and probably several other bands I don't know about. Feel free to unsubscribe us from your mailing lists, unless you routinely send us links to awesome records. Then don't do that. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m29F4FtVo-U">It's been real.</a> -- JCBAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-2333030520926963162017-01-16T18:20:00.000-05:002017-01-16T18:41:34.001-05:00Clicky Clicky's Belated Top Albums of 2016 (Jay Edition)<img alt="Clicky Clicky's Belated Top Albums of 2016 (Jay Edition)" src="https://c1.staticflickr.com/1/741/31450906044_7e9c3bac5b_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
So yeah: Hi! It's been a couple months, a couple very busy months during which we were, frankly, quite uncertain that our schedule was ever going to permit a meaningful return to the blog. But we hate not closing a loop. And while we continue to harbor doubts about the long-term prospects for what we've been internally calling "the URL version" of Clicky Clicky (as opposed to <a href="https://www.facebook.com/ClickyClickyMusicBlog/">the Facebook version</a>), we feel it would be unfair to not give our favorite records of 2016 their due, even if we already did <a href="https://www.facebook.com/ClickyClickyMusicBlog/photos/a.228968753800121.61888.228544603842536/1328308470532805/?type=3">a quick list</a> for Facebook. So leaving our wavering commitment to populating the URL with well-considered words aside, let's round up the best the year-gone-by had to offer.<br><br>
A quick glance down the list reveals some of the usual suspects -- the great KoomDogg himself chides us about our predilection for placing the mighty <b>Johnny Foreigner</b> at number one each year they do a full-length, and any <b>Lubec</b> release tends to rate high -- but also some new names. This is as it should be. Were it not for those new names we'd grow pretty disinterested in following music as closely as we do. How many articles and books can one read about <b>The Doors</b>, <b>Pink Floyd</b>, even <b>The Clash</b>, after all? We suppose the answer to that question is however many we've already read, but more germane to the point is how exhilarating we found the music of the new and new-to-us respectively <b>Strange Passage</b> and Real Numbers, for example, this year. Legends, veterans, and relative veterans such as <b>David Bowie</b>, <b>Lambchop</b> and <b>Hallelujah The Hills</b> all more than acquitted themselves with releases that are still -- STILL -- in heavy rotation at CCHQ (well, perhaps less so now that <b>The XX</b>'s new joint is out).<br><br>
Before we leave you to digest our thoughts on our 10 favorites below, we'd like to note that it was trying year and one in which we valued music more than ever. Our need for peace and relaxation in the face of substantial work stress made things like Spotify's <b>Steve Reich</b> radio station, or custom stations based on <b>Erik Satie</b>'s <i>Gymnopédies</i> or the <b>Lilys</b> oeuvre, reliable, comforting ways to experience music. The bigger message, we suppose, and one that we'd like all readers to take to heart as we work through the new American Political Reality, is that music is there for us. It is always there. Cherish it, and it will be everything you need it to be. Now we'll shut up. Here's the best shit from last year. If you want even more detail, we first revealed our 2016 year-end album picks during a December taping of the podcast tour de force Completely Conspicuous, and the three links below will take you to the three episodes featuring my conversation with podcast proprietor Jay Kumar, the aforementioned KoomDogg.<br><br>
<a href="http://compcon.libsyn.com/completely-conspicuous-452-the-honor-roll">Completely Conspicuous 452</a> / <a href="http://compcon.libsyn.com/completely-conspicuous-453-higher-and-higher">Completely Conspicuous 453</a> / <a href="https://www.mixcloud.com/completelyconspicuous/completely-conspicuous-454-top-of-the-pops/">Completely Conspicuous 454</a><blockquote><b>01. Johnny Foreigner -- Mono No Aware -- Alcopop!/Lame-O</b><br>
There is an astonishing amount of detail packed into its briskly paced 35 minutes, yet Mono No Aware succeeds in every direction. There are the blitzkrieging singles and should-be singles that are Johnny Foreigner's stock-in-trade, such as the brilliant rager "If You Can't Be Honest, Be Awesome" and fiery "The X and the O," respectively. Other successes are perhaps more subtle but substantially more exciting. Even 10 years on the band continues to best itself in terms of songcraft, adding progressive flair to a genre which -- let's be honest -- too often gets to coast on the right chords, the correct pedals. The brightly burning centerpiece of the record is the wild, vivid and deconstructed anthem "Our Lifestyles Incandescent," whose verses feature thrilling vocal arrangements structured around the voice of Chicago polymath <b>Nnamdi Ogbonnaya</b>. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/07/review-johnny-foreigner-mono-no-aware.html">full review</a>].<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2109963522/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://alcopop.bandcamp.com/album/mono-no-aware">Mono No Aware by johnny foreigner</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>02. Lambchop -- FLOTUS -- Merge</b><br>
Sublime.<br><br>
<iframe width="100%" height="120" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/n3JaVPSlbfw?list=PLqS_zOpdzXRtV1bOQSWiG30O5ZxEDJYLe&showinfo=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><br>
<b>03. Real Numbers -- Wordless Wonder -- Slumberland</b><br>
The jangle commandos' new C86-indebted collection, <i>Wordless Wonder</i>, is thronged with instant classics touting big melodies, scritchy guitars and maximum pep. Opener "Frank Infatuation" is timeless, and makes for an auspicious start to this high-quality release. The tune is all fuzzy strums, plunky bass, and surfy leads, delivered at a carefree, upbeat tempo, and, sure, there's a formula at work, but when the formula is this fun and well-executed, no ones cares. If you dig "Frank Infatuation" -- and it is undeniable -- make sure to check out this earlier version <b>Real Numbers</b> released as a digital single in 2014. <i>Wordless Wonder</i>'s barn-storming "Just So Far Away" is even more potent, hitting hard with a chorus first before blitzkrieging through short verses and right back to the chorus again. The album truly is all killer and no filler. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/10/todays-hotness-white-laces-real-numbers.html">Hotness blurb</a>]<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2863730618/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://real-numbers.bandcamp.com/album/wordless-wonder">Wordless Wonder by Real Numbers</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>04. Frankie Cosmos -- Next Thing -- Bayonet Records</b><br>
Entrancing.<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2152703168/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://ingridsuperstar.bandcamp.com/album/next-thing">Next Thing by Frankie Cosmos</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>05. Lubec -- Cosmic Debt -- Disposable America</b><br>
The true surprise of <i>Cosmic Debt</i> is not that it expands <b>Lubec</b>'s already expansive view of guitar pop, not its beauty, sophistication or ready appeal, but rather that the whipsmart threesome does so many new things despite the record's smaller scale. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/09/review-lubec-cosmic-debt-ep.html">full review</a>]<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=4052125082/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://lubec.bandcamp.com/album/cosmic-debt">Cosmic Debt by Lubec</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>06. David Bowie -- Blackstar -- Columbia Records</b><br>
Stunning.<br><br>
<iframe width="100%" height="120" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/b3lcw8qxFtE?list=PLXf32UxnES1wVuoqqaVg3dnADGnF6CC-u&showinfo=0" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><br>
<b>07. Preoccupations -- Preoccupations -- Jagjaguwar</b><br>
On its new eponymous sophomore set the band takes another unpredictable stylistic swerve, possibly in response to widespread criticism concerning the cultural insensitivity of its previous name. The rebrand provided a renewed opportunity for the foursome to reconsider its practice, and <b>Preoccupations</b> capitalized strongly by injecting <i>Preoccupations</i> with a dash of New Wave exuberance and structure that reveals another shade of the dark and classic post-punk sound it has explored since 2008. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/09/review-preoccupations-preoccupations.html">full review</a>]<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=1131705251/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://preoccupations.bandcamp.com/album/preoccupations-2">Preoccupations by Preoccupations</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>08. Hallelujah The Hills -- A Band Is Something To Figure Out -- Discrete Pageantry</b><br>
Given the band passed its 10th birthday late last year, we suppose there's a reasonable expectation <b>Hallelujah The Hills</b> should know what it is doing at this point. But that does not dull the dazzle and delight of the smart and agile <i>A Band Is Something To Figure Out</i>, which song-for-song is the band's best outing to date. Its 11 tunes cast fronter Ryan Walsh's engaging studies of the quirks of our shared reality -- the weird truths in plain sight that we can't or won't see -- within rock frameworks that reliably stretch to accommodate subversive, irreverent impulses. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/04/review-hallelujah-hills-band-is.html">full review</a>]<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2380355703/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://hallelujahthehills.bandcamp.com/album/a-band-is-something-to-figure-out-2016">A Band Is Something To Figure Out (2016) by Hallelujah The Hills</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>09. Strange Passage -- Shine And Scatter EP -- Self-released</b><br>
<i>Shine And Scatter</i> echoes the melodic, guitar-centered sound of the turn-of-the-'90s UK with surprising competence and confidence. Indeed, the short set's four songs echo <b>The House of Love</b> and the early <b>RIDE</b> EPs, and -- more contemporaneously -- are startlingly reminiscent of the massively underrated and short-lived aughts combo <b>The Boyfriends</b>. While there is a thread of shoegaze shot through <b>Strange Passage</b>'s alluring brand of guitar pop, and Boston continues to have a strong share of contemporary 'gaze practitioners, <b>Strange Passage</b>'s music still feels somewhat delightfully off-trend. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/08/todays-hotness-strange-passage-snowball.html">Hotness blurb</a>]<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=1783543122/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://strangepassage.bandcamp.com/album/shine-and-scatter">Shine and Scatter by Strange Passage</a></iframe><br><br>
<b>10. Cold Pumas -- The Hanging Valley -- Faux Discx</b><br>
File under Post-Punk Pleasures. The set includes nine new tracks; based on two fetching preview tunes, the group remains faithful to its favored motorik rhythms and wistful bummer-pop. Leading preview single "A Change of Course" is strikingly more dense and melodic than what we've come to expect from the band; it takes the two-chord pull formula of earlier tunes such as "Sherry Island" and compacts it to fit a sub-three-minute pop framework that echoes the more shoegazey side of early <b>Deerhunter</b>. It may very well be the best thing the Brighton combo has released (to date). Second single "Fugue States" stretches into a longer runtime, and employs open, ringing chords alongside a rambling, Ian Curtis-styled deadpan that reminds listeners that <b>Cold Pumas</b> know their classic gloomy post-punk inside and out. [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/05/todays-hotness-fenneszorourke-cold.html">Hotness blurb</a>]<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=1173078228/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://coldpumas.bandcamp.com/album/the-hanging-valley">The Hanging Valley by Cold Pumas</a></iframe></blockquote>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-61659422131591527702016-11-15T07:17:00.003-05:002016-11-15T07:17:56.520-05:00Notes From The Underground: Aüva's Day Two in The Studio at Mad Oak with Benny Grotto<img alt="Notes From The Underground: Aüva's Day Two in The Studio at Mad Oak with Benny Grotto" src="https://c8.staticflickr.com/6/5692/30901516231_9327961549_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
Here we are with the day two reportage from Boston indie pop sextet <b>Aüva</b>'s foray into Mad Oak Studio. The band was there Friday, Saturday and Sunday this past weekend with producer extraordinaire Benny Grotto on the dime of an anonymous donor and friend of Clicky Clicky, and the plan is to track and mix three new songs. Yesterday we posted singer and keyboardist Miette Hope's impressions of the first day, but tangentially we'll note that <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Aüva</a>'s Friday didn't stop when that session was over. The band played a show at Make Out Point Friday, Clicky Clicky operatives were there, and we're told Aüva played one new song, and a bunch from <a href="https://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/album/a-va">this year's LP</a> including "Better" (whose <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/07/footage-auvas-swaying-surf-pop-gem.html">video</a> was also shot in part at the Point) and closing the set with the dreamy pop gem "<a href="https://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/track/into-place-2">Into Place.</a>" Mixing on the three new tunes is slated to transpire later this month. For now, check out drummer Michael Piccoli's thoughts on the second day of the sessions.<blockquote>Day 2 in the studio was devoted to tracking guitar, keys and bass. We arrived at noon and started out by listening to all the drum takes from day one with fresh ears before recording other instruments. We were all glad to hear that the drum takes were solid so we were ready to move on. Andy did a great job nailing down the bass parts, and it only took about an hour for him to play all three songs. Benny had different ideas for each song and sent the bass through different combinations of amplifiers and compressors depending on what he thought the song needed. After recording bass we moved onto rhythm guitar which we used a similar approach for. Benny had a few different Reverend guitars in the studio that he let us play on the different songs in order to achieve the best sound for each tune. He also had some ideas for what Jake was playing and we got to use one of his 12-strings to double one of the lead lines and it gave the sound a very vintage mid-'60s sound, reminiscent of <b>The Byrds</b>, which we were all excited about. Moving onto keys, we used our Yamaha MX49 keyboard and created sounds by blending two different instruments and adjusting the sound envelope. We also tracked acoustic piano on a couple of the songs and used two mics behind the piano and one room mic. Overall it was a great day in the studio and tomorrow we plan to move onto vocals, lead guitar, and percussion. -- <i>Michael</i></blockquote>
Aüva: <a href="https://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/releases">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://www.auvamusic.com/">Internerds</a><br><br>
<b>Related coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/11/notes-from-underground-auvas-day-one-in.html">Notes From The Underground: Aüva's Day One in The Studio at Mad Oak with Benny Grotto</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/10/hey-this-weird-thing-happened-where.html">Hey This Weird Thing Happened Where Someone Gave Us Studio Time To Give Away So We Gave It To Aüva And Let's See What Happens, Shall We?</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/07/footage-auvas-swaying-surf-pop-gem.html">Footage: Aüva's Swaying Surf-Pop Gem "Better"</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/05/together-again-clicky-clicky-presents.html">Together Again: Clicky Clicky Presents Two Nights of Adventurous Electronics And Under-Pop May 18+19</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-74110923533076364512016-11-14T07:17:00.003-05:002016-11-14T07:17:48.328-05:00Notes From The Underground: Aüva's Day One in The Studio at Mad Oak with Benny Grotto<img alt="Notes From The Underground: Aüva's Day One in The Studio at Mad Oak with Benny Grotto" src="https://c6.staticflickr.com/6/5496/25320576589_16da344e20_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
Aloha readers. If you caught <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/10/hey-this-weird-thing-happened-where.html">our post</a> a few weeks back about sending <b>Aüva</b> into the studio in a mystery donor's dime, and even if you didn't, well it's time for an update. The young and talented Boston indie pop sextet entered the hallowed halls of Mad Oak Studios with esteemed producer Benny Grotto Friday to record new music, and we've got a report from singer and keyboard player Miette. It turns out the band and the studio are neighbors, so <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Aüva</a> was able to literally just push its gear down the street to make the session, which seems like something <b>The Monkees</b> would have done, so we like it. Anyway, we'll have additional notes from the band in the coming days. For now, read Miette's take on day one.<blockquote>Our first day in the studio, we pushed all of our gear over in a shopping cart from our house which is actually right down the road. Making our way to the studio we were surprised at how well it was disguised in what looked like a garage from the front right around the corner from the tattoo shop and venues we have all been to before. When we met Benny he was super nice and made us feel very comfortable right off the bat. His conversation was casual but professional and we didn't waste any time in getting right down to business discussing our instrumentation and process. The studio itself was amazing, with gorgeously warm toned wood floors and panels surrounding. The monitors and mixing board were super nice and there were so many different compressors and preamp options throughout the mixing room.<br><br>
We all took a seat on a black leather couch at the back of the room that was placed perfectly in front of the monitors and talked about our recording plans for the day. After some conversation we collectively decided that it would be best to play through all three of our songs live and focus on getting the best drum takes. We sang the vocals in the mixing room in front of the window in between the live room and mixing room so we could see the rest of the band and they could see us. Benny is also a <a href="https://www.facebook.com/SlapshotBoston/">drummer</a> so he had some cool suggestions for Michael in order to get the best possible drum sound. We played one of the songs without a click to really get the feeling of the way we are used to playing it and it ended up going really well. Another really cool thing about this studio is that the lights in the mixing room had color changing capabilities so we were able to have the room be whatever color we wanted which really helped us get into the feeling of the music a little more. Overall, the first day was very productive and we had such a good time working with Benny and in that space. Can't wait for tomorrow [<i>Saturday</i> -- Ed.], we'll be tracking bass, guitar, and keys. -- <i>Miette</i></blockquote>
Aüva: <a href="https://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/releases">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://www.auvamusic.com/">Internerds</a><br><br>
<b>Related coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/10/hey-this-weird-thing-happened-where.html">Hey This Weird Thing Happened Where Someone Gave Us Studio Time To Give Away So We Gave It To Aüva And Let's See What Happens, Shall We?</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/07/footage-auvas-swaying-surf-pop-gem.html">Footage: Aüva's Swaying Surf-Pop Gem "Better"</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/05/together-again-clicky-clicky-presents.html">Together Again: Clicky Clicky Presents Two Nights of Adventurous Electronics And Under-Pop May 18+19</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-68325480264759053582016-10-24T09:00:00.000-04:002016-10-24T09:00:00.238-04:00Hey This Weird Thing Happened Where Someone Gave Us Studio Time To Give Away So We Gave It To Aüva And Let's See What Happens, Shall We?<img alt="Hey This Weird Thing Happened Where Someone Gave Us Studio Time To Give Away So We're Giving It To Aüva And Let's See What Happens, Shall We?" src="https://c5.staticflickr.com/9/8867/28678250460_ff6762118d_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
<b>[PHOTO: Evan Xiner Hong]</b> So, in case you haven't noticed, we're fans of rising Boston indie pop sextet <b>Aüva</b>. We put the act <a href="http://togetherboston.com/lineup/auva-bos/">on a bill</a> for this year's Together fest, <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/07/footage-auvas-swaying-surf-pop-gem.html">wrote about its video clip</a> earlier in July, and have enjoyed listening to its 2016 self-titled LP. And so, when an old friend from the Boston music scene in April presented us with a very intriguing opportunity, we were compelled to think of <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Aüva</a> yet one more time. Said (very kind) friend provided us with a substantial chunk of studio time in one of the city's top studios -- and with a Boston Music Award-winning engineer nominated <a href="http://bostonmusicawards.com/nominees/">yet again</a> this year -- for us to give away (just give away, just like that, like it was a beer or an extra crew neck sweater) to a deserving band. There were a couple caveats we were happy to countenance, the upshot of which was we needed to identify a young, able band that had never recorded in a proper studio before. As Aüva's prior EPs and aforementioned LP were self-recorded, they hit Clicky Clicky's short list quickly, and were the last act standing after the Clicky Clicky Brain Trust's deliberations were complete in mid-summer.<br><br>
So, here's what's going to happen: next month, Aüva will enter the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/MadOakStudios/photos/?tab=album&album_id=10153224283941781">recently re-everythinged</a> Mad Oak Studios in Allston Rock City for five days to record new music with the great Benny Grotto. The band has graciously agreed to document the recording sessions, which we will share with you, dear reader, in as close to real time as we can manage. What can we expect? 28-minute prog odyssey? A passel of sticky, deafening stoner-rock jams? Probably not. But the point is we don't know, and it will be exciting to find out. After a successful summer tour including a date playing adjacent to <b>Brian Wilson</b> in New Hampshire, Aüva has been primarily woodshedding, but area fans can catch them performing live Nov. 11 at Make Out Point; the bill also includes Amherst, Mass.' <b>Calico Blue</b>. Those unfamiliar with the venue would do well to consult a punk. While we wait for the show and new recordings to roll around, how about taking another listen to <i>Aüva</i>?<br><br>
Aüva: <a href="https://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/releases">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://www.auvamusic.com/">Internerds</a><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=1146952197/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/album/a-va">Aüva by Aüva</a></iframe>
<b>Related coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/07/footage-auvas-swaying-surf-pop-gem.html">Footage: Aüva's Swaying Surf-Pop Gem "Better"</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/05/together-again-clicky-clicky-presents.html">Together Again: Clicky Clicky Presents Two Nights of Adventurous Electronics And Under-Pop May 18+19</a><br>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-15395323163804251182016-10-13T22:56:00.000-04:002016-10-13T22:56:10.009-04:00Today's Hotness: White Laces, Real Numbers<img alt="White Laces -- No Floor (detail)" src="https://c6.staticflickr.com/9/8635/29593789693_1b17bd6f31_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
>> Richmond future-pop leading lights <b>White Laces</b> roll into town tomorrow at the tail end of a week-long <a href="https://www.facebook.com/WhiteLaces/app/123966167614127/">east coast tour</a> supporting its long-germinating third album <i>No Floor</i>, which hit new release bins late last month. With its latest and third record, <a href="http://whitelacesmusic.com/">White Laces</a> ventures further into an aesthetic marked by dramatic electronics and vast reverbs that at times eschews live instrumentation almost entirely. The stark contrast between the guitar-centered and relatively angular sound of <a href="https://www.facebook.com/WhiteLaces/?fref=ts">White Laces</a>' early years and the boundless atmospheres it has conjured for itself more recently is no more apparent than when contrasting <a href="http://www.egghuntrecords.org/products/575709-sick-of-summer-pre-order">a recently released compilation</a> of remastered early track, <i>Sick Of Summer</i>, with <i>No Floor</i>. <i>No Floor</i> is announced by the swirling faux strings and bashing electro beat of "Youth Vote," with fronter Landis Wine dropping the <i>en medias res</i> line "I figured I'd take a ride" as a invocation. Album preview tracks "Dots" and "Cheese" follow with increasingly greater electronic flourishes that deepen the divide between the White Laces of today and the more conventional approach of the band's early years. Indeed, as the chiming opening of "Cheese" -- whose melody echoes faintly the verse of <b>P.I.L.</b>'s "Rise" -- transitions to its own serene verse, it is difficult to identify any non-electronic sounds. Even so, the music never feels synthetic, in large part because Mr. Wine's soulful vocals on <i>No Floor</i> are the most emotionally direct of the band's entire oeuvre. In a departure from prior practice, <i>No Floor</i> was recorded primarily at home, with additional vocal tracking at a studio in Richmond, and it was mixed by Philadelphia hitmaker Jeff Zeigler (Mr. Zeigler had previously tracked White Laces 2014 sophomore set <i>Trance</i>, which we reviewed <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/10/review-white-laces-trance.html">right here</a>). White Laces performs a Boston-area show Friday night at Trixie's Palace, a non-traditional venue whose coordinates can be ascertained by consulting a knowledgeable punk rock enthusiast. Also on <a href="https://www.facebook.com/events/657516191066707/">the bill</a> are <b>Jroy Divorbison</b>, <b>We Can All Be Sorry</b>, <b>Jarva Land</b> and <b>The Owens</b>. Richmond-based Egghunt Records released <i>No Floor</i> September 30 on CD, as a digital download, and in a hyper limited edition of 50 vinyl long-playing records; purchase the set in an of its physical manifestations and in various bundles (which can include the aforementioned remaster of <i>Sick Of Summer</i> as well as a pretty bitchin' t-shirt) directly from the label <a href="http://www.egghuntrecords.org/products/577904-white-laces-i-no-floor-i">right here</a>.<Br><br>
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>> With two particularly hot releases rocketing from its city limits this month, rock fans can only hope that the underpop sounds of Minneapolis are set for a renewed campaign for stylistic supremacy. <b>Private Interests</b>' power-pop revelation, its <i>Only For A Moment</i> EP, hits new release bins at the end of next week. But just tomorrow indie-pop four-piece <b>Real Numbers</b> releases a hotly anticipated and long-awaited full-length debut, despite having toiled in the figurative salt mines of international indie for as long as a decade. The jangle commandos' new C86-indebted collection, <i>Wordless Wonder</i>, is thronged with instant classics touting big melodies, scritchy guitars and maximum pep. Opener "Frank Infatuation" is timeless, and makes for an auspicious start to this high-quality release. The tune is all fuzzy strums, plunky bass, and surfy leads, delivered at a carefree, upbeat tempo, and, sure, there's a formula at work, but when the formula is this fun and well-executed, no ones cares. If you dig "Frank Infatuation" -- and it is undeniable -- make sure to check out <a href="https://real-numbers.bandcamp.com/track/frank-infatuation">this earlier version</a> <a href="https://www.facebook.com/real.nums/?fref=ts">Real Numbers</a> released as a digital single in 2014. <i>Wordless Wonder</i>'s barn-storming "Just So Far Away" is even more potent, hitting hard with a chorus first before blitzkrieging through short verses and right back to the chorus again. The album truly is all killer and no filler, and will likely be featured in a number of year-end lists before 2016 is through. Eternal it-label Slumberland Records releases <i>Wordless Wonder</i> tomorrow on CD, as a digital download, and on white or black vinyl. Purchase your copy of the set in any or all of these formats via Slumberland <a href="http://www.slumberlandrecords.com/catalog/show/307">right here</a>. The record was preceded by a number of 12" EPs, cassette tracks and digital singles, all of which appear to be on offer via the Real Numbers bandcamp dojo <a href="https://real-numbers.bandcamp.com/">right here</a>. Stream the aforementioned "Frank Infatuation" and the equally fun "New Boy" via the Soundcloud embed below.<br><br>
<iframe width="100%" height="280" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/playlists/261122249&color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false"></iframe><br><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-86911231061533791002016-10-12T19:40:00.001-04:002016-10-12T19:40:34.407-04:00That Was The Show That Was: Japanese Breakfast with Porches, Rivergazer | The Sinclair | 5 Oct.<object width="630" height="473"> <param name="flashvars" value="offsite=true&lang=en-us&page_show_url=%2Fphotos%2Fjbreitling%2Fsets%2F72157673954759110%2Fshow%2F&page_show_back_url=%2Fphotos%2Fjbreitling%2Fsets%2F72157673954759110%2F&set_id=72157673954759110&jump_to="></param> <param name="movie" value="https://www.flickr.com/apps/slideshow/show.swf?v=261948265"></param> <param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="https://www.flickr.com/apps/slideshow/show.swf?v=261948265" allowFullScreen="true" flashvars="offsite=true&lang=en-us&page_show_url=%2Fphotos%2Fjbreitling%2Fsets%2F72157673954759110%2Fshow%2F&page_show_back_url=%2Fphotos%2Fjbreitling%2Fsets%2F72157673954759110%2F&set_id=72157673954759110&jump_to=" width="630" height="473"></embed></object><br><br>
<b>[PHOTOS: Tiffany Law for Clicky Clicky Music Blog]</b> The reverbed keys and dense shoegazey guitars on <i>Psychopomp</i>, Michelle Zauner's full-length debut with her latest project <b>Japanese Breakfast</b>, represented a sharp stylistic pivot away from the music of her beloved and much-Clicky Clicky'd Philly indie combo <b>Little Big League</b>. That and the fact that <i>Psychopomp</i> was largely inspired by the loss of Ms. Zauner's mother to cancer provided ready-made narratives ahead of the long-player's release. But the big story for <i>Psychopomp</i>, which was issued last spring, has to be its superlative songwriting, which couches concise hooks and earworm choruses within expansive production. It is one of the year's more arresting releases.<br><br>
Last Wednesday night at Cambridge, Mass.'s Sinclair the band ran through a tight live reworking of the record, while mixing in a number of affirmative nods to certain key influences. Among the live set's highlights were performances of widely heralded album preview tracks. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/japanesebreakfast/?fref=ts">Japanese Breakfast</a>'s cover of <b>Birthday Girls</b>' "Everybody Wants To Love You," whose sprightly indie pop guitar leads -- admittedly something of a tonal outlier on record -- practically blossomed in a live setting. Better still was the band's sparkling rendition of "In Heaven," a track that doubles as <i>Psychopomp</i>'s thesis statement, and one that felt particularly cathartic presented on stage. Multi-instrumentalist Nick Hawley-Garner flipped between guitar and keys throughout the set, working to animate <i>Psychopomp</i>'s lush and at times <b>Smashing Pumpkins</b>-indebted arrangements.<br><br>
Even so, and aside from a gorgeous cover of <b>The Cranberries</b>' eternal teen-pop smash <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwUTzBZxRp8">"Dreams,"</a> the night's biggest moment was Japanese Breakfast's set-closer, an as yet-untitled new tune touting bubbly synth and auto-tune styled vocals from Zauner. For this, she abandoned her guitar and bounced around the stage, underscoring this reviewer's hunch that the band may be heading in a poppier, and perhaps thrillingly experimental, direction. Following its show at The Sinclair, Japanese Breakfast played two sold-out "hometown" shows in Brooklyn and Philadelphia; next week the act heads across the ocean for <a href="https://www.facebook.com/japanesebreakfast/photos/a.1525572947704506.1073741829.1440590182869450/1751023118492820/?type=3&theater">a three-week tour of the UK and Western Europe</a>. Stream all of <i>Psychopomp</i> via the Bandcamp embed below and click through to purchase the set on vinyl, cassette or as a digital download.<br><br>
Popular New York group <b>Porches</b> headlined the night, proffering plenty of cuts from its moody, swaying Domino Records debut <i>Pool</i>. Bandleader Aaron Maine has grabbed headlines for taking his project in a bolder direction away from its earlier downer folk-rock. He now leads a much looser live outfit, and has become something of an enigmatic focal point: video clips now depict his slightly off-kilter delivery and dance moves. There are few indie groups out there with as strong a stage chemistry, which likely accounts for the incredible live takes on <i>Pool</i> highlights "Car," "Mood," and "Braid." New York alt R&B outfit <b>Rivergazer</b>, whose Kevin Farrant also plays guitar in the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/porcheshiii/?fref=ts">Porches</a> live band, opened the night with tasteful numbers from its recent <i>Only 4 U</i> EP. -- <i>Dillon Riley</i><br><br>
Japanese Breakfast: <a href="http://michellezauner.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/japanesebreakfast/?fref=ts">Facebook</a><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=3513002519/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://michellezauner.bandcamp.com/album/psychopomp-2">Psychopomp by Japanese Breakfast</a></iframe><br><br>
Related Coverage:<br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/06/review-little-big-leagueovlov-year-of.html">Review: Little Big League/Ovlov | "Year Of The Sunhouse," "Pure Bliss Choices" b/w "The Great Crocodile"</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2013/11/that-was-show-that-was-little-big.html">That Was The Show That Was: Little Big League with Paws, Idiot Genes | Great Scott | 14 Nov.</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2013/07/todays-hotness-what-moon-things-little.html">Today's Hotness: Little Big League</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-44397344718597217792016-10-07T20:38:00.000-04:002016-10-08T20:10:36.476-04:00Nofuckingwhere Alums Occurrence Release The Past Will Last Forever, First Live Show Tomorrow In New York<img alt="Nofuckingwhere Alums Occurrence Release The Past Will Last Forever, First Live Show Tomorrow In New York" src="https://c7.staticflickr.com/9/8752/30145023846_4451edf08e_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
New York-based polymath Ken Urban delivered today the latest LP from his shape-shifting musical vehicle <b>Occurrence</b>. The new set, <i>The Past Will Live Forever</i>, marks a return to the dark, dramatic and brooding material of the Occurrence oeuvre of what we can now call the B.W.S.F. [that is, before Wayne S. Feldman] era. Indeed, while <a href="https://soundcloud.com/occurrence/sets/decks">the 2013 LP</a> <i>Decks</i> (which we premiered <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2013/11/premiere-occurrence-decks-album-stream.html">here</a>) and <a href="http://occurrencemusic.com/album/the-cotton-floppy-ep">an attendant EP</a> created primarily in partnership with Mr. Feldman were notably bouyant and relatively bright, with his dysphoric new collection Mr. Urban -- along with another former schoolmate, current collaborator Cat Hollyer -- has seemingly retrenched, embracing once more the tension and psychodrama of earlier <a href="https://www.facebook.com/occurrence/">Occurrence</a> collections. Longtime readers likely recall being first introduced to Occurrence via the act's appearance on our <b>Ride</b> <a href="https://soundcloud.com/clicky-clicky-music-blog/sets/n-o-f-v-c-k-i-n-g-w-h-e-r-e">tribute compilation</a>, <i>Nofuckingwhere</i>, for which Mr. Urban crafted an anxious and stinging re-imagining of <i>Nowhere</i>'s <a href="https://soundcloud.com/clicky-clicky-music-blog/nowhere-performed-by?in=clicky-clicky-music-blog/sets/n-o-f-v-c-k-i-n-g-w-h-e-r-e">title cut</a>.<br><br>
<i>The Past Will Last Forever</i> is at its most agile on the early preview track "My Days And Nights Belong To You," which strings together sharp rhythm patterns and pairs them with bleeping and ambient synth backing, while Ms. Hollyer eerily harmonizes with herself via multitracked vocals. But as with much of Urban's work (which includes scads of very well received plays), the greatest excitement comes from odd and surreal moments and sensibilities. "A Bruised Ivy Grad" opens with quavering, almost unhinged vocals in verses built over a hard beat; sampled voices occasionally intercede, a crumbling sound momentarily intrudes, but the wobbly falsetto always returns. Album highlight "Ghost Free Home" feints with the feigned ease of vibrato cowboy guitar leads, but harsh, monolithic verses serially interject before a remarkable ambient passage takes root in the middle of the song and spreads out in every direction and consumes the balance of its six minutes. Urban, Hollyer and collaborator Johnny Hager perform cuts from <i>The Past Will Last Forever</i> tomorrow night at Rockwood Music Hall in Manhattan, an event that marks six-year-old Occurrence's very first live performance. It's a 7PM show, and to the best of our knowledge <a href="http://www.rockwoodmusichall.com/">tickets remain available</a>, so why not make a night of it? <i>The Past Will Last Forever</i> is available now as a digital download and in a very limited edition of 150 vinyl long-players, all of which can be procured via the Occurrence Bandcamp page <a href="http://occurrencemusic.com/">right here</a>. Stream the album via the embed below.<br><br>
Occurrence: <a href="http://occurrencemusic.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/occurrence/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="https://soundcloud.com/occurrence">Soundcloud</a><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=679751985/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://occurrencemusic.com/album/the-past-will-last-forever">The Past Will Last Forever by Occurrence</a></iframe>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-48122089080787001482016-10-03T09:00:00.000-04:002016-10-03T10:08:43.546-04:00Premiere: Emerald Comets | Explore Your Dreams<img alt="Premiere: Emerald Comets | Explore Your Dreams" src="https://c3.staticflickr.com/9/8549/29404848434_c97806d66d_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
Boston lost one of its most prolific songwriters when <b>Guillermo Sexo</b> and <b>Emerald Comets</b> mastermind Reuben Bettsak decamped for the American South this summer. True to form, he remained productive right up until the end of his local residency; what has since been deemed the final <a href="https://www.facebook.com/guillermosex0/?fref=ts">Guillermo Sexo</a> album, the space-rock triumph <i>Eclipse</i> [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/04/review-guillermo-sexo-eclipse.html">review</a>], was released in April, and two preview tracks for a forthcoming <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Emerald-Comets-242108942483193/?fref=ts">Emerald Comets</a> set were released to the wilds of the Internerds in August. Today we are pleased to premiere for you the entirety of that set, titled <i>Explore Your Dreams</i>, the first and final Emerald Comets long-player to have been recorded in Massachusetts with Hub-based collaborators Jason Layne, Kristy Foye, and Steve Rowe and with help from Western Mass. hitmaker Justin Pizzoferrato.<br><br>
It being a solo vehicle, Emerald Comets' music touts a different flavor than that of the better-known Guillermo Sexo. The former has typically been quieter, rawer, and more subdued, but fans will recognize certain stylistic hallmarks, such as the pastoral psychedelia of <i>Explore Your Dreams</i>'s placid opener "Monochrome." More so than any other Emerald Comets release to date, <i>Explore Your Dreams</i> feels fully realized. This is perhaps due as much to the set's relatively long gestation period as it is to the efforts of the aforementioned collaborators. The dynamic feel of upbeat early preview single <a href="https://emeraldcomets.bandcamp.com/track/fortress-single">"Fortress"</a> is substantially enhanced by Mr. Pizzoferrato's drumming, and Ms. Foye's cello rests eerily but on point in the center of the mix, at times applying a swaying melodicism, at others boosting the rhythm with bowed chops.<br><br>
The set ends very strong with back-to-back album highlights "Explore Your Dreams" and "Cornflakes And Stout." The former fizzes with the rough-hewn vim of a <b>Guided By Voices</b> track, while the latter is a gentler, more melodic, and folk rock-tinged strummer in the vein of <b>Ultimate Painting</b>, the quality UK combo whose delightful LP <i>Dusk</i> was released by Trouble In Mind Friday. Longtime readers will recognize Emerald Comets' "Lost In Our Land" and "Revolutionary Earthworms," earlier versions of which came into being as part of our inaugural <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/02/introducing-regolith.html">Regolith</a> songwriting challenge, which of course was undertaken by the indefatigable Bettsak and resulted in the EP <i>Inside Dream Room</i> (still available for free <a href="https://clickyclickymusic.bandcamp.com/album/inside-dream-room">here</a>).<br><br>
<i>Explore Your Dreams</i> is available now via Bandcamp, and you can stream the entire collection via the embed below. While we expect it will take Mr. Bettsak some time to find collaborators in his new environs, fans in the Greater Hotlanta should certainly keep their eyes on the club listings: we'd wager it won't be too long before Bettsak brings the rock to the denizens of his new home town. We previously premiered Emerald Comets' self-titled EP <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/01/premiere-emerald-comets-emerald-comets.html">here</a> in 2014.<br><br>
Emerald Comets: <a href="http://emeraldcomets.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Emerald-Comets-242108942483193/?fref=ts">Facebook</a><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=419605723/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://emeraldcomets.bandcamp.com/album/explore-your-dreams">Explore Your Dreams by Emerald Comets</a></iframe><br><br>
Previous Coverage:<br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/04/review-guillermo-sexo-eclipse.html">Review: Guillermo Sexo | Eclipse</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2015/07/that-was-show-that-was-infinity-girl.html">That Was The Show That Was: Infinity Girl, Lubec, Guillermo Sexo, Havania Whaal | Great Scott | 9 July</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/03/regolith-a1e3-reuben-bettsak-presents.html">Regolith A1E3: Reuben Bettsak Presents Emerald Comets' Inside Dream Room</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/01/premiere-emerald-comets-emerald-comets.html">Premiere: Emerald Comets | Emerald Comets EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2013/09/review-guillermo-sexo-dark-spring.html">Review: Guillermo Sexo | Dark Spring</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2013/01/review-guillermo-sexo-bring-down-your.html">Review: Guillermo Sexo | Bring Down Your Arms EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/07/that-was-show-that-was-guillermo-sexo.html">That Was The Show That Was: Guillermo Sexo Record Release Show with Soccermom, Night Fruit and Young Adults</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/07/review-guillermo-sexo-secret-wild.html">Review: Guillermo Sexo | Secret Wild</a><br>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-70792080070190022182016-09-27T07:28:00.000-04:002016-09-27T12:04:27.294-04:00Review: Lubec | Cosmic Debt<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifVJPqpohg959TmGkm3Qg1XyfzPjZ0Rfr5OdJLDIUW0Q4lOTm0at3w_Fa1loQFfVnsBzUUegPMiaCd79CDYK-30AVcMkhIPOmRLpMPTP3nWB9jkia-cCBaqEqXAI-JxhyphenhyphenHSPk6sA/s1600/lubec+cosmic+debt.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifVJPqpohg959TmGkm3Qg1XyfzPjZ0Rfr5OdJLDIUW0Q4lOTm0at3w_Fa1loQFfVnsBzUUegPMiaCd79CDYK-30AVcMkhIPOmRLpMPTP3nWB9jkia-cCBaqEqXAI-JxhyphenhyphenHSPk6sA/s400/lubec+cosmic+debt.jpg" width="300" height="300" /></a></div> Dreamy underpop heroes <b>Lubec</b> return this week with a compelling sophomore sinfonietta, a collection that sees the Portland, Ore. trio table some of the widescreen optimism of its titanic 2014 full-length <i>The Thrall</i> to engage darker, more domestic themes. Although the relatively concise new set <i>Cosmic Debt</i> doesn't sprawl in the same attractively bohemian manner as <i>The Thrall</i>, it nonetheless presents arresting, figurative diversions into rawer emotion and almost provocatively dense production, as well as somewhat more literal diversions in the form of interstitial instrumentals that enhance the set's quasi-narrative arc. The true surprise of <i>Cosmic Debt</i> is not that it expands <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Lubec-40966615285/?fref=ts">Lubec</a>'s already expansive view of guitar pop, not its beauty, sophistication or ready appeal, but rather that the whipsmart threesome does so many new things despite the record's smaller scale.<br><br>
<i>Cosmic Debt</i> succeeds at being much more than a transitional effort, but is largely focused on difficult interpersonal transitions. It commences as if waking from a dream, with the steady, serene fade-in of "(high blood pressure)." The composition includes a pastiche of disembodied voices, including a decontextualized remark about the '90s that recalls the opening of <b>Mogwai</b>'s classic "CODY." It's a transporting beginning, whose full potency is realized by the segue into "Clipped Wings." While that tune's title echoes somewhat the Icarus imagery from <i>The Thrall</i>'s sparkling "Sunburn!," it also announces certain stylistic hallmarks of the album: a nearly saturated stereo field, Caroline Jackson's weighty and distorted piano, dueling and harmonized vocals, and thoughtful guitar playing. The most distinguishing element of Lubec's sonic arsenal, Ms. Jackson's booming, distorted piano, works in tandem with Matt Dressen's tasteful drumming to power the compositions, while fronter Eddie Charlton guitar playing applies more delicate textures. Dylan Wall's big, full production is most apparent in the ambient thrum that populates the space between the instruments and supplies substantial heft to Lubec's songs. Indeed, big reverbs magnify the restlessly creative trio's playing to such an extent it sounds as if it could blanket a large theater; fans can only hope Lubec's fortunes afford it that opportunity.<br><br>
Lead single <a href="https://disposableamerica.bandcamp.com/track/hard-potential">"Hard Potential"</a> touts a driving rhythm and breathy vocals from Mr. Charlton, both lures difficult to resist, but the percussive bridge and cheese-grater, bending harmonics suggest the unease of Pac Northwest fellows <b>Modest Mouse</b>. The heretofore uncharacteristic angst on <i>Cosmic Debt</i> rings most true in the thrilling title track, whose serene but truncated verses give way to Charlton and Jackson confessing a seemingly generational bewilderment -- in what may be the band's most punk moment -- "I feel my cosmic debt, I don't know what it is!" Closer "Embers" -- shared with the universe by our friends at Post-Trash <a href="http://post-trash.com/news/2016/9/23/lubec-ember-post-trash-exclusive-premiere">Monday</a> -- stands particularly tall. While the tune deals with a particularly meaningful parting, in true Lubec fashion the song focuses on aftermath without dour mourning. Sure: the figurative and titular embers may not provide salvation, but damnation and purgatory are not Lubec's style. Here and elsewhere <i>Cosmic Debt</i> addresses the chasm between youthful optimism and idealism and the sometimes cold reality and necessary pragmatism that come part and parcel with maturity, but the band's resolve for positivity remains.<br><br>
<i>Cosmic Debt</i> feels like an important step toward Lubec establishing a national profile, and certainly underscores that Lubec casually sips beers from a cooler at the vanguard of American guitar pop. <i>Cosmic Debt</i> will be released Sept. 30 by the Boston-based now label Disposable America; the set is <a href="https://disposableamerica.bandcamp.com/album/cosmic-debt">available for pre-order</a> now in a preposterously limited edition of 100 mustard yellow cassettes and will also be on offer as a digital download. An all-ages release show is slated for <a href="https://www.facebook.com/events/645690692262244/">Saturday, Oct. 1</a>, at Black Water in Portland, with support from fellow scenemakers <b>Two Moons</b>, <b>Talkative</b>, <b>Dog Thieves</b> and <b>Radler</b>. Stream the aforementioned "Hard Potential" via the embed below, and click through to pre-order your copy of <i>Cosmic Debt</i>. We are hearing chatter about an east coast tour this winter, so watch this space for all of your latest and greatest Lubec news.<br><br>
Lubec: <a href="https://lubec.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Lubec-40966615285/?fref=ts">Faceblorp</a><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=3471300961/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/track=2464006936/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://disposableamerica.bandcamp.com/album/cosmic-debt">COSMIC DEBT by Lubec</a></iframe><br><br>
Related Coverage:<Br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/01/todays-hotness-fuzz-gold-muse-lubec.html">Today's Hotness: Lubec</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2015/07/that-was-show-that-was-infinity-girl.html">That Was The Show That Was: Infinity Girl, Lubec, Guillermo Sexo, Havania Whaal | Great Scott | 9 July</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/09/review-lubec-thrall.html">Review: Lubec | The Thrall</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/06/todays-hotness-lubec-las-ligas-menores.html">Today's Hotness: Lubec</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2013/04/todays-hotness-brenda-lubec-johnny.html">Today's Hotness: Lubec</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2012/11/review-lubec-wilderness-days.html">Review: Lubec | Wilderness Days</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2012/05/todays-hotness-hop-along-lubec.html">Today's Hotness: Lubec</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2012/02/todays-hotness-lubec-los-campesinos.html">Today's Hotness: Lubec</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2010/08/be-prepared-lubec-nothing-is-enough-ep.html">Be Prepared: Lubec | Nothing Is Enough EP Teaser "Cherry Adair"</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/02/show-us-yours-13-lubec.html">Show Us Yours #13: Lubec</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-22152700539587616782016-09-21T12:59:00.000-04:002016-09-21T12:59:13.019-04:00That Was The Show That Was: Cymbals Eat Guitars with Wildhoney and Field Mouse | Sept. 16 | Great Scott<img alt="That Was The Show That Was: Cymbals Eat Guitars with Wildhoney and Field Mouse | Sept. 16 | Great Scott" src="https://c3.staticflickr.com/9/8403/29203868394_3bc9249d62_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
<b>[PHOTO: Dillon Riley]</b> Indie rock leading lights <b>Cymbals Eat Guitars</b> are established Clicky Clicky favorites, and its latest LP has only burnished our esteem for the east coast troupe. We last caught them opening for the legendary <b>Bob Mould</b> <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/09/that-was-show-that-was-cymbals-eat.html">in 2014</a>, when the fourtet dispensed gorgeous takes on tunes from that year's triumphant <i>Lose</i> -- a record considered, at the time at least, a pronounced "classic rock" pivot away from the band's math-ier earlier efforts. Critics fawned over the set, while sales of the Barsuk-released album were, in a word, underwhelming; some less than stellar touring ensued. Last Friday, however, we witnessed the group in high spirits at a thronged Great Scott on the release night of what should be <a href="https://www.facebook.com/cymbalseatguitars/?fref=ts">Cymbals Eat Guitars</a>' true pop breakthrough, <i>Pretty Years</i>.<br><br>
Cymbals Eat Guitars presented a brilliant night of live rock sounds, including several selections off the already-life-affirming <i>Pretty Years</i> (<a href="https://www.omnianmusicgroup.com/products/pretty-years">out now</a> on Sinderlyn). Well-regarded album tasters "July 4th," "Wish," and "Have A Heart" all shone brightly. But a clear highlight was the performance of "Close," the most winsome of the new collection's 10 tunes, whose a massive and charging earworm chorus was thrilling live and ranks among the best you'll hear in 2016. Stream "July 4th," "Wish," and "Have A Heart" via the Soundcloud embed below.<br><br>
The band also offered a healthy sampling of tracks off the aforementioned <i>Lose</i>, including a towering, noise-addled, and set-ending take on that record's woozy centerpiece "Laramie." The sole concession to the group's earlier records was a midset "...And The Hazy Sea," the <i>Why There Are Mountains</i> opener, which somehow manages to fit in the band's sets despite its gangly pace. In spite of relative commercial indifference, Cymbals Eat Guitars' work continues to place it among the elite song shapers in American indie rock. Whether or not <i>Pretty Years</i> achieves the success it rightfully deserves, we can state with complete confidence that the group has become a crucial live act, a belief Friday's performance only reinforced.<br><br>
Highly touted Baltimore dream-pop quintet <b>Wildhoney</b> opened the evening with its customary <i>savoir faire</i>. While its first EP for hitmakers Topshelf Records, <i>Your Face Sideways</i>, is a neat primer for the group's preternatural melodic gifts, the combo's greatest composition to date came just this summer via Slumberland's <i>tour de force</i> compilation <i>Continental Drift</i>. "Horror Movie," one of <a href="https://www.facebook.com/wildhoneysound/?fref=ts">Wildhoney</a>'s two glorious offerings on <i>Drift</i>, is pop perfection from the grooves, but its live airing Friday evening presented a sharper edge, with the group's dueling guitars cutting across the mix like sabers.<br><br>
Another of Topshelf's great indie pop concerns, <b>Field Mouse</b>, batted second in the lineup, fresh off the release of their own fantastic new record <i>Episodic</i>. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/fieldmousemusic/?fref=ts">Field Mouse</a>'s Rachel Browne (who recently penned <a href="http://thetalkhouse.com/heres-feels-like-musician-chronic-disease/">a must-read essay</a> for The Talkhouse about touring with a serious illness) is a collected fronter and perfect foil to lead guitarist Andrew Futral's unmic'd and consistently stoked spokesman. <i>Episodic</i> doesn't stray far sonically from the combo's debut <i>Hold Still Life</i>: short, punchy, and compact pop numbers are the rule on both. The complexity of Field Mouse's songs are even more apparent in a live setting: bright keyboard shades from Browne's sister Robin no longer hide in the background din, and the interplay between the two (and sometimes three) guitars is often thrillingly loud and nearly abrasive. It's a good look for a band whose songs sometimes underplay an inherent turmoil. -- <i>Dillon Riley</i><br><br>
Cymbals Eat Guitars: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/cymbalseatguitars/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://cymbalseatguitars.com/">Internerds</a><br><br>
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Related Coverage:<br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/09/that-was-show-that-was-cymbals-eat.html">That Was The Show That Was: Cymbals Eat Guitars with Bob Mould | Paradise Rock Club | 12 Sept.</a><br>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-142461641009820502016-09-17T09:03:00.001-04:002016-09-17T09:06:57.157-04:00Review: Preoccupations | Preoccupations<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6PY7UKs6bE2QXs0n1OmLy39N-8B_24oskHUeWkYqp39lOupKeFl_yGqHqzaycAvqRvXqUK4018OmovNhdJev4rSsqaIJHtBPN48y9J188aEok7g19COvMrl2urkeqB59Dhs2bxg/s1600/unnamed+%25281%2529.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj6PY7UKs6bE2QXs0n1OmLy39N-8B_24oskHUeWkYqp39lOupKeFl_yGqHqzaycAvqRvXqUK4018OmovNhdJev4rSsqaIJHtBPN48y9J188aEok7g19COvMrl2urkeqB59Dhs2bxg/s400/unnamed+%25281%2529.jpg" width="300" height="300" /></a></div><b>Preoccupations</b>' 2015 debut (under its previous, controversial <i>nom de post-punk</i> <b>Viet Cong</b>) felt like a <b>New Order</b>-esque re-set following the untimely passing of guitarist Chris Reimer of <b>Women</b> -- the brilliant late-aughts band that first brought <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Preoccupationsband/?fref=ts">Preoccupations</a>' Matt Flegel and Mike Wallace (joined here by Danny Christiansen and Scott Munro) to international (underground) acclaim. On its new eponymous sophomore set the band takes another unpredictable stylistic swerve, possibly in response to widespread criticism concerning the cultural insensitivity of its previous name. The rebrand provided a renewed opportunity for the foursome to reconsider its practice, and Preoccupations capitalized strongly by injecting <i>Preoccupations</i> with a dash of New Wave exuberance and structure that reveals another shade of the dark and classic post-punk sound it has explored since 2008.<br><br>
Opener "Anxiety" churns upon itself in an extended ambient intro before dark synths and fuzzy textures begin to revolve mechanically around Mr. Flegel's low voice. Bright synth notes, entering at the minute-and-a-half mark, illuminate the proceedings and somewhat betray the cold and direct lyrics. Successor "Monotony" takes the approach one step further with billowing and reverberant melody lines and major keys that plot against the bleary song title. The pairing of heavily chorused rhythm guitar -- lurking in the right channel -- and Flegel's considered croon suggests his quartet may be aiming for the morose stateliness of the even-now-underrated <b>The Psychedelic Furs</b> circa <i>Talk Talk Talk</i>. Indeed, at times Flegel's breathless growl is a dead ringer for that of the legendary Richard Butler.<br><br>
Album centerpiece and highlight <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_P6qqceGQlM&feature=youtu.be">"Memory"</a> tackles more dynamic rhythms in its first frame -- a la <a href="http://pitchfork.com/thepitch/1110-why-viet-cong-have-changed-their-name-an-interview-with-frontman-matt-flegel/">Viet Cong</a> highlight "Death"-- and also features a super nifty key change at its midpoint; here the band steps back to reveal a modulating synth tone that twists the song up into a falsetto-led groove, further convincing this reviewer that Preoccupations are embracing a subtly more positive and revelatory stance in key moments. The song's ambient outro wisely doubles back to remind the listener that the band have not forgotten their more characteristically pensive contemplation amidst the relative euphoria.<br><br>
Lead single "Degraded" most closely hearkens back to the massive drum production and propulsive force of the group's first album, but still accommodates its contemporary penchant for single-note, high pitched guitar overdubs in the process. "Sense" uses simple organ and fizzing sound effects for a brief and well-placed change of pace, while "Forbidden" carries on the ambiance into the next track but adds percussion and whirling, carnival-like melodies for another surprising detour that declares the B-side of the record to be just as crucial.<br><br>
As with every Flegel and Wallace-related release, the closer is always important. On <i>Preoccupations</i>, the band forgoes guitars almost completely for a retro-futuristic pop song that cements the post-Bowie New Wave connection. It's not until a <b>Robert Fripp</b>-styled guitar solo that the instrument even makes an appearance, and there it's in mostly wistful and epic celebration, rather than the morose gloom that had so previously defined this band. This, once more, underscores that Preoccupations has transformed the hurdles that have peppered its path into opportunities to push its boundaries, and as a result the band remains one of the more structurally original and stylistic daring indie rock bands of the day. <i>Preoccupations</i> was released by Jagjaguwar Friday. Purchase it on CD, LP or in a great bundle <a href="https://www.secretlystore.com/preoccupations-preoccupations">right here</a>. Preoccupations play The Sinclair in Cambridge, Mass. October 12, and is basically on tour through the end of November. View complete tour dates at the band's web dojo <a href="http://preoccupationsband.com/">right here</a>. -- <i>Edward Charlton</i><br><br>
Preoccupations: <a href="https://preoccupations.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="http://preoccupationsband.com/">Interpants</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Preoccupationsband/?fref=ts">Facebook</a><br><br>
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<b>Related Coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/07/that-was-show-that-was-viet-cong-with.html">That Was The Show That Was: Viet Cong with TV Ghost, Alosi Den | Great Scott, Boston | 13 July</a>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-88058064118239063002016-08-25T13:19:00.001-04:002016-08-25T13:19:35.081-04:00Today's Hotness: Strange Passage, Snowball ii, Mendez<img alt="Strange Passage -- Shine And Scatter EP (detail)" src="https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7635/29084810185_4839155ca8_o.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
>> Our music fandom is reborn with each great surprise, as when the unexpected find flips up against our thumbs in the record bin, or when a sound we love appears out of the blue right in the blog's backyard. This latter circumstance is what has us jazzed lately, said jazz having been sparked when friend-of-the-blog Jeff Breeze sent us a link to a smashing new debut EP from upstart Somerville, Mass. four <b>Strange Passage</b>. The quartet's <i>Shine And Scatter</i> EP echoes the melodic, guitar-centered sound of the turn-of-the-'90s UK with surprising competence and confidence. Indeed, the short set's four songs echo <b>The House of Love</b> and the early <b>RIDE</b> EPs, and -- more contemporaneously -- are startlingly reminiscent of the massively underrated and short-lived aughts combo <b>The Boyfriends</b>. While there is a thread of shoegaze shot through <a href="http://strangepassage.bandcamp.com">Strange Passage</a>'s alluring brand of guitar pop, and Boston continues to have a strong share of contemporary 'gaze practitioners, Strange Passage's music still feels somewhat delightfully off-trend. There are just not a lot of acts out there right now trying to write the next "Chelsea Girl" or "Shine On," are there? <i>Shine And Scatter</i> also boasts some production choices that make the EP feel particularly mature for a debut, including putting an understated, even-keeled vocal up front in the mix. It's a confident, but not showy, move. And so it almost feels as if Strange Passage has foregone the trials and travails of writing a first and second EP, and have just jumped in with a terrific third. Each song is dynamite, but the uptempo rager "Viaducts Burning Down" stands out with its urgent intensity, and the repeated feeling of resolution that comes with each recitation of the title in the chorus. <i>Shine And Scatter</i> was recorded through the late spring and early summer with hit-maker Will Killingsworth at Dead Air Studios in Western Mass. and self-released via Bandcamp Aug. 16. As impressive as its EP is, Strange Passage has yet to play a show; its first live outing is slated for Sept. 30 at The Democracy Center in Cambridge, Mass., where they will be joined by Amherst, Mass. noisemakers <b>Dirt Devil</b> and -- we're told -- others. We're torn about urging everyone out to the show, as every band deserves a chance to get its collective feet under them before being subjected to scrutiny. But all the same, we feel like it's going to be exciting seeing Strange Passage blossom, so, you know, you should probably go. Stream all of <i>Shine And Scatter</i> via the Bandcamp embed below.<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=1783543122/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless="">&amp;lt;a href="http://strangepassage.bandcamp.com/album/shine-and-scatter"&amp;gt;Shine and Scatter by Strange Passage&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;</iframe><br><br>
>> That LA dream-pop concern <b>Snowball ii</b> jumps styles with its new album and latest single "I Doughnut Want To Live" is little surprise, given band mastermind Jackson Wargo may consider notable shape-shifter <b>Kurt Heasley</b>'s long-running, magical <b>Lilys</b> one of his lodestars. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/snowballiiband/?fref=ts">Snowball ii</a>'s clever February 2016 debut long-player <i>?</i> was often a devoutly shoegaze affair, and its most recent music prior to "I Doughnut Want To Live" were spooky, ethereal covers of <a href="https://www.facebook.com/thelilys/?fref=ts">Lilys</a>' "Black Carpet Magic" and "Day Of The Monkey" for <i>Colorful Acts: In The Presence of Lilys</i>, a Lilys-themed compilation issued by The Blog That Celebrates Itself over the summer (for short-tenure Clicky Clicky readers, if the prospect of a Lilys comp excites, you should also check out <a href="https://soundcloud.com/clicky-clicky-music-blog/sets/clicky-clicky-music-blog">our own</a>). And while much of the Snowball ii's forthcoming sophomore set feels influenced by <b>Sufjan Stevens</b>, the appealing ballad "I Doughnut Want To Live" stands apart in the new collection. The deceptively serene song is built up from patient acoustic guitar strums and glistening leads in the verse whose optimism plays against Mr. Wargo's somber confession in the chorus ("'<i>cause I don't think I can love her like I did before</i>."). "I Doughnut Want To Live" is the first taste of Snowball ii's long-player <i>Doughnut Holes</i>, which the band recorded and produced at its own The Doughnut Shop studio and will released via its own Doughnut Records Sept. 16 (<i>sense a theme?</i> -- Ed.). Snowball ii celebrates the record with a release show the same day; a third Snowball ii LP is slated for 2016 release as well. Stream "I Doughnut Want To Live" via the Soundcloud embed below.<br><br>
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>> Singer and songwriter Gregory Mendez has made a bunch of music over the years, and a fair amount of it with input from <b>The Superweaks</b>' Evan Bernard, among others. Projects including <b>Airport</b> and <b>Getting Sick</b> eventually led to a well-received singer-songwriter thing under <a href="https://gregorymendez.bandcamp.com/">his own name</a>, perhaps out of a desire to simplify. That presumed yen is manifested both in Mr. Mendez's new moniker and music; his latest effort <i>Phone Records</i> is attributed to the yet-more-concise <b>Mendez</b>, and the self-released collection features nine tunes tracked to a smartphone app. We mention the means of production here not to encourage folks to start sending us an avalanche of crap they made on their phones, but to underscore that it is still novel to encounter a recording made on a phone that is this good. The trick, of course, is to start with great songs or song ideas, as Mendez does. <i>Phone Records</i> presents what may be an unanswerable chicken and egg question: is the intimacy of these recordings enhanced by capturing the bedroom sessions on a phone's tiny microphone? More likely the production is just a side-effect of making do, but there is substantial charm to the feeling of "being there" as Mendez plies his trade. Songs including "Try" and "Control" firmly echo the balladry of early <b>Elliot Smith</b> (although the latter tune cleverly incorporates the synth melody from <b>Soft Cell</b>'s iteration of "Tainted Love"), but <i>Phone Records</i>' more dynamic tunes, such as the shuffling, early <b>Yo La Tengo</b>-styled "Stained Glass Boys" and "Gum Trash," are its strongest. Album closer "The Drug Trafficker's Daughter" feels demo-ish in the way one would expect a phone recording to be, but that's the other side of the "hey-this-was-recorded-with-a-phone!" coin: some stuff feels like an idea waiting for fuller treatment. But the bulk of <i>Phone Records</i> feels accomplished, evidence that while Mendez may be seeking simplicity, his songcraft remains robust. Stream the entire thing via the Bandcamp embed below; the cassette-inclined will be pleased to know they can get a limited edition physical artifact from Houston-based Some Weird Sin Records <a href="https://someweirdsinrecords.bandcamp.com/album/phone-records">right here</a>.<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2885006049/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless="">&amp;lt;a href="http://mendezmusic.bandcamp.com/album/phone-records"&amp;gt;Phone Records by Mendez&amp;lt;/a&amp;gt;</iframe><br><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-82869430636309876012016-08-17T12:08:00.000-04:002016-08-17T12:08:01.944-04:00Review: Happy Diving | Electric Soul Unity<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhDaYiAlduZirZmcTlVesThCtKffLDzqwaQAiN_Wu-9sxi_UoLdXXBOtk8YvnBcUqdDk83l0A5reTA-UZLn8FmYtD8WwoYQZ2DBINOZSvNV-ZNpTl9S-uWsgNwYOPeR8223C2u9A/s1600/happy+diving+electric+soul+unity.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhDaYiAlduZirZmcTlVesThCtKffLDzqwaQAiN_Wu-9sxi_UoLdXXBOtk8YvnBcUqdDk83l0A5reTA-UZLn8FmYtD8WwoYQZ2DBINOZSvNV-ZNpTl9S-uWsgNwYOPeR8223C2u9A/s400/happy+diving+electric+soul+unity.jpg" width="300" /></a></div>San Francisco power-rock five <b>Happy Diving</b> return this week with a stirring long-player whose mutability and periodic lightness leaven the act's heady mix of bracing power and ready melody. In terms of sonic development, the progress feels fairly conventional for a second album, but just because the path is well-trodden does not diminish the act's cracking songwriting. Indeed, <i>Electric Soul Unity</i> collects 12 tunes ripe with gritty, fuzz-caked power chords, tastefully bummer vocals, and newfound nuance that expands the quintet's domain in welcome ways.<br><br>
Opener "Bigger World" both references the title of the band's 2014 debut on Father/Daughter Records [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/10/review-happy-diving-big-world.html">review</a>] and assures fans that <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Happydivingca">Happy Diving</a> very much understands a formula that has worked so well for them. Commencing with a blast of mid-range guitar feedback that abruptly tosses the listener into the take, "Bigger World" descends into a finessed, palm-muted chug that emphasizes the heavy low end that made <i>Big World</i> such a favorite in the underpop underground. "Don't Be Afraid of Love" follows and makes plain that Happy Diving has no intention of softening its sound or increasing the clarity of production. As with its earlier material, the band's noisy sonic signature feels well-designed to transport listeners to some ideal house show environment, where shuddering amps and the thump of the kick drum reverberate from concrete walls and ratty rugs.<br><br>
It's not until fifth track and highlight "Head Spell" that the band deviates from its tried and true. Here strummy and clean grunge chord progressions and dynamic blasts of distortion echo second-wave '90s alt.rockers <b>Cracker</b> and, well, <b>Everclear</b> with carefully considered, beautiful sadness. The relatively spare approach offers just enough space within the production to reveal more tenderness than the Bay Area bombers' usual two-minute fuzz blasts typically allow. "Head Spell" proffers a big-tent take on the '90s-rock revival that embraces the cheesier songwriting of the more commercial end of the era. Why not?<br><br>
The back half of <i>Electric Soul Unity</i> features still more surprises that make it the stronger side. "The Call, It Thunders" features some of Happy Diving's best lead guitar hooks, while "Pain Country" takes another run at the quieter electric style of "Head Spell." "Unknown Feeling," a 104-second acoustic (!) solo number, is the album's biggest surprise, and stands in stark relief sonically while suggesting an affinity for aspects of <b>Lou Barlow</b>'s catalog. To close the proverbial circle, the riffage resurfaces with closer “River Will Flow” (whose opening suggests <b>Dinosaur Jr.</b> interpreting "Don't Fear the Reaper"). The final cut offers another welcome addition to the mix, some slight dual-singer harmony that modulates the album's otherwise monochromatic vocals.<br><br>
Speaking of, a monochrome feel represents <i>Electric Soul Unity</i>'s sole Achilles' heel. Despite the efforts to vary the album's feel and flow, the persistently pounding <i>Blue Album</i> rock guitars can dominate to such an extent that some of the nifty songwriting on this Jack Shirley-produced set is obscured. Still, Happy Diving's successful revision of classic '80s and '90s indie rock not only reframes great moments of the era, but also presents fans broader opportunities to connect with the band. When in doubt, just play the thing real loud: it's rock and roll. <i>Electric Soul Unity</i> is slated for release Friday on black, white, or coke bottle clear vinyl, CD, cassette or digital download; pre-order the collection in any format <a href="http://www.topshelfrecords.com/products/573831-happy-diving-electric-soul-unity">right here</a> from our friends at Topshelf Records (which also released Happy Diving's terrific <a href="https://happydiving.bandcamp.com/album/so-bunted">"So Bunted"</a> 7" last year). Happy Diving is in the final leg of a lengthy U.S. tour, and the dates for the final two weeks are posted below. Get to the gig. -- <i>Edward Charlton</i><br><br>
Happy Diving: <a href="http://happydiving.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Happydivingca">Facebook</a><br><br>
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08.17 -- Bloomington, IN -- Jan's Rooms<br>
08.18 -- Eau Claire, WI -- Vivian House Concerts<br>
08.20 -- Minneapolis, MN -- Dead Media Records<br>
08.21 -- Sioux Falls, SD -- Total Drag Records<br>
08.24 -- Calgary, AB -- Tubby Dog<br>
08.26 -- Vancouver, BC -- Antisocial Skate Shop<br>
08.28 -- Seattle, WA -- Neumo's<br>
08.29 -- Portland, OR -- The Know<br>
08.30 -- San Francisco, CA -- Bottom Of The Hill<br><br>
<b>Related Coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2015/07/todays-hotness-flying-saucer-attack.html">Today's Hotness: Happy Diving</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/10/review-happy-diving-big-world.html">Review: Happy Diving | Big World</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/01/todays-hotness-happy-diving-bully.html">Today's Hotness: Happy Diving</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-14900391061850605962016-07-24T19:51:00.000-04:002016-07-24T19:51:33.189-04:00Today's Hotness: Ski Saigon, Urusei Yatsura, Mincer Ray<img alt="Ski Saigon -- Brings The Storm Cloud (detail)" src="https://c4.staticflickr.com/9/8211/28481123555_1e9e96e639_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
>> One of the more mysterious and evocative projects we've followed here at Clicky Clicky in recent years has been <b>Mooncreatures</b>. Although the music and premise of <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2015/10/todays-hotness-nosferatu-d2.html">its final long-player</a> was exciting, we were disappointed when the London band and the LP's fictive narrative intersected in reality, and <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Mooncreatures/">Mooncreatures</a> announced (sort of?) <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Mooncreatures/posts/310166645773769">it was no more</a>. Anyway, band mastermind Rhys Griffiths has returned with the even higher-concept project <b>Ski Saigon</b>, whose debut release <i>Brings The Storm Cloud</i> is due toward the end of the summer. The six-song set is inspired by '60s Cambodian pop music and concerns a fictional historical (wait, what?) narrative about French soldiers tiring of the tropical climate of Cambodia in the mid-20th century and setting about creating indoor snow skiing facilities in Saigon and Phnom Penh. Really, you just read that. <i>Brings The Storm Cloud</i> opens with a short, shimmering audio approximation of those blurry scene transitions in film and TV that suggests the commencement of a flashback. As soon as listeners have oriented themselves to the tune, "Wintergarden," it vanishes, and then the EP begins in earnest with the ensuing, fully realized "Sweet Dreams In The Botanics." The mid-tempo swayer rides a steady canned beat, above which sustained synth and simple guitar chords and a pleasantly lazy lead guitar obscure hushed lyrics. The tune's escapist fantasia is amplified by a 45-second coda wherein the aforementioned synth chords give way to an insectoid drone and -- curiously -- the sound of water (although we expect it is easier to present the sound of water than snow). Art Is Hard Records issues <i>Brings The Storm Cloud</i> Aug. 26 in a limited edition of 100 32-page book/CD bundles, as well as a digital download. Pre-order the book <a href="http://artishardrecords.limitedrun.com/products/574863-ski-saigon-brings-the-storm-cloud-ep">here</a>, and click through the embed below to acquire the digital files. The demise of Mooncreatures felt very premature, and we're quite excited by the possibilities presented by Ski Saigon, either as an ongoing project or at least as a sign that Mr. Griffiths has no intention of quitting music any time. Stream the aforementioned "Wintergarden" and "Sweet Dreams In The Botanics" via the Bandcamp embed below.<br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=4063069729/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://artishardrecords.bandcamp.com/album/brings-the-storm-cloud">Brings the Storm Cloud by Ski Saigon</a></iframe><br><br>
>> We've been holding out hope for a good six years that the mighty Glaswegian indie rock combo <b>Projekt A-Ko</b> would return to us. Imagine our surprise when we received word in our inbox earlier this spring that not <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Projekt-A-Ko-79930362512/?fref=nf">Projeckt A-Ko</a>, but the trio's notable, '90s-spawned (and we suppose better-known) precursor <b>Urusei Yatsura</b>, would beat the three to the new release bin in September. Well, technically, it's old music, but it is nonetheless exciting. On Sept. 2, the choicest cuts from <a href="https://www.facebook.com/uruseiyatsuraband/?fref=nf">Urusei Yatsura</a>'s highly regarded BBC recordings (which included, among others, five sessions for John Peel and three for Steve Lamacq) will be released as an LP via London's Rocketgirl. The press materials accompanying the announcement speak, with the benefit of distance and hindsight, of Urusei Yatsura's music shining particularly bright when recorded under the constraints radio sessions necessarily present. And it is hard to argue with the results. Fans can hear a particularly fizzing iteration of <a href="https://www.discogs.com/Urusei-Yatsura-Phasers-On-Stun/release/503798">the rocking 1996 A-side</a> "Phasers On Stun" below. Rocketgirl will release <i>You Are My Urusei Yatsura</i> on 12" vinyl, CD and as a digital download Sept. 2. The LPs are pressed to snappy neon pink media and available in a very limited edition of 300 pieces, so you had better <a href="http://rocketgirl.co.uk/label/release/rgirl112LP">get to pre-ordering</a> if you want this. To be fair to Urusei Yatsura/Projekt A-ko's Fergus Lawrie, he has produced <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/10/todays-hotness-travels-projekt-ko.html">new music</a> over the last seven years, including some engaging "haloed guitar" guitar noise pieces with his project <b>Angel of Everyone Murder</b>. But given the blinding excellence of Projekt A-Ko's sole LP, 2009's <i>Yoyodyne</i> [<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/04/projekt-kos-fergus-lawrie-on-album-of.html">hypertext!</a>], we remain hopeful that that...erm... project will also be resuscitated. In the meantime, we've the Urusei Yatsura collection to look forward to: stream the aforementioned "Phasers On Stun," recorded for the BBC Evening Session May 8, 1996, via the Soundcloud embed below. Speaking of, fans should pay VERY close attention to <a href="https://soundcloud.com/uruseiyatsuraband">the UY Soundcloud</a>, as it features a trove of material, including some cuts found too late to be considered for inclusion on <i>You Are My Urusei Yatsura</i>, like this magical acoustic take on <a href="https://soundcloud.com/uruseiyatsuraband/burriko-girl-xfm-session15092000">"Burriko Girl."</a><br><br>
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>> The charm of lo-fi, and particularly '90s lo-fi, is that it characteristically sounds thrown together, but still sometimes fumbles its way to transcendence. Sometimes that's just the sound (the example we think of it this <b>Perfect Pussy</b> <a href="http://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-radar/perfect-pussys-meredith-graves-qa-other-bands-complacency-is-the-reason-im-never-ever-ever-going-to">interview</a> that describes recording clean basic tracks and then layering noise), and sometimes things are actually, you know, thrown together (see every live thing <b>Crazy Horse</b> did with <b>Neil Young</b>). Although we've previously deemed the act mid-fi, <b>Mincer Ray</b>'s delightful, be-flanneled recent digital EP <i>Early Morning Am Moritz</i> firmly falls within the latter category. A brief note at the Berlin-based act's Soundcloud reports the short stack of songs was "[c]onceived & recorded to cassette in 3 hours & 47 minutes (more or less)." The collection commences strongly with the yearning, mid-tempo, and alt.-countrified strummer "Everything Is Green," a should-be hit whose straightforward presentation can't hold down the sweeping melody of the big, lovelorn verse. With almost no warning the verse become its chorus, which points to an anthemic, ripping guitar solo that aspires towards <b>David Pajo</b>'s <a href="http://www.electricalaudio.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=10841">amazing face-melter</a> from <b>Palace Brothers</b>' epic "Horses." The balance of <i>Early Morning Am Moritz</i> isn't quite as memorable, although the concise basher "Ned Norris" is bracing to the point of infectious and the loose and gritty "Dine" wouldn't feel entirely out of place on <i>Viva Last Blues</i>. Mincer Ray's EP hit the Internerds in late June, and you can stream the entire thing via the Soundcloud embed below (click through to download all five numbers as .wav files). The set is also now available on cassette via the Chicago and Berlin-based <a href="https://www.facebook.com/shakytoothtapes/?hc_location=ufi">Shaky Tooth Tapes</a>. We last wrote about Mincer Ray <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/05/todays-hotness-gold-bears-bozmo-mincer.html">right here</a> in 2014.<br><br>
<iframe width="100%" height="380" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/playlists/234702179&color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false"></iframe><br><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-223976577378916282016-07-21T13:07:00.000-04:002016-07-21T13:07:52.444-04:00Footage: Aüva's Swaying Surf-Pop Gem "Better"<iframe width="630" height="472" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/IxEK1Ec41h4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe><br><br>
We've had our figurative eye on Boston indie pop upstarts <b>Aüva</b> for a year or so, ever since turning on to the genteel, large-ensemble sound captured on its 2015 EP <i>Light Years</i>. The young act hit a steady stride straightaway and remained busy and gigging on the regular into 2016, when it settled in to self-record a full-length debut. "Better" is the first single from the sextet's eponymous long-player, and you can check out the video <i>supra</i>. The tune is a swaying, surf-pop gem built up from skittering drums and an insistent bass line, over which clean guitar leads, rhythm-guitar jangle and tasteful, vibrato synth embellishments gently make their case.<br><br>
The video dabbles with a romantic concept that pairs up co-fronter and keyboard player Miette Hope with the other members of the ensemble, but the real charm is in the faux performance shots, wherein <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Aüva</a> posse waver between goofing around and playing it earnest. The external shots are particularly compelling, including a dreamy shot of trees, a pastiche in which the band members are lined up against a wall and then shuffled, and a shot of a beer bottle getting smashed in a firepit around which we suspect a number of Clicky Clicky readers (and at least one Senior Writer) have consumed adult beverages. The clip was primarily filmed and edited by Aüva guitarist Jake LeVine, with the help of friend-of-the-band Evan Xiner Hong. Mr. LeVine would seem to wear a lot of hats, as he also mixed the forthcoming record, and pitched in on songwriting and arranging with the rest of the groups's six members.<br><br>
The single and indeed the entire aforementioned 10-song debut <i>Aüva</i> was primarily recorded in the Boston Conservatory's dance studios; both the single and LP will be available as free downloads Aug. 6. Aüva's intention was to have had a quiet summer, but fortunately for fans things have not gone precisely as planned. Earlier this month a truncated line-up of the band jumped in at the last-minute for an <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/photos/a.1620564581546082.1073741828.1610369819232225/1775179146084624/?type=3">appearance</a> on WMBR's crucial local music program <a href="https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=10154442976104548&id=321434579547">Pipeline</a> (hosted by the inimitable Jeff Breeze). On Aug. 13, the band embarks on a two-week tour that will take it down to Florida and all the way back up to New Hampshire. There, on the 28th, it will play on a beer-branded <a href="https://www.banknhpavilion.com/?page=second_stage">second stage</a> prior to a performance by the legendary <b>Brian Wilson</b>. Mr. Wilson, in case you don't know, is out playing <b>Beach Boys</b>' <i>Pet Sounds</i> to celebrate the album's 50th anniversary. So, not a bad gig for an indie pop band that formed only 18 months or so ago, yeah? <i>Aüva</i> will be available via Bandcamp, Sporkify, ITunes and Apple Music; whet that appetite with repeat viewings of "Better" and mark down the tour stops below in your daily planner.<br><br>
Aüva: <a href="https://auvamusic.bandcamp.com/releases">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/auvamusic/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://www.auvamusic.com/">Internerds</a><br><br>
08.13 -- O'Brien's Pub -- Boston, MA<br>
08.14 -- The Gateway -- Brooklyn, NY<br>
08.20 -- The Bends -- St. Petersburg, FL<br>
08.24 -- The London District -- Asheville, NC<br>
08.25 -- Joe Squared -- Baltimore, MD<br>
08.26 -- Firehouse 13 -- Providence RI<br><br>
<b>Related coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/05/together-again-clicky-clicky-presents.html">Together Again: Clicky Clicky Presents Two Nights of Adventurous Electronics And Under-Pop May 18+19</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2006/08/review-beach-boys-pet-sounds-40th.html">Review: The Beach Boys | Pet Sounds [40th Anniversary Reissue]</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-85689997664276967072016-07-18T18:27:00.000-04:002016-07-18T18:27:45.346-04:00Today's Hotness: Night Dew Call, Katie Dey, TV Wonder<img alt="Night Dew Call -- Citizen (detail)" src="https://c8.staticflickr.com/9/8729/28353325535_79780df9a5_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
>> We love encountering evidence of the universality of indie pop, identifying acts from around the world mining the sounds of Anglophilic '80s guitar pop. That the "cause" side of the equation has traveled far and wide perhaps shouldn't be surprising any longer in our Internet-connected age, but the "effects" thrill us nonetheless. The very location of a band can seep into its interpretation of the form, and in sometimes subtle and effervescent ways complement the timeless aspects of the little genre-that-could. Be it in sound, language, spirit or even general enthusiasm, when it is good it is icing on the cake. Which is why recent digital singles from young Ukrainians <b>Night Dew Call</b> have caught our collective ear. Straight outta Pobho, the dreamy and twee four-piece craft dancey, clean and crisp singalongs for late night bar crawls amidst the open-collared breeze, as in its tune "Someday." "You'll see me around someday" promises a pleasant mid-range singer (in perfect English, we suppose it is worth adding for our lyrically fixated readers). The bending "ohs" and the earworm guitar line that opens the tune recall touchstone acts like <b>The Smiths</b> to some degree, but the brisk pacing and relaxed but confident guitar solos suggest that this band needs no help understanding how to execute an effective entrance into a three-and-a-half minute sleeper anthem. And so bring on the Globalism, we say. Download "Someday" for any price <a href="https://nightdewcall.bandcamp.com/track/someday">right here</a>; that number as well as two other digital singles from this year, "Citizen" and "Schedryk," can be streamed via the embed below. -- <i>Edward Charlton, At Large</i><br><br>
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>> We were <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2015/06/todays-hotness-katie-dey-yr-friends.html">quite entranced</a> by Melbourne, Australia-based electro-acoustic sound manipulator extraordinaire <b>Katie Dey</b>'s 2015 full-length debut, <i>asdfasdf</i>, taking note of her stunning and original twists of melody and sound. The songs were fairly singular, offering modernist, post-pop tones and pitch-shifted vocals that sounded painstakingly crafted. Just about a year later we now have the first fruits from Ms. Dey's follow up, <i>flood network</i>. Due Aug. 12 via Texas-based Joy Void Recordings, the album is heralded by a brace of preview tracks: "Fear o The Light" and "Only to Trip and Fall Down Again." The tunes indicate a slightly more rockist approach when compared against last year's model, with steady drums grounding impressive and unique EQ artistry and fuzz. Still, dubbing the tunes conventional, however, stretches the definition of that word toward the breaking point. <a href="https://katiedey.bandcamp.com/track/fear-o-the-light">"Fear o The Light"</a> -- seemingly a counterpoint to <i>asdfasdf</i>'s <a href="https://soundcloud.com/orchidtapes/katie-dey-fear-o-the-dark">"Fear o The Dark"</a> -- marries white-noise beauty to a steady, acoustic guitar-led folk-rock structure before Ms. Dey sets to work shifting her lovely vocals into hyper oblivion. The tune <a href="https://katiedey.bandcamp.com/track/only-to-trip-and-fall-down-again">"Only to Trip and Fall Down Again"</a> aspires toward blooping electronica that pleasingly echoes Clicky Clicky-faves <b>The Books</b> at times (that's an extreme compliment from this publication, don't you know), although the rhythm tracks' organic feel is more exotica than futuristic. This reviewer is expecting the majority of music press to adore Dey's inventive release: if only the overground was routinely this exciting. Joy Void is releasing the set on Pink/Blue/Yellow/Clear, Blue/Pink or Blue/Yellow splatter vinyl, color combinations that perhaps come close to approximating the amazing and original talent cut into the grooves. Pre-order <i>flood network</i> <a href="http://www.joyvoid.limitedrun.com/products/572038-joy-void-008-katie-dey-flood-network">right here</a>. -- <i>Edward Charlton, At Large</i><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=623259099/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://katiedey.bandcamp.com/album/flood-network">flood network by katie dey</a></iframe><br><br>
>> This writer was <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2015/04/todays-hotness-flout-tv-wonder-william.html">absolutely in love</a> with <b>TV Wonder</b>'s <i>Bird Sounds</i> EP, which was released last year by the routinely excellent Faux Discx. The short set was a highlight of a pretty cracking year, and the Dutch quartet appear to have made the most of it, garnering slots performing with American indie heavy-hitters such as <b>Viet Cong</b> (now <b>Preoccupations</b>), dream-pop delighters <b>DIIV</b> and the mighty Detroit four <b>Protomartyr</b>. On top of this, the band has recorded two new songs for a cassette Geertruida Records issued late last month. "Glazed" and "Fixed Aesthetic" continue in the vein of the <b>Sonic Youth</b>-inspired jams of the aforementioned EP, but incorporate a pinch of additional clarity and studio punch. "Glazed" opens with a surprisingly major-key garage shuffle before introducing the more dissonant guitar interplay characteristic of the band's music. At the eighty-second mark, the band reacquaints listeners with its post-punk gloom and tension, and it is a delight to hear once more. From there <a href="https://www.facebook.com/tvwonderwonder/?fref=ts">TV Wonder</a> locks into a groove so sinister that when the song's care-free opening chords return, they're run over flat by detuned anti-solos that capture the youthful anxiety and explosiveness this band expresses so well. It's just a great steamroller of a song that makes the most of its few, simpler parts. "Fixed Aesthetic" sticks more to the gloom side of the TV Wonder coin, but, again, the combo switches gears midway to a new part that captures a dreaminess and dread reminiscent of the late, great <b>Women</b>, while also still having its own stark and minimalist European voice. TV Wonder are on a roll, let us all pray they don't stop. Boston fans familiar with the shoe-brand cross-marketing phenomenon Converse Rubber Tracks will be interested to know TV Wonder recorded these two tunes in a single day as part of <a href="http://mulpix.com/post/1002835490906877466.html">Converse Rubber Tracks Amsterdam</a>. Order "Glazed" / "Fixed Aesthetic" on cassette <a href="http://geertruida.net/gshop/product/tv-wonder-glazed-fixed-aesthetic/">right here</a>, or click through the embed below to acquire the digital files. -- <i>Edward Charlton, At Large</i><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=4222307901/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://tvwonder.bandcamp.com/album/glazed-fixed-aesthetic">Glazed / Fixed Aesthetic by TV Wonder</a></iframe><br><br>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-69244971936302496322016-07-10T09:40:00.000-04:002016-07-23T12:36:29.801-04:00Review: Johnny Foreigner | Mono No Aware<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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In the key scene of the 1997 film that takes its name from the quote, Jack Nicholson's Melvin Udall remarks to fellow patients populating the purgatory of his psychiatrist's waiting room, <a href="http://www.okmoviequotes.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/6-As-Good-As-It-Gets-quotes.gif">"What if this is as good as it gets?"</a> It is an unsettling and even disorienting idea, that what you have and what you are, your construction of your self, are unlikely to ever again change for the better. But (thankfully, as it makes this painfully protracted metaphor work) Mr. Udall does change, and grow, spurred by renewed self-awareness and a revitalized sense of self. Far from being a condemnation to a static, flat existence, a revelation such as Udall's can be freeing. That <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukiyo">weightless</a> feeling of revelation-fueled freedom powers the tremendous new long-player from Birmingham, England guitar-pop titans <b>Johnny Foreigner</b>.<br><br>
<a href="https://www.facebook.com/johnnyforeigner/?fref=ts">Johnny Foreigner</a>, of course, was at nothing like Udall's dead-end prior to the release of <i>Mono No Aware</i>, its fifth album. Quite to the contrary, we've often referred to the four as England's greatest band, and it has created one of the most enviable catalogs in independent rock music, ever. But -- as co-founder and guitarist Alexei Berrow told Upset Magazine <a href="http://www.upsetmagazine.com/features/in-the-studio-interview-johnny-foreigner/">here</a> earlier this year -- the veteran act has had to come to terms with its station within the pop music firmament, and now eschews focusing on negative externals and orients itself toward simply being the best band it can be for a frothing fan base cultivated with great care over the last decade.<br><br>
Call it real life (births, deaths and near-deaths), call it maturity (marriage, parenthood): whatever "it" is, it has caught up with Johnny Foreigner, but none of it has blunted the legendary band's fire and passion [<i>excised refutation of <b>Neil Young</b>'s tired binary</i>]. Indeed, the quartet's new set is invigorated by and celebrates the stuff of life, from Mr. Berrow's opening incantation/confession/deep insidery reference -- the Udall moment, if you will -- "<i>it stings to admit, I can't foresee a day when we buy speedboats from this</i>," to the ensuing recitation of his recent brush with mortality ("literally centimetres away from death," he told Upset) in the instant classic "Undevestator" (which, as we noted <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/06/noise-pop-titans-johnny-foreigner-mark.html">here</a>, would seem to present the inverse of "Devestator," the closing number of the band's triumphant fourth LP <i>You Can Do Better</i>) and onward through the collection's 11 songs. Chief songwriter Berrow doubles down on incorporating -- deftly, pellucidly -- autobiography into the music ("...<i>it's lucky sadness triggers the songs</i>..."), making the stuff of life part and parcel of the band's capital A Art using a mature lens whose poignancy <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shunga">spring</a>s from <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono_no_aware">the album's titular concept</a>.<br><br>
There is an astonishing amount of detail packed into its briskly paced 35 minutes, yet <i>Mono No Aware</i> succeeds in every direction. There are the blitzkrieging singles and should-be singles that are Johnny Foreigner's stock-in-trade, such as the brilliant rager "If You Can't Be Honest, Be Awesome" and fiery "The X and the O," respectively. Other successes are perhaps more subtle but substantially more exciting. Even 10 years on the band continues to best itself in terms of songcraft, adding progressive flair to a genre which -- let's be honest -- too often gets to coast on the right chords, the correct pedals. The brightly burning centerpiece of the record is the wild, vivid and deconstructed anthem "Our Lifestyles Incandescent," whose verses feature thrilling vocal arrangements structured around the voice of Chicago polymath <a href="https://www.facebook.com/nnamdi.ogbonnaya?fref=ts">Nnamdi Ogbonnaya</a>. Indeed, impressive vocal arrangements are a hallmark of the set.<br><br>
Johnny Foreigner even weaves intricate and beautiful sonic detail into its bangers on <i>Mono No Aware</i>, as in the final, orchestral section of the aforementioned "If You Can't Be Honest" (which touts strings and horns arranged by the great Nick Cox, formerly of Sheffield, England progressive pop luminaries <b>Screaming Maldini</b> and now out <a href="http://www.nicholasalexander.org/">under his own shingle</a> as a composer/producer/arranger). <i>Mono No Aware</i> closes with a sublime fade-out, largely along a sustained low D before the chord progression resolves, a terrifically smart echo of the delicate notes of the aforementioned "Mounts Everest." The effect, for the put-it-on-Spotify-and-put-it-on-repeat generation anyway, is of a dream starting over every time the crushing, sparkling ballad "Decants The Atlantic" -- which is among the greatest (and most self-aware) songs in a Johnny Foreigner oeuvre rife with sublime album closers -- slips beneath the proverbial waves and is reborn with "Mounts Everest." It's magical sequencing compounding brilliant songwriting.<br><br>
Despite having a decade under its collective belt, not to mention four long-players and a dizzying number of singles and EPs, <i>Mono No Aware</i> is completely devoid of complacence, and perhaps this is why Johnny Foreigner could never find itself in Udall's tight spot in the first place (remember Udall, from the first paragraph?). Instead, the record celebrates perseverence and a career staked out largely on the band's own terms (especially when it mattered). The album was released Friday by the venerable Alcopop! Records in the UK and in the U.S. by Philadelphia's Lame-O Records. The domestic LP is pressed to pink media and is available in a limited edition of 300 pieces, which can be purchased <a href="http://lameorecords.limitedrun.com/products/574535-johnny-foreigner-mono-no-aware">right here</a>. UK fans or dedicated fans willing to shell out for jazzy imports have a broader array of purchase options. In addition to a traditional compact disc of vinyl 12", bundles are available which deliver the music alongside your choice of a t-shirt, posters by guitarist Lewes Herriot and Irene Zafra, some sort of movie script dealie, badges, and yet more posters (there are 10 posters relating to songs on the album, and true heads flush with cash can get the 10-poster Royale With Cheese bundle <a href="http://ilovealcopop.awesomedistro.com/products/574579-johnny-foreigner-collectors-edition-mega-delightful-the-best-bundle-ever-bundle-pre-order">right here</a>). UK vinyl is an edition of 200 blue pieces and 500 orange pieces, and by the time you read these words the blue may have sold out. That's what you get for ignoring <a href="https://www.facebook.com/ClickyClickyMusicBlog/posts/1172354006128253">our advice Friday morning</a>. Stream <i>Mono No Aware</i> via the Sporkify embed below.<br><br>
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Johnny Foreigner: <a href="https://johnnyforeigner.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/johnnyforeigner/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://johnnyforeignertheband.com/">Internerds</a><br>
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<b>Prior Johnny Foreigner Coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/03/postscript-johnny-foreigners-stop.html">Postscript: Johnny Foreigner's "Stop Talking About Ghosts"</a>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/03/review-johnny-foreigner-you-can-do.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | You Can Do Better</a>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2012/11/review-johnny-foreigner-names-ep.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Names EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/11/review-johnny-foreigner-johnny.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Johnny Foreigner Vs. Everything</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/10/cut-rope-and-jump-off-johnny-foreigner.html">Cut The Rope And Jump Off: Johnny Foreigner On Alternate Timelines, Optimism And Everything</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/04/review-johnny-foreigner-certain-songs.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Certain Songs Are Cursed EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2010/11/review-johnny-foreigner-you-thought-you.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | You Thought You Saw A Shooting Star But Yr Eyes Were Blurred With Tears And That Lighthouse Can Be Pretty Deceiving...</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/09/review-johnny-foreigner-grace-and.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Grace And The Bigger Picture</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/03/review-johnny-foreigner.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | WeLeftYouSleepingAndGoneNow</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2008/06/review-johnny-foreigner-waited-up-til.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Waited Up 'Til It Was Light</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2007/12/review-johnny-foreigner-arcs-across.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Arcs Across The City EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2007/12/that-was-show-that-was-johnny-foreigner.html">That Was The Show That Was: Johnny Foreigner | Bowery Ballroom</a>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-64955519037118006472016-07-06T19:05:00.001-04:002016-07-06T19:05:03.309-04:00Premierage/Previewage: Wheat Heralds Sixth Set With "Hey Eugenio," Gigs With Eldridge Rodriguez Saturday<img alt="Wheat with Eldridge Rodriguez | Middle East Upstairs | 9 July" src="https://c1.staticflickr.com/8/7237/27857124520_627c95b629_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
<b>[Photo: Paul Chiera / remixed by Clicky Clicky]</b> The rituals of summer are nice, but it is bittersweet seeing them come and go after looking forward to them for so long (<i>said the guy who just got back from an annual beach jaunt</i> -- Ed.). And maybe this is how fans of area indie rock veterans <b>Wheat</b> feel: without delving into any hard analysis, drummer Brendan Harney agrees with our observation, that it seems like the band -- makers of shoulda-been hits including 1999's <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayqzQdIeOhM">"No One Ever Told Me"</a> or the even older, heart-punching ballad <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBLwoKo2g2U">"Soft Polluted Blacks"</a> -- typically plays shows in the summer and then largely uses the cooler months to hole up and write songs, or play Sudoku, or do whatever it is rock luminaries do. Summer inevitably fades, and only the promise that another one's coming makes that kinda OK. So, yeah, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Wheat-10605351939/">Wheat</a> is playing a show this Saturday in Cambridge, Mass. (more on that below), but what can they offer as a salve once the show is but a memory?<br><br>
Cheer up, Francis: it just so happens the act is closing in on the completion of <i>Blazed</i>, the sixth full-length of a 20-year career during which it has made records with <b>Small Factory</b>'s Dave Auchenbach and renowned knob-twiddler and <b>Mercury Rev</b> guy Dave Fridmann and perhaps even another Dave, who knows? The forthcoming set has been under construction for about a year, and Mr. Harney reports the band is "getting into the final stages of getting the vocals down right, and making sure everything is nip and tuck." A final track listing won't be set until the songs are all complete, but two tunes destined for the forthcoming collection are already in the wild. What's more, we're pleased to premiere for you today a third that is said to have made the proverbial cut, namely the little pop wonder "Hey Eugenio," which you can stream via the topmost Soundcloud embed below.<br><br>
To recap the recent moves, the band released the subdued bouncer "Walking Song" to fans back <a href="https://www.facebook.com/10605351939/photos/a.76506461939.75284.10605351939/10153981672276940/?type=3">in February</a>, and followed it up with "Stay Up Late" in May. Newcomer "Hey Eugenio" is a charming and detailed miniature, a simple love song, according to Harney. The deconstructed number's lyrics pour out like sweet and thick syrup among playful electric piano, tastefully understated guitar licks, canned percussion and a rising firmament of synth. Will the band play it and/or other new tunes at the aforementioned rock show? Oh yeah, about that: pay attention. It's this Saturday at the fabled Middle East Rock Club, and it is an early show, with doors at 7 and Wheat <a href="https://www.facebook.com/10605351939/photos/a.10150656900656940.419740.10605351939/10154221701991940/?type=3">performing at 9</a>. So don't show up at the usual time and be caught flat-footed, unrocked and likely mocked. Hitmakers <b>Eldridge Rodriguez</b> will open the show with a full-band set, and we strongly suggest arriving in time to see that foursome turn in what is typically a fiery performance. Perhaps Cam's fabled white suit will even make an appearance? We make no promises. Either way you should <a href="http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?eventId=6679295&pl=mideastnew&dispatch=loadSelectionData">get yourself a ticket</a> right now, arrange an Uber, weed your garden, trump your towers, whatever it takes to ensure that you will be at the rock show. Rock show.<br><br>
Wheat: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Wheat-10605351939/">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://www.wheatmusic.com/">Internerds</a> | <a href="https://soundcloud.com/wheatmusic">Soundcloud</a><br><br>
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<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/263246129&color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false"></iframe><br><br>
<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/241699425&color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false"></iframe><br><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-78249767157107239152016-06-29T00:01:00.000-04:002016-06-30T08:29:05.202-04:00Review: Deerhoof | The Magic<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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After more than 20 years in the proverbial indie rock game there's only so much hyping a band can do, and assuming an act has the longevity to create them after more than a dozen records maybe -- just maybe -- it is unlikely they'll find many new attendees at the party. But second guess San Francisco-spawned indie rock lifers <b>Deerhoof</b> at your peril, because its new 15-song collection <i>The Magic</i> is magnificent. Those concerned that stagnation might finally kick in after such a lengthy, creative career need not worry; the record sounds refreshing and refreshingly joyous.<br><br>
Fidgety, kaleidoscopic opener "The Devil And His Anarchic Surrealist Retinue" commences with a teeth-rattling riff that vacillates between glitchy, haywire keys and stretches of ambience (watch the tremendous video <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjYAI_c_icY">here</a>). But while <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Deerhoof/?fref=ts">Deerhoof</a>'s songs shift shape constantly and with agility, the band often returns to certain touchstones. The guitars, for example, can either underscore Deerhoof's '90s origins, or sound lifted from '70s and '80s radio standards. The thundering riff of <i>The Magic</i>'s "Kafe Mania!" makes the band's recent predilection for covering <b>Def Leppard</b> somehow less surprising. Hip-shaking deep album cut <a href="https://soundcloud.com/deerhoof-music/plastic-thrills-1">"Plastic Thrills,"</a> which showcases a supple vocal performance from drummer Greg Saunier, has all the swagger of '70s hitmakers <b>The Faces</b>. Atop its big riffs, Deerhoof gives free rein to its fascination with keys, synths and all the weird sounds they can make. "Model Behaviour" approximates the sound of a melting orchestra, whilst the aforementioned album opener flashes with vibrancy that recalls a carnival late at night.<br><br>
Of course the biggest constant on the record -- and indeed most of the group's discography -- is fronter Satomi Matsuzaki's vocals. New listeners might find them overly manic and saccharine, but fans will find them a constant source of delight on <i>The Magic</i>. "Learning to Apologise Effectively" emphasizes how potent her voice can be, as her high-pitched tones sound hauntingly lost within a wall of guitars. The fragility she displays on "Patrasche Come Back" strikes a welcome contrast to the set's stomping rockers. Indeed, when her voice is absent, as it is in "That Ain't No Lie To Me," the music works less well. Elsewhere, "Life Is Suffering" contains the repeated lyric "learning, searching in the night," and the sentiment nicely sums up what makes The Magic magical: even two decades into a remarkable career, Deerhoof continues to bravely explore what lurks beyond the fringe of its comfort zone. Here, the results are as exuberant as they are often unexpected. <i>The Magic</i> was released June 24 via Polyvinyl Records on clear purple vinyl, CD, trusty cassette, or as a digital download. Purchase the set in any of those formats via Deerhoof's Bandcamp page <a href="https://deerhoof.bandcamp.com/album/the-magic">right here</a>. -- <i>Theo Gorst</i><br><br>
Deerhoof: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Deerhoof/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://deerhoof.net/">Interzoinks</a><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2976307559/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless="">&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;lt;a href="http://deerhoof.bandcamp.com/album/the-magic"&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;gt;The Magic by Deerhoof&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;lt;/a&amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;amp;gt;</iframe>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-63009639547516400372016-06-28T22:50:00.001-04:002016-06-28T22:50:37.338-04:00Premiere: All Talk | upstairs/downstairs EP<img alt="Premiere -- All Talk | upstairs/downstairs EP" src="https://c8.staticflickr.com/8/7121/27882482111_dbe05c4673_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
While still a young project, <b>All Talk</b> has already shown an impressive ability to navigate transition. Following the release of 2015's <i>Juno</i> -- which principles Tim Mensel and Cole Maxwell consider the band's true starting point -- and an attendant tour, the Boston indie concern's first drummer Tim Carman decamped for the west coast. Undaunted, Messrs. Mensel and Maxwell rigged an Ableton Live setup to anchor the rhythm and then plotted out new songs. The digitally augmented duo self-recorded its newest EP <i>upstairs/downstairs</i>, but has since incorporated childhood friend Dan Shapiro to helm the drum kit. The proverbial shoe fits.<br><br>
"I felt like it took a couple shows for... the beats to sound right," said Mensel. "I had a MIDI controller and I would try and trigger them with my feet, but we were singing and playing, too, so it was tough at first to do it at spots like the ER without a stage monitor."<br><br>
Needless to say the addition of Mr. Shapiro has proven beneficial. Both Maxwell and Mensel credit rehearsing with a live drummer, and at Shapiro's spacious Brookline basement no less, with giving new life to <a href="https://www.facebook.com/boston.all.talk/">All Talk</a>'s music; even arrangements have shifted. And while he doesn't play on the new record, Shapiro has clearly played a crucial role in the band's (re-)development as a live act, too.<br><br>
"[T]he songs have changed a lot, going from the Ableton versions to recording, and then to us playing them as a trio -- especially the drums," said Maxwell. "Part of that had to do with my limitations as a drummer, or what I thought sounded good, but I think Dan's influence changed things a lot, too."<br><br>
Shapiro's fluid integration into the unit is unsurprising, given there is meaningful shared history among the players. All three grew up together in suburb Needham, Mass., often taking to Shapiro's basement to work out <b>Beatles</b> tunes. To up his game, Shapiro has in recent months -- even before joining All Talk -- taken a more studious approach to drumming, going so far as to take lessons from Mr. Carman's former teacher at Berklee.<br><br>
"It just happened to be good timing, 'cause we had jammed a few times while they were doing the shows with the beats, and it seemed to go pretty well," said Shapiro. "They saw that I was starting to get serious about drumming and asked me if I wanted to play a show with them. We basically just went from there."<br><br>
While keen to mention the influence of classic acts like <a href="https://www.facebook.com/thebeatles">The Beatles</a>, <b>Radiohead</b>, and <b>Wilco</b>, All Talk has been sopping up more proximal influences as well, largely by virtue of attending more shows. More actively participating in the scene has, somewhat counter-intuitively, helped All Talk shape its own identity.<br><br>
"I definitely don't think we go out of our way to write songs that sound like the bands that we go see or the sort of Boston scene in general," Maxwell observes. "But when I do go out to shows and stuff, I definitely pay attention to arrangements and sounds and try and add some of those things to what we do."<br><br>
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjN_JDuHY1H82RPi0pb8WS4B8EY9vcIysi5DyIYBbGRncDatAnzPfwlZE6uaR27OXOc7CzXm8caaoLSAtmiaTgkalcu0HfMkPSh7wibucY1Umxqr1DKItxTJWFTjlbUEVd3GiRbzg/s1600/all+talk+tour+flyer+400+pixels.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjN_JDuHY1H82RPi0pb8WS4B8EY9vcIysi5DyIYBbGRncDatAnzPfwlZE6uaR27OXOc7CzXm8caaoLSAtmiaTgkalcu0HfMkPSh7wibucY1Umxqr1DKItxTJWFTjlbUEVd3GiRbzg/s400/all+talk+tour+flyer+400+pixels.jpg"></a></div>Perhaps the biggest influence on the writing and creation of the new EP <i>upstairs/downstairs</i> was the actual process that birthed it. The collection was mostly recorded in the confines of Mensel and Maxwell's Brighton, Mass. apartment, and the pair passed numerous days clearing and bleaching the floors of their basement, and wiring cables and plugs throughout the space, before rehearsing and recording everything themselves. The DIY approach created a sense of comfort that carried over into the production.<br><br>
"Being able to work at our own pace, without worrying about time constraints, was definitely a benefit," said Mensel. "It was nice to be able to go back and work on things after playing back certain things immediately."<br><br>
<i>upstairs/downstairs</i> finds the band doubling down on the sturdily melodic and folk-tinged power-pop that characterized <i>Juno</i>'s strongest moments. Mensel and Maxwell have distinctive (although not entirely dissimilar) voices and writing styles, and the songwriters' give-and-take across the EP is among its charms. Mensel-penned tunes including opener "Misled" are often appointed with modest, yearning vocals and sprightly jangle-guitar leads that lead to big distorted riffs, a neat reflex that engenders emotional heft. Maxwell's numbers tend to rely less on dynamics and instead dig in to establish memorable grooves. The upstroked and tremoloed guitars on his "Pay No Mind," for example, play into a sturdy and insistent backbeat that pushes the song ahead.<br><br>
All Talk is prepping for a month-long tour that will take it as far Texas and Oklahoma with rehearsals in Shapiro's basement, last-minute DIY flyer production and gear purchases, but it is also looking ahead to its next move.<br><br>
"The next release is gonna be a lot different, for sure," Mensel offers.<br><br>
All Talk's <a href="https://www.facebook.com/events/262018244156249/">record release/tour kickoff extravaganza</a> is set for this very Saturday at Cambridge's living room, the great Lilypad. Dreamy folk strummer (and recent Captured Track signee) <b>Lina Tullgren</b> and Erica from surfy indie poppers <b>Littlefoot</b> also perform. Stream <i>upstairs/downstairs</i> via the embed below, check out the complete tour dates at upper right, and order a limited-edition cassette <a href="https://youralltalk.bandcamp.com/">right here</a>. -- <i>Dillon Riley</i><br><br>
All Talk: <a href="https://youralltalk.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/boston.all.talk/?fref=ts">Facebook</a><br><br>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-59989845758357507232016-06-27T09:00:00.000-04:002016-06-27T17:44:26.834-04:00Boston Indie Pop Favorites This Car Up Back In Service For One Night
Only, Saturday Aug. 13 at Great Scott<img alt="Boston Indie Pop Favorites This Car Up Back In Service For One Night Only, Saturday Aug. 13 at Great Scott" src="https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7305/27874285825_46df7c56e5_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
We first began hearing about a potential <b>This Car Up</b> reunion show about 20 months ago, and we can exclusively reveal today that at long last it will happen, just in time -- more or less -- to mark the <a href="https://myspace.com/tcarup">MySpace</a>-era hitmakers' 10th anniversary. Believe that headline: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/This-Car-Up-7575300947/?fref=ts">This Car Up</a> performs for the first time in five years at Great Scott in Allston Rock City Aug. 13, with support from <b>Sinnet</b> and <b>Pale Hands</b>. Mark it down.<br><br>
Since disbanding in 2009, members of This Car Up scattered, launching or weaving themselves into a number of Boston and Brooklyn-based projects including <b>Mean Creek</b>, <b>Slowdim</b>, <b>The Hush Now</b> and <b>Stereo Telescope</b>, among others. There was a one-off reunion at Deep Heaven Now in 2011, which <a href="https://youtu.be/FXALf2NQ-bE">elicited raves</a> from a very lucky crowd. The quintet's sole release, 2008's terrifically tuneful <i>Smile When You're Alone</i>, was recorded with <b>Aloha</b>'s T.J. Lipple at the legendary Inner Ear Studios in Arlington, Virginia [<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KckwHtFzScE&feature=youtu.be">watch the rockumentary</a>]. The set garnered a Japanese distribution deal with <a href="http://moorworks.com/releases/">Moorworks</a> and the band did a respectable amount of touring, but the resulting acclaim, frankly, was not commensurate with the excellent music the album contained. Songs like "Dislocate," "Tarzan vs. Graham Chapman" and "Expect Them To Lie" are immediate and irresistible, with massive hooks tastefully downplayed among chiming guitars, blocky synth lines and urgent drumming. The tunefulness suggests an affinity for <b>Built To Spill</b> among many others, but folks familiar with TCU co-fronter and friend-of-the-blog Paul Sentz -- who these days leads <b>Slowdim</b> -- know that the man carries around in his head an encyclopedic knowledge of '80s and '90s radio hits, which he draws upon with such facility that his songs can feel like they are singing your life. Or at least that is one man's opinion.<br><br>
If there's a silver lining to the This Car Up story, it is that Mr. Sentz and This Car Up co-fronter Eric Glassman contemplate working together again, although sadly it will not be in Boston. Mr. Glassman has lived in Charlottesville, Virginia for a number of years (certain readers may recall the delightful town was the first post-graduate pit stop for this blog's executive editor), and Mr. Sentz is considering relocating there as well. Sentz had previously reunited with TCU bassist Kevin MacDonald for a time in Mikey Holland's power-pop project <b>The Dazies</b>, and keyboard player Kurt Schneider currently holds down the bass for that act and has also found acclaim as part of <b>Stereo Telescope.</b> For his part, TCU drummer Barry Marino logged a lot of years with Clicky Clicky faves <b>The Hush Now</b> (and now plays with Brooklyn rock act <b>Wet Leather</b>).So while This Car Up has been gone for a while, it isn't far from the minds of many. We're eager for the show Aug. 13, so come say goodbye and hello and goodbye to some of the nicest guys to have graced the Boston scene. It will rock. In the meantime, we invite you to click play on <i>Smile When You're Alone</i>, which is embedded below.<br><br>
This Car Up: <a href="https://thiscarup.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/This-Car-Up-7575300947/?fref=ts">Facebook</a><br><br>
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<a href="Playlist: Great Scott, Boston, Jan. 27 | Giveaway">Playlist: Great Scott, Boston, Jan. 27 | Giveaway</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-6475512554186894652016-06-23T13:01:00.000-04:002016-06-23T13:01:12.550-04:00Today' Hotness: Eros And The Eschaton, Ghost Orchard, Landing<img alt="Eros And The Eschaton -- Weight Of Matter (detail)" src="https://c1.staticflickr.com/8/7348/27439182520_36772d9e2b_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
>> Inspired dream-pop concern <b>Eros And The Eschaton</b>'s second LP, due later this summer, is heralded by the surprisingly brash and altogether thrilling preview rocker "Rxx." After a bright, uptempo introduction, the song deftly shifts into a spiky, punky verse featuring an arresting vocal by co-founder Kate Perdoni, whose delivery ranges from delightfully bratty to pensive as she mythologizes a restless life on the road and the band's conception (at the climax she erupts "I started this band from a traffic jam when I was trying to find my way back to Canada!"). Formerly based in North Carolina but now operating out of Colorado Springs, Colo., Ms. Perdoni and partner Adam Hawkins now count among their number drummer Alex Koshak, bassist Ryan Spradlin and keyboard player Mitch Macura. The quintet's forthcoming album <i>Weight Of Matter</i> is said to be strongly influenced by <b>Neil Young & Crazy Horse</b>, but if "Rxx" takes a cue from Mr. Young's wide-ranging career, it would have to be Young's weird, new wave and experimental pop phase (he was a proponent of and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Highway">sometime collaborator</a> with <b>DEVO</b>, our older readers might recall). Even that feels a stretch, though, and it really makes no difference, as "Rxx" is so potent a single that it needs no RIYLs to prop it up. While the subdued dream-pop of songs like <a href="https://youtu.be/xiepVistE4k">"You Know I Do"</a> and <a href="https://youtu.be/lJoDKFDE4UQ">"Don't Look So Sad"</a> from <a href="https://www.facebook.com/erosandtheeschaton/?fref=ts">Eros And The Eschaton</a>'s early day feels remote here, the big dynamic drumming, anthemic synth lines, spindly guitars and rich feedback in "Rxx" make for a very potent sound that presents exciting opportunities for the band. Bar/None releases <i>Weight Of Matter</i> Aug. 19 on vinyl and CD and pre-orders are being taken for the set <a href="http://www.bar-none.com/store/eros-and-the-eschaton-weight-of-matter">right here</a>. The band celebrates the record with two shows at the end of August in Colorado Springs and Denver and also performs in Denver this Saturday; all dates available at press time are listed below. Stream "Rxx" via the Soundcloud embed below. In related news, Weehawken, NJ-based Bar/None this past March celebrated its 30th anniversary, a very notable achievement indeed, and there are retrospective blog posts and a link to a label comp that are definitely worth checking out <a href="http://barnoneturns30.blogspot.com/">right here</a>.<br><br>
06.25 -- Denver, CO -- Westword Music Festival<br>
07.30 -- Denver, CO -- Underground Music Fest<br>
08.05 -- Colorado Springs, CO -- Fine Arts Center<br>
08.26 -- Colorado Springs, CO -- Flux Capacitor (Record Release Show)<br>
08.27 -- Denver, CO -- Larimer Lounge (Record Release Show)<br><br>
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>> Grand Rapids, Mich.-based <b>Ghost Orchard</b>'s latest set, <i>Bliss</i>, is a veiled and smothered bedroom dream-pop wonder that has already soundtracked many a late night to devastating and lonely effect. Led by Sam Hall, the project enlarges the scope of similarly bleary solo work of artists like <b>Astrobrite</b>, <b>Atlas Sound</b> and the <a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2016/05/todays-hotness-fenneszorourke-cold.html">recently reviewed</a> <b>Flout</b> for an adventure in woozy, driving sound design, not to mention yearning and youthful lo-fi contemplation. Short and sweet songs like "Seperate" and "Sorry" pair distant percussion to textured and tasteful guitar chords for a contemporary take on the "hypnagogic pop" genre which came to the fore with rise of <b>Ariel Pink</b> and other deconstructed songsmiths. Mr. Hall's mid-range vocals serve as another yawning instrument more than a direct lead, but his pleasant tones nonetheless complement the auditory universe he contrives. <i>Loveless</i>-styled instrumental segues bookend "I Saw You Floating," "Sleepover" and "Wisher," and these run into other pieces, adding to the intimate, toy-instrument song-cycle vibe conjured here effectively. While this style of music has been tackled by many, Hall's inoffensive and rounded mid-heavy production and original instrumentation prestidigitate a boyish wonder that circulates through much of <i>Bliss</i>' 13 songs, making the collection an ideal choice for lazy, searching summer evenings. Take this moment to act decisively, however, as Orchid Tapes' <a href="https://www.facebook.com/ghostorchard/photos/a.1580228328923844.1073741828.1578513589095318/1754475218165820/?type=3">recent second pressing</a> of 100 cassettes is likely to disappear as quickly as this piece can be read. Do it: grab <i>Bliss</i> now on tape or as a digital download <a href="http://shop.orchidtapes.com/product/ghost-orchard-bliss-cassette-tape">right here</a>, lest you have to wait for round three. -- <i>Edward Charlton</i><br><br>
<iframe style="border: 0; width: 100%; height: 120px;" src="https://bandcamp.com/EmbeddedPlayer/album=2613081927/size=large/bgcol=ffffff/linkcol=0687f5/tracklist=false/artwork=small/transparent=true/" seamless><a href="http://ghostorchard.bandcamp.com/album/bliss">bliss by ghost orchard</a></iframe><br><br>
>> While the name of Connecticut-based drone-rock four <b>Landing</b> has registered on this reviewer's radar in years past -- perhaps due to its prior association with labels as esteemed as K and Geographic North -- its music had eluded our ears until the recent lead-up to its latest album, <i>Third Sight</i>. That collection hit racks earlier this month on CD and green vinyl LP via El Paraiso Records, but indeed the band's legacy stretches back almost two full decades to 1998. <i>Third Sight</i> is a four-song platter of head music characterized by a psychedelic and ambient narcotic lull, one akin to those conjured by legendary hitmakers <b>Spacemen 3</b>, <b>Stars of the Lid</b> and <b>The Warlocks</b>. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Landingtryyps/?fref=ts">Landing</a> achieves this through the use of pristine and full production, as well as a distinct, major-key howl. The collection, recorded as part of El Paraiso's Impetus series, aims for the tranquil yet hallucinogenic side of Landing's sound with protracted, ruminative songs and serious pedal work. The lead preview track "Delusion Sound/Third Site" (split into two tunes <a href="https://play.spotify.com/album/0HvPhVQDJtZungwmQB52BT">on Spotify</a>) presents soft, delayed vocals that intertwine within a drift of synthesizer patches and slow-burning feedback. "Facing South" highlights spewing, long-timed drone pedals and bongo-esque percussion to establish a meditative, instrumental trance, while closer "Morning Sun" aims for middle ground between the two, before female vocals pour a little bit of light into the composition. Much of <i>Third Sight</i> comes across as tempered experimentation and improvisational, but the focus with which Landing tackles its craft makes for a compelling album that, we'll speculate, likely sounds massive on vinyl, the manner of consumption this music seems clearly intended for. Order <i>Third Sight</i> <a href="http://elparaisorecords.com/releases/landing-third-sight">here</a> or check out Landing’s impressive and substantial body of work at their <a href="http://landing.bandcamp.com">Bandcamp page</a>. -- <i>Edward Charlton</i><br><br>
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<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/268865201&color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false"></iframe>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-27853057762673734712016-06-17T19:50:00.000-04:002016-06-18T07:53:20.272-04:00That Was The Show That Was: Destroyer | Oval Space, London | 15 June<img alt="That Was The Show That Was: Destroyer with Ryley Walker | Oval Space, London | 15 June" src="https://c2.staticflickr.com/8/7392/27661716201_a1d976c2e1_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
<b>[PHOTO: Theo Gorst for Clicky Clicky]</b> Vancouver indie rock luminaries <b>Destroyer</b> arrived in London Wednesday for a sold out, one-off show that is likely to be one of their last in support of 2015's excellent album <i>Poison Season</i>. Since the set's release, the consistently evolving now-octet has developed a live set it hardly seems possible to better. This reviewer would be tempted to say this is what 20 years of touring does, but only a foolish man would try to finitely categorize a project that is constantly shifting in form and style. Indeed, the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Destroyer/?fref=ts">Destroyer</a> that ruled the stage at London's Oval Space this week is markedly different from its initial lo-fi iteration, which was responsible for 1996's <i>We'll Build Them A Golden Bridge</i>. Mercurial mastermind Dan Bejar writes lyrics awash in irony, contradiction and potent symbolism, and at turns Wednesday evening he appeared to embody all of these.<br><br>
Like the songs themselves, Mr. Bejar's performance is both louche and pained. On "Song For America," a standout tune from Destroyer's tremendous 2011 collection <i>Kaputt</i>, the band locked into a gently propulsive groove as the fronter sang to the assembled Londoners, "I wrote a song for America, they told me it was clever, who knew." As he ended the line, Bejar swept his arm across the stage with the flare of a classic rock 'n' roll showman, a gesture further emphasizing the brilliant irony of the line. The theatrical turn was immediately juxtaposed by his next move: kneeling and obscuring himself from most of the crowd.<br><br>
SImilarly, throughout the evening Bejar conducted himself as a self-conscious performer given to bouts of showmanship. The occasional extroversion was occasionally physical, but predominantly vocal, as he chose to pack the bulk of his theatrical impulses into his words. During "Savage Night At The Opera," he was almost spitting them out, while still savoring their grandiosity: "Let's face it, old swords like us have been born to die, it's not a war till someone loses an eye." When he led the crowd to the song's climax, singing "drop the loop and then go wild," the band took over as a buccaneering guitar solo accelerated above tranquil keys. Better still was Bejar's muttered "aw shit here comes the sun," during a thumping rendition of "Dream Lover." As the trumpet rose to crescendo upon crescendo, Bejar muttered and then yelped the line. His appearance was as <i>de rigueur</i> indie rocker –- skinny jeans and a loose fitted shirt –- but he sounded like a matinee idol worn down by serial nights of excess. When the band glided through "Girl On A Sling," it felt as though Bejar should have worn a bow tie and double-breasted blazer. The song's extended intro permitted the flautist and trumpeter to display magnificent musicianship, and their notes were looped and distorted through various effects creating a soundscape that mutated from ambient to glitchy while remaining captivating and bold.<br><br>
The performance of "Chinatown" established a hazy, midnight ambience, a feeling accentuated by lazily strummed acoustic guitar and lonely-sounding saxophone. Elsewhere, the confession "listen, I've been drinking" during "Bay of Pigs (Detail)" felt illuminating; it fit perfectly with the band's smokey-bar-at-midnight aesthetic but also spoke to Bejar's stage persona: a reluctant performer propelled by occasional spells of Dutch courage. While the band often luxuriated in glorious melancholy, it also elevated moments to the point of celebration, exploding into joyous peaks with dueling trumpet and saxophone. Such was the case on first song of the encore, "Painter In Your Pocket," as well as "European Oils." These older songs fit seamlessly within a set that otherwise drew predominantly from <i>Poison Season</i> and <i>Kaputt</i>. Given Bejar's bent for experimentation, it will be fascinating to see where the band's next album takes them. Wherever that may be, assuredly it will only add the mystique the songwriter has created for himself both on record and on stage. -- <i>Theo Gorst</i><br><br>
Destroyer: <a href="https://www.facebook.com/Destroyer/?fref=ts">Facebook</a><br><br>
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<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/10/clicky-clicky-music-blogs-top-albums.html">Clicky Clicky Music Blog's Top Albums 2000-2009</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/08/remarks-destroyer-iran-wooden-wand.html">Remarks: Destroyer, Iran, Wooden Wand</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2008/02/todays-hotness-destroyer-johnny.html">Today's Hotness: Destroyer</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2008/01/todays-hotness-destroyer-islands-chris.html">Today's Hotness: Destroyer</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5841832.post-89361223209219013702016-06-14T20:12:00.000-04:002016-06-15T07:29:05.185-04:00Noise-Pop Titans Johnny Foreigner Mark Tenth Year With Colossal Fifth LP Mono No Aware, Due July 8<img alt="Johnny Foreigner Announce LP5 Mono No Aware" src="https://c8.staticflickr.com/8/7352/27549787855_46570a27fa_z.jpg" width="630"><br><br>
Birmingham, England guitar-pop legends <b>Johnny Foreigner</b> Monday disclosed they will release <i>Mono No Aware</i>, the fifth long-playing release of its decade-plus career, in the UK July 8 via long-time label partner Alcopop! Records. In the wake of some distro tomfoolery, the quartet revealed the album and its title last month, but few details were available. The news promises to continue to trickle at least for another week, as a message at <a href="http://johnnyforeignertheband.com/">the band's website</a> suggests a new single, <a href="https://www.facebook.com/johnnyforeigner/photos/a.396673748679.176396.18738293679/10154161622243680/?type=3">video</a>, and "commerce" (we presume this means pre-orders) will arrive June 20. The same web site refers to <a href="https://www.facebook.com/johnnyforeigner/?fref=ts">Johnny Foreigner</a>'s album as arriving in "Summer 2016," so it is entirely likely that release dates for other territories -- the US release will be handled by Philadelphia's Lame-O Records, and the Japanese release by Vinyl Junkie -- will be staggered a bit. Noticeably absent at this point is format information, although a scan of certain gun-jumping ecommerce sites leads us to believe <i>Mono No Aware</i> will be available on LP, CD and as a digital download. Don't count out Disposable America for a tape release, eh guys?<br><br>
The album's title is loosely translated from the Japanese as "the pathos of things," and relates to an awareness of impermanence that -- according to this blog's executive editor's wide-ranging liberal arts education -- has been a key aspect of Japanese literature and art for roughly the last half-millenium, from <i>The Tale Of Genji</i> to <i>ukiyo-e</i> and <i>manga</i>. Wikipedia <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mono_no_aware">breaks it down</a>, dryly: "<i>mono no aware</i> has frequently been translated as 'the 'ahh-ness' of things', life, and love. Awareness of the transience of all things heightens appreciation of their beauty, and evokes a gentle sadness at their passing." Given the tone and content of fronter Alexei Berrow's <a href="http://www.upsetmagazine.com/features/in-the-studio-interview-johnny-foreigner/">recent revealing interview</a> with Upset Magazine, its use as the title to Johnny Foreigner LP 5 feels perfectly suited. The record contains 10 tracks, its songs are concerned with the wonderful and terrifying stuff of life, and were inspired by, well, that stuff. A <a href="http://johnnyforeignerplease.tumblr.com/mnapress">press release</a> announcing (quietly, and basically only to those who found the link on the band's website, which appeared about a week ago) <i>Mono No Aware</i> describes it thusly:<br>
<blockquote>"Johnny Foreigner is Us, the musical. We're not the type of band to spin our personal delights and disasters into PR angles, but it’s all there in what we create. There's births and marriages and drama and death. The casual horror you somehow just get used to in your 30s, and the moments of bliss and clarity you don't (and hope you never do)."</blockquote>
<i>Mono No Aware</i> will be celebrated with <a href="http://johnnyforeignerplease.tumblr.com/mnalaunchparty">release shows</a> in Birmingham and London July 8 and 9 respectfully. The Birmingham date will be particularly amazing, as supports for the evening include <b>Sunshine Frisbee Laserbeam</b>. The track listing from the album is below (there are bonus tracks, but you'll just have to wait to hear about those). Particularly clever fans will note the song that in effect opens the new record, "Undevestator," would seem to reverse the spell cast by the closer of Johnny Foreigner's no-shit-taking <i>tour de force</i> <i>You Can Do Better</i>, which was released in 2014. <i>Mono No Aware</i> is all killer and no filler, and we look forward to you all hearing it. It's the record of the summer, and ever after, amen. In the absence of a new song to share at press time, we're embedding below "Flooding," a rocker from last year's tremendous <a href="http://dogknightsproductions.limitedrun.com/products/556728-dk082-playlounge-doe-johnny-foreigner-doctrines-4-way-split-12-ep-orange-250-yellow-250">four-way split</a> on <a href="http://ilovealcopop.awesomedistro.com/products/556733-alcopop-vs-dog-knights-12-w-johnny-foreigner-doctrines-doe-and-playlounge">Alcopop!</a> and Dog Knights Productions.<br><br>
1. Mounts Everest<br>
2. Undevestator<br>
3. I Can Show You The Way To Grand Central<br>
4. The X and the O<br>
5. Don't, Just Don't<br>
6. Our Lifestyles Incandescent<br>
7. The Worst Of Us<br>
8. Into The Veldt<br>
9. If You Can't Be Honest, Be Awesome<br>
10. Cliffjumper<br>
11. Decants The Atlantic<br><br>
<iframe width="100%" height="166" scrolling="no" frameborder="no" src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/221839477&color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false"></iframe><br><br>
Johnny Foreigner: <a href="https://johnnyforeigner.bandcamp.com/">Bandcamp</a> | <a href="https://www.facebook.com/johnnyforeigner/?fref=ts">Facebook</a> | <a href="http://johnnyforeignertheband.com/">Internerds</a><br><br>
<b>Prior Johnny Foreigner Coverage:</b><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/03/postscript-johnny-foreigners-stop.html">Postscript: Johnny Foreigner's "Stop Talking About Ghosts"</a>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2014/03/review-johnny-foreigner-you-can-do.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | You Can Do Better</a>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2012/11/review-johnny-foreigner-names-ep.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Names EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/11/review-johnny-foreigner-johnny.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Johnny Foreigner Vs. Everything</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/10/cut-rope-and-jump-off-johnny-foreigner.html">Cut The Rope And Jump Off: Johnny Foreigner On Alternate Timelines, Optimism And Everything</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2011/04/review-johnny-foreigner-certain-songs.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Certain Songs Are Cursed EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2010/11/review-johnny-foreigner-you-thought-you.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | You Thought You Saw A Shooting Star But Yr Eyes Were Blurred With Tears And That Lighthouse Can Be Pretty Deceiving...</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/09/review-johnny-foreigner-grace-and.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Grace And The Bigger Picture</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2009/03/review-johnny-foreigner.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | WeLeftYouSleepingAndGoneNow</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2008/06/review-johnny-foreigner-waited-up-til.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Waited Up 'Til It Was Light</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2007/12/review-johnny-foreigner-arcs-across.html">Review: Johnny Foreigner | Arcs Across The City EP</a><br>
<a href="http://jbreitling.blogspot.com/2007/12/that-was-show-that-was-johnny-foreigner.html">That Was The Show That Was: Johnny Foreigner | Bowery Ballroom</a><br>Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/12517366671775704505noreply@blogger.com0