June 3, 2012

Room of a Thousand Doors


You might be wondering why "Room One" if there's already a room and what it has is doors, but Brooklyn musician Gabe Raines seems to know tricks of perspective; the first song from his project Sun Castle is about the room beyond the first door, perhaps inspired by the ancient Roman recall-technique that involves assembling memories into the recognizable structure of a palace or castle, an ideal home or base, with ideas and attitudes strewn throughout in the guise of objects. Raines calls Sun Castle his own description of "a rainbow shapeshifting castle, the rooms inside, and the area outside" using sound, though the vocabulary of sounds he uses may be too complex or seem too unsystematic to translate without the aid of your own strong associations. "Room of a Thousand Doors (Room One)" is nothing if not filled with that potential. An eclectic range of samples and instrumentation gives the sense that Raines is heavily influenced by traditional instruments and composition, though the shambolic bursts of percussion acquire new significance as he strings them out across an otherwise already very compelling sound collage. If the end product is a castle, it must be some kind of Arabesque or Byzantine affair, dynamic and shaped by the interplay of neighboring cultures. 

MP3: Sun Castle - Room of a Thousand Doors (Room One)
No word yet from Gabe as to whether or not this is the tip of an album or otherwise, but in the meantime he just wants us all to like him (via facebook).

June 2, 2012

Share the Joy

Good ol' brevity. -- the soul of wit and arguably the Vivian Girls' greatest asset on their 2008 debut LP. That record honored some obvious predecessors-- C86, Slumberland, and K Records to name a few-- but just as importantly, it realized that those scenes had a thing for collector's items and myth-making. Starting off with a 22-minute-long LP that was originally limited to 500 copies, Vivian Girls seemed like the kind of band that would nail it the first time, flame out, and then disappear forever. Except they didn't. Everything Goes Wrong wasn't a huge drop-off, but the reception to it was muted, suggesting that they may have started to outstay their welcome. Lo-fi was quickly becoming cliché (again) and with their seemingly endless array of guest spots, side projects, and offshoots, Vivian Girls were adding to the glut of bands doing something very similar.

I'd say they're acknowledging this situation on Share the Joy’s by trading brevity for novelty: Oopener "The Other Girls" clocks in at six and a half minutes, over two of which are filled up with guitar soloing. It's certainly an audacious move for a band that had previously constructed a song with just one word ("No") and drew battle lines about whether technical competency-- let alone proficiency-- mattered in indie rock. But is it a good song? Not really. It never really builds toward much of anything, and Cassie Ramone isn't even noodling-- her fretboard runs are flat and stiff as dry spaghetti. But it's a fitting introduction to Share the Joy, an album that's more admirable for its willingness to stretch than its execution. and it's stunning.

It's a record saddled with contradictions-- though it's their most uneven in terms of songwriting, the diversity oddly gives it more potential replay value than their prior records. Recorded at the home studio of Woods' Jarvis Taveniere, Share the Joy borrows that band's ambling tempos, rustic instrumentation, and frazzled guitar lines. But the breathing room often puts Vivian Girls in an unflattering mid-fi space, one neither slick enough to polish their imperfect pitch or buzzy enough to hide it.

Occasionally, Vivian Girls make discussions about songwriting and instrumental ability beside the point. Placing the chippy sock-hop sing-along "Dance (If You Wanna)" back-to-back with the brooding and sinister "Lake House" makes a good case for the band's range, while "Trying to Pretend" melds the Woodsist psychedelia and galloping punk attempted on Share the Joy's epics in half the time. And whether or not "Take It as It Comes" is the best song here, it's certainly a high point.  that sheds light on how they probably don't take themselves. as seriously as their deadpan pose might indicate. Taking the piss out of the tattered girl-group pop. mode they helped re-popularize, they pull out all the stops-- they fawn over a boy named Johnny, throw in ridiculous intra-band commentary ("Cassie-- you're always right"), and offer clichéd hooks so time-honored, they make Best Coast look obtuse by comparison. I don't know if they've got beef with ex-drummer Ali Koehler's gig with Best Coast, but "Take It as It Comes" could be seen as a winking parody by upping their boy-needy desperation to hyperbolic absurdity.

So Share the Joy is an uneven third LP, and uneven third LPs usually come from bands at the crossroads. I'm not sure that much is at stake here: Vivian Girls have managed to infiltrate a hive of likeminded and supportive artistic peers, which gives them some momentum and also what looks to an outsider like an understandable whiff of back-patting scenestership. But whether it's old band members like Koehler and Frankie Rose and the Outs or more stylized successors like Dum Dum Girls, there are an increasing number of bands beating Vivian Girls at their own game. It's  is easy to see Share the Joy's place in the Vivian Girls’ discography, but their place in indie rock as a whole is becoming less clear.  

June 1, 2012

Lobby Classix


I love Sunup Recordings - someone working with the label will email us some morning, "we just put out a tape with Sunup!", I go over to their site and somehow the label has put out two other tapes since. God bless them. So, this is not their latest, but one of their most recent three releases (as of this overcast June 1); a new tape from our friend Dan Creahan (who runs cassette label Prison Art), recording as Plant Eater, a side project that he uses to engage with more archival materials, ie, youtube videos, field recordings, etc. Lobby Classix relies heavily on youtube for its material, with Creahan live mixing youtube clips and audio samples, then manipulating them further on tape. Divided into two roughly ten minute long segments, occupying the respective sides of the cassette, the album's shambolic sound collages derive a sense of continuity from the recurring markers of Creahan's style of composition and diverse traces of almost melody. For now, he has no primary web presence for the project, but you can check out his other band, Mind Dynamics, on soundcloud.

 
In a world where labels usually charge $5 for tapes, Sunup asks for only four. That's a 20% discount on the national average, by God. Considering $5 is only the middle of the road price, Sunup makes being economical economical. Grab Lobby Classix from their bandcamp.

Look at the Two-Headed Boy

If you haven't heard of him, according to his bandcamp "Psycosis is a video game programmer who accidentally found audio editing software and the world has been paying the price ever since"; though his Neutral Milk Hotel mash-ups, released under the name In My G4 Over Da Sea, may be vaguely iconoclastic for some who reverence the band in a particular way (ho-ho, obsessives), but the fairly fleshed out conceptual underpinnings to his juxtapositions keeps it far out of the sacrilegious for me. For example, with the addition of Jay-Z rapping about relationships, "In the Aeroplane Over the Sea" becomes "My 1st Airplane", giving the rapper a moody trumpet accompaniment and oddly effective interplay of the two voices. I'm listening to this thing and I can't stop laughing every few minutes at hearing the sounds of my high-school-emotion-music being crunched into new shapes and given new names (I'm pretty sure "Miami, 1981" even has a sample from Neutral Milk Hotel-esque earnest lo-fi-ish folk analogue, Okkervil River). "Look at the Two-Headed Boy" is another good one. (via Potholes in my Blog)


Download In My G4 Over Da Sea via Psycosis' bandcamp.

May 31, 2012

Lifetime of Romance

[video by Melissa Cha]
Dylan Ettinger has always had a way of creating sonic offerings that somehow describe in full detail beautiful alien landscapes, set in galaxies far, far away. On Lifetime of Romance, however, his latest 12" release with Not Not Fun has gone far beyond just creating soundscapes. The album's opener, "Wintermute" is an absolute pop gem. It's so much more than anything we've ever come to expect from him, with him even singing a few lines at the beginning before letting it churn off into a thrillingly dark dance floor banger. Picture glitching androids twisting in loop mode on a glowing blue dance floor. And that's only the first track. From there we see Ettinger exploring his sound and instruments like never before, witnessing an intimate relationship blossom between the man and the machine. This is certainly his most fully realized release yet, leaving me just as excited for the next record as I was for this one. You can peep the video for the album opener above, and stream the closing track below. 

Stream: Dylan Ettinger - Blue and Blue Pick up a copy of Lifetime of Romance now via the fine folks at Not Not Fun.

Mixtape: Space Toast

I've been spending a lot of time on Potholes In My Blog the past few weeks, and it's definitely one of my favorite blogs out there right now. Today they posted the second in their series of instrumental mixtapes, titled Space Toast. If you're wondering if the whole mix is as lovely as that cover art above, yes it is. Bangers from the likes of Keyboard Kid, Silky Johnson, Skywlkr, Javis FauX, MF Love & more. It's a killer mix full of artists I'll be digging more into, so just go ahead, press play and enjoy.

Download: Potholes Presents: Space Toast

Lumens

Though Lumens was "originally conceived as a project based around healing frequencies", their self-titled debut, the fourth release on newly founded Austin tape and vinyl imprint Holodeck Records, clearly took them elsewhere entirely - music that is ambient and generically comparable to the original concept, in some ways, but too hefty with the appearance of its own motive and meaning to be purely therapeutic. Even so, its persistent simple rhythm and the dry ringing of brass, which at times sounds so delicate as to be the result of gentle breathing through a horn, avoids the inevitable plunge into anxiety. The album's B-Side has an even more interesting complexion, with more varied instrumentation and a heavier dramatic reliance on the manipulation of specific tones, perhaps feeling a little bit more like a "healing frequency" or at least a range of frequencies abstract enough to attract unrestricted association. Either way, it's a beautiful tape with a more compositional orientation than I'd recently gotten used to with more free form ambient - a conceptual divergence that Holodeck's catalog to date and projected releases seem to underscore. 


Download the album for $2.99 at the Holodeck bandcamp or grab it on tape here. Check out some more Lumens at the band's soundcloud.

Get It Off (JSHIH's Barcelona '92 Remix)

I don't consider myself too much a fan of remixes, but every now and then there's an artist that really pushes the idea of what a remix can be. JSHIH is one such homie, having started to craft a rather incredible collection of late '90s/early 2000s R&B remixes (i.e. his amazing rework of R. Kelly's "I Wish"). His takes do more than just apply a more dance-style step or some wobble to an already complete track. JSHIH breaks down the pieces and does something more along the lines of turning every bit into samples ready to be use before injecting his own flavor on top. The most recent in this line of remixes is the hyperactive Barcelona '92 remix to Monica's "Get It Off". I think JSHIH's take on the production would make original producer Missy Elliott glow with approval, and maybe this is just the breath of life Monica needs for her comeback.

MP3: Monica - Get It Off (JSHIH's Barcelona '92 Remix)

Forest Flower Mix

I'm a fan of Ghibli. Now that we've gotten what you already know out of the way, let's talk about the less known in this killer mini-mix that Tommy Mikey just dropped on us. Ghibli spent the last month traveling to Poland, Germany and Morocco just to prove that he's got it like that. These travels inspired Forest Flower Mix; six highly danceable songs clocking in at exactly twenty-six minutes from arguably one of the most knowledgeable minds on dance music out there. But seriously, fuck arguing and let's all dance. Tracklist after the jump.

Stream/Download: Ghibli - Forest Flower Mix

Love Nest

The folks at Hands In The Dark recently teamed with NNA to drop a new jawn from Co La. Soft Power Memento continues a pattern of loop based drones that Co La has created, while also blending in a variety of new ingredients. Most notably is the bluesy horns that have been included. There are also some juked up moments to keep the Baltimore roots in tact. Our first peek at the record is the track "Love Nest", a song that somehow perfectly captures it's title. It's easy to envision champagne pouring slowly from the bottle, slowly filling the glass of an attractive woman eating take-out Chinese in a silk robe. It's easy to see a charming gentleman, all sharpened up in his finest blazer/turtleneck combo, attempting to work up the courage to so much as kiss her. Regardless of what you see, this is an easy one to fall in love with.

Stream: Co La - Love Nest
Soft Power Memento drops June 5; grab the tape via NNA or the CD via Hands In the Dark.

May 30, 2012

Premiere: Nitemoves - Tertre Rouge

Last Fall I got to see Active Child and Com Truise play my favorite show in recent memory. I also got to hang out with the two groups for a short while after the show, which  is when I first got to know Com Truise & Tycho drummer Rory O'Connor. Since then I've kept up constant contact with Rory through weed photos on Instagram, random images on Facebook, and an agreement that Decoder's photographer, Audrey, could totally be the chick from The Ring (we love you Audrey!) Rory also has a solo project called Nitemoves, though, that I want to share with you now. Last week Moodgadget released Longlines, the debut full-length from Nitemoves. It is every bit the sci-fi odyssey I expected from Rory; but also so much more, with roaring drums loops and moody winding samples that seem to branch into various realms of dance and hip hop throughout the album. Still, despite the variety, everything works tremendously as a whole, making Longlines an early front runner on my favorite albums of 2012 list and proving Nitemoves to be a true "sound designer."

MP3: Nitemoves - Tertre Rouge
You can stream Longlines in full and snag it digitally via Moodgadget.

Untitled Rose Column #2: Suzi Analogue

It was a little over a year ago that I first stumbled upon the enigma that is Suzi Analogue and after one listen to her incredible NNXTAPE, I was hooked.  Her choices of samples for that tape were fantastic, from Lone and Black Milk to P.U.D.G.E. and Prefuse 73. The range was impressive enough, but the way she put everything together and added her own tricks and style to make such a massive, cohesive statement was what really sang. Well, that and her incredible voice. It's shocking to me that this 24 year-old Philly producer's name isn't on everyone's lips right now.

Digitally digging through Analogue's back catalog is like time traveling through space on a fluorescent rocketship. There's a million stars to pluck out of the ether, but it all comes together to paint the picture of an incredibly talented artist whose voice and focus is incredibly singular and dialed in.  Touchstones include the afrofuturism of Sun Ra or Parliament, but also the smoothness of Sade and rhythm of DJ Spooky cooked up in her own cybernetic cauldron. She's also collaborated with the likes of TOKiMONSTA (another incredibly underrated producer) and has connections to chief Afrikan Space Program Cosmonaut, Ras G.  Whether it's sub-busting synth basslines (see "Make Et (Like Sunday Morningg)"), hypnotic, swirling vocal melodies (see "Feeling That Eye"), or squashed beat exorcisms (see "Elle Dorado") - she is always adept at peeling back layer after layer, finding the most vulnerable spot for this music to infect you. It's fitting that her latest dose of Raw&B, (R)OSE (A)LWAYS (W)INS, carries the acronymn RAW with it. The robotic female voice in the title track sums it up perfectly when she says "Original music by Suzi Analogue. Tight." For sure.

For an artist who flew out of the gates with a set as great as the NNXTAPE, followed that up with her Analogue Monsta collab mixtape with TOKi, and has cemented her status in my mind as one of the most exciting hip-hop/soul/whatever producers around with (R)OSE (A)LWAYS (W)INS, I am dying to see and hear what's next because it's going to be unexpected, surely, but definitely exquisite.

Stream: Suzi Analogue - (R)OSE (A)LWAYS (W)INS


Stream: Uziklip - Jump Rope


Watch: Analogue Monsta - Time To

Hoarding Disorder

I recently fell in love with the tunes of Bristol-based dream-drone producer Ellen Davies, bka /please/. She describes her songs as "super angsty bedroom pop," and there's no denying the layers of angst and anxiety that seem to craft the tracks. The tricky thing is it doesn't come across as dark or angry, despite covering peers like Salem. Layers upon fuzzy layers build through the tracks creating a warmth that counteracts the downtrodden feeling of the performer. It's as if /please/ wants us to glimpse her thoughts, but also seeks to protect us from feeling the thoughts by burying them under luminescent sand. /please/ recently released a self-titled EP via Sewage Tapes. It's pretty short, so I'm gonna put some non-EP tracks from her soundcloud below, and you can pop over to bandcamp to listen to and download the EP for free.

MP3:
/please/ - Hoarding Disorder
/please/ - Get Away  Getaway
/please/ - Skullcrush (Salem Cover)

Premiere: Man Eating Sloth - Smacked By Monkeys

Man Eating Sloth is producer Gabe McFarland; a native Virginian and a longtime bedroom producer, he's currently studying at Radford University. Considering that he's chosen to name his first proper release Schitzengigz, I'm confident that Radford is in good hands. Having said that, Schitzengigz justifies itself in more than one ways. Constructed almost entirely out of sounds manipulated from samples or made from scratch, McFarland layers elaborate looped rhythms over synths, deliberately cultivating what he calls a "jungle on the moon" vibe. It comes via Virginian label and DIY arts collective Furious Hooves, who specialize in handmade and limited edition releases - by way of illustration, their tumblr documents how they homemade a stamp for the label's logo by whittling a pair of rubber hoof prints and encircling them with ink pressed by a roller skate wheel. Good people!

MP3: Man Eating Sloth - Smacked By Monkeys
Download Schitzengigz from the Furious Hooves bandcamp.

May 29, 2012

Kickin Out Windows

For the past five-or-so months I've been stuck on the pairing of Nacho Picasso's truly DGAF, say anything for a chuckle lyrical stylings and production duo Blue Sky Black Death's mix of futuristic synths and traptastic beats and samples. In September the trio dropped For The Glory, and then in January of this year they followed it up with Lord Of The Fly. Now the third in their series of mixtapes, Exalted, has finally arrived. Oh, and it delivers. Nacho's every word hangs on him essentially doing whatever he wants and truly not caring one bit what anyone thinks. He does such a good job of it that I've become enamored with his words time and time again. I often find myself saying rappers need more features on their albums, but Exalted has only one feature (Jeremy Cross on the chorus of "4th Of July") yet I never manage to get tired of it. Part of this is due to Nacho's infectious flow, but there's no denying that BSBD's production keeps it fresher than your fridge's crisper drawer. The duo have expanded on their sound  more with Exalted, creating something that feels just bit more tremendous than the previous two releases. The samples they choose help add some organic touches to their sci-fi synth patterns. The end result is something that impresses just as much as its predecessors and manages to go off just a little harder.

MP3: Nacho Picasso - Kickin Out Windows
Head over to bandcamp to stream the whole record and cop the digital for a mere $5.