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FUR

Fri 22 Jan 2010

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fur.jpg

If you liked Washed Out, Neon Indian and Rebel Peasant, all of whom we posted on in 2009, here’s another artist to help curve your chilled out starvation. With the buzzy vibe of summer decorating his music, Bryce Isbell pulls together wavy synths and dulcet bass notes, creating what could be termed an easy listening version of the others more edgy, surfy, psychedelic sound.

In 2006 Isbell began writing and recording music under his own name and by late 2007 he had released 51 compositions; some were full-length albums others were EPs and collaborations. FUR didn’t officially begin until 2008 and was originally defined as a outlet for Isbell to advance his song writing skills, without boundaries and away from the live setting. The project became more electronic based, moving away from incorporating elements of folk music and softly becoming more spacious and breathtaking.

His output has slowed somewhat, but for the average band it is still impressive. FUR has four official releases in its discography (2008-2010), including The Downstairs Room, Blood EP (both self-released), Black Castles EP and Colorful People( both released on Secret Station Records). The song ‘Black Castles’, which appears on the Black Castles EP and on FUR’s forthcoming release Witches is a collaboration with Alan Palomo of Neon Indian.

Witches will be released on February 23 and it is FUR’s first release on the Waaga Records label. Isbell describes it as a “mellow-goth/ambient/experimental/electronic album”.

You can download the Blood EP and the Black Castles EP for free.

FUR- Tunnels: MP3

FUR- Black Castles: MP3

FUR- Myspace

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under Texas, U.S.A
No Comments

Harlem

Sun 10 Jan 2010

Shake It Up

Harlem

Incorporating the ecstasy prescribed by The White Stripes’ early raw blues-soaked rock and roll and the charming glow of ’60s pop warmed through vinyl, Harlem distills that glorious free spirit so many bands are chasing but so few have managed to pin down. Skewing their songs with love and heartache, their jangly party rock and roll anthems bubble with a ghetto trash punk aesthetic, with hooting and hollering through echoey vocal effects and shimmying, shattering drums. Even in their slower moments (’Sometimes’ and their cover of Royal Trux’s ‘Junkie Nurse’), there’s a frenetic quality inherent in the jovial drums and speedy guitar, and in even more introspective moments they can mimic the freak folk of contemporaries such as Grizzly Bear. But while they’re a multi-pronged act, it seems Harlem’s real spirit is in their party music. Their forthcoming debut album Hippies, slated for release in April on Matador, seems set to continue that party.

Harlem- South of France: MP3

Harlem- Friendly Ghost: MP3

Harlem- Myspace

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under Austin, Texas, U.S.A
No Comments

A Faulty Chromosome

Mon 19 Oct 2009

Down and Out in Austin, Texas

Eric Dalke from A Faulty Chromosome sent us a wonderful email last week, complete with a link to download his band’s new album and information about a pledge drive they’re doing to raise money to pay for making it. It’s great then that A Faulty Chromosome’s music is extremely good, spinning a cutesy pop buzz in line with The Unicorns, The Zookeepers and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah.

The four piece band from Austin, Texas make a kind of children’s music for restless adults, mixing casiotone keyboard bleeps, drum machine beats, fuzzy guitar drones and playful lyrics, complete with the excitement young boys get from rolling around in a muddy field and girls get from playing in the school sandpit. It’s smooth and ambient and for the most part moves at a gentle pace, being only occasionally interrupted by dialogue from an old black and white film and the odd collision of instruments.

Their new album (Craving To Be Coddled So We Feel Fake-Safe) has more of a playful vibe than their last (As An Ex-Anorexic’s Six Sicks Exit), which was heavy on drone and had less precarious keyboard parts. And it’s packed with pretty imagery and a sense of dreaminess, achieved by balancing the melodies and noise on par with each other. A Faulty Chromosome like to sound fuzzy and mysterious; it’s part of their charm, and it sets them apart from many other bands who achieve the sound by recording on lo-fi equipment.

Like a lot of musicians, making music full-time has made Eric and his band mates rather poor. Eric says he has been living off credit cards for the past year. So to try and raise the money to pay back all the people that have helped A Faulty Chromosome throughout the past year and to help promote their new album, the band is running a pledge drive over at the kickstarter website (a business set-up to help fund creative ventures). You can visit the site and pledge some money and in return you will be duly compensated. For example, if you pledge $10 you will receive an actual hard copy (CD) of the band’s new album, a limited edition badge/button and a hand-made thank you card; the more you pledge the more you get in return. Go take a look at the band’s pledge page and see for yourself. The only catch is that the band need to raise $5, 678 by November 11. Please help!

A Faulty Chromosome- Incubate’r: MP3

A Faulty Chromosome- Little Miracles: MP3

A Faulty Chromosome- Myspace

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under Texas, U.S.A
No Comments

St. Vincent interview

Tue 21 Jul 2009

Staying Healthy At All Times

After playing eight successive nights in a row, Annie Clark finally had a day off. She didn’t really want to be doing interviews on her one day off but she was kind enough to give me fifteen minutes of her time.

Annie Clark aka Texas born musician St. Vincent, is in high demand. Her second full-length album Actor has just hit the shelf and it’s already been hailed by many leading music critics as one of the best albums of the year. Right now she is mid-way through a massive world tour (including North America, Europe and the UK) in support of the album; she gets very little time to relax, but when she does she likes to sit down in front of the television. When I spoke to her she was on the front lawn at her sister’s house in Atlanta, tired and needing a good few hours to relax.

She has labeled her current tour ‘The Health and Fitness Tour’, with the aim of staying healthy and maintaining a sense composure to be able to perform night after night. Clark admits, just eight dates into the tour, that it’s been tough. “On multiple nights on this tour we’ve been up against Animal Collective playing in the same town.” Forget the economic crisis, that is just plain bad luck. But while on the road, she wants to remain as healthy as possible. Sitting in a car/van all day, most days, puts a lot of stress on the body, so Clark is making sure her band gets plenty of exercise. “We bought a bunch of balls and we’re exercising at truck stops,” she says. “I’m making the band run laps around the van.”

A few other bands have gone a step further with their healthy tour schedule, calling their entire tour a ‘green tour’, and encouraging fans to be as environmentally friendly as possible. Okkervil River even encouraged fans to bike to their shows. While Clark is very liberal (we shared a joke about Sarah Palin), she isn’t quite prepared to tackle the green tour just yet. “I wish I could, I’ve got a lot of friends doing the green tour. The thing that sort of grossed me out about the green tour, although it’s not that gross on the grand scheme of things at all, is my friends telling me about finding grease behind McDonalds and having to filter it through an old sweat sock.” She is referring to the process of gathering vegetable grease to use as fuel to power the band’s tour van.

“… I rented a bunch of movies from the Criterion Collection, a lot of Woody Allen, and I just scored some scenes from those films…”


The whole process for the current tour and the album Actor, started as a result of being exhausted after her last big tour. Returning home after a long tour in support of her debut album Marry Me, Clark had lost the drive to write music. To get back in the zone, she hired some of her favourite movies and started writing songs to fit with scenes in them. “It was really just a way to trick my brain into working. I rented a bunch of movies from the Criterion Collection, a lot of Woody Allen, and I just scored some scenes from those films and drew a lot of inspiration from that.”

“For the song ‘Marrow’ I was watching The Wizard Of Oz and I was watching Sleeping Beauty for the song ‘The Strangers’. There’s a lot more but there’s kind of too much detail to go into.” Clark recorded the basic structure for most of the songs on her Mac computer, using the programme GarageBand. “It was actually quite a silly painstaking process for me, because I couldn’t make any noise in my apartment. I had to do a lot of it through headphones. So what I would do was just draw, I wasn’t playing any instruments or anything. What I would do was just draw in notes until it sounded like I thought it should sound. There was a lot more mathematical thinking than musical thinking in making it.”

As a former member of psychedelic rock outfit The Polyphonic Spree, Clark has now put that well in her past. Her solo career has surpassed her previous band’s cult following and she is now one of the most recognised solo artists in the world. She may not be enjoying the attention so much, but having the opportunity to live off her music is very rewarding. She’s made some very dear friends along the way, including Amanda Palmer, whom Clark describes as “such a curious person and such an uncompromising artist,” and being in a band with one of her dearest friends, Daniel Hart, makes her musical experience all that much more enjoyable. She signs off with an apology for missing me the first few times I called, blaming her extremely busy tour schedule. Hopefully by the end of this tour, the health and fitness regime has worked and she won’t be too exhausted.

St. Vincent- The Strangers: MP3

 St. Vincent- Myspace

 

Posted by Nick Fulton under Texas, U.S.A
[5] Comments

Neon Indian

Sun 5 Jul 2009

Terminally Chill

 

I like that Neon Indian’s new song ‘Terminally Chill’ sounds like it’s straight out of a lesser-known Molly Ringwald film, and that their Brian Wilson-esque melodies are met with a scuzzy sort of ’80s production and dreamy, fucked up synths. The duo is comprised of a video artist from Brooklyn and a musician in Austin, and their new song suits its name to a tee. Particularly on a weather-fucked, hangover-ridden Sunday I can relate to feelings of wanting to just hole up and chill, and Neon Indian are a brilliant soundtrack to that vibe. Slacker pop the likes of a warped Pavement, but much more spaced out. Their album Psychic Chasms is out October 13 on Lefse Records.

Neon Indian- Terminally Chill: MP3

Neon Indian- Deadbeat Summer: MP3

Neon Indian- Myspace

 

Posted by Sarah Gooding under New York, Texas, U.S.A
No Comments

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