Yellow Alex Presents: Lisa Lisa Lisa Video

Yellow Alex, the Los Angeles based musical experience, recently released a video for the song Lisa Lisa Lisa. Previously, I had the pleasure of interviewing Alex of Yellow Alex at a local Silverlake coffee shop. The group possess a high energy passion for their craft, and this shows immensely during their live performance.

The Lisa Lisa Lisa video gives viewers a taste of their choreographed dance moves coupled with musical styling inspired by classic funk and soul. I highly recommend seeing them live. Yellow Alex will be performing every Monday night at the Silverlake venue the Satellite during the entire month of January. Visit their website for additional dates and information.

How to Dress Well "& It Was U" Single

Brooklyn's very own '90s lo-fi R&B replicator, How to Dress Well, is slated to follow-up his stark 2010 debut album, Love Remains, with the release of Total Loss, out September 18th on Acéphale Records. This cut, "& It Was U", is the newest single, and if it's indicative of the rest of the album, the lo connected to that -fi is here to stay, albeit with a little more flare. This propulsive track is indebted to the style of the golden age of R&B - the Age Ain't Nothing But a Number days - and contains a similar swing to R. Kelly's early production work. "& It Was U" grows wider and crisper as it progresses, slowly picking up scraps of R&B nostalgia with every snap beat, while Tom Krell continues to one-up himself vocally - reaching higher and higher with each rotation. 

Check out How to Dress Well on tour this fall. Dates here.

Here's the previously released cut from Total Loss, "Cold Nites".

Holy Other "Held"

 

 

  

After the success of last year's exceptional EP, With U, and extensive touring with like-minded labelmates Balam Acab and oOoOO, the shroud of mystery surrounding Manchester-based Holy Other is slowly beginning to diminish. The still nameless R&B-influenced vocal splicer, known for his emotional slow burns and cloak-covered live appearances, has preferred to remain in the shadows of his dreamy beats. He only recently has begun participating in interviews and the first photo of the artist's face was unveiled just last week, along with the opportunity to stream his debut full-length album, Held, out now on Tri-Angle records. Even with all this new information on the man behind the music, the mystique has remained intact. Not that any of that matters once you get lost in Holy Other's brand of lustful, haunted pop. With U has a decidedly nocturnal, urban atmosphere and Held continues this trend with nine tightly constructed tracks that are as spectral as they are sensual.

Holy Other's catalogue spans no more than 30 tracks, but contains some of the sexiest and most affecting music committed to record. All of this is achieved without a single verse or chorus – hell, even discernible lyrics for that matter. A dark labyrinth of smoky beats and often unintelligible, circulating croons, the crisp and cold Held is no exception to this accomplishment. Holy Other's M.O. is familiar: a lurching, moody beat shrouded with splintered vocal samples that create a tension similar to the juke-influenced Sully - but with an effortlessly captivating force that has no contender. This may seem like an overdone formula in a world where R&B seems to be skewed in all directions, but in Holy Other's hands, the formula creates haunted love songs that creep under your skin and inhabit the dark corners of your mind. Each ghostly vocal pitch-shift strikes just the right nerve to evoke so much more than lyrics ever could. Even through the icy darkness Holy Other crafts, there's a warmth that can be felt, but only at a distance. Like recalling a night of passion with a former lover, the memory has the power to both hurt and comfort you. Held, even with its lack of appropriate lyrics, captures this feeling of love found and love lost, almost acting as a breakup record, a makeup record, and everything in between.

 

 

"Know Where" from 2011's With U EP 

 

Post Apocalyptic LA: A Kill the Noise Mike Diva Music Video

Producer, DJ, and entrepreneur Kill the Noise (Jake Stanczak) recently collaborated with filmmaker Mike Diva in order to visually embody the essence and tone of Jake's forward thinking sound. The music video contains a grindhouse sort of theme to it and focuses on a post apocalyptic Los Angeles in the year 2054 when "a bio-mechanical virus called 'the noise' has turned most of humanity into bloodthirsty drones".

Armed with keyboard automatic weapons and jambox rocket launchers, the video game esq players fight off zombies to get to the main boss. Take a look at the video below and Jake's write up in Rolling Stone

 

Yellow Alex and the Feelings

 

About a year a half ago I saw Yellow Alex and the Feelings perform at an art opening in Hollywood. From the moment their performance began, I was completely enthralled by the high energy group. Their timeless funk and soul inspired sound was perfectly married to choreographed dance moves and positive vibes. In the current music climate, it was refreshing to see a band put so much thought and detail into all of the individual aspects of their performance. The show stimulated a multitude of the various human senses and emotions. It was one of the best live performances I had ever seen. Recently, I used the vortex of social media to connect with Alex Gedeon of Yellow Alex and the Feelings. The result was a sit down in Silverlake to discuss himself and the group.

 

TNC: What influenced you to pursue music?

Alex: I first started playing guitar when I heard the bass line to Under the Bridge by Red Hot Chili Peppers at the age of 10. I could see Flea's fingers moving in the video, and it became very clear to me that I was responding emotionally to the bass.

So I got a guitar because it was cheaper than a bass, and I started using just the first four strings. I got the book to the album BloodSugarSexMagik and began learning all of the bass lines on the guitar. I was like "wow this is so funky and cool", and I was done getting a handle on that by the time I was 12 or so. So then I started looking at the guitar parts, and I started seeing how simple the guitar parts were and realized this is why the bass lines sound so good -- because John Frusciante is only playing one note.

Then I became really fascinated that Flea was this wild and in-the-spot-light superstar, but there was this other guy that was, in my mind, putting all of the emotional color behind what was happening. I thought that was the secret to why it sounded so good. My fascination was how one sound supports the other sounds in an arrangement. The supporting actor makes the lead actor more interesting to watch. This is a selfless function in music-making and it is endlessly fascinating to me.

Other influences are Jimi Hendrix, Prince, Depeche Mode, Nile Rodgers & Chic, Talking Heads, and Brian Eno.

 

TNC: What Other Instruments do you Play?

Alex: Guitar is really my instrument and the only instrument I can communicate through. The other stuff, such as the keys, I can fake. My main thing is writing bass lines, but I still don't really have the strength to play bass properly.

 

Photo courtesy of Koury Angelo Photography

 

TNC: Could you talk about forming your current band Yellow Alex and the Feelings and what you were looking for in the members?

Alex: I had played in a band in New York called Trick & the Heartstrings, and we were doing pretty well. In 2007, I left that band and it was kind of a dramatic split.

I moved back to LA and had kind of a rough year sleeping on my mom's couch and trying to get a solo project together. I had all these label people that had been interested in my band. They were interested to see what I could do by myself. So I started recording by myself, but I didn't realize that I had put myself into a tremendous pressure situation with worrying about what these people with money are going to think. I was still making good stuff but it was coming from an askewed place emotionally.

But I eventually made the demo, and it was great. It was called Emotionals, the first EP I put out by myself. I mixed the whole thing in the parking lot of Ralph's supermarket on La Brea and 3rd. I would get off of work as a bartender and start mixing at 3 AM in my mom's car. I would plug my computer into the audio input of the car and just blast it until the sun came up. I finished the album and it didn't get quite the response that I wanted. This was because before I left New York, my band had crazy momentum and that's really what the label people were attracted to. I didn't understand that. So I had sunk a lot of time, money, and effort into this project and I was a little artistically heartbroken. After that I didn't really do anything for about six months.

Finally, I felt like performing again. I had this very deep sense of purpose to give myself another chance to feel what it was like to make my own music and share it in front of people. In terms of attracting the people I wanted to work with, I just tried to make the most obvious and visceral decisions with people. My friend Daniel, the ex-bass player in my current band, was one of the initiating forces of the band. From the original line up, it is just me and the two singers. Kim, the keyboard player, came in shortly after and our drummer and bass player joined this past year. It has really only taken shape this past summer.

The main purpose of doing this was not to on focus how things looked but how things feel. I wanted to create a certain type of feeling and energy in the audience. It's all about wanting to connect with people in a specific type of way in a performance setting.

 

 

TNC: Is creating that feeling with the audience the driving symbolism behind the name of the band?

Alex: Yeah! As an emotional thing but also as in "everything you sense that is not coming in through your eyes".

 

TNC: Earlier you alluded to funk being a large influence on your sound. What genre would you place your music in?

Alex: If I was forced to pick one genre, I would pick Soul. I just like the name. It is the best genre name out of all of them. The soul is the non-material part of your self.

I like pop music from all eras and even today's pop music. I like the song writing in pop music and the catchiness and hooks. I like the simplicity of it. This is why I like Depeche Mode and Madonna. I like female pop singers like Gwen Stefani. Things that connect to the 14 year-old girl inside of me.

Sometimes I think of a catchy chorus as sort of an emotional cheap shot. That is the phrase I always think of. It's like "go on and take a nice sucker punch to my face". Sometimes a song can have a good hook and be a shitty song, but it gets stuck in your head and that really sucks. But the really good songs twist the knife in your heart.

I'm always working against my own intellect as a writer and as an artist. I try to get out of my head and out of my own way. One way to achieve this is to enjoy a simple melody. That can really can be about as un-intellectual as it gets. There is an escape in melodies, and I like how bass lines and melodies dance together.

 

Photo courtesy of Koury Angelo Photography 

 

TNC: One important aspect of your group's show is the choreographed dance moves. Can you talk about integrating them into your performance and the overall significance of them?

Alex: In pop music and R&B, choreography is pretty ubiquitous--and it was especially so in the 80s. I feel that because of the age I am, the music that came out in the early 80s is the deepest in my sub-conscious mind. When I think of Prince and David Bowie's presentation, it is just fun to me. For me, it is all about the heightened performance.

Once you start doing choreography in front of a group of people, you have immediately upped the stakes and raised the bar on what people are expecting you to do. I like the pressure of that and it just creates another opportunity to communicate something to an audience in a live setting. It is beyond the writing and the emotional connection of the performance. There is now a visual aspect.

I've heard people say that when we start doing choreography, people immediately feel like it's ok for them to move and dance. As soon as they see us moving, they kind of relax and think "ok, this is going to be something silly so it doesn't really matter what I do". That is the main purpose of the performance. There is nothing I want to see more than seeing a bunch of people dancing.

We all come up with the dance moves together. As we work together more, we are coming up with more choreography. We are still at the beginning of our process. I want the show to become more theatrical and more involved. I don't mean by using lights or props, I mean by becoming more physically engaged and more emotionally charged.

 

Photo courtesy of Koury Angelo Photography 

 

TNC: Being in a band in the traditional sense, what are your thoughts on the current prominance of DJ culture?

Alex: I love DJs. I love going out and dancing to house music. I've learned so much about music through DJs. I used to work at APT, which was sort of a musical nexus point in New York City for a long time. I just encountered so many great DJs there that hit me with so much great music. Particularly Rich Medina, Bobbito, and a house DJ named Neil Aline.

The tricky thing about DJ culture is that it is still emerging as an art form, and it may take a little while for people to catch up to it and wrap their heads around it. It's definitely an art form and ten years ago I couldn't have imagined it as an art form. You couldn't have explained it to me.

However, from an art perspective, a collage is a piece of art and music selection, at a certain point, with a certain amount of architecture to the choices, becomes an art form. It doesn't matter that it is other people's art. You are making a new statement.

You can trace the point that house music came from disco. In the late 70s, there was Larry Levan and the Paradise Garage downtown New York music scene. At that time, DJ's were creating the first breaks with two record players, but all the instrumentation was still organic.

For me personally, the excitement of our group is that there is barely anything electronic happening. Basically, it all could have been done in the late 60s. But that's where my musical soul and spirit comes from as a musician, and I am simply doing what is obvious to me. However, if I had two turn tables, I would want to spin some house music.

 

TNC: Can you talk about your latest single Lisa, Lisa, Lisa?

Alex: I had the hook of the song, because I am a hook fisherman and I'm always fishing for hooks, before I knew anybody named Lisa. I was struggling to write lyrics because I was trying to write a story around a hook and it wasn't happening. So it sat there for a while and then this girl popped into my life and we had this really mysterious night. Then I literally filled in the blanks of the song from what actually happened.

We just went out and she had a boyfriend, but it was clear that there was admiration. It was a very civil and polite situation. But I took what happened and put it into the rest of the song.

 

 

TNC: Is that generally your writing process? Starting with the hook and going from there?

Alex: That is really annoying to me actually when it happens. I prefer content first and then form. Its annoying when form comes first, because you may not have any content that fits that musical thing [the hook]. Because I'm into soul and an emotional response, sometimes I have to let go of that aspect [starting with the hook] and tell myself "maybe that the song could be about something else, something lighter".

 

TNC: Where do you want to take the band as things progress?

Alex: I really want to travel the world performing with this group to keep honing the live show and the live material by playing bigger and better places. I love performing, and this group of people that I'm working with has such a great, genuine feeling between everybody. I'm pretty much in love and want to make sure I do everything to keep the relationship right.

I want to keep putting out records and to make cultural events in LA. We are going to do the Yellow Disco at the end of the summer and that will be a monthly disco party. You have to create the culture of what you want to see. What I want to see is performances like we do, and I want to see an extraverted, fun, silly sort of atmosphere in culture that is not so consumed with being cool. Something that can be cool in an innocent way, in the way being cool was in the 50s.

I want our reach to be global, but I really want to create something awesome in LA that sticks around for at least ten years. In a good club scene, there starts to be a familial energy around it. It's not about how old you are or what you look like or how you dress. It becomes a place you want to go to, where you feel like you belong, and that's what it's all about.

 

Photo courtesy of Koury Angelo Photography

 

TNC: As a Los Angeles native, can you talk about the evolution of the local music scene as you've seen it?

Alex: I'm pretty excited about the potential for the music scene in LA right now. I'm also excited about what I feel like I can contribute to it. A lot of the work I've done over the years has started to pay off and bear fruit. I love going out in LA. I love places like the Echo and Townhouse in Venice. Silverlake and other areas are becoming gentrified, but when you go out you still feel a very native vibration coming through.

We are clearly at a very transitive and dynamic period in history and anything can happen with the culture scene around it. I would love to contribute something positive and be part of a nurturing atmosphere for artists in LA. I've been working with Carlos Nino, a DJ on KPFK and a music producer our here, and he is part of a music scene on the west side and Santa Monica that I'm really excited about. I love everything that's happening there.

LA is so big and if there is a good thing going on, it will eventually pull good things towards you. It just takes more time in LA. In New York, you find your scene in an area and stick to it. There is always going to be this dark specter of the entertainment industry in LA that will fuck up good art, but I'm from LA and I love it, and know that good things will keep blooming here.

 

Along with his work with the Feelings, Yellow Alex has released his own solo record. Take a listen below.

 

 

Be sure to check out Yellow Alex and the Feelings at Boardner's in Hollywood on February 22nd! There will be free entry before 10:30PM with the flyer below.

 

Overlooked and Underappreciated: 2011 Music Videos Pt. 1

Here's a look at some of the overlooked and underappreciated music videos of 2011. From the bizarre kidnapping game in Cults' "Abduction", to Hourglass Sea's dysfunctional samurai family, to the haunting and emotionally charged masterpiece for Youth Lagoon's "Montana"; these 20 artists stretch their budgets in a big way to create breathtaking visuals that put the "Super Bass-es" of the world to shame. Even if this will forever be known as the year when the universe allowed "Friday" to become one of the highest viewed YouTube videos, we will still be able to fondly look back at some of these winners.

(In alphabetical order)

Chllngr "Ask For" from Haven

 

Com Truise "Broken Date" from Galactic Melt

 

Cults "Abducted" from Cults

 

Esben & the Witch "Warpath" from Violet Cries

 

Fleet Foxes "The Shrine/An Argument" from Helplessness Blues

 

Frank Ocean "Nocacane" from Nostalgia/Ultra mixtape

 

Grimes "Vanessa" from the Darkbloom split EP

 

Hourglass Sea "L.A. Lights"

 

Holy Other "Know Where" from With U

 

 

Lana Del Rey "Born to Die" from upcoming Born to Die

 

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Overlooked and Underappreciated: 2011 Music Videos Pt. 2

M83 "Midnight City" from Hurry Up, We're Dreaming


Memory Tapes "Yes I Know" from Player Piano

 

Mount Kimbie "Carbonated" from Crooks & Lovers

 

Sleigh Bells "Rill Rill" from Treats

 

 

Timber Timbre "Black Water" from Creep on Creepin' On

 

Warpaint "Warpaint" from The Fool

 

The Weeknd "The Knowing" from House of Balloons

 

Youth Lagoon "Montana" from The Year of Hibernation

 

Young Man "Enough" from Ideas of Distance

 

Zola Jesus "Vessel" from Conatus

Palm Sized Analog: the Korg Monotron Trifecta

 

In our current digital age, there remains a large population of individuals that posses a specific nostalgia for the richer sound of analog music. They also have a certain love for the classic designs and the feel of vintage analog music making machines.

With this in mind, Korg has released three hand held analog devices: the monotron, the monotron duo, and the monotron delay. Korg initially released the monotron some time ago, but recently rounded out the trio with the duo and delay. Each of the hand held, battery powered synthesizers feature a ribbon keyboard, five knobs, and a single switch. Take a look at the videos below showing off the features of each of the synths.  

 

 

 

Referenced from: I have Synth

Kraftwerk's Kling Klang Machine No1

German electronica pioneers Kraftwerk have recently collaborated with Norman Fairbanks to develop an iPad/iPhone app called the Kling Klang Machine No1. The concept behind the music generator seems to be centered around the location of the user on the planet. Another aspect of this app that sets it apart is the fact that the Kling Klang Machine is constantly being fed updated data instead of being based on pre-programmed algorithms. These are the features:

1. World Time Zone Map: 24 hours automated music

2. Interactive Control: Bidirectional cross line: tempo and tune of sound; Zoom: room - sound – effect; Save: 2 memory locations for control settings; Reset: All settings back to default

3. MATRIX: Auto: Matrix sequence – variation after 16 steps; Loop: 16 step sequence in a loop; Clear: Clear matrix; Save: 2 memory locations for sequencer

4. MIXER: Direct access to all parameters through direct controls; Save: 2 memory locations for controller settings; Reset: All settings back to default

Take a look at the video and download it here for $8.99.

 

Denzinger Design ad on Kevin Smith's Smodcast Internet Radio

Kevin Smith, writer/director turned podcasting internet personality, recently launched his own internet based radio network called SIR (Smodcast Internet Radio). The architect of the cult films Clerks, Mallrats, Chasing Amy, Dogma, and Zach and Miri Make a Porno; my personal Kevin Smith favorites; started the original Smodcast podcast several years ago with his film producer Scott Mosier. Because of the Smodcast's success, Kevin added several more podcasts to his empire, most notably Jay and Silent Bob Get Old with Kevin's Jay to his Silent Bob (Jason Mewes) co-hosting.

In May of 2011, Kevin Smith segwayed his efficacious podcasting into opening the 24 hour a day online stream for SIR. To celebrate the launch of SIR, the neophyte network was offering two minute live reads on one of their new shows for an incredible introductory price.

I took advantage of this opportunity and a Denzinger Design ad was read on Friday morning, May 27th. The ad aired during the show Plus One Per Diem and was read by Kevin Smith and his wife, Jennifer Schwalbach. The episode containing the ad can be downloaded on iTunes and streamed from the Plus One Per Diem website. Below is the sound bite for the ad. Have a listen.

 

DenzingerDesign SIR Ad by Denzinger Design

Adult Swim and Kia present 10 singles in 10 weeks

Last year Cartoon Network's Adult Swim, in partnership with KIA, launched a singles series called 8 singles 8 weeks. Every Monday for eight weeks, they would release a never before heard track on their website. Some of the tracks included in the 2010 series are Cults "Oh My God", Washed Out feat. Caroline Polachek "You and I", and an original Holy Ghost! Adult Swim remix of LCD Soundsytem's "Drunk Girls".

This series returns this year a little more ambitious with 10 tracks in 10 weeks. The 2011 series began with the release of Ford & Lopatin's "Too Much MIDI (Please Forgive Me) on Monday, June 6th and will end July 26th. Some artists included in this new series are Best Coast, Mastodon, The Rapture and also previously DD'd jj (collaborating with Ne-Yo) and Active Child.

Single #1 Ford & Lopatin "Too Much MIDI (Please Forgive Me)"

2010 single Cults "Oh My God"

Active Child releases "Playing House" Feat. How To Dress Well

"This aint no bedroom recording!"

L.A. up-and-comer turned all star Active Child dropped the first single today for his upcoming debut full length You are All I See, out August 23 on Vagrant Records. "Playing House" features Active Child's well known harp skills and crystalline synth lines, with guest vocals from How To Dress Well's R&B-minded Tom Krell. This smooth jam displays more swagger than you can shake a stick at, and these boys are getting plenty of shakes. Don't believe me, just visit Active Child's facebook - homeboy's been getting blown up all day.

You Are All I See is the follow-up to 2010's out of nowhere and completely irresistible Curtis Lane EP. After extensive touring with groups like the trio-turned-duo and Vagrant label mates School of Seven Bells, Patrick Grossi, A.K.A. Active Child, gained a strong following and a record deal. After wrapping up a tour with the UK's electro output James Blake, the self-proclaimed "hymntronic" artist announced the release of the single yesterday to the great anticipation of many. If You Are All I See is anything like the evocative and haunting sounds of Curtis Lane, it's sure to make many end of the year top record lists.

You can stream the silky new track over at Pitchfork.

Here's some tracks from Active Child's Curtis Lane.

"She Was A Vision"

 

"I'm In Your Church At Night" music video

 

Now that the Smoke has Cleared: Judgement Day Art

Since the dawn of man, we have used the tools in our environment to depict images of the Gods believed to have created us and renderings of some sort of afterlife. The Last Judgement by Hans Memling, created during the 15th century, is a classical example of a painting portraying the Christian's end of the world belief in the rapture. 

In modern times, Harold Camping falsely predicted that the rapture would transpire on May 21st of this year. This marked his third wrong prediction (according to wikipedia). As stated before, THIS gallery, located in the Highland Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, celebrated "Judgement Night" on the night of May 20th with a one night art show. I had the opportunity to attend the event.

I would have to describe the motif of the show as a guide to post-apocalyptic survival. The first things visible in the gallery were haunting ski masks and nail-ridden baseball bats. The harshness of the Mad Max-esq baseball bat weapons were contrasted with images of colorful butterflies. The back wall of the gallery featured more zombie killing, end of time era weapons constructed of twisted metal, broken glass, rusted steel, and splintered wood.

 

 

The armageddon themed event also contained a wall of mostly geometric, grey scale artwork. A few of these pieces seemed to have slightly ambiguous cosmic undertones to keep with the tone of the night.

 

 

The final region of the show incorporated a fantastic collage containing images of the occult, S&M, voodoo, and a lone picture of Johnny Cash.

 

 

THIS gallery had recently been invaded by the French street artist Invader with a red, white and blue mosaic piece.

 

 

Lastly, the event was scored with two turntables by the awesomely eccentric punk rock icon Keith Morris. Keith is the original lead singer and founding member of Black Flag before Henry Rollins took the reins. He also leads the rowdy and raucous punk bands the Circle Jerks and, most recently, OFF!

I was slightly too awkward to snap a picture of Keith DJing so I'm going to impart his presence with YouTube videos. Below are two of OFF!'s official music videos released for their first album. The second video was filmed in a downtown Los Angeles warehouse/arts complex that hosted one of the best art shows that I have been to on the west coast. Another event that Keith Morris provided the sounds for.

 

 

Even though the "Judgement Day" weekend proved to be the uneventful psychobabble of an elderly religious weirdo, THIS Gallery embraced the opportunity to put on a hell of a party and art show. Also, the event provided excellent inspiration for home made weapons to use during the zombie apocalypse. 

Björk offers glimpse to "Biophilia" project.

The Biophilia Hypothesis, in a nutshell, is that everything is connected - all living systems are bonded. Björk, being the closest thing to an actual nymph we have, is set to release a technology and organic influenced multimedia album, entitled Biophilia, sometime this year.

Björk has always been one to set the curve, and finally technology has caught up with her genius. The partly recorded album was developed in collaboration with Apple and creative team mate Michel Gondry, and is said to be released in installments as a series of apps as the world's "first app album."

The first glimpse of the music from Biophilia, came with the release of the ipad app "Solar System". The app is an interactive 3D eBook written by award-winning author and journalist Marcus Chown. "Solar System" is based on real scientific data and is accompanied by a horn-heavy instrumental track, reminiscent of Björk's earlier releases, such as the evocative "Overture" from Selmasongs

The official unveiling of tracks from Biophilia will occur during Björk's performances at the third Manchester International Festival from June 30th to July 17th. Björk has said that the live performance will be a "meditation on the relationship between music, nature and technology"

The first official app single to be released, which is hinted at in the video below, is "Crystalline".

Visit Björk's revamped website here

"Road to Crystalline"

"Solar System"

Beirut "East Harlem/Goshen" single

Wanderlust sufferers Beirut, led by New Mexico native and musical prodigy Zach Condon, are set to release a new album sometime this year. In preparation for this release they have a new single dropping Monday, June 6th. The two track single is by no means completely fresh material. The A-side track "East Harlem" has been in circulation in Beirut's live set for some time now. Written when Zach Condon was "17...I think", "East Harlem" is a horn-heavy upbeat toe-tapper that could have been the bridge between 2009's outstanding split March of the Zapotec/Holland EP. The album's B-side, "Goshen", is a little more subdued and emotional.

Beirut is currently on tour in support of their upcoming release. You can purchase the new East Harlem/Goshen single, along with other releases, and check out tour dates here.

"East Harlem" 

Live footage of Beirut performing a solo piano version of "Goshen"

DJ Shadow drops music video for "I Gotta Rokk"

On May 10th, the man who single-handedly put Instrumental Hip Hop on the map with the critically acclaimed 1996's Endtroducing..., announced that his long-awaited new LP The Less You Know, the Better is completed and scheduled to drop in September. That same day he released a digital download of remixed tracks from TLYKTB, which will be the follow up to 2006's not-so-acclaimed and all over the place The Outsider. These tracks, released as I Gotta Rokk EP, mark yet another shift in his sound. Here's the music video for the title track of the EP. It's definitely missing the soul and bangin' mentality of his earlier work that changed the game for hip hop production, but stays true to his hip hop roots unlike The Outsider's frenetic set up. 

Pick up the I Gotta Rock ep along with DJ Shadow's other releases here.

"I Gotta Rokk" music video:

 

Zomby's upcoming "Dedication" LP now streaming at Disco Naivete

"Things Fall Apart" Feat. Noah Lennox  

The U.K.'s grimy dubstep underlord Zomby is back! Now signed to musical mashup label 4AD Records, Zomby is preparing to release the follow-up to 2008's rave boogie Where Were U in '92 with the cleaner and crisper 2011's Dedication. Dedication is now streaming over at Disco Naivete and right from the start you can hear that he's turned up his swagger and is looking forward, not back, like on his acclaimed '92 break out. The first glimpse of Dedication we received was the glittering collaboration with Noah Lennox (A.K.A. Panda Bear), "Things Fall Apart", posted here.

 

Timber Timbre "Creep on Creepin' on"

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"Bad Ritual"    

"Creep on Creepin' on"

When my brother and I were young we used to always get a kick out of scaring ourselves, and each other. We would intentionally fool ourselves into thinking things were more sinister than they actually were and would hide from one another, lurking in the shadows, waiting for the perfect moment of silence to burst out and send the other off screaming. We've both always been fascinated with everything related to horror: the films; the scores; the sound effects - all of it.

When we got a little older, we found an old tape of spooky haunted house noises that was full of cauldrons bubbling, witches cackling, werewolves howling, and victims screaming. It was a decade old and a little cheesy, but there were times when it had the potential to cause our skin to crawl. Since we were weird kids, we naturally listened to it all the time. I remember sitting in his truck late one night listening to that tape and thinking to myself how amazing it would be if someone could use the sounds we both feared and loved as the backdrop of an actual album. Timber Timbre's Creep on Creepin' on is that album - a fully realized childhood dream (or nightmare, rather) come to life.

 Helmed by multi-instrumentalist Taylor Kirk, Timber Timbre's roots are in stripped down, bleak, and eerie folk and blues. A shift in sound occurred in 2009 when Canadian music visionaries Kevin Drew (of Broken Social Scene) and Jeffrey Remedios signed Timber Timbre to their label, Arts & Crafts Production, just prior to the release of their larger sounding self-titled third album. With the saxophone support of musical helping-hand and Arcade Fire side man Colin Stetson; Timber Timbre's Taylor Kirk, Simon Trottier, and Mika Posen set out to create an even larger and more atmospheric portrait of swampy and sinister Americana. The result: the bubbling and brimming starkness of 2011's Creep on Creepin' on.

Breaking away from his earlier Randy Newman delivery and adopting a more snarl-and-warble '50s rock 'n' roll sound more akin to Jerry Lee Lewis, Taylor Kirk has a swagger on this album that was missing before. His stutter-to-smooth flow compliments the down tempo doo-wop key strokes in the albums hypnotic stand out "Woman". The folk twang and screaming samples in "Too Old to Die Young" give way to Kirk's newly found growling bravado to create a sinister anthem that slowly unfolds into a bluesy love song in it's latter string-laden half. This track embodies the tone of the album, mixing sounds in a bewildered state of subdued mania. 

There is a haunting sense of forlorn fearfulness within Creep on Creepin' on, which is expressed on both "Woman" and "Too Old to Die Young", but most overtly in the zombie romance "Lonesome Hunter", which sounds strikingly like Arcade Fire in the Funeral years. Falling back on the throaty Newman delivery from their earlier albums, Taylor Kirk slowly sputters "Sparrows at your window/ Starlings at your door/ Magpies wherever we go/ Is it blackbirds forever more?" in a brooding aw-shucks fashion. 

 The sonics of Creep on Creepin' on rely deeply on atmosphere and negative space, maintaining a contrast between harrowing cacophony and murky orchestrations - displayed perfectly in the albums creepy instrumental intermissions "Obelisk" and "Swamp Magic". The addition of saxophonist Colin Stetson aids in this increase in foreboding as well, making Timber Timbre's blues a bit darker. With the addition of the sax the outro to the sullen love sick "Black Water" is made more dismal, the ending to the title track "Creep on Creeping on" is made more desolate, and the intro to "Woman" is made more ominous. 

The group developed the name Timber Timbre by combining the fact that their earliest recordings were made in a lumber cabin (timber) and the music term for distinguishing instruments and tone quality or tone color (timbre). Decidedly, Timber Timbre's tone color would have to be the blood-red-blues. These tracks are as sorrowful as they are sinister and they embody my childhood memories of the almost gleeful terror that sounds can elicit. 

"Woman" music video

"Black Water" music video

 

 

Africa Hitech "93 Million Miles"

Electronic music juggernauts Warp Records, known for such musical staples as Boards of Canada and Aphex Twin, have dropped a new bomb in the music world in the form of dub-drenched beat masterminds Africa Hitech. Their debut full length, 93 Million Miles, sounds as if it was recorded and pressed today. This is as fresh as it get in a music world dominated by nostalgia. Instead of looking to the past, the duos members, Steve Spacek and Mark Pritchard, are looking to the future. They've crafted a ragga rich, bass crazy epic of a dance album that pulls inspiration from reggae, hip hop, dancehall, and dub (with the occasional -step thrown in) to form a breed all its own.

The duo is the culmination of two electro hard-hitters who joined forces after their stint as instructors for the 2007 Red Bull Music Academy. Steve Spacek, known for not only his solo work, but also his work with such groups as the electronic-fusion of Spacek and the post-Dilla jams of Black Pocket. The other half of Africa Hitech, Mark Pritchard, has a different and incredibly varied musical background. He, along with Tom Middleton as Global Communication, created one of the most acclaimed ambient and electronic albums of the '90s, 76:14. He's also involved in countless other musical endeavours that are much different then his success in ambiance, such as the dirty dark beats of Harmonic 313. Steve Spacek and Mark Pritchard came together to meld their dominant styles together to form an inspired slice of ragga flow with a hip hop flavor.

93 Million Miles, with it's many inspiration and producers varying musical backgrounds, is a dense and challenging listen. The album spans 11 tracks, each one a sprawling display of genre bending madness. They utilize heavy amounts of repetition, with slight alterations to create a tightly knit track with little negative space to move around. There is a lot to hear in each of these songs. However pleasing it is track-to-track, the album as a whole can come across slightly bi-polar at times. The first half displays a fast-paced dark urban atmosphere; a more hip hop influenced sound. The latter half is more smooth with tropical undertones that's a little more ragga savy.

A good example of the multiple personality style of 93 Million Miles would be the comparison between the orchestral gang stomp and liquid bass line of "Do U Wanna Fight" and the smooth bongo-banging of another vocal-dominant song "Spirit". "Do U Wanna Fight", Africa Hitech's undeclared shout out to Major Lazer, opens with a sax-heavy intro that grinds into unintelligible vocals that are heavily manipulated and a beat that proves quite difficult to locate initially. This is a strong example of the hip hop mentality of these two creating a powerful urban sprawl of a song. "Spirit", however, displays a smoother and decidedly more natural tone. Softly delivered vocals cover the jungle sounds flowing in between the drums, both kettle and bongo. Both of these tracks are from opposite sides of the album, and they both display the trend of duality between the dark city front half and the bright jungle back half.

93 Million Miles' stand out "Out in the Streets" is a danchall dubstep banger that's backbone is formed by a layered Ini Kamoze vocal sample "out in the street" repeated incessantly, circulating through bass-crazy alternating beat cycles. Utilizing the solid structures heard throughout this album, this song is relentless with sound and gives no room to move around - creating a city claustrophobia that rivals that of the dirty beat doctor Babe Rainbow. This track in particular is an example of how with proper balance, all of their influences melded together can truly create an exciting listen. 

Throughout this album there are varied techniques and talents employed that are truly innovative and very now. The albums midway epic "Our Luv's" wavering synth work and vocal cyclone ending; the guttural bass line of "Footsteps"; and the Broken Spindles-esque "Cyclic Sun", with it's clicking metronome beat -each track uncovers a new layer in the city-soundscape-to-jungle-landscape narrative that is consistently challenging, but consistently rewarding as well. 

You can purchase Africa Hitech's Hitecherous EP and 93 Million Miles LP here.

Out In The Streets by Warp Records

Future Moves by Warp Records

Do U Wanna Fight by Warp Records