2/15/2009

Brakes Brakes Brakes - Touchdown [2009]

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1. Two Shocks 3:49
2. Don’t Take Me To Space (Man) 2:40
3. Red Rag 1:32
4. Worry About It Later 2:03
5. Crush On You 3:14
6. Eternal Return 2:32
7. Do You Feel The Same? 1:33
8. Ancient Mysteries 1:57
9. Oh! Forever 4:08
10. Hey Hey 2:18
11. Why Tell the Truth (When It’s Easier To Lie) 3:32
12. Leaving England 6:53


Release Notes:


The Brighton-based band, known as brakesbrakesbrakes in the US
and comprising members of British Sea Power and Electric Soft
Parade, are preparing to release ‘Touchdown’ in the US on
April 21.
.


The album features 12 songs including ‘Two Shocks’, Red Rag’
and ‘Worry About It Later’. It was recorded at Chem 19 studio
in Scotland with The Delgados’ Paul Savage in just one month


Crime In Choir - Gift Givers [2009]

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Described by Pitchfork Media as “an indie-prog monolith, blending intense mathrock spazz-outs with dense, dreamy melodies”, Crime In Choir have created a name for themselves among the ranks of prog-revivalists.


Intent on reinvigorating and updating the genre for today’s discriminating, post-everything indie-rock listener, Crime In Choir’s 4th album, “Gift Givers”, expands on the complex interweaving of melody, composition and sound-scape heard on 2006’s “Trumpery Metier”. “Gift Givers” brings a complex suite of six songs that harkens back to the golden age of prog while leaping infinitely forward in textures, composition and grace, making “Gift Givers” the penultimate progressive rock album that will forever be remembered.


“Gift Givers” was recorded by band member Matt Waters, mastered by Pete Lyman and will be released in early 2009 by Kill Shaman Records (U.S.) and Moorworks (Japan). “Gift Givers” is manufactered with 100% recylced paper eco-wallet sleeves and includes no plastic products.


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The Balky Mule - The Length Of The Rail [2009]

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Currently resident in Melbourne, Australia, The Balky Mule is the alias of Sam Jones, a highly talented, self-taught multi-instrumentalist, who over the past decade or more has been a key member of the vibrant Bristol post-rock scene, playing in numerous bands, both live or on records, including Movietone and Crescent (alongside his bandleader brother, Matt), Flying Saucer Attack, Minotaur Shock, and Third Eye Foundation. During this time The Balky Mules’ home-recorded releases have been confined to a handful of compilation tracks, remixes and tapes swapped among friends.


For his first solo set back in 2000, Sam was booked to open for Pram at the legendary Cube Cinema in Bristol. In a worrying stroke of luck for a first gig, the venue burned down the night before, cancelling his debut. The Cube recovered from the damage and the show with Pram was later rescheduled, with a line-up extended to include his brother Matt and Kate from Crescent and Movietone. Sporadic live shows in the years since have veered between analogue synth solos and songs sung to the accompaniment of Tom Cops’ (of My Two Toms) banjo, plotting a course between electronic instrumentals and acoustic songs. Other treasured helpers have included Francois Marry, George McKenzie, Naoto Kawate and Peter Emptage.


The name The Balky Mule encompasses all of Sam’s varied recordings over the last ten years. The majority of his output has been CD-Rs on request and tapes swapped among friends, although he has also recorded a handful of remixes (of Pram and Vase tracks) and songs for compilations, including one of his first ever tracks making an appearance on FatCat’s 2001 compilation, ‘No watches. No maps’, which comprised material sent in to the label as demos.


The Balky Mule’s debut self-titled album was released in a small edition on Sam and his brother’s own Archipelago label in 2000. Self-recorded either side of a move between the UK and Australia, The Balky Mule’s new album ‘The Length of the Rail’ is set for release on FatCat in March 2009.


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Various Artists - Radio Lunatica

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Tracklist (Disc I):01.Nikko Patrelakis-Acro Iris (Info Remix)02.Bombero Y Chica-Le Centre03.Sunset Blvd.-Loving You04.Risbaw-Older05.Mr.Leopold Bloom-Kapos06.Magnitophono-B With An (Atom Numb Remix)07.Eko Tiger-Seashell Reprize (Feat.Beatrice)08.Info-Two Roses09.Larry Gus-Girl You’re No Failure10.Your Hand In Mine-The Sluggish Postman11.Elica-Sfera12.Thelma Blankeship-Sick13.Monsieur Minimal-A Wish14.Echonomist-Lean On (Feat.Popnoname)15.The Havana Boys-Before We Get Started
Tracklist (Disc II):01.Chronik-Away From Everything (Feat.Nannou)02.Edwin James-Eastern Lights03.Tronik-Dodecyl Benzene04.Boc Scadet-Serpent Render05.Melorman-Two.Nine06.Dergar-Autumn Sunshine (She Is Closer To Me)07.Aris Dieser Zug Endet Hier08.Bertrand Lens-Enjoy09.Naono-Blurred Story Teller10.Kitephonics-Sunspots11.Airbus Modular-Craft12.Dtolio-Smell Of A Season13.Luumu- Swim Little Fish14.Subheim-Star Tears
…….with a French twist. I opened the post over breakfast: another three page epic from Danielle, a postcard from Brian Eno, and my dear friend Phillip had sent me that long-lost press release Boards Of Canada did prior to the release of “Music Has The Right To Children”. I filled a second cup of steaming cappuccino, light a cigarette, and made my way over to the window. Outside, on the rippled blue sea of Thessaloniki’s port, a tiny red fishing boat was making its way towards the marina…….above it, low diaphanous clouds drifted slowly into the farness of the blurred horizon. I was thinking that there’s no need to have someone beside you if you want him close. The woman that I’ll fall in love with is not here and I was always wrapped in foil-too weak to walk away. Color never loses it’s rights. The Saturday morning tranquility was suddenly broken by a low frequency bleep-bleep-bleep……it was the phone……it was she and sounded very worried. At that time a man with threatening present was haunting her sleep, having the scent of black pepper. That was when the fogs wake-up, with all that strange episodes of death and love. “Hello Keith, I’ve been speaking to the lawyers and they think that Future Sound Of London story is way too risky, especially the allegations you made about it’s private lives”. I smiled to myself and spoke softly into the cream-white phone: “Please don’t upset yourself because we’ve unearthed a rather fabulous Radio Lunatica article from an ancient Jazz magazine. So, what with Paul’s bit on indie football and that piece on girls in electronica, we don’t really need The Future Sound Of London story after all….And honestly, love, who’d be that interested in their little secrets anyway?” “Radio Lunatica”, I heard her mumble. “Um, hold on, I’ll just fax the lawyers” myspace

DM STITH - Heavy Ghost [2009]

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tracklist:1. Isaac’s Song - 1:382. Pity Dance - 4:213. Creekmouth - 4:104. Pigs - 4:545. Spirit Parade - 2:236. BMB - 2:437. Thanksgiving Moon - 3:598. Fire Of Birds - 5:139. Morning Glory Cloud - 3:5610. GMS - 2:3511. Braid Of Voices - 5:2612. Wig - 2:35
David Stith has always been pushing his creative limits. Having been raised in a musical family in Buffalo, New York, he grew up with sounds all around him, often slouched in the kitchen interpreting his family’s melodies into line drawings and poetry. Though a gifted musician from an early age, he remained silent for a long time, instead choosing to express himself through poetry and the visual arts—excelling in many modes of artistic expression. He’s wandered from Buffalo to Rochester to Brooklyn, where he became friends with Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond. In small technical ways (by providing a computer with ProTools, a space to record demos, and gallons of coffee to accompany wandering conversations about her songs), David began helping her record her album Bring Me The Workhorse. Shara was astounded to learn that he also possessed an innate talent for working in the studio.
By spending more and more time recording, David began to rekindle his passion for his first familial love: music. Something within him caught alight, and he began spending countless days stored away in his bedroom, sketching folk songs with epic electronic gestures, grappling with his inner demons, trying to capture his observations of the world with his music. His sustained period of silence, of gestation, of contemplation, was finally over. He continued cultivating his musical compositions privately—until one day Shara introduced David to his doppelganger, Sufjan Stevens, co-operator of Asthmatic Kitty Records. After hearing only two of his songs, Asthmatic Kitty coaxed David to record an album of his own for release.
Now with the release of Heavy Ghost, David is putting his inexplicable visions to song. A true artistic entrepreneur, David spent a year writing, arranging and recording, performing nearly all of the music on Heavy Ghost—even creating all of the album’s artwork—resulting in an intensely personal masterwork that exposes his own conflicted spirituality and his drive to find a place in which he belongs. In addition to coming from a musical family, David was also brought up in an intensely religious family, and much of his artistic struggle has been trying to reconcile his emerging sense of ethics with that of his church’s identity. Finding a spiritual host for himself—without repressing or discrediting any part of himself—is the central struggle that his music addresses.
Musically, Heavy Ghost is as dense as it is transparent, taking listeners through a tumultuous narrative of self-discovery with its rich and daring orchestration. In the opening track, “Isaac’s Song,” a torrent of piano slams, shouts, machine-gun snare, and ghostly harmonics evoke the biblical story of Abraham—when God called upon him to sacrifice his son Isaac on Mount Moria, testing him to see if he would be willing to make the highest sacrifice in order to appease the God he so loves and fears. In the context of Heavy Ghost, this reference introduces the album as a sort of sacrifice, as an offering. In “Pity Dance,” the lilting guitar of Violeta Parra, the over-saturated production of Tom Waits, the dark choirs of The Shangri-Las, and the speak song of Randy Newman all serve to support a sense of lyrical self-awareness that is alternately confounding and thrilling. No longer can the artist simply ignore or suppress the parts of himself “that he doesn’t like” in order to be accepted by his spiritual community; these parts must either be completely embraced or exhumed. But first these elements must be confronted. Heavy Ghost continues along the route of confrontation and purification, reaching a frenzied breaking point with “Spirit Parade,” in which David performs a sort of musical exorcism on himself. Full of visceral, percussive elements, otherworldly wails, and a humming motif that echoes an African-American spiritual, Spirit Parade gives thrilling nods to haunting mysticism. After this track, the tone of the album begins to gradually settle into a realm of peaceful resolution. In “Morning Glory Cloud,” David Stith begins to leave his previously tortured persona behind, embarking on a journey of self-acceptance and atonement.
Lyrically and conceptually, David Stith explores the ineffable. “Morning Glory Cloud” captures a mysterious and rare rolling cloud formation, connecting it to memories of playing hide and seek while growing up in the Rust Belt. In “Fire of Birds,” David connects seemingly disparate experiences: being awakened one morning by what sounds like the neighbors speaking with fire; a memory of being burned by fireworks as a child; following a friend through the rain in the woods in the middle of the night to fix a water collection system; the story of Isaac burning and somehow finding a new body. Throughout the album, the concepts of water and fire are continually contrasted and expounded upon. Fire as menacing and rejected romantic passion in “BMB” is transmuted into joyous and liberating fire in “Fire of Birds;” the foreboding, melancholic clouds of rain in “Pity Dance” become cleansing, empowering watery visages in Pigs—the track that sets up the jaunting sacrificial rite in “Spirit Parade.” Heavy Ghost communicates a startling range—from earnest yearning to heartbreak, shimmering hopefulness to the brink of existential despair. David Stith’s ethereal voice communicates the unfathomable—mysticism, the commingling of water and fire, waking dreams, spiritual torment—with such reckless abandon that is rarely seen in many albums, let alone a debut work.asthmatickitty