Soft Circle – Black Dice Drummer’s new project
Soft Circle started as a solo project of Hisham Bharoocha, the former drummer of experimental rock bands Lightning Bolt and Black Dice, recently became a duo with the addition of Ben Vida (Town and Country/Singer/Bird Show). Soft Circle’s new work is blissed-out minimal electronic music with sparse arrangements that would fit in with the catalog of Bharoocha’s former label, DFA. Earlier this month, Soft Circle released a new track, "Treading Water" a blast of electronic indie pop full of catchy synth loops and a beat so infectious that although the lyrics are about drowning it’s still incredibly danceable. The song is available on "Shore Obsessed", Soft Circle’s new album on the Post Present Medium label. You can also stream it down here. – Nick Haycock
Free Download: 6 emerging bands in the Brooklyn Heat 2010 Compilation!
This past summer recording engineer and Delicious Audio contributor Shane O’Connor took six bands of his choice into Monsterland Recording Studio in Brooklyn. Each band recorded one song in one day, and the result is Brooklyn Heat 2010, a compilation featuring up-and-coming Brooklyn acts Shark?, Quilty (top picture), Quiet Loudly, Little Racer, Magnetic Island (in the picture below) and GunFight! The compilation features no-frills indie rock that runs the gamut from rowdy rock n’ roll sing-alongs (Shark?’s “You Ignore Me” and GunFight!’s “I Would Be Your Man”), to dissonant and spacey pop (Quiet Loudly’s “Be My Baby Mama” and Quilty’s “In the Guts”), and infectious, angular post-punk (Magnetic Island’s “Shake the Fog” and Little Racer’s “On The Run”). According to O’Connor, the bands were chosen without a specific theme, but simply because they each offer “exciting live shows, [and] were willing to promote themselves in interesting ways, and were open to collaboration with other artists.” Each song on Brooklyn Heat 2010 compliments the next perfectly, providing for an undeniably fun and engaging listen. And yes, it’s free to download, so go grab these tracks right now.
New Finds – Jack Littman
Recommendations flood our inboxes constantly here at the Deli, but Jack Littman stood out of the most recent bunch. Naming influences like Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty, and Neil Young, his music is decidedly folk. There is one song though, "GOT2HAVU" shows Littman is willing to break the mold of his chosen genre to incorporate drum machines and synths — the kind of thing that would make Ric Ocasek proud.
He’ll be Hotel Cafe with Patrolled by Radar on Dec. 19th.
-Angelo Lorenzo
Amplify their Appetite @ Empty Bottle
Looking to end your Thanksgiving weekend on a high note? Then head on out to the Empty Bottle this Sunday, November 28th for Betta Promotions’ "Amplify their Appetite". Performances include: Kevin Andrew Prchal & The Wheeling Birds, Elephant Gun, Brendan Losch, and Little Light (Gia Margaret & Alain de Courtenay). Canned Goods will also be collected and donated to the Greater Chicago Food Depository. 7pm | 21+ | $3
The Deli’s Featured Artist(s) of the Month: City Rain
End Your Thxgiving Weekend w/Juston Stens & tGRG at The Fire Nov. 28
A Thousand Horses @ 12th & Porter, 11/24/10
Wednesday night at 12th and Porter was definitely one for the old school rock fans. There were no synthesizers, fog machines or any other new-age distractions. In lieu of the bravado of the glam rock scene were electric guitars, Americana music and a crowd that was socially lubricated and ready to dance. The show was scheduled to start at 8 p.m., but after sound checks and waiting for the venue to slowly fill, the music didn’t start until a little before 9 p.m. After Tesla Rossa finished their set, The Grand Magnolias, an East Nashville-based band, rocked the house, sounding like a cross between Ryan Adams and Old Crow Medicine Show.
Around 10:30 A Thousand Horses took the stage to an appreciative crowd and got right down to it. They played all five of the songs off their EP, which seemed to please the crowd – many of whom had come to see them specifically, the evidence being that several people in the audience were singing along (with one girl loudly and drunkenly screaming) the words to the catchy stand-out track, “A Thousand Horses.” Front man Michael Hobby doesn’t play an instrument on stage, which works for the dynamic of the band because it makes the sound have a Guns ‘N Roses theatrical quality about it. Having already listened to their album, it was impressive that they sounded just as good live, although a little more impromptu and easygoing. Guitarist Graham De Loach played in seamless harmony with bassist Bill Satcher, especially on the bluesy and guitar-heavy “Suicide Eyes.”
While some of the music they played was simple and traditional rock and roll, like the rockabilly tune “Travelin’ Man,” other songs had a funkier, modern vibe like “Kiss Your Photograph.” Part of any good show is having a crowd that doesn’t just sway back and forth, but gets a little out of control. While there were no broken beer bottles or bar fights, there was a contagious energy to being in a room with fellow rock enthusiasts watching a kickass rock show. – Krystal Wallace
Nicos Gun Open for Free Energy at TLA Nov. 27
Weekend Warrior, November 26 – 28
Beats and Blogs, A Musical Hotspot!
What do you get when 99% of the music blogs in town come together to sponsor one mega event? Beats and Blogs, A Musical Hotspot taking place on December 18th at SubT. Come and check out White Mystery, Hollows, Rabble Rabble, and Radar Eyes, and shake the hand of your favorite music blogger.