Weekend Warrior, July 1 – 4
MON Joe Jack Talcum
Weekly Feature: Sam Amidon
Songwriter Sam Amidon is single-handedly re-defining the boundaries of American folk music. His songs succeed in using grooves and melodies familiar to alt-folk listeners as the backbone that supports all-but-forgotten lyrics from early American folk tunes. Sam’s music gives cultural weight to otherwise outdated, seemingly irrelevant lyrics, bringing new life and accessibility to old American hymns. Not a simple feat, but one that his background uniquely prepares him for. Growing up in a family of folk musicians in Brattleboro, Vermont, Amidon was immersed in a rich musical tradition from a young age. Now based in NY, Amidon, along with his fellow Bedroom Community colleagues, is classing up Brooklyn’s indie scene, one folk tune at a time. With his ambitious new record I See The Sign (Bedroom Community), Amidon furthers his folk revival mission, bringing in guest stars like Beth Orton and Nico Muhlry to help out, as well as adding R. Kelly’s ‘Relief’ to his eclectic Americana catalog. – Read Mike Levine’s Q&A with the artist here.
Weekly Feature: Tanlines – Live at PS1 on August 27
Tanlines are a hard one to pin down. They’re perfectly suited for Brooklyn though. A place that values pastiche world music acts like Yeasayer and Dirty Projectors is a perfect breeding ground for the crazy imaginative, All-of-Epcot-on-a-Record approach to songwriting this duo has come up with. Songwriters/production team Eric Emm and Jesse Cohen have been working together for awhile, (each with their own impressive resumes as ex-members of The Brothers and Professor Murder respectively) but because of their DIY distribution model that includes releasing singles, remixes, videos and other takeaways at entirely random times, they still feel much like a new band. WIth their last EP about a year old, (and who remembers anything from that long ago?) I’m hoping to hear some new tracks soon. This is a band very hard on themselves, searching out new sounds with every song. So where most bands find themselves placing years of pent-up 7-inches on their eventual LP, I have a feeling we’ll be seeing a lot of brand new material coming from Tanlines for their first full-length, rumored for release later this year. Here’s hoping! – Read Mike Levine’s interview with the band here.
The Deli’s July Album of the Month: Punishment Cookie – Hair Rocket
Goodnight Lights, Levee Drivers & In Grenada at JB’s July 1
Only Children “Don’t Stop”
The label Nuclear Family has released the new ep for the local producer team known as Only Children. The ep contains the track "Don’t Stop" (below) and four remixes of "Don’t Stop" including one by Hey Champ.
Only Children kick off and end Chicagoist’s Mixtape #10 and are by Chicagoist here.
NYC Artists on the rise: Celestial Shore play Glasslands with Body Language
Uuuuuh… we like this combination of words: "playful psych pop with an experimental edge". That’s our attempt at describing the music of Brooklyn based band Celestial Shore. These guys follow on the bizarre and elaborate "avant-pop" steps of acts like Dirty Projector and Deerhoof, with a slightly "mathy-er" approach, and vocal melodies and harmonies that will get Beach Boys fans excited. The way "Pals" – a perfect pop gem – gets truncated and pretty much sacrificed as a "song" to the god of experimentation might irritate the many pop purists out there. Instead, it makes us smile with complicity. Boring song structures are for later in life…
Check out Celestial Shore with Body Language live at Glasslands on July 1st and at Shea Stadium on July 14.
Clara May “Hush”
Clara May has released a video for their track "Hush". The tack comes from their recently released debut album by the same name.