New England

The Vacant Lots Announce Free Digital Single Remix, Kingdom Come, To Be Released New Year’s Eve

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Burlington, Vermont’s The Vacant Lots are offering a new unreleased track, Kingdom Come, as a free download on New Year’s Eve. Remixed by Spectrum drummer Roger Brogan, who also provides drums, percussion, electronics and drone, Kingdom Come was written and produced by The Vacant Lots. Brian MacFadyen contributes organ and electronics to the track as one half of the band’s permanent lineup, while Jared Artaud provides guitar, vocals and lyrics, as the groups frontman.

A steady gentle organ runs throughout the track, allowing Jared’s vocals and spaciously executed guitar figures to float atop like waves on an ocean. The mix is carefully textured, with percussion provided more for emphasis, rather than any kind of steady beat keeping. That, combined with shifting tempos, creates a somewhat mystical listening experience.

On NYE these links will be activated :

Official Music Video
Free Download link of Kingdom Come on Bandcamp.

Citing influences such as the Mississippi delta blues sound of Bo Diddley, New York pioneers The Velvet Underground and Television, Detroit’s The Stooges and The UK’s Spacemen 3, the band has evolved all of this into their own sound, combining minimal drumming, hypnotic guitar riffs, electronic drone, poetry-driven lyrics, and live film projections. They are a band who not only embrace their influences – but are confident that the filter of their own sensibility will yield something uniquely their own.

Their debut single Confusion/ Cadillac was released earlier this year on Mexican Summer as the band embarked on east and west coast tours, while playing significant festivals inbetween. Their tours have included supporting Sonic Boom’s Spectrum as well as apperances at SXSW, Austin Psych Fest 4, and a featured support slot for Dean & Britta’s Galaxie 500 show in Brooklyn. This past September had them touring the west coast, followed by a mid-western stint during October. Currently in the process of recording new material, expect a second single out soon, to be followed by a first official album release.

Dave Cromwell

Chicago

Wolf In A Spacesuit “Sea of Doors”

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Algebra Huxley and Arthur Aircraft (aka Wolf In A Spacesuit) are back with a new album filled with lush electro-pop. The release is called Safari – Sea of Doors, and through the eight tracks you will find gentle piano sound, well placed sample, hushed vocals, multi-layered beats, and more. Sea of Doors is the first half of what will be a full release called Safari. Both releases will be combined into a full-length vinyl release. You can stream or purchase the Sea of Doors on the band’s bandcamp page, and also download the track "No Bird Fly" for free. The band also created a video for that track which you can watch below.

Philadelphia

Diplo Returning to Old Mad Decent Stomping Grounds at Union Transfer Dec. 29

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Globe-trotting DJ and producer Diplo returns to his old Mad Decent stomping grounds when he plays a SOLD OUT show at Union Transfer tonight. Since moving away from Philly to expand the Mad Decent name to other horizons, he has been busy with creating an offshoot label called Jeffree’s, putting out another Major Lazer album that featured the likes of Santigold and Pharrell, taking the Mad Decent Block parties to the national scale for the 2nd year in a row, and then some! And his homecoming and Union Transfer debut is sure to be a booty-shaking pre-party for NYE. While he’s more known as the sampling mastermind behind Drexel dropouts and local rising stars Chiddy Bang, Xaphoon Jones is also an impressive producer/DJ who is certainly making a name for himself. And when he takes the stage tonight, he’ll be doing things Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle style! They’ll also be joined by Dirty South Joe on the wheels of steel. If you don’t have your tix yet, they’ll be releasing a handful at the box office so swing by early to get yours and drop by Jose’s to grab a delicious burrito while you’re already there. Union Transfer, 1026 Spring Garden St., 8pm, $20 (SOLD OUT), All Ages – Bill McThrill

Philadelphia

Cheers Elephant & Illinois Looking Forward to the New Year at JB’s Dec. 29

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Philly indie pop/rock outfit Cheers Elephant is closing out what has been a busy year tonight at Johnny Brenda’s with Bucks County’s Illinois. Cheers Elephant has spent most of 2011 promoting their sophomore LP Man is Nature since their sold out release party back in January at World Café Live, bringing their Brit-tinged indie folk to the masses with their lively stage antics, rockin’ guitar licks and three part harmonies. They are currently working on their next album. Warming up the crowd will be Illinois, whose eclectic mix of influences straddles the line between banjo-oriented indie-folk meets psych-pop with a dash of hip hop swag. Illinois has been hard at work in the studio since the summer working on their follow-up to this year’s Lemonade Stand. Come celebrate New, New, New Year’s Eve with them and NYC’s Hollis Brown this evening. Johnny Brenda’s 1201 N. Frankford Ave., $10, 8 pm, 21+ – Dan Brightcliffe

San Francisco

California Drops of Gold

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When they first started, they were making a hundred bucks a day playing in the hollows of an Oakland subway station – and that, of course, was an ambitious stretch, jamming nearly six hours of street-style soul daily with no break. Three years later and on the cusp of a bold, new year, the California Honey Drops have raised nearly $25,000 in a recent Kickstarter campaign supported by the generous contribution of fans. Likewise, the quintet of jazz, blues and Bebop enthusiasts takes no gift for granted, and have already booked their calendar solid through March, playing a stint of shows on both coasts, including a stop at next year’s Jazz Fest in New Orleans. On top of the tour, they’ll be releasing a live album in the spring, followed by their third studio LP later in the year.

Then there’s Europe. In addition to rigorous promotion in the U.S., Oakland’s rising stars intend to court their international fan base with equal fervor. Having already hit several countries across the Atlantic in 2011, this coming year they intend to conquer more. Impressively, they are a one-stop shop, balancing the business and creative realms of their career. From the onset, they have managed, booked, and publicized themselves with little more than an aggressive belief in the power of their artistic covenant, and a goal to expand the love affair they commenced in the Bay. 

“We’ve built this band from the ground up,” explains founding father and frontman Lech Wierzynski, who learned his craft early on in DC jazz clubs, under the instruction of Ray Charles’ legendary trumpeter, Marcus Belgrave. “Our strategy when we started was to always hit the subways during rush hour to play. A little while later, we recorded a demo on Garage Band and started bringing that with us to sell, then after that we brought stickers…It became an enterprise and we eventually created a solid local fan base.”

Reverberating off the slick groove of a washboard, trumpet, upright bass, and drums, California Honey Drops serenade the world with bluesy funk songs about the axioms of Dixieland. The band’s anthems are earnest and naturally alluring, a musical interpretation of cultural exposition. They’re as comfortable performing at barn parties in Northern Cali as they are chic Manhattan industry haunts. What’s more, they won’t pass through a town without playing a gig. No, not ever. 

“We were in Asheville,  and we didn’t have a show booked, but we really wanted to play,” recalls drummer, Ben Malament, of their recent travels through the folk city in Western North Carolina. “It was a Monday, and there was this art house called the BoBo gallery. We asked if we could play there, and they told us they never had any people there on Monday…We ended up doing several shows and the place just filled up with screaming girls.”

Influenced by the evolution of jazz from years past to present – artists like Duke Ellington and Ray Charles, ragtime and rhythm & blues – it begs the question how five white guys from California can pull off a sound so quintessentially grounded in African-American ethos. Nevertheless, by carrying a sincere interest in the historical milieu of their composite genre, along with a divergent spectrum of taste, this band of pseudo-traditionalists is able to overcome whatever creative boundaries may be limited by race. They’ve admittedly gotten some “slack,” though.

“We do a lot of research on the blues and the history of music,” comments saxophonist, Johnny Bones. “We’re just playing the music we love and trying to do it justice. We’re careful not only to research books, but to actually go out and play with folks and talk to folks…To talk to people of all races…We have people come up to us from New Orleans all the time, and tell us they’re feeling it.”

Adds Wierzynski, “What’s different in music is style and delivery. We play country music too, redone as soul….We’re taking it from all sides; if we like it, it’s in there. Duke Ellington took material from 20th century composers…Ray Charles did country songs. Was that white music? If you go back far enough, you dissolve the lines.”

California Honey Drops has tapped into the underground soul revival in Oakland, played at a neighborhood bar in Brooklyn and rocked the New York subway in Midtown (where, incidentally, they ran into a crowd of Oakland followers). They are chameleons with a vivid presence; they fit in everywhere and they always make an impression.

“People in Oakland know us, they are our family, and we want to create that everywhere,” stresses Wierzynski. “Our hope is to bring music for music’s sake.”

Mallamont agrees. “Because we’re not bound by a commercial genre, we can market ourselves uniquely. We’re a roots band. We’re paying homage to music’s essence.”

Courtney Garcia 

L.A.

Artist to Watch: Tennis System

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The usual perception with shoegaze bands is that noise is taken for granted, overthrowing any level of clarity to obscure any aesthetic deficiencies. Sonic commissariats Tennis System convey cathartic passion with a torrent of saturated noise. But this is only found in principle – beneath vigorous guitar squalls and delicate distortion lays an assured sense of narrative thrust. The sound is heavy, yet inviting, which clouds its striking hooks behind layers of drifting high-frequency clatter. Their appearance is masked by delirium, but Tennis System do have a furtive desire to compound all those elements and convert it with a high level of pop songcraft. A visit to their Bandcamp page features the entirely of their latest release “Teenagers”, which should swab your ears with wistful noise bliss in time for what should be an essential visit to whichever venue they play in 2012.

 

NYC

Friends – one of NYC’s big things in 2012?

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We blogged about Friends already at the end of last month here, but since the buzz for the band is mounting (they accumulated almost 5k Facebook friends in these few months of activity!) we were looking for an excuse to post this other video they released two months ago – the song is the band’s second single "Friend Crush", which is good but not as good as "I’m His Girl". Friends are currently in a London studio putting the finishing touches to their upcoming full length – we are very much looking forward to listening to it!

 

NYC

The Veda Rays release preview track from upcoming EP ““Die Fast”

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After a 2011 that saw them on the rise in the NYC scene, The Veda Rays are getting ready to take things on the next level in 2012, when they will be releasing a new EP entitled "Die Fast" in the spring. As an early promotional move they are releasing a free song from that EP, entitled "Old Long Since Now", which was written at the end of the aughts and was always intended to be some kind of "New Years Eve song". The band definitely strikes the right balance of holiday cheerfulness and attitude here, creating a rock track that stimulates those kind of positive year end "life recaps" that can propel our existence towards a better future.

Nashville

The Deli’s Choice: Honey Locust, Taylor Brashears @ The Rutledge tonight

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The Rutledge has the post-holiday cheer tonight in the form of three local groups in the Americana/folk vein. Singer/songwriter Taylor Brashears is headlining with her pretty pipes. Her backing band will support her and hold a slot of their own as old-country troubadours The High Riders. Also opening is gypsy folk band Honey Locust, whose live show is a spectacle of accordions, banjos and cellos, and definitely worth the trip out. Show is at 7:30 and will cost you five of your dollars.

NYC

X-Ray Press to Hit the Road in January

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Prog-rockers X-Ray Press are gearing up to hit the road for the first time in nearly a year, launching a west coast tour in Seattle on Jan. 25. This year saw the band release their first full-length album, UVB-76, back in January, as well as a split 7" featuring the talents of By Sunlight’s Mike Sparks and Panther Attack’s Kelly Mynes. Hailed by many critics as a math rock record for the ages, UVB-76 is at once challenging and accessible, aggressive and thought-provoking – in short, the kind of paradoxical album that can get an audience with decidedly disparate sensibilities to bob their heads in unison. This will be the band’s first time taking the tunes on the road, but with some good press on their side and an album that has been quietly making waves all year, the response is sure to be electric.

January 25     Chop Suey w/ By Sunlight and Panther Attack     Seattle, WA

-Kate Shepherd