Dastardly has released a video for their new track "Fever". The tracks comes from their new ep "Bury Me In The Country" which comes out on January 31st.
Diplo Publishing His First Book
Interview with Redline Graffiti: DC Deli’s Band of the Month (January)
You’d really never guess that DC’s indie rockers Redline Graffiti came together as a whole only a few months ago. Having already released an EP in December About and Because, acquiring gigs at some of DC’s best clubs, and conquering the top of our recent band of the month poll (in one of the hugest turnouts all around,) we should be expecting to hear a lot more from Drew Moten (Vocals/Bass/Synth keyboard,) Ajene Harly (guitar), Ebony Smith (drums,) and Donald Martin (Vocals/Keyboard/drums) in 2012. And right now, we wanted to know more about them. So we got a hold of Drew, Ebony, and Donald who filled us in on everything from diversity, Synecdoche, New York, and the "inclined to be musical" vs. the musically inclined. Get ready for some truth in our first interview of the year...
Check out some tracks from their EP About and Because below, and own it via their site.
Kung Fu Necktie “Back in Full Operational Business”!!!
We are very excited to receive an email from Kung Fu Necktie booker Jeff Meyers that the beloved watering hole has gotten “everything straightened out” and “are back in full operational business” so tonight’s WKDU presented show with King Django, The Snails and Lions Paw will be 21+ like before! And make sure to grab plenty of alcoholic beverages and make many toasts to another much-needed local music venue dodging a major bullet. Cheers KFN!
Artist to Watch: Evan Voytas
Evan Goytas is a Pennsylvania transplant to the LA area, but the city seems to have helped him produce a unique brand of synth-pop. On the 24th of this month, he’ll release a new EP, entitled Feel Me, on Dovecote Records. Surrounded by looping synth sounds and a simple piano melody, Goytas’ voice floats on top bathed in reverb. It’s almost like post-club music; something for the cool down after the crazy. There’s a certain relaxing effect that makes it the perfect song to sit and listen to in the dark. It’s brooding, but not in a heavy handed way. There’s sure to be more songs on the upcoming EP, which you should check out. You can listen to "Can’t let Anybody Know Who You Are" and other releases on his myspace page. – Taylor Lampela
Deli Best of NYC 2011 – Submissions Results for INDIE ROCK: Hurrah! A Bolt of Light!, MiniBoone, Monogold, Quilty, Appomattox, Snowmine
We kept this for last people! Here are our Indie Rock selections and honorable mentions from the bands that submitted to ou Year End Poll for Emerging NYC Artists. This was the category with the most submission and it was truly painful having to stick with 6 bands… We had 22 bands with an average ranking above 7 out of 10. We’ll announce the SonicBids and the jurors picks later today and then… everything will be ready for the readers’ and fans’ poll!
NYC YEAR END POLL 2011 OPEN SUBMISSIONS RESULTS FOR ALT FOLK:
Jurors: Annamarya Scaccia (Deli Philly), Jessica Pace (Deli Nashville), Erin D’Souza (Deli NYC)
– QUALIFIED TO THE POLL’S NEXT ROUND
The artists in this list qualify for the next phase of the poll, and will be added to the bands nominated by our jury of local scenemakers.
Will Farr doesn’t take long to drown himself in sweat. Spun from the same cloth as Bruce Springsteen or Ian Curtis, he routinely leads his homespun band to a blaze of glory, forcing his restless spirit and barbed hooks through anyone looking for a dose of excitement. Hurrah! builds each track of their heartland-brewed, rocking yet rootsy tunes to a frenzy, making believers of anyone looking for a rush of adrenaline chased down with a shot of big band frenzy.
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2. MINIBOONE
The video for ‘Cool Kids Cut Out of the Heart Itself‘ features the band MiniBoone take abuse in all its manifestations, from forced haircuts to facepaint almost as disturbing as their odd harmonies. The whole experience leaves you breathless and wondering what exactly you just saw, while making sure you never forget any of it. This group’s Kinks-inspired dance grooves charge ahead with this same kind of intense art posture throughout their whole ouevre, making for an experience as absurdly delicious as Queen’s ‘Bicycle’ in tracks like ‘Chairs are For Lovers,’ and as emotionally intense as At the Drive-In in my fave ‘Liars + Hiders.’
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3. MONOGOLD
As a three-piece band, Monogold can support catchy songs that extend beyond confined spaces or genres. Keith Kelly’s falsetto flirtatiously glides through twinkling keys in the album’s starting track, “Ivory Teeth Golden Tusk,” a cherubic welcome to the trio’s sensational, epic voyage through their 2011 album “The Softest Glow.” The tribalesque, frenetic rhythms feel exotic but ground the different sounds and textures, in an impressive debut that feels both foreign and familiar at the same time.
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4a. APPOMATTOX
This thunderous power trio – one of the best live bands in town – is taking indie guitar rock’s format and cramming politically charged lyrics head-on down its throat. A welcome change from the usually passive temperament of contemporary rock, this band has found a way to stand out amongst Brooklyn’s crowded backdrop by turning the form on its head and back to its roots as a counter-cultural force for change.
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4b. QUILTY
I think if Damon Albarn had fronted The Pixies, something like Quilty might have happened. A band with loud-soft dynamics that took a left turn somewhere along the way to britpop goofiness, singer/guitarist Sarah Dupuis twists Pixies-like formulas into pretzel-like jams that pour on the sweetness and grisliness in equal parts.
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4c. SNOWMINE
Meditative, melodic and spacious, Snowmine’s music emplyos a sweeping array of pastoral tones which range from longing, drifting acoustics to electronic drum patterns that build in tension with soaring horn sounds. In their music we hear XTC’s immense melodic talent and Tortoise’s suspenseful and arty arrangements. Call it post-pop if you wish.
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– ALMOST QUALIFIED TO THE POLL’S NEXT ROUND
These artists had outstanding ratings from our jurors (almost 8 out of 10!) but won’t qualify to the next round of our year end poll. Dudes we are sorry but we must draw a line or this thing is going to be insane (and it will be anyway, with more than 100 bands qualified already!!!)
7a. BUGS IN THE DARK
Not many bands do it like Bugs in the Dark. Here’s a group that wrap their sound up tightly, and unleash it just as strongly. The three-piece places charging riffs under singer Karen Rockower’s soul-shaking vocals to weave a punishing set together that takes no prisoners. No reason to miss the Sonic Youth of years ago, this band is every bit as devastating and noisy, but you’ll love the abuse.
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7b. DIEHARD
There seems to be a trend of late that we certainly won’t complain about: local NYC/Brooklyn bands channeling earnest 90s music styles to match the Doc Martens and grandmother-inspired floral prints seen on the streets of Williamsburg. Obviously inspired to the indie sound of that decade, Diehard’s music triggers a mental trip back to youth for 30 and 40 somethings like us, while sounding like a breath of fresh air to the younger hipsters.
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7c. LIGHTOUTS
It’s about time Gowanus represented. Lightouts its two people with a love affair for the epic buildup. Taking drum machines and Michael Hutchence-minded vocals to a height where this town’s canal will never reach. Something like Bowie backed by LCD Soundsystem’s band, they have no trouble getting intense, but keep their feet in the dance floor throughout the show.
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7d. MOTIVE
In track ‘Nobody Eats My Dinner,’ singer Nick Wold is way too hard on himself. At first lamenting how nobody likes him, he eventually gets lost in the driving rhythm instead; taking the song to a loud, hard-jamming place similar to the destinations The Strokes used to take me. Like track ‘Summer Solstice,’ that takes you on a long ride but leaves you in about the same place it began, Motive deals with life’s revolving frustrations the only way they know how: by channeling their angst through heartbreak riffs and confessional lyrics.
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7e. THE YOUNG THINGS
The Young Things are taking tried-and-true rock sensibilities and giving them an LES makeover. In ‘All My Friends are Junkies,’ the band takes an approach like Brian Jonestown Massacre or Oasis, forcing rock riffs usually associated with Beatlemania into a mold better suited for city dwellers. So Get off your ass. this is a sound as infectious as it’s ever been.
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– HONORABLE MENTIONS
The following bands deserve to be mentioned as well, they all had a 7.5 average rating: Clinical Trials, The Ropes, The Veda Rays, Wild International, Yvette.
Purling Hiss Heading Out on Tour w/Dr. Dog!
Purling Hiss just announced that they’ll be heading out on tour this February/March with Dr. Dog. We love seeing local acts giving each other a hand and hitting the road together! It’s also been mentioned that Dr. Dog’s new album Be the Void (coming out February 7 via Anti- Records) will be much more raucous than their last, and with Purling Hiss opening for them on their next tour to support the new material, it’s a good sign that will be true. You can check out the confirmed scheduled dates below.
02/02 Granada Theatre Lawrence, Kansas
02/03 Boulder Theater Boulder, Colorado
02/04 Urban Lounge Salt Lake City, Utah
02/06 The Crescent Ballroom Phoenix, Arizona
02/07 Belly Up Tavern Solana Beach, California
02/10 The Music Box at Fonda Hollywood, California
02/11 Regency Center Grand Ballroom San Francisco, California
02/13 Crystal Ballroom Portland, Oregon
02/14 Neptune Theatre Seattle, Washington
02/17 First Avenue Minneapolis, Minnesota
02/18 The Vic Theatre Chicago, Illinois
02/19 20th Century Theatre Cincinnati, Ohio
03/01 Mr. Small’s Theatre Millvale, Pennsylvania
03/02 Headliners Music Hall Louisville, Kentucky
03/03 War Memorial Auditorium Nashville, Tennessee
03/04 Buckhead Theatre Atlanta, Georgia
The War on Drugs Making Late Night Debut on Jimmy Fallon Tonight & Stream New Track “Don’t Fear the Ghost”!
Philly will be in the house tonight on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon! The War on Drugs will be making their late night television debut. You can also stream below “Don’t Fear the Ghost,” the b-side that they just released today to the 7” single for “Come to the City” due out January 24. Former Upper Darby native Tina Fey will also be joining them on Fallon and as usual The Roots so show some hometown love and tune in.
Sound on the Sound Birthday Bash Boasts Surprise Headliner
Sound on the Sound founders and editors, Abbey Simmons and Josh Lovseth, will host their 30th birthday bash this Friday at the Blue Moon Tavern, featuring local acts Dude York, Golden Blondes, and “HOT DAMN!” – a surprise headliner performing under a pseudonym. For the fifth straight year, the duo will celebrate the passing of another 365 days with up-and-coming artists and one band that’s graduated from the Blue Moon’s modest stage. Last year, the Moondoggies took the stage, billed as the Allman Butters, along with American Girls and Pickwick, and once again, the party should give Seattleites the chance to see the best of the city’s established artists play alongside some of its fastest rising talent.
Show: 10 p.m.
Tickets: $8
– Kate Shepherd
Lightfoot EP “Scarlet Sails” Released Today
After a European tour last summer, Lightfoot is finally back in D.C. They’re up to their usual sexy-60s-pop antics and happen to also be releasing an official EP today titled "Scarlet Sails." You can download the album here. Or, even better, you can plan to attend the album release show at Black Cat later this month and receive a totally free 7" vinyl record! Nice! Here are the details:
Friday, January 27
Black Cat Main Stage
with Loose Lips (last show), Ugly Purple Sweater, and Paperhaus
$10 – Buy Tickets Here
I’ll be reviewing this album later, but since I know just how impatient you all can be, here’s a sneak peak at the video for the first single, "1963."
–Jarrett
The Burgeoning Bay Area Bass Scene: Looking Into 2012
If you overdosed on the easy listening sounds of 2011, there is a chillwave backlash thriving in the Bay in the form of bass (avoiding the term "dubstep" since it also became a bad word in 2011).
Minnesota‘s single Sun Burst landed on a lot of electronic music lovers year-end lists, and 2012 holds even more excitement for the DJ boy wonder as he announced today he’s part of the Coachella lineup.
Another up-and-comer in the scene is Sound Science who recently released his first remix and is currently at work on his first EP. Expect a Deli preview of the reclusive DJ’s debut performance this year (rumor is he is the hot guy above).
–Whitney Phaneuf
New Music: Kapowski “Section Eight”
Last we mentioned Oakland troupe Kapowski, I professed my adoration for twee lead singer Jesse Rimler in the form of a marriage proposal. He friended me on Facebook, so it’s probably gonna happen.
Now Kapowski returns to our blogroll with a new mp3, "Section Eight," from their soon-to-be-released LP Boy Detective. On "Section Eight," Kapowski has rebounded with the same darling, stylistic middle eight harmonies and indie-tastic bleeps that landed them on our radar in the first place. There’s also a promo video to go along with the track featuring a tux-clad, suburban butler-bot who self-destructs all while a black and white Kapowski plays on the 50s era TV set (watch below).
If you find yourself smitten with Kapowski’s unquestionable charm, they’ll be throwing an album release party at Rickshaw Stop on February 1st along with fellow Oaktowners Mwahaha and Bells.
-Justine Fields