The battlefront appears strategically aligned in Baroness‘s new record Purple, which was released yesterday via the band’s newly founded label Abraxan Hymns. The reconfigured lineup, which has emerged in the aftermath of their catastrophic 2012 bus crash, marches forward with an excellent, triumphant album – one that attacks with precision. The pounding percussion/bass combination push forward, given an additional dimension by the somberly smooth keys, anthem-esque personal persevering vocals, and white-hot scorching guitar work. There’s a marriage of metal menace and resurgent joy. Tonight, Baroness will be aided by the all-in, top-speed, battering-ram metal of Virginia’s Earthling who exhibit a potent possessing sound. Get to JB’s early. Johnny Brenda’s, 1201 N. Frankford Ave., 8pm, $20 (Sold Out), 21+ (Photo by Jimmy Hubbard) – Michael Colavita
Luke Sweeney Releases Loveless Christmas + Plays Amnesia – 12/22
The San Francisco frontman and singer/songwriter, Luke Sweeney has released a new Christmas song to celebrate his holiday residency at Amnesia. We’re excited to share his charming new song and to give you details on the final date of the residency. Don’t miss it!
"For December 22nd we have holiday-decorated solos & duets by Bart Davenport, Sarah Bethe Nelson, Anna Hillburg, DONCAT, Michael Shaw, and Jitsun Vincent plus some special guests w/ DJ Golden Grams. I write a holiday original once a year, and I plan on playing a few of them for the occasion. It will be an inspired time sharing the stage with friends and creating some warm winter magic.” – Luke Sweeney
Tuesday 12/22 solos & duets with Bart Davenport, Sarah Bethe Nelson, Anna Hillburg, DONCAT, Michael Shaw & Jitsun Vincent, and Luke Sweeney. Presented by BFF.fm- Best Frequencies Forever
Weekend Warrior, December 18 – 20
New Track: “Criminal” – Eliza Hardy Jones
Eliza Hardy Jones (Buried Beds, Nightlands, Strand of Oaks) will release a solo record Because Become. The single “Criminal,” produced by Nick Krill (The Spinto Band, Teen Men) couples her ambient synths and enchanting vocals, with Krill’s hard-searing guitar and the pace-setting steady backend thump of Eric Slick (Dr. Dog, Lithuania) and the album’s co-producer Dave Hartley (The War on Drugs, Nightlands). It premiered earlier today over at Stereogum. Eliza Hardy Jones will be headlining Boot & Saddle on Wednesday, January 6 with support from The Dove & The Wolf.
Half Waif announces LP “Probable Depths” + unveils single “Nest”
Brainchild of Brooklyn singer songwriter/producer Nandi Rose Plunkett, Half Waif incarnates the paradox – made possible by modern technology – of the solo orchestral project. In control of lyrics and vocals, Nandi also forges the band’s lush electronic arrangements, partly delegating the rhythm section to drummer Zack Levine and bassist Adan Carlo. Half Waif – who made our Best of NYC Poll for Emerging bands back in 2013 – just announced the release of their sophomore LP "Probable Depths" by unveiling single "Nest" (streaming). Before the release, scheduled for an April 2016 release, the trio will be performing at Shea Stadium on January 6 with Shana Falana, Fraternal Twin, and Ajnabi.
Is this “Post-Emo”? NJ’s Gates is a band on the rise
Speaking of New Jersey (see post below this one), Gates from New Brunswick play a genre that we would more easily associate with the Garden State, with its frequent emo references and "alt" sounding distorted guitars. But, by introducing textural post rock and ambient elements, the band forged a sound so intense and sophisticated that the resulting songs come across as sincere and heart-felt, which is what most emo fails to achieve. The quartet isn’t new to the scene, but last year’s release "Bloom and Breathe" (their third since 2011) has raised their profile quite a bit, opening the doors to a tour opening for The Dear Hunter. Check out their single "Not My Blood," streaming below.
“Big Damn Holiday Brawl” w/August John Lutz II at Bourbon & Branch Dec. 18
In these winter months, we all gravitate toward things that give us warmth, comfort, and stability: home, family, big blankets, glasses of bourbon, and sure – why not – some good ole, goddamn, soul-caressing country and blues. Levee Drivers‘s August John Lutz II is here to rub warmth back into the fingers and toes of your inner being with a solo performance at Bourbon & Branch this Friday for his "Big Damn Holiday Brawl." His comfortingly familiar contemporary take on old-fashioned folk and blues stems from the tradition of Johnny Cash, Hank Williams and other country-western cult figures. Lutz’s full-bodied voice explores a large vocal range reaching low to the gravelly Cash frequencies, as well as soaring with a forced strain into a Robin Pecknold-slanted crescendo. His songs explore recognizable feelings of heartbreak, reminiscence, yearning, and spiritual catharsis that pick you up like a hitchhiker on a long, lonely road and fill you with dusty reflections and secondhand longing. Joining Lutz for this night of rich ambience will be Dirty Dollhouse and Brian Dale Allen Strouse (of The Lawsuits). Bourbon & Branch, 705 N. 2nd St., 9pm, $10, 21+ (Photo by Lisa Schaffer) – Bryce Woodcock
NoHo quintet The Knitts plays at Skinny’s on 12.28, unveils new single “Get Up Get Out”
Rhythm and attitude is what fuels The Knitts, a quintet that brings that indie-dance crossover that should sound pretty famiiar to those who enjoyed the post-punk revival of the early 2000s. "Get up and get out", lead singer Charlie Volkens snarls as those fuzzed-out, unhinged guitars and steady hi-hat patterns mark every beat with increasing momentum. Having been playing around the NoHo scene for a good few years now, the band is finally hitting its stride with an upcoming debut full-length recorded by jazz specialist Michael Leonhart.
Be on the lookout for the Knitts’ debut EP sometime in early 2016, and catch them shortly at Skinny’s on December 28th.
Get lost in The Human Machine’s sophomore LP “Patterns”, release party tonight
From the twinkle of emo-tinged post-rock to the suffocating gravity of drone, OC’s trio The Human Machine wields an amorphous sound that is undeniable in its grandeur and technique. Displaced by geography — Jake Ingalls (bass) and Patrick Whitehill (guitar/vocals) lived in the Bay for a time, while Jonathan Modell (drums) stayed in the OC — the three built the "Contrashiva" EP on modulating textures, down-tempo rhythms and chordal intricacies — stuff that would make Don Caballero and American Football fans ecstatic. Following a split EP with Oakland’s Stars Are Projectors (now Valley Girls), THM released their 2014 self-titled debut album. Tonally rich and unapologetically honest, the seven-song album immersed listeners in jazz cadences and psychedelic atmospheres.
Their newest album Patterns is the second body of work (following January’s "Palimpest") that the trio have had the luxury of working on at length — "All material up to "Palimpest" was done under time limitations and living throughout different parts of California," says Modell. Shedding some shoegaze and post-rock influences in favor of improvisational and functionalist grooves, Patterns welds textures of Duster and Can with the thrum of Earth into titanic passages. "My inspiration behind Patterns was to make music that sounded desolate," says Whitehill. "Music that makes you anxious; music that makes you feel like you are moving slowly through a desert."
Modell adds, "THM’s progression as a band has been a very natural arc that shifted with our influences. I wouldn’t call Patterns a hard shifting point. It was the natural step for us after "Palimpest" — focusing less on the technicality and more on the textures and grooves that can be carried for extended lengths of time."
Tonight, The Human Machine celebrate their newest album Patterns with a release party at Beatnik Bandito with New Balance (of Canyons), Dead Recipe (Santa Cruz), Young Jesus, and Known Bird Sightings. – Ryan Mo
NJ Artists on the rise: Forth Wanderers
It sounds like New Jersey is going through a process of Brooklynization – at least as far as music is concerend. So many good indie bands coming out of it these days! After Stolen Jars, who landed on the cover of our most recent issue of The Deli, Forth Wanderers (incidentally also out of Montclaire) are now stealing our hearts with their intricately melancholic indie pop. The band has a trick up their sleeve in lead singer’s Ava Trilling’s adorably earnest delivery. Her touching lyrics, mostly revolving around the challenges of growing up, may bring you to tears; in streaming track "Selfish" (the opening track from their debut 2014 record "Tough Love") she sings:
"I wanna be known/as the girl who’s stone cold
wears her heart on her sleeve/for everyone to need
oh she’ll make you proud …"
"…I get scared instead, when you say/you’ve been in my head", let that stay
i wish i could hurry home/i better hurry home."
Forth Wanderers will play a home show at Montclaire’s Old Mogul Theatre on 01.03.
We added this song to The Deli’s playlist of Best songs by emerging NYC artists – check it out!
Katy Gunn (of Teenage Love) solo project – with choreographed performance
We already knew that Katy Gunn (an artist we covered with her duo Teenage Love) was a talented lady, but we weren’t aware of her links with performance art. As the in-house performance artist/composer at NOoSPHERE ARTS in New York City and a member of The Mothership art collective in Brooklyn, Katy performs regularly at exhibition openings, incorporating solo violin with voice, choreographed movement and audience interaction. She’s about to release a solo record entitled "Whispering Voices," set for January of 2016 in tandem with choreographed performance of her compositions alongside interdisciplinary artist and performer, Autumn Kioti. The record, tackling the inner struggle for identity and meaning, is entirely built around Katy’s voice and body, using samples and regular recordings.
Bringing troubled darkness back to rock’n’roll: Cold Sweats
Remember the good old days when some religious entities believed rock’n’roll was evil, and – trying to prove that – dissected songs and lyrics by artists as extreme as… QUEEN? That demonization had only the effect of inciting more and more radical forms of musical rebellion, in most cases in the shape of terrible metal acts with devilish looks and lyrics, that were soon exploited by record labels targeting alienated teens. Undeniably though, rock music has always been flirting with – if not evil – at least dark impulses, in the varying form of personal despair, violent desire for change, rebellion against society’s accepted structures and conventions, or even just sexual, intellectual and behavioral anti-conformism. Rock artists seems to cyclically rediscover these powerful thematic, always pairing it with an aggressive sound. Cold Sweats is a NYC based band that does that to perfection: with a singer that sounds as apocalyptic as Nick Cave in his early days with The Birthday Party, and a backing band able to pull off any kind of shock inducing sonic trick, these guys are pure, unadulterated, quality tension. Abuse of the cathartic power of their music, it may prove liberating.
We added this song to The Deli’s playlist of Best NYC songs by emerging NYC artists – check it out!