Just under a week ago, Rhode Island garage-rock quintet The Naticks shared the steadily mounting “Carry My Body” (streaming below). Telling after-hour longing similar to that of fun.’s “We Are Young” or tracks off The Walkmen’s ‘Bows + Arrows,’ the piano-pulsed song compellingly conveys dazed youthfulness with mature calm, the titular request seen more as a serious plea for emotional warmth than just a literal body to rest on. The Naticks play at AS220 in Providence, Rhode Island on 4/13. – Zach Weg
Brooklyn’s quirky folk-rockers Howth play The Gutter on 04.07
Listening to Brooklyn rock quartet Howth‘s July-released album ‘Trashy Milky Nothing Town,’ one is pleasantly reminded of great bands of old, while exhilarating in its fresh quirkiness. On such guitar-laced songs as "Teenage Mutation" (streaming below), the tight punk of The Ramones comes surging forth while a track such as "You Were My Girl" has fond hints of The Turtles. Lead singer Carl Creighton and his band do, in fact, seem to be aware of rock’s potential for eccentricity and, with this Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles-referencing work, they entertainingly and compellingly emit their own spunky oddness. Howth plays at The Gutter with Jennifer O’Connor on April 7th. – Zach Weg
The Inventors
The Inventors have released a new EP with a very long title. Unasked Questions Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Mob is the band’s follow-up to their 2015 EP, The Procedure Room.
Slothrust returns from SXSW to play Baby’s All Right on 03.26
Bringing a technical touch to grunge-tinged garage rock, Brooklyn via Boston trio Slothrust offers a lot that a listener can latch onto. Lead singer, Leah Wellbaum, delivers her lyrics with angst, passion, and subtle sarcasm that permeates each song distinctly. Humor and dark themes coalesce seamlessly as the band’s personality is put on full display in front of spot-on musicianship. While the band has been a slow burn in terms of popularity, their 2013 album ‘Of Course You Do‘ reached many hearts, displaying the talent, charm, and uniqueness of this group. After three years, they are due for a new record. – Lee Ackerley
Be a Deviant w/Motherwhore at KFN March 23
The trio of Motherwhore embodies gloomy, gothic grit. Semi-filtered through the shade, the band smacks of a direct simplicity, luring listeners with semi-spoken, spellbinding vocals that hang on with an emotive, expressive power. Catching on to an unencumbered, raw, rock feel, a somewhat methodical mechanism establishes a sense of weighted steps as the guitar echoes through the fading light, demanding that you follow. Motherwhore inflects a dreary, deserted expanse with momentary musical mirages that shimmer with catchiness. Tonight’s billing at Kung Fu Necktie will be fortified by the quick-fired pop-punk of Baby Brains and the unrefined snapping confidence of Trash Night, whom dare to roam in the darkness. Kung Fu Necktie, 1250 N. Front St. 8pm, $8, 21+ – Michael Colavita
New Video: “Eatin & Goin Nuts, Man” – Kurt Vile
Kurt Vile‘s stardom has transferred to the small screen of the HBO/Duplass Brothers series Animals, "about anthropomorphic New York City animals." Check out a squirrel version of Vile as he croons his latest tune, "Eatin & Goin Nuts, Man"! The new video premiered earlier today over at Pitchfork, along with some additional dates to his already extensive tour, and you can check out the complete episode of Animals this Friday.
Starchild & The New Romantics release ‘Crucial’ EP + play Baby’s All Right on 3.25
Listening to Starchild is like ascending into the deepest pockets of space and sitting in a pool of glimmering stars. With oscillating synths and spacey electronic textures over smooth, deep vocals Starchild takes us on a trip out of this world. Bryndon Cook, the man behind Starchild & the New Romantics, has toured with big indie and R&B acts like Solange, Chairlift, and Blood Orange as a guitarist, and these artists’ influence is evident in his own work. At times dancey and at other pensive, Starchild’s debut album Crucial is music oozing purple, and covers the entire emotional spectrum. Take a listen below and catch him Baby’s All Right on 3.25. – Adriana S Ballester
New Track: “(Fourscore) – False Ascension” – Noema
Embark on a seemingly endless search with Noema‘s latest release Former Selves and Future Void. Available on cassette via 1980 Records, drone powers through, twisting deeper and deeper into the labyrinth of one’s mind. While an underlying, ominous anticipation hangs overhead, a subconscious pensive door is unlocked. Take a listen to the album’s opener, “(Fourscore) – False Ascension,” below, and mindfully drift with PeteJoe Urban (ex-Creepoid) & company tomorrow night at House Gallery 1816, as part of a lineup which also includes Mitch Esparza and Ross Hammond & Sameer Gupta.
Katy Kirby’s “3” EP Is Maybe the Best Austin Music We Missed Last Year
Katy Kirby is somethin’ real rare. Not just in relation to her pure voice, or true skill with words, but in a very now-specific way: Katy Kirby, somehow, in 2016, has figured out how to write a love song both fresh and authentic.
Kirby released a three track EP aptly and simply named 3 in mid 2015, but it just got over to our ears about a month ago, and it is without question one of our bigger misses of last year. This is a strong piece of recording, the kind of single-person guitar-heavy folk that can only come from an obviously young, obviously flipped-on young person that hits their musical stride at just the right age to capture that elusive something, as wild as it is sad, that only the youth ever have captured in folk. Often someone this age, and this hip to modern sounds, writes folk that’s indulgent and immature in its approach, not knowing the history of its genre enough and wanting to be taken too seriously. But not Katy Kirby. You can take her seriously right now. She’s got the stuff, and she’s using it right.
3 is evidence of that. The EP in question begins with its strongest track, though don’t take that to mean that the rest isn’t quality. It is, but opener “Every Time” is a sunny day special. Like a classic folk song (it wouldn’t surprise me one bit to learn that Kirby is well versed in such songs), it gets to its good hook early, and damn is it good when Kirby sings “Every time I count my blessings/I count you first."
That there’s a line worthy of a song, as is Kirby’s voice itself that sings those endearing words. You notice that voice particularly in the bridge, where most of the 60s-inspired “fields-and-mountains” guitar picking quiets down to let you hear her timbre nice and clear. Katy Kirby’s voice is the star of these tracks, just as it should be, and you know it’s truly quality because it’s best when it hits its highest notes. Those tone are pure and clear like only some talented young girls have ever been able to do (well, and Diane Coffee), and it’s not something you have to question. You hear it in your bones.
The other two tracks may not grip me in the heart (and have me thinking of that countryside air I grew up in) quite like “Every Time,” but they’re nothing but good as well. “Every Time” is followed by the much more country “Come Back to Nashville,” a nice track that shows off Kirby’s story-building skills and continues to trbrsl her modern era-bucking ability to write those damn love songs that really get to you.
3 then closes at its most experimental, though with a track that’s still quite well-built and efficient for being so. Called “All of Everything,” the song is much slower than the rest of the record, and it ditches the guitar for a hymn-ready organ sound and a filtering of Kirby’s robin’s tones through a heavy electric fade. It sounds like a song you’d unexpectedly hear playing out of one of those old kids “The cow says moo” toys, complete with barnyard sounds and the true spirit of the South inside of it, and indeed the whole song feels like Kirby’s take on the past seen through the lens of now. It’s her own hymn, sripping the form of its oldschool dogma and making it breathy with the air of the modern, independent era, which has its own way of looking at the world’s pretty things.
This is a real romantic’s record- no bullshit and full of lovely clouddrifter harmonies. It might be almost a year old at this point, but it’s good enough and still little-known enough to absolutely demand to be on your Spring 2016 playlist, espeically as we hit the kind of rare temperate days in Texas that Kirby says the record was completed during. The next sunny day, take this one out with you and sit with it a bit in the light and the breeze. You won’t regret it one bit, nor will you regret taking a second to try Katy Kirby on for size below.
(You can also vote for Katy Kirby for The Deli Austin’s Artist of the Month to the right, so get on that if you like what you hear.)
Tower Defense unveils “Stay Inside” EP; release show this Saturday (3.26)
We previewed a single the latest from Tower Defense about this time last month, at the time calling it "Devo with a short circuit." Those frantic late-70’s new wave leanings that drew us initially are present throughout the whole EP, giving an urgency to the whole affair. It’s remarkably robotic, in the most enjoyable way. Even the guitars are fuzzed out to the point that they sound less like stringed instruments and more like you’re being admonished for entering the wrong password on some kind of outdated terminal.
See Tower Defense at the 5 Spot this Saturday (03.26) with garage punkers Vamptones and human safety hazards Hans Condor. –Austin Phy
Buzz Alert! Cigarettes After Sex plays Rough Trade on June 1st
Greg Gonzales relocated to Brooklyn at the end of 2015, and the move seems to have proved beneficial. Since then, his uber-mellow, twangy, dreamy band Cigarettes After Sex has developed noteworthy buzz, thanks to their beautiful new record ‘Affection,’ and to powerfully intimate live performances. Greg’s voice, magnetic and androgynous, conveys an aura of ambiguity and mystery to his ghostly material, although his thick mustache/beird combo definitely fights the bi-gender appeal. The band can be experienced live at Rough Trade on June 1st.
DC rapper Bakalis releases new single, Street Classic
Looking for hot beats? Gaithersburg-based Bakalis pumped out this sick single a few weeks ago and it should be blasting through everyone’s speakers right this moment. He’s been busy the past year, laying out new tracks every couple months. Barely pausing for breath but spilling out lyrics flawlessly, Bakalis has somber backbeats that serve to emphasize the strength of his message and make your head start bopping along. He’s talented and industrious, so keep this guy on your shortlist for quality DC rap. -Jonathan Goodwin