NYC

Hollister trio Conserve strip down their sound in “Puzzle Dust” EP

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The newest EP, Puzzle Dust, from Hollister-based trio Conserve takes the band in a completely new direction from their debut self-titled album. In their sophomore release, they completely strip down their sound and rely solely on acoustic guitar and vocals—whereas Conserve is heavily punk and garage influenced. This isn’t a surprising move for a band that is determined to escape the confines of genre, and they do it well, bringing a distinctly grunge sensibility to singer-songwriter tracks. Catch their next show at The Colony on April 29th. – Lilly Milman

Listen to our favorite track “Inside Looking Out” below.

Philadelphia

New Cave People EP Available for Streaming & Purchase

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Cave People‘s new EP Kingfisher is out now via Stereophonodon. A stirring, intimate, warmth radiates from within a cabin. The serenity of thought-provided space gently wears into you, which is countered and accentuated by a heart-thumping, grungy melody. Boot & Saddle will hosting the band’s record release this Thursday, April 12, with support from Petal & Body Guard.

Portland

New Al’s Den Residency with Mitch Wilson begins tonight

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McMenamins Al’s Den has got a knack for picking artists to watch and using their residencies to showcase them. For this week in April, Al’s Den is giving us the chance to see a different side of a very talented and familiar face, along with some special guests to play close at hand along the way. Starting tonight, we’ll get a whole seven days to enjoy Mitch Wilson and his sundry sounds.

Many probably recognize Wilson from his time spent in indie rock bands around Portland, like the Deli favorite LiquidLight, but he’s actually got a surprising amount of work under his belt. What many probably don’t know is that on top of being a jazz drummer, he was also one of the founding members of the Taylor Momsen (remember Gossip Girl?) led rock band The Pretty Reckless. Even more than that, he’s performed in the Sting-featuring Broadway show ‘The Last Ship’ and has contributed creatively to the Tony Award nominated Broadway musical ‘A Night with Janis Joplin.’

With all of this artistic output behind him, Wilson has opened up the next music chapter of his life to share with us all. He’ll be the headlining act each night of course, but joining him tonight will be Quiet Type, tomorrow 4.09 with a variety of local special guests for the On Broadway musical theater night, the jazz super group Trad Jazz on Tuesday 4.10, LiquidLight on Wednesday 4.11, Megan Diana on Thursday, Wil Kinky on Friday, and then ending on Saturday 4.14 with S.O.S., A Tribute to the Police. 

There’s too much to miss, so be prepared to find your seat for the whole week at Al’s Den.

NYC

Been Stellar premiere garage rock single “Everyone Smokes in the City”

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On their newest release, Been Stellar’s Sam Slocum and Skyler Knapp take inspiration from the city of New York after moving from Michigan in 2017 to start college. “Everyone Smokes in the City” comes from an observation the two made about the prevalence of smokers in New York compared to their previous, more midwestern home. The single takes clear inspiration from bands at the forefront of New York’s music scene in the early aughts—The Strokes and Interpol, in particular, are cited as influences by the group—and keeps a naïve sort of charm with observations on the city like choosing between a smelly subway car or the unknown of catching a cab.

“Where we came from, everything was so safe and upstanding,” Knapp says. “Even though we still were in a really nice part of the city, we noticed that the people were a bit more jagged. The song is about this new type of personality we started to see: falsely jaded, pretentiously unpretentious. It’s about dudes who talk way too much about zines and Bushwick (both of which are cool for the record). The goal of it was to try to make the least hypocritical observation of these new people we found ourselves surrounded with.”

You can stream “Everyone Smokes in the City” below. – Cameron Carr

Chicago

The Claudettes Free Show at Emporium

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The Claudettes recently released their latest album, Dance Scandal At The Gymnasium, via Yellow Dog Records. The band blends blues, soul, punk, and more into a sound that is all their own. It’s somewhere on the venn diagram of Little Richard, Fiona Apple, and Nirvana.

You can catch The Claudettes performing a Free show at Emporium Chicago (Wicker Park) on April 27th with The Cell Phones.

Philadelphia

Weekend Warrior, April 6 – 8

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Layers on layers create a rich density; however, that complexity can sometimes confine a means of accessibility or entry. Hop Along achieves the delicate balance between the two with their latest album Bark Your Head Off, Dog, which was released today via Saddle Creek Records and will be celebrated tomorrow evening at Johnny Brenda’s. Wistfully weaving words into emotive-ranging, exploratory, narrative webs, one naturally embraces the triumphant tangles. These songs hold their hands out, expressing personal consciousness, while connecting with the listener in a one-on-one level. Swept up in the stories, memorable melodies and polished instrumentation provide a living-breathing framework, one that offers nuanced sonic accents, playing with pockets of space, crafting tight-grooves, highlighting subtle-penetrating details, while also pushing to powerful points of peak performance in key stretches. What catches one’s ear at first may be not what one holds onto in hindsight. – Michael Colavita

More shows to hit this weekend…

Johnny Brenda’s (1201 N. Frankford Ave.) FRI Rosali, The Dove & The Wolf, SAT Hop Along, Lucy Stone

Boot & Saddle (1131 S. Broad St.) SAT Yowler

Kung Fu Necktie (1250 N. Front St.) FRI No Thank You (Record Release), Narra, Tact/Forever Vista/DJ Deejay, SAT Shit City/A Black Celebration: DJ Baby Berlin and Jem/DJ Littlespaceyy, DJ Magglezzz

PhilaMOCA (531 N. 12th St.) SAT RFA (Album Release), Secret American, SUN The Goodbye Party

Underground Arts (1200 Callowhill St.) SUN Violent Society, Please Die

The Trocadero (1003 Arch St.) FRI U + Me + R&B, SUN Mantis

The Fillmore Philadelphia (1100 Canal St.) FRI Dirty South Joe, Magglezzz

The Foundry (1000 Frankford Ave.) SAT Work Drugs

Electric Factory (421 N. 7th St.) FRI Stassi Pryce, El Feco, Ras Professor, Elliven, Big Mind Band

World Café Live (3025 Walnut St.) FRI (Upstairs) John Vettese / Conjunto, DJ Rahsaan, SAT (Upstairs) Stella Ruze/(Downstairs) Rockin’ Docs for Diabetes Cure

The Fire (412 W. Girard Ave.) FRI The Soft Spots, Distant Voices, Blood Sound, The Phonies, Tubey Frank, SAT Apex Predator, Mauled By A Bear, Nasuta

MilkBoy Philly (1100 Chestnut St.) FRI Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Calvin Weston, Sirius JuJu, Mixed People, Johnny Popcorn

Ortlieb’s Lounge (847 N. 3rd St.) FRI Dear Forbidden, Resilient, Kelsey Cork and the Swigs, SAT The Bad Larrys, EyeBawl, SUN The Morning Herald, Kodiak Park, Water Temple

The Barbary (951 Frankford Ave.) FRI Dylan Jane, SAT Something Like A Monument, Medusa’s Disco, Chalk & The Beige Americans

Silk City (435 Spring Garden St.) FRI DJ Dav, Reed Streets, SAT DJ Deejay, SUN Francisco Collazo

Fergie’s (1214 Samsom St.) SAT Johnny Moskal, SUN Rusty Cadillac

Connie’s Ric Rac (1132 S. 9th St.) FRI White Cheddar Boys, Baffle the Cat, Tropical Disease, Urban Shaman Attack, SAT The Prisoners, Scars Like These, Disoriental

Bourbon & Branch (705 N. 2nd St.) SAT Petty Vandal, JJ Gunn, Adam Travis & The Soul, SUN Stereo League, Sixteen Jackies

The Grape Room (105 Grape St.) FRI Somethin’ Divine, The Sly Foxes, Swwik, Sitting in Cars SAT Naps Past Noon, Inner Temple, Pansy

Ardmore Music Hall (23 E. Lancaster Ave.) FRI Stargazer Lily, SAT Splintered Sunlight, SUN The Griz Band, Walking Dead, Sammy Vile & Vilbred

First Unitarian Church (2125 Chestnut St.) FRI Caracara, SAT Wicca Phase Springs Eternal, Lil Zubin, Holy Mountain

The Pharmacy (1300 S. 18th St.) FRI Overwinter/Frankly Lost , Wolves Can’t Dance, Fuzzy Slippers/Zinskē, SAT Auburn Row, The Boardwalk Kings, Here For The Night /The Rectors, Cthulhu Martini!/Yeenar, Erik Kramer

Tralfamadore (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) SUN Handsome Crü , Brackish, Puppy Angst

The Sound Hole (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) FRI Boon, SAT Soularium

The Mothership (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) FRI The Retinas, Don Babylon, C. M. Slenko, SAT Destroying Angel, John Markow

All Nite Diner (Please contact one of the acts or venue for more info.) FRI Free Cake For Every Creature, Slow Ref

NYC

Caroline Rose plays Summerfest + talks about Pedals and Synths

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New York City-based songwriter Caroline Rose has reinvented her sound on her sophomore LP Loner. Dawning an ironically sporty aesthetic, Rose delivers poignant tales of loneliness and disillusionment with a cigarette in hand. Contrasting the Americana sensibilities of 2014’s I Will Not Be Afraid, Loner combines elements of ’70s punk and straight-ahead pop. Caroline just announced she will be performing at the upcoming Summerfest. Our sister blog Delicious Audio asked her a few questions about the gear used in her sophomore album – read the interview here. – Charley Ruddell

NYC

A Deli Premiere: Locus Pocus release “Doctor’s Doctor” & play The Ivy Room (4.6)

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If you have yet to hear the apocalyptic indie psych of San Francisco five-piece Locus Pocus, then you are surely suffering from intense FOMO. Good thing that we have the cure. Today, the Deli SF is happy to premiere “Doctor’s Doctor” (streaming below), the first single off their forthcoming self-titled debut LP. This track departs from the band’s previous style, trading in some of the softer sounds, creating a feeling that is much more urgent. Locus Pocus plans to release their next single on May 6th, and the full album on June 6th—a decision meant to align with the themes of the album, and, in the band’s words, “to be cheeky.” If you like what you hear, make sure to catch this track live tonight at The Ivy Room in Albany. – Lilly Milman

NYC

Negative Gemini brings brooding electronica to Mercury Lounge 04.06

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The music of Negative Gemini (real name Lindsey French) feels spring-loaded – full of tension and liable to blow at any moment. At a cursory listen, the instrumentation on Negative Gemini’s most recent EP, Bad Baby, is smooth, and almost mellow. However, factor in her velvety-yet-seething vocals, and the color of her music takes on a whole different shade. It’s dark, it’s staticky, it’s at times dissonant and it’s always urgent. Dread seems to hover over many of French’s songs – a vague sense of impending doom – or it may just be the spectre of depression lurking in the corner. Ultimately, it’s up to the listener to interpret the feelings encapsulated in French’s music, and they’re plenty. Negative Gemini is playing at Mercury Lounge on April 6th, with CIFKA, Ani Klang, FEE LION and Wild Kid. Listen to "My Innocence" below! – Ethan Ames

NYC

HEAVEN plays symphonic indie rock at Mercury Lounge 04.07

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Despite its namesake, HEAVEN is a gritty and angsty band. Their songs are big, booming and compelling, with an evident pop ethos that straddles indie irreverance and top-40 catchiness. Making good use of the minor-key, grimy vulnerability of grunge and soaring, harmonious refrains reminiscent of Arcade Fire and other early-aughts indie bands, the four-piece of HEAVEN are a tight unit on their most recent LP, All Love Is Blue. The eleven-song album flows seamlessly, with enough variety in each song to keep the listener guessing. It’s clear that for HEAVEN, the sky’s the limit. HEAVEN is playing Mercury Lounge on April 7th with Longwave and Tiger Mountain. Listen to "She’s Closer Than Everyone" below! – Ethan Ames

Austin

Interview: Cut Copy in Austin

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Cut Copy arrived in Austin once again, this time on tour for their latest album, Haiku From Zero.  We sat down with Dan and Ben, backstage at Stubbs, to discuss influences, life on tour, local hotspots, and working at Blockbuster.  Cut Copy would go on to put a memorable show that proved to be just as scintillating as it was epic.

 

Lee:                          When you’re in Austin, do you have any favorite spots or things to do while in town?

Ben:                          We do, we’ve developed one kind of go-to thing in the last sort of couple of trips, it’s a taco truck, called Granny’s Taco’s, which is just sort of a couple blocks away, but they make amazing breakfast tacos. When you’re on tour, getting something in your stomach after a big night is usually a Godsend, so finding this place that makes amazing breakfast tacos was a game-changer for us. We went there this morning.

Lee:                          Haiku from Zero was recorded remotely, which this is the first time you’ve done that, correct?

Dan:                         Well it was written remotely, and then, we did a bunch of recordings, remotely, but then, inevitably we kind of had to meet up to finish the recordings, so we did a bunch, maybe 4 or 5 weeks in Atlanta, just kind of doing the final stage, but yeah. As far as everything else up to that point we’ve done separately.

Lee:                          Why Atlanta?

Ben:                          We worked with a guy called Ben Allen, who we’d mix the albums with back in 2010, and yeah there’s a studio there. We wanted to work with him more, so we hadn’t really worked in that sort of classic, Ben in the studio with a producer at the helm, kind of model for a while, so we wanted to do that. So we rented a Airbnb, lived there for like a month, or more, maybe 6 weeks. And, yeah it was good. It’s a good city to do a record, a lot of new stuff, really great places to eat and drink, and yeah obviously Ben, we love Ben. He had a really great studio there as well.

Lee:                          So no collaborations with Outkast, or any Atlanta artists coming up?

Ben:                          Not this time around.

Dan:                         No, No.

Ben:                          Maybe next time.

Lee:                          I know you guys are NBA fans, did you catch Hawks games while you were there?

Dan:                         We went to one actually.

Ben:                          Yeah.

Dan:                         Which was really cool.

Ben:                          Yeah. Our bandmate is a big Boston Celtics fan, but Ben Allen is a pretty big Atlanta Hawks fan, and we saw the Hawks.

Dan:                         Hawks versus the Bulls actually, pretty cool.

Lee:                          Do you have to be a Ben Simmons fan? Being from Australia right now he’s kind of like the new Jesus from Down Under.

Ben:                          Yeah, I guess so. We actually went to a Philly game…

Dan:                         …yeah a few months ago.

Ben:                          …and he was playing, which was, yeah. That was pretty cool, but I think if anyone in Australia kind of doesn’t even vaguely have interest, in a foreign sport, the press just goes obsesses over them, and it’s just sort of, so we’re probably, you know, overloaded on Ben Simmons already, without him even, yeah he’s had one season or something now, but I feel like I’ve read a lifetime of articles about him just from Australian magazines and newspapers and stuff.

Lee:                          Gotcha. One thing I’m curious about before Cut Copy kind of took off, how did you guys make a living? Did you have any odd jobs going on?

Ben:                          Yeah, I mean I worked in the service industry, and I worked in a video store actually for a long time-

Dan:                         That’s actually when, I think probably about when you joined the band

Ben:                          Yeah.

Dan:                         I lived in the area where this video store was, and he’d be the guy going in, you know, gets the DVDs or whatever, and he’d be there at the counter. That was sort of funny like, going in for a video, and going "how you looking for rehearsal next week?"

Lee:                          Was it a Blockbuster?

Dan:                         It was.

Ben:                          Which it’s kind of amazing, because they’re all gone now. I remember when I started working the place was still VHS videos, but mainly VHS. Then it was mainly DVDs, then couple Blu-Rays, and it was…I mean I finished it before it failed. They didn’t last much longer after I left. I must have been holding it all together.

Lee:                          You saw it all the way through then?

Ben:                          Yeah, I saw…

Dan:                         Yeah, lightning round.

Ben:                          Yeah.

Lee:                          As Cut Copy was starting, what were your biggest influences?

Ben:                          I mean I guess probably a lot of the influences are in the album sleeve, you know a lot of the artwork I did for that was referencing the artists that were inspirations, but I mean I guess just from a perspective, like an Australian guy, like The Avalanches were hugely influential, because they were probably the first act that I knew of like electronic, sort of, band to emerge from Australia and really have international success.

Lee:                          Cool.

Ben:                          Yeah, I mean there just weren’t many artists that came out of Australia at that point in time, I guess it was a lot harder, the internet wasn’t sort of a medium for getting your music out at that stage. So you need to kind of somehow, get a record deal or get on the radio if you want to even play a show outside of Australia, so The Avalanches were pretty influential in that, certainly at that point in time. Well you know, if they can do it, then maybe we can do it, kind of thing.

Lee:                          What would a perfect day for you guys look like?

Dan:                         It probably changes, I mean …

Ben:                          I don’t know, any day that would be perfect would be, you know, once you have it, you’d be looking for something else, but I don’t know, it depends. I think the perfect day for me would probably just be at home, but you know, I’d get bored of that as well and want to go on tour again.

Dan:                         Yeah, the life a musician is kind of a strange one, because you’re never really 100% settled, ’cause if you’re writing a record you’re at home all the time, you don’t really see anyone, you’re kind of just in a bubble, and then when you’re on tour, you’re kind of in front of people the whole time, like you’re never in same place for more than a night, and so somewhere in the middle of those two things, is kind of an ideal life, but you never have that ideal life. It’s always one extreme or the other, and that’s just kind of the way it … that’s the life between both those extremes.

Lee:                          Always greener pastures.

Dan:                         Yeah.

Ben:                          Yeah.

Lee:                          I know when you guys write songs it’s first you create, but then you go back and make sure you can play it live, is there a catalog of music that just sitting somewhere, that you could release later?

Ben:                          I mean, not really, there’s definitely a catalog of songs that never made onto our records or anything like that. Probably a long catalog, but I guess, you know, there’s probably like, you know just wanting what we put out there to be as awesome as it can be, so we kinda don’t want something that’s two thirds good, we want it to be 100 % good.

Dan:                         There’s probably one or two songs off this album that we still haven’t released yet that may see the light of day, there’s not, yeah …

Ben:                          There’s a couple beats I would still…

Dan:                         Yeah

Ben:                          I don’t know if we’re ever going to release those.

Dan:                         We might.

Ben:                          Just a couple.

Dan:                         Thanks for reminding us.

Lee:                          Has touring taken over your life recently?

Ben:                          It’s great fun, I think we’re … we’ve been doing it for a while, and sort of, as the years go by, it doesn’t necessarily get easier it just sort of back up day after day, doing what we do, but we still have to remind ourselves how lucky we are to be doing it and playing amazing shows, at places like this, and going to really nice cities, it’s a pretty rad job.

Dan:                         I think it does in a way, I think the only thing with touring is you kind of, even when you come off tour, you feel there’s a bit of a recovery period. It’s like you kind of, yeah it’s like a surreal existence, you know when you’re off on tour. You’re getting a lot of attention, and you’re probably exhausted most of the time, even though, but you’re constantly stimulated.

Dan:                         Then coming home, it’s like there’s a come down from that, you just, it might take a week or two to sort of get back down to Earth, and be like "okay, alright, I’m back in the real world again". So, I think, yeah, even sometimes when your home, you’re not really 100% home, a part of you is still out on tour in your mind. But yeah I don’t know, I kind of enjoy the feeling of adventure and unexpectedness of touring, cause it just feels like you’re never quite sure what the next day is gonna bring, it’s like, you know, it’s exciting.

Lee:                          At least you know Granny’s Tacos is happening in Austin.