Toronto

B.A. Johnston – Hamilton Wildman’s New Record “The Skid Is Hot Tonight”

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Hamilton’s wildest performer B.A. Johnston has just released his latest record “The Skid is Hot Tonight” on February 22nd. Based on the tracklisting alone you should be excited about the tomfoolery he will have lined up for us on this upcoming album. Indie88 recently premiered his latest single “Geddy Lee.” The guitar noodles its way through this song with a very indie-reverby and somewhat silly riff as he offers his opinions on Rush. B.A.’s official album release party goes down on March 16th at This Ain’t Hollywood in Hamilton. He will be touring all over Canada and the UK from March to June. Don’t ya dare miss it! – Kris Gies

Chicago

Kate Schell “Shoeboxes”

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Kate Schell, formerly of Paper Thick Walls, has released the powerful lead single, “Shoeboxes”, from her forthcoming debut album Past Present Future. This is raw and honest Chamber Pop with lush electronics through out.

You can help Kate Schell celebrate the release of her album at Burlington Bar on March 9th with Doomerang, Low Swans and Eshé All Day.

Chicago

Forest Management “Passageways”

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Forest Management is preparing to release his next album, Passageways, on March 22nd via Whited Sepulchre Records. This is the beautiful ambient drone sounds of John Daniel, and this album promises to be his most personal work to date. You can preorder and stream “Blue Leaves” and “Smoke Rising Out Back (The Gardens)” below.

He also recently released a Nathan Melaragno directed video for “Blue Leaves”.

You can catch Forest Management at The Hideout on March 29th with Miranda Winters and Bill MacKay.

Nashville

Outlaw rocker Boo Ray premieres new video; plays 3rd & Lindsley on 03.03

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Playing with Andrew Leahey at 3rd & Lindsley on March 3rd is Boo Ray, whose outlaw sound and rough voice will have you smelling whiskey and swamp water psychosomatically. The artist’s new video for "Back Down To Georgia" — a track from his latest release Tennessee Alabama Fireworks — traces the journey of a woman delivering a recipe in parts to Ray to help him make Nashville’s famous Hot Chicken. The track has Boo Ray and his band’s signature sound of a tight group that’s thundered up and down the roads of the Bible Belt together over the years, their vocal cords becoming coated with smoke and their instruments loud enough to shake the Delta. Take a look at the video for "Back Down To Georgia" below, and catch Ray on March 3rd at 3rd & Lindsley. – Will Sisskind

NYC

CLAVVS plays SXSW + celebrates EP release at the Knit on 03.29

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The Brooklyn dream-pop duo known as CLAVVS has always had their feet squarely planted in the realm of electronic soul-pop. Swaying soundscapes and luscious vocals were synthesized into a potent formula. Yet with this recent run of new singles to promote their upcoming EP No Saviors, the pair have cracked open new patterns to make their distinct ideas sound infinitely more versatile. Lay Back adds a baroque flourish (reminiscent of some Tricky’s best ideas) that crashes down like a waterfall of strings, while the title track (streaming below) bursts with polyrhythms and self-assured brashness. Retaining their hazy aura and breaking out of the dream pop bubble with exuberance is a balancing act that CLAVVS pulls off with the utmost ease. – Tucker Pennington

Chicago

Blind Adam & The Federal League @ Reggie’s (3/2)

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Blind Adam & The Federal League will be releasing a new 7” single via A-F Records called “Mansions on The Boulevard” on March 22nd. This will be the Punk N’ Western band’s first follow-up to their impressive 2018 debut album.

The band did release a new song back in December called “Bonfire Song”, and that can be streamed below. However, the three tracks that will be on this 7” are “Mansions On The Boulevard”, “Too Short To Die”, and “Another Lonely Weekend (acoustic”.

You can catch Blind Adam and The Federal League at Reggies on March 2nd with Volk, Badwater Sound, and Dead End Lights.

Philadelphia

New Music Video: “The Sun Still Seems to Move” – Shannen Moser

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"The Sun Still Seems to Move," a new song from Philly singer-songwriter Shannen Moser, has arisen. The recording possesses a gentle, folk-country progression as Moser narrates in an earnest, emotive manner with raw, gripping beauty. Inserting a poem as vocals bounce and echo off each other, there’s a tender yet escalating tension that tears right through. You can catch Moser this Thursday, February 28, on a Home Outgrown Presents lineup at The Music Ward that also includes The Obsessives and Active Bird Community. (Photo by Vincent Sadonis)

Philadelphia

New Bridge Underwater LP Available for Streaming & Purchase

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Bridge Underwater recently shared its new self-titled full-length album. Breathe in the buoyant, bubbly, pop-rock sound. Velvety, seamless melodies and exacting, instrumental lines create a weightless sense of intimacy, as the synth and vocals wash over you. It’s delicate, dreamy and danceable – all at the same time.

Austin

Louis Black Reminisces on the Austin Music Awards

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The Austin Music Awards is closing in on nearly four decades of disseminating accolades to exceptional Austin musicians and industry rock stars. Now in its 37th year, the event has evolved from a backyard barbecue aesthetic in 1982, to a local equivalent of the Grammys. Winners of the Austin Chronicle’s music poll will share the stage with national artists like Jakob Dylan, Suzanne Vega and John Doe of X; while surprise guests always threaten to steal the show. A regular staple of the AMAs, Louis Black is a founding father of many Austin institutions. A serial entrepreneur and tireless creative;The Austin Chronicle, SXSW and The Austin Music Awards all have his finger prints on them. We spoke with Louis to learn about the AMAs inception, history and dig up a few of his best memories.

The Austin Music Awards began in 1982 and there was concern that if local punkers, The Big Boys, won ‘Artist of the Year’, that The Chronicle would be seen as too ‘street’. 

What happened was, Jeff Whittington, who was the music editor; really wanted to do the poll. We all agreed and we were ready to run it and I suddenly had this concern, well we were having problems with were we too ‘street’ at the time. We were only a few months old. We were all pretty crazy. We were working all the time. And so I had … briefly I had this thing where I said, "Well, maybe we shouldn’t do this. Maybe people will think we’re too punk. And I took one look at Jeff who was about to have a nervous breakdown and dropped that. I’ve brought it up more recently because I’m friends with Chris Gates and Biscuit and I thought it was indicative of how l wrong I had been on many occasions.

 

When the actual awards are taking place and the planning is all done, what do you take the most pleasure in once the ceremony is actually started? Where do you have the most fun?

I think the awards are really remarkable in that it is really collaborative and cooperative and it’s about music and it’s not about money or celebrity. You can make a lot more money in New York or LA or Nashville. You can become a bigger star. I think most people in the Austin scene really are into thecollaboration … not that they don’t want to be successful, of course they do. But there’s a nature of which this community really works together. And so the awards now, having done it for 37 years, I don’t think it’s about the accolades … and even early on I would get nervous about that. Because I think that kind of competition thing, I think is counterproductive. But it’s really about who’s had a really good year.

And since we’ve being doing it for so long and so many categories. It was 50 then we cut it down to 35 but we added another 10 to make the music industry awards. So it’s like 60 categories now. And so many people have won it. So many people have been honored. And I think there’s only a handful of people who might have deserved to get it and didn’t. I can’t think of anybody offhand. So really … It seems to me to be very much an Austin event. It’s like a high school reunion or something. Everybody’s happy to see everybody else. The community votes on it. It’s not critics. It’s not industry. And so I think there’s something very organic about it. And I realize … And I hadn’t even thought about this but I realize like last year, everybody shows up. And I think that says something. Out of the 35 categories, maybe two people won’t be there because they’re on the road or they didn’t allow time.

When we just did the Austin Music Industry Awards last Sunday, for the first time we didn’t tell people who had won. It was just they knew they had been a finalist. But the didn’t know who had won. And every winner was there except for Jody Denberg who thought hanging out with Yoko Ono in New York was more important.

Yeah, I can see why hanging out with Yoko might be …

A little bit more important. I’ve been bitching about Jody but I’m kidding.

 

The awards look like a reunion. It’s exciting just seeing some legends run into each other and have those interactions. Do you have any favorite moments from the awards?

There’s a lot of them. Actually the second year we did it, Stevie Ray Vaughan flew in on his own nickel and did two-thirds of Texas Flood and then he played with Jimmy. I think it was one of the first times he and Jimmy played together on stage, at least in Austin. That was like the second year.

There were two with Roky Erickson. One where he was going to play with Doug Sahm. He agreed to come and to play but he basically wandered around the stage and didn’t play. And then other time with Roky when he played with the True Believers and he wouldn’t get off stage. They were doing "Two-Headed Dog" and Roky kept running up to the microphone and singing "Two-headed dog, two-headed dog, stuck inside the Kremlin with a two-headed dog" again and again. At one point, three of the guys had him cornered with their guitars and had him pushed off to the side of the stage and he broke through and sang "two-headed dog" again. I thought that was pretty cool.

There are so many times though when different people played together. Margaret got Okkervil River and Roky to play together and then they recorded an album that did really well. Having Pete Townsend come out with Ian McLagan or having Alejandro Escovedo go, “Oh here’s another guitar player”, and Bruce Springsteen walks out, was pretty cool. You know the backstage is where everybody is waiting because they come in groups. And all of those people … Some of them haven’t seen each other in a while and there’s a real camaraderie.


 
 
 
 
 
Portland

Get Lost in the Apathy of Soft Kill

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Punishing isn’t the first word you’d think to describe Soft Kill, an official SXSW artist, but the more their gothic barrages of post-punk and shoegaze pummel into you, the apter the label becomes. On Savior, the Portland-based outfit buries most of their synthesizers into a thundering vessel of fuzz and shadowy guitars. Like streetlights quickly appearing and vanishing again as you drive past them, moments of joy appear only to get smothered in a wave of rumbling toms and a peal of crashing cymbals. It’s a relentless hail of gloom and doom, something akin to The Cure without reveling in any of the performative aesthetics of goth music; Soft Kill is purely here for the raw ennui.

-By Tucker Pennington

 

NYC

Matt Shapiro unveils single “The Addict” from upcoming LP “Fade In”

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With three full length albums and a fair share of movie placements under his composer and musician’s belt, Matt Shapiro cannot not be called a staple of the NYC scene. He recently unveiled The Addict (streaming below), the first single from the upcoming EP Fade In, scheduled for an early March release. Mostly electronic, The Addict represents – according to Shapiro himself – a return to a more disciplined and stripped down approach to writing, after the epic and layered sound of his latest LP Metaphysical. However, after the initial bars (which are stripped down indeed), The Addict builds into a rich and warm sound conveyed by luxurious, ’80s inspired synth pads and by Matt’s soulful tenor and spot on falsettos, which sing about the best addictions of all – Falling in Love.