Philadelphia

New Kerin Maguire LP Available for Streaming & Purchase

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Singer-songwriter Kerin Maguire recently shared her new LP Places. Subtle instrumentation shines a light on the earnest, introspective lyricism. Hovering the threshold between memories and chronicling current moments, the recordings possess a dreamy, intimate quality. It’s a thoughtfully charming, resonating collection of songs.

NYC

NETHERLANDS scream into the void on “HOPE PORN,” play Alphaville 7.22

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Brooklyn’s NETHERLANDS makes the type of sludge rock we deserve in 2019—dark, synthbass heavy post-punk that confronts the consumerist elements of a society we all complain about (but in actuality do very little to change). From their gripes with excessive baby pics on social media (“NEGATIVE LIKES”) to the miasma of existence (“DEATHLESS”), their most recent EP HOPE PORN charts resonant lyrics for a pessimistic 21st Century mindset, all sung against the trudge of subwoofer-destroying electric instrumentation. It’s a maximalist reaction to our world, a sharp rebuke of the idea that things will get better, offering an insightful catharsis in its full-throated scream into the void. Rage on, and catch their sound at Alphaville on July 22nd, supporting Throwaway and Dead Tenants. -Connor Beckett McInerney

L.A.

Rey Villalobos begins anew on new single, “Breathe”

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For close to a decade, Rey Villalobos wrote three albums of atmospheric psychedelia and indie-folk under his moniker House of Wolves. But for the Ojai, California native, a change of pace was necessary. There’s something both familiar and new about "Breathe," switching to his birth name as a solo artist—his ominous new single blends a downtempo backbeat and swaying, oscillating guitars, using natural elements to describe a sense of escape. He incorporates an acoustic flourish on the song’s bridge, later to demolish it, perhaps a clever guise to remind us that he’s respecting the old and welcoming the new.

"Breathe" is the first single from Rey’s forthcoming EP, due out later this summer. – Juan Rodríguez

Austin

Geographer Exposes the Idiosyncracies of an Indie Pop Artist

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Mike Deni, who plays music under the moniker, Geographer, is back on tour for his latest album, New Jersey. The 36 year-old musician has been making music for over 12 years now and stands on a wide catalogue of music, spanning 7 releases, that have crossed a spectrum of genres and influences as Deni has progressed in his career. We sat down with Deni before his show at the Parish, to hear him dish about his onstage personas, his love of touring, and his favorite spots to hang while in Austin.  

 

 

Let’s catch up on the tour. You’re getting towards the latter end of your dates. How has everything been so far on the New Jersey Garden State Tour?

Really good. It’s been even more exciting than I anticipated. A lot of people are coming up to me and saying they’re seeing me for the first time, like they used to listen to me in high school but they could never get into the shows so I’m seeing a lot of 21 year-olds who are seeing me for the first time which is pretty cool. I didn’t know that was a thing so that’s cool.

 

Your live performances definitely have a rawer quality. Have you gotten that feedback in the past before?

Yeah, that’s always something I hear. I feel like certain bands are always trying to capture the energy of the live performance on record and it’s just not really possible. The Grateful Dead is a band that’s known for live performances. If you listen to their studio albums they’re pretty, sort of, staid and sterile. Or Bruce Springsteen who’s known for his live performances, his albums sound great. But it’s kind of a completely different experience.

And I think my music might be like that too. Where the goals that I have in the studio are completely different than the goals that I have on stage. Onstage I’m a very different person than I am generally.

I certainly am garrulous and outgoing but not as much as I am onstage. And in the studio I’m extremely introspective and almost somber. So, yeah, maybe that has something to do with it. Just the two different Mikes that are making the music.

 

Is it therapeutic when you become that extroverted person onstage?

Well it’s pretty fun if it’s natural to do. If you have to sort of contrive it, it can feel really horrible. I don’t want to say horrible, but it just feels extremely disingenuous if you’re having a really off day but these people deserve as good a show as the last place when you were feeling fantastic. It’s like you kind of still have to pull it out of yourself. And generally, like, halfway through the show or a couple songs in it just happens organically as a result of making the music which is exciting to me. It’s exciting to strap on a guitar and sing through some speakers. But sometimes it takes a little while for me to get going. But yeah when, but to be able to do that and sort of exaggerate that side of myself is a very pleasing experience.

 

So with the new album ,New Jersey, the lyrics are a little Springsteen-esque. There’s a little blue collar streak isn’t there?

Oh really, interesting. I’m not a blue collar man.

Well not 100% blue collar. But maybe just a little bit of the worn-down romanticism?

Yeah I mean, I think that’s what it’s about. It’s about, like I was just, I don’t know. I was just trying to make songs that were nostalgic without being contrived. So it was like a depth to the, and really I was really just drawing from my personal experiences in a way that I don’t always do. I do a lot, there’s always personal aspects to all the songs. But a lot of them are concepts that then I apply to myself.

But these, particularly “Summer of my Discontentment” and “Love is Wasted in the Dark” were just straight up about my life and I was just in that mood just sitting in my new apartment in L.A. and just thinking about how I used to feel. Because I’ve always felt like a different person at every stage in my life. It doesn’t, it doesn’t feel like there was a through line. I was a child and that’s a different guy and then I went to college and he’s a totally different guy. And then I’ve sort of been the same person for a decade or more now. But the truth is, is that I am the same person. So it’s like, where does that disconnect occur? Where is the rift between phases? And I was just trying to connect those dots.

 

Are you comfortable on the road? 

Yes, in many ways it’s my best self because I get pretty depressed when I’m not doing something all the time.

And the charge of songwriting is very challenging because it’s like, when you write a song and it’s a good one, it’s a great high and nothing feels better. But sometimes you wake up the next day and nothing comes or there’s long weeks of frustration and recording is really intense too. But on tour life is so simple, it’s just be nice to the people around you and play good shows, try to get a lot of sleep and eat well and exercise. And it’s just like, I can do that. 

The goals are very small and I’m good at them all. So it’s really relaxing and I’m around people all the time which I think is good for my mental health which I’m not, when I’m at home. I spend so much time alone. Sometimes I don’t even leave the house for a few days. Which is not healthy. So it, all the challenges that come with tour, which they’re real and I feel them and I get grumpy but then at the end of the day I’m just like, well I’m happy.

I’m around my friends and I get to do my favorite thing every night and meet a lot of excited people and it’s pretty great.

 

You have history in Austin, I mean, you’ve been coming here for a long time.

Yeah, it’s the home away from home for sure. Because we had a friend here too who we used to stay with all throughout SXSW.

When we would come here we wouldn’t just spend time in a hotel. So it was pretty great, got to know the city really well and yeah, Austin is one of those highlights of every tour. I think is a result of playing it so many times, it’s like, your hometown crowd is always going to be your best. And that’s San Francisco but then there’s other places that I’ve played so many times that it’s almost a hometown crowd vibe and I think Austin is chief among those. It’s kind of like the second city to really pop off after San Francisco.

I remember I played the Mohawk and sold it out on my first headline tour and it was such a shock.

It was just like, what? Yeah, that was the best feeling in the world, to expect if 50 people showed up at the show I would’ve been so excited and then 900 came. It was pretty wild. Yeah they had us in the small room and then they bumped us to the bigger room. It was like rock and roll dreams coming true. So I’ll always associate Austin with that experience. Of being young and really stupid and just so excited.

 

Do you have the Austin routine, you got to hit the tacos or BBQ or what do you get into here?

Well I had an Austin routine where we would go to Freedmen’s. But it closed?

Oh yeah, it shut down.

Yeah, and the reason I went there was because it was pretty much just as good as all the other barbecue places because once you reach a certain level of barbecue it’s like, it’s hard to tell when you’re having the absolute best and when you’re having like, 98%-

And maybe Freedmen’s was 98% but that’s just fine for a guy who lives in California where the barbecue is terrible. But so, we would go there because there were never lines but I guess then that meant that the business wasn’t booming.

So, what was good for Geographer was not good for Freedmen’s. So we need a new Austin routine honestly. I love the tacos here, they are amazing. But so far I feel like our routine is go to Koriente for lunch because it’s really healthy and really cheap and maybe go to Easy Tiger for like a tea or something. And then we got to find our new barbecue joint.

 

 When you’re putting together this tour, you’ve got over a decade body of work, how do you pick your setlist?

Well okay so I try to balance what I think the fans will want to hear with what I want to play. I never want to be one or the other artist.

Where I’m just “Screw you, I do what I want” that’s just not my personality. I definitely want people to be pleased. But I also, I do admire artists when they do just do something for themselves and I think everybody does. So I have, I’ve thrown in one song that’s really just for me. I’m playing every single song from the new EP just because it’s what I’m most excited about.

But it’s short too, so it’s not too much of an imposition. And then I try to just play all the quote-on-quote hits. And, I’ll never play a tour without playing “Kites”, obviously. For the rest of my life which is a blessing. Yeah, and then I try to throw in one deep cut. Like that I’ve never played before on tour.

So it’s like, maybe one person in the crowd will be crazy excited but I just remember how I felt watching Radiohead for the first time. Just begging a god that I don’t believe in that they would play “Let Down” or something that they, just one of the songs that is not a big song for them.

And I think they did play one of the ones I wanted to hear and I was just so unbelievably excited and it’s like, for people who that’s not their favorite song, they’re not going to hate it. And it’s over soon, and I just think it’s a nice flow. Because I’ve done tours before where I’m just like, all the hits, nothing but the hits, and it’s not that much fun.

There’s not a lot of meat inside that sandwich, you know what I mean? So it’s, I feel like this set is one of the best I’ve crafted. It’s very thought out, the progression of the show. And there are moments where I let the energy wane on purpose and then just slam it with a big one so I’ve been really pleased with it.

 

Is it a blessing or curse, when you feel obligated to play a song for the rest of your career?

Well I think, I feel very, aside from the just feeling lucky to have a song that people like, I feel lucky because the song on mine that everybody likes is one that means so much to me.

It’s actually really deeply personal and it was the first song that I wrote, like I almost lost my mind when I recorded, like I recorded it mostly at home, like the demo. And I was just like, what did you just do? I was like, this is a volcano.

So it reminds me of that moment. And then it reminds me of making something of myself? You know, like, achieving my dreams, so I have all these positive associations with the song. It’s so fun to sing, I get to just hit like, my highest note over and over again.

And just the fact that people want to hear it so much, it’s so cool. I mean I could see it getting, okay so, last night for instance I was, Houston is a really rowdy crowd which is really fun because they just live out loud. 

And I was sort of like, obviously I’m going to play “Kites.” Just let me play these other songs for you too. But then I was reflecting on it and I was like, but dude you wouldn’t know that you wanted it, like the fact that they want to hear it so bad that they’re screaming it at you is so cool and then you wouldn’t know that they wanted to hear it if they weren’t screaming it. So I’m just like, yeah. I’m just trying to be grateful.

Yeah, I guess I just, it’s a funny mentality of like, well okay, when I saw Bruce Springsteen it was like, I know he’s going to play “Dancing in the Dark.” I know he’s going to play “Born to Run.”

Right? He’s never not going to play, he’d be an idiot not to play those. But it’s like, there’s a lot of other songs that are just as good that he might not play. So you might want to scream them at him.

So it’s like, yeah. The people, just so you know, I’m always going to play “Kites” forever.

 

Photo by Austin Hansen

Interview by Lee Ackerley

 

Nashville

King Corduroy drops music video for Americana track “Workin’ for a Livin”

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Americana artist King Corduroy will release his new EP Avalon Ave. on August 16th; to preview the drop, he’s released the single "Workin’ for a Livin", along with its music video. A little rootsy and swampy, "Workin’ for a Livin" mixes a little Texas blues and Southern rock with sounds from the Mississippi Delta and New Orleans’ French Quarter. For the better part of the past decade, King Corduroy has written songs that reflect the world around him, and "Workin’ for a Livin" helps to tell the stories of people doing whatever it takes to get by in the somewhat unstable world we live in today. Take a look at the music video for the single, which features little clips of people on the job doing what they can to survive. – Will Sisskind

Chicago

Spark The Forest “Reversion (Observation II)”

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Spark The Forest has released a video for the first single, “Reversion (Observation II)”, from their forthcoming LP, Growth in Erosion. The album is due out July 19th and this is the Post-Rock duo of Anders Johanson (Guitar, bass, keys, sound design) and Ryan Nelson (Drums, programming).

The St. Charles based duo is kicking off a West Coast Tour on August 18th with a hometown show at The House Pub (16 South Riverside Drive, St. Charles, IL).

Philadelphia

New Yellowhammer Fund Compilation Available for Streaming & Purchase

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Bummer Presents… recently released The Yellowhammer Fund, a compilation that aims to raise proceeds for its namesake. "The Yellowhammer Fund provides funding for anyone seeking care at one of Alabama’s three abortion clinics and will help with other barriers to access (travel, lodging, etc.) as well as able." The nineteen-song collection includes contributions from Philly’s own Coping Skills, Big Nothing, and Queen of Jeans, as well as New Jersey’s The Carousers covering Modern Baseball‘s "Your Graduation". Take a listen to a variety of artists below with the added benefit of supporting an excellent cause in the process!

NYC

Ariel Wang to release second single “House Upon a Hill”

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This August 3rd at the Starline Social Club, Ariel Wang releases her second single, “House Upon a Hill,” off of her forthcoming album Bridges. The set will feature her string chamber orchestra, The Composer Arranger Performer Orchestra (CAPO). Wang’s music has simple folk melodies with an orchestral feel and although the vocals are at times not the strongest component of these songs, they are enveloped by a warm chorus of violins, booming cello and compelling drumlines. Wang’s music feels like the soundtrack to a powerful moment and listening, watching, you can’t help but feel overwhelmed in the right kind of way. Join the band at Starline, where they’ll be opening for Meerna’s album release. – Michelle Kicherer, Associate Editor

 

New England

Strangers by Accident celebrates single release tonight at Aeronaut Allston

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Keeping New England’s folk-rock history going strong, Strangers by Accident has released a brand new single titled “Clean,” which pushes the limits of the genre in ear-pleasing fashion. The track builds up slowly: soft acoustic guitar strings and ambient vocal harmonies are led by impressive drum patterns toward a sonic cyclone of bass arpeggios and roaring electric guitar chords. The song closes with a front porch type of tranquility that betrays the storm that precedes it and completes the folk and rock ritual the band is fond of practicing. “Clean” is everything a folk-rock aficionado could ask for; the group is sure to play the single this evening at Aeronaut Allston, we are streaming it below for you. – Rene Cobar

Chicago

Fay Ray @ Sleeping Village (7/11)

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Funk Pop band Fay Ray recently released a new single called “Up & Away”. This is the first new music from the Mariel Fechik fronted band since their 2017, “No Love”.

Fechik is joined by Noah Gehrmann (Guitar), Erik Opland (Bass), Tom Kelly (Drums), Rob Osiol (Keys), Joe Meland (Organ/Synth), Daniel Hinze (Saxophone), and Byron Allen (Trombone).

You can catch Fay Ray @ Sleeping Village tomorrow (7/11) with Deanna Devore and Cordoba.

New England

Matt Maratea debuts funky new single “Can’t Make It Up,” MGM Live performance set for 07.12

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West Springfield, Massachusetts is bumping to the latest single from their very own surging hip-hop star Matt Maratea. "Can’t Make It Up" revs up a deliciously funky guitar riff that then blasts off alongside a pounding bass for a dance groove that enkindles Maratea’s already captivating flow, abundant with charisma. The production by Tantu and Danny EB is squeaky clean, showcasing the producers’ ability to layer harmonies in such an organized way that they create an entrancing atmosphere for the mind to escape to and a sonic spectacle that commands the body surrender unconditionally. The brand new single incorporates just enough pop and funk elements to create a viscous hip-hop hybrid track too sweet to ignore. Matt Maratea will be taking the MGM Springfield Stage by storm on July 12th, and we got "Can’t Make It Up" streaming below in anticipation. – Rene Cobar

NYC

Get lost in the ambient, lo-fi world of Public Library Commute

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New York based multi-instrumentalist Conrad Hsiang creates chill, lo-fi influenced soundscapes under the project name Public Library Commute, drawing from both Japanese hip-hop and contemporary alternative RnB to craft something novel. Last year’s sienna 1999 encapsulates these diverse genre influences in perfect form, with tracks like “fake hawaii” employing sticatto vibraphone-like noodling over Hsiang’s detached auto-tuned vocals. Hsiang’s lyricism and vocal performance in particular breathe new life into a genre of music that’s frequently criticized for its repetitive nature, elevating lo-fi from its stream-heavy, easy-listening reputation to something that is engaging—but still relaxed. Listen to it below, preferably while basking in the warm summer sun. -Connor Beckett McInerney