NYC

Best of NYC #20: Midnight Spin, Live at Crash Mansion on 08.07

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We continue our "Best of NYC Countdown", covering every day one of the artists that made our Year End Best of NYC list (a chart compiled by a jury comprised of local bloggers, music writers, promoters, record store personnel, DJs, and our writers and readers).

After multiple rounds of categorizing, voting, narrowing down, and counting, Williamsburg, Brooklyn-based Midnight Spin landed at the top of The Deli Magazine’s “New York’s Best Emerging Artist of 2009 Reader’s Poll.” Freshly formed in 2008, Mike Corbett (vocals, guitar), Jim Terranova (guitar, vocals ), Danny Scull (drums), Ben Waters (bass), and Jeremy Cohen (keys) have been touring around town, selling out beloved venues in New York, including the Lower East Side’s Mercury Lounge, making headway at college campuses across the country, and leaving lasting impressions at this past year’s CMJ Music Marathon. The quintet has gained substantial support in their short time as a band, and with their recent victory on The Deli’s website poll, Midnight Spin may hold the keys to hitting the big time in no time. Their album “Through the Mojo Wire,” released last summer, resembles the type of record that would skip the Indie scene and head straight for the “Top 40s.” However, unsigned and New York-grown, Midnight Spin have benefited from the necessary acknowledgment by the neighborhood, a feel-good step in any emerging band’s career.

NYC

Deli Artist of the Month The Spring Standards release new Video

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The Spring Standards – currently our artist of the month – are a NYC trio of multi instrumentalists who play rather mellow folky tunes. The band released their debut full length in April, showcasing a sound more varied than your average Americana band, enriched by beautifully evocative male/female vocals. Bells and Whistles is the song the trio chose for their debut video, which is tastefully (and quite literally) inspired to the song’s lyrics.

NYC

Lobisonem readies electronic instrumental release

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Inspiration works in weird ways, all artists know that. Brooklyn producer/musician Brad Loving’s recent experience can testify that: a trip to Mali, one of the most georgeous African countries – although almost completely electricity-less – inspired… an electronic album! The full CD, presented under the project name "Lobisonem" and produced by John McEntire of Tortoise, will be released in september under Tall Corn Records, but a track can be previewed (or should we say "pre-heard"?) here.

NYC

Bern & The Brights CD release party on 07.17 at Maxwell’s

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Bern & the Brights will be celebrating the release of their new EP, Swing Shift Maisies, on Saturday, July 17th, 9PM at Maxwell’s in Hoboken , NJ . Their first full-band, studio release promises to satisfy ravenous fans who’ve come to love the infectious energy of a Brights’ live show. By recording the core of each song live in the studio, the band was able to capture the magic and chemistry that arises when they play as a five-piece act. Every aspect of Swing Shift Maisies— from song selection to production to album artwork—was meticulously handled by the band, and they’re eager to share this labor of love with you. More on the band: Bern & the Brights have opened for such notable artists as Butch Walker, Rhett Miller [of the Old 97s,] Nicole Atkins and the Black Sea, Living Colour, and Mike Doughty [of Soul Coughing] and will be opening for Richie Havens this summer. In addition to touring the northeast, the Brights have graced the stages of major venues such as Webster Hall, Maxwell’s, The Stone Pony, The Bitter End, Spike Hill, and Southpaw. – (as posted in The Deli’s Open Blog – post your band’s entries, videos, and Mp3s here).

NYC

LC Fest final 2 nights: Courtesy Tier, B. Dunn, Jessi Robertson + 20 more

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As Brooklyn’s 4th Annual LC Fest heads into its fourth day, look for performances from 13 artists including Danny Ross, The Courtesy Tier and Jessi Robertson (in the picture). Classically trained Ross brings his polished piano rock to the stage and his latest album, Danny Ross Presents One Way, while Brooklyn duo The Courtesy Tier, ranked #35 in The Deli’s current Best Of NYC Bands list, layers raw guitar riffs over catchy rhythms for a full-on rock sound, as heard on their recent EP, Map and Marker. Batting cleanup for the night is Robertson, one of the Local Correspondents founders, whose dark, lyrically driven songs and whiskey and honey-soaked voice will soon be exposed to a wider audience when her first studio album is released later this year. Performances begin at 8 p.m.

Sunday July 11’s, the final night, highlights include performances by Craig Chesler, Bryan Dunn (picttured), The Rambler’s Jeremiah Birnbaum, and nine others. Ukulele and guitar player Chesler mixes ’60s pop and ragtime into easy songs that practically scream summer, as heard on his latest CD, Little Craiggy Chesler & The Musical Proverbial Knee-Highs. Dunn, whose high-octane band shows pack ’em in at Mercury Lounge, brings his Americana rock out for a rare solo performance before heading into the studio to record a new album. Birnbaum, who fronts bluesy, alt. country act The Ramblers, will be serenading the crowd with songs from their latest release, Getting There. For the complete schedule of all five nights (from July 7th to the 11th), go here. For 42 free MP3s from festivals artists, split into four volumes for easy downloading, see here.

NYC

From the NYC Open Blog comes a Deli CD of the Month: Very Fresh

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Ah, the delights of The Deli’s Open Blog! NYC duo Very Fresh posted an open blog entry here a few days ago – we checked out their songs and… we were impressed! "Marker", in particular,  is a splendid song, very fresh sounding, slightly reminiscent of Liz Phair for the honest, fun delivery and the surprising melodic turns, but more chilled and intense – Phair’s material was always so: "yeah whatever, this isn’t really affecting me at all, dudes…"
This song shows a ton of potential and earns the band’s EP "Americana" the Deli NYC’s CD of the Month title. Amongst the other tracks we also like spare and dark "On Moot Point", while "The Clientele", which also displays a Barretesque love for unexpected melody twists, would benefit from better performances. Don’t miss these guys’ live show at Les Poisson Rouge on July 10; they’ll be opening for Larkin Grimm, in whose band singer Cindy Lou Gooden plays the bass. Actually, we should write something about Larkin soon too…

NYC

3rd night of LC Fest at Bar4 with Casey Shea, Lowry and Great Elk

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The third night of Brooklyn’s 4th Annual LC Fest features free performances from Casey Shea, Lowry, Great Elk and ten more NYC indie acts. Shea (smaller pic) is a local celeb whose latest release, Love Is Here to Stay, combines vintage ’60s pop with pleasingly modern layers of noise. Indie rock band Lowry’s alt-country, psychedelia and rock sound has put them on the bill with bands such as Mates of State and Grizzly Bear, and their new album is scheduled for a fall release. Great Elk (bigger pic) just released their first self-titled studio EP, which is replete with haunting, sparse melodic rock. Performances begin at 8 p.m. For the complete schedule of all five nights (from July 7th to the 11th), go here. For 42 free MP3s from festivals artists, split into four volumes for easy downloading, go here.

NYC

NYC band to keep an eye on: The Rassle, live at Union Pool on 07.14

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The Rassle were born of the ribs of The Virgins and The Young Lords. This NYC psych-noise-pop band has the potential to attract the interest of a mixed audience of hipsters and "civilians" thanks to their droney guitar sound, combined with pristine and beautiful pop-folk melodies and dancey beats. Sit patiently through the 30 second intro of this video to meet a song that’s equal parts Jesus and Mary Chain, Happy Mondays and The Pogues (those Irish genes stuck in your system are always ready to pop up and be acknowledged, huh?) Thumbs up also for "Celebrate The Days", reminiscent of J&MC and Spiritualized, which you can find on their myspace page. Check out this noisy psycho-poppiness live at Union Hall on July 14.

NYC

Best of NYC #21:April Smith, Live at The Bell House, July 22

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The Deli Magazine’s pride and joy for several years, Brooklyn’s April Smith and the Great Picture Show, have been ascending since their number five ranking in The Deli’s “Year End Best of NYC 2008 Poll.” Their latest, self-released album, “Songs for a Sinking Ship,” debuted this past February, elicits images of a jazz lounge aboard a pirate cruise. On particularly notable tracks, the suggestive, rowdy, and anxiously paced “Terrible Things,” and “Colors,” a cheerful tune that embraces a calypso inflection, lighthearted grace, and amusing, vocally-created trumpet sounds, April Smith showcases her virtuoso, powerful, bluesy voice, and all-around sass. Ragtime piano and a cabaret cadence, blended with horn counter-melodies on the saloon-ballad “Can’t Say No,” and “Movie Loves a Screen’s” Caribbean beat, patter chorus, lilting trumpet lines, plus Smith’s dazzling vocals, define the album’s sunny theme. Because April Smith and the Great Picture Show’s swooning seductiveness and flamboyant flare set the band apart from many on the current Indie scene, the group will retain their distinctive presence on the press and audience radar. – Meijin Bruttomesso

NYC

Weekly Feature #209b: Oberhofer, Live at Mercury, 08.11

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Though German metal truly rocks, New Yorkers will be happy to discover that the Tacoma-based, Brooklyn-transplanted Oberhofer is a bit more mellow…something like MGMT rather than Rammstein. And if names can be deceiving, why not age? At 19, Brad Oberhofer transforms youthful emotional exaggerations into mature articulations of feeling, while retaining that messy rawness. “AWY FRM U” with its ADHD drumming style and frantic guitars is a perfect example — "You’re pushing me away from you/Oh and I know what I’ll do/I’ll hop the fence/So I can get out of this mess." Oberhofer showcases simple, imaginative lyrics from the mind and heart of someone in synch with his feelings, especially when they’re confused or contradictory, as feelings often are. His recorded vocal has a psychedelic, surf-like quality, with lots of “ooo’s”, like he’s arriving from some far off place – perfect, for say, a Sobe commercial featuring a near-nude Ashley Greene on the beach (the genius “o0Oo0Oo” soundtracks the spot). – Read Paul Dunn interview with the NYC scene’s favorite teenager here.

NYC

Weekly Feature #209a: We Are Scientists, Live at Music Hall 07.17

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California-born, New York-grown We Are Scientists, have undergone multiple transformations and experimented with musical chairs on their path to the top. College buddies, a literature, and political science major, who shared a mutual passion for their “hobby,” the band’s nucleus formed shortly after meeting, and relocated to Brooklyn postgraduation to make their premise a career, catching the ear of The Deli (who interviewed them back in 2004) and then Virgin Records. With three EPs, four full-length albums, including their newest, “Barbara,” released this June, on their resume, W.A.S represent to the NY Indie scene a prime example of survival of the fi ttest. Pioneering the fusion of danceable-pop/rock with cerebral intensity and an urgent energy that umpteen bands strive to clone, Keith Murray and Chris Cain are not simply business; they make funny their business, as well. – Read Meijin Bruttomesso’s article on We Are Scientists here. – Read a vintage Deli interview with WAS here (year 2005).

NYC

LC Fest 2nd night with Brian Bonz, Matt Jones and Third Wheel Barrel

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Matt Jones, Brian Bonz (pictured) and The Third Wheel Band are performing on the second night of Brooklyn’s 4th Annual LC Fest, along with 10 other independent NYC artists. The festival, organized by independent music community Local Correspondents at Bar4 in Park Slope, runs through Sunday, July 11. Jones’s guitar-driven Americana can be heard on his first independent release, Butter and Rum, as well as a new EP, to be released later this year, and indie darling Bonz is currently working on a follow-up to his debut album of ambient, intelligent pop, From Sumi To Japan. The Third Wheel Band, a relative newcomer to the scene, is already making a name for themselves with their infectious brand of old-time, foot-stompin’ country swing. Performances begin at 8 p.m. For the complete schedule of all five nights (from July 7th to the 11th), go here . For 42 free MP3s from festivals artists, split into four volumes for easy downloading, see here.