Austin

Subcommander Drops New Single “Hacksawteeth”

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 Local D.I.Y. songwriter Marcos Rocha [A.K.A. subcommander] dropped a new single earlier this month via their North Loop apartment studio. The barely-there vocal style attests to their environment, being quarantined in a room with parchment paper walls. Though a lot of musicians are adjusting to working remotely, subcommander’s process hasn’t changed much. “All of my work has been made with really limited resources. It just so happens now that the resource I’m lacking is human contact”. Despite the current state of music in Austin, subcommander brings us a mini-symphony in “Hacksawteeth”.


The track starts with a funeral march style piano/string arrangement, then comfortably transitions into a warm, lounge vibe. The light fingerpicking on the nylon strings sound like Rocha’s sitting in the room with you. “Don’t take the beaten path if it beats you to death” they whisper in the last line of the verses. Rocha is open about the feelings that went into creating the track, stating “One of my biggest fears is living a life that isn’t worth living, out of fear that I can’t have what I really want.” They added, “Meanwhile life is grinding away at you like a hacksaw & you’re expected to rise to whatever you’re handed using any tools you’ve got.” Rocha is well known in the Austin music community for their unabashed, guerilla marketing and no-frills approach.

 

In “Hacksawteeth”, subcommander took inspiration from fear, anxiety, false promises, Disney movie ‘Tangled’ and their cat Michael Caine. Rocha explains, “There is a horse named Maximus that has a whole personality and story arc. When the hero, Flynn, gets taken to jail near the end of the movie, I thought “Oh, obviously Maximus is just gonna go pay his bail” & that idea was really funny to me. That’s how I got the first line of the song ‘spent the night in jail / my cat paid bail.’ In a broader sense I feel like the song is about feeling helpless.” 

 

The subcommander discography is packed with a healthy dose of lo-fi, trip-pop tunes & more recently, an emotionally charged split album with Lizzie Page entitled ‘The Mud/Goodwill’ via local net-label Digital Hotdogs. Rocha plans on releasing an EP with their power-pop band Luvweb by the end of the year. Until then, you can purchase and stream “Hacksawteeth” on all major music streaming sites. Make sure to follow their Instagram and Facebook accounts to stay tuned in.


-Chris Lopez

 

Austin

Black Artist Spotlight: Theo Love’s “Rescue Me” Out Now

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In the climate of masks, protests and the eternal quarantine, Theo’s new single “Rescue Me” is the cure. He reminds us to stay strong and to remember that we are not alone. Local Austin artist Thelonious “Theo” Love released his latest single on April 3, 2020 in collaboration with Kate Priestley. This heartfelt song is laced with beats to guide a rough day back to tranquility.

Theo is never afraid to take risks in both his lyrics and his musical style. A combination of modern hip-hop and live instruments truly makes his music unique to the Austin scene. The vibe of the music along with Theo’s soothing voice work together in a harmony that could make a N95 mask melt.

The live experience is unlike anything else. Remember live music? Theo and his group have such synergy on stage you almost want to look away; as if you are watching a private moment between a small group of close friends. His recorded music is reflective of this energy and “Rescue Me” feels like you are inside the heart and mind of the artist.

Theo is more than an artist; he is an activist, a songwriter and, above all, an advocate for love. Now, more than ever the lyrics “still tryna get free, what do I do? What they say feels like chains to me” is an honest reminder of the struggle a black/queer person experiences in daily life. Theo’s response to this adversity: “I chose to be the example. Of life and love and love and love and love”.

There is something eerie about how a song can capture an emotion so specifically. Almost as if this song was created for a time of strife… to keep us humble and keep us together.

        Magz Baillio

Photo Credit: Theo Love’s Facebook Page

Austin

Interview with Brandon Curtis: MAX / MIN , Secret Machines and Life in Pandemic

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Jesse Beaman (My Empty Phantom) and Brandon Curtis  (Secret Machines, Interpol) have joined forces to create, MAX / MIN , a project where artists can produce, distribute and market passion projects that might fall outside the purview of conventional labels. As the music industry has come to standstill during the pandemic, MAX / MIN is giving artists an outlet for their music. We spoke with Brandon about the new label, Secret Machines and pandemic life in Vermont.

Interview by Lee Ackerley 

How are you doing? Are you in Vermont right now?

Yeah, I live in Vermont. I’m about a half hour North of Burlington.

It’s pretty nice. My wife works in the medical field, and so we’ve been pretty strict about social distancing, and wearing masks, and stuff like that. So we haven’t really gone to any of the trails. But I know they’re mostly open. And yeah, I mean, the town I live in, you wouldn’t know there’s any kind of … I mean, people are pretty diligent with the masks. But for the most part, just business as usual. The weirdest thing is the protests that are going on, that is just nonexistent here for the most part. And so there’s this sense of being a spectator. You know what I mean?  I can’t get off Twitter, because I keep looking at police videos.

 

It’s nonstop, and it feels like an echo chamber of just misery, pain, and outrage. It’s a lot to handle if you get sucked into that vortex for sure.

It really is. Although, I think there’s a part of me that’s, I’m trying to just not look away, I’ve been trying to diversify my follow … I mean, I’ve always kind of followed some political activists, or I’ve been a fan, or a supporter of prison abolition for a while, and the defund the police thing is a new add on to that. A lot of progressive people, and union organizers, and things like that.

But then add to that these kind of black educators I’ve started to follow, and just trying to learn more about what racism … You know what I mean? Because I think you know what racism … I started reading this book, I can’t remember the name of it, I’m on chapter three. And it’s just basically blowing my mind about the concept of racism, the concept of assimilation, the concept of anti-racists versus non racists. It’s a lot to take in, but it feels necessary. I feel like people need to learn that. I know I need to learn that.

 

Yeah, it’s good for people to actually take the time to investigate, look into things, and not just take it off as this is a surface level type of protest, and this is the same thing we saw four years ago. A lot of people just file it under, "Oh, I’ve seen this before. Let’s just get through this."

Yeah. I mean, for me, I grew up in a town that was segregated in Oklahoma. I mean, it was literally, there were railroad tracks, and people would go on one side, and other people would go on the other side. And it was never explained to me what that was. And it’s just only in my adulthood, I’m like, "Oh, that’s because the bank wouldn’t loan people money to buy houses in these neighborhoods. Oh, that’s because …" You know what I mean? So it’s re-characterizing things that I took for granted as a child, and understanding what was really the driving force around that stuff has been pretty eye opening.

 

Yeah, so I know you and Jesse came up with Max / Min  before the civil unrest started taking over the media. But where did the impetus for Max / Min  come from with Jesse?

I’ll say mainly, okay, so Jesse and I met a few years ago. He was seeing a show up here, and I did a performance opening for him just being on the road. And we hit it off. And then we just stayed in touch. And then as it came time for him to do another record, we worked on it together. And then I just enjoyed collaborating with him. And it’s just been one of those things that, it’s something that I didn’t expect, I wasn’t really looking for it. I kind of was. I was kind of looking for people to co-write with.

But it just happened. And so I mean, Jesse, he’s got so much energy, and so much ideas, and all this stuff. And we just started talking. And just, as some of the ideas of his about being involved in the release of his own music, and him questioning about labels, and this kind of stuff. We just started talking about what if we worked together on this. And then it just evolved in the sense of, well, what does that look like? And then I mean, we’re still figuring it out. But it’s been this very natural evolution. And I got to say, the main impetus is Jesse’s energy, and vibrancy, and the intensity that he approaches his art, it’s contagious. And I feel he inspires me. So that’s kind of the basis of it.

 

So you guys met after playing together in Burlington. So he was in Vermont at the time?

That’s right. He was on a tour with My Empty Phantom and he had a couple of buddies with him that were filming. And yeah, it was actually, I think it was in Winooski that we played, which that’s another town, not that that matters. But yeah, basically Burlington. And yeah, that’s where we met. And then we hit it off. And it’s just been, as time has gone on, we’ve just become closer, and the lines of collaboration have increased. Starting out just like I was saying, co-writing on songs, and working on music, and then it’s maybe he’ll release his music, and maybe the idea about helping other people release music.

And it’s helping me figure out a place to put out things that are just … I work on shit all the time, and I just sit on it. And it doesn’t fit maybe Secret Machines, or it doesn’t fit anything else, I don’t know, it’s nice to have an avenue, or a place that, maybe together we can support each other in our music. And maybe that’s something that you can do for other people as well.

 

Do you think MAX / MIN  is filling a need for a lot of independent artists who don’t have the conventional way to get that music out?

I think that might be a way of looking at it. I think, for me, I never really viewed, when I write music, I don’t really view it as, "This is my real gig, and this is not." When I’m doing a piece of music, or working on something creatively, it’s just that, it’s just what it is. And I feel like that’s probably true for most people. That said, you get a group of material together, and then you’re like, "What do I do if this doesn’t fit my, whatever, day job?" Whatever that means as a musician.

And you can call it a vanity project, or a side project. But in a weird way, it’s just an outlet for people that have, maybe it’s … I aspire for it to be an outlet for people with creative ideas that just don’t have a home somewhere else, obviously within reason. We’re very infantile at this moment, just beginning stages of what this is.

But just, Jesse has talked to some people, and I’ve talked to some friends about stuff. And it’s been generally enthusiastic about, "Well, holy shit, I can just put this out like that?" And it’s like, "I think so."

I mean, so there’s been that part of trying to figure out what that looks like for, how do you engage with a distributor? And how do you maintain the finances so that you can afford to do promotion without getting in over your head, or ahead of yourself with expenses. So that’s kind of where we’re looking at right now, is just the nuts and … At least, for my part is looking at the nuts and bolts of, how do we make this work for what we want it to do?

And I think starting with Jesse’s record, and then there’s a couple other artists we have in mind coming next, it was just going to forge the path for what MAX / MIN does.

 

Are you with Interpol right now? I mean, obviously nobody is on tour, but is that on hold, everybody is just doing their own thing for the meantime?

Well, I mean, without speaking for them, just the general cycle of the way that band works is that they put out a record, and then they do a very intensive tour schedule. And so we just finished that in November. And that would have been about a year and a half of touring straight. And then six months before that, we were doing the Turn On The Bright Lights thing. So it’s been from November previously, we were very busy for maybe two years.

And so what they normally do will be go their separate ways, we all go our separate ways. And then at some point, the three principle members of Interpol will kind of begin … I mean, they’ll begin to start writing together, and working together. And then it just slowly ramps up into recording, and then the record, and the tour, and then we’re back out on the road again for a year and a half.

So right now, we’re in that break period, that down time. I know Paul just put out his Muzz record, which is really great. And I think that’s where he’s at. The other dudes are living their lives. And everybody is still creative, it’s just, I think when Interpol is on a break, it becomes a, maybe people get involved in more personal projects, and more things that are close to them.

I know Sam is really super into modular synths and connecting that with percussion, and all these weird things. And he has this crazy setup. And he’s been making music, which is something we were talking about with him with MAX / MIN putting out. Because it’s just really unusual sounding. I mean, I think Jessie described it as cold wave … Oh, shoot, what did he say? Like a cold wave John Carpenter, or something like that. Maybe that’s too reductive. But it has this energy and vibe that’s, it’s really, really cool.

And I mean, I’m hoping that we get to put that record out. I know that’s something that he just does with because he loves it. So that’s the kind of thing where I feel like maybe that’s what MAX / MIN can do, is … He loves this stuff. And I think it’s good, and I think maybe people should hear it. And maybe that’s something that we can address, and do with a certain amount of style, but also at the same time, with a sense of, again, just being mindful of, just being within the resources I guess. You know what I mean?

 As far as the Secret Machines, I know you guys did Live at the Garage, and released that. So there’s been signs of life as far as at least the group coordinating together. But are you still talking with Josh Garza, and I’m not sure who the other members were at this point?

Right now it’s Josh and I. The official announcement is going to come in a couple of weeks. But we have a series of releases that we’re going to put out ourselves, starting with a new record that we finished recording last year.

And then we have a record that Josh and I wrote with the guitarist Phil Karnats, who was the guy who was on the self-titled record that we released. And I’m in the process or remixing that. That’s going to get released. And then actually, the self-titled record is something that we have the rights to it, the label that originally put it out folded. It reverted back to us, so we’re going to release that. And then another EP. So we’ve got these four or five releases that Secret Machines are going to put out. And that’s something that I’ve also been working on. So all of the sudden, we’re fucking busy.

 

Where would you be releasing Secret Machines? Or who would you be distributing through?

We’re negotiating right now with … We haven’t signed anything yet. But it’s going to be basically … The third record, the self titled record, we did as a basically a vanity label through World’s Fair, I don’t know if you remember that label. They did Def Jux, and World’s Fair were kind of partners.

And then so we did TSM Recordings through World’s Fair. And then shortly after we released that third record, they declared bankruptcy. And so I think that was the end. Def Jux folded, and World’s Fair folded. And so we were going to continue that moniker of TSM Recordings.

And then what we’re doing right now is just working on, hopefully we’ll have a deal sooner or later with someone to kind of be the digital and physical distribution, and that kind of stuff. It was just something that I think … I mean, two months ago, Josh and I were talking about just, let’s just post this shit on SoundCloud and be done with it. So we were just going like, "Let’s just put it out." Because it’s like, It’s one of those things like, "Whatever."

And we started exploring what that looked like. It’s evolved into what it is now where it’s going to be more of a, what would you call it? Strategized and planned release. We’ll have initial tracks, and all that stuff. But all this stuff isn’t going to be announced until, I think the 22nd is the first announcement. 

We plan on the announcement is going to be on the 22nd I think, as of right now. Of this month, yeah. So yeah, it’s been one of those things we’ve been figuring out how to take publicity photos over FaceTime, and it’s been a very unique experience as far as putting the record assets together. And it’s also just been really instructive in a sense, we were forced to do it like this, and it’s like, "Oh, you can do it like that?" And, oh, it’s weird. I don’t have to fly to LA to get pictures taken.

 

Do you ever make it back down to Texas, or Dallas, or Oklahoma? Or are you pretty much in North East Vermont, and New York most of the time now?

Yeah, well, I mean, I don’t get down that often. My parents both live in Dallas. So I still have a family connection there. I have family in Oklahoma that I don’t get to see very often at all. It’s been a long time since I’ve been back to see … Well, actually, Interpol played in Oklahoma City, and I saw my aunt and a cousin or two. But my sister lives in Colorado. My youngest brother, Andrew, lives in Los Angeles. So everyone is kind of scattered. There’s not a place that we just go home to. Last time the family got together, we got together in Palm Springs. Old folks shit, you know?

Oh my God, well, you know what, that’s one thing about living up here, January, February, you feel the deficiency in sun. And so we went in February, and it’s good to get out of the deep dark winter for a second.

 

Vitamin C is absolutely necessary to keep being happy, for me at least. So your wife is in the medical field, and so you guys haven’t left Vermont since everything locked down?

That’s right. Yeah. It’s been interesting, so just the way … I mean, in Vermont, because of her access, and contacts with the hospital here, she’s aware of the cases. And it’s just a very, very low population of people that have been infected by COVID, relatively to the rest of the country. So that’s fortunate. But at the same time, it’s one of things where it just takes one person to be careless. But we’re the people wearing the masks all the time, and we try and keep our distance, and we haven’t left, we’re not going to beaches, we’re not going on trips, that kind of stuff.

 

Is there any place that, as soon as this pandemic ends, and maybe you are able to go out, that you’re itching to get back to?

It’s very comfortable here. But I mean, we were just talking about when we thought we would get back to New York, we have friends there, and just … We both lived there for a dozen years or so. And so it’s like I still feel very strong connections to New York City. And that’s the kind of thing where, generally, pre pandemic, I would be there, I mean, once a month or something like that. So that routine has been interrupted. And for better or for worse, it’s been nice just being planted at home. But it’s nice to get down to a different range of culture. And you know what I mean? Vermont is beautiful, but it is low population density.

 

Yup. And it’s a lot of the same people from what I remember.

That’s exactly right. That’s exactly right.

 

Austin

Wil Brookhart Drops Smooth Debut EP

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Multi-instrumentalist, composer, and producer Wil Brookhart put out his debut EP “Flight Risk” on June 18th 2020. With seven features, it’s a delicious amalgam of modern genres from R&B to lo-fi hip-hop to pop, even adding in a pinch of math rock. The Austin native, currently residing in Denton while studying double bass at UNT, stirs in his vast array of influences into a savory main course meal of mingled grooves and flavorful melodies. Yet just as each bite of “Flight Risk” tastes unique, it’s crowning achievement is keeping a consistent tone amid the eclecticism. 

 

Any of the individual tracks are strong enough to be singles but “February” and “Summer Bleeding” do stand as out catchy summer morsels. Many voices can be heard on this record but Brookhart allows his music to naturally grow out beyond him, then crafts it to shape his distinct vision. Leila XY, who is featured on four out of the five tracks, consistently exudes clarity, grounding her performances with bright and buoyant vocal melodies. Lucas Wassmer soulfully harmonizes with her on “Prove Me Crazy”, as T.W.I.N. soon comes in rapping an emotional perspective on how one’s mindset is altered when away from loved ones. With help from Katie Butler, Brookhart’s own vocals sustain “Carrie”. While Leila XY and Butler close out the EP on the contemplative title track. As a composer, arranger, and player, Brookhart’s musical abilities are clearly evident but his ability to weave various genres, voices, and ingredients into a cohesive palette make him an even more exciting producer. 

As current situations have made many artists have to drastically change their process, Brookhart and his compatriots were already creating and collaborating virtually. “Flight Risk” came together using the relatively new music streaming platform Quadio, which connects nationwide college students and facilitates artistic collaboration. All the features are university students, and in true college fashion the majority of the EP was written between 11:00 pm and 4:00 am. Polished mixing and mastering from Jamison McMackin, working under the name Glacier City Sound, majorly assist the contemporary and intentional feel, while cover art from Leah Bury (@leah.creative) grounds the work in a tranquil charm. 

 

  Overall, Brookhart’s debut finds itself snuggled somewhere in between Social House, Maggie Rogers, and Frank Ocean. As all these components come together, all I can say is…my compliments to the chef! Stream “Flight Risk” on all your favorite streaming platforms! 

-Hayden Steckel

 

Austin

The Lagoons Drop Soul Soothing Single “So Did I”

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The Lagoons, consisting of brothers Ryan and Joey Selan, put out a peaceful new single “So Did I” on June 5th. The duo craft a romantic track that’s perfect for a relaxing summer day by the pool or an introspective walk in the park. The song floats in your ears like a breeze pushed by the comfort of a devoted lover

  

Airy synths and an acoustic guitar open the track as punchy drum samples and calming vocals begin to fill out the arrangement. Lead vocalist Joey sings “Your mama thinks that you’re so divine. So do I, so do I”, eventually concluding with “She knew the day would come when you were mine. I thought she’d cry, instead she smiled and so did I.” This comparison between maternal love and the love between significant others is both bold and heartwarming. After the first verse, the composition moves into full swing with lush synth pads, a soaring saxophone, detailed percussion, and a fully unravelled drumbeat.  

 

Along with the track, The Lagoons put out a ‘making of’ video showing the intricacies of their production style. Their home studio is shown littered with guitars, synthesizers, samplers, and microphones, practically everything someone would need to professionally produce a track! It’s insightful seeing the brothers in their element as both multi-instrumentalists are able to show off their talents. 

 

This song preludes The Lagoons’ debut LP Midnight Afternoon coming out on June 23rd. It will surely be as breezy and buoyant as “So Did I”. Also catch their virtual album release party on June 25th.

– Hayden Steckel

 

 

Austin

NightFire Offers an Escape on New Single “Cave of Dreams”

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As the pandemic persists and continues to pervade our lives with fear and anxiety, the next renaissance of artistry is slowly fomenting. Artists and creatives are leveraging their quarantine as a solitudinous period to make art – to make something. 

 

The pulsating rhythm of NightFire’s new single,Cave of Dreams,” recalibrates and validates ones senses. NightFire released her new single as the first track of her latest EP, which is scheduled to be released sometime this fall. A self-produced singer, songwriter out of Houston, TX, Nightfire has been gaining momentum with recent music releases that have become to garner attention. The EP itself was produced before life crystalized under quarantine, but her lyrics provide a beacon in this dark, restless time. For some of us during lockdown, it may feel like we are in, “dreams, a cave of dreams.” Energy feels more potent lately, dreams are more vivid, interactions have become more sacred. If anything can happen overnight, NightFire asks ‘Which of your wildest dreams are you bringing into a reality?’ 

 

It’s not difficult to lose yourself in the bombinating rhythm of "Cave of Dreams". Sweet like a siren, NightFire sings, “Cast your loving spell now….they can’t find us down here because they don’t know how." It’s in this private cave, which includes the dreams that light you up, that makes you feel most authentic, and allows you to leave behind what no longer serves you. NightFire’s hypnotic voice will protect you as you descend deeper and deeper into your subconscious. 

 

-Mel Green


 

Austin

Waldo Witt Hits His Stride on New EP

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  Waldo Witt’s new EP, Inner Paths, beckons listeners to fully immerse themselves in the singer/producer’s psyche. The North Carolinian fuses together synth-pop, psych rock, and R&B to create groovy soundscapes that illicite introspection. It’s easy to get lost in the sauce of the dense arrangements he crafts, but the vocal melodies reach out and guide you back down his path. Recording his last record from his van, Inner Paths also allows Witt to use the studio as an instrument, as intricate production, mixing, and processing seamlessly eb and flow with the palette of a cunning professional.  

 

The five track EP takes the listeners on a fully formed journey of peaks and valleys, expressing a wide range of emotion. It is able to slide right into the rare pocket of stasis between adhering to pop music conventions and simultaneously breaking down those conventions with electronic experimentation. The opening track “For The First Time”, builds a groove into a multi-layered vocal release, swirling from ear to ear. The hooks from “Remember To Forget” and “Umstead Park” are undeniably catchy, while the title track could be heard at the club and “Lost On The Highway” could have been a hidden gem on The Breakfast Club soundtrack. 

 

Overall, Inner Paths carves out the middle ground between Toro y Moi and Peter Gabriel, sentimentally nodding to the 80’s whilst sprinting past them into the world of contemporary production. With this release, Witt is able to actualize what Kevin Parker was trying (emphasis on trying) to do with the last Tame Impala album. The detailed synthesis and drum sequences also hearken back to groups like Yellow Magic Orchestra. One of the most disappointing things about this EP is that it may be a while before these songs can be performed, which is a shame, because they are rife for live experimentation. 

 

-Hayden Steckel


 

Austin

Blood Surge Forward with Debut EP

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As the world moves closer and closer to chaos and disarray, Blood’s new EP entitled Why Wait Till ‘55, We Might Not Even Be Alive has the energy to match it. The group meanders through genres as a bundle of nomads looking for the brighter future that they know exist. From dense permeating tension to bare-bone melodic release to swift electric motion, the band seems to drive forward as one entity. Blood strikes the equilibrium between the harsh distortion of a rock band and the glistening horns and dynamics of a big jazz band, tranquil 7th chords and exploding drums, and the poetically vulnerable lyrics of a seasoned folk songwriter and the manic screaming delivery of a post-punk ruffian. 

 

Recorded by Erik Wofford at Cacophony Recorders, the four track EP opens with “Intro”, which is not only the perfect preface to the EP, but to the band as a whole. It’s a slow-building descent into madness with layered, unravelling instrumentation paired with cryptic, culturally relevant lyrics reflecting criticisms of masculinity and class struggle. Tracks two and three each display one half of the group’s aptly self-described genre of “jazz-punk”, “Primitive Priest” being the high energy punk and “Genesis” being the more laid back jazz. The closer “Progeny of the Agency” is the longest track and only leaves the listener wanting more. 

The band originated from frontman Tim O’Brien, who fairly quickly was able to amass his team of cohorts. The current lineup consists of bassist Nino Soberon, drummer Tyler Wolff, trumpeter Zach Malett, keyboardist Caleb Parker, guitarist brothers Ben and Julian McCamman-McGinnis, and O’Brien on lead vocals. After a couple of years of local shows, an east coast tour, and opening for some of punk’s biggest names, Blood’s debut surges forward, maintaining their position as one of Austin’s coolest bands. 

 

-Hayden Steckel

Austin

Billy King and the Bad Bad Bad Release New Single “Tiger’s Den”

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 It’s fair to say most of us are cycling through a lot of moods right now during quarantine; anger, fear, boredom, and occasionally hope. While our anxiety runs rampant and the apocalypse looms, Billy King & the Bad Bad Bad have a new single being released to help everyone process what a shit show the world is right now. 

The band’s upcoming single, “Tiger’s Den,” takes the band’s signature ‘surf-rock from hell’ style, and gives it a rougher, country-style twist.The track’s greatest strength lies in the narrative it lays out, creating a compelling and interactive story within a song. Through the song’s non-linear lyrical setting and immersive soundscape, the single taps into Billy King’s signature sound.  

 

The winding and anticipatory track begins to build and crest before vocalist, Will Reynolds, launches right into a twangy howl filled with bravado. Reynolds speaks in a cinematic but commanding manner, regailing of past days spent in the Tiger’s Den with an old flame. His voice provides a brief exploration into the story the band is telling, without commandeering the narrative.   

 

 In many ways the song reads as a love ballad, but the band replaces the typical lust and loneliness found in love songs with a sense of urgency. Guitarist, Cameron Wren, and bassist, Mike Sellman, really help set this tone in place. The guitar interludes add in a nice call to action, giving the listener space to take in the music and decide where exactly they would place themselves within the world the song presents them with. 

“Tiger’s Den" helps make those weird, frantic trips to the grocery store, a rebellious adventure in a post-apocalyptic spaghetti western. Tie that bandanna around your face and let the music take you over in your search for paper towels and oat milk.

-Avril Carrillo

 


 

Austin

My Empty Phantom Unveils Quarantine Meditation Music Sessions

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Take an ambient drive in your mind with My Empty Phantom by viewing his “Quarantine Meditation Music Sessions.” Like many, this artist lost his upcoming tour dates overnight due to the upending effects of the coronavirus. The artist is hosting at home sessions to continue creating music and disseminating positive vibes. Music is an essential magic that connects in these strange times that require our separateness.

 “These trying times call for the healing power of music. I have decided to bring an intimate bedroom version of my tour to you all via the internet! I will be performing a video series of my most ambient works for you to meditate, read a book, breathe, do slow body movement, make art, sleep or to just sit back and relax.” – Jesse Beaman 

Press play, and allow the ambient sounds to attach themselves like molecules to the atmosphere of your room. The calming, haunting reverberations gently wash over you as the sound waves trigger a trance, confusing real noise with white noise, but altogether drowning out the mental noise. As the whole world is paused, this time welcomes reflection and introspection. Thank you, My Empty Phantom, for blessing our restless ears.

His first home session is about 12 minutes – the perfect length to induce deeper meditation, light up and smoke one, or set up your space for a creative project. Now, that half the world is under some order to stay at home, join me in looping this track and inviting the sweet notes to drip drip into our watery collective consciousness. We have hope that we will be together again one day, we will see live music, we will throw our sweaty bodies on strangers, we will accidentally spill beer on our new shoes again. Until then, we show our support for artists by listening to their home sessions, buying their merch, washing our hands, and shining lights in our hearts for our loved ones and our communities around us.

 

-Mel Green

 

 

 

Austin

Heartbreak, Gratitude and Ariana Grande: Interview with Tim Rice-Oxley of Keane

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 After spending last summer invigorating festival crowds across Europe and captivating fans in the US with a series of intimate shows, Keane released Cause and Effect, their fifth studio album and the first since 2013. The album hit Top 20 on the Billboard Albums chart and hit the UK charts at #2. Keane have finished a triumphant sold out UK and Latin American Tour and are now embarking on their North American headline tour kicking off March 2020. We spoke with songwriter and keyboardist, Tim Rice-Oxley, about Keane’s hiatus, new album and the band’s protean legacy.

 

It’s been a full seven years since your last album, how  has it been being back on a full international tour like you’re on right now?

Well, I think it’s seven years since we did a proper tour of the States. So really excited about that, it’s going to be fantastic. It’s kind of the dream tour for a British band, getting on a bus and doing a sort of road trip around North America, so that’s going to be cool. But I mean we were here, we were in the States a couple of times last year as well actually, just for little shows and we also did a big tour of South America] which was incredible. So we’re in the swing of it and having a fantastic time.

 

Is Keane a band that likes to tour?

I love it, I think we all love it. I think more than ever actually we really enjoy being on the road together and really enjoy being on stage together. I think we’re playing, play better than we ever have before. And we still really kind of value connecting with people when we get on stage and it’s a really nice feeling. Especially after like 50 years, definitely don’t take that for granted. So we’re really happy to be here again, I think. But yeah, we have a great time, we love being tourists and getting to travel around the world and seeing new places. It’s a really great life.

 

Are you able to write new music while you’re on tour?

I mean I have done a lot over the years. I actually find it quite difficult so, yeah, I mean I find it hard to find the sort of space and get into the right head space when I’m on tour, but yeah, not so much lately. But then we also have quite a deep catalog now of kind of five and a half albums, there’s a lot of stuff and there’s a lot of songs to choose from. Just trying to mix up the set list every night is almost as much as our little brains can cope with.

 

You’ve previously stated that your new album, Cause And Effect, is actually a breakup album?

Yeah. Yeah, definitely. I mean it’s a very emotionally intense record. Hopefully all the best after all that, as you said, we had a very passionate response from people to the kind of depth of feeling and the sort of openness of the album. I think there’s a kind of new level of connection with people, both on the record but also live it shows that we’re really enjoying seeing the way people react so emotionally to some of the music. It’s very validating and very satisfying for us creatively.

 

There are a few themes on Cause And Effect, that you can also hear on Hopes And Fears. What was the process in writing the new album?

Well, I mean all the time that we haven’t been touring, been out for six years or so, I’ve been writing and composing, and I got into a real kind of rich seam, I guess, also to go on the roam phonetically probably two or three years ago. And then probably the set of songs that ended up becoming this record were probably written over about 18 months or so, and I think I was definitely in a … We were obviously in a particular period of time, for sure. I was really sort of trying to articulate some of the stuff that had happened over those few years and sometimes it takes me a few years to kind of work out how to say that stuff.

So yeah, I reckon end of 2016 and most of 2017 I was just writing new songs, probably ended up with about 30 that were kind of … that felt right for this album. Or at least create the tension for this album and then we kind of narrowed it down a lot based on the newer scene actually. Worked out which songs that told the story most basically and most powerfully I suppose.

 

Was there a lot of anxiety coming out with the new album and touring after all these years?

I think one of the things with taking some time off is that you’re forced to think about why you’re making music in the first place. I mean what constitutes success? And so I definitely did a lot of thinking about that and really the conclusion I came to was the only way I can judge something to be successful in my own head is if it feels totally authentic and I guess ideally connects with people in a very … in a way that I see has an effect on their lives, I suppose.

As opposed to sort of worrying about numbers, essentially. Which I think we went from a place, having been a little band that was playing tiny venues in London and really being very excited just to have a record out, you’re suddenly catapulted into a world where we had this sort of freak success with our first album. And I think consequently our expectations became totally distorted in a way that we never really intended, so it’s nice to have a chance to step back from that and think, "Okay, well, actually what are our expectations? What are our desires from our music? What do we consider to be a creative success?"

I think now it’s much more it feels like we’re into a different phase where we’re much more interested in just doing what we think is the best possible thing we can do at a given time. Telling the story is what’s important to us and hopefully also bringing something good into the world that means something to people.

 

For your personal preference, do you enjoy some of the more upbeat Keane songs or do you think the heartbreak songs are closer to who Keane is?

I don’t mind whether they’re kind of fast or slow, but I definitely prefer the ones that feel like they articulate something really meaningful and it’s … I don’t even know how you get to that stuff, how you access it creatively. I wish I did, but sometimes it just happens and you know when it’s good, and there’s the other times your creative instincts can be slightly hindered or distorted by worry about what is going to sound good on the radio and what the record company wants or even just what the fans want or what your parents want. You get a whole load of different influences coming from outside and it can be very hard to block out that noise.

So for me the stuff that I love the most is the stuff that feels really pure and I just know in my heart that it is powerful, I suppose, because it still feels powerful for me, whatever, playing it. I can feel it in the band and performing it on stage you can feel a magic in it, in a song. Those are the songs I love the most and I think they speak to other people the most.

 

Are there any surreal moments where you’ve realized that you guys have created this catalog and what are some things that you now see that kind of just blow you away? Because you mentioned you guys came out of a small town and it had a very instant experience with success.

Yeah. Yeah, well, I think really a result of that initial success is we just got into a pattern, as bands do if they’re lucky enough to have that success, where you’re just pumped to be on a plane and the next tour, it’s a TV show or it’s a radio show or it’s whatever it is. You’re sort of rushing from one thing to the next and it rapidly becomes normal and so it’s been great to step away from that and then go back, have a chance to go back to it and still have people wanting to see us.

So for me, I think for all of us, we’ve had moments in the last let’s say six months or so where we’ve been … Kind of you’re in Buenos Aires or a lot of moments on our South American tour where you’re kind of in a venue of like 15,000 people or something and you just think, "What are we doing here on the other side of the world? And how can it be that so many people … how many of these people know our music and actually are paying their hard earned cash to come and see us play?" And I guess I don’t know if that sounds like a cliché, but it really is when it hits you hard, it’s mind blowing really because we all grew up together and really still think of ourselves as a pretty amateurish bunch of musicians. Definitely have a lot of kind of Imposter Syndrome and it’s just very, very exciting, it’s very, very thrilling and somewhat protecting to find yourself going on stage every night and people wanting to hear you play.

I find that happens a lot more and more now with the passing of the years. I think instead of taking it for granted, we actually are just sort of astounded by it more and more and I think it’s a really nice place to be.

 

I feel like Keane’s music has been timeless, to a certain respect you can still go back to Hopes And Fears and it plays beautifully and I think it still connects with people. But do you have any contemporary artist or artists that are out today that you personally are inspired by or that you’re really into right now?

Yeah, I think it’s a great time for music. I think there’s definitely been a shift away from I guess what you’d call Guitar Bands or Hippy Bands, whatever at the moment. In the UK at least. I mean I’m a great lover of pop music anyway. I think the music I’m sort of most in awe of at the moment is … I’m a huge fan of the last two Ariana Grande records and I love the songwriting, but also the production of them. It’s just both records fill me with that feeling of, "I wish I could do that." Which is always kind of annoying but also very thrilling and inspiring and it makes me want to learn new ways of doing things. They have a lot of personality and quite interesting takes on familiar themes, I guess, as well as being very kind of danceable and feeling very contemporary. They’re very spacious production-wise.

I don’t know, there’s a lot for me to learn from that stuff. So there’s a lot of great music around. Beyond that, Bon Iver and Billie Eilish and I listen to a lot of old stuff as well, Springsteen and Crowded House and The Smiths. But, I don’t know, I’m just trying to learn all the time, I feel like we’ve only just started really and still have so much to learn.

 

Interview by Lee Ackerley

Austin

My Empty Phantom Is Ready to Tour the World, Again

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My Empty Phantom is the solo project of Jesse Beaman, a multi-instrumentalist and composer who is based in Austin. After taking time off touring to finish his latest album, Beaman is embarking soon on a 12-city international tour, beginning with Mexico City on March 26th. 

 

Over the past few years, My Empty Phantom has toured the globe playing instrumental soundscapes while sharing the stage with acts such as Cocorosie, This Will Destroy You, Dosh and many others. Touring on his upcoming album, Beaman will be joined by Brandon Curtis ( Interpol, Secret Machines) who helped produce the album and will elevate the live show experience with his musicianship.

 

Beaman’s stage performance explores a combination of multiple instruments being looped live; often mixing piano, synthesizers and drums. The resulting sound is a wave of blissful effervescence with a swirling undercurrent of sonic chaos. Beaman’s unique style and performance has earned him a dedicated cult following worldwide and enthusiastic crowds manifest for his shows regularly, which feature intricate visual film and light design. Check out My Empty Phantom at any of these dates listed below (with more dates to be added):

 

 



3/26 Mexico City, Mexico 

@ Departamento 



4/2 Boston, MA

@ LilyPad



4/3 Portland, ME 

@ SunTiki 



4/4 Brooklyn, NY 

@ Littlefield



4/8 Burlington, VT 

@ Monkeyhouse



4/9 Montreal, Canada 

@ Le Ritz

  

4/11 Buffalo, NY

@ Revolution Gallery



4/13 Chicago, IL 

@ The Empty Bottle

 

5/1 Rotterdam, NL 

@ Hostel Room Rotterdam



5/7 Berlin, Germany

@ Loophole



5/8 Berlin, Germany

@ Loophole



5/11 Stockholm, Sweden

@ Larry’s Corner



5/12 Stockholm, Sweden

@ Larry’s Corner



5/15 Glasgow, Scotland 

@ M Gallery 



5/16 Glasgow, Scotland

@ M Gallery



7/7 Los Angeles, CA

@ Kinship Yoga Event Studio



7/9 Los Angeles, CA

@ The Satellite