Chicago

Jackie Hayes “eye 2 eye”

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Jackie Hayes is back with her first single of 2021, the Billy Lemos produced "eye 2 eye". This is the first new music from the Indie Pop artist since the release of her debut EP, "Take It, Leave It" in 2020.

According to Hayes, "This song is about feeling lost and not knowing what to do with my life. It was written back in March and I was looking for a direction at the time."

photo by Adam Alanzo

Chicago

Fauvely “Always”

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Fauvely recently released the second single, "Always", from their forthcoming album, Beautiful Places. The new album, the band’s third, is set to be released on April 2nd.

This is the work of Sophie Brochu (vocals, guitars), Dale Price (guitars, backing vocals), Dave Piscotti (drums), and Phil Conklin (bass).

NYC

Save Our Wicked Lady

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Having lived all over this city and its vicinity for a good number of years (Jersey Cit-tay!) this blog writer finally ended up in the borough of Brooklyn in 2019 and felt a sense of unrestrained joy at being in the middle of a live music mecca and seeing tons of shows at tons of venues. And one of the most special of these venues has been Our Wicked Lady aka OWL.

Ever since the pandemic first hit, OWL done everything right. They’ve sold food and delivered beer and bottles of liquor and sold shirts and other merch and even held an online auction. They’ve supported their staff and their customers by opening OWL’s rooftop bar with safety precautions in place, and supported live music by hosting and livestreaming audience-less shows for anyone to stream, with optional donations, and even made those shows viewable in real time from the rooftop.

But despite their efforts there’s one major catch. New York’s regulatory laws for bars and nightclubs are famously complex and capricious–even under the best of circumstances–harder to discern and follow than it is to figure out what exactly is going on with Andrew Cuomo’s nipple rings or clamps or piercings or pasties or breast milk pumps under his form fitting polo shirts. So no big surprise then that a worldwide pandemic and the subsequent chaotic and disorganized response has only made things that much more difficult for small business owners, bars and clubs in particular.


Regrettably but understandably, the proprietors of Our Wicked Lady have recently come to the conclusion that they must shut down for the time being, and raise significant funds to continue on in the future. So please, if you can, OWL is a crucial venue to this borough and its inhabitants and its music, and all those who enjoy its music, and they deserve your support if you’re someone who reads this blog and if you have the wherewithal which, sadly and understandably, many don’t. But if you do, you can donate to the Our Wicked Lady go.fund.me HERE or buy sexy OWL merchandise HERE and also read more about the people behind OWL and their plight in a recent Reckless Magazine feature HERE.

And now for the personal testimonial part. Two shows in particular at Our Wicked Lady are extra vivid in my mind at this moment even in my quarantine addled state. The first was a packed rooftop show in late summer 2019 as part of Jonathan Toubin’s Sunday Soul Scream series. It was an interesting bill to say the least with its diametrical extremes between the two featured acts but they worked perfectly together, kind of like one of those McDLT sandwiches. Appearing on stage first was L.A.’s Warm Drag with their cool vibez and programmed beats and textured noise and waves of fuzzed-out psych guitar complete with reverb-laden male-female vocalizing kind of like a darkwave Cramps. 

 

And then next they were followed by the King Khan and BBQ Show which was just straight up god damn rock ‘n’ roll (referencing the Cramps again) something like watching a combination religious tent revival and illicit basement burlesque show led by a man inhabited simultaneously by both Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis but with less sense of restraint than either. (!) Truly it was one of those shows where it feels like the crowd turns into one big amorphous organism all moving and shouting and singing and dancing and jostling together–fully achieving a sense of pure ecstatic rock ‘n’ roll communion that’s sadly lacking in these covidly times. 

The other show that stands out at Our Wicked Lady was one of the last shows I saw period in March 2020, an indoor show that had more of an indoor feel to it–like a private party between friends, and indeed there were many friends and fellow musicians there, but with a vibe where anyone could join in and be comfortable. I won’t go into musical details on this one since there were four acts but I’ll list them off–Kino Kimino (see below), Vanessa Silberman, Catty, and Janet LaBelle–and this was another one of those “something kinda magical happening here” shows.

Thinking back on this Kino Kimino et al. show highlights something that’s only been reinforced by witnessing the recent outpouring of love and concern around the plight of Our Wicked Lady. And that’s how OWL in its four or five years of existence seems to have created and sustained an authentic community among its regulars, musicians, and employees (categories that easily overlap) which is not the kind of thing that can be easily replaced or replaced at all. Also, during the four or five months that I’ve been the blogger for this site, it’s become that much more apparent how much OWL is a central hub for Brooklyn’s music scene, and certainly for quite a few of the individual bands I’ve written about, some of which I’ve never even gotten to see live so I have my own selfish motives here.

And finally, for any aspiring filmmakers out there, here a little tip: there’s a Decline of Western Civilization Part IV just waiting to be made at OWL alongside other local venues (I’m sure Penelope Spheeris will license the franchise no problem) (LA is over) (jk) so we just need to get these venues around the last lap of this thing and get some bands up on stage like maybe OWL stalwarts like Ash Jesus and Bipolar and Spite FuXXX (see above) plus some others and this’ll be ready to happen. (Jason Lee)

Chicago

Emily Blue “7 Minutes”

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Emily Blue has released a new single called "7 Minutes". This is the first single from Blue’s forthcoming LP, The Afterlove, and it takes the addictive pop sounds we have come to love and throws a twisted late ’80’s, early ’90’s flare.

The single is accompanied by the self-directed video below.

NYC

TVOD on FLTV

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If you’re at all retro-minded or if you’re J.G. Ballard-minded you’ve probably heard of a song called “Warm Leatherette” by a band called The Normal, or maybe you’ve heard the cover version by Grace Jones. It’s become pretty iconic over the years. But it was originally released as a mere B-side and The Normal was not really a band (probably fooled ya with that ’70s-looking-collective pictured above) being instead just this one British guy named Daniel Miller who founded a record label called Mute Records to put out the single, with the label soon becoming a pretty big deal and taking on a life of its own.

But back to our subject, the original A-side to "Warm Leatherette" was called “T.V.O.D.” which stands for Television Overdose and its entire lyric consisted of the song title’s repeated over and over broken only a single stanza: "I don’t need a screen / I just stick the aerial into my skin / Let the signal run through my veins / T.V.O.D."

Well what if we told you there’s also a contemporary Brooklyn-based band called T.V.O.D. and that the band (not entirely unlike the song "T.V.O.D.") addresses our posthuman future in song and in sound–a future that may have finally arrived in full blown form in 2020 and ’21–but with strong intimations of human longing and even intimacy hanging on for good measure. Fittingly for their name, Brooklyn’s T.V.O.D. are prone to making sounds that could make some listeners feel a bit jittery or twitchy (call it David Byrnitis) or have you feeling mildly sedated and mildly euphoric all at once all while being catchy and cool sounding, in support of lyrics on subjects like self-medicating in disco huts and sentient sexually-frustrated bank accounts.

Give a listen to the EP Daisy up top to see what you think, or listen to the song below which happens to be one of this writer’s faves from the EP. It’s their slinkiest song and apparently the band got some nice endorsement money for making banking options sound so sexy so good on them. And then below that you can check out an earlier single that gives a very different perspective (a more puke-splattered perspective!) on the world of high finance and the cultural logic of late capitalism.


Despite all my hopes based on their band name, T.V.O.D. are in fact not a collective of sad horny TV-addicted cyborgs who like to go out dancing to disco punk, but really just five human beings sitting on a couch in Queens–as I recently witnessed–humans who have played (or still play) in other NYC-based indie bands like THICK, Star 80, Low Mein, and Acid Dad. But on the couch they don’t bring these bands up instead sharing their thoughts on the moral culpability of Godzilla, and their desire to eat like Ryan Seacrest, and then they get up and walk over to a stage with instruments on it and play songs in real time including several songs that have yet to be been committed to digital circuits or streaming media which is pretty cool.

If you need proof of any of this there’s an app for that and it’s called FLTV (editor’s note: not technically an app but a dedicated webpage on Vimeo) where the letters stand for Footlight Television–another acronyms with TV in it which makes it easy to remember. In addition to the T.V.O.D. segment, the Vimeo page is full of other live-show-and-interview content provided by the good people at the Footlight Bar in Ridgewood, Queens and made available for a small fee. Just think, for the amount it would once take you to order a good-quality draft beer (non-happy-hour rates) at a bar or club, you can now order a band to sit down for an interview and play a live set all for your own pleasure. So maybe this whole post-human thing isn’t all bad after all. (Jason Lee)

NYC

Drug Couple & Moon Kissed live tonight

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It’s my working hypothesis that Becca and Miles are hands down the cutest drug-buddies-slash-couple since the dazed heydays of Juliana and Evan Lemonhead who once dueted on a song called "My Drug Buddy" about just this exact subject. And c’mon I mean being drug buddies with benefits, how much better can life possibly get? Well I’ll tell ya how it does, you could also be in a cool indie band together–a cool indie band that could’ve very plausibly scored a gig at the Peach Pit if this were ah say 1995 meaning you could hang out together with Brandon & Kelly and Brenda & Dylan in cute couple nirvana much like the Flaming Lips and the Cramps and the Cardigans before them. 


In celebration of this winning trifecta of lovin’ touchin’ and squeezin’ the previously mentioned Becca and Miles (have you forgotten the first paragraph already?! maybe slow down on those drugs bubby!) named their musical collaboration Drug Couple. Also not unlike Evan and Juliana before them and their various musical projects over the years, the Drug Couple couple have quite a knack for writing sugary sweet pop hooks backed up by musical textures that can veer from pleasantly jangly to pleasantly jagged at a moment’s notice (case in point being the opening track from their 2020 EP called Choose Your Own Apocalypse ((which really is the best any of us can hope for these days)) with said track being called "2027" which is a year that can’t get here soon enough). 

And dammit if Becca and Miles are not deceptively wholesome enough to take home to Mom and Dad should you choose to form a thruple with the couple and just in time for Valentine’s Day you lucky dog. With all of this in mind and given that Drug Couple are pretty easy on the eyes I don’t feel wrong in recommending that you watch them play a live set coming up here in a few hours at 8pm EST–streamed on one of the Deli’s very favorite virtual concert outlets known as BABY TV–after which you will no doubt be moved to exclaim, and here I quote the esteemed Steve Sanders after having witnessed the aforementioned Flaming Lips play "She Don’t Use Jelly" live at the Peach Pit: "You know, I’ve never been a big fans of alternative music but these guys rocked the house!"

And here’s a big bonus and added incentive. Drug Couple will be sharing the stage with Moon Kissed, an also very cute thruple (in the musical sense that is) who are likewise highly skilled at combining big melodic pop hooks with rocking the f*ck out and if you don’t believe me peep the song above which as far as I’m concerned should have been declared the "Song of the Summer" in 2019 when it came out and for every summer subsequently. Moon Kissed are also recent Deli Artists’ of the Month so rest assured you should keep an eye out for what these ladies have coming up soon… (Jason Lee)

 

L.A.

Jake Hays is scary good in new single “Overcomplicated”

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Jake Hays jumps into his new single “Overcomplicated” with sufficient swag: his vibrant vocals, glazed with reverb, strut to a sexy drum rhythm, and a pulsing bassline that adds a sweet caramel groove to that. Hays discusses in the song the complexities of bad first dates, their brevity, and vast potential for comedic/horrific stories – based on the Goosebumps tribute music video, perhaps it is the latter? With its bouncy choruses and continuous sonic edge, “Overcomplicated” keeps its appeal simple and its theme the perfect conversation-starter piece. Stream “Overcomplicated” below for a thriller-fun video and a song that is scary good. – René Cobar

Chicago

Young Man In A Hurry “Fixer Upper”

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Young Man In A Hurry has released a new single called "Fixer Upper". This is an outtake from the band’s 2020 debut album, Jarvis. The song is inspired by two of the last words the lead Singer’s, Matt Baron, said to him before their divorce. The video documents the "Fixer Upper" that Baron lived in after said divorce.

Perhaps not the most uplifting Valentine’s Day post, but it is a reminder that this is not a happy day for everyone. Some may be in the middle of living through their "Fixer Upper" moment.

Chicago

Lalito “Moonlight”

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Lalito has released his sophomore EP, Moonlight, the follow-up to his 2020 debut EP ROJO. Last month saw the release of the EP’s lead single, "500 Nights of Summer", an Emo-Pop, auto-tuned, love song that blends Pop, R&B, and Rock into style all it own.

Chicago

Hollyy “Sailing”

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Hollyy recently released their latest single, "Sailing", and it is sure to transport you away from this bitter cold Chicago winter to a breezy shoreline awaiting your sail.

This is already the band’s third single of 2021, and they appeared this week on Audiotree. All of this comes on the heels of 2020 debut album, Miss The Feeling, and the clearly show no signs of slowing down.