Toronto

Glutenhead – Debut Experimental Folk Album “Glugen Frau”

Posted on:

Brand new experimental folk rock group Glutenhead released their debut album “Glugen Frau” last month. The band explains the history of the album title:

“The phrase Glugen Frau first came up in my life innocuously, when I was eighteen and in Berlin. In a moment of manic while ordering at a restaurant, realizing I didn’t know any german, I asked for the food to be “Glugen Frau.” 5 years later, it was time to look up what it meant.”

The rough translation is "Glimmering Woman” You can expect it all on this album as you can tell from the track “how it feels” which contains a variety of influences. Give ‘er a spin and see what you can gather from Glutenhead. – Kris Gies

New England

Samuel Sandoval welcomes reflection in new record “Current Pretender”

Posted on:

Samuel Sandoval’s new full-length record, Current Pretender, is a sonic stained-glass window into the colorful mind of a young man wrestling and dancing with existentialism. The anthology is track after track of therapeutic acoustic guitar-led confessions and realizations: tracks like “I Mime” tip-toe instrumentally among bizarre ambient sounds and Sandoval’s layered-pensive vocals. As esoteric as some tracks can be, others like “Falling Asleep to Your Parents Watching TV Pt. 1” are gorgeously composed, with honey-sweet piano melodies and soothing flowing-water samples creating a cave of wondrous sounds. Much like life itself, Connecticut resident Samuel Sandoval’s record encompasses beauty, ugliness, weirdness, love, hope, and existence as you want to see it. We are streaming the indie-folk tune “Madam Day” from the new album below. – Rene Cobar

Chicago

Binary Canary “iterative systems”

Posted on:

Binary Canary is preparing to release a new album, iterative systems, via Carrier Records on October 4th. You can currently stream the album’s opener “I” and the album’s neat two minute centerpiece “metal” below.

This is the improvised collaboration between electronic artist Ted Moore and Saxophonist Kyle Hutchins.

This is the duo’s first album since 2017’s “bc+1” and It was recorded back in July 2018 at CHIME Studio at University of Chicago.

You can catch Binary Canary at Constellation on November 3rd.

NYC

Kate Bollinger marks summer’s end with EP “I Don’t Wanna Lose”

Posted on:

Based out of Charlottesville, Kate Bollinger‘s jazz-infused blend of indie pop marks the end of summer with the release of her EP I Don’t Wanna Lose. The EP’s five tracks provide a relaxing and introspective soundtrack for the cooling temperatures and the dying of days on the beach as the leaves start to fall. The EP’s final track "Talk About It" is an upbeat song for taking a walk in the autumn breeze. Take a listen to it below, and check out the B-side version on Kate’s Soundcloud for an even more chilled out groove. – Will Sisskind

Chicago

District 97

Posted on:

District 97 announced a Fall Tour UK to promote their new album, Screens, which will be released on October 4th. This is the band’s first album since 2015’s In Vaults, and the first single, “Forest Fire”, is available below.

This is the Progressive rock of Leslie Hunt (Lead and Backing Vocals), Andrew Lawrence (Keyboards, Additional Guitar), Jim Tashjian (Guitar, Backing Vocals), Tim Seisser (Bass), and Jonathan Schang (Drums, Percussion_.

You can catch District 97 at Reggie’s Rock Club on October 13th as part of the three day Progtoberfest V. They will also be opening for Flying Colors on October 17th at the Arcada Theater in Hunt’s hometown of St. Charles, IL.

Chicago

Ness Heads “Pull Me Up”

Posted on:

Ness Heads has released the first single, “Pull Me Up”, from her forthcoming EP, “Numb”, which is due out October 25th.

Ness Heads is the raw Hip Hop of Humboldt Park’s Vanessa Ortiz, and when talking about this new single she had this to say; “I was basically begging the person to be patient with me… She ended up walking away instead of waiting it out so I wrote a sad song about the feelings I had going through it”.

You can catch Ness Heads at Schubas on October 17th with Khary and Ajani Jones.

New England

Maya Lucia is splendidly assertive in new record “Lashing Out”

Posted on:

Darting in and out of Boston, Maya Lucia has managed to create a significant buzz in New England for her now-released EP, Lashing Out. The record is rebellious indie-pop, it is soft rock with a touch of lo-fi, it is alternative: the album is Maya Lucia, and that says it all. Tracks like “Jolene” are heartfelt, confidently presented, and punchy in their bass guitar plucks. Maya is explosive in the choruses of “Misunderstood” and playful-assertive in the verses of “Sadgirl (RIP Moviepass),” showing her ability to tell an honest story in each song. There is no reason to doubt that Maya can hang with the likes of indie-pop rising stars like Clairo and Charli XCX: the young artist offers something wholly different, something more attitude-fueled. Listen to “Jolene” streaming below; discover what the buzz is all about. – Rene Cobar

Chicago

Varsity “Second Act”

Posted on:

Varsity has released the first single, “Second Act”, from their forthcoming new vinyl project, The Basement Takes (2015 – 2016). The album will feature 6 previous released and two new songs, including “Second Act”, and will be released on November 15th via Run For Cover.

You can catch Varsity at Schubas on November 30th with Tenci.

Chicago

ZORILA “Disaster”

Posted on:

ZORILA has released the first single, “Disaster”, from their forthcoming album, Sidney, which is due out October 18th via Electric Train Records.

This is the work of Stewart Arp (Vocals/Guitar), Henry Arp (Bass/Vocals), Nate Finn (Guitar), and Anthony Hish (Drums).

You can catch ZORILA at Cubby Bear on Sept 27th with Loose Cannons, Addy’s Corner, and Littlebirds.

Philadelphia

Bye-Bye!

Posted on:

Dear Deli Philly Readers,

I’m a procrastinator by nature, and this is certainly a post that I’ve been procrastinating to write. When I first became involved with the Philly music community, I started with booking shows at various spaces and for local area acts. I remember coming out to a show in Brooklyn to support one of the local bands that I was helping out, and I was really interested in figuring out how I could connect similar-minded, up-and-coming NYC acts with the lesser known yet talented Philly artists that I was assisting. During that time, if you had heard of a touring act coming to your town, they were usually already a little too popular to really want to trade shows with any acts that they didn’t know personally and/or probably had never heard of. That was when I just happened to come across a print issue of the NYC Deli Magazine in a coffee shop. (I still probably have that copy somewhere because I’m a borderline hoarder.) It was exactly what I was looking for – a publication that was dedicated to giving exposure to interesting-sounding, indie/DIY acts that were still flying under the radar of the larger music blogs and news organizations.

I was instantly a fan of what The Deli was doing, so when I read that they were opening a Philadelphia branch, I was psyched to get involved. I have always been a bit of a music geek who spent way too much of his time listening to and discovering new music to make mixtapes, burn CD mixes, and create playlists for my friends. The Deli Philly just felt like a natural extension of what I had been doing most of my life. However, when I submitted my first post, I never imagined that I would be writing my final one over a decade later, which will unfortunately also be The Deli Philly’s last as well.

Running the Philadelphia site and helping to edit the NYC print magazine have truly been a joy to me and a labor of love, but as some of you may or may not know, I recently became a father, and I’ve been simply finding myself lately more interested in jamming on a toy cat synthesizer with my daughter and deejaying private dance parties for her than practically anything else in the world. So deciding to move on from what has been such an essential part of my life for over the last ten years or so was definitely a difficult decision, but it also became a much easier one. It just felt right.

I’d like to take this time to thank all those who have supported us over the years and those who have inspired us with your music, words, photos/graphics, and always much-appreciated kindness. Of course, extra special thanks go out to Deli Editor-in-Chief Paolo De Gregorio for his passion and genuine good nature, Michael Colavita, whom The Deli Philly could have never survived without for the last few years, Tedd Hazard for his creativity and humor, and all the wonderful writers and photographers who have contributed to The Deli Philly site. It’s been an honor to share your words and art. And finally, for those who might still be interested in what I’ve been listening to of late, you will soon be able to find interviews with some of my favorite musicians over at Delicious Audio. (That is after I take a much-needed vacation.)

Much Love to All,

Q.D. Tran

NYC

Dirt Buyer to perform at Rough Trade NYC 10.04

Posted on:

NYC’s Dirt Buyer offers nothing short of a unique take on folk. The trio, consisting of Ruben Radlauer, Joe Sutkowski, and Emma Stacher, released their debut album in 2019. Murky and dark, their sparse ballads are often sung in a melancholic falsetto, and betray influences as disparate as Radiohead and the Beach Boys. Opening track “Dirt Buyer Theme Song” is only a little over one minute in length, but does an exemplary job at introducing the listener to the band; according to it, Dirt Buyer is here to comfort the listener, letting them know they did nothing wrong. Lead singer Sutkowski’s unique and ghosty voice has a knack for exploring spacious melodies rich in minor thirds yet not-at-all bluesy, like in brand new single IKIF, probably their best track to date, streaming below. You can catch the band at Rough Trade NYC on 10.04. – Karigan Wright

Chicago

Steve Hauschildt “Subtractive Skies”

Posted on:

Electronic Musician Steve Hauschildt has released the first single, “Subtractive Skies”, from his forthcoming sixth studio, Nonlin, which is set for release via Ghostly International on October 24th. This is the follow-up to his 2018 Ghostly debut, Dissolvi.

You can catch Hauschildt at Metro on October 19th with Sv4, DRAMA, Shigeto, and Tobacco.