Release(r) has released an Alex Zarek directed video for their latest single “The Haze” from their 2018 debut EP, “Retox”.
You can catch Release(r) at RocHaus in West Dundee on March 11th with SHIM and Madame Mayhem.
New Music, Emerging from your Local Scene
Release(r) has released an Alex Zarek directed video for their latest single “The Haze” from their 2018 debut EP, “Retox”.
You can catch Release(r) at RocHaus in West Dundee on March 11th with SHIM and Madame Mayhem.
Armed with his trusty upright bass, singer-songwriter Scott Mulvahill hit up NPR’s Tiny Desk to play a few songs for the Internet. Having performed for years with Ricky Scaggs and rising to become one of Nashville’s most accomplished bassists, Mulvahill earned the spotlight as he performed fan favorites like 2016’s "Begin Againers". Though he performed that song solo, he brought his band along to perform "Gold Plated Lie", the latest single from his newest album Himalayas. Mulvahill showed his musical versatility when, after playing the rocking tune, he once again went solo with bass and bow for "Himalayas", creating a spacious sound that captivated the audience in the NPR Tiny Desk room and on YouTube viewers’ screens everywhere. Mulvahill’s on tour now with Lauren Daigle; he’ll return to Nashville on March 17th to play the Ryman Auditorium. Catch his Tiny Desk performance below if you haven’t already watched it. – Will Sisskind
Mindloss released their debut EP, Virulent Hymns, last week. This is heavy death metal of Stephen Szczasny (Drums, Vocals), Anthony Crisanti (Vocals), Felix Peralta-Muñoz (Bass), and Christian Guajardo (Guitars, Vocals).
This is guttural, aggressive, but oddly melodic, and a great first offering from this newly formed group.
“All My Loving,” the latest single from Ceramic Animal, is an expansive (almost 10 minute) musical sojourn. Steeped in a nighttime groove, the song hovers between a smooth, weightless, cruising approach and a heavier, psych-blues stomp. Those adventurous escalations continually increase the pressure, until the top appears ready to explode. What results is a locked-in yet wide-reaching trip that precisely pushes the limits. You can catch Ceramic Animal at Johnny Brenda’s on Tuesday, March 26, with touring compatriots Spendtime Palace.
One wouldn’t expect the front man of self-defined "panic rock" band Flagland (a punky trio whose latest record was released in 2017) to drop a mostly instrumental record that’s as delicate and well orchestrated as Dan Francia’s Come Back to Life (streaming below). Released by Explolding in Sound early in 2019, the album blends an overall understated vibe with a playful, collaborative approach, consisting in several guest appearences by noteworthy local artists like The Feelies, Speedy Ortiz, Sharkmuffin, Ovlov, Field Mouse, gobbinjr and Titus Andronicus – all accurately reported in the album’s Bandcamp page. Each track sounds like a humble experiment in sound exploration not necessarily aiming at forging a unified style, but succeeding at it nonetheless, creating a sound in part reminiscent of a less sample-heavy Beta Band. Those rare times when Dan’s voice comes into the picture ("Come Back to Life," "No Matter What"), his gentle bedroom melodies add an extra relatable element to the record, and in the titletrack‘s chorus ("Come back to life, you can do anything") seem to offer the clue through which this record should be interpreted: a statement of the freedom granted by life.
A Mild Circus, the debut EP from Philly trio Yarrow, is out now via Get Better Records. A fierce, menacing, post-punk blitz sears into your ears. Tracked and mixed at the Headroom with Kyle Pulley, Mark Watter, and Jackie Milestone, there’s a jarring rumbling that immediately grabs one’s focus. However, that power is refined and utilized creating impactful narratives with rippling societal implications.
Ok, so either someone in Tired all the Time SOMEHOW convinced (lord knows how) their coworkers to dance along to their new emo/post-punk song about their life and work being meaningless, or they rented out an office and got their properly dressed friends in and told them to dance as awkwardly as possible. Either way, I simply love the music video for "Bone Dry".
There’s no p***y popping or carefully choreographed mosh pits here, just real people dancing their cringey dances. And seriously, genuine human expression goes perfectly in an emo/post-punk band’s music vid; so real people doing cringey, no pressure dancing is just what this song needed. In all, some of the best new content put out by a DC band.
Check it out!
Elijah Berlow recently released a few new tracks via Soundcloud. Our favorite is the upbeat folk song “Out To Dry”. This is the first new music we have seen from Below since his 2016’s debut EP, “Under The Weather”.
Punk outfit Vixen77 recently dropped its debut self-titled EP. Recorded & produced by Pete Donnelly, the three-song sampling unapologetically announces the group’s arrival. With an enthusiastic assertiveness, the femme fatales mesh polished backing harmonies and guitar shreds with unwavering aggression. Vixen77 will be performing next in Philly at Kung Fu Necktie on Sunday, February 24, along with Pravda, Ketosis, and Symfinity.
John War creates a beautiful symbiosis of clashing sounds on "Track #4." The multi-instrumentalist’s latest defaces any fluid approach to genre conventions, taking a loose indie rock structure and turning it inside out with an odd convergence of styles which include, and are not limited to, reggae, sophisti-pop, and jungle tekno. War – who self-produced Track #4 – adds a surrealist touch to his lyrical imagery, seamlessly forging his madcap vision while retaining a pop slant.
"Track #4" is just a taste of War’s inventive approach and should be indicative of what he unveils on his forthcoming Summer release, the tentatively-titled Fantasy. Juan Rodríguez
Pancho Morris combines Waitsian lyrics with Lynchian visuals in the folky-funny new music video for “Strangetown USA.” Though the song itself doesn’t have huge lyrical variation, its music video is so completely packed with symbols and statements (and a huge cast) that one really must watch it several times to see all the sights. The video starts off with its star, a young man in an all-white outfit whispering in Russian into a red telephone perched inside a hanging bird cage. If that’s not an illusion to Trump and his Russian buddies, well. The star then walks through a factory full of depressing laborers, where everyone–including himself–is clothed in orange jumpsuits and manufacturing rubbish of some sort. We’re then in a slaughterhouse, where a laughing, blood-splattered man hacks away at a carcass. Ah, animal cruelty.
Speaking of the food industry. The star then marches his way toward a diner–first taking a stroll through some sex-kittens that may or may not be alluding to Trumpy’s sexual escapades in Russia and beyond–and up to the counter, where a disgruntled cook slaps a burger bun on a cell phone. Our star slams a shot and in our next scene he’s in a white suit, carelessly strutting by a protest to which he does not seem to give a fuck. We’ll let you watch the rest for yourselves, and tell us what you think! God bless the USA?
This video was shot with an insanely massive and talented crew of folks based in Oakland and was recorded at Zoolabs. Produced by James “Skyway Man” Wallace. Check out Pancho Morris’ work and stay tuned for more. –Michelle Kicherer, Associate Editor
Good Fuck has released a video for the latest single, “Physics”, from their forthcoming self-titled debut album. This is the third single released from this new project from Jenny Pulse and Tim Kinsella.
You can help the duo celebrate the album’s release on February 22nd at Open House Contemporary with Windbreaker, Mayor Daley, Whitney Johnson / Ben Lamar Gay Duo, Water Ritual, and DJ MTZ.