NYC

Reminder: Punk never really died. An Interview with SlothRust.

Posted on:

SlothRust is the brain child of guitarist/vocalist Leah Wellbaum, bassist Kyle Bann, and drummer Will Gorin. Wellbaum blazes through her lyrics with emotional rawness that sounds like it’s voiced over a static megaphone. The trio is made up of graduates from the prestigious Sarah Lawrence, and if you’ve seen “10 Things I hate about you” you know how big of a deal that school is. Between studying and connecting through their blues and jazz classes, the group formed a distinctly new age punk band. Despite common band issues; such as a broken van, very little capital and no practice space; the motivated group is working on their latest EP at Spaceman Sound with the working title, “Of Course You Do”.  The band is excited to offer more diversity in terms of style on the next EP. SlothRust’s sound is intricate and woven into careful patterns like grandma’s favorite quilt. Leah’s aggressive and slightly Nico monotone vocals coupled with melodic guitar parts and funky bass lines offer a dazzling balance of Rock and Blues.  We were lucky enough to catch up with the lead singer, Leah, and ask a few questions about the group.

Read full interview here

NYC

Singer Songwriter on the Rise: Allison Weiss

Posted on:

I think if Ben Gibbard (Death Cab for Cutie) was a New York resident, preferred biking, and was just a wee big younger, he might sound something like Allison Weiss. The sentimental songstress charts her own misadventures in growing up, growing older, and getting over all the dramas you otherwise might not hear from the girl next door. New record ‘The Teenage Years’ charts these upsets through the battles fought out in ‘Here’s the Plan,’ and a chilling duet with Chris Mansfield (Fences) in ‘Boston.’ See her live when she plays Public Assembly on Feb 1. – Mike Levine (@Goldnuggets)

NYC

Artists on Trial: Various Blonde

Posted on:
For the next few weeks, we’ll be featuring artists playing the MidCoast Takeover fundraiser shows, sponsored by Midwest Music Foundation.
 
Various Blonde is the brainchild of Joshua Allen, formed in 2008 and presenting a dark, experimental, progressive style unique to Kansas City music. The band has opened for national acts like Russian Circles, Thursday, Murder By Death, Fang Island, and The Electric Six. We talk with them and find out more about what they’re up to as well as their plans for SXSW.
 
The Deli: Down and dirty: 1 sentence to describe your music. What is it?

Various Blonde: A bunch of experiments with trial and error sprinkled on top.
 
The Deli: Tell us about what Various Blonde has going on.
 
VB:We have been chosen as a finalist for this: http://jansport.sonichub.com/artist/various-blonde
 
It would be awesome to win because if we win, it’s also a victory for KC. It’s good to bring attention to KC. We also have two EPs up on Bandcamp for whatever people will give us. nd if we are talking promotion, there is always Facebook. Please "LIKE" us on there, but more importantly, come to a show.
 
The Deli: What else can we expect from you guys this year?
 
VB: Perform and record as much as possible. Use my axe to chop down a money tree. (sarcasm font)
 
The Deli: What does supporting local music mean to you?

VB: Promoting and going to shows besides your own.
 
The Deli: Who are your favorite local musicians right now?

VB: This is a tough question and I know I’m gonna forget someone, but I really enjoy the Jorge Arana Trio, Sons of Great DaneThe Conquerors are super sick, THE DEVIL, Snuff Jazz, Making Movies fuggin’ slays Latin dragons, obviously Hearts of Darkness! Er’body luv HOD! One of KC’s best kept secrets, Clock People (just wait, their first show is March 1 at Riot Room and you should go), Cherokee.Rock.Rifle because they wrote “Black Cauldron,” RADKEY because the guy from Entourage loves them, Janet The Planet (So dope!), MINDEN (even though they moved to Portland will always be KC to me), MONOLYTH!, and The Beautiful Bodies; they’ve really locked in their sound and are headed for big shit!
 
The Deli: Congrats on being selected to play MidCoast Takeover at SXSW. Who are you guys looking forward to playing with or seeing there?
 
VB: Thanks. I’m looking forward to all the KC energy that will be there, but as far as nationals are concerned, I honestly have no idea who is playing. I’ll let you know when I know. Andrew W.K.?
 
The Deli: Who are your favorite not-so-local musicians right now?

VB: Zechs Marquise, No Spill Blood, Bosnian Rainbows, Chelsea Wolfe, Zach Hill, Dot Hacker, Big Sur, Flying Lotus, Swahili Blonde, Death Grips, Tame Impala, Dirty Projectors, The Stepkids, Bailiff, The Budos Band, and Antibalas are all awesome. I was tempted to write dead artists cause none of them are local to anyone, but I don’t wanna be a smartass.
 
The Deli: What is your ultimate fantasy concert bill to play on?

VB: A festival with my band, Radiohead (Ok Computer, KID A, Amnesiac set), Smashing Pumpkins (original lineup Mellon Collie disc 1 and 2 set) The Mars Volta (De-Loused in the Comatorium set), Tool (Ænima cover-to-cover set), The Flaming Lips, Jack White, Blonde Redhead, Queens of the Stone Age with Grohl on drums, NIN (Fragile left and right Set), and if were including dead people that should still be alive… Biggie, Tupac, and Wu-Tang with Ol’ Dirty. After-party with Flying Lotus at Shaun White’s crib.
 
The Deli: Would you rather spend the rest of your life on stage or in the recording studio?
 
VB: On stage because you’re creating a moment instead of trying to capture it. I hate to quote Coca Cola, but you can’t beat the real thing!
 
The Deli: A music-themed Mount Rushmore. What four faces are you putting up there and why?

VB: James Brown (hardest working man in show business, Godfather of Soul), Miles Davis (changed the face of jazz four times over four decades), brown Michael Jackson with fro in tow (King of Pop, indigo child), Hendrix (just ask the Axis).

The Deli: All right, give us the rundown. Where all on this big crazy web can you be found?


The Deli: Always go out on a high note. Any last words of wisdom for the Deli audience?

VB: Breakfast really is the most important meal of the day.
 
Various Blonde is:
Joshua Allen – guitar, vocals
Jason Nash – bass
Josh Enyart – drums
 

You can see Various Blonde this Saturday, February 2, where they will be playing the second MidCoast Takeover fundraiser at Riot Room. The group will be playing at 9:45, followed by Drop A Grand, Maps for Travelers, and Six Percent. Tickets available here. Various Blonde was also one of over 40 KC artists selected to play the 2013 MidCoast Takeover showcase at SXSW from March 13-16 at Shangri-La in Austin, Texas.

–Michelle Bacon

Share this story on Facebook 

NYC

Kladruy Gold Wins The Deli Seattle’s Artist of the Month Poll

Posted on:

What began as a solo project of Ryan Cline, Kladruby Gold turned into a full-fledged band here in Seattle. Teaming up with the likes of Gary Thorstensen on lead guitar, Dustin Miller on drums, and Steve Melle on bass, the quartet began producing music with more of a rock edge. These ‘ameri-gaze’ rockers bring a southern flare to their music that gives them a rootsy edge. The band is getting ready to release their full length “Wilderness” due out this spring, with their promising single OBC available on their website. – Lucy Sherman

Read the full interview here.  

NYC

Brooklyn House Music, Michael Bouldry-Morrison is Octo Octa

Posted on:

In the future, one has every reason to expect things like sausage-making will take place in colourful pop storefronts decorated minimally and sterilized to the point of maximum hygiene (think Pinkberry). And when that day comes, Octo Octa has just the soundtrack. Brooklyn’s Michael Bouldry-Morrison leads this loop-happy lo-fi house music project to highly polished results. Readymade for the Standard Hotel’s poolside lounge or, well, the inside of your nearest Pinkberry, songs like “High Reflection” still feel somewhat derived from the bedroom synthpop style connected ineffably to Williamsburg. Yet sometimes the loop-making experiment becomes so transparent that it sounds like the audio equivalent of watching sausage made. – Brian Chidester

NYC

Brooklyn Experimental Electronic: The Mast

Posted on:

Combining a rumbling, metallic percussive undercurrent with passionate vocals and mysterious lyrics, Brooklyn electronic duo The Mast‘s lastest release "Nuclear Dragon" is both hypnotic and inviting. In this track – available as a free download on their bandcamp – their exotic psychedelic journey weaves through a land of turtle bays, grazing elephants and dragons, where dreams made of bronze and stone are frozen under the sun (but still alive within). Propulsive tribal patterns are woven within dramatic vocal placement that rise in cascading swells as this story unfolds. The Mast will be appearing at Glasslands on January 29. – Dave Cromwell

NYC

NYC Progressive Indie Rock: No Shoes

Posted on:

New York needs a band like this. While Chicago has its share of insane math musician geniuses on Thrill Jockey, NY isn’t known for this kind of showmanship. With No Shoes, you get all this along with a determined interest in such topics as Werewolves and honeycombs. The quartet can play their asses off, while making sure you’re having filthy fun at the same time. Check out their half of a split EP made with Basal Gang. on their Bandcamp. – Mike Levine (@Goldnuggets)

NYC

Swampcandy wins DC Area Best of 2012 Readers and Fans’ Poll for Emerging Artists!

Posted on:

Deli Readers,

The Deli DC’s Best of 2012 Readers and Fans’ Poll for local emerging artists is over, thanks to all those who cast their vote in support of the emerging local bands and artists in our list of nominees. Congrats to Swampcandy for being The Deli Readers’ Best DC Area Artist of 2012. Kudos also to Mission South and Alex Vans who placed second and third.


Here’s this poll’s top 10 chart, full results can be found here.

 
ARTIST
VOTES
 
1
Swampcandy
853
2
Mission South
587
icon
3
Alex Vans
269
icon
4
M.H. & His Orchestra
87
icon
5
PLOY
77
icon
6
Ghost Hotel
76
icon
7
Dance For the Dying
73
icon
8
Mirror Kisses
52
icon
9
The WeatherVanes
48
icon
10
The Young Rapids
44
icon

Stay tuned for the composite chart, to be released soon, which will include the point nominees accumulated from the jurors and Deli writers’ votes, and will crown The Deli’s Best Emerging DC Area Artist of 2012.

The Deli’s Staff

NYC

Brooklyn Electro-Pop: Empress Of

Posted on:

Brooklyn’s Lorely Rodriguez (a.k.a. Empress Of) describes her augustan moniker as “a project of sight and sound,” which, last year took the form of 13 one-minute bursts of exhilarating pop uploaded to her YouTube account. Dubbed “colorminutes,” these arresting nuggets of colour-filled background music set the stage for Empress Of’s first single, “Don’t Tell Me,” an aching electro ballad that recently played on The Fader’s “Yours Truly” online TV show. Think Portishead meets Sinead O’Connor at her most breathless and you’ll get the idea. – Brian Chidester

NYC

Brooklyn Band on the Rise: Happy Lives

Posted on:

Oh the power and glory of over-driven drums. There’s really nothing quite like it when you’re looking for that crunch to get you out of bed. For Happy Lives, the band seems to broadcast an especially large sound using the barest of materials. From thrown-together harmonies that somehow reach their mark, to sideways guitar shredding, funky drum machines and yes.. destructively large drum samples, this is a band goes as far as they can towards a messy good time, before falling back into the catchiest groove you can imagine in tracks like ‘Brutus’ and my fave ‘Slacks and Slippers’ from their self-titled EP. – Mike Levine (@Goldnuggets) 

NYC

Brooklyn Experimental Garage: Young Boys

Posted on:

The debut single "Love Hits" by Brooklyn’s Young Boys begins with a bass line that finds the centerpoint between The Sisters of Mercy’s "Lucretia, My Reflection" and "A Forest" by The Cure. A wall of guitar fuzz is then introduced in tandem with vocals that additionally evoke Andrew Eldrich’s peak era Sisters recordings. Unique keyboard elements emerge, pulling the track up from its 90’s era beginnings to more current sonics. So much so that the central instrumental keyboard segment creates the sensation of some future alien landscape. It’s a beautifully executed transition that culminates in otherworldly textures reminiscent of the work of David Bowie’s more experimental pop tracks. – Dave Cromwell

NYC

Up and Coming NYC Indie: Dear Comrade

Posted on:

Like the social protests of Arcade Fire and Hank Williams III, Dear Comrade aren’t content to air their grievances against acoustic instruments and sentimental conclusions. This is a band has serious stadium ambitions. A larger-than-life diatribe against injustice everywhere, this group will make you grab pitchforks and shout the message from the rooftops. Singers Sam Quartin and Arthur Kremer work out their issues in burners ‘Basketcase’ and ‘Wolf’ off their debut ‘All Wisdom is Gone.’ – Mike Levine @Goldnuggets