Cut Copy Is Playing FFF8

Get ready people, Fun Fun Fun Fest is upon us. Festival season is a fickle beauty. It enchants you with dance and libations and wrecks your perception of reality and your liver.

The wife and I will celebrate fifteen years of marriage on the day before FFF8. Cut Copy is her favoritest. Free Your Mind like Neo jumping off a building and dance a little. Here is perfect synths pop dance jam called “We Are Explorers” to get you in the mood for Friday on the Orange Stage.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/115519032″ params=”color=ff6600&auto_play=false&show_artwork=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Drifting Dream from White Birds

whitebirdsI’ve been keeping a close eye on White Birds, and admittedly, I never quite know what I’m going to get.  Sometimes the music created is so intimate, other times it’s interestingly abstract, but this new track that just popped up yesterday is too mesmerizing to miss.  I could just listen to the vocals over and over, soaring, quietly.  There’s a tribal quality in the percussion, which makes creates a really dense ethereal haunt throughout.  I’m not sure what or if this will be released, just think you should enjoy such a ridiculously good song; I’d be responsible for ruining your day if I didn’t let you hear it!

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/White-Birds-Woman.mp3]

Download: White Birds – Woman [MP3]

New Pop from Charlie Big Time

charlieIt says a lot when a band can claim the likes of Matinee and Cloudberry as their past homes, and with the move to Jigsaw, Charlie Big Time continue their foray into the annals of great indie pop labels. Next week you’ll be able to grab the Sale or Return EP from the band, and this first listen is really something special.  There’s a an airy quality to the song, which counteracts with the cascading distorted guitar.  The vocals are definitely focused on Matthew’s performance, but Beth also does a great job of adding just the right backing vocals, leaving listeners with a fine slice of pop to get you through your day.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/01-A-Sunday-Afternoon-Well-Spent.mp3]

Download: Charlie Big Time – A Sunday Afternoon Well Spent [MP3]

Playful Jam from Chromeo

sexyI know it’s only humpday, but I already feel bogged down this week, so I’m looking to the feel good tunes of Chromeo to get me through the rest of the day.  The duo has always had a soft spot in my heart, with “Mama’s Boy” being one of my favorite tracks.  The group’s always employed a fun spin on the world, and they don’t stop with this tune, commenting on a popular social butterfly…I’m thinking they’re nodding to Kim K. You can hear this tune, and what I assume will be more hits, when the band release White Women, their latest LP.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/115343497″ params=”color=ff6600&auto_play=false&show_artwork=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Thursdays Are for Rock N’ Roll

austin-skyline-mark-weaverMan, I was looking up what shows I wanted to love on for you all this Thursday, and I ran into just a smorgasbord of good little shows.  A few of these are locals gigs, and a few are traveling acts.  For the most part, they’re all fairly cheap, so get out on the town, find your groove, and rock it out with the best of us.

Holy Ghost (w/Orthy, Midnight Magic) @ Emos – 8 PM  – $17

Crystal Stilts (w/Lovely Bad Things, Zachary Cale, Holy Wave) – 9 PM – $14

Mean Jeans (w/Audacity, Prince, The Rich Hands, the Vomettes) – 9 PM – Cheap

There’s also some intersting sets from the likes of Austin Lucas, Barenaked Ladies, Finch about town, but my suggestions lay with the previews up above.  Below are some jams from the bands I’m really into, like Crystal Stilts and Audacity.

[audio:

[audio: https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/01_Couldn_t_Hold_A_Candle.mp3]

Another Rocker from Radioactivity

radioactivity3x372Just last week I was tossing one of the great new songs from Radioactivity your way, and less than a few days later, the band have unleashed another kicking tune for your ears. I love the gritty sound of this tune, even though it still has this underlying pop sensibility to it; you wouldn’t expect anything less from two ex-Marked Men memebers would you? Not only does this capture the sound that I’ve been enthralled with (again) over the last few years, but we can get a big Texas shout out going here.  Their self-titled LP comes out next week via Dirtnap Records…and rumor has it that another one is right around the corner.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/04-Locked-in-My-Head.mp3]

Download: Radioactivity – Locked in My Head [MP3]

 

Show Preview: Holy Ghost @ Emo’s (10.24)

We have some dancing to do.

Holy Ghost! last came to town in support of New Order. It was a great opening slot for them, save for one thing – they didn’t have all the new jams ready to unleash. Don’t get me wrong, I love the s/t, but I want to hear the new stuff. I am ready to dance to Dynamics.

Orthy will have their 12″ up for sale and Midnight Magic are road companions. Holy Ghost! has a knack for picking interesting openers so show up early.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/109564251″ params=”color=ff6600&auto_play=false&show_artwork=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Great Track From INVASIONS

1260890_10151618587618869_244397175_nReally digging this new tune called “Rosy” from up and coming band INVASIONS.  The band describe it as a song you’d find in a lost Quentin Tarantino movie, and I’d say that just about sums it up.  I’m feeling the reverb jamming throughout mixed in with a darker, sort of swirly country/swing vibe.  Check it out.

New album, Rosy, will be out on October 25th.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/114225789″ params=”color=ff6600&auto_play=false&show_artwork=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

ACL 2013: The Big Post of Good Stuff

We are wrapping up Austin City Limits 2013 coverage with this giant summary of links and a massive amount of photos not previously shared. We had a ton of coverage, from tweets galore to interviews of ATH faves. You can see plenty of pics from Weekend One. I didn’t have the fancy wristband that gets you up close and personal for big camera fun. I did have the most fun of any ACL I have ever been to thanks to a group of amazing friends I call fambly.

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Crooks on Tape – Fingerprints

Crooks-On-Tape-Fingerprint-450x450Rating: ★★★☆☆

Fingerprints is the debut album from Crooks on Tape, a psych-pop group out of Dayton, Ohio.  While they are a fairly new band, two of their three members played together previously for over a decade in indie rock outfit Enon.  Fingerprints contains twelve songs collected from hundreds of hours of improvisational recordings.  The results are intriguing, if a bit unfocused.  

Individually, the songs on Fingerprints are fairly repetitive.  There are catchy, nearly danceable tunes such as “Duper”, songs built on mind-scrambling vocal loops such as those on “Tito’s Riser”, and a couple of more mellow tracks in “Summer’s End” and “Barging In”.  Taken together, they form a lighthearted, very sample heavy pop record that should reward multiple listens.

Texture, on this record, is established more through effects than song structure.  Everything, including the vocals, has a slightly muddied, dreamy tone.  The drums are kept light throughout, letting the bass and synthesizers come through the strongest.  While there are a few very alternative, 90s sounding guitar parts, Crooks on Tape spend most of their time here working through bubbling and/or pulsing synths.

One of my slight hang-ups about this band is that the vocals and lyrics often feel like an after-thought.  On most of these songs the vocals are somewhat muffled and low in the mix, and I found it very difficult to make out any of the lyrics on a first listen.  The vocalist has a nice range, and a higher register somewhat reminiscent of James Mercer’s falsetto, but there’s just something missing.  For the most part, these songs don’t have strong melodies, and the vocals never really feel important to the structure of the songs.  There’s also something of a sense of discontinuity about the record, owing to the constantly varying effects on the bass and different synth tones from song to song.

My favorite parts of the album are when the band turns up the delay and establishes a mellower, more contemplative atmosphere as they do with “Summer’s End”, which also feels like their strongest bit of songwriting.  Here, the vocals are a bit higher in the mix, and the tension of some of their faster songs is absent.  Altogether, Fingerprints is a solid, inviting debut from a new voice in the psych-pop landscape.    

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