Dark Pop from The Melting Rabbits

After spending all of the night hanging onto 90s rock heroes like Karate and Unwound, I wanted to slide into something a little darker, like this single from The Melting Rabbits. For me, the song’s all about the immediacy of the pulse; it has this primal energy, hitting you with its simplicity, unable to let you pull away. There’s similar acts out there, but I love the way this tune holds back some of the effects on the vocals, allowing for an almost pensive nature to creep into the tune here. Pump it up and take a spin or two around your room right now!

100% Share Abandon Single

Australia’s synth pop outfit 100% are set to release their debut album pretty soon here, so they’ve decided to entice us with this heavy darkwave track so we can be prepared. “Abandon” is a mixture of beats and synth washes to create this cavernous background that hangs just behind the vocals. For their part, the vocals are emphatic in their delivery, punching in a sense, though mixed in with the musical elements, they’re likely to entrance you, beckoning you into the tune like haunting sirens. Maybe it’s a little dark for your morning, but wanted to keep you in the know so you can be on the lookout for Clear Visions when it drops later this year via It Records.

Here’s More Dark Wave From The Black Ships

blackIt’s getting to that point of the year when things are slim pickings in the Interwebs…people are working on wrapping things up with all their lists, but music’s still coming out. I love this bouncy bit of dark pop coming from the Black Ships, who I wrote about earlier in this year. There’s a nice wash of keyboards on this tune, giving it a little bit of club shimmer. Those of you looking for tunes of the darker pop ilk will definitely be appreciative of Dead Empires, the band’s new album coming out later this week.

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Black Marble – A Different Arrangement

Rating: ★★★★☆

There are tons of bands out there crafting dark electronic pop music nowadays, and I’m cool with that, for the most part.  But, sometimes you have to wade through a lot of mediocre work in order to find something special.  Luckily, the newest effort from Black Marble makes it easy; it’s accessible, dark and infinitely rewarding.  You’re going to want to get your hands on a copy of A Different Arrangement as soon as you can.

For three seconds, Black Marble begins things with this ominous feeling on “Cruel Summer,” but just minutes later it evolves into a evenly-paced bit of dark pop.  Beats unfold rather slowly, encouraging you to fall further into the track as a brighter electronic sound begins to take shape.  If you’re looking for something that’s going to beat you over the head with hooks, then perhaps this isn’t the song for you, with the lyrics keeping an even keel throughout. While other bands simply push forward to quickly, the NYC duo are happy just hanging out and making tracks you’ll want to listen to on your darkest days, and your brightest too.  There’s a pulsing beat to “A Great Design,” and even a bit of a lighter sound to the crafted music, but the slightest hint of an echo drenched over the vocal provides that sensation of personal melancholia that allows you to lose yourself within the confines of A Different Arrangement.

Even with the songs creating their own sort of negative space throughout, a few songs do allow for that slight upbeat movement.  The one-two punch of “A Different Arrangement” and “Limitations” does provide the record with an extra skip in the middle of things.  Musically, the former track is what provides the bit of a different mood, with the vocals holding tightly to the distant feeling they’ve provided since the get-go. I feel like the latter track, though still dwelling in that haunting spectrum, does its bit to move the mood into a peppier sphere, though only slightly.  All that being said, the tempo remains slow–a constant for almost every track on the album.

One of the things I really enjoy about immersing myself in this release by Black Marble is its ability to seem so far away musically, yet provide you with a bit of personal intimacy—at least if you grew up on the dark-tinged pop of the 80s.  Songs like “Pretender” though using a more propulsive drum loop still invoke a feeling of longing or isolation, yet the slight swinging of the beat makes me wax nostalgic about dancing in my room as a kid to my sister’s records.  Naturally, those sorts of feelings, even as an adult, still resonate, which is what makes the entire effort so enduring spin after spin.  A Different Arrangement never grows old, and it almost always surprises me with which song I like the most; sometimes I lose myself in one, only to find myself mildly tapping my tow to another.  As the winter months begin to approach, there’s not a record that I think you’ll appreciate more.

[audio:https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/BlackMarble_AGreatDesign.mp3]

Download:Black Marble -A Great Design [MP3]

A Different Arrangement is available October 9th from Hardly Art!

 

 

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