Premiere: So Many Wizards Announce Heavy Vision

Tuesdays beg for energetic pop tunes, and what better way to get you on your way then by bringing out news of a new album from So Many Wizards. While the album’s opening track opens with an angelic vocal carefully echoing through your speakers, you can hear the energy building as the guitars slowly churn. Instantly, they’re jittering quickly, pushing the song’s pace, pushing you to shuffle your feet as you dance frivolously through your room. I like the sudden draw back in style that comes during the chorus, softly pulling in a moment of steadiness before blasting back towards jangling rock n’ roll heaven. Lolipop Records will be releasing the band’s new record, Heavy Vision, on April 14th, and it sounds like we’re in store for a banger of furious pop hits.

New Ablebody Video ft. Sean Nicholas Savge

We’re a few weeks away from the release of Ablebody‘s full-length release, Adult Contemporaries, and the band have offered up this new video for their latest single. This is the sort of dreamy pop I’ve come to expect from the band, with the video seemingly matching the album’s contemporary adult motif. There’s a softness to this track, which walks that fine line between indiepop and soulful R&B, which is probably owed to the beautiful touch of Sean Nicholas Savage‘s vocals. Look to get your hands on their new LP via Lolipop on October 14th.

Sorry I Missed This: New (Ish) Track From The Yetis

10633139_10154614720600538_2704436462315816379_oA few weeks ago, Pennsylvania’s The Yetis put out a new track called “Where You Goin'” and somehow this slid under my radar for rad tunes. But I stumbled across this surfy gem from the group and couldn’t help but make up for lost time by sharing it with you all. This song is a classic summer jam from the start not only in its instrumentation, but lyrics as well. The guitars are surfy, the percussion shimmery, there are swelling gang vocals of “ooohs,” scattered throughout and not to mention lyrics that talk of wine, the ocean, and secret getaways. This track is part of an EP from the band which should be coming out later this summer.

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Grunge Pop From Franky Flowers

10988325_1610313425864842_1388397097689672816_oWho doesn’t love those grungey pop songs that remind you of yesteryear? Well, this track from Franky Flowers is sure to get you feeling loads of nostalgia today with their fuzzed out sound. “Sneakers” has sort of a Modest Mouse feel to it, with both its twangy and heavy guitars; the song is a mix between meandering pop and grunged out rock and roll. I’m digging this track, which was just recently released as an EP you can pick up here.

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DTCV – Uptime!

dtcvRating: ★★★☆☆

There’s a lot of mystery surrounding the French American post-punk duo, DTCV (pronounced Detective) perhaps some of which is owed to the pseudonyms of the band members Vivarock and Fiat Lux. While they had their humble beginnings a mere three years ago in L.A., they’ve already managed to put out two full-length, and one collection of singles under three different labels. Uptime! is an adventure in gritty guitars, catchy pop hooks and shimmering percussion that should have you ready to smash along with these two.

The album opens strongly with the first four tracks all bringing the infectious rock. “Astros” gives you a brief stirring introduction to the band, and the female vocals chime in with haunting “ahhs,” before the guitar snarls in, and I’m reminded of the sleek music of the likes of Frankie Rose. They follow this with the delightful “X-Water,” that moves from sleek to outright rock, the vocals becoming the most striking element as it flourishes and shrieks with grace. This trend continues early on in the album, hitting you with track after track of post punk rock.

Once you reach roughly the middle of the album with “Miley Cyrus Wins The Race,” you can begin to see the direction DTCV are headed. This track listens like a power ballad of the post-punk persuasion; the sultry yet forceful vocals dominate the track, but not without contention from the distorted guitar parts and that throbbing bass that opens the song. What I like about this track is the subtle way that it builds to the very end and the way in which all the components of the song come together with ease and refinement. It’s a less spunky track than what we’ve heard thus far, but by no means less powerful. When you get to the end of the track, which culminates with those female vocals belting “burn it to the ground,” it’s hard not to take notice of the music the band has crafted.

Here, however, marks the point of the record in which the band moves towards a slower approach to the songs, and apart from a few of the tracks that introduce a novel sound for the band, (See “Invitation to a Beheading,” and “California Girl”) they start to lose me a little bit. It’s not that the songs aren’t enticing in their way, it’s that the pacing of the album doesn’t do them any favors: the first half of the album is stacked with the hits and the second half is dominated with slower moments.

While there are some solid numbers on Uptime!, the album falls a bit flat in its low moments, and could have benefitted from a trimming down of a few tracks; forty minutes drags on a little towards the end and the sound begins dull out from the spunky music that the band began with. Perhaps this album is a grower and simply requires more time for the songs to really set in, so I encourage you to find that out for yourself.

 

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