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Showing posts with label custom made music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label custom made music. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

True Independent Music Labels

A truly independent music label exists as a self-sufficient operation through their own financing and sales. When one of these labels enters into an affiliation with a larger record company to help distribute or otherwise enhance their venture, they are no longer really an "indie."   No matter how cutting edge or innovative their catalog may have been at the time, they are now actually a subsidiary of a larger company. This affords them distribution advantages and financial clout that the true indie does not have.

 What follows here is focused on music being put out by true independent music labels.

 First up, some recent releases from old friends of this blog, Squirrel Records


Earlier this year the good folks at Squirrel sent me a package that contained this 7" record


The mysteriously named band and it's peculiar imagery was compelling enough right away to dig in, give a good listen and see what this was all about.

Fortunately this accompanying promotional video makes for quick and easy access to the track as well as providing visual enhancement.



A driving snare shot drum beat comes surrounded with enough reverb to evoke comparisons to “Barbed Wire Kisses” era Jesus and Mary Chain. But the pulsating synths that follow point to an earlier period, bringing to mind synth-pop’s first wave in the 1980’s. A distinct, hooky melody line emerges on top of that already lush backdrop, leaving no doubt that vintage keyboard sounds will dominate. Vocalist “Sissy Space Echo” presents an impassioned tale of behind-the-wheel driving impressions that echoes the spirit of “car song” pioneers The Shangri-Las and the dangers ever present. Another layer of keyboards emerge as additional sonic enhancement for the coda section that features a repeated vocal line about “time” and “these dirty streets.”

Another unique feature of true independent record labels - the 7" vinyl single.


Complete with inside liner notes.


The other side of this single serves up a track called "(I'm A) Willing Receiver."  With whip-slap percussion  under a throbbing electronic pulse, verses are delivered in teutonic narration-style as electronically altered amplified guitar sounds create the impression of radio static behind. A chorus of sorts repeats with the lyrics "you don't know I exist" and "you don't know how I feel" which ultimately resolves with the line "but I know you." There's enough mysterious word play throughout - "icy smile - penetrate the glass - look in the mirror - take it in the trash" - to keep you guessing as to the overall subject matter.  The track was recorded and mixed in mono, which contributes to a certain overall nostalgic charm. However there is enough separation between the sounds to approximate the feel of stereo.  Abrasive guitar washes (always welcome) lead it all to a noisy conclusion of crackle and mayhem.


B-side vinyl goodness

More recently Squirrel released a follow-up single from this band again.


The A-Side here is quintessential pop music in the way Bobby Sherman used to make when he ruled the teen airwaves, with a dash of Conway Twitty when those songs dominated the country charts.  Structural similarities aside, the lyrical content and accompanying video presents an homage to the central character of popular 1970's era film "Logan's Run."



The B-Side takes things off into more adventurous directions. With a title that playfully twists off an Echo and The Bunnymen classic, “Bring on the Dancing Horse Meat” pulses with slap percussion and buzzing synths.  Soft upfront mixed vocals sound perfectly placed, putting the right amount of emphasis on those curiously intriguing lyrics. A ripping guitar part emerges in a style that's equal parts prime period Velvet Underground and late 1960’s era Byrds. Unexpectedly, the track morphs into a quicker driving beat, with “choir” patch synth textures and throbbing bass guitar. With “Sissy” singing about listening for bells and the ringing, additional layers of guitars jump into the fray. Ultimately the whole track devolves into frantic raveup of urgency.

Have a listen and hear for yourself



Both 7" singles (among many other things) can be ordered directly from the label's website:

*****
Patetico Recordings is an independent music label based out of Philadelphia under the fervid attention of it's owner Tom Lugo.


In addition to running this label, Tom writes and records his own music as well as engaging in collaborations with others.

The recently released Drowning Dreams is one such project.


Stand out track "Leave It All Behind" emerges slow and gently, like the bubbles rising up on the albums cover.  Precisely placed bass notes establish the full progression, allowing for loose and jammy drums to share sonic space with a single note struck guitar melody that sits perfectly with digital delay "echo" overtone enhancement.  Midway in a piercing guitar solo takes off on top of everything, creating an additional level of excitement that is most welcome.  This added guitar continues to build in intensity as it expands across the sonic field.  The drumming becomes more intense as a result of this inspired guitar work, and you can hear subtle changes in the bass progression.  The overall impression given is that of a basic song idea that blossomed under improvisation and a mutually shared passion for the psych rock sound.

Listen to the track here:



Find out how to obtain this album as well as the full Patetico Recordings discography at this link:


*****
Custom Made Music has been putting out an eclectic blend of releases from both new and previously established recording artists for quite some time now.


Prior entries on a variety of recordings from this label can be found in the archives of this blog as well.


A new 7" single is now available from the band Eartheater

Featured A-Side track “Birds Eye” presents a creative blend of relaxed-groove dual-guitar interplay, fluid bass playing, and light electronic percussion. Vocalist Alexandra Drewchin presents an eccentric story about spies, the need to keep silent, and staying above it all – “high like a birds eye.” At times her vocal delivery takes on the quirky inflections that singers Dolores O'Riordan of The Cranberries (“Zombie”), Lene Lovich (“Lucky Number”) and even Yoko Ono (everything) popularized. The song structure itself takes interesting turns as a descending progression appears a third of the way in (within the first minute) accompanied by industrial speed-snare percussion and distant siren sound effects. This pattern repeats as a bridge between verses until the final minute of the song. At this point the track veers off into an unsettling movie soundtrack mode, which the accompanying video made for it fully capitalizes on.

 Look and listen here:



Find out more about the Eartheater release on Custom Made here:


And everything that label has to offer here:


You can read a prior feature on Custom Made releases published exclusively on this blog, here:


*****
Another indie label who's work has been featured on this blog over the last few years is the Virginia Beach based Planting Seeds Records.


 New releases have now been delivered to the public with an enthusiasm that presents each artist in the genre best suited to their respective creative output.

Death Valley Rally roll out their first EP on the label with the six song "The Stars Shine Brighter After Midnight."


Lead single "Come On" is fast paced and driving with a fuzz-bass undercurrent that points directly at early Jesus and Mary Chain (and more recently Ringo Deathstarr) as sonic forbears, at least instrumentally.  Unadorned boy-girl vocals sung in tandem move things in other directions, as the honest clarity (no heavy studio autotune correcting here) creates a charming atmosphere.  With the actual EP title showing up as an additional hook further into the song (the song title itself being the first), the band exhibits a knack for catchy phrases, intended to stick in your head.

Have a listen to "Come On" and discover for yourself:



Find out more about this band (including how to order their record) go Here

*****
Another signficant PSR release is the limited edition 7" 45 rpm Vinyl and
4 song digital download from The Young Sinclairs


Titled "You Know Where To Find Me," these label home-state residents have been honing their particular brand of pop music for a number of years, compiling a sizeable catalog of releases (which can be found here ).

The era this band so obviously chooses to emulate is that point in the early 1960's when popular music stood at the crossroads between American standard bearer Buddy Holly and the "invading" influence of The Beatles.

The title track here presents a faithful homage to Holly's spiritual sound while referencing at points the structure and lyrical sentiment of the aforementioned Beatles "Please Please Me."  A sense of unrequited love (for now) runs through the lyrics, after being "left alone" once again. He's leaving it all out there for her - “can’t you see what I want – and what it could be.”

Listen to "You Know Where To Find Me"



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To find out about this release and all the other artists at Planting Seeds Records, follow the link below: 

*****
Speaking of Buddy Holly, the new Suzy Blu release takes on the Texas legend in a truly inspired way.


Building their entire song around a single word sound sample of Holly's trademark "Well" - provides the necessary sonic gravitas for Suzy's own creative flow.  After Buddy's initial "appearance," the track takes on a forceful minimalism of driving tom tom percussion accompanying storyteller vocals.  Guitars emerge into the mix and serve to create an appealing level of tension throughout.  The bigger move, however is a jacked up chorus featuring buzzaw guitar chords, matched throbbing bass, electronic handclap percussion and floating outerspace sounds.  It's all pulled back together with the return of Buddy's "Well."  The cycle repeats with enough incidental sonic variations to hold the listeners interest.  The story being told focuses on the eternal search for love - or at the very least a compatible partner.  While one may "find it easy to lie in the dark" the other challenges them to "play your part."   "Do you want to sink or swim?   Show me how thick's your skin!"  If only Buddy were around to hear this.

Fortunately, you are and therefore can (listen - and look):



Find more about Suzy Blu here:


*****
A new track from Vandana Jain has recently emerged that is well worth checking out.


Creative sound design is woven throughout this masterful recording. Passages appear stark and minimal in places – yet it somehow still sounds incredibly big. Such seductive vocal delivery (and placement) makes for a wonderful headphone listening experience. Lyrically the subject matter addresses the “mask” we all put on every day to function. The point of view presented here takes a candid look at the all too frequent deceptive nature of this practice. Referencing a “wicked smile” that is “crooked and sideways” with “misleading” intent driven by “imposters.” Ultimately the mask is removed when alone, allowing for an unguarded mirror conversation with your own mind. This is the work of a serious electronic musician who’s visual imagery further enhances an overall appealing sensory mix.

Listen to this wonderful track:



Prior coverage of Vandana's live show can be found here:
 
For additional information, links
to all the pages relating to this artist can be found through
her Soundcloud, here:
 
*****

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Custom Made Music - Free Electric State - Hypefactor - Last Remaining Pinnacle


Three recent releases from the Virginia based Custom Made Music label have found their way into my music listening sphere, each with their own unique take and update on venerable genres.


Emerging from the fertile North Carolina music scene, Free Electric State presents their musical ideas via traditional rock band structures. On "Yr Last Mistake" Vocalist/bassist Shirle Hale sings in a vocal timbre that falls somewhere between Beach House’s Victoria Legrand and Rush ’s Geddy Lee . The instrumentation is classic guitar, bass and drums that evokes the late 70’s feel of U2 or even the aforementioned Rush . A sweet sonic interlude plateau to half step-up positions the track more firmly in the modern era, however.


Free Electric State - "Yr Last Mistake" from Duotone Films on Vimeo.

Ride cymbal, tom toms and bass drum drives the forward momentum on "A Matter Of Time," while triumphant guitar chords chime behind smooth blended vocals. Buzzing, foreboding ambient textures are provided via the barely-over-a-minute "Blue Outing," suggesting early Krautrock pioneers like Neu! as possible influences.

An angular, syncopated progression, pairing clean and harsher guitar patterns against tandem vocals are the stand out qualities of "All Done Before." Guitar layers take center stage as this one drives hard via a mostly instrumental raveup. "Better Planes" rides a ticketty-tacketty percussive high-hat pattern while guitars chime along aggressively. Lyrics about having a "destiny" hint at song title’s meaning.

"Mt Dream" starts out at a slow, dreamy pace, with rough hewn vocals singing about "drifting down the stream" to the "mountain dream." The intensity builds till it ultimately explodes into full throated bombast. The cleverly titled "We’ll Have A Great Funeral (When You Die)" stomps along pulsing a bass pattern and chugging guitar chords. Roughed up high end guitar textures shatter the stasis, creating an excited listening point that pairs successfully against the more controlled vocal passages. The bass guitar in particular takes a star turn during the end out.

"Angel" drives along a syncopated drum progression, with throttling bass guitar rumble and distorted guitar figures setting up a male vocal turn. "Song of Joy" closes out the album with Shirle singing over a mid-tempo rocker about how "I ain’t crying no more" because "my heart is breaking with joy." 

Find out more about this album and band here:

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Hypefactor have been making music for a decade, releasing a number of quality recordings along the way. Their latest project comes as a series of creative remixes to the single "Descriptive."


The bands own single mix pays homage to the Depeche Mode/Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark (OMD) school of sonic design. Bringing to mind that quintessential 80’s era of Duran Duran/Howard Jones/Thompson Twins – especially via the percussion sound (the processing on the toms), sequenced background keyboards and bassy keyboard melody lines. However, more modern pulses can be heard, evoking the Swedish electronic music duo The Knife.




"The New Division Remix" is immediately brighter. With background keyboard sequencing still firmly in the 80’s, it’s now even more upfront – like what's heard on The Eurythmics "Here Comes The Rain Again." The male/female vocal lines are presented in tandem at points, and then broken out separately at others.

"Screen Vinyl Image" remix focuses on an initial singular guitar melody line, before trading it off for a buzzy background texture. Softer string pads are introduced into the mix, along with panned left-right drum fills.
"baye + deckard" open their remix with the female vocal standing alone in a reverberated chamber. Both voices (male and female) soon emerge with similar FX textured qualities against sparse instrumentation.

Coming in as the longest track overall, "Clan of the Xy" mix focuses on an icy descending melody line. The vocals are processed and distorted, giving them a robotic quality. A myriad of potential sonic references run through ones mind when hearing this. Anything from Depeche Mode's "Enjoy The Silence" to everything Nick Rhodes, Simon Lebon and Roger Taylor did on their one-off "Arcadia" album (while John & Andy were off doing Power Station with Robert Palmer).

"Teff Teff" slows the progression down to a chillwave meter, while adding an additional female vocal line. The final remix by "Dossier" is more playful, funkier and dance floor ready, especially with the added "Ohhhh" vocal hook.


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Last Remaining Pinnacle has been the musical outlet of Custom Made Music founder Dave Allison for over 15 years. Last year guitarist/recording engineer Dave Dembitsky joined on as a permanent member. This latest release - "Visitors" - delivers 8 tracks of gloriously dark soundwaves.



Opening track "7 Dollar Room" propels foward on a JAMC "Blues From A Gun" mechanized percussion track. "Don't want to see you die, don't want to watch you cry, don't want to say goodbye" is the lyrical sentiment expressed.

"Start" slithers along via a heavy, rubbery bass pattern. Guitars fuzz and moan above and below that. The vibe inhabits a place somewhere between The Velvet Underground and A Place To Bury Strangers.

"Lies" is a heavy goth guitar stomper that channels Andrew Eldrich's early Sisters Of Mercy visions. Before there was a "vision thing" - there was a minimal Dr. Avalanche driven, heavy menacing guitar process. Dave & Dave seem to have inheritied this spirit, at least here on this one.

"They Are Lost" presents a dark and ominous take of a "quest for gold" and how these searchers are "twisted and old." Lovely. The rhythm is clacketty-thin, allowing deep guitar tones to take center stage.


"Mantle Rotation 3" builds around a humming undercurrrent, while textured guitar patterns float above. Experimental in that Brian Eno sense. "Everynight" brings back the bombast via thundering tom toms and distortion powered guitar crunch. The jungle drums create lively patterns (which oddly brings to mind AC/DC's "Hell Ain't A Bad Place To Be") but the vocals are delivered more from the Ian Curtis/Joy Division school.

Though the state of mind presented in "Students Of The VU" may pay tribute to Lou Reed's legendary and still influential to this day band - The Velvet Underground never sounded this heavy. The deep guitar rumble on display here reside much closer to the aforementioned APTBS and even darker death-metal elements.

"Visitors" situates itself in the more mystical areas popularized by Jim Morrison and The Doors. "I think you're afraid of what you think you'll see," and "I know you're afraid of what you think I'll be" are the ominous, acid-enduced questions. Utimately summed up by the statement "still we walk and continue to dream." 


 
Find out more about this band here:


And all the artists on Custom Made Music here:


Saturday, March 3, 2012

Dead Leaf Echo release single "Kingmaker" + tour to SXSW

Dead Leaf Echo release single "Kingmaker" + tour to SXSW



On Dead Leaf Echo's most recent single release "Kingmaker," (now out via Custom Made Music) you can almost feel the spirit of 90's dreamgaze bands like Chapterhouse flowing through this modern updating of that classic sound. This shouldn't surprise as DLE was hand picked by that seminal band to open their much anticipated reunion show in Brooklyn last year. Other similarities may be evident due to the hiring of legendary 4AD producer John Fryer to add his golden mixing touch to the track. The song is more complex than much of that era's simpler compositions however, demonstrating the essential difference between unimaginative copying and true musical evolution. Dead Leaf Echo have now positioned themselves at the forefront of this creative updating. Guitars chime and shimmer while vocals smoothly wash all over you. The track will be included on their forthcoming album titled "Thought and Language." The band is also is planning another 7" split single, coming out on the California based Green Fuse Records this spring/summer. Two new videos are also in the works as is a March tour. Those live dates commence on the 7th in Baltimore, working their way through the south up to and including some noteworthy shows in Texas, not the least being multiple dates at the SXSW Festival.

*****
Listen to Kingmaker
Essential Links:

Dead Leaf Echo
http://deadleafechonyc.com/
http://www.soundcloud.com/deadleafecho

Custom Made Music
www.custommademusicva.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Custom-Made-Music/44475896156

Posting at The Deli Mag
 Additional classic DLE videos
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