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Showing posts with label psychic selves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psychic selves. Show all posts

Monday, August 21, 2017

Features: Frankie Rose-Cage Tropical, Tempers, Psychic Selves, Birds, gods, Autodrone

Making a triumphant return with her latest album "Cage Tropical," Frankie Rose delivers a veritable treasure trove of sonic amalgamation.


Drawing from classic 80's "new wave" rock sources (as well as the sci-fi movies of that era), the album presents 10 perfectly executed songs that still manage to sound fresh, avoiding the trapping of a mere nostalgia trip.  What you get instead are abundantly layered vocals and revealing autobiographical lyrics with enough auditory easter-eggs for those who enjoy pinpointing potential references.

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Opening track "Love In Rockets" describes Frankie's ultimately disappointing time spent attempting a residential move from New York to Los Angeles.  While poetic lyrical lines describe her "resting my head like a wilting flower," others stating how she's "done 500 degrees in my ivory tower" imply that at least some of the fault may not be all on the city alone.   The hook centers around a vocal chant ("ah-we-oh, ah-we-oh") stylizing the initial word to lyrics "a wheel of of wasting my time here."  Strong percussion dominates with an emphasis on rolling toms coupled with synthesizer enhancements capture the golden age of 80's "new wave" textures.

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"Dyson Sphere" is an interesting song on a number of levels.  For those who don't know already (or are curious) the title refers to a hypothetical mega-structure that completely encompasses a star and captures most or all of its power output.  It should be noted that this is a theoretical concept and currently far beyond humanity's engineering capacity.  Instrumentally, the track is driven along by a Simon Gallup-of-the-Cure sounding bassline (A Forrest being as good a reference point as any).  Frankie's voice on verses are processed with a sandpaper-smooth quality that morphs into a catchy "ah ah oh oh" bridge.  The chorus is a big bold hook that declares "Days long - when you live without the sun - Days long - and we knew this day would come.  Under skies of grey - never light (phonetically delivered as "La-Ah-Ah-ight") my way."  Melodic guitar licks, keyboard pads and meticulously dropped-in percussion all contribute to an extraordinary listening experience.



Built over a steady motorik drum beat and teutonic bass pulse, "Trouble" features enhanced layered vocals covering both the smooth midrange and higher end harmony stating "sometimes I want to walk, I want to walk, I want to run - away."  In addition to her keen sense of melody, Frankie has always been able to create vocal qualities that rises above nearly all of her contemporaries.  The chorus here is merely one more example of that, with it's combined descending ("trouble follows you") and rising ("you can't run no matter where you") dual harmony lines.

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Emerging via four curiously angular organ-like chords, "Art Bell" serves as a tribute to the cult figure who provided hours of entertaining theories about extra-terrestrial life on late night radio.  With it's big chorus stating "we'll never have to say goodbye" cascading down amidst huge guitar licks, synth bursts and thundering drums, the wonder of what might actually be "out there" goes on.

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Clocking in as the albums longest track at five and a half minutes, "Dancing Down The Hall" uses that extra space on an ambient, trippy, jazzy-percussive intro.  After a minute and a half, bass guitar textures enters the mix as Frankie sings "we don't have to go together, we don't have to stay forever.  In the end we fall together - dancing down the hall together."  While those sentiments furnish catchy rhymes and song title, lyrics "letting it go again - and you see another day" convey the songs primary hook and emotional core.  Icy chiming bell synth tones usher in rolling toms, bringing to mind the best sound qualities of 80's instrumental "new age" music like Sanford Ponder and Patrick O'Hearn.

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Title track and album centerpiece "Cage Tropical" demonstrates more than any other track on this album how a band like The Cure has influenced successive musical generations.  While that band may be better known for their gothic doom and gloom contributions, they've also produced a fair share of bouncy, upbeat melodies.  This song falls distinctly into that latter category, with it's perky intro melody and similar sonic textures.  However the author laments a "special kind of hell on a sunny day" (with stark piano chords underneath) - "cafe tropical, make it go away."   The lushest of hooks emerges as uplifting, cascading vocal melodies declare "on and on - you're on your own again."  Impeccable production weaves in 80's hand clap (hand clack) percussion and subtle touch synth buzzes that immediately brought to mind Duran Duran's 1985 one-off project Arcadia and the coincidentally appropriately titled "So Red The Rose."

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It's mostly keyboard ambiance and no guitars or any of the more typical rock instruments on the synthy "Game To Play."  However, once again the central focus is a strong, catchy sing-along chorus which is the title line.

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Another song to receive an interpretive video release is deeper cut "Red Museum."  An existential realization statement proclaims that "everything you know is a lie, and everything you have will die."  Regardless of those sobering thoughts, Ms Rose can't seem to help conveying it through elevating choruses with rich counter-melodies and vocal augmentation.




Immediate reactions, noted


Riding a wave of pitch-bended keyboard pads and succinct piano notes “Epic Slack” is a moody instrumental interlude for moments of calm introspection.


Album closer “Decontrol” could have been positioned much higher in the track order as its one of the best on the entire record. Once again tapping the appealing synth and bass guitar sounds of classic 80’s era British rock (a distinction necessary to make so as to avoid lumping in with American 80’s hair metal rock – also an influential sound source of that decade, but having nothing to do with this album) bright retro sine waves support chorused vocals. “And though I’m sinking fast, you run from me – one momentary glance, could set me free” are the lyrics to another glorious bridge. However, it’s the chorus (once again) that is most impressive. While singing the lines “De-Con-Trol – you’re not losing sleep,” the cadence and meter is punctuated by a clipped breathy vocal technique and pentatonic keyboard scale.


On Saturday, August 12th Frankie played her release show for this album at Baby's All Right in Brooklyn.  The set included four songs from her new album along with a number of her best tunes from previous records.


Festive post-show backstage banter made the whole experience that much sweeter.


Social Media Awareness

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Frankie Rose heads out on a Big Tour beginning in September with scheduled dates running all the way through November.


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Performing on the same evening just prior to Frankie, were the alluring duo Tempers.

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Having had opportunities to catch them live at various stages of their musical progression, front-woman Jasmine Golestaneh never fails to impress with her casually magnetic presence.


The duo work well as a tandem (reminding of the similarly synchronous Raveonettes) with guitarist / electronics generator Eddie Cooper driving the instruments.

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Earlier this year they released their "Fundamental Fantasy" EP which included four new songs and an extended remix.


There’s a slow-burn tension building on featured track “Tail Is In My Mouth” that deceptively masks chugging guitars and dance floor ready drum beats. Even the repeated “just for a moment” phrase feels like a holding pattern, floating above the overall rhythm. The bittersweet feelings of desire and the projections we place on others (to fuel our own illusions) comes together in a wonderful chorus that goes [Ahhh –Ahhh-Ahhh] “Oh and how I miss” [Ahhh–Ahhh-Ahhh] “who I wanted to you to be” “Oh and how I miss [Ahhh–Ahhh-Ahhh] what will never be” - “I thought you didn’t care” leading to the curious title line, all enveloped in an aurally spacious, melancholy longing.








First meeting - April 2013

First Dave Cromwell written feature on Tempers - on The Deli Magazine



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Having last covered the musical output of Brooklyn dream-psych collective Psychic Selves a few months back, the word was that new music would soon be on its way. The Pep G led collective has now delivered on that promise with a new cassette single (affectionately referred to as a cassingle) released on Time Castle Records.


Featured single "Rosemary" (which has been given the full video treatment here) emerges via a steady bass drum thump and ringing single note guitar progression. That quickly changes as vocals begin and the rhythm shifts to bass guitar and high-hat cymbals. It all eventually leads up to the catchy vocal hook that goes “I’m trying for you – you tell me – to sit myself down” - “time is wasting for you – you tell me – to sit myself down.” Numerous funky interludes create the necessary space between emotional high-points. There’s even a mini psych-out jam at the 2:35 mark for good measure.




Psychic Selves play live at The Knitting Factory on August 22nd as part of their cassingle release show

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Speaking of live shows and record releases, melodic psychedelic pop rockers BIRDS will be celebrating the release of their latest album "Everything All At Once" at this very same show.



Emerging from a two-chord progression similar to Iggy and The Stooges “Search and Destroy,” the albums’ lead single “Get Away” adds bass counter-melody and rising background vocals, positioning the track closer to a pop song. “I’ve been awake all morning, watching the light pour in. I keep away from stealing – I do my own healing,” describe the self-reflective lyrics.



Catchy melodies unfold via speedy guitar lines woven in and around emphatic vocals. “I get away so easy” becomes the ultimate key line towards the end of a power-packed two and a half minute song.



“Everything All At Once” is now available through Greenway Records and through most listening formats.

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Catching up on Asbury Park legends gods most recent output inspired this snapshot analysis of their of their epic proggy psych-out track “Wash.”


Another gem floating out on their Soundcloud is the creatively inspired track "Couch Ride."



With syncopated accent drum beats leading things off, a number of quick shifts in song structure make this track an unpredictable delight. Brief call-back guitar melodies and 60’s sounding organ becomes the focus while vocals perfectly mimic the spirit of the classic 1965 No. 1 hit “Hang On Sloopy.”  That’s followed by a plateau of quieter moments where vocals are sung as if in a dream.  It all builds back towards the initial clattering groove, making way for a tasty guitar solo and jam-out. The briefest interlude of calm serves only to set up the next furious drums, bass and guitar solo rave-up. Ending on the softer angelic sequence seems only fitting for this equal parts heavy and light composition.



While we wait to hear about upcoming gods live show appearances, parent band The Parlor Mob (including a number of the same members) are headlining the Saturday September 23rd portion of Asbury Parks Indian Summer Fest.  More info about all that (including how to get tickets) can be found here.

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Having spent a two year period recording, mixing and finally mastering 10 fully realized tracks (while performing much of the material out at live shows) gothic rockers Autodrone released their album “This Sea Is Killing Me” at the end of 2016. That long journey produced a number of engaging results touching on a range exploring psych, darkwave, drone and dreampop.



Opening track “49:51” is an edgy just over 2 minute ambient instrumental that leads into more structured follow-up track “Corvus.”  Making full use of classic buzzing synths and shimmering tremolo guitar chords, the stage is set for dreamy ethereal vocals. Even with the full band effect in motion via a solid drum track, the vocals remain angelic and unintelligible like the best of The Cocteau Twins.



Epic closing track “Thunderbolt” mysteriously unfolds through synth pulses, cymbal rushes and passionate reverberated vocals.   The band will be playing The Safari Room At El Cortez next on August 29th, and Pianos after that on September 6th.

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Friday, February 24, 2017

Features: Meviu§, Dahl Haus, Goth Prom Live, NoPop, Psychic Selves, Journalism, Softspot, Baby Acid, Citris

Despite being the shortest month of the year at 28 days (29 every four) February provides enough early-in-the-year opportunities to check out interesting new music releases. Showing up at select live shows offer additional avenues of insight, as the 360 degrees in the round experience can never truly be duplicated any other way.


Already familiar with the work of Daniel Ka$$hu and Richey Rose from other projects they are separately involved in, an opportunity to focus on their collaborative effort Meviu§ presented itself.


Valentine's Day might appear a curious date to have a "Goth Prom" to some, but knowing it is also Daniel's actual birthday makes it the most likely time to do it at all.

Emerging as the newest popular "go to" venue in the wake of numerous long-time clubs closing, The Footlight in Ridgewood Queens hosted the occasion.


Serving as the evening's headliners, Meviu§ delivered both a visual and sonic tour-de-force.


With Richey stoically distributing crunch guitar chords and precise melody lines, Daniel's vocals came wrapped in a camp-glam visual hearkening back to Andy Warhol's Factory. and his Exploding Plastic Inevitable shows.



Recent single release "Los(t) Angeles" captures the essential elements of this creative collaboration. Rising waves of guitar merge with programmed beats and chilled atmospheric synths before vocals emerge.


Daniel’s voice straddles a line between the soft tenor of Daniel Ash deeper tones of Peter Murphy. Harsher industrial passages emerge however, creating a mood less goth-pop and closer to the rapid percussive snake-rattle of Nine Inch Nails.





The deep-twang, western guitar sound on “Kitten Lung” is initially sparse, allowing space for a more intimate vocal delivery. Mechanical percussive ticks soon emerge as vocals coalesce in harmonies over icy-bell keyboards and clearly defined melodies.



A number of unexpected finely crafted textured sonics appear in the instrumental passages between vocal lines. Another segment makes use of spoken word narration, bringing to mind The Raveonettes brilliant track “Run Mascara Run.”


It will be interesting to follow the progress of this band in the coming days.


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Also featured on this evening was a performance by the Blaise Dahl led band Dahl Haus.



Playing their first live show in 2017, an eager audience witnessed a dazzling display of sound and imagery.



Blaise has been diligently working away at Studio G in Brooklyn with producer and Psychic TV guitarist Jeffrey Berner on completing a proper recording for the debut record.



While those tracks are nearly complete and should see the light of day soon, hearing this material once again in a live setting further heightened expectations for what’s to come.



Songs like the fuzzy bass and guitar thrill ride of “Scream Machine” simmer with an underlying tension as Blaise provides an intimate vocal look inside love’s amusement park.



The driving chugger “Seasick” hits all the marks for rock and roll diva swagger. A slithering bass-line and heavy distortion guitar lays the groundwork for a series of catchy vocal hooks.


While the inventive lyrical wordplay of dream popper “Helium” compares romantic attraction to the second most abundant element in the observable universe.


Serious pedals


"Can I get an Amen, People!"


Tweaking the sonic possibilities


Getting reacquainted with a Pastel Pink Princess



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Opening the evenings festivities was a sample based experimental act called Freudian Slit


Which is a solo music project featuring Brooklyn-based artist Kendalle Aubra


The music she produces draws influence from Phil Spector, Jesus and Mary Chain, Einstürzende Neubauten, Fever Ray, Suicide, Arca, Björk, Throbbing Gristle and The Smiths - just to name (more than) a few.


For this night's performance the visual styling was spot on.


Even though there were a few technical difficulties one occasionally experiences with a laptop + sample driven sound, an unruffled confidence from the performer overcame all that.


An entertaining mix of synthpunk with some industrial, noise, post-witch house, alien girl-pop, Hollywood Sadcore and a bit of Motown thrown in too.


A hint of sex and danger as well.


Gothic Prom Pic

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The artists most responsible for hosting this event came by way of the Occult Electronic Dance act A Place Both Wonderful And Strange


Even though only two-thirds of the full trio were able to perform on this night both Russ and Shanda commanded the room with their dark and moody presentation.



Drawing from the retro vibe of campy noir television series “Twin Peaks,” their “Laura Palmer Devastations” gather together five distinct “Deviation” remixes.


The "Real Life Horror remix" allows like-minded artists Azar Swan (who have been featured on this site both here and here as well as on The Deli Magazine) to fashion an ominous industrial theme.



“Winkie's Pink Room remix” eliminates all the throttling groove, with focus shifted to a looped percussive sample as a variety of metal-on-metal textures clash over top.


Goth, glam, wall art and tabled crafts on display throughout the evening.


Fellow writer and style icon Mary Grace adds a charming presence to this occasion.

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Self proclaimed "pink-punk" rockers NoPop premiered their latest 7 track collection “Demons” recently on The Deli Magazine (a feature written by yours truly).


Establishing this potential new sub-genre, “pink punk” combines driving rhythms and softer pop together in a hyper-crazed mix embracing unhinged wildness. “Wear The Feeling” taps into Surfer Rosa era Pixies with similar distorted scream vocals. The under two minutes “Holly” chugs along with perky energy as female vocals find the sweet spot between Kim Deal speak/sing charm and bigger girl group background harmonies. “Huffers” emphasizes heavy fuzz bass, alternating chant vocals and shifting snare shot punctuation. “Zoo Music” is a minute and a half of free form jamming with wild drumming, angular guitar notes and rubbery bass right out of The Stooges “LA Blues” mold. “Number One” pairs syncopated drumming and metal guitar phrasings with alternating hyper-angst vocals and softer passages. First single “Rules” builds off a steady bass guitar pulse before launching into a full cinematic explosion. The near 7 minute “Frederick Fleet” serves as an epic final track. Demons was mixed, engineered, and co-produced by Julian Cubillos of 77 Linden, and mastered by NY legend Kramer, whose work includes the Pulp Fiction’s soundtrack, Half-Japanese and Butthole Surfers.





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Brooklyn’s indie psych rockers Psychic Selves released an impressive 7 song album “Lucid Night” this past year. While the band continues working on new material and play select live shows, these tracks provides ample opportunity for immersion into their sound.


Opening track “Ratio” is dual guitar riff driven, as flange-effects pair against brighter tones creating the surf psychedelia reminiscent of early Beach Fossils.  Featured single “Goodnight Luna” (streaming below) builds off that foundation, emphasizing melodic hooks via a note-for-note matched vocal phrasing and guitar figure. With the chorus transitioning into a smoother vocal phase, bass guitar and drums provide the driving force on its latter half double-time cadence. Pitch-bended melancholia emerge on instrumentals “And the Truth Pt 1 + 2,”pop elements on vocal heavy “Masochist” and punk aggression on both “War Head” and “Crazy Tasty.”




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Recently released single “It Just Hits You” from the appealingly named Brooklyn rockers Journalism see the track currently featured on Spotify's Garage Jams and Fresh Finds Six Strings playlists.



Structured around an open chord note melody over throbbing bass and driving drum beat, a tale of honest reflection on sobriety unfolds. “Here I stand without a drink in hand,” immediately establish clear-eyed reflection on social practices reined in. While the bridge’s phrasing of “you know, you know, you know” echo’s Nirvana’s “hello, hello, how low” on that bands famous bridge, “you know you’ve seen it all – and who cares?,” completes the realization. By the time the chorus hits with lines “I’m getting sober, but I’m getting so burnt out, it’s hard to act my age, when I can’t see through the haze,” rising melodic guitar lines deliver ample hooks. Ultimately it comes down to self-realization and personal choice, because “sometimes it just hits you like a ton of bricks, and sometimes it just hits you.”




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A gentle sweetness emerges within the deeply resonant female vocals on “Abalone,” the preview track (streaming below) from Brooklyn-based Softspot’s forthcoming album “Clearing.”



While open note guitar chords provide counter-melody and bass drives its rhythmic center, a churning percussive track underneath parallels the same mysterious wonderment of penultimate Kate Bush/Hounds Of Love track “Running Up That Hill.” Harmony vocals appear at crucial points within the emotional arc, dreamily elongating end of line words. At over five minutes in length, there is plenty of room for extended instrumental passages featuring bright guitar figures, deeper bass only passages and swelling synths. An extended outro features an angular time signature that ultimately gives way to a beat-less ambience. This is an outstanding track from a full album set for an April release on Arrowhawk Records.




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The reckless abandon of Brooklyn rockers partying hard is on full display in Baby Acid’s debut music video and song “Baby Guts.”


That track is one of seven featured on their full-length release “Don’t Blush When I Rip You Open” available now both digitally and on cassette from Moon Sounds Records.



Recorded and produced by band visionary Lindsey and Jasno from Vandelles/Hellbirds notoriety at his Secret Loft Studios, mastering was handled by A Place To Bury Strangers Oliver Ackermann.



The track itself emerges via full-on fuzzed out guitar chords while initial vocals proclaim that “my baby comes from France, my baby don’t wear no pants.” While the lyrical output playfully rhymes the behavior of notorious friends, ferocious riffs and rhythms are executed with serious intent.


Video imagery depicts the black-clad band against a white backdrop interspersed with footage from a raging house party. As walls become increasingly covered in handwritten graffiti, impromptu crowd-surfing and bathroom shenanigans mirror the tracks explosive conclusion.



Baby Acid are the current winners of the Deli Magazine Readers’ Pick: Best NYC Emerging Indie Rock Act poll, earning them a featured artist of the month spot.




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The celebration of indie rockers Citris and their revamped debut album "Panic In Hampton Bays" culminates with it's official release today February 24 on New Professor Records along with final night of their month-long residency February 28 at Arlene's Grocery.


Catching the third residency show on February 21 saw the band delivering a finely tuned set of their most appealing material.


The initial pairing of singer-songwriter Angelina Torreano and multi-instrumentalist recording/mixing engineer Chris Krasnow created an exciting collection of tracks that warrant repeated listens.


Further enhancing their live show are two highly skilled musicians, drummer Clint Mobley and bassist Gianluca Minucci.



Album opener “On The Sidelines" channels Daydream Nation era Sonic Youth and the way Steve Shelley’s tighter, more controlled drumming locked in with the single-note guitar riffing of Thurston and Lee.  Understanding that lead guitarist Chris Krasnow is also an accomplished drummer (doing double-duty on this evening playing drums for support act Caretaker) provides additional insight on this cut.


The chorus vocals change all that with harmonizing far more evolved than anything SY ever put out, moving things closer to the ear pleasing fourths that Drew Citron and Frankie Rose did so well with Beverly.


Lyrically hitting the mark that anyone can relate to “maybe we’re just rejects, force fed concepts all the time” progress to a coping mechanism of how “maybe we can be friends, see through the same lens on the sidelines.”



Clocking in at over five and a half minutes, “Little Scars” ambitiously combines 90’s grunge Courtney Love angst with bombastic choruses and even a prog-rock tandem guitar interlude. “Here I am with the poison. I’ve given up, I’m not disappointed. Not looking for love, just want to hang out with you.” There are times when that’s all you need.


Brand new track "Coco Chanel" compares the fade of perfume wearing off to romance and comes complete with a cleverly conceptualized video (which can be viewed here).  However it's the hooky rising chorus of "it's not your heart" that stays with you.


“Burn Into The Sun” drops jazz chords in places, which fits nicely around the wordy, impassioned vocals and busy drumming.

Previous features on Citris can be found on this site (and The Deli Magazine) here and here.

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