Showing posts with label Dandy Warhols. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dandy Warhols. Show all posts

November 20, 2014

Today's Hotness: Hideous Towns, Her Magic Wand, Primitive Parts

Hideous Towns - Hideous Towns EP (detail)

They come from the land down under, but their name is lifted straight from a track on The Sundays' legendary debut Reading, Writing & Arithmetic, which is the reason why Melbourne foursome Hideous Towns first caught our eye. The quartet's stirring shoegazey ballad "Undone" is set to feature on a forthcoming Beko Records comp titled Oz Do It Better Vol. 2, which is slated for release in 2015. But a little Googling tells us that the swaying noise-pop gem was included on a self-titled, debut EP Hideous Towns self-released just last month, and you can stream the entire short set via the Bandcamp embed below. We recommend you do, as the Aussie act -- which has apparently only been playing shows about a year -- certainly channels a Sundays vibe, although the dense guitar work and pretty vocals on "Undone" and elsewhere on Hideous Towns aren't as uniformly intricate or fluid as those of Sundays' David Gavurin and Harriet Wheeler, respectively. We admit the comparison is an unfair one, and we should be clear that the merits of Hideous Town's EP are many and should be celebrated separate and apart from the work of the UK legends (who are apparently a functioning operation again, we learned in recent days). Where The Sundays are more literal and dour, the Aussie act is more abstract and aggressive. "Undone" and its shuddering, gigantic chorus is undeniably the highlight of Hideous Towns, but the song's beauty and majesty are recreated on the succeeding track "Devolution," and the vocal harmonies in the relatively spare and placid closer "Pets" are riveting and affecting. Hideous Towns fĂȘte their self-titled EP with a release show Saturday night at Boney in Melbourne; the bill also includes Bad Family, Zig Zag and Basic Spirit. We imagine most readers aren't going to be hopping a plane to make the show, so take comfort in the fact that the favorable exchange rate means you can get the EP for less than a buck a song in USD. We think you will find that to be money well spent.



>> Who remembers 2010? Anyone? Maybe a few of you? No... OK. Well. Way back when we devoted some of our attention to the Parisian dream-pop project Her Magic Wand, which had just self-released a notable EP titled Catch A Rainbow. We were surprised to get an email from mastermind Charles Braud earlier this month, reporting that a new single from Her Magic Wand was in the offing, and directing our attention to the understated, perhaps Dntel-inspired electro anthem "Everything At Once." Mr. Braud tells us that "Everything At Once" concerns itself with the phenomenon of synesthesia, which he ably defines as "a neurological phenomenon in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in a second sensory or cognitive pathway and where letters or music can be perceived as inherently colored." The lyrics do much of the heavy lifting in driving this point home, but really it is Braud's dreamy delivery amid stormy, electric crescendoes that provides the most exciting moments of "Everything At Once." The song chases a desperate electro pulse, the rhythm tracks drawing out cool synth chords that deeply layer as the canned beats pile up and white out in the tune's smouldering choruses. The tune is a taster for a forthcoming full-length set recorded over the course of 10 months and mixed last summer by Stephane "Alf" Briat, who has worked with basically every French rock act you could name if given 30 seconds. We certainly recommend the single to your attention, and you can stream it via the Soundcloud embed below; click through a link there to purchase that jawn from Apple's ITunes digital music store.

We feel compelled to mention here that at this point Apple = "The Man;" the company presently touts a market capitalization of $676 billion dollars and recorded a net profit of $8.5 billon dollars for its 2014 fiscal fourth quarter closed Sept. 27. Read about the alleged human rights abuses attributed to the company right here. If we choose to, we can make the world a better place. How's all of that for a tangent?



>> Nervy and spikey post-punk has been the Brighton, England-based Faux Discx label's stock-in-trade, and it is backing a winner in a forthcoming single from the sorta supergroop Primitive Parts. The trio is comprised of a who's who from label affiliates Cold Pumas, Sauna Youth and Male Bonding, and its new offering is the single "TV Wheels" b/w "The Bench," which you can stream in all of its glory via the Bandcamp embed below. B-side "The Bench" in particular is a strummy and cool hip-shaker, just a little bit of attack on the guitars, tambourine and hand-claps driving an inevitable groove toward a gloriously rudimentary guitar solo that emphasizes the band's garagey bona fides. "TV Wheels" would sell tens of thousands of singles if it were a new Dandy Warhols song, but we don't imagine that Faux Discx will be able to keep the single in stock no matter who recorded it, as the two-minute tune is air-tight (indeed, some pre-orders have already shipped). Primitive Parts previously issued in February its debut single "Open Heads" b/w "Signal" on Sexbeat, and also had its cover of The Yummy Furs' "Chinese Bookie" featured on Faux Discx's 2013 comp Collective Hiss. Faux Discx releases "TV Wheels" b/w "The Bench" Monday as a 7" single in a humble paper sleeve with insert, pressed in a limited edition of 300 pieces. Primitive Parts are planning a UK tour for 2015. We previously wrote about Cold Pumas here two years ago; the act disclosed in September it had recently wrapped recording on its own sophomore effort.



July 22, 2007

Show Us Yours #9: Charmparticles

Charmparticles practice space, Portland, Oregon[After a several-month hiatus, our Show Us Yours feature returns. Links to prior episodes are at the bottom of the piece. -- Ed.]

When we were coming of age, Portland, Oregon was known to us (incorrectly, as it turns out -- thanks for the comment, Potatoes! Sorry Mr. Tate, et al.) as the home of mind-incriminating rockers Queensryche. But in the last decade or so -- as the musical underground clawed its way toward the mainstream, and as the mainstream plummeted toward the offensive mediocrity of the lowest common denominator (babes x beer = party) -- indie bands in Portland have distinguished themselves. Nowadays Decemberists, Dandy Warhols and Quasi are household names among most indie fans. The Portland scene supports a diversity of styles, and its premiere dream pop band may very well be Charmparticles.

Currently a trio that fuses the best parts of acts like Starflyer 59 and The Cranberries into a single, focused package while remaining loyal to its shoegazing roots, Charmparticles has just self-released its slightly foreboding ("Rarest Numbers," "Battersea"), sometimes aggressive ("Get Your Complex On") sophomore set, Alive In The Hot Spell. This spring we discovered the five-year old band while streaming music via Pandora. Entranced by the sounds of the bending guitar chords on one of its earlier tunes, we checked in with bassist and vocalist Pamela Rooney to see where the band does what it does for this edition of our voyeuristic, practice-space fixated feature Show Us Yours. What we learned is that cement can't protect you from either the heat or the cold; that Charmparticles' song writing has changed over time; and that angel-voiced Rooney doesn't believe in ghosts.

1. Why did you choose/why do you use this space?

We had another space in the same building that was a small and lightless box. When this one came up for rent we grabbed it. It's got decent views of downtown and windows that open. Very important in the summer, very crappy in the winter.

2. Explain how an idiosyncrasy or quirk of this space or a former practice space has affected a song, or even your overall sound.

The whole building is the former headquarters of the Oregon Portland Cement Company. It's an old building and made entirely of (you guessed it) cement. It's blazing in the summer and frozen in the winter, so we've spent many nights either bathed in our own sweat or exhaling streams of steam. Summer and winter practices are often made as short and productive as possible for this reason. There's a rumor that the place houses plenty of ghosts of workers who died with lungs full of concrete dust. I'm not so much one that goes for ghosty stuff, but it's a creepy building and we've freaked ourself out a couple of times when loading our equipment in after a show. Eerie. Creepy.

3. You walk into your space. What's the first thing you smell? Why?

Dust and beer. It's dusty and there are plenty of empty beer cans.

4. It's been three years since your last EP, and it was two years between The Scenic EP and Sit Down For Staying. Despite the pauses between releases, many of the band's stylistic elements have remained constant. What are the biggest changes between the band that wrote that first EP and the band that wrote Alive In The Hot Spell?

The easiest changes to identify are those of line-up. There were four of us and a different drummer for The Scenic EP, then a new drummer for Sit Down For Staying, and then we lost a guitarist for Alive In The Hot Spell. The songwriting process was completely restructured for this last record, and I think in the years between Scenic and AITHS, we've just found ourselves a little more, both musically and personally. We're a little more focused and a little more easygoing now than we have been, and when we finally took some pressure off of ourselves, songs started rolling in. BUT, we still love reverb and delay, so those elements will probably make us sound sonically like us for a time to come.

5. We discovered your band via the Internet radio service Pandora. With the threat of a new royalty scheme being enacted and destroying Internet radio as we've known it, we were wondering if you have any thoughts on how its potential demise will affect Charmparticles?

Yes, I have plenty of them. I feel pretty certain that Pandora and SomaFM (and plenty of other stations) have broadcast our music to a broader audience than we could have ever hoped to with day jobs. I get a few emails a week from people that have heard us on Pandora or Soma. I don't mean to state the obvious, but it can stand the emphasis: The internet as a free and available communication medium has been a boon to so many independent musicians/writers/artists (and independent music in general) that watching it become yet another outlet available to only those with abundant resources is utterly heartbreaking. I really did think it would stay good.

6. What do the next six months look like for your band?

We'll be having a little tour here, a little songwriting there (once the space cools down!). Generally flying by the seats of our pants until we settle down long enough to record again.

^^^

Charmparticles' Alive In The Hot Spell was released June 29. You can buy it at CDBaby right here, or stream cuts at the band's Virb page here or MySpace dojo linked below. Below that are listings for three shows the band has booked for next month.

Charmparticles: InterWeb | MySpace | YouTube | Flickr

08/04 -- Portland, OR -- Doug Fir Lounge
08/17 -- Seattle, Washington -- Skylark
08/18 -- Portland, OR -- Someday Lounge

Previous Show Us Yours episodes:
Shapes And Sizes | Dirty On Purpose | Relay | Mobius Band | Frightened Rabbit | Assembly Now | Meneguar | Okay Paddy