Long name but a lovely song. Check this song out and enjoy!
From the Album: Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker, Yim Yames – New Multitudes (2012)
Long name but a lovely song. Check this song out and enjoy!
From the Album: Jay Farrar, Will Johnson, Anders Parker, Yim Yames – New Multitudes (2012)
Great song from The Deportees. Something that can move you a little.
From the single: A Heart Like Yours (In A Time Like This) (2012)
Genre: Indie/Pop/Folk
Country: Sweden
Tracklist
01. A Heart Like Yours (In A Time Like This) (Single Edit)
02. A Heart Like Yours (In A Time Like This) (Oskar Linnros Remake)
03. Pretty Little Hands
Yeah, one of my favorite bands. This is good old war. They are from Philadelphia.. (I though they were from p-town but i’m wrong.)
Album (out March 6th) is: Good Old War – Come Back As Rain (2012)
Small synopsis:
Over the past three years, indie-folk trio Good Old War has captivated countless audiences with their acoustic-driven, sing-along-inspiring live performances. Now, with the release of their third full-length record Come Back as Rain (out March 6th, 2012 on Sargent House), the Philadelphia-based band harnesses the high-spirited simplicity that makes their shows so unforgettable. Like Only Way To Be Alone (Good Old War’s 2008 debut) and their 2010 self-titled sophomore effort, Come Back as Rain showcases the delicately textured melodies and multipart harmonies that have become the band’s signature. Once again revealing their penchant for infectious folk-pop, Good Old War this time sharpens their sound by infusing Come Back as Rain with the same joyful passion they’ve ceaselessly brought to the stage.
If you have epileptic seisuzes, skip this bad boy. Otherwise, it’s a sweet video and a good song. It’s directed by John Lee whom is infamous art collective PFFR (of Wonder Showzen fame) and features a cameo by one of their cohorts, Michael Mahalchick. Enjoy.
From the Album: Bear In Heaven – I Love You, It’s Cool (2012)
Genre: Alternative/Indie/Pop/Rock/Psychedelic
Hail from Brooklyn
This song is good. Like real good. Like, instant playlist good. Enjoy.
From their new album: School Of Seven Bells – Ghostory (2012)
Ghostory is the upcoming third album by School of Seven Bells. It will released on February 28, 2012 through Vagrant Records/Ghostly International.[3] It will also be their first album to be released without founding member Claudia Deheza after she left the band in October 2010. The tracklist details were released when the album was made available through several sites via online streaming, on February 20, 2012.
http://sviib.com/
I just stumbled upon this band about a year ago and thisn’t to the crap out of them. Therefore they make my classic for this week. Sit back and enjoy the excellent harmonies and Portland magic. Funny this is, they are my classic, but they only have one album out… BUT THIS IS MY BLOG SO HA!
This is “Souvenir”
This is “No Return” a Kinks cover.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?list=UUb1yc_Zi4beEs4-hUyVJHYw&v=eKGJh5XaU_I&feature=player_detailpage
This is “Navy Parade (escape from the Black River Bluffs)”
Some synthpop for y’all! Y’ll just sit back and enjoy now. Oh he’s from London.
From the Album:
NZCA/LINES – NZCA/LINES (2012)
Small review:
Nzca/Lines frontman Michael Lovett has claimed as a primary inspiration the late R&B diva Aaliyah and there’s something about his gossamer-light falsetto that recalls her delivery.
But the truly inspired thing about this debut is the way that he and producer Charlie Alex March have blended that falsetto into sleek electropop arrangements, with his vocal supported by just a skeletal beat on “Compass Points”, while gently shuffling keyboard figures lend a watercolour backdrop to “Okinawa Channels”. Elsewhere, “AM Travel Approach” features a Beach Boy-ish a cappella arrangement bookended by electronic fizz, and the Eighties groove of “Atoms & Axes” recalls Metronomy’s first album; but “Moonlit Car Chase” and “Base 64 Love” come perilously close to generic technopop.
I’m iffy on this song. Sometimes I love it, Sometimes I don’t… You decide. Tell me what you think!
From their Debut Album: The Elkcloner – The Elkcloner (2012)
No Music video here, but the music was worthy of posting. Enjoy!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tfz5-vhX_sw&feature=player_embedded
Tiny Victories – Those Of Us Still Alive (2012)
Yeah, this song rocks! Don’t like the scraggly beards but the sound is awesome!
Carolina Chocolate Drops – Leaving Eden (2012)
Album Review:
The Carolina Chocolate Drops third album,Leaving Eden, begins with a bang, a rousing fiddle tune (“Riro’s House”) whose driving beat promptly had me bobbing my head and squinching up my face and generally looking rather stupid. But I didn’t care. After a brief instrumental chillout—a sparse minor traditional called “Kerr’s Negro Jig”—it regains momentum with a percussive rendition of an old Cousin Emmy tune, “Ruby, Are You Mad At Your Man,” a fine platform for the soulful, classically trained Rhiannon Giddens to let loose a bit with her powerful pipes.
In case you’re not yet familiar with the Chocolate Drops, much of their repertoire harks back to a time early in the last century when there were quite a number of uncelebrated black string bands—including their namesake, the Tennessee Chocolate Drops—playing and composing this type of music. (When I checked in with her a while back, Giddens talked a bit about being inspired by the TCD’s leading man, Howard Armstrong.)
This is the Drops’ first album since losing the talented Justin Robinson, who has embarked onother projects. But they’ve have made up for Robinson’s departure with the addition of Hubby Jenkins, a black multi-instrumentalist and songwriter who shares his bandmates’ passion for reinterpreting traditional American music. As before, there’s so much instrument-swapping that it’s well neigh impossible to keep track of who’s doing what, when. Dom Flemons, Chocolate Drops’ quintessential showman, guitar ringer, and third banjoist, also stands out on the percussion, driving that “Riro’s House” beat and embellishing tunes with bones, quills, and jugs—which is always fun live.
I was mildly surprised a while back to learn that the Drops’ were also picking up Adam Matta, who features prominently on several tracks. Matta is a human beatboxer who can do absolutely unbelievable things with nothing more than a microphone. It’s an interesting combo so long as it’s not overdone, and I think the Drops were pretty smart about it; in proper doses, Matta’s unique skills adds a retro-modern spice to this mix. But you’re unlikely to catch Matta on the band’scurrent US tour, Giddens told me in a recent email. He’ll be playing selected dates, but he’s become more of a part-timer. But they will be bringing along cellist Leyla McCalla, who also plays on the album.
Leaving Eden continues the Drops’ M.O. of reviving old tunes, often with a black twist. You’ll find quite a variety here, from the backwoods-y vibe of Etta James’ “West End Blues” to an adaptation of “Mahalla,” a slack-key instrumental by South African spoon-slide player Hannes Coetzee, to Ben Curry’s goofy “Boodle-De-Bum-Bum” and “Run Mountain,” a traditional that Flemons sings in such a way as makes me want to go to the back door to see if the chickens have got out.
I’m also liking Jenkins as cantor on the traditional call-and-response “Read ‘Em, John,” while the swing-bluesy “No Man’s Mama” has a just-divorced wife reveling in her independence. I found Giddens’ original tune “Country Girl” pretty but a tad earnest; she regained my attention and more on the sweet, mournful title track—a tearjerker whose lush instrumentation includes fine cello work by McCalla.
Bottom line: I dig this album at least as much as I did Genuine Negro Jig, the Drops’ last recording—which veteran music critic Greil Marcus told me was his favorite album of 2010. Did I mention that it also hit No. 1 on the bluegrass charts and won a Grammy to boot, for best traditional folk album. Nope, I don’t believe these guys are leaving Eden quite yet.