Best new indie rock songs, indie news, best bands, reviews
Author: August W. Zander
Author, artist, musician and eco-travel guide manager. Born in Akron, Ohio (The Black Keys!) and raised in locations worldwide as a military brat. Landed out west. Life is short; live it big.
The home of legendary musician Neil Young has been destroyed in the California wildfires that have been ravaging the Los Angeles-area for the past week.
On his website yesterday, the aging rocker revealed that he lost his Malibu home over the weekend to the fires. As a longtime political activist, Young didn’t waste any time condemning the president.
“California is vulnerable – not because of poor forest management as DT (our so-called president) would have us think,” Young wrote in a Tweet, continuing, “as a matter of fact this is not a forest fire..we are vulnerable because of climate change; the extreme weather events and our extended drought…”
“Our temperatures are higher than ever here in our hottest summer on record. That has not helped,” he added. “DT seems to be the Denier. (I’m holding back and not using the word liar because it rhymes with denier). It really is time for a reckoning with this unfit leader. Maybe our new congress can help. I sure hope so.”
Ripping into the president, Young continued: “Imagine a leader who defies science, saying these solutions shouldn’t be part of his decision-making on our behalf. Imagine a leader who cares more for his own, convenient opinion than he does for the people he leads. Imagine an unfit leader. Now imagine a fit one.”
On Sunday morning, the president, via Twitter, blamed poor forest management for the wildfires and said he may withhold federal funding in the future. The president, who believes climate change is a “hoax”, failed ot mention the fact that more than 90% of the charred land has been on federal lands and his administration slashed funding in its federal budget.
No word yet if any recordinds or valuable instruments were lost.
Young is one of the most commonly cited influences by indie musicians and bands for decades now.
This latest new indie tracks featuring two artists and bands each from Los Angeles and at the other end of the continent, Boston. It wasn’t planned that way. Anyways, there are some great new DIY tracks in this post. Enjoy. Another Top 10 Songs coming up soon.
This post features:
Jordan Vincent – Los Angeles, California Berta Bigtoe – Boston, Massachusetts Telamor – Boston, Massachusetts Wino Strut – Los Angeles, California Anteloper – Somerset, England
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Jordan Vincent – “DGTZD”
Los Angeles solo artist and composer Jordan Vincent’s debut EP, There is No Line, is expressed as an “electric requiem for the pre-virtual age.”
He adeptly mixes experimental indie rock with psych and cinematic pop elements. There’s even some soul and R&B tinges spread across this terrific track that sounds like The Beatles, Jeff Buckley and Sid Barrett tripped and produced a magical song.
The newest single from the release, “DGTZD,” evolves from a brooding minimalist 60’s psych-pop to the heights of an anthemic rocker by the time it completely unwinds. Other tracks of note from the release include the terrific vocal pitches and tones on the croon-heavy “Sister Jill,” supported by a chorus enhanced by spurts of brass and guitar elements, and the passion-filled, blues-tinged, hook-loving “Back Then,” among others.
As the recording proves, Vincent is not a new arrival to the music scene. His vocals appear on recordings alongside artists like Michael Bublé, Blackthought (The Roots), Shellback, and Spicy G. His songwriting credits also include a variety of commercials and short films.
Vincent’s new release “explores the ever-blurring lines between our real and digital human existence.” The album release campaign incorporated fake news, performance art, disinformation, street preachers, and general disruption throughout Los Angeles.
His musical influences include Jeff Buckley, The Beatles, Hiatus Kaiyote, Yes, Beck, Prince, and Frank Zappa.
Berta Bigtoe – “Hold The Fort”
Following up its debut album release this past summer, Boston indie rock band Berta Bigtoe has just dropped a new and catchy single, “Hold The Fort.”
The song is an ear-clincher from the get-go, and to the end, with its unique lo-fi psych-pop guitars, wavy, trippy keys, and upbeat percussions, coalesced by 60s-era style group singing. The band has an exciting and interesting sonic persona that is not the average fare.
The band started out as a duo founded by DIY musicians Ben Astrachan and Austin Koenigstein which quickly became a trio with the addition of percussionist Dan Schreiber.
All three worked tirelessly on the band’s debut release, The Gap (Demos) @ Rat City. That album is a good listen, full of original and exhilarating tracks with obvious Beach Boys’ influences.
For the effort, the band was nominated as New England’s Artist of the Month by an online music magazine.
Since then, BB has added even more members including Astrachan’s former writing partner Jackson Zinn-Rowthorn along with Elan Wong and Ryan Gebhardt. The latter is also the frontman for the band Stanley.
Boston area rebel musician Tom Hauck continues to pump out new and audacious tracks under his indie moniker, Telamor. In the past couple of years, Telamor has gained rotation on various indie college radio stations around the country.
Hauck, a self-professed music addict and semi-recluse, just dropped an exciting song, “Midnight at the Drive-Thru Window,” which demonstrates his love for classic rock and roll, not to mention his ability to expand his own classic rock, among other genres, discography.
On bass is Tony Goddess and on drums John Lynch with mixing, producing and recording by Warren Babson and Tom Hauck at Bang-A-Song studios. Hauck’s musical influences are diverse and include Robert Johnson, George Jones, Van Morrison, Keith Richards, and Prince, among others.
Wino Strut – “Cut Teeth Grind Nails”
On the new ‘cosmic country, 70’s vibe’ single “Cut Teeth Grind Nails,” Los Angeles area indie rock band Wino Strut blazes a path of its own with the let-it-rip style of genre-mixing and art rock.
Here’s how the band’s frontman and guitarist, David Philips, describes the track: “it’s a cosmic honky tonk bar band anthem recounting the trials and tribulations of being a full-time working artist in a major city.
Backed by a “band of true heathens,” Wino-Strut’s DIY creed is: “all things that are fun, debaucherous, and vibrant in art and rock n roll.” The other band members are Guy Welles (mandolin, fiddle); Robert Cook (guitar, bass, keys) and Alexander Loweth (drums).
In L.A. proper, the band hosts high energy, raucous, and drunken live shows with “unabashed hillbilly rock ‘n’ roll with a psychedelic flair.”
Phillips has been creating audio and visual art for more than 20 years. After writing a batch of songs he was content with, Phillips set out to recruit a band of “very well respected players” to back him in the studio and at gigs in the LA area and the state, opening for artists like Meghan Linsey, MR Snakes, Los Fauna, and Thriller Party.
The band’s main musical influences include Tucker Zimmerman, Bob Dylan, Allman Brothers, Tom Waits, Doug Sahm, and Kevin Coyne.
Anteloper – “Capr”
The track “Caper” from Somerset, England indie band Anteloper stews with drab, lo-fi angling guitars and creepy vocals that remind some a bit of Thom Yorke. In fact, the track is in the style of Radiohead – moody, unconventional and a bit psychedelia mixed with experimental elements.
In this edition of new 2018 indie rock albums that we’ve been listening to from the following DIY artists:
Thunderbird – Vancouver, British Columbia KG Morris – Denver, Colorado Victims of the New Math – Phoenix-Charlotte Parker Moore – Oakland, California Tom Harrison – Los Angeles, California
Thunderbird – Thunderbird
Folks who say ‘rock is dead’ haven’t heard the latest self-titled indie rock album from Vancouver band Thunderbird.
The album, the band’s third, dropped last week. It kicks off with the head-banging, 80’s style hard rocker, “Liar (Fool’s Gold),” followed by lamenting of a broken relationship on “Little Jenny,” and the standout song, “Star,” one of the most memorable tracks on the album. Flanked by ringing dual guitar riffs, chorus singing, and Eddie Van Halen-inspired guitar solos. The song may remind some of Cheap Trick; it just has that big, rock-pop arena sound.
There are also surprisingly mellow songs like the enchanting “Man of Clay.” Other tracks like the haunting, menacing “Painted Lady”; the rapid-fire, head-banger, “Into The Sun,” and the classic hard rock of “On The Brink,” which recalls Deep Purple, complete a commendable album for rockers.
Just about anyone who came of age in the early to mid 1980’s, before hair and make-up bands took over, remembers the heyday of hard rock when bands like Def Leppard, KISS, Van Halen, Ozzy, and AC/DC, among many others, ruled the airwaves and record sales.
Thunderbird has managed to revive those iconic sounds in a way that is classic and yet completely fresh at the same time. They don’t box themselves in nor make shameless efforts to commercialize their sound.
The album was produced by LaFrance and co-produced by drummer Kelly Stodola; mixed by legendary producer Mike Fraser (AC/DC, Franz Ferdinand, Metallica, Dave Grohl) and mastered by the equally well-regarded engineer Adam Ayan (Def Leppard, Foo Fighters, Queen).
Other key band members of this amazing recording include guitarist Brice Tabish and bassist Rob Becker.
Thunderbird has succeeded at doing something special by offering up this thoroughly enjoyable and surprisingly impressive hard rock album.
That is, they’re at, in our books, the forefront of the underground revival of hard rock. And it goes without saying that this album is the best of the three they’ve dropped so far. Rock and roll will never die!
Whether it’s the catchy Americana song, “Moonlit Drive” or the soothing, yet yearning, sounds of the title track about the passing of time, the new 13-song indie rock album, It Goes Fast, from Denver singer/songwriter KG Morris, is an exhilarating journey of touching, thoughtful lyrics, professional-level guitar playing and intricate genre-mixing.
Morris’ skills as a musician and a songwriter, coupled with the professionalism of the session musicians and band members, come shining through on track after track.
Another highlight of the album is the soft rock love tune, “A Look,” which is very much reminiscent of 70s AM radio, complete with bubbly melodies, bumbling percussions, and saxophone trills.
“The time has gone fast and I am blessed to have had the opportunities to make six CDs, the latest and best: It Goes Fast,” Morris says. “I have got a bunch of favorite songs on the album, but the first track, “Moonlit Drive,” really captures me and my bride’s love of the West, our home in Colorado, and it sets the tone for the rest of the album.”
In addition to his latest, Morris has five albums under his belt: two solos and three others in other collaborations and bands he’s been involved in the past. It Goes Fast is Morris’ third solo album, and perhaps his best.
Morris is also the co-founder of the Denver Songwriters Group and frequently performs in the city at open mics and coffee houses. He is also raising twin five-year grandaughters. Quite the remarkable musician and granddad.
His musical influences include James Taylor; Joni Mitchell; David Wilcox; Steve Seskin and Hayes Carll.
Brother bands are nothing new in the history of rock music. What is a bit different are alt. rock bro bands like Victims of the New Math.
Unlike most brother bands, they don’t even live in the same city (not even close) nor sit in a room and jam out their songs. Instead, they collaborate from across the continent.
Utilizing the Internet to bridge the divide of their geographical gap, the brothers, Thomas Young (Phoenix) and Joseph Young (Charlotte), track their instrumentations, collaborate, mix, add vocals and master.
They have been doing it this way for years before it became a cool thing to do; that is, to collaborate online and write, record, produce and release albums as VOTNM.
Back in 2016, we featured VOTNM’s remarkable trip of an album, Satellite Head. Songs like the chilled out, Bowie-influenced title track and the lo-fi experimentation of the infectious single, “Brand New Day,” put the brothers on our radar.
Fast-forward two years later. The VOTNM have dropped a new indie rock album, The New Victorians. Intentionally fraught with lo-fi, demo-like tracks, including the opening title song and the scrappy, “The Gift.” There are stories of loss, innocence, love, yearning, and desperation.
The first half of the album, consisting of songs like the aforementioned as well as “Can’t Stop Loving You” – which recalls Daniel Johnston – and “Love One Another,” is dominated by out of tune, under-produced, rough-and-ready, riff-driven melodic rock tracks with a raw edge.
But the second half of the album is more distinct – with songs like “Noise” and the dreamy, psych of “Not The Only One.” One of the best songs of the entire album is the somewhat celestial, heartfelt closer, “Find Your Way Home.”
As the former member of a number of Bay Area bands over the years, Oakland-based indie rock singer and songwriter Parker Moore knows the music scene well.
As the guitarist for a number of San Francisco bands, like Cartographer, MMMM, and Big Skinny, and more recently, Catholic Radio, the boot camp musical experience has done Moore well. This is evident on his new solo debut, Alterations & Repairs, an inspiring, new 2018 indie rock album worth a listen.
Right off the bat, the radio-friendly, percussion-heavy indie pop rocker, “Almost Blue,” sets the mood with a big sound of sweeping melodic hooks. Moore’s songwriting and vocals are above average for a DIY artist. There’s a sense that he’s straddling the line between alt. rock, classic rock, and indie pop/rock.
Crisp guitars, bumbling bass lines and alt rock-like shifting beats and time signatures drive “Here We Are,” as with the soft melodies of “Change Your Mind,” a song clearly about overcoming addiction (“chasing chemicals”).
Other standout tracks from the album include the lamenting of “Sing Me Goodbye” and the hook-friendly, “Strange Night,” featuring some of the best guitar playing on the album.
The song, “Last To Know,” is a bit more alt. rock with a Britpop influence. It is also one of the tracks on the album that doesn’t sound like the rest.
The album closes with the acoustic dreaminess of “The Attic,” during which times Moore’s voice sounds oddly like that of the late, great Leonard Cohen.
Alterations & Repairs, according to Moore, “spans a range of indie rock format from 90’s-influenced alt-rock to psychedelic ballads and acoustic guitar-driven atmospherics.”
“Lyrically,” he adds, the album “explores scenes of personal transformation – getting clean, struggles with old patterns, and finding a life partner – alongside wry sociological ruminations on contemporary tropes.
It’s not too difficult to hear Moore’s biggest influences – Dinorsaur Jr, The Sea and Cake, Deerhunter, Kurt Vile, Neil Young & Crazy Horse, and Beck – woven in the structure of the songs, the nuisances of the instrumentation and Moore’s soothing vocals.
In addition to songwriting, singing and producing, Moore also plays guitar and is joined on the album by bassists Rob Mills and John-Paul McLean, drummer Javier Torres and keyboardist Greg Francis.
Alterations & Repairs, available via Bandcamp, was recorded, mixed, and co-produced by Greg Francis and mastered by Justin Weis.
Tom Harrison – Shakespeare’s Sonnets
Scottish recording artist and film composer Tom Harrison, who now lives in Los Angeles, recently dropped a five-track EP, Shakespeare’s Sonnets.
In short, Harrison scores four original orchestral pieces inspired by the old Englishmen’s celebrated Sonnet 12 (“Violet”); Sonnet 130 (“Goddess”); Sonnet 17 (“Antique Song”), and Sonnet 18 (“This Gives Life To Thee”); he also composed, arranged, recorded, mixed and mastered each piece himself.
Three of the sonnets’ interpretative pieces lament the passing of time and the preservation of personages and beauty through art. Such is the case with “Goddess (Sonnet 130),” another of Harrison’s favorite Shakespeare sonnets.
Originally released six years ago, the track was used by the Royal Shakespeare Company on their 2012 World Shakespeare Festival website as part of the London Olympics celebration.
“Antique Song,” he says, “felt like an English folk song when I read the sonnet so I made it an American folk song.” We have to say that while it little to do with indie rock in the traditional sense, Harrison has put his heart into this project.
The standout track of the EP, “Hereafter,” is a sweeping and nearly epic orchestral piece. Obviously, the piece he worked the most on, it’s dedicated to Harrison’s childhood friend who passed away from Lupus at the age of 24.
All instruments and vocals were performed and recorded by Harrison at Little Victories Studios. The EP was produced, mixed and mastered by Harrison as well. His musical inspirations for the EP include bands like Genesis and Yes, as well as the influences of musical theatre, and classical and romantic period music.
His favorite artists include Green Day, Squeeze, Ash, Genesis, The Beatles, Manic Street Preachers, and Fountains of Wayne. Harrison is originally from Morayshire, Scotland. He has scored compositions for CSI and The Simpsons.
It’s mid-October and the Fresh Tracks keep popping up by bands spanning the globe from South Africa to England; California to Massachusetts; Norway to the Big Apple; Pennsylvania to Oregon, and places in between.
Caelo – Cape Town, South Africa Fornis – Sacramento, California Shoring – Portland, Oregon Papa Sierra – Trondheim, Norway Dizzy Bats – New York, New York Danny Baxley – Boston, Massachusetts All This Huxley – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Papersleeves – Martinsburg, West Virginia Indya – Brighton, England
Caelo – “Visions”
Back in June of 2016, the folks of Cape Town, South Africa had their first glimpse of a new alt-rock trio called Caelo. The band jettisoned from relative obscurity to local popularity within weeks of their debut performance.
With the release of their new Visions EP last month, the band is building even more of a fan base thanks to the electrifying energy on tracks like “All You Need,” the grinding and hard rocking, “Renegades,” and the title track, which has amassed over 10,000 plays on Soundcloud alone in just a few weeks.
“Visions really captures the energy of our early beginnings and consolidates many feelings from that time,” says guitarist and vocalist Joel Bronner, who together with bassist Matthew Winfield and drummer Mike Dickens form the Cape Town rock trio.
The trio’s flair for dynamic ranges in their music indicates that their alt-rock verve comes from influences like Muse, Royal Blood, The Black Keys, Foals and, of course, Biffy Clyro. The band has opened for artists like CrashCarBurn, Springbok and Nude Girls.
It was actually during a Biffy Clyro performance in 2015 that Bronner decided to kick of Caelo and he went out fervently to make it happen. Now in the studio recording a new album, Caelo hopes to build a U.S. and overseas fan base in 2018.
Based along the western foothills of the Sierra Mountains, in the California capital city of Sacramento is the DIY rock band Fornis. They knock out good old rock and roll with various other influences and genres, as evidenced on the band’s new release, Generic Hope.
Founded in 2013 and co-fronted by vocalist and guitarist Todd Pittman, the band, he says, like to call their music ‘bolster rock.’
“We take the good old rock and bolster it into something new,” Pittman says, “with personal musical influences of old school punk rock, doo wop and old rock and roll, like Little Richard, and Dion and the Belmonts.”
Pittman is also fond of the old girl bands, such as Darlene Love, the Crystals, and the Ronettes.
The standout single, and title track, “Generic Hope,” rifles away with lo-fi ringing guitars, bumping bass lines and mad drumming, sounding more like a punk rock band than old school rock, although it is peppered generously throughout the rest of their songs and again making it difficult to place the band into one genre.
Songwriter Todd Pittman began writing and singing original songs with the creation of Fornis. His persona is rock-a-billy with pompadour combed to a ducktail. It’s difficult to peg him or the band’s music into one genre – it’s an amalgam of tastes and styles, using generations of rock influence as foundation, which results in a hard hitting, foot stomping, old school, unique and catchy musical style.
Fornis solid bottom end, drums and bass, are supplied by drummer Trapper Herzog and keyboardist ‘Keydragon,’ aka Ron Langford. Trapper has played in the past with bands like Tower of Power, Elvin Bishop, and The Cliff Fields Group while Langford has been active in music since the 70s
Prior to Fornis, Pittman fronted two other bands, a punk rock outfit called Pruno (named after the ‘jail juice’ prison inmates drink) and a punk band named Duodenum – apparently named after a section of the large intestines.
Though nowadays Fornis primarily plays its ‘bolster rock’ originals, they also enjoy playing cover songs of Del Shannon’s, The Cars, Elvis and others, with influences that range from the Ramones and Misfits to Dion and the Bellmonts.
Four musicians who spent a decade in various other Portland bands decided in 2015 to form their own new band called Shoring.
Built around the songs of frontman Brian Bergstrom, the veteran musicians spent over a year recording their self-titled debut album, dropped earlier this year. Prior to completing the album, and armed with only with a demo track, the band was able to book a 10-show tour in California.
“Our music is inspired by reclaimed lumber, people who speak the truth, and that perfect cup of coffee,” says the band with ethos aimed at providing “quality and authenticity” and to play “purely for the love of it.” The band’s sound draws from folk and Americana influences, as well as 1960’s pop and ’70’s rock with more of a rhythm section “steeped more in the virtues of Cheap Trick than James Taylor.”
The band – which in addition to Bergstrom, features accomplished musicians like drummer Nick Kostenborder; guitarist and keyboardist Jesse Dreher and Mickey Nucci on bass – has opened for artists such as San Geronimo, Frontier Ruckus, The Loved and count among their top musical influences Ryan Adams, Dire Straits, Deathcab For Cutie, John Prine, and Tom Petty.
Hailing from the town of Trondheim, Norway, DIY band Papa Sierra is, according to frontman Per Sundet, “semi-political desert polka band.”
“Our music is light hearted and lively. We wish to tell you small stories from a place you never heard of,” he says, citing the band recent album drop, The Dictator.
The album’s songs are inspired by “personal adventures as well as terrible real world events. Everything from violent revolutions to love and espionage. The musical notes we use are concocted of highly experimental and illegal stuff.
We advice you to dance and sing along,” he exclaims, on songs like the exhilarating title track, with it’s energy-charged Arabian-like verve. You almost have to get up and dance.
Contributing to it all are, in addition to Sundet, band members Torje Markussen, guitar; Espen Berg Nilsen, drums; Øyvind Fjeldstad; piano, Julian Haugland, bass, and Johan Grødal, bass.
The band has opened for artists like Skóg and Whisper City, and count among their top influences bands like Kaizers Orchestra, Kasabian, Kate Bush, and The Flaming Lips.
The New York City DIY rock band Dizzy Bats has a Green-Day-meets-Weezer-pop-punk vibe on songs like “I’m Listening” and “Scared” from the band’s just-released album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore (Sept 19th).
The band officially formed in 2011 in vocalist and guitarist Connor Frost’s basement. The other band members include David Ma (vocals; bass); Derek Swink (drums); and Jared Sochinsky (guitars).
Based out of the city of brotherly love, Philadelphia indie rock band All This Huxley are noted by their beguiling riffs, genre-shifting playing and introspective lyrics as found on songs like the interesting “Comrade Winston Smith” from the band’s recently released eponymous debut.
A unique aspect of the band is that each member – guitarists Trevor Serine and John Corcoran, bassist Alex Marlys and drummer Josh Mayer – alternate on lead vocals, and Serine and Corcoran switch spots on guitars from rhythm and lead throughout the album.
All This Huxley has performed at some of the most iconic venues in Philadelphia and the surrounding area, and has built a reputation for delivering rock-solid performances. They opened for bands like Castle Black and Shadowplay, and are most influenced by artists like Wilco, Dr. Dog, Guided by Voices, Archers of Loaf, and Tom Waits.
It is not often that we receive music from the fine state of West Virginia, but a new band from Martinsburg, named papersleeves, just dropped their debut album, V.1 (which implies perhaps that there will be a V.2 and perhaps V.3 and so on).
The songs on the album are built on strong traditional rock ethos yet are also heavily pop rock hook oriented such as on memorable tracks like love song, “Chasing After You” and the hard-rocking, “Sensation.” The band’s musical influences include U2, Weezer, Radiohead, and Pearl Jam.
The band members include Lucas Barnhart on guitar; Michael Flynn on lead vocals; Reece McClung on lead guitar; Allen Hutzler on bass and Joel Weedy on drums. The band formed in 2015.
Outta Beantown, Boston musician Danny Baxley has put his stake in the ground of the city’s long tradition of birthing trail-blazing artists who borrow from indie, pop, electronic, R&B, psych rock and lo-fi to craft unique tracks like the inspirational “Trials and Errors of a Troubled Mind” and “Ithaca” from the Baxley’s debut album, Love Sex Alcohol.
Baxley’s biggest musical influences include Modest Mouse, Grimes, Sylvan Esso, Crystal Castles, and The Doors.
Any UK artist that opens for big name musicians like Noel Gallagher and bands like Republica is going to get people’s attention.
That’s exactly what the artist Indya, from the city of Brighton, England, did here in the cafe. But we should not make too much of such credentials because her music itself is what captives people.
Behind the one name moniker is musician Natalie Indya West, a graduate of the British School of Performing Arts. In 2015, she formed her band who were influenced by classic rock artists like Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and David Bowie.
They dropped a new album in August, Insane Love, featuring songs like the raucous title track. West is supported by Raymond Tognola (bass); Andrea Rapisarda (drums) and Paolo Marelli (guitar).
Here’s what you’ll get with the outlaw folk of Rust Dust’s new album, Diviners and Shivs: one voice, a few fine old instruments, and an unflinching, all-of-a-piece performance that will reach you in the moment and resonate with historical memory.
Rust Dust is the new moniker of Jason Shealy Stutts, a South Carolina native with a healthy aversion for barbers and liars. He earns his keep repairing and dealing in guitars and amps of a certain age.
After bonding with Oscar-winning, Grammy-nominated producer John DeNicola over their mutual affection for this sort of vintage gear, Stutts explained his concept for a record.
“A set of songs came together. I rearranged and de-arranged them until they tell the story of Diviners and Shivs [the new LP],” he says.
“They seemed to fit naturally with the country, blues and gospel songs I always held dear, and I hoped to record them, live, with someone who wanted to contribute to the sound and feel so that this wasn’t just a ‘dude with an acoustic’ record.”
DeNicola was enthusiastically on board for the recording.
“Jason wanted to do this like a performance art piece, a live recording straight to two-track tape, and I thought my barn studio in upstate New York would be the perfect setting,” DeNicola says.
“While Jason would be the only guitarist and singer, he saw the project as the work of a ‘band,’ with me and our engineer, Andris J. Balins, ‘playing’ the gear.”
And so Rust Dust made use of the large hayloft and milk house, placing different mics in various locations to capture subtle nuances.
They even used the corn silo as a reverb unit, putting a mic at the top and bottom and sending Stutts’ voice and guitar through a speaker. They also recorded outdoors to capture a more organic, country feel.
You’ll hear this process in the prison-break intensity of the title track and the rawboned blues of “Just Can’t Keep From Crying.”
You’ll feel it in the acidic sincerity of “Nothing Hurts Worse” and know it via a medley that teams Townes Van Zandt’s “Lungs” with Rust Dust’s “Modern Times” – a tragedy for the Trump era with rough and tumble guitar, before seg-waying into the possible salvation of “Everything Got Softer.”
There’s the jaunty delivery of “Wayfaring Stranger” and an “Amazing Grace” from your strangest dream.
“I hope everyone can listen and dream their own story of Diviners and Shivs. John and Andris made sonic changes live and played the barn, board and tape machine while we recorded straight to tape. It gives the album a cool sound and movement.”
Now that it is finally spring, it’s time to start highlighting just a few of the new DIY indie music releases from this year so far that we are digging, featuring bands from California, Tennessee, Alabama, Texas, New York and overseas from Scotland and Germany.
We Govern We – Ventura, California The Outer Vibe – Nashville, Tennessee Alabama Deathwalk – El Paso, Texas Zach Cannella – Nashville, Tennessee Ruby Bones – Brooklyn, New York DOTE – Essen, Germany Bobo and The Demeraras – Glasgow, Scotland
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We Govern We – Zano
Just beyond the boundaries of the Los Angeles city limits, and situated along the 101, is the coastal city of Ventura, California where the alternative rock band, We Govern We, has taken root in recent years. Busy with adult lives of paying bills and raising families, the members of the band find time to continue to nurse their project.
Now, the new sophomore album, Zano, has already produced one single, “Red Rover,” which received over 6K plays on SC alone in just a few weeks after its release in January.
With whip-like beats, sultry vocals, pensive lyrics and sonar-like sounding electro vibes and grinds, “Red Rover” is hard not to listen to; it draws you in, and it’s just one of a number of standout tracks on the album – WGW’s follow-up to the celebrated 2011 debut, Reznor’s Child.
The No Doubt-like verve on the band’s cover of “Punk Rocker,” plus the cinematic rock of “Mulligan’s Island” (the video for which came out years ago and received various nominations), the uplifting verve of “Sunshine,” and the brooding, slow burn rocker, “Grey Sea,” all lend their own unique contributions to the EP as a whole. There is a sense of mystery and even mysticism in the sounds and vocals throughout the EP – one its numerous allures.
WGW’s sophomore EP demonstrates the band’s musical and lyrical maturation process just since their debut. As founders, and husband and wife, Panos Scourtis (guitar) and Anna Karakalos (vocalist, songwriter), like to say that WGW was “born in Greece and raised in California.”
The other experienced and talented members of the band include guitarist Alexis Cohen, bassist Adrian Burke and drummer John Boutin to solidify the band’s percussion.
Album Stream: Listen to Zano via the band’s official website
WGW dropped its acclaimed debut album, Reznor’s Child, produced by Daniel Ash (Bauhaus, Love & Rockets), in 2010. Previously in the popular Greek rock band, Sigmatropic, Scourtis and Karakalos have toured Europe and opened for artists like Moby, Sonic Youth and Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.
The five-piece indie pop band The Outer Vibe from the music city of Nashville are self-described as “cinematic surf disco (think Clint Eastwood drinking a pina colada at a Dick Dale concert).”
After recently signing a publishing deal, the band dropped a collection of new tracks, including singles like “Why Don’t You Listen” and “Sweet to the Rind.”
As demonstrated on the riveting “Sweet to The Rind,” the band’s style is based on diverse genre-mixing format, in this case featuring R&B and funk rhythms and grooves, shimmering rock guitars and an awesome horn solo.
The Outer Vibe has been putting its talents to hard work over the years, gaining each fan deservedly . The band members – Sean Zuidgeest (vocals); Nick Hosford (guitar); Lisa Kacos (trumpet); Wunder Dornoff (bass); and Noah Snyder (drums) – have carved out and honed their own sound.
They’ve opened for a bunch of alt. and indie bands, including Train, Young the Giant, Kongos, and Borns, since forming in 2002 after the five friends decided to start up the band. Not many bands last 15 years in the music industry, and it’s nice to see these guys haven’t become ordinary. The band members are fans of artists like Electric Light Orchestra, Ennio Morricone, Paul Simon, Justice, and Spoon.
For more than a decade now, El Paso musician Eric Reed, has been attracting press and fan adulation within the indie rock world for his series of DIY albums as the artist Alabama Deathwalk.
Reed’s celebrated style of Americana-meets-emo with tragic lyrics of heartbreak of the modern age, has captured the attention of popular indie bands as well, including Built to Spill, Deertick, Appleseed Cast, and Porches – all of whom have tapped Reed to open for them when they passed through the region on national tours.
Reed’s newest release, the haunting album, Steep Hills, has produced the emo-leaning single, “Friends”, a touching tribute to friends Reed lost tragically in recent years. The music video for the song, directed by Sheridan O’Donnell, is wonderfully crafted with a touching, and appropriate, black and white short film.
Reed’s authentic songwriting and performance on Steep Hills obviously wouldn’t be as accomplished as it is without band members Simeon Beardsley (guitar); Rod Mendoza (bass); Josh Mendoza (drums) and KT Neely (vocals). Apparent in the band’s songs, Alabama Deathwalk is heavily influenced by, and similar to, artists like Bright Eyes, David Bazan, Pinegrove, Sunny Day Real Estate, Ryan Adams, and Rocky Votolato.
Other notable tracks on Steep Hills include the electric lashing beats, lonely ringing guitar, and melancholy vocals of the memorable “Two Weeks,” with swelling choruses of instrumentation and vocals near the song’s conclusion.
Even more stand out tracks on Steep Hills, and there are a number, include the math art-like indie rock of “Confessionals Part Two” and the poignant breakup song, “Dallas.” There is also the lo-fi Americana-meets-emo meandering track, “11:14,” and definitely don’t miss Reed’s heartfelt lyrics, shaky, screeching vocals, high school band-like background drumming, and wonderfully melodic, sweeping synth swells on “Freaky.” From beginning to end, this is one of the best DIY albums of the year so far.
You may also want to take a listen to Reed’s thrilling, soaring post rock/indie rock hybrid track, “Plans,” (listen here) from 2015. The album was produced by Reed and Ross Ingram; recorded and mixed by Ingram at Brainville in El Paso and mastered by Luke Dumke at The Yard in Las Cruces, New Mexico.
When songwriter and musician Zach Cannella arrived in Nashville from his hometown of Chicago a few years ago, he brought with him “a different outlook on the genre of country and a unique interpretation on what makes an ‘indie folk’ musician.”
At first, the layers of acoustics and strings on the standout title track of his new EP, Jephthah, flow like gentle streams with Cannella’s wonderfully lush melodies, pitch-perfect vocals, sound effects and booming percussions that all converge into a sweeping chorus before the song downshifts again. The second single, “South,” from the EP is an uptempo country-tinged rocker reminiscent of Kurt Vile.
A student of music composition at a music conservatory in Chicago, it wasn’t long before Cannella discovered that the art and process of songwriting was “the most honest form” of artistic expression. Cannella’s musical influences include Bon Iver, Sufjan Stevens, and Jose Gonzalez.
Ruby Bones – Ruby Bones
With unfettered guitar rock hooks, energetic rhythms and existential lyrics on songs like “Heart of Darkness,” the new Brooklyn indie rock band Ruby Bones make no bones about enjoying themselves.
The track reminds us a lot of The Strokes, and in a good way. The band’s guitarist and vocalist Chris Nova, describes the track this way: “It’s heavy without being macho, all while embracing pop melodies and big hooks.”
On May 12th, the band will drop their eponymous debut album. Ruby Bones main musical influences include The Thermals, The Walkmen, and Spoon. The other band members are James Janocha on drums and FC Spies on bass.
Uptempo Strokes-inspired guitar riffs and hooks; booming bass lines; a grooving rhythm and beat, and the fantastic Robert Smith-like vocals of Jonah Lemm (guitar, synth and programming) comprise the unforgettable, melodic hooks of the hot new single, “Cold Lips,” from the band DOTE‘s debut EP, North.
If you dig “Cold Lips” as much as we do, you can listen to the rest of the EP on Spotify. We’ve been listening to it for a couple of weeks, and it’s a grower. Other tracks like the seductive, Bowie-influenced, “Blind,” the mood-swinging synths of “Arcane Love” and the ringing guitars of the anthemic-like “Ghosts.”
The other band members – Lukas Hueskens (vocals, drums, percussion), Moritz Arendt (guitar, synths, Rhodes), and Niclas Beba (bass) have been friends since they were school boys growing up in Essen, Germany. But they didn’t start to create music together until their late teens.
Now in their early 20s, the band members “like to sing about red wine and cigarettes with danceable beats and dark electric sounds,” Lemm exclaims. DOTE’s musical influences include Foals, The 1975, Phoenix, Ben Howard, The Cure, the xx, and The Smiths.
Formed in Glasgow, Scotland during the summer of 2014, a couple of touring veteran session musicians – lead by Craig Bobo France (vocals, guitar and keys) and Billy Hudson (drums and production) – decided to write and record their own album as Bobo and The Demeraras.
That 2015 debut album, Heart Goes Blind, received many glowing reviews and thumbs up from Nik West (former Prince bassist) and Johnny Marr (The Replacements founder). The duo’s major influences include The Stone Roses, AIR, Tame Impala, and Kraftwerk.
The group’s second album Uptopia Eurotica, out now, is full of dreamy sci-fi synth pop songs like the space love song, “Oktogon” and the floating melodies and emotive vocals of “Everything (Is You)” with it’s memorable guitar hook.
MP3: “Oktogon“ – Bobo and The Demeraras from Utopia Eurotica (Feb. 28th)
There were so many under-the-radar indie and DIY debut albums dropped in 2016 that we need to share some more with you before 2016 really becomes a memory.
If you missed the first installment of Best Indie/DIY Rock Debuts of 2016, you may wish to start there. Also, check out the other posts – including ones with 50+ Likes – from the past couple months. Oh, and there’s more coming. Plus the Top 10 Songs playlists will also be coming back.
Don’t forget to follow us, Like us and check out our playlists that we’ve worked on for years via IRC on Spotify; plus IRC Facebook; IRC on Soundcloud, IRC on Twitter and IRC on Instagram. We need to feel your love to make this worth while because we do it for our readers, listeners and followers.
In This Installment:
Peyote Coyote – Pompano Beach, Florida Candy Cigarettes – Portland, Oregon Economy Island – Austin, Texas Hiels – Kyjiv, Ukraine COUNCIL – New York, New York
Peyote Coyote – Peyote Coyote
Peyote Coyote is a new psychedelic/garage rock trio from Pompano Beach, Florida. The three members, all FAU music majors, formed the band in late 2014 with the goal to make truly original psych rock.
Embracing the DIY aesthetic, the band recorded and produced their debut self-titled EP in their home studio and dropped it officially in April 2016, featuring standout tracks like the infectious, “Follow Through,” with its semi-theatrical rock with tinges of 80’s new wave and 70’s punk influences.
Another standout track, “Desert,” is noisy, gritty psych rock guitars with heavy hooks, bombastic bass and crashing drums all covered in layers of reverb and musical textures, and moments of dueling instrumentation between the band members, who are Ryan Huseman on guitar and vocals; Jake Stuart on bass, and Cari Giard on drums and vocals.
Peyote Coyote has opened for artists such as Rivers, -kids-, Sunghosts, and Mantra Love, with their biggest musical influences listed as The Doors, The Beatles, The Black Angels, The Dandy Warhols, and Band of Horses.
From one of the Pacific Northwest’s most beautiful cities, Portland, comes Candy Cigarettes, the music moniker of one-man band, producer, vocalist and self-taught multi-instrumentalist Lane Mueller.
In this early 20s, Mueller says that he has written hundreds of songs, contributed music to film soundtracks, received radio play and received a growing reputation in Portland’s competitive DIY scene, opening for established artists like Nurses, Frances Cone, and Minus the Bear.
His self titled debut dropped in April of 2016. Unforgettable tracks like “Selling Price” and “Molded Ocean” ordain Mueller’s EP as one of the best debuts of the year. Also, don’t miss The Beach Boys-influenced choruses and psychedelic beach pop for “Sweet Love.”
Beginning in his mid-teens, Mueller taught himself to play guitar, bass, drums, keyboards, and piano. His biggest musical influences include Beck, Elliott Smith, Brian Jonestown Massacre, and Radiohead. Candy Cigarettes was officially founded in 2014.
MP3: “Selling Price“ – Candy Cigarettes from Candy Cigarettes
The Austin indie rock band Economy Island got our attention thanks to a couple of hot rock and roll tracks they sent in from the self-titled debut album dropped last October.
Formed in 2015, the band model its sound, which the band says features elements of artists like Guided By Voices (“anthemic indie rock stylings”); Built to Spill (“untraditional dual guitar interplay”) and the “lyrical bitterness” of Archers Of Loaf.
The examples are pertinent when listening to the album. Take a song like the standout fuzz alt. rocker, “Stay Home” – a track that sounds like Dinosaur Jr. mixed with Archers of love; the slow-burn stoner-rock track is just one the tracks that makes it absolutely one of the best alt. rock debuts of 2016.
MP3: “Stay Home“ – Economy Island from Economy Island
On “Typically Weak” the mood is more melodic and minimalistic with the same guitar chord riffing over and over again (not sure if that works though) concurrently with Richi Fatheree‘s (lead vocals/guitar) mellow vocals, throughout most of the song – a song that is otherwise sparsely populated by sounds other than the subtle guitars and understated percussion.
The hooks are reminiscent of bands like Big Star and The Replacements and the guitar solos that follow are on the J. Mascis (Dinosaur Jr.) side of the rock guitar style spectrum.
The other band members include Mark Twistworthy (vocals/bass guitar); John Christoffel (lead guitar); and Paul Ahern (drums, vocals).
The Ukranian indie band, Hiels, have captured our attention with a couple of smoking tracks from the debut album, Let It In, including the sun soaked psychedelics of the standout track, “Surfers,” and the urgency and experimentation on “Cockroach.”
The DIY indie band is Daniel Zubkow, on vocals, guitars, synths; Victoria Podroiko on bass and Eugene Glebov on drums.
Hiels was formed in the town of Kyjiv, Ukraine in 2014 and toured throughout the Ukraine in 2015 to support the debut EP, including slots at music festivals such as Art-Picnic and Respublica. The band spent a year recording, mixing and mastering the debut LP.
“We like experimenting and we did it a lot when recording our LP, which turned out beneficial,” says Zubkow. The trio’s top musical influences include The Beatles, The Beach Boys, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Muse, and Dot Hacker.
Growing up as fans of bands like U2, The Who, Oasis, Nirvana, and Queen, New York City-based indie rock trio COUNCIL, offered up its debut EP, Rust to Gold, last fall, featuring standout singles like the sprawling pop rock and uplifting choruses, “The World Is On Fire” and the more down-to-earth title track.
The band members, all brothers, are Pat Reeves on piano, bass and vocals; Andy Reeves on guitar, programming and Doug Reeves on drums. The brothers grew up working on a farm in Bookersville, a rural area of upstate New York.
The album was produced Justin Gray (Mariah Carey; John Legend); mixed by Mark Needham (The Killers; Imagine Dragons) and mastered by Howie Weinberg (Wilco; Iggy Pop; The Clash).
MP3: “The World Is On Fire“ – COUNCIL from Rust to Gold
We’ve gotta close out 2016 with one more post, featuring DIY and small label indie bands from across the United States, Canada and Sweden. It’s hard to believe this is the XXVIII (28th) posting for the In Dee Mail (aka, in the mail) series.
Have a safe, happy and healthy 2017!
In This Installment:
Stella Nova – Denver, Colorado Bud Collins Trio – New Haven, Connecticut Amery Rey Tuesta – Gothenburg, Sweden Mahdi Khene – Washington DC Parker Rose – Santa Clarita, California Jack Mosbacher – New York, New York Morning Fame – Toronto, Canada
Stella Nova – “Old School Radio”
Denver teenager and DIY one man band Dominic Ellerbee has bigger things to worry about than most teens these days. His family has been on the verge of becoming homeless once again, he recently told IRC, and he has lost his “best friend, my girlfriend and my band.”
And yet you wouldn’t know from listening to this 19-year-old’s latest single, recorded under the moniker, Stella Nova, that it was such a troubling year.
In fact, “Old School Radio,” is infectiously upbeat, and nearly impossible to turn away from, with it’s indie, alt. rock and pop radio influences. When you consider that Ellerbee wrote the song, recorded all of the instruments – guitar, bass, drums and vocals – and mixed and mastered everything himself, it’s a pretty solid DIY drop.
Despite his 2016 tribulations, Ellerbee highlights as well the positives, writing on Facebook: “But this year also saw an immense growth for me: I met some amazing people; found myself a little more; wrote a whole bunch of music, and best of all, started work on this album.” He is referring to an album that he plans to drops in early 2107.
Stella Nova’s overall style is influenced by different eras of rock, pop, and alternative, with his favorite artists to include The Strokes, Lil Yachty, Arctic Monkeys, Weezer, Mobb Deep, and Sam Cooke. Another single that we find particularly interesting is the alt. rock like “Zephyr.”
Connecticut’s long-running music group, the Bud Collins Trio (BC3), is not really what you might imagine at first; for starters, they are not a trio. They were once though. That identifier, ‘trio,’ isn’t usually used in any other context that we know about except jazz trios, and BC3 is not a jazz trio.
However, there are jazz elements interwoven in the band’s remarkably eclectic discography, as there are funk, punk, prog rock, psych, electronic, and many other genres. Yet BC3’s overall sound is mostly pop and rock wrapped within the warm and welcoming blankets of alt. and indie rock.
And that’s the great thing about alt. and indie rock music – you can mix and match whatever genres, styles, eras you want without anyone saying “you can’t do that.”
IRC has been featuring talented, under-the-radar artists and bands for 10 years now, and the BC3 is definitely one of them.
The band’s latest EP, Quasarmoto, is more decidedly electronic-influenced than other releases, and features the fast-paced, electro-driven, “Bad Kids Wander Away,” the slower, space pop-like, “I Don’t Understand” and the melodic shifts, and wild guitar solo, on “Useless People.”
Referring to “Bad Kids Wander Away,” band member Chris Duers says, “this tune is actually written about my youngest daughter…about all of the things I worry about, and things that I might say to her or want to say to her… about growing up and some of the dangers of the world, and some of the ways you can get lost, drift away from the right side of the world, get sidetracked.”
Now it’s time to enter the world of the eccentric, experimental Peruvian musician Amery Rey Tuesta who now lives in Gothenburg, Sweden.
Tuesta’s 2016 album, Mr. Black Pants, is decidedly unique and guitar-driven, with many interesting tracks, such as the memorable, “You Don’t Understand,” which sounds like 1970’s TV cop show music interlaced with off-kilter heavy metal music; the guitar licks are sparkling and the horn section adds a memorable finality.
While Tuesta’s vocals are not necessarily perfected, it’s also what helps set him apart from many of the other bedroom musicians; he certainly has the angst, and accompanying guitar licks, of a novel heavy metal/punk DIY one man band – writing and playing all of the instruments himself and mixing the masters.
His blistering guitar work is time and again the dominate force riffling through many of the tracks on Mr. Black Pants – from obscure theatrical arena rock (“Un Mejor Lugar”) to predominantly punk (“Roar” and “What Do You Mean?”) to influences of spaghetti western rock (“Ironic Life); surf rock (“What Did You Say?”); mid-60’s guitar rock with 70’s horn sections and Mexican music influences (“My House”).
Standout songs like “My House,” and “You Don’t Understand” are perhaps most accessible; Tuesta may not be smooth around the edges, but he exhibits a wide understanding and appreciation for the freedom that indie allows in mixing genres in creative and unconventional ways.
Via Soundcloud: “You Don’t Understand“ – Amery Rey Tuesta from Mr. Black Pants
Mahdi Khene is a Washington DC-area acoustic folk musician who was born in Algeria and immigrated legally as a toddler to the United States. Growing up hearing the music of Bob Dylan and The Beatles at home with his family, Khene became addicted to music.
By the age of 11 years old, he asked his father for a set of drums. His father made a deal with him: learn to play the guitar first, and the drums will follow. In short order, Khene learned with great earnest how to play the guitar. His father kept his side of the agreement and purchased Khene a new drum set.
Continuing to perfect his skills playing the guitar and drums, Khene was writing songs by the age of 14.
“I’ve been writing songs since I was 14,” he says. “All i do is write. I may have around 200 songs. I just wanna share them.”
Inspired by The Kinks and the early Motown Records catalog, California songwriter, vocalist and musician Parker Rose has harnessed the inspiration of his biggest influences to release a number of commendable singles during the past couple of years, including a couple of tracks that received a nice helping of online love from music lovers.
There’s no doubt listening to songs like “Slow Drive” and “Little Dreamer” that Rose has a love and a knack for indie pop music influenced from the sounds of yesterday, but still very much relevant today.
The latter track, “Little Dreamer,” had a good run on Soundcloud for a while, amassing more than 5K plays with nearly 50 comments from listeners.
In social media world, we call that excellent engagement and reach because people don’t comment unless they really like a track a lot. Comments range from “Feeling the vibe! Very funky and soulful” to “amazing!” Rose has opened for artists like The Withers, Fidlar, Together Pangea and the Allah Las.
Jack Mosbacher Band – Sunny Songs for Shady People
Raised in Woodside, California, and now living between New York City on one coast, and California on the other, songwriter, vocalist and actor Jack Mosbacher was obsessed with The Beach Boys’ Brian Wilson and Motown music from a young age.
“I am passionate about telling a story — be it through music, on a stage, or on a screen—that makes the world a little brighter, bit by bit,” says Mosbacher. Mosbacher has an extensive palatte – he is just as comfortable “covering pop crooner Ed Sheeran as he is belting out a Stephen Sondheim number from Sweeney Todd,” his bio reads.
In 2014, Mosbacher founded the Jack Mosbacher Band, and the band has performed at venues in and around the city. His band has also performed in San Francisco at the Great American Music Hall during a California tour to support the release of the debut album, Sunny Songs for Shady People.
Bolstered by radio-ready pop tunes like his cheery debut single “I’m in Love” and funky slow-burner “Bad News,” Sunny is an eclectic mix of genres, moods and stories. Mosbacher is also hugely influenced by Bob Dylan and Van Morrison.
Via Soundcloud: “I’m in Love” – Jack Mosbacher Band from Sunny Songs for Shady People
Morning Fame – “Dreamality”
Based out of the increasingly influential Toronto indie music scene, the indie rock band Morning Fame, incorporates alt. rock and elements of classic rock with big, booming sounds, 70s-80s style guitars, and a psych rock jam halfway through, and a blazing end on the band’s track, “Dreamality,” from their upcoming new album to drop in early 2017.
“The song portrays being trapped in a dream,” says guitarist Joe Liranzo, “and the pace of this song illustrates the chaotic feeling one might have if they were a prisoner of such a mystic place.“
Comprised of band members from all backgrounds and musical genres and influences, like songwriter and vocalist Vik Kapur and drummer Alan Dennis, Morning Fame has been rocking the Toronto scene for years, building a following along the way. There are definitely some Detroit rock influences in the band’s gritty rock sound.
Liranzo skillfully use insightful imagery to bring their lyrics and ideas to life as evident in an animated music video for the song, “Time of the Blackened Sun,” a sweepingly ambitious video and long-play song about Native American culture and history. The band will drop a new album in early 2017.
The latest edition of Fresh Tracks includes new singles, albums and videos from artists and bands we’re digging are featured in the playlist below as well in their own sections of this post below.
Don’t forget to follow us, Like us and check out our playlists that we’ve worked on for years via Spotify (must listens!); via Facebook; new tracks and more via Soundcloud; announcements and other goodies via Twitter and please help us build up our Instagram by following with love Otherwise the indie-loving elves behind the scenes get cranky. Please don’t let them get cranky. :-)
Corusco – College Station, Texas Pacific Radio – Los Angeles, California Joseph Eid – West Hollywood, California Jack Kotz – Wilmington, North Carolina Aux House – Grand Rapids, Michigan Kingsley Flood – Washington, DC
Corusco – “Twin Ghosts”
South Texas songwriter, vocalist and guitarist Aaron Gonzalez and his band, Corusco, have spent the past year recording and touring from Texas to New Hampshire, stopping in many cities along the way.
Based in College Station, Corusco started as an acoustic solo side project of Gonzalez’s in 2015. Soon after, it “accidentally grew into a full band,” Gonzalez says, bringing on Ryan Corb on guitar, Phillip Baugh on bass and Carlos Garza on drums.
The inspiration for the band’s latest single, “Twin Ghosts,” Gonzalez? says, “is the story of the weekend one of my friends passed away…he was one of the kindest, smartest guys I’d ever met. I wrote it from the perspective of his roommate and his best friend, and what I think they would have told him if they could see him again.”
It’s a hauntingly beautiful song, and together with their tantalizing August release, Don’t Give Up, puts Corusco on indie map.
“We’re a band that wants to write music that is meaningful and though a lot of the material we deal with is somber or heavy, we always want there to be that glimmer of hope through it all,” Gonzalez says.
Via Bandcamp: “Twin Ghosts” – Corusco from Don’t Give Up
Based in the city of Los Angeles, the indie rock quartet, Pacific Radio, deliver a sound that “ranges from rock n roll to West coast ballad,” according to band member Kyle Biane.
Pacific Radio’s new single, “Katie,” is a bright, uplifting romp, highlighted by singer Joe Robinson’s well-honed vocals and the awesome talents of his band members. The second half of the track blossoms into a full blown, infectious celebration.
But Pacific Radio (not to be confused with Pacific Radio radio) is not simply an indie band that creates musical magic in the studio. In fact, the band has been very busy performing shows and touring.
Earlier this year, the band performed four shows at South By Southwest, including for showcases Red Gorilla Fest and the Midcoast Takeover.
Southern California musician, singer and songwriter Joseph Eid‘s engaging new video, “One and Only,” was filmed on West Hollywood‘s famed Sunset Strip, giving the smooth, alt. folk rock ballad a nice touch against the backdrop of the city in his new video for the track.
Eid says the song itself “is about finding and longing for true love in a place where instant gratification and temporary thrills are the norm,” referring to Hollywood. He adds that the song could also be interpreted as a story about a common experience adults face in life – longing for a special relationship and holding on to it while fighting the temptations of the future.
“It’s the realization and confession that the short term fulfillment of a new thrill or adventure cannot compare to the true and everlasting fulfillment of a love that goes beyond the surface,” he says.
When making the video, Eid and director William Sanford set out to convey use the night lights of the Sunset Strip to convey the emotions and sense of loneliness in the middle of one of the largest cities in the western hemisphere. Brian Soucy co-produced the single.
His influences, not surprisingly, include Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, Billy Joel, Tom Petty, Fleetwood Mac, Prince and many others. Eid has been performing around the Pacific Northwest for much of the year. He is working on completing the new EP, Watch It Fall.
Last spring we featured some exciting new tracks from Wilmington, North Carolina musician and ‘one man band’ Jack Kotz‘s debut album, What’s All The Fuss About?.
Kotz has just released his followup to Fuss with his sophomore album, Neon Orange Nectar Juice. For fans of guitar rock, funk inspired beats and rhythms, and psych pop, Neon is a tour de force of high order.
Here is the tantalizing title track, followed by an electrified cover of Jack Johnson, one of Kotz’s musical influences.
Based out of Grand Rapids, the DIY alternative rock trio, Aux House, offers listeners something more than the regular fare. And yet they manage to appeal to a larger audience with their fun and eclectic brand of alternative rock.
Perhaps founder, guitarist and vocalist of Aux House, Tristan Rudolph, explains it best as a revival of the “Bowian idea of the space-alien rock star.”
The Michigan trio’s debut self titled DIY album release contains a mix of rock and pop punk angst with sci-fi elements, and alt. rock overtones, creating a larger than life sound and stories about girls, cars love and troubles, which are no better demonstrated than on the irresistible “Antique Radio” and the delightful and unusual track, “Aliens Can’t Dance.”
Rudolph said the band’s top musical influences include Sufjan Stevens, Bruce Springsteen, Pavement, Wilco, and Bright Eyes. There’s a nicely suited eclecticism about that selection of artists and bands.
The Washington DC band Kingsley Flood, sports a gritty, and yet at times, sassy, sound on their new music video for the edgy track, “To The Wolves,” from the new album, Another Other.
The band was founded by Palestinian-American born singer and songwriter Naseem Khuri in 2009, and has won praise for his work from the press, including NPR, Rolling Stone, Esquire, Paste and American Songwriter.
The band has toured nationally, opening for artists like Grace Potter, Lucius, Langhorne Slim, Angus and Julia Stone, and Brett Dennen. They were also invited to perform at the 2011 Newport Folk Festival.
Khuri tackles a number of issues in his music, including the lingering – stoked by presidential candidate Trump – bias against Arab born Americans, who he says, don’t deserve to be treated as “one” – Khuri reminds people that the vast majority of Arabs, or Muslims, are peace-loving, law abiding hard-working members of society.
“At the end of the day, I’m American,” he asserts. “The only Arabic words I know are foods and swears. It’s just that more jarring to somehow always be labeled ‘an other’ when you don’t even see yourself that way.”
Via YouTube: “To The Wolves” – Kingsley Flood from Another Other
Summer is a full flame right now and we have some hot Fresh Tracks from artists and bands across the country and around the world, featuring rock, pop, electronic, experimental, alt. country rock and plain ‘ole alternative rock, spanning from Oklahoma to Wisconsin, and Italy to Australia. Enjoy and share this post. Indie and DIY forever!
Animal Names – Tulsa, Oklahoma Coding Candy – Milan, Italy Lastlings – Sydney, Australia Jack Lavoie – Quebec City, Quebec Versus The Wake – Long Island, New York Ian and The Dream – Milwaukee, Wisconsin BestMan – Chicago, Illinois Boomlights – Nashville, Tennessee
Animal Names – “Flowers In Your Hair”
Musicians Ian Gollahon and Brian Keller are no strangers to the indie annals of Tulsa. Nearly a decade ago, they were just kids making a splash in the growing local indie scene.
Then high school graduations and college came along. And while they were out of the Tulsa scene for a number of years attending university, the duo, along with drummer Philip Martin, and bassist Aaron Wesinger, returned to their hometown recently to start a new musical project called Animal Names.
A successful Kickstarter campaign earlier this year officially welcomed Animal Names to the Tulsa indie scene. The new trio draws inspiration and influence from the bands they have admired for years, such as Grizzly Bear, Modest Mouse, Band of Horses, Counting Crows, Mountain Goats, and Fleet Foxes.
The first single – from their upcoming debut album slated to drop next month – “Greens and Reds,” is an electric guitar-driven song with elements of atmospherics, somewhat in the tradition of Jeff Beck, that has a real classic rock quality about it, intentionally or not.
The newest, and second, single, “Flowers In Your Hair,” is not a hippy dippy song as much as it sounds like. In fact, it is something of a real gem for the summer playlists, we believe. It cannot be overstated that the band members’ skills in instrumentation and song composition prove that they are, once again, and perhaps more than ever, a force to be reckoned with in Tulsa. (Yes, you can go back home again).
When indie was really taking off, from 2007 to 2009, Gollahon and Keller, were part of the indie band, I Said Stop! in Tulsa. Even when they split up and went off to college, I Said Stop!’s music did not fade completely from their local radio stations and fans’ memories.
In May, Gollahon, who interned with producer Brian Deck (Modest Mouse, Counting Crows), and Keller, who interned at Chicago Recording Company and works C9 Studios, joined the other band members of Animal Names to headline the Blue Dome Arts Festival.
Animal Names self-titled debut album will be released officially on vinyl and CD at a release party next month.
The Italian composer of genre-bending cinematic, electronic/digital music, Luigi Cirelli, otherwise known as Coding Candy, dropped a terrific new EP titled, H3ll0 W0rld, last month.
Largely inspired by “movie soundtracks, TV series, anime and novels,” as well as England’s Bristol trip hop movement, H3ll0 W0rld‘s overall feel is an ethereal tour de force of engaging synth riffs; laid back instrumentations; angst-filled, and sparingly used, vocal arrangements; trippy dance beats; sonic dreamscapes and ambient overtones; various sound effects and samples; infusions of world and international music, and loads of electronic and digitally enhanced song structures and experimentation.
Cirelli himself calls his new and very different EP “a soundtrack for life,” covering genres from electronic and industrial to pop and psychedelic. “It can be a movie score,” he writes, “a background for your daily life set to music and sounds.”
The first single from the album, the thrilling and potent, “Rachael,” was inspired by the 1982 classic movie Bladerunner, according to Cirelli. Altogether, Coding Candy’s new EP, is a remarkable work that you don’t want to miss.
Cirelli’s main artistic influences in the popular music world include Chemical Brothers, Daft Punk, Pink Floyd, New Order, Nine Inch Nails, Massive Attack, Radiohead, Air, Aphex Twin, and The Cure.
Via Soundcloud: Listen to H3ll0 W0rld in its entirety
Lastlings – “You”
Combining their unique brand of lush electronica and breathtaking vocals, Australian brother-sister duo Lastlings, just released a new exotic music video for the hypnotic and emotive, even melancholic, track, “You,” from the siblings’ new EP, Unreality.
Directed by rising talent ORFN, who produced The Rubens’ “Hoops” clip, the Lastlings’ video was shot in multiple locations around the city of Tokyo. According to the band’s publicist, “A minimal and refined approach was used to explore and juxtapose the different textual elements Tokyo had to offer, with the choreography element incorporated to pay homage to the traditional Japanese Geisha.”
The EP also features the standout track “Wavelength,” and 2015’s “Chills,” which has received over a half million streams on Spotify alone. Lastlings has garnered the attention of the critics and fans in Japan, Australia and now, worldwide.
We hope they’ll now breakout in the U.S. “You” is their debut US-UK single, which you can play in the streaming playlist at the top of the page or via the YouTube video above.
Via Soundcloud:“You” – Lastlings from Unreality Lastlings on Facebook
Jack Lavoie – “I Wonder”
Canadian country rock musician Jack Lavoie grew up in Quebec City listening to music and participating in arts and learning whilebeing raised in a bi-cultural, bilingual family. Today Lavoie is an established, yet DIY, country rock star in Canada.
Last year, his single, “I Am Sorry,” became a crowd favorite, blew up on Canadian radio and has receive nearly 180,000 plays on YouTube alone.
Lavoie and his band released their third album, Out of The Box, in April, featuring the standout single, “I Wonder.” The catchy melodies and sing-along quality of the song, as well as it’s decidedly less modern country rock feel, make it a little something different for fans, not to mention the live and post-live film shooting and editing with a group of friends at the studio. The video has already received over 300,000 views in the past four months.
Growing up in a creative and diverse environment was the perfect incubator for Lavoie, so it is no surprise that he began writing, composing and performing his own songs as a teen. It was not long before Lavoie was filling venues in his native land and growing a loyal fan base. His accolades also include songwriting awards like an honorary mention in the 2004 John Lennon Songwriting Contest for the song, “Reason,” from his band’s debut album, and a Billboard World Songwriting award.
Versus The Wake is an acoustic duo from Long Island, New York. Their newest video, “Pursuit of Perfection,” is a studio session outtake. The song, which is divided into two parts, features rich acoustic and vocal driven melodies, and does a remarkable job conveying the emotions that come with the ups and downs of any of life’s pursuits, especially that of perfection, which is ultimately unattainable.
What we would say is that VTW’s sound comes off a bit too polished and predictable to be indie, and the whispery vocals are a bit too imitative of so much radio music during the past decade.
Since their bio says that both guys, who wish to remain anonymous, were “born from the rubble and ash in which life’s hardships and obstacles leave one with,” we’d like to hear some of that angst and grit in their music music instead of the safe place they are currently operating from. Another new single, “Soul Search,” is available for viewing.
Ian and The Dream – “The Girl Who Knows Everything”
The Milwaukee band Ian and The Dream craft pop-rock driven songs with heavy melodies and hooks, like the new single, “The Girl Who Knows Everything,” with its decidedly 80’s new wave slant to it.
A second song, which hasn’t been released yet, titled, “The Heat of Her Soul,” reminded me at first of Dr. Hook’s “When You’re In Love With A Beautiful Woman,” but definitely has it’s own flare and appeal. Over the past couple of years, the band has been increasingly been on the radar of indie fans in the western Great Lakes region.
The band is the creation of Ian Ash (songwriter, lead vocals, guitar, keyboards), and also features Matt “Chivo” Chivas on bass and Brian Farvour on drums. In 2014, competing in Bodog’s Battle of the Bands, Ian and The Dream were named ‘Best Milwaukee Band,’ landing them performances in front of larger crowds at venues like the Metro and House of Blues in Chicago.
Ian and The Dream on Soundcloud
Ian and The Dream on Facebook
BestMan – “Worry”
The very 80’s-sounding new single, “Worry,” from the Chicago recording duo BestMan, is the latest new track from the upcoming album Big Sky, set to drop on August 5th.
BestMan founding songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Brian Clouthier and vocalist Jonathan Alvin are the forces behind the new Windy City indie duo.
They are keen at combining sunny, vibrant electro indie pop and new wave to produce glittery melodic synth riffs with driving, industrial-like beats – the essential building blocks and the hallmarks of BestMan’s music – imagine Depeche Mode’s children on prozac.
The duo this Friday evening, July 15th, at Chicago’s Beat Kitchen with the band Step Rockets.
Nashville indie rock band Boomlights formed when brothers Alexander Jones and Derrek Jones, from Delaware, moved to Nashville and eventually began to record reverb-soaked demos on GarageBand with their neighbor, and Atlanta born guitarist, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Tony Compton, and drummer Adam Puff, also from Delaware, who moved to Nashville to join the band.
Over the past year, the band has worked diligently on writing and recording a set of songs from their initial demos. The result is an impressive debut EP.
Tracks like the electric guitar-driven alt. rock ballad, “Visitors,” with Compton’s tortured, soulful vocals, and the more edgy, garage rock cut, “Behave Like Animals,” are some of the standout tracks from the band’s new four-track EP, Forty-One Fifteen Sessions.
“Visitors,” more vocally than instrumentally, is likely to draw some comparisons to Thom Yorke. Not surprisingly, the Jones’ brothers, and their band mates, are Radiohead fans.
“From what I recall we found out we had a great deal of music in common,” Alexander Jones says, “including modern bands like Radiohead, Cold War Kids, the Strokes and Beck, as well as more classic bands like The Rolling Stones, Talking Heads, Pixies, and Television.
“I think we bonded over how wide-ranging our tastes were,” Jones adds, “and a love for catchy melodies and good song structure more than we did over any certain band or one genre.”
The band’s EP, recorded at Nashvile’s Forty-One Fifteen Studio, which served as the inspiration for the EP title, was officially released on June 20th.
This amazing edition of 5 Bands That Rock features a killer collection of rock music from artists and bands from our archives that most of you have probably never heard of until today. And if you have – damn, you’re up on your DIY bands that rock!
In this 10th installment of 5 Bands That Rock:
Welshly Arms – Cleveland, Ohio The Scarlet Son – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania YourEnvy – Dryden, Ontario Sunblaze Lane – Westchester, Pennsylvania Glorious Moonrockets – Ottawa, Ontario
Welshly Arms – Cleveland, Ohio
Hailing from Cleveland, Ohio, blues garage rock band Welshly Arms knows how to rock. Formed in 2012, the band has released a couple of EP that have garnered them attention in their hometown, which appropriately is the location of the world famous Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Their amazing track, “The Touch,” with it’s gritty, attitude-oozing, even somewhat spooky thrust, is irresistible for anyone that loves stomping, kick-ass rock. The song would be perfect on the soundtrack of HBO’s series Vinyl. Come on, Mick and Martin – listen to this track. We’d even be so bold as to say that these guys are a yet-to-be-discovered Black Keys (except with more people).
Band members Sam Getz on guitar and vocals; Jimmy Weaver on bass; Mikey Gould on drums and Brett Lindemann on keys are all competent and accomplished musicians in their own right, which is part of their appeal.
The band members are heavily influenced by artists like The Black Keys, The James Gang, The Ojays, Jimi Hendrix, Alabama Shakes and Howlin’ Wolf.
Combining rhythm and soul, rock and jazz, with lots of blues, the band has knocked out a string of riveting, creative and exciting home brewed guitar rockers over the past few years.
In the summer of 2014, the band’s ripping riffer, “Dirty Work,” was released and used in a promotional video for the band’s hometown baseball team’s (Cleveland Indians) new season. That’s a pretty big deal for a home town band in the city known worldwide for rock and roll.
Bonus MP3: “Run Right Out Of Here“ – Welshly Arms from Welcome
Welshly Arms on Facebook
The Scarlet Son – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
The Scarlet Son band from Pittsburgh is a heavy alt. rock band that began as a solo project for vocalist and guitarist Kris Litman before his friend and bass player Sterling Taylor joined followed by drummer Colin Mcbride and guitarist Dan Winschel.
The first single, “Silence,” is cloaked by a dark and heavy shadow, full of hard driving beats, blazing, buzzsaw guitars, and at times, even slight pop rock elements. There’s no question their sound is partly influenced by the 80’s metal and hard rock bands – just without the teased hair, make-up and tights (and that’s definitely a good). The second track, “Consumed,” is another solid rocker from the band’s self-titled debut.
MP3: “Silence“ – The Scarlet Son from The Scarlet Sun
Well-honed, good ole fashioned rock and roll blues is the signature sound of Dryden, Ontario duo YourEnvy‘s album, Darkside, featuring standout rockers like “Blue Ale,” that harken back to a bygone era when rock ruled the world.
If you know anything about Detroit rock from the 70s and early 80s (Iggy and The Stooges; MC5; Ted Nugent; Alice Cooper, etc.), that’s where YourEnvy has its roots. The track “Dirt Hill Woman II” is a rock radio blast from the past, reminiscent of classic rock bands like KISS, Black Sabbath and Deep Purple with a flare of T. Rex. These guys are tight!
MP3: “Blue Ale“ – YourEnvy from Darkside
Inspired by both American blues and British hard rock, YourEnvy have emerged from deep within the forests of northern Ontario with a twisted saga of battle, romance, and nature. All the instruments are performed by Shawn Sherwood, with vocals from Clint Gottinger. The duo has opened for bands like Black Jack, Dayblind, and Stratovarius, and list their top musical influences, a bit surprisingly (but not really), as Helloween, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Guns N Roses.
Bonus MP3: “Dirt Hill Woman II“ – YourEnvy from Darkside
YourEnvy on Facebook
Sunblaze Lane – Westchester, Pennsylvania
Since 2014, the Westchester, Pennsylvania DIY rock band Sunblaze Lane has released one single at a time, bucking the tradition of a new band dropping either a debut EP or LP. But it doesn’t really matter because smoking songs like “I’m Coming Home” and “All I ever Wanted,” show how talented the band is; great band name by the way.
“It’s easy to avoid sounding like one type of music because our influences are all very different,” says lead guitarist Justin Smith. “Without getting into too much detail, our biggest challenges have to do with alcohol, women, money, and the law. All of us have similar interests, but common problems.”
The other band members, all in their mid-20s, include frontman and guitarist Nick Hopton, drummer John Lamplugh and bassist Addison Scott.
Sunblaze Lane has opened for bands like The Moxy, The Quireboys, Goodman Fiske, Hello Cleveland, and are mainly influenced by Foo Fighters, AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, and Arctic Monkeys.
MP3: “I’m Coming Home“ – Sunblaze Lane from The Way She Goes
Bonus MP3: “All I Ever Wanted“ – Sunblaze Lane from The Way She Goes
From their home base in the Ontario capital of Ottawa, indie rock band The Glorious MoonRockets belt out a gripping trashy, gritty punk rock sound that has rightfully earned them a spot in the Bands That Rock series. Formed in 2011, the band has kept busy with recording and releasing new material as well as touring throughout eastern Canada.
With their garage and psych rock influences, notable 90’s grunge tinges and raw, driving lo-fi power chords notable on the band’s menacing, edgy track, “Down On Their Luck” – a gritty chugging track that is ripe for the soundtrack of a series like Vinyl – and “3 Dollar Dinner,” a blazing rocker. The band members are fans of Motorhead, AC/DC, MC5, and Dictators.
MP3: “Down On Their Luck“ – Glorious MoonRockets from More Other Stuff
Bonus MP3: “3 Dollar Dinner“ – Glorious MoonRockets from More Other Stuff