Best Rarely Heard Songs of 2010, Vol. 1: Cosmo Black, Porcelain Raft, Fez, ColourMusic

In the cafe, we listen to a lot of indie music from artists and bands that the majority of music-loving people have never heard of. One way to bring more of these rarely heard songs to the ears of more people is by creating the playlist mix series titled Best Rarely Heard Songs of 2010. Our tag line for this mix is: “Some of your favorite music in 2010 is that which you have yet to hear.”

It’s amazing how much spectacular music is ‘out there’ but that would otherwise be forgotten. Like so many of the songs we publish weekly on the main Indie Rock Cafe site, the tracks presented here on our new ‘quickie blog’ are way under rated, and the talented artists who make them often overlooked.

“When Night Becomes The Morn” – Cosmo Black

“Moonwalk” – Porcelain Raft

“The-Mirror” – Back Ted N Ted

 “Nothing You Can Do About It from Essex” – Darren Haymen & The Secondary Moder

“Chemicals” – Fez

“Yes” – Colourmusic

“I Am Your Head” – Elephantom

“Daily-Mirage” – Dream Cop

“Can’t Take It” – Jay Regan

“White Doves” (unreleased) – Young Empires

Artists of the Week: Virginia’s Dream Cop and Brooklyn’s Grandpa Was A Lion

We’ve been listening to a lot of great music that has come to us in dee mail lately, and discovering dozens and dozens of really talented and promising artists in the process (a bunch that we’re still preparing to publish on the site). We picked two artists for this week’s artist of the week instead of the usual one because there’s so many potential artists and bands of the week, month, and so on that it feels stupid, and too conventional, to be restricted to choosing only one artist or band of the week. We couldn’t make up our minds, ok? (hehe, j/k folks).

No, but, seriously each of the two artists featured below are relatively unknown, they are both one-man bands, and their music would fall somewhere in the so-called glo-fil, or chillwave, movement that is clearly one of the most popular sub-genres in 2010, around the world, as evidenced by the success of bands like Animal Collective, Surfer Blood, Wavves, Local Natives, Neon Indian, Washed Out and many others.

The first artist of the week is poised to explode in popularity in coming months if enough of the right people hear his music. Dream Cop is the moniker of 21-year-old student Tommy Davidson. His music delighted our ears from the get-go, and has just gotten better with subsequent listening sessions. Dipped in uplifting Beach Boys‘ -influenced harmonies and mixed with electronica beats, lo-fi instrumentation, spaced out shoegaze elements and layers of voice tracking, Dream Cop’s got down the recipe for synthy, warm, hazy vibes perfect summer lounging on a hot dog day afternoon.

Interestingly, Davidson is friends with one of our favorite new bands of 2010, Blacksburg’s very own Wild Nothing. Trust us, if you haven’t heard their debut LP, you’re really missing out on a spectacular record.  Davidson and the members of Wild Nothing met as students at Virginia Tech University. Now that Wild Nothing have enjoyed moderate success in the indie world in the past six months or so, we think it is time that Dream Cop gets some of the limelight.

Dream Cop’s debut releases, both digital and vinyl have only tentative release dates of late August or early September. “The Output Noise Records digital only release will include two tape/electronic original songs with remixes from Million Young and Outputmessage“, Davidson told IRC. In addition, he will release a separate vinyl-only album with Tough Love Records “including four original tracks”, and three or four remixes from artists still to be determined. Both releases are not yet titled.

“Beach City/Carol I Know” Dream Cop from TBA (2010)

“Marooned”Dream Cop from TBA (2010)

“Daily Mirage”Dream Cop from TBA (2010)

Dream Cop on MySpace

As with Dream Cop, it only took a couple of minutes to realize that Brooklyn one man band Justin D’Onofrio, or Grandpa Was A Lion, is a ‘chillwave’ (or glo-fi) artist that more fans of the popular glo-fi movement should hear.  Again, like a broken record, we’ll repeat our common refrain – some of the best artists we hear, year after year, are those who are rarely heard, barely known, and yet to “break through”. As with most of the under the radar artists and bands we feature on IRC, we think Justin D’Onofrio will naturally get more press and fans in the coming months.

“Flying Birds”Grandpa Was A Lion

“London”Grandpa Was A Lion

“Hello FromThe Farm”Grandpa Was A Lion

Grandpa Was A Lion