LuRose’s Beautifully-Lush R&B Acoustic Pop Debut “Sweet”

The wonderfully mellow R&B acoustic-pop debut song from LuRose is a perfect antidote for the coronavirus isolation blues and these troubled times.

Backed by a warm and captivating instrumental mix, LuRose’s sassy, yet blunt, vocals are perfectly original and authentic. Her voice soars above the warm tropical acoustic guitar notes, booming bass, hard-hitting beats, and saccharine synths.

While we all may not be able to get too close at the moment, this song is nicely-suited for a late-night romantic dance.

luroseThe 28-year-old musician was born and raised in Pittsburgh where her Sicilian-American family had a family-treasured passion for music.

From the time she was a child, LuRose’s parents encouraged her to pursue music. When she was only seven years old, her father bought her a guitar and enrolled her in every local musical opportunity and lesson he could find.

For years, LuRose patiently perfected her unique talent behind-the-scenes – writing, composing, and producing. “Growing up in a city with the least amount of sunlight year-round,” she writes, “the single emphasizes the nostalgia and excitement of brighter days while paralleling the excitement of the start of a brighter season with that of a new season of love.”

Album Review: The Figurants’ Lo-Fi Alt. Rock-Pop L.P., ‘Indoor Words’

indoorwords-thefigurants-postSeattle indie/alt rock band The Figurants have been featured in the past on IRC thanks to the band’s decidedly melodic, lo-fi garage rock sound. Such is the case with the lead-off track, “Magic Magazines,” on the band’s new album, Indoor Words.

Fuzzy, jangling guitars, muffled vocals, and a big, swinging hook make the track an appropriate opener for an album full of slacker-style, chunky chords, and unperfected production value.

This is the vein of a truly original, home-grown DIY Seattle musician and producer that still have their feet firmly planted in the bygone days of the Emerald City’s alt.rock/grunge heyday.

For clarification purposes, the ‘band’ is actually a studio recording project of singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Matt McClure working online with Pennsylvania producer Erik Sahd. McClure was a member of the band Red Kitchen and Sahd of Chauchat. The two originally met in high school in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

After a 20-plus year hiatus and facilitated by the long-distance recording methods of indie rock band Sparklehorse, McClure and Sahd began to exchange recordings online and have since released three albums.

The duo’s sound, as certainly affirmed on the next track, the buzzing, “Blasha,” is comforting and kicked-back with plenty of heavy, buzzy stoner-rock allures and pop-leaning melodies.

Things mellow out a bit on the next little gem, “Buster.” Sporting a fresh and airy acoustic guitar riff, and a sweet backbeat, McClure’s vocals are so naturally fitting.

His voice has an authentic 90’s-rocker-Pacific-Northwest character to it: a little snarly, detached but at the same time engaged; indifferent yet concerned, and not to be taken too seriously. The latter becomes more apparent the more one listens to The Figurants. In fact, many of the observations within this review cannot possibly be accurately and fully articulated without listening to the album.

Another little wonderfully packaged slacker-rock charmer, “Horrible Horses,” blazes through nicely and burns at just the right temperature and illumination that it seeps into the psyche and demands the listener’s attention. In fact, that is the case for many of The Figurants’ tracks – they make you pay attention and want to hear more. That’s not a compliment that is thrown around lightly.

On “Via Vitamins,” a sugary melodic alt.rock/pop vibe takes over, complete with silly – perhaps irreverent – lyrics and choruses gliding atop fuzzy electric guitars with frequent chord changes and muzzled layers. Yet again, McClure and Sahd take what is arguably demo-y material, and make it work on its own merits.

Some may say they would have been a great band in the 90s and early 2000s thanks to their talent in creating semi-addictive, big hook and melodies lo-fi alt.rock/pop/grunge mixed tracks that make you want to go back and listen to them again.

On the track “Hong Kong,” the band adds in a Byrds-like guitar hook, a swaggering percussion and the match-up of harmonious electric guitars that just have that classic rock vibe that is so wonderfully blended with a backdrop of a 90s grunge rock/alt. rock elements that should be exciting for all fans of sounds of yesterday, but with a today’s freshness. We don’t get to hear much of this music nowadays that is actually really good and will be spun again and again.

In fact, there are so many standout tracks on the album that it makes it hard to pick the true favorites because we may have a new favorite track in a few weeks from now. When something works, it just works. If someone demanded to describe the album in three words, I would have to say: “Listen to it.”

“Serious Business” is interesting since its title purports something different than what is delivered, and which is part of the playfulness that you hear in the band’s tracks as well – they’re not really taking themselves, their music or you the listener very seriously at all – but not in a bad way.

Really it’s altogether endearing. Not your mother’s kind of endearment, unless she is a slack rocker from Tacoma who grew up when the Seattle sound dominated the world for a few years there. Some don’t want to give up that specific sound, and The Figurants are one of the few long-running bands we’ve heard over the years that do just that and do it well.

The album wraps with two short tracks, the needling of the artsy rocker “The Long Ones” and the minute-and-a-half closer, “Tredit.”

What The Figurants is offering on Indoor Words is a set of 10 unrefined, alt. rock-pop tracks with a grunge-like swagger wrapped in lo-fi guitars and melodic hooks.

Austin Townhall recently wrote about The Figurants’ sound: “I kept thinking hard upon how to describe this new tune from The Figurants. How could I explain to you my adoration for this track without using the every day pigeonholing techniques? … it’s just on the edge of arty, but teetering along the line of neediness. It definitely makes sense that the band call Seattle home, as there’s a certain lineage to the Northwest I hear here. Is nerdcore a thing?”

In 2019, we were floored by The Figurants’ track “Uncle Morty” from another solid album, Vicarious Victims. When we first heard “Your Uncle Morty”, we couldn’t help but hear hints of Sonic Youth mixed with Dinosaur Jr. It’s rare to come across such an interesting, if unintentional, combination. And yet the duo has it’s own unique alt rock sound. We dig when artists dare to be different.

 

Radar Love: Trees of Maine’s Captivating “Mud & Snow”

treesofmaine-cover-post2From the small Croatian town of Labin, songwriter/singer and multi-instrumentalist Valdet Luboteni weaves organic sounds, deep lyrics, and fitting vocals.

For an artist of his talent and skill, he should have more exposure. Luboteni, who records as Trees of Maine, creates a rich tapestry of fine textures, moving lyrics and impressive instrumentations as evidenced on his new E.P., Twin Cities.

One of the many standout tracks on the E.P. is the gripping, beautiful song, “Mud & Snow.”

Luboteni said the title is a “reference to everything that had been going on with the band,” citing the main lyric: “we were never made of stars/ we’re mud and snow/ never hawks; we’re always swallows/ far from home.”

Although his former band of 15 years – The Orange Strips – did have a studio, that was lost when the band split up in 2015.

“So I recorded the entire album in my apartment,” he says. “I was working on the album while waiting for the birth of my second child and did most of the recording when he was only months old. I would do all the quiet bits with my headphones on, went to sleep around 3-4 AM, and then off to work in the morning.”

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“I remember the day when I was recording vocals for ‘Mud & Snow’,” he says. “I sat behind the kitchen table, pushing and pulling the stroller with one hand and pressing record with the other hand while singing.

Later, Luboteni received a call from his producer saying: ‘you know, there’s a lot of baby sounds on the recording.’ He replied: “I know. Do your best, please.”

“I am aware of my low visibility,” Luboteni says. “I live far from the capital. I can’t be part of the scene physically, which makes me an outsider.”

“Not many people care about this kind of music, not only in my town but in this entire region. It used to be difficult in the past, now it’s pretty much hopeless.”

Well, we can say for sure that there are millions of people in America that care about this kind of music, especially that which is refined and pure.

Part of what we love about what we do is ‘finding’ or ‘discovering’ new and talented artists that we never heard of before, and who are not being featured anywhere else.

That describes the music of Luboteni’s solo project. By the way, he does not live in Maine but does have family connections there.

For the past few years, the songs that Luboteni has been dropping pack a huge punch, including his recent album releases such as 2019’s, Twin Cities, and his debut, False Dawns.

While he was with The Orange Strips, the band opened for artists like Maximo Park, Atlas Sound, Arcade Fire, and Skunk Anansie. His major musical influences are The Smiths, Bon Iver, Sufjan Stevens, and R.E.M.

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