ryan egan, “swarm”

ryan egan, “swarm”

Today, New York-based musician Ryan Egan unleashes his latest single – a slow burner titled “Swarm” – unto the world. Compelling in its simplicity, the track is driven into existence by simplistic instrumentals and soft, persistent percussion. As the instrumentals layer in and blossom, Egan asks the existential questions like “Am I close to the edge, or am I stepping out?” and “How does it feel to be free when I let it go?” He recognizes the “dangerous ground” that he’s walking, utilizing lines in his lyrics that add a dimension of mystery and flare to the easy-listening, fun pace of “Swarm”.

Admits Egan of the track:

In many ways, this song is a perfect representation of the sound I’ve been digging for over the years as a composer.  At a certain point, I knew there was a very organic, common ground between my biggest influences from Bjork to Radiohead to D’Angelo.  Of course I don’t think that any one song can capture this sentiment entirely, but hopefully when listening to the various things I write and release, people can start to connect these dots and will find something unique that resonates with them.

“Swarm” is out now. Keep up with Ryan Egan here.

bartees & the strange fruit, “IDK”

bartees & the strange fruit, “IDK”

Just ahead of the release of his new album Magic Boy, Bartees & The Strange Fruit (Bartees Cox) has released a music video for his drop dead gorgeous track “IDK”. Even though we’re not big on acronyms, we are incredibly happy we gave this one a shot. Bartees’ voice is voluptuous almost in its delivery, beautiful and far-reaching in its range. But even without the accompanying guitar, his voice holds its own and essentially drives the entire track, something that brings us back to the beauty and simplicity of utilizing the voice as an instrument. The slow motion, precise movements in the video just really allow you to focus on the bittersweet, heart-driven lyrics as you gaze at the Manhattan skyline behind Bartees.

We love everything about this.

Magic Boy is out December 8th and is available for preorder now. Keep up with Bartees & The Strange Fruit here.

becca krueger, “we all in it”

becca krueger, “we all in it”

Denver-born, NYC-based electro pop musician Becca Krueger recently released her entrancing new single “We All In It”. The first single off her debut EP – expected out in early 2018 -, the song is quite the departure from the covers on which she established her career. But her wherewithal in the industry didn’t just stem from her studies at NYU, it came from years of experience at some of the most incredible venues on the east coast, as well as from the success of her first feature “Ceasefire”.

Becca’s lyric video for “We All In It” just premiered with PopCrush. Set over a dark blue, textured backdrop – something that beautifully resembles the night sky – the lyrics appear in a handwritten font while the patterns on the backdrop change ever-so-slightly. The song itself is tranquil, so the feeling that we are watching cloud formations change feels like the perfect way to translate this song into a visual. Becca’s vocals are low, raspy, ethereal in their delivery, and we know a voice has been developed that will help lead “the wounded hearts” to a serene feeling of camaraderie.


Keep up with Becca here.

stephen rubinosky, “slow hands” {niall horan cover}

stephen rubinosky, “slow hands” {niall horan cover}

Solo musician Stephen Rubinosky might just be starting out with his craft – his debut release is a fun acapella cover of Niall Horan’s behemoth of a soulful pop song “Slow Hands” – but he’s showing he’s got the chops to support a long-lasting career. He recently released the cover as music video depicting several screens of acapella recordings, and it’s absolutely mesmerizing. Working with contrasting colors – white backdrops with blocks of color made of black, red, and gray shirts – the video is simple, but easy to watch, as Rubinosky’s dancing and choreographed movements entice the watcher to dance along. Plus, it lets his new audience really get to know him, as we are exposed to 16 frames of Stephen as he serenades us.

Stephen Rubinosky will be opening for Drake Bell at Club Diesel on December 3rd. Tickets are available now. Keep up with him here.

thor & friends, the subversive nature of kindness

thor & friends, the subversive nature of kindness

Austin-based experimental musical collective Thor & Friends – comprised of Thor Harris (multi-instrumentalist), Peggy Ghorbani (marimba), and Sarah “Goat” Gautier (marimba, vibraphone, xylophone, organ, and more) – released the next chapter in their musical journey – an entrancing 9-track full-length titled The Subversive Nature of Kindness – just this month. Taking us on a musical journey that feels enticingly primal and exotic, Thor & Friends puts its unique blend of talents to the test – and passes with flying colors – to capture an ambiance that isn’t quite describable.

Whether the entirety of the material in this album was created as a source of relief or distraction from feelings of political unrest following the 2016 election – Thor is a very lively activist and often takes to Twitter to discuss politics and controversial topics – there are songs that we know to be directly inspired by recent events, some of which boast titles as obvious as “Standing Rock” and “Resist”. We choose to believe – after enjoying this album uninterrupted, from start to finish – that it does provide some of the peace necessary during this time of social and political unrest. Tracks like “Creepy Carpets” and “Dead Man’s Hand” set the pace with percussion, developing into almost eery soundscapes – the latter slightly more soothing, as though in the presence of death there’s nothing left to fear – before falling into oblivion. Our favorite track on the album just might be “An Escapist Theme”, as there are aspects in the soundscape that make you feel like you’re wandering through a sparsely populated dystopian society, and equally as though you’re adventuring through Neverland with Peter Pan and his Lost Boy cronies. But perhaps that was the intention, as any type of escapism is caused by a stressful situation in which you feel abandoned or alone in some way, driven by the lust for adventure.

In that way, if the experimental themes and confines within which Thor & Friends delivers their art provide existential questions or unsolved mysteries, the trio takes the time to find and provide closure with that thought. The songs themselves are these questions and answers, making the release feel complete in a very real way.

If you haven’t gotten a chance to experience Thor & Friends live, check out their upcoming tour dates. They take the time and make a concerted effort to really speak with their fans, hug and greet newcomers, and make the entire audience feel like they are a part of the show.

Upcoming performances
12/1 Austin, TX , Lemon Lounge w/ Bill Converse
12/8 Rennes, FR, Les Rencontres Trans Musicales, Parc Exposition, Hall 8
12/9 Rennes, FR, Les Champs Libres
Born! Music presents
12/11 Castellón, SP Teatre del Raval – Sons Castelló
12/12 Barcelona, SP Fabra I Coats
12/13 Madrid, ES, Centro Cultural Galileo – Ciuda Distrito
12/14 Lisbon, PT, Galeria Zé Dos Bois
12/15 Vigo, SP, Museo Marco – Sinsalaudio
12/17 Zaragoza, ES, Centro Civico Delicias – Bombo y Platillo

The Subversive Nature of Kindness is available now. Keep up with Thor & Friends here.

hendryx lucas, The World of Captain Beefheart

hendryx lucas, The World of Captain Beefheart

Vocalist Nona Hendryx and guitarist Gary Lucas – delightfully known as Hendryx Lucas – have combined forces to create a tribute worthy of the indelible Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band. A band that achieved cult status after their rise to existence in 1966, Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band was led by the great musical mind of Don Van Vliet and released 13 albums before its retirement. They focused on a blues and jazz, yet somehow always had a punk rock flare and the ability to produce brilliant, poetic lyrics.

Taking a variety of songs from different areas of his extensive catalogue, Hendryx Lucas has somehow seemed to perfectly capture both the expanse of his musical prowess and the simplistic way with which his music could profoundly enhance your environment. And they waste no time, a “start at the top” with “Sun Zoom Spark” – buoyant and entrancing in its delivery, much as its original – adding in a bit of punk flare to differentiate it just enough. They continue through the remaining eleven selected tracks in the same fashion, putting their own unique mark on each song just obvious enough to let you appreciate the individual musicianship of the two incredible artists who are doing us this fine service. What is perhaps the most endearing aspect of this release, however, is how you can begin to see how Hendryx’s funk/soul background actually enhanced her vocal abilities to be able to cover such range as Don Van Vliet. Add in the fact that Van Vliet was a huge inspiration to later generations of punk rock and those musicians are now recreating that same music with a more progressed punk sound, and it almost feels like kismet.

The World of Captain Beefheart is out now via Knitting Factory Records.

tbt: juliette lewis talks artistic past, future deep

tbt: juliette lewis talks artistic past, future deep

**Originally published on Impose in December 2016

We caught up with the highly revered Juliette Lewis on a freezing cold day working from home. There was a strange sense of excitement in the air for about an hour before the phone call, which may or may not be attributed to the holiday season. (Or our immense love for this woman and all of her talents. Could be that.) My nerves had gotten the best of me, as I explained to my father earlier in the day that Lewis recently released her first collection of songs in years – an incredible EP titled Future Deep – and that seeing her perform live this past summer had really increased my faith in her ridiculous amount of talent.

Check out the fun – but all too quick – conversation we had with Juliette below. We’ve included the EP for you to rock out to for the rest of the year and beyond.

How are you today?

I’m pretty good. Just a few more days until Christmas. I’m not sure. When is it? (laughing) Where are you based out of? I’m in Los Angeles right now.

I am actually in Kansas City, Missouri.

Wow, that’s neat.

So we’re snowed in right now. Is it OK out there? Heard it’s been raining.

Oh yeah. It’s raining and it’s freezing per L.A. weather, which is great. (laughing) It’s good. We needed rain so it’s all good.

Absolutely. Alright, let’s dig in! Your career is super expansive and amazing. Everything you touch turns to gold. So we were wondering, what keeps bringing you back to music?

That’s sweet. When I was a kid, I was always involved in music. So when I was a kid – before the art mediums were segregated to the extent that they are now – I took dance and sang in musicals and created characters and did storytelling. Then, I got successful doing one thing, which was mainly actin gin movies. When I turned around 30, I thought, “Holy shit, you’re 30 and you didn’t do that thing you wanted to do.” And that thing was to make music.

For me, it begins and ends with a live show and the live show experience. I always likened The Licks – my first band – to like, when you have a band out of high school. The music was really energy based, I wrote songs specifically to perform live. It’s not until now that I’m really enjoying the process of making the album. I got into the idea of making rock music as a collective, so I worked on this record [Future Deep] with Brad Schultz – who produced half of it and is a songwriter as well as a member of Cage the Elephant – and Isabella Summers – who is in Florence & The Machine, I did a few songs with her. For Future Deep, I wanted to work with people and write songs that I dug.

What keeps me coming back to music – and any art form – is necessity. I was touring for about five years and wasn’t making movies. What brought me back to acting was the thought that I wasn’t done and I still had more to say. In both mediums, I feel like I still have more to say. So it’s about navigation of those two streams – those two currants – and it’s proved challenging but exciting at the same time.

Fair enough! Your live performance – like you said – is crazy. I knew you made music and I had heard it before, but I didn’t get to see you until Riot Fest Denver this year and you KILLED IT. Your Evel Knievel outfit, your presence. What made you decide to go with that?

I don’t know! (laughing) I like showmanship. But at the same time, there’s no other way I can be on stage. I don’t know how to do a sedate show or a whatever show. Every show I do, it’s like my life depends on it. And it’s the people that bring it out in me because I want to move every single set of eyes I see in the crowd.

Music – for me – has been sort of spiritual in the sense that I used music to get over a lot of fears. I used to – believe it or not – have a fear of crowds that was happening when I lost my anonymity at around twenty. I never wanted to go to malls or concerts or any place where there could be crowds. The great irony is I formed a rock band and now there’s no crowd I can’t put myself in front of. I don’t throw myself in every crowd, but mostly it cured me of my fear of people. I like the idea of bringing danger and electricity and unpredictability to a live show experience. It’s an expression to me against the anesthetized, plastic part of our culture that’s been happening, especially with women in the arts where there’s this weird, unspoken way with which we deal with women in the arts.

I also feel like a superhero on stage. And Evel Knievel, he wore a badass suit. So I got one made. (laughing) I was inspired by David Lee Roth and others growing up, and he wore great outfits.

performing at riot fest denver 2016

I wish I could pull it off! You do everything right!

Well thank you, I’m glad you were there!

Very happy I got to experience it. So what do you do to prep for a live performance like that though?

It’s weird because when I started my band, I very much approached it – and I guess acting more and more as I go on – by trying to maintain energy. So before I go on, I stretch and love looking at a venue or a space before it’s filled. Every stage has an electricity or a vibe, which is one of the pleasures of touring. You have all that came before you in that space.

I am inspired a lot by my band this time around. I had a bass player named Juan Alderete (The Mars Volta) and his groove alone would excite me for a show. He’s one of my favorite bass players of all time. I was just really excited to play with the group of people I put together. I always know why I’m doing it. I love people and having them come into a space to form a collective and shed their fears and problems and get into a space where we all unite and celebrate life, love, and music.

One ritual I do have is when I’m putting makeup on my eyes. When I’m doing my eyes in the mirror, there’s a focus and I’m doing vocal warmups while I work on it. I always do my eyes, but everything else I sweat off.

So Future Deep makes you feel like a total badass when you listen to it. Are there any fun anecdotes that you have from creating it?

Each song has a whole life of its own. “Hello Hero” is a song Isabella and I created in London. I met with her, we talked about music. It’s so neat to talk about something, to play a song and to create a beat or melody and watch it all come to life. When Brad and I made all our songs, it was snowing. I went to Nashville and we bunked out at a studio there and it was so great because it was snowing outside so we didn’t want to go outside. We made “Any Way You Want” and “I Know Trouble” – which is very inspired by “I Put A Spell On You”.

A lot of the best songs will sort of write themselves. I usually work with musicians who will play something and it will unlock a whole story that is sitting there within me, or a melody. If you’re connected to your truth, you can then access it.

One time, they took me out to Bowling Green, KY. I basically kidnapped most of the members of Cage the Elephant and made my EP. Drummer Jared Champion, Matt, and then Brad Schultz took me out to a bar in Bowling Green. I have a rule where I don’t accept shots or drinks from strangers, but (laughing) I just missed that rule. It was their southern hospitality. I was wrecked in the studio for two days and they just made fun of me. So that was good, I was like a member of the band for a minute. I passed the test. (laughing)

The whole record was made in a couple weeks. It started because I knew Brad Schultz from ten years ago when we were both touring in London and then I heard a recent record of theirs, and I digged the sound a lot. New rock n’ roll doesn’t have a whole lot that’s carrying the torch of soul and groove in the music, but they do it. They do it right.

Do you have a favorite song from the EP at all?

Definitely. We played most of them live the past year, so I do. These songs live take on a life all their own. Like “Future Deep” takes on this dance tone, and people are super into it. “I Know Trouble” is definitely a favorite as far as just a soul-ripping blues song. I love “Any Way You Want” as an out of the gate rock track. And “Hello Hero” is one of my favorite things I’ve done of all time. It’s dancey with big beats and the grooviest bass line. I love “Hello Hero”.

I will have to say I do everything haphazard because I’m totally independent. Vinyl is coming in two weeks, I’m making all of this myself. There’s a lot of freedom in it. Then there is social media and things like this interview that are fun and very helpful.

Over the years, have you had anything interesting or fun on your rider list?

We have such a basic rider. One, we’re so punk rock and low budget. (laughing) There is NOTHING fun on our rider. We play little rock clubs where you’re lucky if you get half your rider. PLUS I always have a couple vegans in my crew, so we prioritize getting them fed. Especially in Europe. So there’s nothing fun ever. Socks? I’m not vegan, but ginger cookies. I like ginger. Nothing exciting. (laughing)

What would your advice to young girls chasing their dreams around the world be, especially with our current political climate?

My biggest advice is to find your truth. I learned how to sing from jazz music, and I realized imitation isn’t bad as long as you develop who you really are. To imitate Billie Holiday or Ella Fitzgerald – I used to sing like that. Then I got with Linda Perry and she helped me get more courageous. She asked me what I like and what it is I want to say and we just started playing. So I would just tell people to try. There is no perfection. Be willing to make mistakes in your art and keep doing it. Stop it with the pressure.

I think with social media, people like writing and directing their own bits online and putting themselves out there. Perhaps there’s less perfection. But then on the flip side, there are young girls who say, “I can’t take a bad picture.”

I’m really big into doing what you fear. Not in an unhealthy way, but to stand up and speak a poem you wrote that was meaningful to you. Say it in front of people. There are so many inspiring things that come from that and you’ll find that there are other people who hear and feel your truth. You’ll find who you’re meant to speak to and where you’re supposed to be.

Please break the mold and don’t get lost in beauty stereotypes. Nowhere in my art am I thinking about being safe or attractive. My deeper concern is expression and connection. That is the end all be all.

I got the privilege of touring with Chrissie Hynde of The Pretenders and it showed me that with certain artists, I don’t see any age. I don’t see anything but a one of a kind voice and a musical force with the most incredible songs. I got to tour with her and Cat Power f0r a month and it was such a phenomenal experience. Two completely different women and musicians. It was so liberating.

You do amazing things, woman.

Well thanks! I’m just open to opportunities and trying not to overthink. I try to leave it to chance. I don’t always feel prepared, but I’ll go for it and do my best in that moment, where I’m at. This record we just made is nothing I would have been able to write ten years ago. But ten years ago was what I could do at that time.

Do you have any big plans for the holidays?

Yes, I’m going to go to the snow. I grew up in California, the snow is like a miracle of life. “OH MY GOD! THERE’S SNOW!” I just want to be surrounded by it. I love that you’re surrounded by it and can’t drive right now. We’re going to Utah. I’m going with my guy and his kids and my sister and their kids for New Years. I’m really excited to play board games and to be stuck with each other and do things in the snow.

As far as Christmas, I’m just doing my thing with family. Should be relaxing.

Anything else you’d like to add?

Try and be active in the things you believe in and connect with other groups who are also active. Try to protect the vulnerable. That’s the main concern with our political climate is those people who have to be vulnerable by whatever things are about to be laid down. Right now is a very inspiring time. People are finding their voice and coming together. I’m going to that march on Washington for female rights at the end of January. We’re all coming together. It’s amazing.

___

To get your own copy of Future Deep, head over to juliettelewis.com. Keep up with this unicorn of a human on Facebook.

chloe bodur, “glory”

chloe bodur, “glory”

Earlier this week, London-based 19 year old singer/songwriter Chloé Bodur released her debut single, a glowing track by the name of “Glory”. Slowly and steadily, the track unwinds into this incredible, soulful experience, from the robust singing chops of the stand-out up-and-comer, to the smooth intensity of the lyrics. Her vocals have a delicate rasp to them, just enough edge to allow the track to blend equal parts rock, funk, jazz into its peaceful and enticing soundscape.

“Glory” is out now. Keep up with Chloé here.