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INTRODUCING: Slumberhaze

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New kids on the block, Slumberhaze, have peeped their heads through that fresh Sydney morning fog with their first installment of a three-part EP project, Rhyme, Rhythm & Romance (Part 1).

The new four-track EP is a perfect taste of where the trio are heading with their obscure fusion of hip hop and post-rock, layered further with beautiful harmonies and spacey guitars.

‘Backspace’ dances its way into your head with its catchy vocal hook. The lead vocalist carries an eerie sounding set of wavering pipes, similar to that of Hayden Thorpe of Wild Beasts. Slumberhaze put their own stamp on Wild Beasts’ whimiscal melodies; fragmenting the bliss with bursts of down-tempo and soulful hip hop. Their love of all thing soul pops its head back up in ‘A Lot Of Love’, until it swells into a brutal and guitar-heavy orchestra of sounds. Foraying into darker, more melodic territory, ‘Until The Summer’ is a highlight on this release; beautifully littered and broken up with offcuts of spoken word.

A release for the oddball romantic. Looking forward to Part 2.

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Slumberhaze are playing in Sydney this Saturday 8 June at the Oxford Art Factory. Check it out.

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LISTEN: Oscar Key Sung – ‘It’s Coming’ / ‘Sure Thing’

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Oscar Key Sung 2

 

Oscar Key Sung (Oscar Vincent Slorach-Thorn), R’n’B revivalist and mega babe, has just dropped a couple of new tracks on his Bandcamp – the weighty ‘It’s Coming’ and a cover of Miguel‘s ‘Sure Thing’. He’s been performing them live for a little while now, causing outbreaks of krumping and general frisson all around town. The kid’s sure got a pair of lungs on him: stark and emotive, his version of ‘Sure Thing’ rivals the slick showmanship of the original.

The highlight, however, is definitely Slorach-Thorn’s own creation. Built out of loops from his voluminous collection of cassettes, ‘It’s Coming’ has the glitchy production, playful samples and great ear for melody that we know from his work with Oscar + Martin. This feels like a progression though – it’s darker and sexier than his earlier stuff. Like The Weeknd, Oscar has the uncanny ability to make a love song sound ominous.

 

Catch Oscar’s stellar live show during his residency at Shebeen in Melbourne every Thursday in June. He’s also playing a show tomorrow night at FBi Social, put on by our blog bros from Sound Doc and Circular Key w/ JONES Jnr and the always excellent Tim Fitz.

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INTRODUCING: Gang of Youths

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Gang of Youths

 

Gang of Youths aren’t confused, just curious. People who write about music love it when a band releases two tracks that sound completely disparate from each other. We thrive on that shit. It lets us make stupid comparisons, gives us an excuse to abuse the right to use adjectives like ‘juxtaposing’ and ‘brooding’, and makes the lesser of the two feel reasonably insecure.

‘A Sudden Light’ and ‘Riverland’ sound like they’ve been penned by two different artists. For anyone who wanted an example of what Wim Butler at your birthday or Julian Casablancas singing at your funeral would sound like; here’s your smorgasboard. As soon as that major-minor piano refrain treads in at the start of ‘Riverland’, you get the feeling this is gonna be something special. Actually, anyone who can sit down at a piano and sing in-tune is pretty special (and sadly, too rare these days). It’s definitely a mood setter; a track for closing time, quiet train rides home. I can picture this track sitting nicely in the background of some Sophia Coppola film, the one where the characters are probably dressed in ornate clothing and doing something suitably ironic.

On that note – for the small lapse of stillness that ‘Riverland’ brings, ‘A Sudden Light’ is the punchline here. It’s a loose, belter of an anthem with modulating chorus, overbearing references to children and drugs and enough swarming around harmonic ‘WHOAAAHS” to put the whole Brisbane league of bands out of business. This is a killer track –  and even for GOY’s indecisiveness, you should probably claim this tune early. You know where good pop songs go to die? Derpy Australian dramas, like Offspring more often than not. So while their music programmers go hunting for matching cobalt outfits (see above) and the strange form of ‘censorship’ the band have employed on all their press shots (see above), definitely recommend you cart along to their next show. Nothing wrong with committing to a good hook, right?

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LISTEN: I’lls – ‘Speak Low’

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I'lls

I’lls (pronounced ‘isles’; fingers crossed they’ll change this soon and save us all the confusion) have had a pretty sweet time since their self-released EP, Thread, came out in 2011. They had played just one gig – I’m assuming it was a good one – before being offered a slot at Parklife, and they’ve since opened for acts like Chet Faker and Flume. Sydney label Yes Please picked them up and is about to put out their next EP, A Warm Reception.

‘Speak Low’ is the second single from the upcoming release, and it’s a delight. Grounded by Simon Lam’s gorgeous vocals and the band’s warm, velvety production, the song opens with electronic sputtering, looped keys and a solid, live drum beat. The vocal harmonies build towards a stunning outro that floors me every time. There’s a lovely, arpeggiated guitar in there that’s reminiscent of some Radiohead tracks – that is, the cuddly, less paranoid, less ‘Knives Out’ Radiohead – but let’s not get hung up on that. Just give in, because this is lovely stuff.

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A Warm Reception is due out on 17 June.

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LOVE THY NEIGHBOUR – Surf City

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Love_Thy_Neighbour

 Surf City have been one of my favourite NZ bands since Matt posted their track ‘Icy Lakes’ back in 2010.  UTR’s Courtney Sanders takes us for a rehash of the NZ fuzzrats for this week’s LOVE THY NEIGHBOUR with their punchy new track ‘It’s a Common Life’. This tune is blowing up on the interwebs at the moment, so get on this quick.

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Surf City

You’ve probably heard of Surf City before. Hell, you may have even seen them live circa 2008 when they released their critically-acclaimed self-titled debut EP, which contained the jangly, Dunedin-Sound-evoking classics ‘Mount Kill’, ‘Records of a Flagpole Skater’ and ‘Dickshaker’s Union’. Sure, they’ve received their share of criticism for sounding a little too much like their major influence New Zealand lo-fi outfit The Clean, but they have channelled that band’s sound and nonchalant ‘tude better than anyone else in the business. The guys are a household name in this country (relatively speaking) and have earnt spots on line-ups at overseas festivals (I saw them at both SxSW and headlining a solo show in Los Angeles #sosuccessful).

However, they took the laissez-faire approach to their craft a little far when, on the back of all this hype, they didn’t do very much at all for quite some time. They then released a really-quite-good album called Kudos in 2011 which for the most part went under the radar. We have heard little from them since until this week when – totally out of the blue – they announced that they will release a new full-length album in August and provided us with a taste of it, in single ‘It’s a Common Life’.

New Zealand may have a lot of alternative guitar bands who reference our most famous era of music, but I’m sure a lot of them also look toward Surf City’s earlier work for a riff or two. Have a listen to ‘It’s a Common Life’ and please get as excited as me – and more excited than Surf City themselves – about a new era for this significant band.

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LISTEN: Pikelet – ‘Pressure Cooker’

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Pikelet

(photo: Karl Scullin)

 

Ooooooweeeeeee. It’s time for some new Pikelet everybody.

‘Pressure Cooker’ is a groovin’ jam replete with the characteristically scattered vocals of lead, Evelyn Morris.

What this Melbourne based four piece does well, is provide ‘alt-pop’ that goes completely against the grain. As a band that’s a staple on community radio, Pikelet who makes you think about the construction of music than what’s presented through perceived national tastemakers. Tagged as ‘psych pop’ on their Soundcloud, it seems ‘Pressure Cooker’ does exactly that. From the get go, you’re immersed in those Pikelet synths, furthering that with woozy trip with reverb-laden guitar lines, and ever-subtle arpeggios.

While I think a band like Pikelet transcends labels, it’s tracks like ‘Pressure Cooker’ that really does make you think about Morris’ vocal style. Morris’ reminds me of Dirty Projectors’ Amber Coffman. They both possess a voice that fronts as hollow, almost ghost-like at points – but underpinning all that there’s some subterranean soul that’s waiting to be released, given the right context – just like Coffman on Major Lazer’sGet Free‘.

And it’s only on this track which Morris hints at this, her voice working well within restraint particularly on the refrain “these are our darkest days”. The overall feel here makes you think this track could be a shoe-in for a video clip with projection art, dusty floorboards, and distant looks from the foursome (…maybe).

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Pikelet will launch ‘Pressure Cooker’ at the Tote Hotel, on Friday June 7.

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