Monthly Archives For July 2013

LISTEN: Bad//Dreems – ‘Badlands’ EP

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Adelaide’s Bad//Dreems have come a long way since recording their first demos at the Fish Shop with a bloke going by the charming name of ‘Fester’. Coming from a town that’s sometimes seen as a bit of a cultural backwater, the guys are getting some serious attention in the lead up to the release of their debut EP, Badlands.

The EP was named for the southern capital’s derelict northern suburbs – an area of disused factories, abandoned motor tracks and dried-out grasslands. In songwriter Alex Cameron’s words, it’s ‘the weird murder hamlet’ of his hometown. The songs are about the frustration of feeling out of the metropolitan loop. They deal with ‘isolation, claustrophobia, doomed relationships, bad Sundays, fear of home life, paranoia, dreaming, kicking against the pricks …’.

Badlands opens with the misanthropic ‘Chills’, which was inspired by one of those intense heat waves that only South Australia can produce. ‘Take me away where the sun don’t shine / Give me chills, give me darkness all day / Make me sick, let my soul rot away,’ vocalist Ben Marwe sings. ‘I’m only happy when nobody’s happy’.

‘Chills’ is the first single Bad//Dreems released, back in January 2012. It’s notable for being the only track on the EP that was recorded by Jack Farley during the band’s first Melbourne studio session. Farley’s known for his work with groups like the Twerps and Scott and Charlene’s Wedding, and ‘Chills’ fits right in with bands like these, referencing the sound of Australian and Kiwi music from the late 70s and 80s.

The rest of the songs on Badlands were produced by Woody Annison, a guy the band describes as having ‘the energy of a jack russell and the constitution of an elephant’. These recordings really pack a punch, separating themselves markedly from the lo fi, ‘jangly’ aesthetic so common in the Australian indie scene. The new tone is forceful and jagged. Merwes’ rich, throaty delivery is a cut above earlier takes, sounding as compelling and frayed as a young Paul Westerberg.

We’ve already played you the brilliant ‘Hoping For’; lead single ‘Caroline’ is also a ripper. It opens with rollicking drums, which sticksman Miles Wilson says were inspired by Paul Kelly (Paul Kelly on a high dose of amphetamine, maybe), vicious chords and a fast-paced lick. The chorus is cathartic, releasing what sounds like months or even years of pent-up anger. ‘Home Life’ is a dark number that calls to mind the post-hardcore sound of Lync, and the searing guitar and icy post-punk textures of ‘Tomorrow Mountain’ are a world away from the affable band we used to know. Merwes rasps on the track with an almost frightening disaffection: ‘I am bored / I am lonely / I’m scared / I’m scared’.

Bad//Dreems have got to be one of the best bands Adelaide’s produced in decades (agreeing to pretend, for one pleasant minute, that Barnesy never happened). They’ve got a sound that’s distinctly Australian, but frankly, they’re a mile ahead of the pack.

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Badlands is out through Mirador today. Get it here and here.

These are the launch dates – don’t miss them:

Friday, 26 July – the Gasometer, Melbourne with the Clits, Velcro, the mysterious and shit hot Destiny 3000 and the Angel and Baby Chain

Saturday, 27 July – the Hotel Metropolitan with Summer Flake and the Ocean Party

Saturday, 3 August – Spectrum, Sydney with Drown Under and special guests

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STORYBOARD: I’lls – A Warm Reception

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The last six months have been amongst the best of my time. A home base in Toronto and extensive travels about North America gave me the time and space to work on different projects while consuming Australian music through a more long-form process.

Each flight, cross city train ride, or 7 hour bus ride across great snowy landscapes lent itself to a more reflective consumption of music. In particular, new records from Beaches and Standish/Carlyon demanded my attention. But it was A Warm Reception, the new EP by I’lls that kept swallowing my thoughts.

What follows is a series of camera phone pictures accompanied by direct quotes from the stranger folks I met along the way.

It’s an essay explaining a visual and very personal story of a 6 week road trip circling the East Coast of the USA; driving from the fishing villages in Maine, stopping by haunted mansions in Savannah – to hanging out in dingy New Orleans jazz clubs and tourist-ing the maze of museums in DC. The colour, smell, sound and atmosphere of 5000 miles of the pure American dream…

 

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Track 1: ‘Speak Low’

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“I don’t drink coffee. Or drink that much. I’m not really addicted to anything…except, well, I’m a sex addict. Anyway, so you want to hear a haunted story?”.

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Track 2: ‘Plans Only Drawn’

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“I hear you like the Man From Snowy River? I’m a big fan. I’ve got an 8’ kangaroo whip. I’ll crack it for y’all if you like?”

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Track 3: ‘Outright’

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“I play a Benjamin Franklin glass harmonica for tourists on the freedom trail. I’ve pretty much learnt every national anthem so that if someone asks for the… Mongolian national anthem (she gestures with her fingers) I can play it.”

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Track 4: ‘Sharing’

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“Aren’t you two just a gorgeous couple? And on this lovely sunny day, that’ll be a pretty picture.”

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Track 5: ‘To All The Blurred’

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“Oh, hey… I laid some carpet in Elvis’ house. 6 weeks after he died. Man, that was a long time ago. Hey could you spare some change for a veteran with colon cancer?”

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Track 6: ‘Mine’s Here or My End’s Here or Nineteen’

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“My biggest fear is losing my special lady friend cause that’s what gets me through the night.”

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I’lls Warm Reception EP available through Yes Please here.

Catch them launching the EP tonight at Yes Please’s 2nd Birthday:

July 18 – Melbourne
The Worker’s Club
$12 pre-sale
$15 door

with Fishing
Wintercoats
Guerre
The Townhouses

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INTRODUCING: ESC

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ESC

ESC are a Melbourne four-piece making music in the great Australian tradition of depraved pub rock spliced with post-punk  – a sound conceived in the Old Country by expats like the Birthday Party. Singer Max Sheldrake cites Rowland S Howard as an influence, and there’s definitely a whiff of Crime and the City Solution about ESC.

The band’s latest single, ‘Atomic Shadow’, is both menacing and danceable, with a tight rhythm section and harmonies that lighten Sheldrake’s terse vocal (‘Do you wanna fight? Then come and fight’). Their mate Mick Bell has made them a video, which features the band jamming in silhouette. The blokes all seem to have lost their shirts (hawt), and bassist Bonnie Knight is paying a rad, translucent-bodied guitar that I now fiercely covet.

ESC’s debut EP was recorded, mixed and mastered by Nick Hoare, who’s also worked with Absolute Boys – another forward-thinking local post-punk outfit. The band is launching it at the Tote this Friday. Make sure you get there early, because there are going to be free copies of the EP on the door. Supports will be Strangers From Now On, an amazing bunch of Melbourne musicians led by a little guy with a lot of presence and a great head of hair (we know cos they played our warehouse party last month), and newcomers Yum Yum Cult. Sheldrake told Beat, “I get a bit angry and let it out a lot” during live shows, so perhaps steer clear of the front rows if you’re the nervous type.

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LOOK: Scenic – ‘Shockwave’

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Polite Perth four-piece Scenic have dumped their new track ‘Shockwave’, taken from their forthcoming EP Shockwaves, out in August through Future Classic, with a montage of VHS video complete with sun-drenched babes and random explosions. The track does sound like Miami Horror’s ‘Sometimes’ but that’s hardly a bad thing.

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LISTEN: Holy Holy – ‘Impossible Like You’

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Holy Holy is singer/songwriter Timothy Carroll from Brisbane and guitarist/producer Oscar Dawson from Melbourne. Their record was pieced together in Berlin, as you do, then recorded with Matt Redlich back in Aus. Redlich has knocked out very accomplished sounds with Emma Louise, Hungry Kids of Hungary, and Holy Holy’s current touring buddies The Trouble With Templeton.

‘Impossible Like You’ is easy to like. It’s catchy. Has a great breakdown and a vintage 70’s period sound that doesn’t define the track but rather compliments the vocal and story telling talents of Timothy Carroll. To say that ‘Impossible Like You’ is well constructed would be a gross understatement. This is perfect modern rock and roll for the masses.

Holy Holy are touring with Ainslie Wills:

Sun 11th Aug – Queen Street Mall, Brisbane (daytime show)

Tues 13th of Aug – Black Bear Lodge, Brisbane

Thur 15th Aug – High Tea, Sydney

Fri 16th Aug – News Agency, Sydney

22nd Aug – Workers Club, Melbourne

And supporting The Trouble With Templeton:

Thur 29th Aug – The Spotted Cow, Toowoomba

Fri 30th Aug – The Zoo, Brisbane

 

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SEQUENCE: Naysayer & Gilsun

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                                                                IMG_0051 IMG_0096 IMG_0117                                                                        N&G                                                                                                                                                naysayer & gilsun _ whothehell 2

 

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 Photos by Alan Weedon

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MAP July 2013

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Click the play button icon to listen to individual songs, right-click on the song title to download an mp3, or grab a zip file of the full 29-track compilation through Ge.tt here.

ARGENTINA: Zonaindie
San DimasGeneración Espontánea

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San Dimas is an instrumental indie-rock band from Rosario, one of Argentina’s largest and most cultural cities. Generación Espontánea is one of the best tracks from their latest album, La Música y Las Cosas, and it was also part of a compilation released in 2012 by Planeta X, their label.

AUSTRALIA: Who The Bloody Hell Are They?
KinsAimless

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Originally a solo project for frontman Thom Savage, Kins made the move from Melbourne to Brighton in the UK two years ago and have been working hard at their craft since. Kin’s new track Aimless is just that – it’s both a dreamy saunter and an angular dance. Thom’s distinct voice remains the subtle hero of this track. While this shares the unconvention of Local Natives, Alt-J, perhaps even Dappled Cities at their synth-tuned best, comparisons don’t apply to Kins. One of Australia’s best exports and most underrated bands.

AUSTRIA: Walzerkönig
DAWASome Things Are Different

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Singer John Dawa and the band that formed around him stand for honest and unpretentious folk music. Two voices, a cello, a cajón and an acoustic guitar are all the ingredients they need. Their frequent live performances with a hippie touch (flower garlands on mic stands, that sort of thing) have earned them a constantly growing fanbase. Some Things Are Different is the opener of their full-length debut This Should Work.

BRAZIL: Meio Desligado
Banda UóO Gosto Amargo Do Perfume

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Banda Uó are like a big kitsch joke, a sense of fun that is manifest through their fearless use of pop references with Brazilian technobrega (which can be translated as something like “cheesy techno”). In this song, they use Two Door Cinema Club’s Something Good Can Work as ‘inspiration’ for messing up.

CANADA: Quick Before It Melts
Air Marshal LandingMove With You

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Air Marshal Landing are three friends who make music that sounds greater than the sum of its parts. Together since 2009, they’ve recently put the finishing touches on their first long-player, You Used To Be Me, which is ballsy enough to mix genres and is unapologetic in its catchiness.

CHILE: Super 45
KinéticaHalo

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Emiliana Araya is Kinética and she’s returning this year with II, her second album, this time helped by Milton Mahan and Pablo Muñoz (De Janeiros) in the production side. In addition to her usual electronic beats, Kinética explores pop and soul from an experimental prism, adding new elements to her intimate songs. Halo is a MAP exclusive download and a preview of her new record, which features collaborations from Marcos Meza and Fakuta.

COLOMBIA: El Parlante Amarillo
El OmbligoTrinidadla

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El Ombligo has gone largely unnoticed in the Colombian music scene. So that’s why we want to emphasize this union of many musicians, local and abroad, from Germany to Mexico, under the command of Colombian bass player Santiago Botero. They are doing what they call a new folklore, starting from Andrés Landeros’ cumbia to 60s free jazz. The fascinating Trinidadla is taken from their 2012 album Canción Psicotropica y Jaleo.

DENMARK: All Scandinavian
BodebrixenThe Wave

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Following up on 2012’s acclaimed third full-length, Out Of Options, Bodebrixen aka Andreas Brixen and Aske Bode have released a great first synthpop taste of an as-yet-untitled EP which will be released later this year. The Wave is a summery MAP exclusive download.

(More bands after the jump…)
(more…)

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