Monthly Archives For January 2014

MAP – January 2013

, , No Comment

map

MAP – the giant worldly music compilation behemoth we’ve helped chip at for 5 years has arrived again for January. Cool tunes from where your ears wouldn’t usually take you. Argentina and India’s picks are particularly impressive this month. Also, if you haven’t heard our recent MAPCAST wrap-up podcast from Robbie, scoot over to our Soundcloud.

We choose our MAP submissions by the 25th of each month. If you’re an Australian artist and think that the folks from Brazil to Iceland should hear your stuff, submissions are welcome – editors@whothehell.net.

Right-click on the song title to download an mp3, or grab a zip file of the full 27-track compilation through Ge.tt here.

ARGENTINA: Zonaindie
QueridasDrama Bomb

Listen to

Andrés Yeah is the lead guitarist of Mi Nave, an up-and-coming band from Rosario’s independent music scene. Queridas is his solo project, full of songs with melancholy, reverb and shoegaze guitars. Drama Bombo is one of our favorites.

AUSTRALIA: Who The Bloody Hell Are They?
Head CloudsMirror’s Image

Listen to

Head Clouds are a Gold Coast band who have been busy working on their debut LP for more than a year. Mirror’s Image may be the first track we’ve heard from them but it’s definitely no wallflower. Jaykke Maddison is a less erratic version of Wild Beasts’ Hayden Thorpe; there’s hardly room for shirking away with that falsetto. A glorious trumpet crescendo and thoughtful lyricism lights up this track. A band to watch.

BRAZIL: Meio Desligado
BoogarinsLucifernandis

Listen to

Os Mutantes, the psychedelic tropical band from the 60s, is one of the main influences of Boogarins, besides affinities with contemporary artists such as Tame Impala and Of Montreal. Lucifernandis is the opening song of their debut album, As Plantas Que Curam, released in 2013.

CANADA: Quick Before It Melts
TeledromeBoyfriend

Listen to

Calgary, Alberta, best known as the home of an annual Stampede and being firmly rooted in cowboy culture, may be the last place you’d expect a synth-based power-pop-punk outfit to emerge from. But Teledrome is the latest cultural contradiction to come from Cowtown, and perhaps one of its finest. Boyfriend is a sample of the synth-laced solemnity offered up on their soon-to-be-released album.

CHILE: Super 45
Kinetica & MotivadoHoy Quiero

Listen to

Kinetica & Motivado brings together Chilean producers Emiliana Araya and Mario Martinez. Although we have previously highlighted both projects separately, their joint work deserves its own limelight. Mixing Kinetica’s mysterious, nocturnal vocals with Motivado’s tropical beats, their collaboration gives rise to sensual, intelligent electronic music. Their first single, Hoy Quiero, was released on Chilean label Discos Pegaos.

Click below to hear the full playlist.

(more…)

Read Post →

LISTEN: Seagull – ‘Written Word’

, , No Comment

seagull

 

It was raining on the beach yet our Austrian visitors still decided to swim naked. On the drive home, we listened to Seagull’s new album Ocean From Above. Through the car’s air conditioner, I could smell that someone was burning off in the distance. As we crossed over the West Gate, I tried to place Seagull’s sound. There’s a little bit of Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy in there, a little bit of Sleep Decade, of Elliot Smith. As the album progressed I often felt as if I was listening to a darker version of Low; a haunting melody slowly (always slowly!), shifting with that typical Kishore Ryan (Kid Sam, Otouto) minimalist-style drumming.

Yet, Written Word – and the album as a whole strays into ambience much more than it ever does into darkness, or dissonance. Take the vocal track on WW, about two minutes in that cuts and loops over itself after Christopher Bolton mutters: “Soon enough, I’ll be on medication”.  And to say that WW is dark is to discredit the odd bits of humour that surface in Seagull’s lyrics. Bolton pauses as he sings “The end of our connection / came with The Age…. of civilisation”, as if to play on the image of society’s severed connections arriving with the morning paper.

As we reached home, unpacked the esky and the blankets, it struck me that Seagull doesn’t necessarily remind me of a particular band, but a mood. There’s a certain sadness inherent in their sound, in those delicate guitars and sparse melody lines. Yet Seagull don’t offer colossal, cathartic finishes. Rather, their form of sadness hangs around in an anti-climactic, repressed manner. And, as the opening seconds of WW started up, as Bolton’s voice began to waver, the only thing I can think of were naked Austrians running into the water, a long drive home and the smell of burning wood.

 

Listen to Ocean From Above in full here.

Facebook / BUY THE LP

Read Post →

LISTEN: The Zebras – ‘Chase’

, , 1 Comment

The Zebras

If all was right with the world, The Zebras would be a veritable Aussie institution. Instead, Tony Abbott is in the Lodge, the weather is fucking bananas and it’s near impossible to find any information on this band at all. These guys have been around since almost the turn of the century and were regulars on Brisbane’s live circuit before moving to Melbourne in 2007. Their second album, Worry A Lot, was praised by Rolling Stone and the Australian, and over the years they’ve supported bands like The Shins, The Mountain Goats and Lambchop.

The Zebras’ relative obscurity may be to do with the fact they’re named after everyone’s favourite stripey equid. Lord knows the people love their online safari ephemera, so a Google search leads to a lot of videos of hunting scenes. Plus, so far as I’m aware,  they haven’t released anything since the 2008 EP New Ways of Risking Our Lives. Whatever the reason, it’s a crying shame, because The Zebras’ Sarah Records-channelling power pop is damn near perfect.

The band is signed to Lost and Lonesome, the twee-revivalist imprint run by Mark Monnone of The Lucksmiths. With boy-girl harmonies and organ-like synth tones, The Zebra’s ‘Chase’ recalls the bittersweet gems of Rocketship. There are also intimations of fellow analogue obsessives Broadcast and Stereolab, especially in the timbre of Edwina Ewin’s lead vocal. ‘Chase’ features on Lost and Lonesome’s 15th birthday sampler. With charming contributions from The IcypolesThe SubletsCaptain Coach and more, it’s well worth a listen.

 

Facebook

 

Read Post →