Tagged By Sydney

LISTEN: Bushwalking – ‘No Enter’

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It’s such a treat to share Australian music every week. And some weeks it really does floor me how much great music comes across my desk. Today I’ll kick off with the excellent release from Bushwalking’s forthcoming LP No Enter. This is the titled track from the group formed by Ela Stiles from Songs with Nisa Venerosa from Fabulous Diamonds and Karl Sculllin from Kes Band. The opening bass line sounds like something My Disco might create if they had vaginas. I don’t mean to be controversial. This sound is pleasantly devoid of the male pounding that typically drives “droning jams over tightly regimented songs”, mess and noise.

It takes a hellova lot of restrain to create this mood. Far more beautiful and enchanting than a Celine Dion record, Bushwalking is music that your church group can get behind. Instantly recognisable for its thick bass, spiralling guitar and stirring vocals. No Enter follows on from First Time released last year and will be out through Chapter music on September 6, as the Americans say.

We’ll preview more from the LP in the coming months.

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INTRODUCING: Castlecomer

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If you’re in the need for a mood lifter, then look no further because Sydney outfit Castlecomer know how to treat your ears. Made up of four cousins and a friend, these guys are more than just your average roving family band that know how to harmonize.

‘Forrest’ is the latest track taken from Castlecomer’s forthcoming EP Lone Survivor. Led by a bouncy melody, this tune brings all of your fondest and wildest travel memories flooding back (sans the gastro, backpacker fornication and the overzealous use of #yolo of course).

It begins with an enchanting five-part harmony intro; half ‘Sun Giant’, half monastery chant. But soon after, the mood hastily shifts and an acoustic rhythm picks up, picks you out of your meditational state and swings you onto an open-roof jeep.

The band’s travels across India are captured on their Go-Pro here; rich in colour, youth and huge smiles. In fact, these guys might just be the reincarnated form of Rusted Root in their video for ‘Send Me On My Way’.

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Castlecomer are gearing up for a national tour. Check them out in your town and experience the feel-goods live.

Thurs, Aug 1 – Oxford Art Factory, Sydney
Thurs, Aug 15 – Beach Hotel, Byron Bay
Fri, Aug 16 – X&Y Bar, Brisbane
Fri, Aug 23 – Worker’s Club, Melbourne
Fri, Aug 30 – Yours & Owls, Wollongong
Sat, Aug 31 – Transit Bar, Canberra
Fri, Sept 6 – Ya-Ya’s, Perth
Sun, Sept 8 – Grace Emily, Adelaide

 

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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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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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INTRODUCING: Alex Cameron

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If you’re about to head out tonight, you should take a listen to the latest offering from Alex Cameron, (otherwise known as the babe from Seekae).

Having been a fan of Seekae since they first came out, I’m forever obliged to take a listen to whatever comes next from this Sydney based trio. The last we heard from the Seekae boys was the stunning ‘Yech‘, a mello, down-tempo jam laced with soul-rnb undercurrents. For some, it seemed as though the band departed from +Dome’s aesthetic into more of the brooding, less abrasive sounds of The Sounds of Trees Falling on People.

And first out of the solo project stables is vocalist/percussionist, Alex Cameron.

It’d be a disservice to not acknowledge the fact that you’d be hearing this track through the lens of Seekae, considering that’s how we’ve come to know Cameron up until this point. But that said, it’s also a disservice to rely solely on Seekae to get Cameron’s latest offering. But you really don’t need to anyway. At points, this track is reminiscent of Twin Shadow circa Forget.

This track seems to inhabit a space which is almost pseudo-80s, with its liberal use of synths. Cameron’s vocals are subdued, creating a character according to his Soundcloud:

“A voice like honey and lyrics that sting…He knows what he’s doing and although he’s nobody’s fool, he is a slave to love.” 

The legacy that Seekae has left over their two albums has done more than enough to hold future solo releases in good stead. It’s now up to Cameron to mark a definitive step away from the band to make it all count.

 

Photograph: Alan Weedon

 

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LISTEN: Jenny Broke The Window

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Jenny Broke The Window

Jenny Broke The Window is definitely one of the more interesting and unconventional band names I’ve come across.

Hailing from the South Coast of NSW, the indie-pop outfit’s new single ‘Ravel’ is feverishly catchy – from the bouncy string sample intro to the track’s anthemic hook, there’s an energy present throughout the entire duration of the song that compels you with giddy desire to skip, dance or do something!

The five-piece have crafted a single that continually shifts and evolves. It’s a mash-up of musical ideas sewn together ever-so-smoothly, while the production on this is slick.

‘Ravel’ is the first of two new songs Jenny Broke The Window has recorded this year with a video also currently in the works. They’ll be launching ‘Ravel’ at The Standard in Sydney on the 23rd of May, with support from The Preatures DJs, Gang Of Youths and Rockets.

In the meantime, highly recommend giving their previous EP Another Summer a spin.

 

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LISTEN: Cherax Destructor

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Cherax Destructor may be the fancy name given to the Australian freshwater yabby, but meet your new favourite (human) Cherax Destructor: singer/producer Patch Hutley.

The Sydney-based musician is pretty much Australia’s answer to Baths. If you’re unfamiliar with Baths’ sound, think atmospheric, squelchy beats with electronic hooks aplenty. Hutley dropped his ‘Objects In Space’ EP in October last year, but it’s his new material that has reeled us in (which you can find scattered across his various music and social media pages).

The adventurous ‘<3’ is jam-packed with fiddly samples and joyful melodies – all chopped up and twisted into one another. His songs generally move from instrumental hip hop to collaged IDM beats and tricks. Although he’s labelled his sound on his Soundcloud page as ‘friendship-hop’, it’s also bang on, as his songs are as warm and cuddly as good friendships generally get. 

It’s not all samples and beats for Hutley though. He’s also branched out a little and released a killer cover of TLC’s ‘No Scrubs’. It’s a stripped back rendition with simple vocals and acoustic guitar, and it’s a charmer.

Catch Cherax Destructor at the Oxford Art Factory in Sydney on Friday 26 April as part of the Lonely Kids Club winter range launch party.

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