sam smith | leave your lover | video premiere


 
The video premiere of Sam Smith butterfly-soft track, Leave Your Lover, is a thing of beauty and wistful sadness. Shattering the notion of ‘two is company and threes a crowd’. The Luke Monaghan-directed video displays a triad of lovers overspilling with generous and genuine affection, as they paint an evening in Paris bright red, and in the end a deep shade of blue. And Sam, sings his every word caught in a rosebush of ripping thorns and silken petals, revealing bitter via dolorosa.

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Look for Sam Smith’s debut album, In The Lonely Hour, out June 17th courtesy of Capitol Records. Peace. Continue reading “sam smith | leave your lover | video premiere”

slk | call


 
It was all a dream. Five-months ago SLK dropped the bass heavy track Ride and what a joyous (ride) it was. Three-months ago it was the up lifting tempo track Be and bodies were found strewn across dance floors crush lovingly beneath it’s tidal wave. And now, we are listening yet another monsta’ track from this remarkable talent. Listen to “Call,” and it an equally potent pint of irresistible grooviness. Now, all we want is a full-blown album. Peace. Continue reading “slk | call”

soak | the mother we share | chvrches cover | blud ep


 
Bridie Monds-Watson bares her all out of necessity. And as Soak her songs take on a whisper soft existence. Yet, as beautiful and delicate as these songs are they have the capacity to eviscerate the heart. Soak is also a ray of sunlight breaking through dark clouds, in that the music she pens are both a catharsis for creator and listener. Continue reading “soak | the mother we share | chvrches cover | blud ep”

first aid kit | silver lining


 
First Aid Kit are sisters Johanna & Klara Söderberg. Listening to these two weave harmonies like sloshed whiskey upon the silk throats of aged and mundane ghosts of their futures selves, it is (they) a thing to be experienced, and often. These young women of phenomenal musical means have matured into such understated artists, and their first single release, “Silver Lining,” displays such skill it impresses as well as it satisfies.

The new album, Stay Gold drops June 10th courtesy of Jagadamba Records. Peace. Continue reading “first aid kit | silver lining”

malcanisten | wake ep

The songs of Amsterdam-based folk four-piece Malcanisten harken back to a time of bards, balladeers and rhapsodists utilizing the olden convention of music pre-dating recorded sound. And perhaps that is the bare approach interwoven throughout their recently released Wake EP.

The opening-track, “The Oven” opens pliant and sweet, like tranquil waves foaming up upon a barren stretch of coastline. Great guitar work, and with a melody evoking a measure of equanimity which settles feather soft. The harmonies are sumptuous too, mere soughing winds warm and tranquil with an undertow of peace and sweet dream. And that’s just the first track. “Fitting Coffin” comes off as a folkish affair lining my ears with wood smoke and nostalgia and a hint of Bob Marley.

The song “Clive Wearing” is a darkly beautiful song based on the real life story about a man with no memory. In the hands of Malcanisten the song becomes weighted with human flesh riddled with feeling and tugging emotion.

On the fourth track “Swans” the song is anchored by heavier vocals, perhaps to keep the song earthbound and within earshot. Again, the continuation of sweetness and light unfurls further as Sjaak Kassies and company weave a storyboard tapestry streaked with muted pastels and heartwarming meaning.

The final track “Prophets” exudes a bit of “hedgerow orations,” perhaps even a cautionary tale espousing astute spirituality (a remembrance of the old ways, etc. if you will) over moral frivolity. All in all, these are sobering songs displaying a beautiful darkness, they are bare, and they stare into the void of one’s ear, resonating like cathedral bells. Peace. Continue reading “malcanisten | wake ep”

nervo | sunshine thru rain | ft. duane harden | inspired


 
Nervo has a way of tapping into one’s neurological system and turning it way up. Their new compilation ‘Inspired‘ out on Ministry of Sound comes out on iTunes May 18th.

Nervo’s ‘Inspired‘ piece spans over two mixes, with the first covering ‘Present & Future inspirations‘ and the second revealing ‘Past Inspirations‘, with both fully exploring a comprehensive mix of styles and sounds which have shaped and influenced their style. Continue reading “nervo | sunshine thru rain | ft. duane harden | inspired”

rare monk | ain’t no sunshine | bill withers cover


 
Hailing from Portland, Oregon, the young Turks of Rare Monk have a sonic resilience that’s like everything and nothing you’ve ever heard. While the obvious signposts are there to guide you (Modest Mouse, Sonic Youth, Phoenix), Rare Monk combine their love of both 90s and contemporary Indie Rock with a fevered Pop intensity, before shooting the whole thing into outer space to see what comes back. As frontman Dorian Aites puts it, “Although we draw upon many genres for inspiration, we’ve been creating our own thing based on nothing other than the idea that, ‘these are the songs we wrote cause they sound cool’”. Continue reading “rare monk | ain’t no sunshine | bill withers cover”

how to dress well | repeat pleasure |part 1 of 3 | what is this heart? | trilogy | official video


 
The trend running through each of Tom Krell’s records as ghostly R&B singer-songwriter How To Dress Well so far has been for each one to sound like he’s stepped a little further forward from behind the smoke. With last year’s Total Loss, Krell found a new directness in his vocal-led arrangements and starkly open lyrics, and his upcoming What Is This Heart? looks to be even more soul-baring; “Repeat Pleasure”, the first official single from the album, is a funky handclapping anthem that features full-on falsetto belting as Krell explodes with catharsis on the line “Even broken my heart will go on.”

In the first of a three-part video series, Norwegian director Johannes Greve Muskat and creative director Luke Gilford take a glossy yet earthy approach to bringing Krell’s vision to life in a way that takes it beyond pop music and into the reverent realm of fables. Focussed around the heartbreak of other characters, with Krell himself making spectral cameos, the clips spin a universal and simply told tale of love, loss and risking everything. Peace. Continue reading “how to dress well | repeat pleasure |part 1 of 3 | what is this heart? | trilogy | official video”