Saturday, September 7, 2024

2 Foot Yard - Crisis


Any band with a name that looks like somebody’s email password instantly arouses my suspicions — probably because clunky alphanumerical strings seemingly composed of someones ‘porn’ name and the year they were born were irritatingly prevalent among pop and dance bands of the early 90s. The number 2 was a repeat offender. In 1993 a euro trash rave band called 2 Unlimited held up the airwaves with the hit “No Limits.” Then there were Boys II Men. There was 2Pac.
Perhaps it’s just me, but 2 Foot Yard also has the whiff of a working title, like a loose confederation of Dutch DJs who got together for a couple of albums. But while they may be an ‘outfit’ of sorts, a vehicle for the talents of Marika Hughes (Charming Hostess, Vienna Teng), Shahzad Ismaily (too many to mention) and Carla Kihlstedt, they are no stuffed shirt. To name but a few of Ms. Kihlstedt’s projects: Sleepytime Gorilla Museum (Mr. Bungle with violins), The Book of Knots (responsible for a compilation of scary portraits of rotten industrial towns), and a song cycle for the stage based around Jorge Luis Borges’ Book of Imaginary Beings. The last is particularly impressive when you consider the influence of another famous musical menagerie: Saint-SaĆ«ns’ Carnival of the Animals - which, while being the source of as many radio friendly soundbites as any pop album, is experimental, cacophonous in parts.
If I may extend the analogy to 2 Foot Yard themselves, the eponymous “Borrowed Arms” is the radio friendly equivalent of the Carnival’s ‘swan’ (song), a perfect gem of chamber pop that would be unpleasant only to someone in a really bad mood. On the other hand the album throws up tracks like “Crisis”, which is shouty and abrasive. Overall though, Borrowed Arms and 2 Foot Yard are an experiment within the parameters of pop. Carla Kihlstedt implied as much in an interview after a gig in Amsterdam (the home of techno I might add). The band’s tiny 2 Foot Yard was that limited space in which the artists were hanging their work, leaning their stepladders, paint cans and so on. Although the sound was lush, the band members were few, and the arrangements were for songs of pop length, which could be reproduced easily on stage without the whole of Polyphonic Spree in tow.
The series of live videos with interviews are perhaps a more accurate glimpse of what the band can do than the album itself. But this is not to say Borrowed Arms isn’t great, it’s just so clearly created on the white paper that neutral ‘space’ estate agents and gallery attendants are so fond of pointing their clipboards at. It’s as if the record can never be more than a brochure for the live performance. Perhaps chamber pop is faulty anyway in it’s attempt marry the incompatible — a bold sketch of a pop song and something consummately ‘finished’. Is it a fundamentally pointless exercise? Or is the genre like classical music — put down on record for convenience, while it’s taken for granted that most music buffs would rather go to their church, the concert hall.
Despite all that’s been said though, 2 Foot Yard do transmit a rough and readiness, and even a kind of wartime bawdiness (see the provocative “Red-rag & Pink-flag”, based on E. E. Cummings’ poem) which appears to be born out of a life lived permanently on the road. Carla Kihlstedt is described on her myspace as “a wayward waif wandering the wide world, happily lost somewhere between the music conservatory, the arboretum, and the road house.” This excursion into fancy has the potential to be irritating, but it’s self deprecating enough to be endearing. In the Dutch interview, Carla seemed rueful about her tendency to end up with a band flanking her. I imagine her idea of normality must be pretty strange, but her talk of popping up in various projects as if she were a circus brat continually — but unsuccessfully trying to strike out on her own — seemed to make deliberate light of her prolific achievements. Anyway, what came across clearly was that the work of creating and recording music was more important to the members of 2 Foot Yard than where it originated.
Indeed there’s a touch of old fashioned socialism about the band, exemplified in the way they come on stage wearing workaday gear. Musicians, after all, must sweat a lot under those lights. 2 Foot Yard are old hands, ‘comrades’ skillful enough to make the best of any limitations imposed on them, even by themselves. They have the reliability of classically trained musicians and the rakishness of rock entertainers. Their accomplished album may not represent the full warmth of their live sound, but its influences (Klezmer and European Jazz) and its concerns (the restless heart, the cabaret bar, the sadness of settled life) record their trek through music, glamorous or world weary, and sometimes a bit of both.  From: https://www.tinymixtapes.com/delorean/2-foot-yard-borrowed-arms


Drug Couple - 2027


Brooklyn indie duo Drug Couple is a band marked by a series of contradictory facets. The band’s members, Miles and Becca (themselves a couple) are willing to talk about their past projects, while hesitant to delve into the specific details (or even provide their surnames). Becca is ever the optimist, while Miles is a pessimist to his core. Most notably, their forthcoming EP seeks to reconcile the process of finding love and romantic companionship in a time when the End seems increasingly Nigh.
After sitting down with Miles and Becca in their Bed-Stuy apartment last weekend, however, I came to understand that these opposing parts represent a sort of harmony, an element key to understanding the band’s sound and ethos. Miles and Becca find that their respective personalities provide a necessary balance to their home life, and are able to recognize their music and relationship as something beautiful that exists despite our increasingly precarious political climate. Following the release of their debut EP Little Hits, I interviewed Drug Couple to better understand their relationship, their politics, and what we can expect from their forthcoming sophomore effort, Choose Your Own Apocalypse.
 
Q: So the two of you met at Brooklyn recording studio The CRC, where Miles was working as a producer for Becca’s old band. Can you tell me about that meeting, and how your relationship progressed. Did the music come before your relationship, or vice-versa?

A: Miles: The music definitely came before the relationship. Becca was in a band with my old next-door neighbor. I hadn’t seen him for years, and one day he showed up at the studio and played some demos, and I was like, “Oh, I see what you’re trying to do here.” But what he was playing me didn’t have Becca on it at all.

Becca: The demos had a previous lead singer on them. So we came in to the CRC, did some demos—

Miles: And I was like, “Oh my god, this is really cool, I’m really into it.” And what I was into is what she was bringing to the band. So part of us working together was convincing Becca she was a songwriter.

Becca: I had been writing songs for a long time, but I didn’t flex that muscle a ton, and didn’t really think of myself in those terms. And Miles really encouraged me to occupy that space. As soon as we started working together, we really clicked on a creative level. From early on it was clear that we had this really great collaborative relationship.

Miles: Not that long after, we broke for Thanksgiving, I stayed in New York and started mixing those demos while Becca went up to Vermont, and, y’know, I started forming a crush on this young woman who was writing these really compelling songs. So we had a production meeting and at some point I believe I said I had an “art crush” on you.

Becca: At that point, we realized we work so well together, we have a great collaboration, we should start a project ourselves. That was four years ago.

Miles: Since then we recorded a 16-song album, which we cut down into two EPs.

Q: Regarding the new EP, Little Hits, you described your music as “an attempt to showcase a dialogue between genders, as opposed to one side soliloquies.” Could you speak more to this point?

A: Miles: When we first started thinking about the idea, I was tired of bands comprised of men, specifically white men. I just no longer find it compelling, and I don’t know that it’s relevant. I also spent a lot of time as a solo artist, which is this incredibly insular, navel-gazing, staring-in-the-mirror thing. Which can be inspiring, but I feel like the end result of that is hating everything you make, because there’s too much of yourself in it.

Becca: I think doing things where it’s just you, it’s really easy to enter into this space where you either think, “Oh, this is really great” or, “Oh, is this terrible?” And I don’t feel that way when we write stuff because it’s not just me that’s reflected there, it’s you too — and I love you.

Miles: It creates this back and forth that feels more interesting, that has more staying power. I like it four years later, in a way that I don’t always like the things that I was thinking four years ago. And it’s richer.

Becca: And from a practical perspective, there’s two of us, and we have our own distinct perspectives, and sharing that space with Miles really elevates what I can do. It makes me better, I think it makes us both better.

Q: The sense I get is that this dynamic between the two of you amplifies your joint output.

A: Miles: Really, if I start a song on my own or Becca starts a song on her own and we run it through our filter by playing together, it comes out as a Drug Couple song.

Q: Besides the music, there’s another component of your relationship, in both the title of the EP, as well as the name of the band, which is drugs.

A: Becca: What!

Q: Yes, what a shocker. From your press release, you’ve indicated a mutual appreciation of LSD, especially given the cover art for the Little Hits EP is sheets of acid—

A: Miles: Well I will just say we think the name speaks for itself. I will say when we came up with the name it was very early on in the Trump era, before he was elected when Jeff Sessions was a person who was hanging around with him. We’re part of a culture that felt a little defiant about that. Like, yeah, y’know, we smoke a lot of pot. We’ll leave it at that.

Q: You cite your primary influences as Yo La Tengo, and Dinosaur Jr. Were there any non-musical influences or cultural touchstones that informed this project?

A: Miles: With naming the band Drug Couple, we’ve got a little bit of revolutionary in us. We have fairly radical politics; I’m very heavily invested in politics.

Becca: Miles still talks about running for office, and I feel like that’s something that could happen down the line. Drug Couple 2020.

Q: You’ve indicated a desire to release your music “before the impending armageddon,” and your new EP is billed on the premise of “finding someone special to share the end times with.” How does that shared existential dread affect your music?

A: Becca: For our second EP, Choose Your Own Apocalypse, we had started playing around with the idea of finding love in the time of the apocalypse right around the time that we had started writing together, which was around the 2016 election. So we have a lot of unreleased songs that kind of play on that theme and that concept. I think it just felt like a natural theme — it didn’t feel we were going to “explore” it, it was like, “Oh, everything’s going to shit.”

Miles: It’s like, “Oh, the climate’s getting worse and Donald Trump is gonna be president, so we’re not gonna make it, I guess.”

Becca: But amidst all that horrible shit, we met, and started doing something beautiful.

Miles: And at the same time, things have not necessarily gotten better; they seem to be getting worse. But we’re planning to get married this summer. I would like to start a family —the EP kind of deals with, how do you square that with the fact that, as a species, we’re kind of tying a bow on our own existence?

Q: That’s interesting, because It doesn’t seem like there’s a lot of pessimism in your music.

A: Becca: Well, I wouldn’t say that we are pessimistic.

Miles: Which is funny, because I am definitely a pessimist. Which is the difference between the two of us, because I’m never disappointed—

Becca: And I’m an optimist, which means I’m always disappointed. And we meet somewhere in the middle.

Q:  One of my favorite tracks on Little Hits is “Be In 2,” because the narrative splits the difference between talking about a relationship and slightly cryptic, almost metaphysical phrases. What informed the writing of that song?

A: Becca: For that particular song, we sat down in my barn in Vermont and wrote it together, in that room, start to finish. We’re writing that way more and more. The actual content of the song was about the impossible things you ask someone that you’re in a relationship to do, that you ask of each other.

Miles: “Be In 2” is essentially about asking someone to be in two places. There’s an impossible aspect of love. It’s so grandiose, but we’re small people, and we’re flawed. And when you fall in love with someone, it’s this great thing that you’re asking someone to carry for you, and it’s preposterous. It’s an insane thing.

From: https://bedfordandbowery.com/2019/12/dont-be-surprised-if-musical-and-romantic-duo-drug-couple-runs-for-office-%EF%BB%BF/

Maryam Saleh - Ayez Awsal


In what could be described as a fresh and ingenious collaboration, Egyptian singer Maryam Saleh and Lebanese composer Zeid Hamdan came together to present Halawella, an album comprising of Arabic satirical lyrics and state-of-the-art electronic music. Initially meeting in 2010, Saleh and Hamdan swiftly began their collaboration, and experimented with this fusion of Arabic lyrics and electronic beats. Together, they performed an array of concerts inside the Arab world and abroad. Halawella is thus a continued collaboration between both musicians, albeit one that witnesses further experimentation. The album comprises of 10 songs, six of which are reinterpretations of Sheikh Imam and Ahmed Fouad Negm’s songs: Valerie Giscar D Estaing, Nixon Baba, Ghaba, Youyou, Halawella and Chal El Hawa. As for the other four songs, Watan El Akk, Eslahat, Emchi Ala Rimchi, Islahat, and Walaa Soda, they were written by Mido Zoheir, Omar Mostafa, Amr Qenawi, and Maryam Saleh. Saleh is also the music composer. The album is steeped in dark humor and rebelliousness and tugs at politics and life.
Maryam, a theatre artist herself, manifests her performance skills in Halawella, her second album after her debut release Mesh Baghanny (2012). She maintains her rejection of traditional music- her voice intensifies the black comedy characteristic of the album’s songs. Saleh chops the lyrics into little snippets, exhibiting a remarkable ability to play with her voice. Maryam began her music career with participations in Baraka band, which reinterpreted Sheikh Imam’s songs with rock music, and Gawaz Safar band which she founded herself, before commencing her solo career. Her repertoire also includes acting roles in films Ein Shams, Bel Alwan El Tabeeeya and Farah Layla TV series. Her theatre experience includes collaborations with El-Warsha and Tamy troupes as well as Choir Project. Furthermore, her repertoire is steeped in experimentation, with collaborations with Palestinian musician Tamer Abu Ghazaleh and Egyptian musician Maurice Louca. Halawella was produced by Mostakell, a music label for indie Arabic music operating under Eka3 platform. Palestinian musician Tamer Abu Ghazaleh, Eka3’s founder, explains that the platform “has become an incubator and accelerator for business models that helps to fill the gaps in the Arabic music market."
Besides Mostakell, Eka3's portfolio also includes “Almoharek (Live booking agency of indie Arabic music), Awyav (Arabic Music Content Agency), and Ma3azef.com (Music Magazine). The album was produced jointly with both Saleh and Hamdan. The production took a long time “because -- as usual -- we work with low budgets, and each of the artists lives in a different country, which made us work on the production bit by bit whenever the circumstances allow us,” Abu Ghazaleh asserts. Upon the album’s release, the production team opted to spread the album’s recorded music, rather than focus on live shows. So far, they have focused on the Arab region release, but they are scheduled to plan Europe's release, as well as an album tour by early 2016. Halawella was presented at Rich Mix London, UK on 23 October, and at BO18, Beirut, Lebanon on 12 November. Ahram Online spoke to Saleh about Halawella, her music collaborations, singing style and upcoming plans.

Ahram Online (AO): Is Halawella a development of your relationship with Imam’s music?

Maryam Saleh (MS): Certainly. Halawella witnesses a development in my own relationship with Sheikh Imam's repertoire. I also found in Zeid's music the right sound that we could present Sheikh Imam's music through, and thus introduce his music to the young generation that would not have heard this music otherwise.

AO: Tell us more about your specific collaboration with electro-music producer Zeid Hamdan.

MS: I've been a fan of Hamdan's music ever since he was performing with and composing music for Soap Kills, and Kazamada bands. Besides his incredible music, working with Hamdan is in and of itself an enjoyable experience. He is always excited about music, which in turn inspires me to fetch new songs that we can work on together.

AO: Tell us more about Halawella.

MS: The album comprises of six of Sheikh Imam's songs, and the rest are my own musical compositions, which include Watan El Akk, Eslahat, Emchi Ala Rimchi, Walaa Soda and Islahat. I also wrote the lyrics for Emchi Ala Rimchi, and took part in writing Walaa Soda, alongside Amr Mostafa and Amr Qenawi. As for Watan El Akk and Islahat, they were written by poet Mido Zoheir. What I like the most about Zoheir's lyrics is how he sees things. He reminds me of Samuel Beckett’s plays, a kind of art which I really love. And I’ve been interested in these styles of lyrics and music state since I was in Baraka band (2008) and also in my debut album Mesh Baghanny (2012).

AO: In Halawella, as elsewhere, you perform, rather than just sing. Is this style of singing influenced by your experience in theatre?

MS: I've worked with my father, director, writer and theatre critic Saleh Saad in street theatre since age nine. I specialised in the character of the popular clown. Most of our work together was based on the idea of folk arts in Egyptian society, and which in turn really influenced my musical career. I was also influenced by Sheikh Imam and others. All together, these influences contributed to the way I sing now.

AO: In Halawella, we see you as a performer, singer, songwriter and composer. How challenging was this project for you?

MS: I love each of Halawella's songs, and the making of each song constituted a unique experience of its own. This, I believe, explains why I didn't find the idea of taking on many and diverse responsibilities hectic or challenging, especially that the project took so long to finish. I'd say that the biggest challenge we encountered was that Zeid and I live in different countries, which negatively affected our ability to rehearse together, to think collaboratively, and to also work on new songs. But I’d say that our excitement towards this collaboration always overcame these challenges.

AO: This is your second collaboration with Mostakell, after your debut album Mesh Baghanny. How important is this music label to you?

MS: Mostakell helped me launch my solo career, after I had always performed as part of bands. I had feared the idea of working on my own, but I nonetheless grasped the importance of taking such step through my work with Mostakell.

AO: How do you assess this current moment in your musical career? What has changed? And what are your upcoming steps?

MS: The main change I encountered is that music has become a career, and I now devote all my time to singing and music, a decision which I wasn't so conscious of, and which is a constant source of fear. I fear losing the playful spirit I approach music with, and the ability to enjoy the music process as a result. To deal with that fear, I like to involve myself in many projects, and to constantly experiment with different people. My future plans include a collaboration with musicians Tamer Abu Ghazaleh and Maurice Louca. The project includes research and experimentation with the new music in our society, from maharaganat, to shaabi music, to experimental music. Each of us will leave their own imprint in this project. All three of us are merged together in an end result, which seems unusual yet exciting nonetheless. The project is scheduled to come out by the summer of 2016.

From: https://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/5/33/168776/Arts--Culture/Music/INTERVIEW-Egyptian-singer-Maryam-Saleh-on-her-new-.aspx

Dream The Electric Sleep - Heretics


An individual’s musical taste is almost as fluidic as music itself, it’s a constantly growing and changing thing. It adapts to the life of the individual, the soundtrack changing as the movie evolves. But we don’t lose what we had, though we may not listen to it for months or years at a time, and anything that comes to us anew with elements of music of yesteryear will usually appeal to us rather quickly. My own musical taste started with my older brothers cranking Yes when I was exceptionally young, and that set some pretty high standards for anyone who followed. Of course not every band I listen to has to have the exceptional musical talents of the prog giants, but when a band comes along that does have those elements, or that of Rush, IQ, Dream Theater, Marillion, Pink Floyd, or any of my other favorites, they usually will stand a good chance of getting some of my hard earned money. Now when a band list a good four or five of my favorites as influences, they surely will get some cash out of me.
Which brings us to Kentucky based Dream the Electric Sleep. Not only is their name a nod to the great novel that inspired Blade Runner, but they list the likes of Pink Floyd, Rush, Genesis, and Peter Gabriel as influences, all of whom hold very valuable shelf space in my collection. Formed in late 2009 in Lexington, Kentucky, Dream the Electric Sleep consists of Matt Page (guitars, vocals, and keyboards), Joey Walters (drums, vocals), Andrew Hibpshman (guitars) and Chris Tackett (bass). The next few years were committed to recording and producing their debut album, Lost and Gone Forever, which went on to get enough acclaim to get them an invite to the Rites of Spring Festival (RoSfest), one of the premiere prog festivals in the USA. Upon returning, they diligently worked to release their second album, Heretics, in the beginning of 2014. I went into this album looking for the influences of bands of my past, and came out with an intimate knowledge of a solid new force in the progressive rock field, Dream the Electric Sleep.
Heretics is a conceptual album, and as is proper form in the prog arena, the band opens with a primarily instrumental number, managing to sneak in some lyrical elements towards the end. Also the title track, Heretics, the opener displays one of the things the band is best at, busting out crunching melodic chords. The sense of epic that is a prerequisite for me in any concept album is immediately noticeable, as the drums crash around the rest of the band dropping the resounding notes, serving notice that we are in for some juicy good music. The song then goes into a soft strumming and the first vocals are distorted, an announcer introducing the theme so to speak. A subtle element of hand claps and dragged out bass notes is built upon by the guitars, keys, and choral vocals, making altogether for a superb opening number, and also setting up the second track, Elizabeth, which is nothing short of stunning. With eleven tracks amassing to over seventy minutes, the band gives themselves a ton of room to play around, and with their skills on their respective instruments and collectively as songwriters, they make the most of every one of them. Elizabeth opens with a structured form, we finally hear the non distorted vocals, and they are solid. No uber ranges are hit here, and when he does stretch it, it’s noticeable, but he is very clean otherwise. The band does a quick slowing down before breaking into a four minute instrumental that lets us know once and for all that we are in for a show. Using all the best tricks in prog, clever time changes and mix-ups, alternating leads, and escalating intensities, they bring the house down, just in time for nine more songs.  From: https://ladyobscure.com/http-www-ladyobscure-com-post_typealbumsp7376/

Lula Wiles - Bad Guy


What will we do? For Lula Wiles, the trio made up of Isa Burke, Eleanor Buckland, and Mali Obomsawin, the question is central to the creation of their music—and it’s the title of their new album. “We wanted to make an album that reflected, in a current way, what we are all staying up late thinking about and talking about over drinks at the dinner table,” says Obomsawin. “What is everyone worried about, confiding in their friends about, losing sleep about?” Anchoring the band’s sharp, provocative songcraft is a mastery of folk music, and a willingness to subvert its hallowed conventions.
They infuse their songs with distinctly modern sounds: pop hooks, distorted electric guitars, and dissonant multi-layered vocals, all employed in the service of songs that reclaim folk music in their own voice. The musicians take turns in different roles––Burke and Buckland on guitar and fiddle, Obomsawin on bass, all three singing and writing—but no matter who’s playing what, they operate in close tandem. All three members grew up in small-town Maine, and the band came of age in Boston’s lively roots scene. Since then, they have toured internationally, winning fans at the Newport Folk Festival and the Philadelphia Folk Festival, garnering acclaim from NPR Music and a Boston Music Awards nomination, and sharing stages with the likes of Aoife O’Donovan, the Wood Brothers, and Tim O’Brien. Lula Wiles exists in the tense space where tradition and revolution meet, from which their harmonies rise into the air to create new American music.  From: https://purplefiddle.com/bands/lula-wiles/


 

Cheeto's Magazine - Nova America


Oh my prog! Wassup with band names these days? When I see the moniker of the Spanish band Cheeto's Magazine from the greater Barcelona area (El Prat de Llobregat to be exact), I can't help but think of the artificially flavored junk food snack that used to have that cheesy cheetah hocking the "cheese that goes crunch!" There were the soft fluffy Cheetos as well but personally I never cared for those. Anyway, this crazy title along with a cute cartoon image of a chicken in a pot of water on the album cover really stood out amongst the heavily crowded halls of modern prog. I mean if a band can name itself Cheeto's Magazine, can we soon expect a Dorito's Diary? A Frito's Fannypack? A Ruffle's Razorblade or even a Pringle's Pantyhose? I dunno and I digress before I even begin this review. I'm such an American having eaten all this crap in my youth and I have no idea if they even sell this garbage in Spain! But despite the funky band name, this is some seriously splendiferous prog behind the super silly packaging!
The origins of Cheeto's Magazine (and I have no idea where the name came from) dates back to the summer of 2005 when founders Esteban Navarro (lead vocals, keyboards) and Manel Orella (guitars) set out to do some comedy shows with some music added for good measure but the whole project got expanded with the inclusion of DĆ­dac GarcĆ­a (bass) and Joan MontanĆ© (drums) which turned into a band that steered the quartet into the realms of prog rock. Having a little performance history under their belt the band spent some time conjuring up some proggy music mojo and performed the first gig in 2007 and was a smashing hit as the band had already hit upon it’s own quirky delivery system mostly thanks to Esteban's eccentric silly demeanor that found the band adding all the humor and childish antics to their unique style of symphonic prog. Zappa and Canterbury stalwarts would approve!
By 2009 the band had recorded some of the best songs and released their first EP titled "All The Chickens In The Bowl" which would be performed for a few more years and ultimately led to this debut full-length release Boiling Fowls in 2014. Somewhere along the line drummer MontanƩ was replaced by Rafa Weber and Matias Lizana joined the cast as primary keyboardist. While the band debuted as a quintet, Boiling Fowls also features a few guest vocalists as well as a couple sax performances by Sergi Felipe (on "Nova America" and "Naughty Boy.") The final product presents a shiny exuberant production job based in a modern version of symphonic prog that takes a few cues from bands like Spock's Beard and other Neil Morse led band's like Transatlantic as well as the dreamy lengthy prog workouts found in other bands like Echolyn or the Flower Kings. Boiling Fowls delivers a lengthy series of prog workouts and clocks in at over 64 minutes which is usually a red flag for, yeah you guessed it - filler! But not the case with these Spaniards. This is an amazing display of twists and turns that keep me enthralled for the entirety.
The opening track "Nova America" alone takes up almost 26 minutes of sonic real estate but showcases the band's ability to weave tight knit melodies with schizoid freak outs, choppy time signature rich instrumental gymnastics and best of all delivered with a quirky sense of humor. Belying their geographical origins, Cheeto's Magazine gives no indication that they emerge from one of the Latinate language speaking regions of Europe and rather sound like they originate from some Anglo-dominant sector of the world. Within the album's nine tracks you can hear not only the modern sounds of symphonic prog but also find some Beatles inspired melodies and harmonies, Gentle Giant prog quirkiness, Kansas symphonic prowess as well as the Zappa fueled silliness not to mention interesting segments of Eno inspired electronica as well as heavy guitar riffing that borders on the neo-prog sounds of bands like IQ or Arena. The album comes off as quite ambitious and obviously a labor of love and not one forced upon the team at hand because all is displayed in a graceful manner with the passion shining through every cadence.
Cheeto's Magazine scores on their debut Boiling Fowls which finds inspiration in the entire history of the melodic side of prog and pulls it off with a stylistic flair all their own. Perhaps the only weak track is the closing "Driver French" which sounds eschews the prog scene altogether and opts for a danceable electro-pop style which is found in small doses throughout the album but integrated quite fashionably whereas the ending track goes nowhere else. While not quite the perfect masterpiece of prog, Cheeto's Magazine found a unique way to forge their visionary style into the prog world without the all too often derivative confinements that don't allow the experimental touches to shine. Many newer symphonic prog bands suffer from this phenomena but Boiling Fowls just comes off as taking an unexpected journey down a road of prog that I didn't know existed and once on it, I can't help but get lost as the non-linear stroll pleasantly twists and turns into unexpected and unforeseen scenery that wasn't in the tourist's brochures.  From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=8923 

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Joan Osborne - Hard Rock Live, Las Vegas 1995 / House Of Blues 1995


 Joan Osborne - Hard Rock Live, Las Vegas 1995
 

 Joan Osborne - House Of Blues 1995
 
As the unpredictable winds of mainstream popularity shift more frequently than ever, Joan Osborne has been able to sustain her career through steadfast touring and well-received live performances. Osborne exploded onto the popular music scene in 1995 with the Mercury release “Relish,” propelled by the monster hit “One of Us.” Relish has sold 1.9 million copies in the U.S., according to SoundScan.
Since that time, Osborne hasn’t scaled those commercial heights again; even so, she maintains a heavy touring schedule that keeps her in the public eye. The artist resumes her touring cycle in support of her Interscope release “Righteous Love” — which has sold 105,000 copies sold in the U.S., according to SoundScan — June 22 in Hampton Beach, N.H.
For an artist who came to music indirectly (she originally pursued filmmaking at New York University), Osborne has taken to touring like a born troubadour. “Live performing is a very natural part of what I do,” Osborne explains. “It’s not like, ‘I put out an album, therefore I tour.’ Touring makes me less dependent upon the vagaries of the label or radio. It’s kind of a touchstone for me.”
Perhaps fittingly, the Kentucky native’s musical journey began onstage, when a friend persuaded her to grab an open mike at a corner blues bar on New York’s Lower East Side. “He dared me to go up and sing with the piano player,” Osborne recalls. “They invited me to come back down, and I kind of made a habit of it.”
A vital early-’90s blues/roots music scene in the East Village made a convert out of Osborne. “A number of bands came out of that scene, like Blues Traveler, Spin Doctors, and Chris Whitley,” Osborne notes. “I was very drawn to that scene, going out every night to see these groups and spending all my college money on Etta James and John Lee Hooker records.”
As Osborne became more comfortable with live performance, she put her own band together. “I always knew I had a good voice, and I sang in school, but this was completely different,” she says. “There is something so captivating about how real and passionate this music is.”
Prior to signing to Mercury in 1995, Osborne gained notoriety as a regional performer, hitting a Northeastern U.S. circuit that included such markets as Philadelphia; New Jersey; Burlington, Vt.; Syracuse, N.Y.; Rochester, N.Y.; and her home base of New York City. A live CD sold at shows helped foot the gas bill. “Step by step, I built a following,” she recalls. “That’s the great thing about live performing, and I love to do it.”
It’s a sentiment those involved with her touring career appreciate. “Joan Osborne rocks my world,” says Jonathan Levine, Osborne’s agent at Monterey Peninsula Artists. “She’s one of the most magical and gifted artists I’ve ever worked with. The reason I do what I do is because of people like her.”
Osborne has dates on the books through the end of August, playing a mixture of summer-type venues that includes wineries and smaller sheds, as well as such music festivals as Ben & Jerry’s One World, One Heart Festival in Warren, Vt. (June 23); Milwaukee Summerfest (June 30); and Humphries Concerts by the Bay in San Diego (July 5). She’s also booked in such theaters as Newport Music Hall in Columbus, Ohio (June 26); the Keswick Theatre in Glenside, Pa. (June 24); and the John Anson Ford Theater in Los Angeles (July 9).
Promoter/venue owner Mark Adler of True West promoted Osborne at his Aladdin Theatre in Portland, Ore., around the time of the “Righteous Love” release, as well as July 25 at the Woodland Park Zoo Amphitheatre in Seattle. Both dates sold out. Osborne’s fans don’t particularly seem to care whether she’s on the radio, Adler says. “I work with a lot of artists whose popularity is a bit transient, but Joan is one of those people where record sales and radio play may go up and down, but she maintains a solid fan base. And that’s good for a promoter, because we don’t get much out of record sales.”
Earlier this year, Osborne toured as the featured vocalist with the Chieftains, a role she relished. “I had done some recording with them,” she says. “I have learned so much from them, and I love their sound. There’s something so ethereal and beautiful about it.”
This summer, Osborne plays some dates with artists she admires, including Hooker and Al Greene, as well as such newer acts as the Holmes Brothers — whose debut Alligator release, “Speaking in Tongues,” Osborne sang backup on and produced. Osborne’s touring band this year includes multi-instrumentalist Jack Petruzelli (Rufus Wainwright), drummer Billy Ward (Chris Whitley), guitarist Andrew Carillo, and bassist Gail Ann Dorsey (David Bowie).
Osborne’s set includes cuts from “Relish” and “Righteous Love,” as well as choice covers often geared to fit the venue. “We just did a casino in Reno, Nev., and we worked up a version of Gram Parson’s ‘Ooh, Las Vegas,’ ” she says, adding that the set changes nightly. “I can’t do the same exact show night after night. If I’m not excited, I don’t feel like the people that come to see me will be, either.”
In addition to her touring efforts, Osborne continues to work on her Womanly Hips project, a multi-artist festival celebrating women in the arts and music tentatively set for mid-September at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, Calif., with Bill Graham Presents/SFX promoting. If the event is successful, Osborne is considering a tour and an album for later in 2001. As a side project, Osborne oversees the Web zine heroinemag.com, where she interviews “women who are doing interesting things.”
But music remains her true love, regardless of current mainstream trends. “I’m sure there are moments when other artists get discouraged if they’re not on the radio, but I’m grateful I can go out and play music for people,” she says. “This is not rocket science. I love to play music, and I get to play music — so I’m happy.”  From: https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/joan-osborne-takes-on-troubadour-style-79371/
 
 

X - Country At War


This is probably the least surprising album of note released this year, chronicling predictable growth from what was once the most important punk band from Los Angeles. Hey Zeus! isn't bland — how could any X album be bland in today's musical climate? But it isn't a hallmark of the Next Big Thing either. It's simply more X. It makes sense that X's rockabilly-punk-country mix would mellow a bit, spotlighting the songwriting and letting everything breathe freer. It's sensible to downplay the musical components that were X trademarks: minor-key vocals, unbridled energy, razor guitar riffs on top of sophisticated lyrics. Why cover the same ground again? Yet it isn't disappointing (or unexpected) when X drifts into familiar punky ground toward the end of the disc, climaxing with the hot duo of "Baby You Lied" and "Lettuce and Vodka."
Actually, it would have been fun if this gently subversive and political album (with songs such as "Someone's Watching," "Country at War," "Arms for Hostages") had come out last year. The possible confusion with the Spike Lee film would have raised hackles (and X-consciousness) nationwide. As it is, Hey Zeus! runs the risk of being quietly forgotten. If there is a hit in here, it's hiding well.
Perhaps that is because the aforementioned trademarks that made X's name a notable band are downplayed so rigorously. Up front in the sound mix are the bass and the electric guitar, which allows the grooves and melodies to be spotlighted, but partially obscures the unique vocal interaction of John Doe and Exene Cervenka. And I hate to be a spoil-sport, but the world's need for guitarcentric albums is limited. On Hey Zeus!, guitarist Tony Gilkyson's Hendrix homages make for pretty music, but are just plain tired. Yes, yes, we've all heard "Third Stone from the Sun," and yes, it is flippin' awesome. Paraphrasing it in "Drawn in the Dark" only invites comparisons, not illumination.
Still, this is an X album. Songs like "New Life" and "Big Blue House" disarm you with modest lyrics about domestic life, while "Country at War" and "Arms for Hostages" debates where money should be spent in a country with rampant poverty. Punk energy burns in an even flame on "Clean Like Tomorrow," with its chugging chorus and Gilkyson-moody verses. Folks would pack Tewligans to hear this music, but they would listen closely rather than thrash around. Can there be such a thing as mature punk? Hey Zeus!  From: http://www.louisvillemusicnews.net/webmanager/index.php?WEB_CAT_ID=50&storyid=12759&headline=X_%96_Hey,_Zeus&issueid=54

The Sundays - Summertime


When The Sundays hit the British indie scene in the summer of 1989, they were heralded by the press as the next Smiths. While they didn't share The Smiths' ambitions of world domination, they certainly proved to be one of the most original and innovative bands of the 90's and they quickly became indie heroes. Their sound is airy, ethereal, driven by shimmering melodies and jangling guitar atmospheres. Harriet Wheeler's high-flying sorprano is loose, boundless and beautiful, and her husband David Gavurin's gleaming guitar work boasts a similar soaring feel, free to glide across the songs' laid-back energy. Their presence has been completely personal and unconcerned with passing trends and fads in the highly flakey U.K. music market. This reflects in their rather sparse album output, as they've released a total of three full-length records since their 1988 formation. Yet their international fanbase remains unfettered, as they've managed to win a place in the heart of nearly every thinking music fan and their influence is well aparent in ethereal-tinted acts such as The Innocence Mission and Sarah McClachlan.
David Gavurin was attending university in London, England in 1988 when he met fellow student Harriet Wheeler. Both sharing a passion for music and a mutual ambition, they became lovers and began rehearsing in David's bedroom with his 4-track. By that summer they'd teamed with the wonderfully tight rhythm section of Paul Brindley (bass guitar) and Patrick Hannah (drums), making their debut in London as The Sundays. They were spotted by a number of writers, who swooned at Wheeler's angelic vocals and Gavurin's Johnny Marr-esque guitar jangle. Word quickly spread and as the year closed a label bidding war commenced, ending with The Sundays' settling on renowkned U.K. indie label Rough Trade. The debut single "Can't Be Sure", with its shuffling, almost stuttering beat, mournful guitar echo and free soaring vocal delivery by Wheeler thrilled the press and listeners alike winning The Sundays an instant following. They were praised as The Cocteau Twins meets The Smiths, and certainly this wasn't a faulty comparison, as the songwriting team of Gavurin/Wheeler resembled a more ethereal take on the Marr/Morrisey unit.
The debut album, Reading, Writing and Arithmetic was everything to be hoped for and more, a youthful, energetic collection of downtown London lullabies driven by tights rhythms, loose melodies and a distraught, but never despairing, self-reflective lyrical outlook. It was released in 1990 along with the single "Here's Where the Story Ends", a cynical tale of love-lost elegantly draped in strumming acoustic guitar. Amidst the endless sea of "trying to be trendy" British market the album and single stood out, and the innovation materialized in major sales, chart success and a lucrative (if sparse) tour. Already The Sundays had won an international following. More recordings couldn't have emerged soon enough.
Yet, with Rough Trade's financial troubles and the band's decision to manage themselves, The Sundays' next single, "Goodbye" wouldn't emerge until 1992. It revealed a slightly more intense guitar sound, and an even gloomier atmosphere made whole by Wheeler's still stunning vocals and the band's trademark gleaming overtones. Again, The Sundays were both critical darlings and the delight of indie fans everywhere. The next album, Blind, revealed a more grown-up Sundays, with Wheeler's vocals and Gavurin's guitar more free and soaring than ever. The moods were darker and just as ethereal, certainly Blind is just as essential as its predecessor. A second single emerged in 1993, a cover of The Rolling Stones' "Wild Horses". Again, the band's touring schedule was sparse, although they were met with nearly salivating fans, starved for new material. Despite the obvious thirst the band dropped out again, and this time they wouldn't be heard from for five years.
Finally, in 1997, The Sundays broke in with their third full length album, Static and Silence and the single "Summertime". Although the record retained the band's trademark jangling guitar and utterly beautiful vocals, it revealed a more traditional folk rock feel (apparently Gavurin and Wheeler had taken a liking to Van Morrison). The melodies were more concise, less free-spirited than in the past which reflected in both Wheeler's vocals and Gavurin's guitar playing, both of which now operated within a more planned, orderly fashion. Mournful crooning gives way to straightforward pop melody, tight guitar/bass/drums approach gives way to string and horn arrangements, ethereal gives way to folk. The Sundays had changed quite a bit, and although the album was fantastic, it wasn't the stunning innovation they'd showcased in the past. Again the band would quickly drop out of the public eye yet The Sundays remain beloved internationally and have found comfortable status as one of the most popular cult bands in the world.  From: https://www.angelfire.com/indie/impryan/sundays.html  

The Karovas Milkshake - Factory


Q. When did The Karovas Milkshake start, tell us about the history.

A: It began in Ekaterinburg, a city where Europe meets Asia, the future meets the past. It appears very symbolic to us. First thought of the Karovas Milkshake came about when Albert and I walked out of a music bar where a band played fake rock’n’roll. We just couldn’t bear it! That evening we decided to create a band with wild live sound that would sweep all that humbug away. Besides nobody played 60’s garage in the surroundings. We listened to heaps of records thinking that all these great 60’s unknowns have been long buried and their great songs forgotten. There was a strong desire to bring it all back and share with our local music lovers. Around the same time we went to a cinema club where ‘A Clockwork Orange’ by Stanley Kubrick was shown. That’s where we picked our name from. We looked for something simple and recognizable that would reflect our tastes both in literature and gastronomy. In a while we were joined by Nick the Kick and Shasha which added more complexity and psyche to our music, but the basic 60’s garage energy remains as a stem.

Q: Who are your influences?

A: Our main heroes are bands and signers who emerged in the 50’s and the 60’s on both sides of the Atlantic, when emotions were fresh, true and genuine, one had no second chance and music just sounded cool.

Q. Make a list of 5 albums of all time…

1. Pink Floyd – The Piper at the Gates of Dawn
2. Grateful Dead – Workingman’s Dead
3. Captain Beefheart – Safe as Milk
4. Rolling Stones – Sticky Fingers
5. Doors – L.A.Woman

Q. How do you feel playing live?

You feel excited before playing live. And once you’re on stage it can be different, sometimes it feels at home and at times it feels as if you were thrown into an abyss, and that feeling can vary within one concert or even one song. Playing live is much like living – you are searching for the right way.

Q. How do you describe The Karovas Milkshake sounds?

It comes out thick and dense, no matter how we try to play quiet. It can be gentle at times, but mainly it is wild!

Q: Tell us about the process of recording the songs?

Recording is part of our music-making process. We came to a conclusion that our music sounds best on tape and since then we record ourselves on a tape recorder. We experiment with natural sound and different microphones quite a lot. Recording process can be full of fun and curiosity.

Q. Which new bands do you recommended?

A: We like the music by the Jaguar (tribal Bo-Diddley beats), the Madcaps (barretesque psyche) both from France and we recommend you our friends ‘The Thunderbeats’ (Moscow’s rhythm’n’blues and freakbeat), ‘The Traulers’ (eco-country from Ekaterinburg) and ‘Anton Ripatti & Sabaka Babaka Band’ (chanson, blues).

Q: Which band would you love to make a cover version of?

The Sonics (and we already have!)

Q: What´s the plans for future?

We plan to release our first LP ‘In the shade of the Purple Sun’ in sunny Portugal this September and would love to go on a tour, after which it would be fine to record our new songs.

Q: Any parting words?

Pick good music that gives inspiration. Play it with all your heart. Thanks!

From: http://theblogthatcelebratesitself.blogspot.com/2015/08/freak-out-factory-with-karovas.html

Light - Betray


Light is a larger than life orchestra from Toulouse, France that released its debut album The Path in 2023 showcasing some of the extreme limits of musical fusion. The band incorporates an entire classical orchestra, a large choir and a sizeable jazz ensemble which together incorporate progressive rock moments. The overall effect is tantamount to a classical orchestra that has adopted both jazz and rock elements thus bringing the world of progressive rock into ever higher levels of accomplishment. If that wasn't enough, the main writer Camille De Carvalho plays dozens of exotic instruments ranging from everything from the marimba, glockenspiel and Burmese gong to ethnic instruments like the duduk, guanzi, hulsi and bawu. The overall count of musicians is around two dozen.  From: https://www.progarchives.com/artist.asp?id=12466  

Psychotica - Little Prince - Live at Lollapalooza 1996



Psychotica, formed in 1994 by Don Hill's bartender Tommy Salmorin and NYC Club Owner Pat Briggs along with Paul"ENA"Kostabi were a seminal influence in Industrial Goth, releasing 3 albums to mixed reviews and varied success. Lead singer Pat Briggs, with outrageous costumes and antics, paved the way for the mainstream acceptance of androgynous musicians in bands like Orgy and Placebo. Psychotica's fame reached it's pinnacle of popularity in 1996, as a result of being on the bill at Lollapalooza with Soundgarden.  From: https://www.concertarchives.org/bands/psychotica

My first thought of this band was, "Aren't those the guys who painted themselves blue and danced, screaming and half-naked, at Lollapalooza?" They were. Something about the sheer insanity of the album first attracted me, but lying underneath the personality excess that gives the band its name is an emotional intensity rarely felt in this genre. I say "felt" because this is music that digs deeply into the listener. While Gary Numan and David Bowie spend most of their time in space, ocassionally delving into loneliness or shallow lust, Pat Briggs, Tommy, Reeka and Ena run the range of emotional experience.
The hard-driving, alienated "Ice Planet Hell" and "Starf***er Love" set the tone that this is a sonic experience far-removed from your daily soundtrack. The complex "Barcelona" allows rhythm and melody to expand, contract, and intertwine, starting from a simple few acoustic chords, until it reaches an epic-feeling climax, not unlike running with the bulls in Pamplona, only to be gored within inches of the finish. In contrast to the uber-glam power of "New Man" (featuring Pat's incredible vocal crescendos), "The Little Prince" develops from a mellow foil into a gripping cry of isolation. The insane "Stop" and the band's cover of Devo's "Freedom of Choice" give an energy boost to the center of the album.
What kept the album from earning a 5th star was the incomplete concept that tried to unify the songs. Intertwined within the full-length tracks were bits and pieces that were trying to make a statement but never quite did. "worship" is a backwards scream, echoed several times over with a bass playing backwards in the background. "the sleep" is the strangest track on the entire album - in between the hard-grinding "Flesh and Bone" and the spiraling "180 degrees," the sleep is a minute and a half piano-and-cello melody, very slow, the type of thing you would play when trying to get an infant to settle down. The album finishes very nicely, however, with "the awakening," a quasi-mystical piece that should be listened to on repeat under the glow of blacklights and highlighters.  From: https://www.amazon.com/Psychotica/dp/B000002MBC

Cold Specks - Bodies At Bay


Since the release of her debut album, I Predict a Graceful Expulsion, in 2012, Cold Specks has wooed audiences with her combination of acoustic soul, gospel and gothic elements that some have noted as “doom soul.” Despite the dreary nature of the musical style, her honest lyrics, emotional vocals and minimal melodies have tapped even the toughest of exteriors - garnering fans wherever this twenty-something artist goes. Now, two years later, she is back with a collection of songs, Neuroplasticity, that carry the elements of her previous LP but also are chock full of layered sounds that are so luscious they float into your ears and coat your soul.
Re-enlisting the production skills of Jim Anderson again, Cold Specks, also known as Al Spx, shows not only her growth, but that she’s more than just your average singer-songwriter. Hailing from Canada, she made sure to stay true to her roots by recording in the country, even though the actual songwriting took place in the English countryside - away from the hustle and bustle of her London home. “I was in the studio for six months making the record. I spent my time writing it in a cottage in Somerset,” she tells me. “The entire record was recorded in Montreal in this studio called Hotel2Tango and a studio called Revolution Recordings in Toronto. That’s pretty much all I was doing - making this record.”
She continues, “I became frustrated with the sparseness of the first record. I made a conscious decision to alter that for the second record with a lot more expansive sounds sonically, but melodically it’s still pretty dark.”
Although some artists can worry about how they are perceived by the quick-to-judge public, Spx seems to go with what works for her. And one thing does work is her willingness to embrace the darkness that oozes out of her songs, which she explains with a laugh, “I have no idea where the darkness comes from.” But she isn’t all doom and gloom. Despite the fact that she is a woman of few words, she does reveal that her songs have given many the impression that she isn’t a happy or carefree person. “I think people think I’m gloomy,” she says, “but I can be trippy when I want to be.”
If there’s one way Spx has showcased her “trippiness,” it is through the first single off the album, “Absisto”. The gothic track is one that can easily be described as hauntingly beautiful with a mystical video to go along with it. “‘Absisto’ was the first song I started writing, and the last song I finished,” she explains. “It was a nervous breakdown in the middle of the song. It was when I finally felt the album was nearing completion. And the video was based on a dream by Ian Pons Jewell, the video’s director. Directors tend to put me in occult situations, and I just tend to roll with it.”
“Absisto” may have stemmed out of a nervous breakdown, but her more recent single, “Body at Bay” is about coping with the consequences of becoming an up and coming artist. And with numerous nominations for her debut album - including a nod for the 2012 Polaris Music Prize and a win for Female Artist of the Year at the SiriusXM Indies Awards in 2013 - the spotlight was shining brightly on this artist. And while some could deal with all the newfound fame, she felt otherwise. “‘Body at Bay” is constructed out of many things,” she states. “I think it’s about my frustrations of Cold Specks and doing interviews and like everyone wanted a piece of me at first, and I didn’t know how to deal with it.”
This isn’t to say that Cold Specks can’t deal with pressure as a whole. It’s the opposite actually. Many others who have a successful first album do worry heavily about their second one in fears of producing something that would fall into the dreaded “sophomore slump.” However Spx fed off of that to put more of herself into Neuroplasticity. “I don’t think there’s any harm in any pressure,” she explains, “but I didn’t allow that to seep through in any creative process.” While it’s clearly that Spx is the voice of the record, she had the chance to join forces with Michael Gira not only for the Swans latest album, To Be Kind, but also for her own album. Although many young artists have been able to work with well-known musicians in the past, she had the chance to complete one of the items on her musical bucket list.
“My dream collaboration is Michael Gira,” she reveals. “He sang on this record. I think I got my dream collaboration for a good while. It was incredibly exciting and honoured to have his voice. He sings on ‘A Season of Doubt,’ the last song on the record. And we sing on another song called ‘Exit Plan.’”
“A Season of Doubt” is by far the most unique song with regards to this album, as it sounds more like you are sitting in a the dark corner of an old jazz night club instead of the more gothic soul that she has been dishing us throughout the whole album. “I think I just wanted to end with something different,” she says. “The whole record covers a wide range of emotions, and I wanted something to cover that emotion—whatever it is—pretty grim I guess. Ambrose, the trumpet player, came into the studio one day. We had the piano laid down and trumpet down and the vocal down. We did it all in one day. It’s all very much a moment captured. I really love that song.”  From: https://www.thelineofbestfit.com/features/interviews/cold-specks-interview-2014


Lunatic Soul - The Passage


There is nothing else quite like the thrill of entering into the world of Lunatic Soul. Well, it's less of a thrill, and more of a sacred joy, or at least that is how it feels sometimes. Lunatic Soul is back with a new album, called "Through Shaded Woods", and I imagine that it will be remembered as one of the best. The album releases on November 13th through Kscope.
Lunatic Soul is the original solo output for Mariusz Duda of Riverside. I still remember first hearing the LS debut and falling instantly in love with this very different side of his musical expression. Over the years, the project has explored folk, post-prog, electronic, and Gothic ideas, gathering all of these concepts into one mysterious and hazy experience. Indeed, there is a romance and a hidden sentiment in every single album that rouses my love for enigma, spirituality, and gravity. In fact, the lyrics and storyline for this project are so complex and yet so powerfully emotive that I still haven't attempted to write a spotlight for any of them. This project is both painstakingly human as well as blissfully otherworldly, and I cherish that.
With "Through Shaded Woods", Mariusz has returned somewhat to the sound of the first two records. Now, I say "somewhat" because this record doesn't just explore vague folkish ideas, aka Dead Can Dance, but employs that darkness to explore Scandinavian folk music very specifically with all the evocation and wonder that it deserves. Mariusz is a big fan of Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, and so you will hear that mountainous sound throughout the album, but also the green of hushed forests and fantastical creatures. I especially love the moments where Mariusz pays tribute to the Dragon Shouts from Skyrim with utter class and melody.
As usual, no electric guitars are present on this album, though Mariusz does manipulate his trusty bass to sound like distorted electric guitar at a few points. This album is heavy in that regard, though still retaining the spacious, murky whiteness of Lunatic Soul II. Indeed, this album is most at home with itself with tumultuous percussion, raging bass, and unnervingly peaceful atmospheres creating layers of beauty and light, darkness and sadness, faith and courage.
There are two things I need to mention about the music here. First, this might be the best vocal performance of Mariusz's career thus far. He certainly has one of my favorite voices ever, but I just feel something more colorful, more melodic, and more harmonious in his vocals on this album. His voice is truly a beacon of light here, and I have to admit that I've been deeply impressed by his diction and articulation. Most people wouldn't notice that, I know, but there are moments when Mariusz pronounces each and every sound in a word with such effortless precision and clarity that my love for language grows just a little.
Secondly, while this album may rely on thundering percussion, voluptuous bass, and serene keys at times, the real star of the show is Mariusz's acoustic guitar. He weaves folk melodies with such care and fleeting exactitude on almost every song, playing with illustrious skill and festive feeling. Honestly, it makes me want to dance sometimes, which isn't like me. Not since witnessing Steve Hackett's 12-string guitar skills live have I been so mesmerized by acoustic playing.
Lyrically, "Through Shaded Woods" is absolutely wonderful. I honestly haven't figured out Mariusz's map of where each album fits in his timeline, but I can still make out the general feelings here. This album seems to mention the afterlife ferryman's warning in "The Final Truth" from the debut. This warning was that the protagonist had to make a choice: to keep or lose his memories of life. If he chose to keep them, his loved ones would forget him. If he chose to lose his memories, he would be remembered forever. This album seems to take place directly after Lunatic Soul II, then, as that album was the protagonist's entrance into the afterlife. "Through Shaded Woods" sees our friend learning to cope with the things he has seen and felt. He is living his afterlife, more or less, and he seems to be reaching out to his lover in his past life. The lyrics are therefore quite sorrowful and introspective, yet I find them to be confident and daring, too. Our friend is beginning to have faith, something that has eluded him in life. He especially seems to have faith that he will see his love again one day, if only he can let go of her for the moment.  From: https://www.progarchives.com/album.asp?id=70342

Rapunzel & Sedayne - Outlaws

 
 
It’s no secret that I am partial to a bit of old time folk music: it’s the sound of many a campfire singalong, a narrative tradition of music that is participatory rather than merely made for an audience to consume. And I love to discover new folk that dwells on old time tunes but with new arrangements, new harmonies and new stories to tell. I fell for Rapunzel and Sedayne as soon as I heard them on Soundcloud, a gorgeous duo clammering away on a variety of exotic instruments to create subtly haunting tunes that sound as relevant and wonderful today as their influences.

Can you tell us a bit about your life up to now? It sounds most intriguing. For example how did you come to fall in love with folk music, and what other things have you done before this album?


Rapunzel: I’ve always loved singing since I was a child – influenced by my dad who is a great harmony singer himself, but not musically trained so he made sure my sister and I got music lessons early on. I started piano at six, but far from being a child prodigy I hated it and really only started understanding music in my late teens when I stopped trying to read it and started listening to what I was playing. There is an annual folk festival in my home town and I remember seeing the likes of Fred Jordan, Jim Eldon, Peter Bellamy and June Tabor who all had an influence on me as I was growing up. In my late teens and twenties I did the singer-songwriter thing with my guitar, but in recent years and by working with Sean I have got back in touch with the old folk songs.


Sedayne: Folk was part of the zeitgeist of my childhood. Everything from Dr. Who and Catweazle to Strawbs, Gentle Giant and the Third Ear Band and a shelf load of books on folksong and folklore most of which are now entirely discredited but still mean a lot to me. It was integral to the landscapes in which I grew up – ballads and legends and bagpipes – all of which informed my own approach and most crucially in the areas I explore with Rachel. We’ve done a number of projects over the years from experimental music with Martin Archer to neo-folk tracks on various compilation albums such as Infernal Proteus and three volumes of John Barleycorn Reborn. We’ve just done a song on the subject of Werewolves for a project in Sweden – it is an exquisite facsimile of a 19th century study of Werewolves in Swedish folklore with a disk of specially composed songs. Think Porcupine meets Being Human…

Sedayne, I understand that you are a specialist in ancient and traditional instruments, and on this album you play kemence, violin, crwth, flute and kaossilator. I don’t know what three of those are, can you tell us more about them and the sounds they make?


Sedayne: At the high end is the kemence from Turkey – also known as the Black Sea Fiddle. It’s small, extremely versatile and ideal for the music we do. At the bottom end is the crwth – a medieval bowed-lyre that was made for me in 1983 by Tim Hobrough (long before the current crwth revival I might add) so it’s a big part of my musical life and thinking. In the middle is the violin – which is an extension of both in a way, though people say I play the violin like a crwth and the crwth like a violin. I was playing crwth and kemence long before I got into the violin, which Rachel insisted upon when she got into the banjo some years ago. The banjo and violin make good bedfellows. The Kaossilator is a looping phrase synthesizer from Korg that replaces the tyranny of the keyboard with a X-Y pad because it’s primarily designed for DJs! it’s also the size of a decent slice of toast. Along with an electric Shruti box, we use it for loops, drones and washes.

You’re a couple – did the music or the romance come first and how does it inform the way that you work? 


Rapunzel:  We were friends for several years before we became a couple. We met at the Durham City Folk Club which at that time was at The Colpitts. It was a golden age for that club in terms of harmony singing and it’s true that Sean and I were communicating through singing together long before we had a conversation. 


Sedayne: Rachel’s musicality had always impressed me and she always did amazing things. It’s odd but the only time we really row together is when we’re working on music. Maybe that’s why we do it? It’s a natural catharsis that always gives rise to something because Rachel is invariably right anyway. We always record live – in real time, no multitracking, which is part of that energy too.

You have quite an old fashioned folk sound. What are your influences and how do you think you differ from those influences or include elements of them?


Rapunzel: Melodically and vocally my influences probably come from the artists I’ve listened to most: Jane Siberry, Judee Sill, Laura Nyro, Tori Amos, David Bowie. But the old songs are lyrically so much more straightforward, telling a story, reporting an event, simple but effective imagery, no hidden meanings, and that is what I love about them. 


Sedayne: The songs are the main influence. I keep saying that we’re not trying to breathe new life into them so much as draw new life from them. It’s a cultural communion as much as it is about doing something in our way, or being deliberately idiosyncratic, though people say we are, but we’re not conscious of that. It’s an old thing as you say, but so is language, baking bread and sex. Most of time we’re listening to pop or classical or early music or jazz or tuning into Tim Westwood but when it comes to doing our own thing it tends towards something pretty archaic to most ears – even folk ears, because we’re less interested in revival conventions than we are more ancient and traditional forms. It’s folk art basically; rugged, earthy and hand-crafted.

How important is the folk scene in Lancashire to your process? And are there any folk clubs or meet ups or festivals that you recommend a visitor should go to?


Rapunzel: Strangely enough I didn’t start performing until I left Lancashire, having neither the confidence nor the encouragement. But settling back home, and particularly singing and playing with the Preston Club has helped to make this album what it is.


Sedayne: The Preston Club is the Holy of Holies for us as far as the local Folk Scene goes. It’s very small though. Not select, just awkward as far as audiences or visitors go. I think of it more of a master-class where we can bask in the genius of musicians like Hugh O’Donnell, Tom Walsh, Neil Brook and Dave Peters although what we do is very different to what they do. We do things at the Fylde Folk Festival either just as ourselves or working on projects with other artists, like Ross Campbell and local song-writer Ron Baxter who has an approach we quite like. We’ve only been in Lancashire for four years though – so I don’t think we identify that much with the local scene which I get the impression hasn’t changed in fifty years, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing just Rachel and I are both essentially nomads with itchy feet. We’ve lived in Worth Abbey, Brancepeth Castle, Durham City, the Deerness Valley, Lytham Saint Annes, Lancaster… I’m amazed and disturbed that you can live in a place for over four years and still be regarded – and resented – as a newcomer. After four years I’m thinking – where next?


How did you choose the old songs that you covered? have they been much loved for years or were they specially sourced for the album?


Rapunzel: The Max Hunter archive – an online resource from Missouri State University – is particularly important. I love the songs of Ollie Gilbert that feature on there. Silver Dagger and Diver Boy are from her singing.


Sedayne: We spend a lot of time browsing old field recordings and archives. I always think it’s best that you let the songs choose you, that way they’re easier to learn, they don’t resist you. A lot of those songs we’ve been singing since we met, like Poor Old Horse which I got off Jim Eldon twenty years ago or more. That’s the thing I really remember Rachel singing on before we talked to each other. Her harmony was the most amazingly different thing in an otherwise normal Folk club chorus, so over the years we’ve kept evolving that feel in terms of how our voices work together. I don’t think anyone can own a song, but you have your own way of doing it which is what a song is – it becomes a vehicle to help you find your own voice, which is what you hear from the old singers anyway – a gladsome diversity of an infinity of approaches. Contrary to a lot of Folk thinking, there’s no right or wrong here, and what happens happens. We also improvise a lot, so things change, and always for the better. I must stress that, because we’re doing songs now that I used to do years ago but they’ve never sounded better than they do now even though to some people the old ones will always be best, which is absurd. New fruit is always best I find…

In Porcupine in October Sycamore there are all sorts of incidental sounds including ducks and a dog barking to the beat – what informed your choice to include these kind of sounds?


Rapunzel: What sounds like a dog is more likely a goose. The version with wildfowl is on the Soundcloud rather than the album version.


Sedayne: The field recordings are of diverse wild-fowl from Blackpool Zoo – where the Porcupines live who inspired us to make that song, which is an old-fashioned sounding song about the sorts of non-native elements we embrace as our cultural whole. I was born a multi-cultural UK – I’m a product of that, and I cherish it very dearly. In the local Folk Scene you routinely hear songs in which it is lamented that that the local fish & chip shop is now a Chinese takeaway. I despair at times, I really do. The best thing someone said about Porcupine was that they thought it was a Rudyard Kipling poem set to music by Peter Bellamy. Maybe they were confusing Porcupines with Armadillos?  
 

In real life you are known as Rachel McCarron and Sean Breadin. Where do your pseudonyms Rapunzel and Sedayne come from?


Sedayne: Rapunzel got her name from a song she sang when we first met. No one knew her name at the time and in the song she sings Call Me Rapunzel, so we did, and the name stuck, even with people who knew her anyway. Sedayne comes from Brian Sedane which is a very old anagram of my given name. I don’t know how or when it acquired the Y or at which point I lost the Brian. There’s no mystical thing here, it’s just random. The best anagram of Sean Breadin is Insane Beard.


Rapunzel: I think Rapunzel was the second song I wrote, when I was 19. Still sing it occasionally.


Sedayne: You can hear Rapunzel on Rachel’s myspace page, along with Sarah Sometimes, another song about naming. People always call Rachel ‘Sarah’; it’s one of these weird things that’s happened all her life, so she wrote a song about her imaginary alter-ego. You can also hear my folk:funk remix ‘Sarah Sometimes’ which reveals some of our other sensitivities. Someone even called her Sarah on the phone the other day! Maybe we’ll do Rapunzel on the next album as people have expressed bafflement over the name, or think it’s in some way contrived (in Folk? Heaven forefend!) but Rapunzel & Sedayne is what we call ourselves because that’s what people call us anyway, and no-one could pronounce Venereum Arvum, which is the name we use for our darker projects, without making it sound like a social disease. We did our last album Pentacle of Pips of Venereum Arvum (download it on bandcamp) and are releasing Fire and Hemlock as Venereum Arvum (on vinyl) in the new year. The name means Field of Pleasure – an erotic metaphor from Sir Richard Burton‘s translations of The Sportive Epigrams of Priapus from ancient Rome.

Your music is described as ‘haunting’ and I’ve certainly had it on repeat since I first received it. How do you hope that it will be enjoyed and what do you hope its effect might be on people?


Sedayne: The songs are haunting in themselves and the music we make comes from the songs. Some people see that as being weird and esoteric but we’re really just a husband and wife Folk ‘n’ Fun duo even though we like the spookier Gothic side of things which is there in spades in the old ballads and songs of ceremony. We love MR James and Diana Wynne Jones and Phil Rickman and HP Lovecraft but it’s essential to keep things in perspective regarding what they actually are, or what their actual function might be. People hearing us doing The Gower Wassail (for example) might think it’s a very occult or pagan song, but when you go to the source (the great Phil Tanner – check him out!) you’ll find it’s nothing of the sort. These things run pretty deep though and people relate to them on all sorts of levels, which is fine by us.


Will you be touring this album at all and what next in general for Rapunzel and Sedayne?


Rapunzel: We’re always finding and developing new old songs, and some new new ones, so we’re already trying to reduce the longlist for the next album.


Sedayne: We’ve been featuring a lot of those songs in our repertoire for a while now – as Rachel says we’re always evolving new songs and revisiting old ones, so our shows are always a mix of whatever it is we’re up to at any given time. We’ve got some gigs coming up in November & December which will feature a mix of things from the Barley Temple album as well certain inevitable Seasonal Material you’ll find on the Soundcloud site nearer the time. We’re playing at the Kit & Cutter club in London on 3rd December, the Kirkby Fleetham Folk Club on the 19th of November, and The Chase Folk Club in Staffordshire on the 2nd of December.  We’re also doing a session for Radio Shropshire on 23rd of October for Genevieve Tudor‘s folk programme. We have this thing of Singing the Calendar Round, but I like the fact that Songs from the Barley Temple has been called ‘The ideal October album‘ (by Stewart Lee in the Sunday Times no less) because one thing about the old songs is that they bring you home in a way – home to the hearth, the orchard, as the days get shorter and year darkens. These things are no longer literal – they’re part of a mythic idyll and that’s a very ancient which we still feel today, even if I do find notions of the viscera of pagan sacrificial victims living on in Christmas Tree decorations a little far-fetched, it still gives you a notion of continuity and of home, and belonging, which (getting back to the previous question) is maybe something we like to share with our audiences and listeners, but I bet (and hope) no one feels it in exactly the same way.

From: https://ameliasmagazine.com/music/an-interview-with-rapunzel-and-sedayne-on-the-release-of-new-album-songs-from-the-barley-temple/2011/10/05/