Showing posts with label New Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Music. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Motion City Soundtrack
Hometown heroes Motion City Soundtrack have been rocking out all over the world since 1997. Their fifth studio album, Go, was released on June 12 as a collaborative effort between Epitaph Records and the band's own label, The Boombox Generation. The band returns to the Twin Cities on June 23 for the River's Edge Music Festival on Harriet Island.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more local acts that made it big!
- Erica Rivera
Friday, June 1, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Kristoff Krane
Kristoff Krane’s musical style can’t be contained to one genre. A singer-songwriter who’s been known to whip out an acoustic guitar and croon like Bob Dylan one minute, then spit freestyle the next, this rapper is pure firecracker spunk. An artist who thrives on audience responses to his music, Krane often eschews the stage for up-close-and-personal performances with his fans mere inches from the mic. The intense tunes, paired with Krane’s unparalleled passion, leave you energized, if unsettled, long after the show is over. ‘Til his next live appearance, this video will have to tide you over.
"Birthday Song" is the first music video from Krane's new release fanfaronade. The album is available as a free download on bandcamp.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more new local music.
- Erica Rivera
Monday, April 30, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: David LeDuc
David LeDuc (of Pictures of Then and The Less Complex) released the video for his new track "Amends" last night. This project was collaborative, calling on the talents of seven musicians worldwide in addition to LeDuc, who penned the tune. Paul Haataja (of the Twin Cities rock band Far From Falling and Fuzzy Fotography) directed the video.
"The track was recorded piece by piece and each contributor wrote and recorded their part in separate studios from around the globe," LeDuc explained in his press release. LeDuc then collected the contributions via the Internet and arranged and mixed the final track in Minneapolis.
Musicians featured on the track are Ein Astronaut (Germany, drums), Laurena Segura (Quebec, vocals), J.B. Dazen (The Netherlands, bass), Arno Ceres (France, MIDI Sounds), Raven Zoë (Oregon, vocals), Bob Clagett (Georgia, guitars) and Mykl Westbrooks (Minneapolis, guitars).
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
- Erica Rivera
Friday, April 13, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Trampled By Turtles
How could we not choose Trampled By Turtles as this week's featured band? The locally bred bluegrass outfit just released their new album, Stars and Satelittes, and had their own official day proclaimed by the Mayors of both Duluth and Minneapolis as a tightly packed, and very rapt, sold-out crowd at First Avenue looked on.
This tune, Alone, encompasses both the frantic fiddle-heavy sounds and the tender lullaby lyics that frontman and primary songwriter Dave Simonett is known for.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more Twin Cities musicians making waves on the local scene.
- Erica Rivera
This tune, Alone, encompasses both the frantic fiddle-heavy sounds and the tender lullaby lyics that frontman and primary songwriter Dave Simonett is known for.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" every Wednesday from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more Twin Cities musicians making waves on the local scene.
- Erica Rivera
Monday, March 12, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Andrew Bird
Though technically not a Minnesotan, the Windy City's Andrew Bird spends enough time in the Twin Cities to considered an honorary resident. Bird's delightful hybrid of string instrumentation, wistful vocals, and intermittent whistling lend an old-world sound to lyrics that are wise beyond Bird's 38 years.
Bird, who has released previous albums on both Fat Possum and Ani DiFranco's Righteous Babe labels, was recently signed to Mom+Pop, with whom he scored the soundtrack for the indie film Norman and released his latest full-length Break It Yourself.
This video, for Bird's song Danse Caribe, was filmed by MPLS.TV at The Sound Gallery, which is owned by Jacob Grun, a forthcoming guest on our show!
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more exceptional local-ish acts!
- Erica Rivera
Monday, March 5, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: The Honeydogs
Most Minnesotans hardly need an introduction to The Honeydogs. Fronted by local icon Adam Levy and backed by the musical talents of Peter J. Sands, Stephen Kung, Trent Norton, Matt Darling and Peter Anderson, The Honeydogs have 18 years of onstage performances under their belts. Though best known for their single "I Miss You", this sometimes-twangy, always pleasing, pop-rock-Americana outfit is on the brink of releasing their 10th studio album, What Comes After. Join the band at First Avenue on March 10 to hear "Aubben" and all their other radio-ready tunes live. Rogue Valley and Farewell Milwaukee open the show.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more local music movers and shakers!
- Erica Rivera
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Poliça Wows First Avenue Crowd On Valentine's Day
It’s rare that a band sells out the First Avenue mainroom before their album officially drops, but such was the case with Poliça and their Give You The Ghost release show on “ValenTuesday” night.
“This is the first Valentine’s Day I’ve enjoyed,” Leaneagh said as the performance wound down.
We couldn’t have agreed more.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more amazing local music.
- Erica Rivera
While some of us saw this success coming since the initial listen of “Wandering Star” last fall, there must be a devil’s advocate or two who doubted another auto-tune influenced electronica outfit could get off the ground.
Well, get off the ground they did, and Poliça has proven itself to be nothing less than a sonic triumph. Following substantial buzz on the local scene, Poliça’s video for “Lay Your Cards Out” was featured on rapper Jay-Z’s website, and Rolling Stone magazine recently gave the group’s debut album a 3.5 star review. Grammy winner Justin Vernon of Bon Iver even gushed, “They’re the best band I’ve ever heard” after he himself took home awards for Best New Artist and Best Alternative Music Album on Sunday evening.
Poliça’s hybrid of hip-hop, techno, and new wave indie sounds is indeed addictive. The double-drummer set-up of Drew Christopherson and Ben Ivascu is astounding, as is Chris Bierden's tight talent on bass. And we haven't even mentioned frontwoman Channy Leaneagh yet; hers are the kind of vocal chords that make hairs stand on end. Together, Poliça is a powerhouse quartet whose jams demand attention.
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Photo by Erica Rivera |
The First Avenue crowd was entranced from the very first beat on Tuesday night and there wasn’t a lull in the energy for even a second during the hour-plus set.
“This is a show for the lovers…and for the lonely,” frontwoman Channy Leaneagh said early on in the evening.
Those extremes are what makes Poliça so endearing; Leaneagh has a deft ability to balance vulnerability with strength, tenderness with truth, and breaking down with breaking through.
“You are my date tonight,” Leaneagh announced midway through the set list. “I wore a dress for you.”
Though Leaneagh is the pretty face and sinewy form associated with the band’s name, what’s refreshing about Poliça is that it’s not about celebrity or even any one particular band member; it’s about the music. And that music is thunderous, ominous, haunting, and heartbreaking all at once. Doubly so if you know that Poliça was born, in part, from the dismantling of Leaneagh’s prior band, the much beloved Roma di Luna, and Leaneagh’s split from former husband and band partner, Alexei Casselle, with whom she has a daughter.
“This is the first Valentine’s Day I’ve enjoyed,” Leaneagh said as the performance wound down.
We couldn’t have agreed more.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio for more amazing local music.
- Erica Rivera
Monday, February 13, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Sharon Van Etten
Sharon Van Etten’s career began in Nashville and was formed on a foundation of rock, folk, and country music. Van Etten went more mainstream following her move to Brooklyn and the release of her album Epic, which was chosen as a favorite record of NPR in 2010.
Van Etten’s latest full-length, Tramp, continues the singer’s tradition of evoking bittersweet memories about love gone wrong, ambiguous relationships, and the melancholic artist temperament. The beauty of Van Etten’s sound is her simplicity and cutthroat lyricism; this track is especially heart-wrenching with its refrain “We all make mistakes/I do what I can.”
Van Etten brings her new collection of songs to the Cedar Cultural Center on Feb. 18.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
Van Etten’s latest full-length, Tramp, continues the singer’s tradition of evoking bittersweet memories about love gone wrong, ambiguous relationships, and the melancholic artist temperament. The beauty of Van Etten’s sound is her simplicity and cutthroat lyricism; this track is especially heart-wrenching with its refrain “We all make mistakes/I do what I can.”
Van Etten brings her new collection of songs to the Cedar Cultural Center on Feb. 18.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Take Five: An Interview With ReadyGoes
Bryan Shackle, Tyler Jorenby, Patrick Gibbs, George Hadfield, and Mo are ReadyGoes, a rambunctious pop band of 20-somethings determined to get your booty moving on the dance floor. I spoke to Bryan Shackle, the frontman of the quintent, in anticipation of the group’s EP release show at the Varsity Theater on Feb. 25.
Give me the spiel about how ReadyGoes got started.
Bryan Shackle: It started four years ago, though we’d all played in different bands before that. Tyler and I were approached by a publishing company to work on some songs for TV shows. We created a make-believe band and make-believe songs, but we ended up really liking them. Half of the songs were used for the shows and we kept half. We actually booked our first show at the Fine Line before we had enough band members to play the show.
And now you’re preparing to release a new EP, Like A Bomb. What kind of sound and themes can fans expect to hear on it?
BS: The sound is still us—dance pop—and it’s big. We’re not apologetic about it or worried about what other people think. It’s unlike anything else that the Twin Cities is making right now, which is a lot of chill, cool stuff. These six new songs are monstrously big and sexy. They are songs we feel good playing and we think fans will appreciate them and react well to them.
So your goal is to see the crowd dancing and going crazy during a show?
BS: Going crazy—yes, that’s a reaction we want! Hands in the air, anything. The worst would be people or critics being neutral to our music. I want them going crazy or hating it. Some kind of reaction.
Talk about the band’s look. Is it something that happens naturally or do you purposefully plan it? Are you into fashion?
BS: I wish we had the money to hire a stylist to plan it out. For now, it’s natural. I mean, before a photo shoot, we’ll say to one another, “Let’s not wear pink” or “Maybe iron your shirt” but that’s it.
And yet you went as zombies to Rock The Cause’s Phantasmagoria. Not exactly heartthrob attire.
BS: [Laughs.] Of course we planned that. It was so much fun.
Has ReadyGoes played many shows for charity?
BS: We haven’t and that’s because this album has been all-consuming for over two years. We’ve been through the ringer with management and going between Nashville and L.A. and Minneapolis . It’s not that we don’t want to play charity shows, it’s that it’s hard to play a ton of shows if you’re unsure about the songs.
But you did offer yourselves up for a bowling date for your Kickstarter campaign…
BS: We’d been talking about what would be an interesting way to promote on Twitter and Mo, our guitar player, said, “Dude, let’s go bowling!” We did a contest based on re-tweets. A girl won and that’s coming up, so we’ll see how that goes…
In ten years, do you anticipate ReadyGoes will still be making the same kind of music or do you think it will morph into something else?
BS: It’s always going to morph or we’d get super bored. We’ll still be making music together in five years, ten years, but it will change. ReadyGoes has already changed. At first, Tyler and I were the ones doing the songwriting. The rest of the guys help with the writing now; there are multiple hands involved. George had a heavy hand in the six songs on the EP, and there’s hip-hop in his background, so that's a new influence.
Who would be your dream band to open for?
BS: To open for? I don’t know. Who sounds like us? Who do you think?
I wouldn’t want to insult you.
BS: It’s okay. I know we play chick pop.
It’d probably someone you’d hear on KDWB.
BS: I don’t know what they play on KDWB well enough to even name anyone. The bands we like don’t sound like us. I don’t think Ryan Adams would have us on. Butch Walker …Fun…any band that has cool dudes or girls that would hang with us onstage and off.
Are there any legal substances that you guys rely on to get riled up before a show?
BS: We’re whiskey men. There’s usually a bottle of Jack Daniels or Jim Beam in the back. Aside from that, it’d be jumping around, battle rapping, or wrestling tigers.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI for more great music from up-and-comers on the Twin Cities scene!
- Erica Rivera
Monday, January 30, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: The Pines
Drawing from Americana and bluegrass influences, The Pines are an underappreciated Twin Cities act. Their first full-length, Tremolo, wove haunting ballads like “Heart and Bones” with boot stomping tunes like “Pray Tell.” The delicate balance between edgy and atmospheric defines singer-songwriters David Huckfelt and Benson Ramsey’s music. The result is rich, authentic sounds reminiscent of a simpler life and bittersweet times gone by.
This track is from The Pines’ forthcoming album, Dark So Gold, which will hopefully be on the set list at their release show at the Cedar Cultural Center on Feb. 17.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
This track is from The Pines’ forthcoming album, Dark So Gold, which will hopefully be on the set list at their release show at the Cedar Cultural Center on Feb. 17.
- Erica Rivera
The PINES - Cry, Cry, Crow (Official Music Video) from The PINES on Vimeo.
Tune into "Live From Studio 5!" on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Senakah
Robert Hope of Senakah (formerly Seneca), the alternative Irish outfit, just gave us the heads up on the band’s newest video. The video was written by and stars Ben Morrison from MTV’s Punk’d. Seneca’s album Human Relations drops on Feb. 17 on iTunes! For more on Seneca, visit the band’s website here.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into ”Live From Studio 5!” on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into ”Live From Studio 5!” on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
Monday, January 9, 2012
Earworm Of The Week: Poliça
Though Poliça is one of the newer bands on the Twin Cities scene, it is fronted by Channy Leaneagh, a veteran singer-songwriter and one-half of the former duo Roma di Luna. Now teamed up with bass player Chris Bierden, drummers Drew Christopherson (Solid Gold) and Ben Ivascu (Marijuana Deathsquads), and producer Ryan Olson (Gayngs), Leaneagh explores a sound light years away from the indie folk fans are used to hearing from the petite powerhouse. Experimental, spacey and subtly sensual, Poliça is stirring up plenty of press and already making a name for itself with recent performances at CMJ and an opening gig for Foster the People. Hopefully you already nabbed tickets for the band’s Valentine’s Day Give Up The Ghost album release show at First Avenue; if not, you’re out of luck. It’s sold out.
This video, for Poliça’s tune "Lay Your Cards Out," debuted on rap star Jay-Z’s blog. We’re placing our bets that Polica will have a Bon Iver style breakthrough this year.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into ”Live From Studio 5!” on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
This video, for Poliça’s tune "Lay Your Cards Out," debuted on rap star Jay-Z’s blog. We’re placing our bets that Polica will have a Bon Iver style breakthrough this year.
- Erica Rivera
Tune into ”Live From Studio 5!” on Wednesdays from 10 PM to Midnight on KFAI radio.
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