DISCOSALT HALLOWEEN BASH: TICKETS ON SALE NOW!

Posted in discosalt

Time to dust your wig and freak the demons!  The Discosalt Halloweekend Bash is finally here!  This year we are taking over the Frost Street Firehouse Space in Williamsburg, with live music from Brooklyn’s Team GeniusQuiet Loudlyand mysterious synth lord Teeel. Tickets are on sale now, just click the link below.

WHAT: DISCOSALT HALLOWEEN BASH

WHERE: Firehouse Space, 246 Frost Street  (L Train to Graham)

WHEN: 9pm-2am, Saturday October 29

***OPEN BAR 9pm-2am***

$25.00 (all inclusive)

Discosalt Halloween Party 2011 Map

 

Q + A: THE DO

DISCOSALT: Hi there! It’s been such a long time for me, since I first saw you guys. It’s great to finally meet you!

Dan: Which festival was that?

DS: It was Eurosonic Noorderslag festival in Holland.

Olivia: In Amsterdam?

DS: No, It was in Groningen. Nice festival but it was quite cold at that time. You were touring for so long in Europe and the USA. How did you find time to record in all that time?

O: Actually that’s a good question. Everybody kept asking like why it took us to record so long but actually it took us only 1 year to record.  But yes we toured for almost 2 years for the first time. It was a long time. And we were impatient to record new songs.

DS: Where did you record the new album “both ways open jaws”?

O: We started recording in the house we rented in South of France. We started for a few weeks. We took all our stuff from the studio and rented a truck.  We started going around with that truck and also different musicians came there to work with us. It was very important for us to get away from Paris and being in a new environment.

DS: What do you think about Paris these days? I’ve spent the last 2 summers there and I find it much more touristy now compared to 10 years ago.

O: That’s true. I think Paris is going down. We want to move somewhere else soon but we are not sure where it will be. Maybe to Berlin.

DS: Olivia, you are from Finland and Dan, you are from France. I assume that most of your time is spent together because of the tour, but when you are not touring…do you still spend time together?

D: We do music very often, so most of the time we are together. But when we need we take some time off and go apart, we do.

DS: And when you are on tour for a long time, who is your best friend?

D: Musicians.

O: I don’t know. I can’t focus on a book when I’m touring.  I can’t really actually focus on something else.

D: Normally, when you are on a tour, our best friend is our bed. We are so tired that when we have time to sleep we are extremely happy.

O: It’s also good to have good headphones. Listen to your own thing.

DS: Who do you listen to these days?

O: Tune-yards.

D: Micachu and The Breeders.

DS: On your new album, there are two songs that stand out for me, which I love: “Bohemian dances” and “was it a dream”. Can you tell us the story behind those songs?O: I remember I wrote Bohemian Dances when I was very sick. I wanted to break free, go out and start singing again. I was so bored. It was like a freedom anthem for me.D:  “Was it a dream’s” story…We wanted to make an old school song. And nobody is dancing slow these days.DS: (Olivia and Dan start dancing a little)

DS: Olivia,  this question is for you… Your style is very interesting.  Do you choose your clothes or does somebody else choose them for you?

O: Since I don’t really have time to go and pick them up somewhere,  a friend goes out for me and help me out.  Sometimes I just have time to go around and do shopping very quickly.

DS: What was the first album you bought?

O: I remember that the first I bought was with my brother. Michael Jackson:  “Dangerous”.

D: Mine was also from Michael Jackson: “Thriller”.

O: Was that on tape or  vinyl?

D: Vinyl. I’m older.

O: I’m a girl from 80’s. You are from 70’s.

DS: You are old Dan! (they both laugh)

DS: What’s the “phrase” you use these days, as a band?

D:: Can you feel the groove tonight! We just want to say that like a thousand times a day.

O: Oh it’s a long story. But you know you find the most cheesy video on Youtube and you keep watching it and it becomes a habit.

DS: Do you have any secret talents?

O: He’s (Dan) really good at cooking.

DS: Yeah? What can you cook?

D: Whatever you want.

DS: So if one day you decide to stop being a musician,  you always have a second job!

D: My parents have a restaurant for 35 years, so I have a talent.

DS: If you were to be a band in 60s or 70s, who would you be?

O: Can we be the Beatles?

DS: No! Everybody wants to be The Beatles.

D: The Kleenex.

– Hayalsu Altinordu

David Bowie lionized on New British Pound…Keep the Ch-ch-ch-change

Posted in New Art

Maybe if the United States started printing rock legends on our dollar bills, the economy might pick up.  Over the great pond,  the Brixton district in London has been experimenting with it’s own alternative to the sterling pound to promote local commerce.  The newest, and hands down, the most fun to funky cycle of this British currency features David Bowie, wearing ‘Aladdin Sane’ makeup from the 1973 album following up ‘The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars’.  Bowie is the first musician to be included on the currency and we are excited to see who Brixton will come up with next. Keep the ch-ch-ch-change.

 

 

Doug Aitken’s installation – Black Mirror Featuring Chloe Sevigny

LA based artist Doug Aitken is most known for his innovative fine art installations but not limited. In 2007, Aitken’s “Sleepwalkers” exhibition at MoMA was able to transform a whole city block into an expansive cinematic experience. His work, which utilizes a wide array of media and artistic techniques, ranging from photography, sculpture, film, and  sound can be seen on display in London, in a new solo exhibition in London taking over both floors of Victoria Miro. The exhibition  includes a specially reconfigured presentation of his acclaimed multi-channel film installation Black Mirror, alongside new wall-and floor-based sculptures and light box works.  Check out more HERE.

In the upper gallery Aitken’s film installation Black Mirror explores the story of a nomadic individual, set in a modern wilderness: a geography constructed of calls, electronic messages, and virtual documents superimposed over the physical world. It is a portrait of people who are the products of a society that has lost track of information and is saturated with change. The characters move in shorthand, they communicate in quick pulses, they travel long distances for short meetings. They depart quickly. The protagonist, a young woman played by American star Chloë Sevigny, exists in the borderless world of Black Mirror where people live fast lives in the shadows. These are the people you pass and don’t identify at the airport terminal, the hotel lobby and the car rental kiosk. Black Mirror explores modern life accelerated. Like a river of light moving on the highway, we’re all on this road, but this is the story of those for whom the road is existence; those who don’t step back to breathe the air, those who never stagnate or stop… this is “the now.” (http://www.victoria-miro.com/exhibitions/_425/)



PAINFUL NEW VIDEO FROM OFF! FEAT. SKATER LEO ROMERO

OFF! just released a video for their song “Crawl” featuring Thrasher’s 2010 skater of the year Leo Romero wiping out. Over and over and over. For a minute an a half, to be exact. Check it out and feel free to share the pain. 

The band are out on tour starting this weekend, full dates follow:

Oct 7 – Club Sound – Salt Lake City, UT

Oct 8 – Marquis Theater – Denver, CO

Oct 9 – The Black Sheep – Colorado Springs, CO

Oct 12 – Sons of Hermann Hall – Dallas, TX

Oct 13 – Red 7 – Austin, TX

Oct 14 – The Studio @ Warehouse Live – Houston, TX

Oct 15 – Siberia – New Orleans, LA

Oct 17 – Exit/In – Nashville, TN

Oct 18 – The Masquerade – Atlanta, GA

Oct 19 – Palomino Pool Room – Gainesville, FL

Oct 20 – The Engine Room – Tallahassee, FL

Oct 21 – Backbooth – Orlando, FL

Oct 22 – State Theatre – St. Petersburg, FL

Oct 23 – Culture Room – Ft. Lauderdale, FL

STREAM: JACK WHITE HOMAGE TO HANK WILLIAMS: YOU KNOW THAT I KNOW

The lost notebooks of Hank Williams were discovered after he died in 1953.   Jack White, Bob Dylan and a bunch of other artists have gotten together to complete the collection of previously unheard songs, adding a little lick of their own style with a lot of Hank’s raw energy to make  The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams.  Stream the standout track “You Know That I know” from White Stripes frontman Jack White HERE

STREAM THE COOL KID’S MIKEY ROCKS: PREMIERE POLITICS

Sir Michael Rocks aka Mikey Rocks of The Cool Kids dropped his solo debut last week for free. Premier Politics features guests Alchemist, Casey Veggies, Jeremih, Cardo, Boldy James, Shorty K, Chuck Inglish and plenty others.

 Grab it here, feel free to share this link: http://www.mediafire.com/?a29f1r1b08c2p9c 

Backstage Photo Pass with Elodie Chapuis

Posted in New Art, Photography

Meet Elodie Chapuis, the newest member of the discosalt Artist Collective.  Since she began photography in 2006,  Elodie has contributed her music and fashion photography to a slew of culture magazines and fashion projects.  In 2007, she spent 4 days covering the Roskilde Festival in Denmark; the first step towards a personal artistic project to photograph live performances and off stage portraits.  Elodie’s work in music, has lead her to several solo and collective exhibitions and she is constantly looking for new upcoming artists and bands to photograph. Some of her work includes The Kills, Franz Ferdinand, The Drums, Razorlight, Florence & The Machine, The XX, Iggy & The Stooges, Cold War Kids,  PJ Harvey, The Strokes among others. For updates, check back soon to find more of Elodie’s work in the collective here.

NO RADIOHEAD AT OCCUPY WALL STREET TODAY

Sorry folks, No soap, No Radiohead. The band’s representative Steve Martin of Nasty Little Man said in an email “We can officially confirm this is NOT happening.”   Twitter rumors have been circulating of  a confirmed Radiohead  “surprise” show downtown for the Occupy Wall Street protest this afternoon at 4pm, but looks like this will not happen.  The band will however,  stick around NYC to play Jimmy Fallon’s late show Monday night, and has been rumored to play the All Tomorrow’s Party over the weekend.

 


DISCOSALT EXCLUSIVE: ANR AND THE COMING APOCALYPSE

Miami’s ANR navigate post-apocalyptic musical territory on their new album Stay Kids.

The end of days may be imminent, but right now, we are going to need more napkins.It’s about 95 degrees and feels like Cambodia in the back room of Mikey’s, a greasy, Asian-influenced burger joint in the Lower East Side. I’m sitting down with Floridian (psych-synth) chill-wave band ANR, trying to stave off forehead sweat and keep my shirt clean, while politely navigating the house signature: a patty infused with corned beef hash, smothered in curry chili.If the Apocalypse looms near then two of the four horsemen have potentially revealed themselves as some unlikely but dubious “signs”: a lamb satay burger and a restroom door handle made of tissue paper. If this is, in fact, our last meal, I regret not having ordered the avocado shake. The horror…

DISCOSALT EXCLUSIVE: ANR AND THE COMING APOCALYPSE

ANR’s Michael-John Hancock and Brian Robertson are concerned about the coming apocalypse – their worry rears itself into our conversation more than once over the course of the night. This is, most likely, because of the band’s South Florida roots – an area notoriously devastated by hurricanes. In fact, the duo’s last album, Stay Kids, is a concept album about the recent Gulf Coast disaster, the earthquake in Haiti, and the fear that Miami will soon find itself under three feet of water.

“Miami has like 20-50 more years before its like Venice, before it’s flooded,” says Michael-John. “I think some people don’t want to talk about [the apocalypse]. This year especially, waking up New Years, dead birds falling from the sky, dead fish floating in the waters, that dumb ass with his head shaved in Arizona, all this stuff happening in the Middle East. So [the album] Stay Kids also means, ‘Go back to square one and deal with it, like a kid would.’”

The band has opened for such big name acts as Yeasayer. But, they tell me, they don’t get out much – and for some reason, I believe them.

Together, these “reclusive” Miami music-makers create complex, atmospheric synth-heavy dance music; A sound the band describes as  “apocalyptic psychedelic pop.” They create loud, virtuosic melodies with haunting, brilliant falsettos that reach a shimmering chorus of electro-pop juju with raw, punk rock intensity.

ANR is equal parts energetic and unnerving. Theirs is the kind of music befitting the soundtrack of a horror movie.Which, incidentally, it is. Slasher? I barely knew her is the band’s new, film project, in which Brian – the quieter of the two – plays an eerily believable killer. The short is an extended music video cum horror epic, reminiscent of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” and based on ANR’s single, “Big Problem.”

“It all started with the idea of shooting spear hooks through this girl’s back, through her boobs, into her boyfriend’s hands,” Michael-John explains. “That little idea became a short film.”

DISCOSALT EXCLUSIVE: ANR AND THE COMING APOCALYPSE

We discuss the merits of Star Trek versus Star Wars, breakfast cereal with the Chariots of Fire soundtrack, evangelical radio preachers, and what it’s like living and making music down South. Brian tells us that one of the major handicaps to the South Florida music scene is its lack of venues. “It’s a pretty cool, self-contained scene, in a way, being so far South…So far out of the way from the rest of the country. You have to just get together, collaborate, make stuff. “

While our conversation occasionally drifts into darker waters, ANR’s laid-back, quintessentially southern style has me at ease like we are swapping ghost stories on a road trip. (Or how movie killers deftly charm their victims into thinking everything will be okay.)

But ANR truly will make everything okay, because they are a pop band that transcends pop music. ANR has managed to find an emotional catharsis in the chaos of the apocalypse and cultivated a sound and style that is surprisingly hopeful for the future. Stay Kids is really about “just trying to put a positive spin on the coming apocalypse,” says Michael-John.

Discosalt Magazine - Issue 1 - Cover

If the end of days is coming, ANR is spending their time wisely.

Continue Reading the full article > Download the Summer 2011 Issue of DISCOSALT MAGAZINE

NEW VIDEO + MP3 GRAB FROM UK’S JETHRO FOX: BLINDING LIGHT

Jethro Fox is a songwriter based in Liverpool, UK.  This year has seen the release of first single Blinding Light, which received positive praise from many different blogs and companies, plus a one-to-one songwriting session with Sir Paul McCartney.  Autumn 2011 will see further releases and a selection of tour dates.

MP3 DOWNLOAD: Blinding Light

 

NEW TRACK FROM YUCK: SOOTHE ME

In preparation of a double-disc deluxe edition of their self-titled debut album (out October 11), Yuck are now streaming a new track called “Soothe Me”; sounding less like Dinosaur Jr. and more like a band trying to forge their own direction.  The re-issue will include “Soothe Me” along with 5 other  B-side tracks. Listen here.

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/24120124″]

 

STROKED: A STEREOGUM TRIBUTE TO IS THIS IT

(Designed by Seldon Hunt)

For the 10th anniversary of it’s original release, Stereogum presents STROKEDa track-for-track cover album of the Strokes first album Is This It. If you have ever wondered how Real Estate, Owen Pallett,  Peter Bjorn & John, Austra, Heems, The Morning Benders, and others might sound offering their spin on Strokes songs, download this album now.

Click here to download.

Read the Liner notes from Stereogum below: 

Peter Bjorn & John – “Is This It”
The only time I have agreed with some of the many, many stupid music journalists in Sweden was when “The Strokes” appeared on a Swedish website about 10 years ago. On of the most stupid journalist said that this new band for New York was the rebirth of rock or something and when I for the first time listened to three of their tracks on this swedish web-page I almost wanted to hit myself in the head with the computer. It was kind of a new thing for me to listen to music on a computer machine and this was the very first time I remember getting goosebumbs from hearing music on such a thing. It´s a strong memory believe it or not and It felt like magic that something this good had been created maybe just some month ago and that I could hear it on my computer at work. The idiot journalist was right, this was amazing and for me it was almost like when I heard “Jump” with “Van Halen” for the first time back in 1984. When we recorded our cover of “Is This It” we didn’t want to do anything crazy or weird like turning the song into a acid jazz P-funk power ballad. We just wanted to play it as good as we could.
– John Eriksson
Chelsea Wolfe – “The Modern Age”
I didn’t know this song well before I was given it to cover, so I listened to it a few times in a row and then started just focusing on the words. This song has great lyrics. I decided to pretend it was an old folk song. When I recorded my cover I was really sick and had taken lots of heavy cough syrup. I sat down with my classical guitar and just played it out, then my bandmate Ben (Chisholm) and I added layers of vocals, drums and juno until it felt slow and heavy like the medicine.
– Chelsea Wolfe
Frankie Rose – “Soma”
To be honest this was the first time had ever actually sat down and listened to the strokes! Maybe that sounds crazy like I have been living in a bush or something, but true! The trick was how best to make the song my own. I decided slowing it down and taking out some of the garage elements might be interesting. Adding a synth was helpful. The harmonies keep the chorus moving forward like the original, and yet totally different. Take note, there is a little homage in the guitar at the end. Can you guess for whom?
– Frankie Rose
Real Estate – “Barely Legal”
Matt, Alex and I – as well as all of our friends – were pretty much obsessed with this band when we were 15. We formed a Strokes cover band and played at Cassie (Ramone)’s sweet 16. When Alex got his first electric guitar, he opted for the white Stratocaster like Albert Hammond Jr. He even had the red lightning bolt strap. The approach to doing this cover was to not make it sound like the original, pretty simple. However, these songs are all arranged so well already that it’s pretty hard to come up with something new. We did a half-time drum beat thing, and then the rest of it just kind of fell into place.
– Martin Courtney
Wise Blood – “Someday”
I was psyched and terrified to get “Someday.” I decided to try and stick with the way the song develops, which I think is 4 parts that progress, fall apart, then start over again. Everything else I sort of switched up, and I tailored the lyrics a tiny bit to better suit me.
– Chris Laufman
Austra – “Alone, Together”
This song was really hard for me to cover because in my opinion the greatest things about it are the performance and the production. It took a while, but ultimately I just made it sound like an Austra song, which is to be expected!
– Katie Stelmanis
the morning benders – “Last Night”
Back when Is This It was released everyone was going crazy over how much The Strokes sounded like VU and Television and Iggy Pop. But to me, there first single “Last Nite” always felt like a Beatles song. The way the rhythmic elements always stay out of the way of the vocal, that one note guitar line a la George Harrison, even Julian’s vocal has that combo of snotty grit and melody that reminds of Lennon. But beyond all that, the reason it really feels like a Beatles song is the structure. It’s classic early-Beatles Lennon, and an approach to pop structure that still hasn’t really been tapped into. There’s no clear verse or chorus, just one main hook and melody. The only other section is a short bridge, that really just acts as a kind of propeller for the main melody, giving it the momentum it needs to come back over and over and over again. That’s good pop! And of course the middle eight is replaced by a guitar solo because, well, they’re the Strokes. For our cover we turned that structure on its head. The sections still occur in the same order, but we have re-imagined them. The main “Last Nite” melody/lyric becomes a proper verse, and the section that used to be a short bridge becomes the proper chorus/hook. At the end everything intersects with each other and we have a melodic party. Pretty fun, right?
– Chris Chu
Owen Pallett – “Hard To Explain”
Is This It is one of my favourite records of all time. I like a band when they’re metronomic with zero dynamics, and they never play the chorus more than twice, and when the vocals are buried. It sounds like efficiency. I read a quote, once, from Regina Spektor, in reference to Is This It:
The thing that blew my mind first hearing the Strokes was that they were the closest I had heard rock come to classical. Their music is extraordinarily orderly and composed.
I post on several message boards — less these days, but still on occasion. Spektor’s statement, which made instant sense to me, was the source of lively online debate. Essentially, people disagreed with Spektor’s quote. What followed was a firestorm of criticism, and many things came into question, from Spektor’s familiarity with rock music to begin with, to the worth of “classical training” in the pop context.
A user named Nabisco posted this in Spektor’s defence:
So far there’s like one person on the thread who’s actually bothered to spend half a second thinking about what [Spektor] seems to mean. (…) As of the first couple albums, at least, there is something almost insanely orderly about the Strokes’ eighth notes, in a way that’s pretty much the opposite of the “raw sloppy rock” tag they once got. I seem to remember Tom Ewing saying it was no surprise to have a drum machine on “Hard To Explain,” since the band always played like they were machined and sequenced anyway. It makes sense that this would be what Spektor means when she says the band is “like Mozart”. (…) It would be nice if there were ever any pull on [this message board] to look at something with the expectation that maybe — just maybe — it will be useful for something better than eye-rolling.
When I was asked to cover “Hard To Explain,” I remembered Spektor’s comment and Nabisco’s response. I re-imagined the Strokes as a piano quintet, and had us all playing hard, fast and mechanical. I can’t sing it as well as Julian, but he’s a really good singer — I think he had might have had lessons — not that it matters.
– Owen Pallett
Heems – “New York City Cops”
Michael Stewart, Eleanor Bumpurs, Amadou Diallo, Patrick Dorismond, Alberta Spruill, Timothy Stansbury, Abner Louima, Sean Bell, Ousmane Zongo, Randolph Evans, Anthony Baez, Clifford Glover, and Fermin Arzou were senselessly beaten or killed by the NYPD while unarmed.
– Himanshu Suri
Deradoorian – “Trying Your Luck”
I was psyched to have a different type of challenge within my daily writing routine. It was nice to have a project that could be viewed more objectively and focus more on what kind of sound I wanted it to have. I love the production of dub/reggae and thought I’d give my own interpretation of that for “Trying Your Luck.” It took a couple of tries to get on the right wave, but I feel it came together in the end. I usually don’t add environmental sounds to songs, or use that kind of instrumentation, so it was fun to put that all in there.
– Angel Deradoorian
Computer Magic – “Take It Or Leave It”
I grew up listening to Is This It in middle school and high school. I think everyone my age did. “Someday” was my ringtone for my old Nokia light up phone for at least three years. I love the Strokes, but I can’t think of anyone who doesn’t. “Take It Or Leave It” has a pretty level headed obvious message to it, it’s one of my favorites.
– Danielle Johnson

 

TEEEL + DATASSETTE: CORDUROY SWELL [REMIX]

Teeel’ s Amulet (Remixed) is now available everywhere! You can stream the whole album here or grab it on itunes.  To promote the album, Teeel has also released a new video for the opening track/ Datassette Remix of  “Corduroy Swell”. 

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/playlists/1056282″ height=”200″]

Dan Mountford Doubles his Exposure

Posted in New Art, top story

At just 20 years old, revealing little background information, English photographer/ graphic designer Dan Mountford has created a professional portfolio which already includes clients like EMI Records. His series of portraits titled The Worlds Inside of Us, is a surreal visual journey into the minds of his subjects, using the process of double exposure and photoshop to create thoughtful, captivating and superbly composed images. You can purchase prints through Dan’s shop or see more of his work on flickr.

ALBUM STREAM: GEOFFREY O’CONNOR: VANITY IS FOREVER

Stream Geoffrey O’Connor’s soaring and arch pop statement, Vanity is Forever, now! The album will be released in the U.S. on Tuesday, September 27th via Chapter Music but you can give it a listen today and dare to be hypnotized.  Make sure to check out the very David Lynch, Twin Peaks soundtrack reminiscent “Thing’s I shouldn’t Do”.

STREAM VANITY IS FOREVER HERE

PRE-ORDER VANITY IS FOREVER HERE

Also, listen to these previously released tracks off the record:

“Whatever Leads Me To You”

“Now and Then”

Geoffrey released a remix EP of “Whatever Leads Me To You” as well, including reworkings by Expensive Looks, Lawrence Arabia, and WORNG. All the remixes can be downloaded here for free.

SHUT UP LITTLE MAN!: AN AUDIO MISADVENTURE

Posted in discosalt, top story

Before youtube, before twitter, before facebook and all the other networks where viral sensations get their inception today, there was “Shut Up Little Man!”: a short 1987 audio verite recording of two argumentative alcoholics, Peter J. Haskett and Raymond Huffman, made by neighboring apartment dwellers “Eddie Lee Sausage” and “Mitchell D.”  The recordings were passed  from friend to friend to reach cult status among the San Francisco underground culture, until Bananafish magazine acquired commercial use of the tapes in 1992, forging the line “Shut Up Little Man!” into viral sensation.  The new documentary “Shut Up Little Man!” examines the tapes and probes the question of how viral sensations start.  The film opened in New York and Los Angeles last Friday.

Watch this exclusive clip from IFC.com, where Eddie and Mitchell recount their first encounter with Peter and Ray.

NURSES: DRACULA

Posted in discosalt

[rating: 4.5 stars]

Nurses: Dracula

Label: Dead Oceans

Release date: September 20, 2011

Nurses’ entire brand is built off personality. Granted, that brand is founded on the laurels of just two mostly unheralded albums to this point, but nevertheless, the band’s genetics have been fairly well established. On Dracula, not a whole lot has changed. Aaron Chapman’s vocals, the biggest thing that separates Nurses from their closest peers, are as sharp and addicting (and divisive, too) as ever. This is certainly a much more antiseptic record than their last, a progression that lends their sound a little more depth but sacrifices plenty of the organic, backyard-bred charm that helped make Apple’s Acre so infinitely redeemable.Nurses’ third full-length begins with “Fever Dreams,” the lead single and prime point of introduction for what their sound brings to the fold. Industrial clicks and clacks quickly lead to wobbly guitar and percussion, which is then promptly washed over by Chapman’s challenging drawl. His words are difficult to understand at first, if only because he sings practically every note through his nose, his pitch and inflections equal parts airy and whimsical. It can be a challenging sound, but ultimately his vocals – as they have on previous releases – maintain a carefree quality that drives the mood forward successfully. “Fever Dreams,” like several tracks on this LP, can be a little bit repetitive, with only occasional splashes of cymbal between a lot of very similar moments and layers. Still, it’s a nice aesthetic and the harmonies are every bit as addictive as “Caterpillar Playground” or “Technicolor,” the two big Apple’s Acre standouts.In the past, Nurses have been appropriately shuffled under the umbrellas of freak folk and neo-psychedelic rock. That hasn’t changed either, be it the squeaky effects that surround the hollow, loose drumming on “Extra Fast” or the brilliant explosiveness of “Gold Jordan,” which utilizes horns and represents quite easily the band’s most fully realized soundscape to date. It’s fantastic to hear the Portland band expand and indulge; most bands have rough production on early albums simply because that’s all they’ve been afforded, so it’s hard not to feel like albums that come further down the road backed by more proper studios are really the kind of thing that was intended all along. And there’s no doubt about it: Dracula is lush and focused, so clearly the band entered the studio with a vision. Still, these guys are at their best when au naturale. They sound good with production value bolstering their efforts too, but it’s not the same. Dracula just doesn’t have the character ofApple’s Acre or even Hangin’ Nothin’ but Our Hands Down, which might be their weakest record overall even if it did come packaged in a certain lovable, elemental messiness.Dracula‘s key selling point is its accessibility. Concentrated hooks are fused well with crisp, poppy arrangements throughout, though sometimes the use of effects feel forced (“Dancing Grass,” the band’s four-and-a-half minute Animal Collective phase, is an example that really sticks out). The changes here have been small ones, but at least they’ve been well-executed and geared towards drawing in a broader audience. Even if it isn’t quite as organically endearing as their past work,Dracula successfully retains the same sensational personality that’s made them such a must-hear act.

-Andrew Bailey

MONDAY VIDEO PREMIERE: WE DON’T LIKE YOU: BEAUTIFUL DISASTER

Watch the premiere of We Don’t Like You‘s,  DIY self-produced and directed music video for their new track “Beautiful Decay”.  The trio, hailing from Pesaro, Italy, churn out simple, sharp and brazen rock saturated with heavy dance rhythms and riffs that echo influences ranging from the Arctic Monkeys to Franz Ferdinand.  Find out more about the band HERE.