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″]

 

STRFKR: LIVE AT BOWERY BALLROOM 9/17

Starfucker, also known as STRFKR, formerly briefly known as Pyramiddd, performed to a sold-out Bowery Ballroom on Saturday night.  A far cry from the Nachbar show I organized in 2008 (link) and even the Mercury Lounge performance of 2009 (link). How things have changed…bigger venue, bigger sound, bigger crowd, and even a bigger band…but there was one major deficiency.  Ryan, the face and frontman of Starfucker, is gone.  Starfucker may have started as a solo project of Josh’s, but for anyone who had seen them live, Ryan was the center of attention. For those that had never seen Starfucker before, the absence is really no loss.  The band sounded fantastic, Shawn and Josh both stepped up to share duties that the comically bad dancer Ryan once alone bore and had I not known better I would think they’d spent years with this approach.  Call me an old man, well-removed from the loop, as I was unaware that in early August, Ryan had announced his departure from the band to focus on his solo career.  It’s unfortunately hard to recover from an unexpected blow of that caliber. I wasn’t prepared.

Nevertheless, the band DID sound amazing.  Starting off with the their first ever single, German Love, the band instantly drew the crowd in.  Though in essence a simple and pure pop song, when combined with a rad laser show, harder-than-anticipated synth beats, and a crowd of primarily 18-20 yr olds, a pit was bound to erupt.  It was, in fact, in many ways, one of the most aggressive shows I have seen in New York, and it was from the first note.  My girlfriend and I were literally forced from front row, center stage to fifth row, stage left by the time German Love had finished.  Growing up going primarily to punk shows, I loved it.  The energy of the band and the crowd ramped up quickly and never faltered.  My concern that the show would lack energy, sweat and dancing without Ryan was quickly alleviated.

Starfucker

Beat Connection

Alexico

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″]

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.

CAVEMAN: LIVE AT MERCURY LOUNGE 9/15

New York’s Caveman played a sold-out recordless record release party last week (9/15) for the digital release of their debut album “CoCo Beware” on Magic Man! Records (which you can get here).  Packed with psychedelic pop jams from beginning to end, we were ecstatic for the chance to catch these guys live.  Their show contained a visual component which was relatively nondescript, but which worked nicely to light the stage in a beautiful way while not distracting the audience from the focal point of the performance, namely the music. Frontman Matthew Iwanusa’s vocals contain traces of the nostalgia that seems to pervade every fuzzy shoegaze band since 2008…which is, of course, essentially every “new” band since 2009…but only ever so subtly and in hearing them live, I felt as though harmonically the vocals were aimed more at creating a mood than a mentality.  Anyone you speak to will tell you that if you like Grizzly Bear, you’ll like Caveman, however in a live setting, while a great deal of the albums texture does come through that invariably draws the Grizzly Bear references, I found Caveman to provide what was, for me, a significantly more engaging and exciting performance.  Iwanusa alternated between a standing drum and guitar and on songs such as “My Room” and “Great Life” launched into ferociously heavy tribalesque drum tirades turning the otherwise melancholic and hushed songs into truly dance-worthy jams.  It’s rare to find a band with such sweeping and beautiful sounds to also have the pop sensibilities that Caveman has, and perhaps the best example is “Thankful.”

It’s no surprise that Caveman are so quickly generating buzz instantly upon the release of their debut and have gained places opening with the likes of The War on Drugs, Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros, and the White Rabbits. These guys put on one hell of a good show. Abandoning the sold out crowd with a deafening reverb, Caveman returned to the stage to perform one last unplanned nonalbum song “Wasted Life.” Our recommendation, be sure to catch Caveman at CMJ next month, you won’t be disappointed.

 

JPL

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.

NEW VIDEO FROM ARCTIC MONKEYS : SUCK IT AND SEE

Focus Creeps, the director duo behind Waaves “King of the Beach”and Girls ““Lust for Life” have teamed up once  again to direct another Arctic Monkeys video. This time around for the title track off their new album “Suck It And See”.  Interesting title, interesting American Graffiti style video, interesting nipple appearance…unfortunately not so interesting song. 

NEW VIDEO FROM BONNIE “PRINCE” BILLY: QUAIL & DUMPLINGS

“Prince” Boniface “Bonnie” Billy goes by many names—St. Nick, Lucifer, AKA Joe– but close friends call him by his “nick name”, which is short for “Nicolas Nameham”, which is long for “NiNa”, which is backwards for “aNiN”, which sounds a bit like “anon” which is short for “anonymous”, and he prefers to keep it that way. Only recently has he come clean against the wall of speculation concerning his mysterious origins.Which brings us to the music video for the single “Quail and Dumplings”!!Directed by Benjamin Berman & starring Kennan Gudjonsson with special appearance by Nina Nastasia!

ST. VINCENT: ST. VINCENT

[rating: 4.5]

St. Vincent: St. Vincent

Label: 4ad Records

Release date:  September 13, 2011

Annie Clark is a woman of almost painterly beauty who would, in all likelihood, cut a bitch if she needed to. Beneath her gracefully composed chamber pop lies a scratchy, violent underbelly. With Strange Mercy, Clark achieves the perfect balance of porcelain elegance and distorted ugliness she’s spent three albums working to hit. Serrated guitar and some seriously agitated synthesizers—the coda of “Surgeon” sounds like something off a particularly wigged-out Bernie Worrell record—rip straight through strings, woodwinds and Clark’s own crystalline voice, leaving fractures in the delicate arrangements that take on a skewed sort of loveliness themselves.

 

– Matt Singer

NEW SILJE NES VIDEO FILMED IN NORWAY

In advance of next month’s short European tour, Berlin-based Norwegian Silje Nes has released a great new video. Created in the unusual portrait format, it was filmed by Blank Blank in time lapse over 24 hours in Flø, Norway. The video was created for Silje’s live performance at the GO WITH THE FLØ festival, this June. Beautifully shot, the film documents the Norwegian countryside and changing atmospheric conditions and is sympathetically soundtracked by a new abstract instrumental track which Silje created.

Q + A: FLORENCE + THE MACHINE

Since the remarkable reaction to her teaser track ‘What The Water Gave Me’ which was released online late last month, Florence + The Machine announced the new single “Shake It Out” and full details of her highly anticipated second album today. The 12 track album or deluxe 20 track double album, ‘Ceremonials’ will be released in the UK on October 31, 2011 on Island Records and in the U.S in November on Universal Republic.
Discoalt writer Hayalsu Altinordu recently sat down with Isabella Summers; the “Machine” of Florence +The Machine and one of Florence Welch’s best friends.

 

 

DISCOSALT: Can you tell us about how music entered into your life and how you started making your own music briefly? On your Myspace page,  you stated that you like to work on hip-hop music more..is it true?
ISABELLA SUMMERS: I was 9 years old and I had 2 boy friends who gave me a cassette. In one side snoopy dog and the great diggers on the other side. I listened to it over and over again. As a teenager I hanged around with them. They were Djing and scratching, listening to lots of hip-hop music. When I was 18, I want a pair of deck. So then i bought a deck and i started to make music, and mixes. When I was in college, I started working in a hip-hop label, and then i decided that i wanna become a producer.Then I started making hip-hop, then I got my own studio and then I made Florence. And now I do all kind of things.I have to say I really have an open mind for music. 3 years ago I think I always wanted to make hip-hop music, I was always determined to do that. But I always wanted to make songs, now I’m learning to play guitar. I appreciate everything.
DS: You are known as the “Machine” of Florence + The Machine. For how long you have been working with Florence? How did you guys meet? And why are you called “Machine” particularly?

IS: When we first started making music together I had a mpc machine which made beats. It was my idea to make a song. So she came to my studio, i made beats and she sang. She felt like she was the robot when she pressed the play button. And my machine was actually my mpc. So we were together the robot & the machine. So when we set up a group it became “Florence + The Machine”. I was the machine because I was the one who had the machine and who always had the ideas.

DS: You’ve been touring a lot lately. I last caught you at the Primavera festival at Spain and you guys were amazing!  How does it feel to work with Florence? Can you tell us about your relationship with her? Do you have any interesting/funny memories together that you can share?

IS: Yeah it was a weird day because one day before we were in Leeds playing for a university ball and we finished at 3 am. And then we had a flight at 7 am to fly to Barcelona. We were really tired when we are there. Our plane was delayed so we were all over the place. But I’m glad you enjoyed it! I definitely remember writing “Dog days days are over”. I had my mpc machine, I don’t play guitar and i didn’t have a proper keyboard. We only had drums and I was like “how are we gonna do it” she was like “yeah we are gonna make a record!”. One night she bought drinks and she was hitting the walls to Express the beats in the dog days are over. The first time we played in Glastonbury she had a clown dress and she forget one of the song’s lyrics and it was fun! She is crazy & amazing. Now we are really good friends.  I think I should keep a diary about all these stuff. I have lots of photos. I think i should make it a book.

DS: You co-wrote and produced many songs on the Lungs album. What inspires you most when you are writing? How did you feel when the album won a Brit award?

IS: It’s amazing. I’m a workaholic. I still didn’t have a real break and think about the success but it’s amazing we’ve done so well thinking that we are just learning to make a song. We created a song in a small studio and now hundreds of people are singing that song.

DS: What are your thoughts on the future of the music industry? We continue to see record sales dropping, online sales rising and concert/festival tickets getting really expensive. Meanwhile, bands are offering music lovers free song downloads…
IS: I don’t know really. I kinda feel like I work hard to get to this point. In life if you try hard you can also get something back. I think the internet is amazing. How people sells records..But selling records is a process in this business.I think people will always gonna need music. I don’t think the internet will kill music or it’s sales.

DS: Can you name some bands you love?

IS: I really like Jimmy Hendrix, early Janet Jackson. Marianne Faithful, led zeplin are my current discoveries. But I also listen Lady Gaga and Rihanna. I always keep an eye of everything. I even listen to Justin Bieber! I listen to everything people put in front of me.

DS: What are your future projects? Who would you like to collaborate with?

IS: I always wanted to work with Rick Rubin and David Grohl. Beyonce would be cool! I’m really with my studio and the people I’m working with.

DS: If you were to organize a festival, who would be your headliners?

IS: The XX, for sure! They are great. We recorded with them before they got really big, about a year ago. We toured with them and it was fun. Yeasayer would be also nice.

DAS RACIST: UNCENSORED MICHAEL JACKSON VIDEO

You may have seen the video for Das Racist’s “Michael Jackson” last Friday, but today they celebrate the release of their debut album “Relax” by unleashing the director’s cut of the video, uncensored to maximize hilarity.

MP3 GRAB: HENRY’S FUNERAL SHOE: DOG SCRATCHED EAR

Following on the heels of their highly-praised debut Everything’s For Sale, South Wales duo Henry’s Funeral Shoe are set to unleash their second full-length effort Donkey Jacket – an album filled with the twosome’s distinctive punk-energy-blues-drenched-rock ‘n’ roll. With their incendiary guitars and hard-rock riot, fans of Radio Moscow, Left Lane Cruiser and The Black Diamond Heavies should find much to like in this explosive new release.

Comprised of brothers Aled and Brennig Clifford, this second offering evokes images of the Deep South, rather than the Welsh Valleys from which they hail.

Donkey Jacket features a number of guest appearances from a plethora of acclaimed musicians, including long time Van Morrison collaborator John ‘Ned’ Edwards on harmonica, slide guitar and mandolin, Pete Hurley of legendary ’70s Welsh band Lone Star on bass, and Justin Beynon of the Broken Vinyl Club on keys. The album was recorded in Wales with Tim Hammill at the helm, while mixing duties were undertaken by Jim Diamond (Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, The Go) in Detroit.

Taking its name from the coat worn by Welsh miners, Donkey Jacket is a collection of rousing numbers ranging from the hard-hitting “Love Is A Fever” and “Anvil & Chains,” to their contrasting softer side on acoustic-driven tracks such as “Heart on Fire” and “Across The Sky.”

FREE MP3: HENRY’S FUNERAL SHOE: DOG SCRATCHED EAR

 

STREAM THE NEW CLAP YOUR HANDS SAY YEAH ALBUM: HYSTERICAL


Clap Your Hands Say Yeah has come a long way since 2005, when the DIY group first recorded and released their debut album all out of the apartment of bassist Tyler Sargent.

The band is back  now with their third album Hysterical, marking their best work to date. “Hysterical Balances the exuberance of the band’s first album with beauty and reflection, most notably in “In a Motel” and “Adams Plane.” But it wouldn’t be a Clap Your Hands Say Yeah record without that bounce; that “grab your buddy and dance with unhinged joy” emotion that’s all overHysterical. It’s feeling I thought we’d lost, but that the band has once again found, just in time.” (NPR Music)

 

You can stream the new album in it’s entirety on NPR’s First Listen by following the link below:

http://www.npr.org/player/v2/mediaPlayer.html?action=1&t=1&islist=false&id=140226001&m=140227904

PETER BJORN AND JOHN TRY A LITTLE TENDERNESS

A.V. Club has released another great cover song video from Swedish trio Peter Bjorn And John. This time tackling the 1966 Otis Redding American soul classic, “Try A Little Tenderness”; a song that over the years, has been re-interpreted by just about everyone from Bing Crosby to Three Dog Night.  While no version really compares to the original track for me,  Peter Bjorn and John take a pretty good indie stab at it, joining the tradition to  support their latest album, Gimme Some. Check it out.

Peter Bjorn And John cover “Try A Little Tenderness” by Otis Redding

ALBUM STREAM: AIM LOW: FOULARD

There is something mysterious about a band with a professional veneer that refuses to share the names of it’s members.  Called to only by their initials, the members of Aim Low create dark and swirling drone shoegaze that uses waves of sound to insinuate melodies.  It’s ambience is magnetic, gently pulling you in with sharp reverb and subtle loops.  Their EP Foulard is available for free through Bandcamp, which will also alert you to upcoming shows.

Q + A: THE NATIONAL

Discosalt writer Hayalsu Altinordu sits down with The National to discuss their writing process, the best thing about New York, Headliners at the ultimate music festival and what’s on their ipod shuffle.

 

DISCOSALT: Can you tell us a bit about the writing and recording process of your last album High Violet? It’s an amazing album, worth waiting for, but why did it take so long to record? 

THE NATIONAL: Thank you for the compliment. Writing and recording and our band are two sides of the same coin. The process starts with musical sketches which Aaron and/or Bryce will record and pass on to Matt to consider. For the ones he likes we go back and record drums for and just kind of massage into finished mixes over thecourse, in this case, of many long months.

DS: High Violet sounds even heavier compared with your previous album. Also, the songs all seem to have a New York theme…what’s your favorite thing about New York? And what parts of urban life inspired you to write this album?

N: Generally the songs do share a theme as you say. Sonically, too, they are similar in their darkness. As for New York, I believe that the city takes care of its own and is rife with opportunity. I like the seeking aspect of the city life.

DS: Sorrow and Anyone’s Ghosts are albums with some really amazing lyrics, almost magical… I love the line, “I had a hole in the middle where the lightning went through. I told my friends not to worry.” How did the idea for these songs come about ?

N: I like those lyrics too. This is Bryan, the drummer, and I’m afraid I can’t speak for Matt who writes the lyrics. Though Matt is on record in the New York Times Magazine, saying: “[Sorrow]’s about the idea of sorrow more than anybody’s personal experiences.”

As for Anyone’s Ghost, there is an undertow of alienation there. My favorite lines from that song are: “You go out at night with your headphones on, again/Walk through theManhattan valleys of the dead”.

DS: Why did you choose to record this album in your home studio?

N: Well, we blew our budget building the place so we couldn’t really afford to go somewhere else.

DS: Matt, what do you do when the band is working to put the songs together?

Again, Bryan the drummer here, while we’re working in the studio Matt’s at home listening to the demos over and over and agonizing over the lyrics.

DS: What about the artwork of the album? Whose idea was it? 

N: Matt suggested the image of Mark Fox’s piece and Scott put it all together in thedesign.

DS: When you look back at your career thus far..which album do you think defines “The National” the best? And why?

N: For me it would be Cherry Tree the EP. It captured us as we were really coalescing into a “real” working band.

DS: Do you like interacting with your fans through social media sites such as Facebook,myspace & twitter?  

N: I personally don’t use social media sites. I do however write an on-and-off-again tour diary for brassland.org and sometimes gothamist.

DS: Do you prefer playing in front of big audiences, in big festival or in smaller venues?

N: I don’t really have a preference really. I mostly just keep my head down and try not to fuck up.

DS: If you could organize your own music festival, who would headline?

N: Alive or dead? Alive: The Walkmen; Dead: The Grateful Dead

DS: If you had to explain The National in one sentence, what would it be?

N: Hot tar + loose wool = The National.

DS: Can you tell us three songs on your ipod shuffle right now?

N: “Notorious Thugs” by Notorious B.I.G. (aka Biggie Smalls)

“Lover” by Nite Jewel

“Silver Soul” and “Norway” by Beach House

NEW JUSTICE VIDEO: AUDIO, VIDEO, DISCO

Justice have just unveiled the labor-intensive video (appropriate post-Labor Day timing) directed by SO ME, for the title track of the new album Audio, Video, Disco. Good luck getting the hook out of your head.

BAND RADAR: THE MORNING CLOUDS

With lush guitars, and hushed vocals The Morning Clouds are the perfect soundtrack for a foggy drive. The Morning Clouds consists of Josh Wambeke, who’s best known for his work with a band called Fell.  Wambeke’s upcoming release Wasted Youth Blues EP is self produced and recorded, showcasing one complex and lush piece of work. Although Wambeke slinks into a bedroom-pop aesthetic on The Wasted Youth Blues, there’s still enough cosmic dust left over from Fell’s travels to the edge of the universe to coat The Morning Clouds’ songs and cast an ethereal shimmer over that comfortably familiar classic pop framework. Just like the Ramones roughed it up with punk and JAMC’s C86 aesthetic yanked it into the new wave, The Wasted Youth Blues filters the sound through Wambeke’s spaced-out sensibilities. The Morning Clouds first release through Lefse Records is the gem-worthy EP.

Lefse Records will be releasing the debut EP Wasted Youth Blues on October 11th from Denver’s The Morning Clouds.

[MP3] The Morning Clouds “The Wrong Things”
http://www.lefserecords.com/tracks/TheMorningClouds-TheWrongThings.mp3

[Stream] The Morning Clouds “The Wrong Things”
http://soundcloud.com/viciousbuzz/the-wrong-things-1/s-1hgUA