The 10 Best Mustaches in Indie

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Here is our handsome list of the 10 Best Mustaches in Independent Music:

10.Tim Norwind(OK Go!)

9. Taylor Rice(Local Natives)

8. Gaspard Augé and Xavier de Rosnay (Justice)

7. George Lewis Jr. (Twin Shadow)

6. Jesse F. Keeler and Al-P (MSTRKRFT)

5. Alec Ounsworth (Clap Your Hands, say Yeah)

4. John J. McCauley III(Deertick, Middle Brother)

3. Jason Schwartzman(Coconut Records)

2.John Aldridge,Scott Butler and Billy Potts (The Black and White Years)

1. Eugene Hutz(Gogol Bordello)

NEW VIDEO FROM ARCHITECTURE IN HELSINKI: CONTACT HIGH

Krozm directs the very peculiar new video from Architecture in Helsinki for their bleepy dance pop single “Contact High”, off their forthcoming album, Moment Bends. In the video, an androgynous woman/man/ 80’s David Bowie wannabe in a business suit is molested by some  retro happy ending furniture with human arms.

RADIOHEAD: THE KING OF LIMBS

[rating:4]

Radiohead: The King of Limbs

Label: TBD Records

Release date:February 18, 2011

Radiohead’s many achievements are so rich that the group is no longer in a class among peers. They haven’t been for quite a while, really. In much the same way The Beatles discography is compared to itself rather than to albums from other artists of the same era, we draw lines from OK Computer toAmnesiac and Kid A to In Rainbows because these are the only comparisons that make even the slightest sense. Sure, Radiohead borrows concepts from other artists — this is what allows them to take on a new identity with each release — but the music they make is, even objectively, unlike anything else being done. It just is.

Even the band’s peripheral business is unmatched. In 2007, the lads famously utilized a short notice, pay-what-you-want method to release In Rainbows. While giving away music for free (if that’s what you chose to “pay”) wasn’t such an unheard of practice, it certainly was coming from the biggest band in the world yielding a highly anticipated record. But it worked. And so one week ago, the band went down a similar path: they announced via their official website that a new album, The King of Limbs, was not only finished but would be available for digital download (for nine bucks this time) in just five days. Of course, later in the week they audibled and the record was downloadable 24 hours early. For the second time in as many records, the band had rather remarkably dodged the advance leaks that plague so many — practically all — of music’s heaviest hitters. It also set the stage for fans from all over the world to share in a frantic collective listening experience full of swooning, knee-jerk analysis, and even optimistic code cracking.

For many listeners, those first spins were justifiably surprising. Aside from the somewhat confounding fact that The King of Limbs spans only 37-and-a-half minutes across eight songs — Pablo Honey was previously the band’s shortest album at 42 minutes in length (but it had 12 tracks) — the music, which matters above all else, proved something of a perplexity even for a group known for turning any previous sound they’d established onto its head. Even after many, many more listens, there’s still a baffling quality to it all. Beginning with “Bloom”, which is fueled by an uncharacteristically repetitive percussion-heavy beat that reminds of Flying Lotus, this is a record that feels startlingly minimal. In terms of immensity and texture, it sounds a lot closer to Thom Yorke’s solo effort, The Eraser, than it does a full-fledged Radiohead outing. “Separator” (formerly “Mouse Bird Dog”), for instance, sounds like it could have just as easily come from the same sessions where Thom recorded his extraordinary cover of Miracle Legion’s“All For the Best”.

The album is heavily indebted to electronics, but the way in which everything is arranged, produced, and mastered gives it a pleasant organic feel. When you listen to “Idioteque” you can actually hear the carnage of a busy dance floor: sweaty bodies bouncing off one another like bumper cars, the erratic flash of strobes. Aside from the fantastic pairing of “Codex” and “Give Up the Ghost” (both softer cuts), every song here is thick with electronics, but rarely does it feel like music you’d hear in a club. Instead, it sounds like something you’d play loudly through headphones while inebriated somewhere in the middle of the woods. Its disjointed, visceral, and extremely environmental. Purported to have been inspired by a 1,000-year-old oak tree in an English forest, The King of Limbs sounds appropriately like nature, twisted up and skewered through drums, synthesizers, sequencers, and miscellaneous electronic smoke and mirrors.

That the band has taken on electronic music in such a head-first manner isn’t a surprise. It is, however, a shock that they’ve left so many of their trademarks on the cutting room floor. The exquisite guitar work of Jonny Greenwood and Ed O’Brien seems heavily restrained, if not snuffed out altogether. The smooth strums and accompanying palm slaps against the face of the instrument on “Give Up the Ghost” make for a beautiful composition, but Thom could have pulled this off on his own. While it isn’t uncommon for Thom to take center stage and the band to serve a lighter, more complimentary role, on The King of Limbs that practice is the standard rather than the exception. The sheer lack of the band’s usual scale makes it difficult to digest, as if at any given moment there’s something absent.

The King of Limbs is also unapologetically devoid of the band’s signature pins and needles emotion. The build-up-and-break-down moments are nowhere to be found and the range of sentiments is noticeably compact. It often moves in a linear direction as if the whole thing is one giant stream — surprising given that it wasn’t too long ago that these guys seemed frustrated and bored by the generic album format, which breeds the type of even-keel cohesion on display here. The beat and rhythm of “Bloom” meld directly into “Morning Mr. Magpie” as if the tracks or feelings hardly changed at all. “Feral” plays like an extended introduction to “Lotus Flower”, one of the few moments where it sounds like all five members showed up at the studio. Without the hysterical meltdowns and assortment of affecting moods that are usually brimming from a Radiohead album, its just an emotionally meager presentation.

After 1993′s average-ish Pablo Honey, Radiohead reeled off six diverse, revolutionary records in a row. In each case, the results were about as life-altering as music can get. In the case of OK Computer and Kid A, at least, the entire music industry was sent reeling. The King of Limbs lacks that mystique and, for the first time in almost two decades, has dented the five-piece’s astonishing invincibility. Still, in the grand scheme of things, this is a triumph of its own variety. That it can be so puzzling, so removed from their legendary arsenal and yet remain engaging and enjoyable is an unparalleled testament. Truly, Radiohead has a Midas touch all their own — even when they miss, they somehow manage to excel.

The King of Limbs isn’t exactly the grand unveiling of a new sound, but rather a deeper exploration of a place that the band has already gone, this time toned down and smoothed up around the edges. It could grow to be terrific by almost any standard, but up against the astronomically high bar that Radiohead have set for themselves — masterpiece after masterpiece after masterpiece — its difficult not to feel somewhat let down.

-Andrew bailey(Binge Listening)

YUCK: YUCK

[rating:4.0]

Yuck: Yuck

Label: Fat Possum

Release date: February 15, 2011

Yuck is a predominantly four-piece (sometimes five-piece) outfit made up of members from London, Hiroshima, and New Jersey. On their self-titled Fat Possum debut, the band proudly wears those worldly influences on their sleeves, meshing together a surplus of genetics from other notable artists into one versatile, low-fi production.

Both Yuck the band and Yuck the album could be loosely fit into a number of different genres. There’s indie rock, obviously, but there’s also elements of shoegaze, noise pop, punk, and dream pop all run through the same garage rock aesthetic. All things considered, its not the most original sound that’s ever been broached. In fact, more often than not these songs are derivative of other songs from other prominent bands, beginning with Dinosaur Jr., Yo La Tengo, and Sonic Youth and then extending to Pavement, shoegaze mainstays My Bloody Valentine, and even The Folk Implosion. An entire mile-long scroll could be dedicated to listing all the bands that have a fingerprint on here. So yeah, its a familiar sound. But its a sound that’s tried and true and that they do an impressive job of tackling.

Aside from how recognizable this album is even on a first listen, the thing that immediately jumps out about it is the variation. Perhaps its just a narrow perception, but it seems that as more and more bands influenced by garage rock and indebted to the increasingly popular low-fi production crop up, the differences from track to track grow slimmer. This isn’t the case at all for Yuck. Highlighted by the fantastic, grinding closer “Rubber”, Yuck hardly spends the entirety of the album rocking our ears off, even though the first few notes of the initial track, “Get Away”, suggest that’s what’s to come. Standouts “Holing Out”, “Georgia”, and “Suck” are all infused with thick layers of bass and guitar, but throughout the album these heavier peaks are complemented by valleys of surprisingly comforting harmonies and softer, more wavy instrumentation. “Shook Down” is one such example. Even if they’re borrowing from a recognizable sound, each song manages to distinguish itself in some way so as to prevent it from feeling like 12 iterations of the same old song.

Yuck isn’t going to garner a lot of points for overall creativity, though it certainly begs mentioning that following in the footsteps of other artists doesn’t simply mean playing prearranged songs out of chord books. They should, however, be credited for their execution. Over the course of 12 excellent songs, they’ve done justice to the likenesses of some of the best bands across multiple genres, while simultaneously separating themselves from their more recent contemporaries.

-Andrew Bailey

BRIGHT EYES: THE PEOPLE’S KEY

[rating: 3]

Bright Eyes: The People’s Key

Label: Saddle Creek

Release date: February 15, 2011

The People’s Key is expected to be the final chapter for Conor Oberst, Mike Mogis, and Nate Walcott’s Bright Eyes, a legendary outfit with a revolving cast of characters that has spawned no less than four classic albums. This curtain call is also quite possibly the most ambitious yet, picking up right around where 2005′s Digital Ash in a Digital Urn left off. This isn’t the Bright Eyes we’ve heard evolve over the past decade plus, but it is a fitting punctuation mark.

One of the reasons that this is expected to be the last Bright Eyes production is that Oberst’s tastes and ambitions have shifted noticably over the years. Obviously, changes with age are also a factor (he was a teenage prodigy when this all began, after all). Cassadaga, the band’s previous album, was arbuably their most country-influenced yet, but Oberst has stated in the lead up to The People’s Key that he’s become“really burnt out on that rootsy Americana shit”. So basically, rather than clinging forever to a name that comes with preconceived expectations, Oberst will be able to move forward and explore different things without that cloud hanging over him (of course, as we all know, musicians do have a way of changing their minds). But not before exhausting the last of the obvious Bright Eyes avenues.

Unless Oberst and bandmates were planning to release a Spanish techno album — and they probably weren’t — The People’s Key is about as far as the Bright Eyes umbrella could have been stretched without becoming something altogether alien. That isn’t to suggest that 10 songs on this LP are unrecognizable, because they aren’t. Some of the formulas the band has subscribed to for years are still firmly in place. At the same time, this is easily the most electronic, drum heavy, rock ‘n roll inspired album the band has ever put out.

The album starts horribly, to be blunt. In front of wavy synths that serve as the lead-up to the actual song, “Firewall” features the first appearance of some weirdo buddy of Oberst’s, who makes several appearances on this album, but none worse than the one right at the top. He rants mostly incoherently about Adolf Hitler, lizard-creatures, the Garden of Eden, and alternate universes orbiting counter-clockwise. Its pretentious, probably intended to be a little bit ironic, but most of all its the first appearance of a frustrating trend. Unfortunately, it also feels necessary, because these are all topics Oberst addresses — even if briefly or vaguely — throughout the course of the album. From someone who puts such an emphasis on narrative and literate songwriting, it shouldn’t be a surprise to hear Oberst reference Jesus, Buddha, and the Führer (and Hitler directly). But we expect to hear this stuff from him. It would have been nice not to have to hear it from some rambling froot-loop as well.

That big complaint aside, the musical composition of the album — albeit different — is actually pretty good. The percentage of “Firewall” that doesn’t involve these senseless ramblings borders on fantastic, “Shell Games” is one of the better radio-natured songs Oberst has ever written, and “A Machine Spiritual (In the People’s Key)” is another standout that really begs repeated listens. The album’s closer, “One for You, One for Me”, is every bit as terrific a song as there is here and, in a strange kind of way, sparks subtle reminders of LCD Soundsystem‘s “All My Friends”. (Admittedly that’s a bit of a left field, abstract parallel to draw.)

Percussion is the thing that makes this such a new direction for Bright Eyes though. Drums have always held a place in their songwriting arsenal, but on this record they’ve been pushed to the very front and paired up with more synthesizer than ever before. Hell, “Triple Spiral” illustrates it all in one four minute chunk. Its a weird chameleon-like shift to undergo in four years or so, but if Cassadaga was the outfit’s most outwardly Americana album, then this is as close to the opposite of that they’ve ever gone before. Its a curveball to be sure, but again, it really isn’t leaving the band’s boundaries so much as nuzzling right up close to the edges.

This isn’t the greatest thing Bright Eyes has ever done and if it does turn out that this is their farewell then it might not be the most neatly tied ribbon they could have put on their legacy either. Or maybe, just maybe, we’ll look back down the road and see the positivity this album yields and be able to appropriately compare it to those gut-wrenchingly emotional days of Lifted or The Story Is in the Soil, Keep Your Ear to the Ground and realize, yeah, Bright Eyes covered all the ground they could and did so wonderfully.

-Andrew Bailey (Binge Listening)


Q + A: DEVO

Selected as an official honoree by the 12th annual Webby Awards, FakeMustaches.org’s mission is to have a Fake Moustache in every home by 2014. A target which may actually be more achievable than the United Nations millennium goals. Why you may ask? Who cares? Just get out there and pick up a fake stache, then submit your pictures to the site. FakeMustaches.org features a different user-submitted picture of somebody wearing a fake moustache everyday and clicking the pictures will randomly select two images of people wearing disguises from their large repository of user submitted photos. So click away and Enjoy! Even Mark Mothersbaugh of DEVO is on board! Discosalt contributing writer Cory Greenwell from Backseatsandbar and Patrick Yen caught up with Mark Mothersbaugh rocking a fake stache at the 2010 Forecastle Festival to discuss Eskimo clog dancing hula death metal and why this is the best time to be involved in music . Check out the interview below:

MUSTACHE MARCH IS BACK!

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Mustache March is officially back! Time, once again, for men, women and Discosalt to come together,  savor the flavor saver and celebrate the Mustache. This month, we will take a look at the nose neighbor in art, film and music, bringing you more “Great Moments in Mustache Music History” and some other mustachioed wisdom to tickle your nose and fancy.  Check back with us all month, as the tribute continues. Discosalt Abides.

MGMT DIGITAL RELEASE: THE CONGRATULATIONS REMIXES

On March 15th MGMT will digitally release the Congratulations Remixes EP. The 3 song EP will include remixes of tracks off the band’s last release Congratulations. The EP features a full 10+ minute “Siberian Breaks” remix from the Ed Banger All-Stars, a group comprised of artists on Ed Banger Records which was founded by Justice. Also included is a remix of “Congratulations” by Erol Alkan, a London based DJ known as an originator of mashups and one of the most acclaimed dj’s of the last decade, reworked the title track “Congratulations.” The final track was remixed by Japanese artist/producer, Cornelius, who remixed the band’s song”Brian Eno.” These join the previously released remixes of “It’s Working” by Air and Violens.

The band are currently in Australia, performing as part of the Future Music Festival as well as headlining their own shows. They are on their longest tour yet of thePacific Rim and have just completed their most successful Japanese tour yet. Following Australia the band travel to New Zealand, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Hong Kong, and Seoul.

In other news, “Congratulations” to “Inside Job” for winning the Oscar for Best Documentary.  Those of you who’ve seen it may have noticed a familiar song at the end of the film…

NEW VIDEO FROM THE STROKES: UNDER COVER OF DARKNESS

Trading chucks for tuxedos, The Strokes premiere their new look and new music video for “Under Cover Of Darkness”, directed by Warren Fu off their anticipated new album Angles today, which was filmed inside the Loews Theater in Jersey City.

You can also stream another surprisingly heavier new album track “You’re So Right” at NME.

“A brooding sort of surfy sci-fi feel, with robotically monotonous and electronically treated vocals. If you thought the guitar solo on ‘Under Cover Of Darkness’ was ‘interesting’, wait until you hear this one; all hair metal twiddling, it’s almost Van Halen-worthy. Well, alright, I said ‘almost’.”

NEW VIDEO FROM MILLIONYOUNG:REPLICANTS


“Replicants” video by Millionyoung, from the new album also titled, “Replicants” combines two classic short films by George Pal , “Hoola Boola”(1941) and “South Sea Sweethearts”(1938) with the Floridian bands synthy dance party sound.  Check out the video, then grab the track below.

MP3 Download: Millionyoung: Replicants

NEW VIDEO FROM JAMES BLAKE:THE WILHELM SCREAM

Alexander Brown directs James Blake moving in an out of focus in a fish tank, in the new video for “The Wilhelm Scream”. A soulful r&b track laid over cold electronica using a looping vocal melody. While the song surprisingly doesn’t contain the original “Wilhelm Scream”, a primal scream sound effect from a 1953 Western film, The Charge of Feather River which has since been used in countless Hollywood films to dub over men getting shot and stabbed, Blakes “Scream” manages to break down some of the same desperation.

James Blake – The Wilhelm Scream from Alexander Brown on Vimeo.

SHARON VAN ETTON: EPIC

[rating: 4]

Sharon Van Etton: Epic

Label: Ba Da Bing

Release date: September 21, 2010

The opening track of Sharon Van Etton’s sophomore album Epic sets the tone of the album by being quite literally, epic.  As she pushes through the song, the listener realizes that she is her own hero, protecting herself from the naked emotions of a broken heart.  With each breath, she is both asking and telling herself “never love like that again.”  Her lyrics, while generally uncomplicated, have a subtle power to both ask and tell, and to be firmly resolute.  The record poses a series of introspective questions that are directed at herself, not the listener.  The record isn’t telling a story, but instead, expressing the feelings that humans have that make us insecure.  Her bare and direct confrontation of these feelings is unsettling and beautiful.

Her lyrics and smoker’s voice are the driving force behind the album.  There are definite influences of country music from her years in Tennessee, especially on “One Day” and “Save Yourself” but they don’t define her sound.  Her voice has a strong character to it that shines over country guitar or the synth pop sounds of “DsharpG” and “Love More”.  “Don’t Do It” is strongly reminiscent of The Cranberries, both vocally/lyrically and instrumentally.   Although the album is a relatively short seven tracks, there are a lot of different musical styles and influences.  While it does feel a bit disjointed, her strong lyrics and emotional delivery seem to bind the album together.

There is no way to decide if a singer with a simple backing is going to be uneventful.  Sometimes you’ll get a beautifully spare record like Bon Iver’s For Emma, Forever Ago. Other times you’ll hear a completely forgettable album, that was good, but nothing special.  On that spectrum, I think Epic is far into the Bon Iver region.  I find myself humming parts of it, and dialing my iPod to it more than I expected for a female folk singer.  There’s something raw, open, and honest about Epic that makes it noteworthy and memorable.

-Rachel Covert

THE STROKES: THE MAKING OF ANGLES: EPISODE 2

Check out a behind the scenes sneak peak of The Strokes recording their fourth album in Episode 2 of the “The Making of Angles”.  Bromance, Ping Pong and Wrestling but no sign of Julian. The band also releases the offical music video for the first single off of the album, “Under Cover of Darkness,” tomorrow.

NEW MP3 DOWNLOAD FROM PARTS & LABOR: REST

Grab a new mp3 for the track “Rest” off Parts & Labor’s forthcoming release Constant Future which you can pre-order at InSound. The song perfectly encapsulates the band’s ability to take elements of noise and turn them into a truly infectious pop song. You can also check out the bands cover of No Age’s Life Prowler below:

NEW MP3: Parts & Labor “Rest”

MP3: Parts & Labor “Constant Future”

NEW VIDEO FROM AGESANDAGES: NAVY PARADE

Watch, as AgesandAges singer Tim Perry unburdens his soul to the people he encounters over the course of his day, backed by the campfire sing-a-long track “Navy Parade (escape from the Black River bluffs)” off the bands new album Alright You Restless. The video was entirely shot on location in the neighborhood of St. Johns, Portland, Oregon and Cathedral Park in January of this year by director Alicia J. Rose. Check it out:

MOOMBAHTON: THE NEXT GENRE TO RIVAL DUBSTEP?

There was a time when playing great records put you on the map.  Nowadays, the proliferation of DJs has made producing essential to climbing the ladder.  With this rationale, wouldn’t it be faster to leapfrog your peers by creating your own genre altogether?

In his 2002 essay entitled “Postproduction”,   French curator and art critic, Nicolas Bourriaud stated, The remixer has become more important than the instrumentalist… Bourriaud’s quote seemed to bolster my hypothesis when a young New York DJ, Ear Thing, gave me a heads up about the sound of a relatively new genre called Moombahton, which was created not by an “instrumentalist” but by a “configurable musician”.

In 2009, DJ/Producer Dave Nada slowed down the Afrojack remix of the Silvio Ecomo & DJ Chuckie song “Moombah” to a mere 108 beats per minute, and the inspiration for this new genre was born.  He proceeded to produce a 5 track EP titled “Moombahton” (The title and name of a new genre after the combination of the inspirational track and “Reggaeton”, the urban Latin musical style that evolved from Reggae) which was released on T&A Records in March 2010.  This music, which began as Dutch House on Valium, has metamorphosized into a complex mix of the Baltimore Sound, Reggaeton, Dutch House, Glitch vocal cut ups, echoes, prolonged build ups and tropical drum rhythms.

Moombahton has since been recognized by numerous configurable musicians as a new genre, and is rapidly evolving into a movement that I believe will give Dubstep a run for it’s money.  In all likelihood though,  these two genres will get together and squeeze out a love child I am preemptively calling “Mumbstepatata”.

Some Moombahton pioneers include: DJ Sabo, Munchi, A-Mac, DJ Melo, Uncle Jesse, David Heartbreak, Philadelphyinz (DJ Apt One & Skinny Friedman), Sonido Rampage Y Nader, Billfold AKA Billy The Gent, Obeyah, Cam Jus, Steve Starks, Dillon Francis, Sabbo, Moombahtron and Doc Adam.

– Chris Alker

SUMMER FICTION: SUMMER FICTION

[rating: 4]

Summer Fiction: Summer Fiction

Label: Unsigned

Release date: December 3, 2010

Somewhere between The Shins, Belle and Sebastian and The Zombies, Philly’s Summer Fiction (singer-songwriter, Bill Ricchini) reside and play your local Garden Party with sleepy nostalgia and (what else?) Summer flare.

Channeling those timeless 60’s pop melodies and transforming them into something just as familiar but no less exciting, Summer Fiction is a gorgeous and promising debut. Ricchini’s genteel vocals pair well with his chamber pop production and though there is no evidence of straight beachgaze allegiance, Summer Fiction could find a friend (and fans) in a band like Real Estate.

One cop-out that isn’t is that this music almost sounds like it could have been made personally for grown-up versions of Wes Anderson characters from Rushmore. All the main offenders are here: 70’s am gold, Chicago-style soft rock, and imagery of affluence. It’s never decadent or dark. Easton-Ellis has no place here. In fact, it’s almost always innocent sounding. This is easy listening, indie style with boat shoes. So, yeah, there’s some trendy/tired bi-coaster nautical themes as evident in By the Sea, Diamond Beach, and Kids In Catalina (“Dig your feet into the sand/ Wade the ocean, take my hand”) but you instantly forgive when you you really listen up and just let go. The instrumental tracks serve this purpose near-perfectly, creating a soft and playful interlude and by carrying the drama on its way.

What you’ll find on Summer Fiction, Summer Fiction:

  • Coastal charmers, wordless waltzes, and even-toed ballads and bedroom duets with splashes of muted chroma and candle-lit lullabies.Echoes of Burt Bacharach, Tijuana Brass, xylophone solos, chiming, ringing guitar notes, even keeled drums, toe tappers and sway-to serenades.
  • The dude at your work with the Mogwai t might not dig it as much as you, the Fleet Foxes devotee but then again, he might and you might not. For clearing off your iTunes gift card or for $8 on bandcamp, it’s well worth finding out. Sail on, float on, drift by, and dive i – wait, no diving!

-Casey Bowers

DEERHUNTER: HALCYON DIGEST

[rating:4]

Deerhunter: Halcyon Digest

Label: 4ad Records

Release Date: September 28, 2010

It’s rather difficult to keep track of all the indie bands with “Deer” in their name these days. Deerhunter is a venison-inflected troupe that has managed to escape me over the years. Walking into Halcyon Digest, their much-lauded new album, I carried a tabula rasa of impressions never having heard a note of music from the Atlanta, GA four piece. Renowned for their mix of indie pop, post punk and shoegaze, Deerhunter has released two EPs, two LPs and even gone on hiatus in their decade long career.  Halcyon Digest is their jump back into the fray.

Out of the gate “Earthquake” mixes a pretty yet thin acoustic guitar sound with an indie rocker’s idea of dub-influenced percussion.  Ambient support by ethereal vocals immediately deepens the song’s texture, a theme running strongly throughout the album. While many of the song structures initially come off as relatively standard indie pop/rock fare, digging aurally deeper yields enchanting results. “Don’t Cry,” offers a crunchy fuzz-tone guitar sound and the first of many moments that easefully pay homage to 1950s girl groups. As the band coos, “Come on little boy/I am your friend/And I understand the pain your in…/Oh boy/You don’t need to cry/You don’t need to cry your eyes out/You don’t need to understand the reasons why-o-why-o-why-o “ they deftly mix the hipster angst of the twenty first century with the accessibly sweet arrangements of The Marvelettes’ tender ballads. Electronic effects cloaking the vocals add further depth to this creatively eerie juxtaposition. “Basement Scene” is perhaps the album’s most resonant example of this girl group vs. shoegaze sound. ‘”Dream, a little dream all about the basement scene/I don’t want to wake up/I don’t want to wake up/I don’t wanna wake up, no” the band sings amidst a haze of electro-acoustic air.

First single “Revival” carries this pattern of fully fleshed out structure further.  There is a simple vs. dense dichotomy occurring, where the supporting instrumentation expands outward but remains warmly tucked inside a pop framework. “Memory Boy” fantastically recalls the late 60s psych-garage pop of The Pretty Things inside an echo chamber. Halycon Digest’s meticulous organization is rock solid, each note ideally placed yet the sum of these interlocking patterns is much greater than the individual playing, a mark of quality song writing.  “Desire Lines” is a prime example of this artful pop, nothing terribly exciting seems to be going on but the song burns with an rising fervor into a mini-crescendo. “Helicopter” adds dubby hand claps to an effected acoustic guitar and lush vocals for an enchanting flourish.  The album closes with the hypnotic lament “He Would Have Laughed”.  A sprawling ode, seemingly to a lost friend, Deerhunter glazes the song with shimmering, simple grooves and a captivating acoustic guitar loop.  “I won’t rest till I can’t breath/I can’t breath with you lookin’ at me/ I get bored as I get older/ Can you help me figure this out”. There is a depth of anesthetized longing inside the song’s vocal performance that carries it away as the tempo slows down. Halycon Digest finishes in a wash of atmospherics and acoustic guitar, a mellow, forlorn triumph.

-Chris Calarco

FEATURED ARTIST PORTFOLIO: JASON WOODSIDE

Posted in New Art

Jason Woodside - Discosalt Artist
Discosalt Artist Jason Woodside has been hard at work making some new updates on his website which you can check out  HERE. You can watch a new video in the media section filmed by Philip Mansfield which shows some of his more recent work. Also, there’s a series of limited prints up online in the store. Each print is $100 and comes framed. They’re in the new line of work Jason has been doing and are cool if you want some of the artwork without having to buy an actual piece. Check out more of Jason’s work in the Discosalt Artist Collective and watch his new video after the jump.

Discosalt Photography Exclusive : Brad Elterman , Like It Was Yesterday

Brad Elterman’s golden rule of concerts?

“There’s always a party.”

And if anyone is an authority on this, it’s Elterman.

Around a curtained corner in the posh Le Parker Meridien hotel on Manhattan’s West Side, under a neon burger sign, I sit down with prolific rock photographer, Brad Elterman. The Burger Joint is a crowded hole-in-the-wall in the middle of this luxury hotel. Elterman has suggested this place for dinner, which turned out to be apropos for the man himself.

Elterman is a sort of Everyman – a completely unpretentious, quality guy, who just happens to seat himself in the middle of decadence. At sixteen, he borrowed a friend’s camera and snapped a shot of Dylan performing on stage, launching a whirlwind career that has given him backstage access to just about every rock/punk/pop legend to grace the stage and my high school bedroom walls. He has partied with the best, and he has spent his life chronicling these adventures.

As we talk, I realize how genuinely interested Elterman is in hearing my perspective on his photos: why do I like them and what do they mean to me? He talks about music, his disgust for today’s pop culture, why he likes Lindsey Lohan.  He appreciates a good burger, a good beer, a good whiskey. He just also happens to be good friends with Cherie Currie, used to party with nude girls at The Mega Mansion in Beverly Hills four times a week,  and still has dinner with the Sex Pistols’ Steve Jones.

Elterman’s new, limited-edition, signed, seventy-two page book, Like It Was Yesterday, which has graciously included Discosalt in the intro, is a personal collection of fifty-five provocative black and white and color glossies. Pop culture aficionados are transported back to the long gone, but not forgotten, rock-and-roll renaissance of the seventies and eighties. It’s a collection of raw, candid, often intimate snapshots of celebrities at a point in time when celebrity meant something very different than it does today.  Brad’s unadulterated images manage to capture and transcend something beyond the guise of the lens: a loner slacker Joey Ramone in a parking garage; a workaholic David Bowie hustling to his car at 6am; Steve Jones showing off his “sex pistol” in a swimming pool. These are moments that can never be reproduced in a studio.

As we chew the fat about his prolific career and the book, I realize that Brad’s rule for concerts, doesn’t only apply to concerts. It’s sort of his life mantra.  There is always a party, if you are looking for one. And Brad is always looking, thankfully right behind a camera.

DISCOSALT: Do you have an all time favorite photo you have shot over the years?

BRAD ELTERMAN: Probably the photo that I took of Bob Dylan backstage at The Roxy in 1976. It wasn’t just the photo, it was getting to meet Dylan, shaking his hand, chatting with him and to take his photograph with Robert DeNiro. It was really something.

DS: Craziest Party you’ve ever been to?

BE: Warner Bros Records threw The Faces with Rod Stewart a party at The Green House in Beverly Hills. That was probably around 1976. I was invited by Rod’s colorful publicist Tony Toon and at one table sat Bob Dylan, Joni Mitchell, David Blue, Cher with Greg Allman and Paul and Linda McCartney. I did not own a wide angle lens so I just zoomed in on Dylan at the table. Floating around the party was Jimmy Page, Rod with Brit Eklund and best of all Bryan Ferry. I will never forget that evening as long as I live.

DS: How is Celebrity different today than it was back in the 70’s and 80’s?

BE: Celebrity today? There is no real celebrity today. I had Dylan and The Ramones and today you have Kim Kardashian and Lady Gaga. No interest to me. Pop Culture today is created in an attorney’s office in Century City. In the office is a lawyer, manager, publicist and a booking agent with some hand selected overproduced starlet. Let’s see how they are remembered in three decades.

DS: Are you still in touch with any of the musicians in the book and have you gotten any of their reactions to the photos today, looking back?

BE: I see Leif Garrett once in a while. Steve Jones from the Sex Pistols lives up the street from me and we dine from time to time. Steve adores the photograph of him jerking off in my pool in 1978. We talk about it all the time! I just saw Bebe Buell in New York last week.

DS: Who would you love to shoot today?

BE: Lindsay Lohan. She is a photographers dream and she is loaded with controversy. That’s what makes a great photograph. I am sure that I will photograph her one day, but I refuse to pay her for a photo session. Instead I  will share with her all of my stories and sign for her a copy of my book! I will photograph her with a roll of black and white film just like it was yesterday.

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

Like It Was Yesterday is officially out this Decemeber 2, in all its signed, 500-limited-edition, seventy-two page glory. Can’t wait until December? We found two hard-cover copies available on Amazon for $150 here. This is sure to become a collector’s piece, so grab one!