“Olympic Skeleton” by McDead is Like an Instrumental, Wire-esque Soundtrack to the Exploration of Past Sites of the Olympics

McDead, photo by Kev Bridges

If Wire had done a more pop score to the 2022 Winter Olympic games it might sound a bit like McDead’s instrumental post-punk song “Olympic Skeleton.” The driving, angular guitar lightly distorted with a touch of fuzz, playful interludes with call and response with synth bell tones, accented leads, start and stop dynamics that come off like freezing on an image for a second before the tenor of the song switches. Yet there’s a brightness to the song that contrasts a bit with the image conjured by the song title which might make those in the know recall the 2010 horror film Frozen (nothing like the beloved 2013 Disney animated feature). But there are no dire endings here and no morbid tones which gives the song a surreal aspect like someone years from now finding a skeleton from a lost fan or competitor found while excavating a former Olympic site and pondering on who that person is and how they got to be there. Perhaps it’s all just a play on words with the name of the project in mind and/or an oblique commentary on what happens to the sites of Olympics once the games move on to the next country following all the development no longer always put to civic use. And on that note, check out the song on Bandcamp and explore the works of Kev McDead by following him at any of the links below.

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New Goo’s “Distancer” is a Finely Crafted, Ebullient, Otherworldly Indie Pop Gem

New Goo, photo courtesy the artist

“Distancer” sounds like New Goo rapidly laid down layers of sound collage and yet this dynamic works as an unconventional architecture for what is essentially a pop song. It has a buoyant energy that carries you along for ride through bursts of sonic color and textures. Which is why Aspen De Rosa’s video (linked below on YouTube) with the bit about carnival rides seems so fitting. Dot Ashby of New Goo imaginative uses a keyboard chord that would be atonal in another context yet seems to perfectly complement Ashby’s breathy and melodic vocals. It never feels rushed and to say it’s reminiscent of a more manic and classic indie pop flavored Broadcast might be to overstate the song’s momentum and yet the song really hooks you from the beginning with sounds both alien and comforting that are instantly inviting into an alternative creative headspace that inspires repeated listens. Check out the track for yourself on YouTube and follow New Goo at the links below.

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The Wistful and Melancholic Tones of don’t get lemon’s “D.I.E.I.N.T.H.E.U.S.A.” is the Sound of Accepting a Dim Future That Hopefully Never Quite Arrives

don’t get lemon, photo by Anthony Flores

The second single from don’t get lemon’s album Hyper Hollow Heaven (out March 26, 2022 on à La Carte Records) has the rather dire title “D.I.E.I.N.T.H.E.U.S.A.” and the lyrics hit with the resigned nihilism born of an accurate assessment of where human civilization is trending. But the music is a special kind of lush, synth pop like bedroom production style Roxy Music or Crush-period Abe Vigoda. In the video Austin Curtis, the band’s singer, seems to party privately in the few creature comforts available in late capitalism before the utter collapse: oddly plentiful, Asian grocery items that seem like a cruel and surreal joke, karaoke night lighting and equipment, late night Vegas lounge aesthetic. This while the audio equivalent of VHS video fidelity and visuals to match has Curtis singing about basically being ready for the end of the world or at least the world as we know it and knowing that it’s kind of too late to do anything to stop it. One imagines if synth pop had existed in the fourth century Roman empire it would take on a tone like this between climate change, widespread political corruption and fiscal malfeasance, deep social divisions, international strife, pandemics and other crises that ended up rendering the most powerful economic and political entity the world had ever seen unable to rally to address the many built in ills that were contributing to its downfall. Many perceptive people had to have seen it coming and had there been a popular art form that survived we might have seen the ancient equivalent of a song like this born out of similar struggles, pressures and a sense that it’s all worse than a recession or political partisanship gone wild. This band personalizes the ambient anxiety of the time with a soothing song that commiserates with us a downer mood. But contained within it is the seed that we could turn this whole thing at least partly around but do you see anyone overthrowing the oligarchic power and economic structure in the next five to twenty years? Seems unlikely so while perhaps hoping and working for the best may as well enjoy some of the small joys of life before it’s completely over. Watch the video for “D.I.E.I.N.T.H.E.U.S.A.” on YouTube and connect with don’t get lemon at the links below.

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Dot Allison’s “Love Died In Our Arms” as Remixed by Lee “Scratch” Perry is Overflowing With Richly Emotional Seductive Energy

Dot Allison, photo by Maria Mochnacz

Having first come to prominence as the frontperson for One Dove Dot Allison has had a long and distinguished career with numerous collaborations and an acclaimed solo career. Now Allison has the distinction of having been part of Lee “Scratch” Perry’s final work: his remix of her song “Love Died In Our Arms.” The songwriter and vocalist has long had a gift for imbuing her work with a lush warmth and an enveloping quality informed by great emotional nuance. The almost undulating structure of “Love Died In Our Arms” lends itself well to Perry’s dub treatment as the breathy vocals float through reggae style instrumentation, echoing tones, a vibrant keyboard mid song like a non-linear, cinematic presentation of film slides from a person’s life projected in slow motion animation. It’s the kind of song in which it would be easy to get lost especially when played on a powerful sound system embraced by its alchemy of layered sounds and exquisite sound design coupled with its richly emotional seductive energy. The remix is part of Allison’s forthcoming Entangled Remix EP but for now you can listen to the single on Spotify and follow Dot Allison at the links provided.

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Elodie Rêverie Elicits the Spirit of a Great and Transformative Romance on “Casa I Don’t Know”

Elodie Rêverie, photo courtesy the artist

Elodie Rêverie brings a great deal of mood and atmosphere to her new track “Casa I Don’t Know.” With her usual sultry and widely expressive voice, Rêverie sings about a love that can and should happen and one that contains an element of mystery because they two people don’t necessarily know each other well or if they do that element of fantasy and purity of feeling toward one another hasn’t evaporated with familiarity. The music video for the song shows Rêverie, looking a little like a young Natalie Wood, frolicking around a private pool and giving attention to an unseen figure capturing intimate but not lurid moments in their life together. In black and white with footage either from or made to look like taken from an old camcorder with the “PLAY” indicater and the rightward pointing triangle in the upper left of the screen and the “SP” in the lower left letting us know it’s being recorded at the speed that produced the best image fidelity on that old technology. This touch and the small video glitches enhance a sense of nostalgia and old fashioned romance perfect for the tenor of this song. The piano melody, the whispery production on parts of the vocals, the slowly sweeping synth tones, it all gives the song a beautifully hazy aspect that lends the sense of romance an appropriately dreamlike quality as something it could all be and putting that intentionality into the songwriting. Many love songs are hackneyed but Rêverie’s ear for classic pop songcraft and imaginative yet sincere emotional performances with attention to dynamic nuances has consistently meant her songs are instantly affecting and durably appealing. Watch the video for “Casa I Don’t Know” on YouTube and follow Elodie Rêverie at the links below.

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Seven Layer Piano Cakes Captures the Uncertainties, Insecurities and Urgencies of Parenthood on “Remy”

Seven Layer Piano Cakes, photo courtesy the artist

Through his musical project Seven Layer Piano Cakes, Justin Hoyt offers us his single “Remy” about his young son. Plenty of artists have written songs about and/or for their children to the point where it’s all but a subgenre. But Hoyt begins with “Hey little man, the clothes I bought don’t seem to fit” and later “did your growing up have anything to do with me” and for a moment you may think there was some kind of separation but it’s really about how quickly your kids can grow up and you as a parent are usually just doing the best you can without much in the way of having a map for doing things right and never certain if what you’re doing is adequate or appropriate or helpful or nurturing the way maybe you should be or which would be optimal. Hoyt ponders these insecurities while hinting that being concerned about all of these things probably means you’re at least trying to do things the way you should and that will always mean more and be more effective than giving up and not trying to be at least a halfway decent parent. The melancholic tone of the song matches the uncertainty Hoyt expresses so well and the dynamic of the song shifting from slow moments of contemplation to urgent passages marking the seemingly impossibly rapid passage of time is a great evocation of how the pace of being a parent feels in the living it. Watch the luminously beautiful visualizer video for “Remy” on YouTube and connect with Seven Layer Piano Cakes at the links provided.

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Duchamp-Killer Created a Self-Decomposing Sonic Collage Automaton for “Live in the sounds”

Duchamp-Killer’s new single “Life in the sounds” is a bit like taking a journey through the composer’s usual Rube Goldberg-esque soundscape: looped, introspective guitar, sampled bubbles, various percussive sounds, rain stick, processed bird sounds echoing. All with a sense of motion and at one point the whole thing sounds like it’s being played in reverse order with some signal processing indicating the same. Like an ever evolving collage of sounds suggesting a tropical setting at twilight. It is as mysterious as it is playful, as simple as its aggregate of sounds reveals an expressive complexity that never seems overwhelming. And then toward the end this song that seems to be its own sonic ecosystem starts to unravel in organic fashion and dissolve into its component parts. Listen to “Life in the sounds” on Soundcloud and connect with Duchamp-Killer at the links below.

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Tablefox Honors the Struggle of the Modern Social Rat Race on “Keep Them Guessing”

Tablefox, photo courtesy the artists

Although from New Zealand, Tablefox channels strands of 90s Britpop on its new single “Keep Them Guessing.” The driving, atmospheric melodies and soaring yet grounded vocals and searing guitar work brought to bear also seem to evoke a sense of running ahead of a brooding menace and escaping just in time. What that threat might be doesn’t matter as much as the energy of that sort of motivation and eventual triumph gives the song an irresistible momentum. The song seems to be about that old chestnut about faking it until you make it and that elusive quality today in the age of social media accessibility of maintaining a mystique about oneself so that can be an asset even if it’s essentially a pose as much as projecting an image of glamour and all good times all the time. But hey if you’re one step ahead of your troubles and of people figuring out you’re not as cool as you’d like them to think or that they might initially think of you when they don’t see the real person maybe you’ll be alright. But is that a worthy goal and use of your time and energy in life? The song doesn’t answer the question but it does express some sympathy with the social rat race forced on most people these days in one way or another and in doing so the song honors the struggle even if it doesn’t quite celebrate it. Watch the video for “Keep Them Guessing” on YouTube and connect with Tablefox at the links below.

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Prospector Sound Manifests a Sense of Mystery and Awe in the Presence of Majestic Natural Phenomena on “Nord View”

Richard Talbot aka Prospector Sound, photo courtesy the artist

The visualizer video fro “Nord View” by Prospector Sound (aka Richard Talbot) gives some context to the track’s gentle sweeps of white noise like a distant wind and winding tonal blends that convey a sense of translucent layers of color and sound. The title too hints at a possible inspiration being that of witnessing the Aurora Borealis in the middle of a clear night with no distractions from the ambient light of cities and human-made noise. Even if you’ve not been privy to such an experience this track delivers that feeling to you and a sense of mystery, wonder and tranquility that washes into and through you in moments when you get to be around as natural wonders manifest that you don’t see every day or take for granted until you’re in the proper setting and can forget the intrusions of demands on your psyche placed by your life in the context of your participation in socially constructed economic relationships that did not exist when humans were first exposed to these things and took time out to let their imaginations ponder their beauty and conjure from within their creative interpretations of the significance of the various phenomena of the world. The song is one track from Prospector Sound’s new album Red Sargasso out April 29, 2022 through The Ambient Zone. But for now watch the video for the song on YouTube and follow Prospector Sound at the links provided.

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The Live Performance Video for Wave 21’s “Way Far Back” Reveals the Rocking Side of its Warmly Sensitive Songwriting

Wave 21, photo courtesy the artists

Wave 21’s live performance video for “Way Far Back” she’s the group in fine and lively form. Rather than it’s usual storytelling mode, the song is more like an anthem that connects other songs together while also being able to stand on its own. Vocalist Mary-Lynn Doroschuk brings great energy and presence to the performance as she sings about “going way far back to where it all started and even further than that.” What that exactly means it’s hard to say but the song sounds like a compelling blend of power pop and country and so that song might be thought of as embracing roots in songwriting and perhaps the kinds of places you play live when you’re starting out as a way to get back to where you want to be. Doroschuk’s father Stefan was a member of well-known Canadian New Wave band Men Without Hats and he and his brothers had a band called Wave 21 that was the precursor to the band that earned them some degree of fame. But Mary-Lynn Doroschuk isn’t musically tapping into her father’s style or accomplishments as a musician so much as having forged her own creative identity and one that has been going on long enough where she and her bandmates have a sense of their own history the celebration of which in the fashion of this song is a way to utilize current musical chops and sophistication to revisit the spark that got them going to where they are now as a source of inspiration. The rest of the album Brace Yourself is sonically more intricate and atmospheric. But “Way Far Back” with some great, fiery solo work by Steve Hill is raw and brash and a vehicle to showcase how the band rocks as much as it is capable of delivering thoughtful and sophisticated, folk-inflected pop songs. Fans of Lone Justice will appreciate the songwriting acumen and warm sensitivity Wave 21 has to offer. Watch the video for “Way Far Back” on YouTube and connect with Wave 21 at the links below.

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