Queen City Sounds Podcast S2E12: Taleen Kali

Taleen Kali, photo by Kris Balocca

Taleen Kali took a fairly unorthodox path to being a performing musician. She grew up in Los Angeles and attended shows at DIY spots like The Smell and Pehrspace before moving to New York City for a few years where she lived near legendary DIY spaces like Death By Audio and 285 Kent and took in the one off house and the like. But she went to Chicago to attend art school and became immersed in the underground music scene there and regularly attended performances by the wide array of noise artists in and touring through the Windy City. Returning to Los Angeles in the early to mid-2010s Kali ended up forming her own band TÜLIPS which was a potent hybrid of punk and and shoegaze. But by summer 2017 Kali debuted her solo act. Across a handful of singles and EPs like 2018’s Soul Songs, Kali has revealed herself to be an imaginative songwriter and lyricist able to translate those concepts to a powerful live presentation with an undeniable mystique. The forthcoming, full-length debut album Flower of Life showcases the work of an artist capable of fusing styles to suit moods and to somehow be both ethereal and introspective and ferocious and gritty often within the same song. The style is very much her own and that of her collaborators but she has truly synthesized elements of garage rock, classic pop, punk, shoegaze and psychedelia to craft her own sound that suits well the heartfelt and heady subject matter of her lyrics.

Listen to our interview with Taleen Kali on Bandcamp where we discuss her roots in music and evolution as an artist. The aesthetics of her songwriting and her appreciation for the Jim Jarmusch film Only Lovers Left Alive, the title of one of the singles on Flower of Life. Connect with the artist at the links below and catch the band currently on tour in the US including at the Hi-Dive on Sunday, October 16, 2022 with Tuff Bluff, Galaxies and Princess Dewclaw.

taleenkali.com

Taleen Kali on Bandcamp

Taleen Kali on Instagram

Taleen Kali on Twitter

Taleen Kali on Facebook

Queen City Sounds Podcast S2E11: Molly Nilsson

Molly Nilsson, photo by Graw Böckler

Molly Nilsson is a Swedish born electronic pop artist now based in Berlin. Since 2007 she has been creating a rich body of work including ten albums starting with These Things Take Time (2008) which yielded her first widely recognized single “Hey Moon” and covered by experimental electronic artist John Maus on his 2011 album We Must Become the Pitiless Censors of Ourselves. The introspective sounds and luminous melodies with measured yet accented beats of Nilsson’s early work and her poetically illustrative lyrics brought to the songs a mystique that has endured throughout the songwriter’s career. Her embrace of a lo-fi aesthetic and organic noise in her songs also gives the music a sense of immediacy and intimacy that other artists at her level of accomplishment, development and influence might have chosen to edit out in pursuit of a kind of fictional purity. This core humanity to Nilsson’s work is one of its perhaps often unspoken appeal and it helps to ground some of the heady concepts she infuses into her lyrics. There is a political element in much of her music that explores concepts of power, our notions of identity and the foundation of what we aspire to achieve and do with our lives and how that is so often driven by the prevailing economic system controlled by the interests of elites until we learn to disentangle our dreams and psychology generally from the ongoing process of commodifying every aspect of our lives. This examination always seems to be carried out in a compassionate and imaginative way and never comes across in didactic fashion. Her 2022 album Extreme (out now on the artist’s own imprint Dark Skies Association) brings together Nilsson’s various impulses and instincts as a uniquely creative musician who imbues accessible pop songs with rich conceptual content that most directly yet not explicitly explores the place and role of power in the world and how it manifests in society and in our own consciousness and how we can challenge the less savory aspects of it in the world and in our own hearts. It’s a thematically deep record that works on the level of a poignant social critique and as pure pop songcraft. It is yet another chapter in Nilsson’s ever-evolving artistic journey and one worth taking in from beginning to end.

Listen to our interview with Molly Nilsson on Bandcamp, connect with the artist at the links below, check out a couple of the videos for songs from Extreme and perhaps see the artist live on our current US tour including the date in Denver, Colorado on Sunday, October 16, 2022 at Glob with Water on the Thirsty Ground and French Kettle Station.

Molly Nilsson on Facebook

darkskiesassociation.org

Queen City Sounds Podcast S2E10: Sydney Sierota of Echosmith

Echosmith, photo by Nightdove Studio

Echosmith is a pop band that formed in 2009 in Chico, California. The former and current quartet are siblings Sydney, Noah, Graham and Jamie Sierota (Jamie having taken a break from the band from 2016-2022). Adopting the moniker when the group signed to Warner Bros. Records in 2012 (previously having performed under the name Ready Set Go!), Echosmith released its debut album Talking Dreams in 2013 which yielded the hit single “Cool Kids” about not really fitting in with the popular crowd but being comfortable with being different. Following the performance and touring cycle behind the debut album on a major label, Echosmith found itself saying yes to every opportunity to advance the band and listening to industry people in helping to further their career and that meant long term that there wasn’t enough time to write and develop new material aside from an occasional EP until the group took steps to do so in time to issue the sophomore album Lonely Generation in January 2020. With the onset of the pandemic and the enduring and continuing impacts on tour and thus supporting a new record Echosmith had time to reassess its priorities and reconnect with the ideas and inspirations that initially got the group off the ground into a serious project and during that process went with a more open approach to its songwriting as heard on new singles “Hang Around” and “Gelato” hinting at the new chapter of Echosmith’s creative development.

Recently “Cool Kids” garnered some renewed interest when it was used in TikTok videos by the likes of Demi Lovato, Drew Barrymore, Lindsay Lohan, Addison Rae and Hayley Kiyoko who felt the song expressed their own feelings about looking back and seeing how far they’ve come as people. The trend of utilizing the song has garnered more than six million views to date. Echosmith in response to that did a new version of the song with a new music video with “Cool Kids (our version)” (linked below).

Listen to our interview with Echosmith on Bandcamp, check out the videos for the new singles, connect with the group at the links provided and catch Echosmith live at The Marquis Theater in Denver on November 8, 2022. The national tour kicks off on October 14, 2022 in Atlanta at The Loft and the rest of the dates can be found on the Echosmith website linked below as well.

echosmith.com

LDN Monos Presents a Playful and Uplifting Expression of the Eternal Cycle of the Universe on “Samsara”

LDN Monos, photo courtesy the artist

LDN Monos takes the sound of a ritualistic chant and places it in a swim of mechanistic beats and descending bell tones in the beginning of the single “Samsara.” And in the music video we see a swim team entering into their laps, plunging into the water and creating various circles individually and together with a fluid grace paralleled with the song itself which is structured in loops and a circular dynamic of its own. As the title suggests the Hindu/Buddhist concept of the cycle of death and rebirth as reflected in great works of art and music from that region and beyond can be heard in the music and in tandem with the visuals giving it a dimensional and conceptual meaning that into and expresses universal patterns of human behavior and cognition. LDN Monos obviously wouldn’t be the first person to harness this method of using music to convey layers of meaning, his own employment of sounds in crafting what might be considered a bit of an IDM track hits as playful and uplifting like an extended jingle with only benevolent intentions and root inspirations. Watch the video for “Samsara” on YouTube and connect with the UK-based producer LDN Monos on the LinkTree below.

LDN Monos LinkTree

Queen City Sounds Podcast S2E9: Gogo Germaine

Gogo Germaine aka Erin Barnes, photo by Tom Murphy

Glory Guitars: Memoir of a ’90s Teenage Punk Rock Grrrl is a memoir written by Erin Barnes under her alter ego of Gogo Germaine. The narrative is primarily set in the 1990s when in a place like suburban Fort Collins, Colorado, pre-Columbine massacre and pre-9/11 much less recent social and political developments, the worst thing that seemed likely for one’s life was to settle for a mediocre life safe from doing anything that feels significant and inspiring. Rebellion against the conformity and sheer mundanity of life seemed to be a pursuit of transgressive sensory experiences like getting drunk and high with one’s friends, having sex at a relatively young age and acts of petty vandalism. All very common rites of passage for the American teenager for the past few decades and most often the subject of After School Specials in the 70s and 80s and Puritanical depictions in mainstream media. Barnes perfectly captures the spirit of that time in life when you feel so much so dramatically all at once and you need a release, an outlet, for that energy. Anyone that grew up before the 2000s will immediately identify with the way Germaine tells the story from the perspective of a young teen and the ways you try to make sense of and navigate your world and have fun and grasp at the things that give you a sense of your own agency as a human even if your adult self might look back and wince at some of the foolishness, ignorance and hubris that were components of your questionable decision-making as you were learning to become your future self. Barnes also sprinkles bits of self-awareness as the narrative progresses in a manner that organically reflects growing up and learning. Barnes sagely does not let the fact of her current adulthood hamper being true to where her head was when she was a teen and that’s what makes the book so believable and readable. Many of the names were changed to protect the innocent and not so innocent. But in naming hangouts and landmarks and vividly describing the people and the situations that were her adolescent universe. Barnes doesn’t sanitize that period in her life nor does she romanticize it either. Rather she tells it from how she remembers it in its full spectrum of experience with an admirable level of self-acceptance of the truth of her life from the truly, yes, glorious moments of adolescence and the low points that help to define one’s life. It’s an honest and often startling story that Barnes lays out in chapters and sections for which she chose a song as a header that encapsulates the emotional resonance of the part of the story you’re about to read. Beginning to end it’s a work of rich cultural and psychological detail that offers great insight into a time and place of American social history generally and of the life of the author whose experiences will seem familiar to many that survived their tumultuous teen years. Barnes’ subsequent career as a band publicist, music journalist and writer brings to the memoir a literary perspective and sense of storytelling that helps to render the book poignant and compelling throughout without compromising its raw and conversational approach.

Glory Guitars: Memoir of a ’90s Teenage Punk Rock Grrrl can be ordered from University of Hell Press, Amazon, Barnes & Noble or found wherever books are sold. On Tuesday, October 11, 2022 Barnes will release the book at an event at Tattered Cover Books in Denver at 6 p.m. which will include select readings and an FAQ session. Following that Barnes will further celebrate the book release at The Crypt with a performance by queer pop punk band Velvet Horns and DJ sets from author Josiah Hesse and Brian Polk of various Denver-based punk bands including Joy Subtraction. To further stay engaged with Barnes’/Gogo Germaine’s work she can be found at the links below. As a companion to the book Barnes created a Spotify playlist with the songs mentioned throughout, link below as well.

gogogermaine.com

Gogo Germaine on Instagram

Gogo Germaine LinkTree

Queen City Sounds Podcast S2E8: MAITA

MAITA, photo by Tristan Paiige

MAITA is a Portland, Oregon-based songwriter who released her second full length album I Just Want To Be Wild For You through Kill Rock Stars in February 2022. Growing up in Oregon sharing time in her Japanese-speaking mother’s home and the English-speaking home of her father, MAITA learned firsthand multiple forms of self-expression and culture that perhaps enhances her own personal insight and layers of observation about the American society that many of us navigate. As a youth MAITA didn’t share her songwriting in private as a bit of a shy introvert but got her start performing live as a solo artist at open mics while attending college in Portland. MAITA subsequently developed the full band as a means of more fully realizing her creative songwriting vision and did some touring before connecting with the local creative community as an active participant. And as many musicians across decades have found out once you become a part of your creative community in a real way you find that often people will support what you do in an organic way and you find ways in which you can offer the same often leading to opportunities to expand your horizons creatively, personally and in terms of the reach of your art.

The debut full-length MAITA album Best Wishes released at the peak of quarantine in May of 2020 to great critical acclaim. But perhaps the band is undertaking its first wide national tour in support of the new record. I Just Want To Be Wild For You is an astute, sensitive and nuanced commentary on how we are bombarded by communication and information daily with demands on our time and attention. Through channels like social media there is an encouragement for “engagement,” a model utilized as a route and method of commerce, monetized by tech companies and presented as a form of marketing that takes advantage of a natural desire to participate in society. But it’s a surrogate for actual connection and subconsciously we feel that disconnect and the and methods supposedly designed for us to keep in touch and maintain the illusion of having a connection to strangers and celebrities, albeit fairly passively, end up creating a dynamic of disconnection that can result in massive confusion and uncertainty because those same systems can make our interactions and ourselves feel disposable. The impact of that state of things on our psychology, aspirations and relationships, interpersonal and societal, has clearly been significant. MAITA’s songs from I Just Want To Be Wild For You comment on this phenomenon in a way deeply personal and in the language of direct experience with entrancing melodies and delicate textures with rich emotional resonance. MAITA takes complex feelings and concepts and renders them relatable with a rare immediacy.

Maita performs at The Skylark Lounge’s Bobcat Club on Sunday, October 9, 2022 with Allison Lorenzen, doors 7 p.m.

Listen to our interview with Maria Maita-Keppeler aka MAITA on Bandcamp and find the project’s records at your local record store as well as at the Kill Rock Stars website and follow the group at the links below.

maitamusic.com

MAITA on Facebook

MAITA on Instagram

MAITA LinkTree

MAITA on Bandcamp

Kramies’ “4:44am” is a Powerful and Radical Yet Fragile and Gentle Reassessment of Work-Life Balance

There is a fragile weariness to Kramies’ single “4:44am.” One imagines it’s the kind of song written that time of day when no one should still be up and at which time no one should be waking up unless they are working the early shift at a coffee shop or on the farm or at a hospital in some mission critical capacity. Since Kramies is a producer and songwriter by trade the coffee shop gig isn’t so difficult to imagine much less being up way too late working on music, his own or that of someone else and having a spare several minutes at the end of a long day to take stock of where his personal life has been and gotten away from him. The delicate guitar strumming and textures that accompany incredibly vulnerable and raw vocals sounds off the cuff and maybe in the initial skeleton of the song it was. Is it strictly autobiographical? Who can say but it is written and performed in a manner that suggests at least emotionally it is coming from a real place of lived experience when you reach the point in a relationship at which you must face your role in its falling into dysfunction. In America and especially in the arts it’s so easy to get into the habit of self-neglect that bleeds over into the rest of your life and get so focused on the work at hand that can stretch out and take up most of your time leaving little room for self care much less the essential activities of maintaining a healthy relationship. Kramies finds that place of regret and a will to work toward making the correction in one’s habits in order to try to make things right. But there’s a layer of nuance and realism that makes the song hit with a subtly crushing force. In singing about how he hits the ground emotionally and stays down Kramies captures that feeling of failure as a human and the sense of weakness that comes from it and in singing “While I’m gone well I’ll try not to hurt myself” and encouraging his beloved that “while you’re alone will you please enjoy yourself” then later that he’ll find his way back home but “this time I won’t lose myself, lest time gets away from me again” the songwriter acknowledges this habit that is perhaps difficult to break because of the nature of his life and bemoans the possibility while also seeking to change it but not knowing how. There’s a power in that acknowledgment that speaks volumes in a seemingly simple song. When the haze of atmospheric drones comes in mid song like how your mind can feel foggy when you’re caught up in things and swept up by the momentum of your projects it’s like an expression of the way you can get into that headspace and not be aware that’s where you’re going because it feels normal. And when that all clears out in the last fourth of the song the clarity of wanting to not be trapped in that cycle returns. It’s essentially an experimental folk song but speaks directly to how we let our lives be dictated by work and how that can warp how we relate to each other without any need for didactic political, social or psychological analysis and that’s why the song hits so hard but with a compassion and spirit of gentleness for those going through these times and definitely for those experiencing the fallout. Listen to “4:44am” on Spotify and follow the critically acclaimed songwriter and producer at the links below.

Kramies on Facebook

Kramies on Twitter

Kramies on Instagram

kramies.com

MOONBEAN Encourages Potential Lovers to Embrace Vulnerability on Exuberant and Moody Synth Pop Single “rock vs ocn”

MOONBEAN, photo by Colin Harrington

MOONBEAN taps into a strong and vivid mood on its single “rck vs ocn” as though capturing the vibe of an underground club in Berlin or its hometown of Toronto. The title suggests the immage of a rock vs. ocean per the opening line of “My heart is a wave/Your body is a rock/I splash against your skin/But you don’t let, no you don’t let/Your barrier down.” The lyrics further lay out lines that describe how people will often meet with an initial disconnect and communication challenges until they learn to be vulnerable without losing themselves and allowing their own energies to mix with that of another in a way that makes real, vibrant connection possible. The pulsing bassline and the ghostly main synth melody float over pulses of tone as the vocalist tells this story of someone trying to get past someone’s automatic emotional defenses and in these irresistible rhythms and immersive melodies one can imagine that barrier dissolving just enough. Fans of Eurhythmics, Actors and the unusual “New Wave” music at Tech Noir in the film The Terminator will appreciate the retro-futuristic techno pop style MOONBEAN puts forth in this song. It can be scary to open up to someone and let your own barrier down as embodied in this song with the mysterious tenor of the synth line but it also hints at the rewards of being willing to for the right person. Listen to “rck vs ocn” on Spotify and follow MOONBEAN at the links below.

MOONBEAN website

MOONBEAN on Instagram

Queen City Sounds Podcast S2E7: TripLip

TripLip, photo by Tom Murphy

TripLip is an experimental rock band from Denver formed in 2010. The persistent duo of drummer Patrick Sutton and bassist Kevin “Enji” Schultz have been a mainstay of the Denver underground although with few releases under its belt. Sutton and Schultz came up during formative years in the small town of Elizabeth, Colorado where they formed their earliest bands and played their earliest shows and were in the same social circles as future members of experimental rock band Facial and comedian Sam Tallent and Clay DeHaan who were part of their own bass and drum punk project Red Vs. Black. Around the time of the formation of the band Sutton and Schultz and some of their Elizabeth friends moved into a house at 29th Avenue and California and dubbed it Mouth House, one of the most active and important DIY spaces of that era that included Rhinoceropolis, Glob, Blast-O-Mat/Seventh Circle Music Collective, Unit E, GNU: Experience Galley, TeaHaus, The Wasteland, The Weather Center and Megahouse. With Mouth Bomb Records and the studio where DeHaan recorded numerous records for a few years as well as the ‘zine the group produced that included the calendars of select other DIY spaces, Mouth House was very much a community hub in the Denver and national and even international music underground. Unfortunately, Mouth House came to an end when the police busted a show on Halloween 2012. The group of people who made the space happen continued with the Mouth Bomb Records umbrella to produce events like the Festibowl music festival. During the TripLip’s early touring days Sutton and Schultz met legendary kabuki and kaiju themed surf rock band DaiKaiju from Alabama while on tour in The Yellowhammer State and became fast friends. These days when DaiKaiju tours through Colorado, TripLip has found the appropriate places for the bombastic group to thrill people that show up. Up to now TripLip has no formal released recordings outside of a live EP on Bandcamp but in 2023 the group plans on its first full length album currently in the works.

Listen to our interview with TripLip on Bandcamp and witness their hijinks this weekend with two Denver shows with DaiKaiju on Saturday (10.08) at The Squire Lounge and on Sunday (10.09) at 715 Club.

Corsicana’s “The Torchbearer” is a Poignantly Observed Character Study About Shedding Dysfunctional Habits

Corsicana, photo courtesy the artist

“The Torchbearer” eases in with its gentle melody and introspective spirit. But that’s the way Corsicana has often operated. Setting a contrasting expectation with warm atmospheres and delicate textures and lyrics that offer poignant and soul baring/exposing insights. The titular character is someone who takes on family legacy and trauma needlessly like an adopted burden as part of one’s identity. The song seems to be from the perspective of someone who sees a friend psychically self-mutilating until that friend becomes consumed with the resentment of taking on the responsibility of an unspoken habit as tradition like all of the things held up as this is how we’ve always done things in this family or this culture or this society regardless of how dysfunctional and useless it has always been. But these things can be what gives us a sense of stability and continuity in times of turmoil. But none of these structures are sustainable and the final line of the song “did you catch the light through the cracks?” really articulates how you can see someone you care about cling so stubbornly to a mindset in ways that hurt them no matter what you or anyone else has said until realizations crumble that dubious foundation. The orchestral arrangements with singer and songwriter Ben Pisano on guitar, keys, synths, bass, drums, electronics and production and Darby Cicci adding doleful trumpet are reminiscent of classic Elephant 6 style indiepop. The net effect is a lush pop song that condenses an emotionally complex and sophisticated observation and a full arc of composition in just three minutes thirteen seconds and thus a fine example of economy of style. Listen to “The Torchbearer” on Spotify and follow Corsicana at the links provided.

Corsicana on Facebook

Corsicana on Twitter

Corsicana on YouTube

Corsicana on Instagram