Queen City Sounds Podcast S4E03: Kissing Party

Kissing Party, photo by Veronica Dolan

Kissing Party is the self-styled “slop pop” band from Denver that formed during the heyday of the wave of indie rock that came to prominence in the mid-to-late 2000s. The band’s sound early on and even to the current moment might be considered in the realm of twee pop except the group has had two guitarists for years but whose interplay has meant lush and delicate melodies that compliment the gentle exuberance of the songwriting and passionate live shows. What is “Slop Pop”? According to the band’s bio it’s “a perfectly blended chaos of dream pop, shoegaze & beach goth. But fans of Belle & Sebastian, Sarah Records and C86 bands and Denver indiepop from the 90s will find Kissing Party’s earnest sentiments, refreshingly and completely lacking in irony, and exquisitely crafted melodies much to their liking.

Several releases over nearly two decades has proven Kissing Party adept at creating deceptively simple songs about love and life that offer genuine insight without coming off corny or insincere. Sure there is some humor on stage and you might catch a show that’s loose around the edges but the charm is in the humanity of the music and its presentation while taking care to give listeners accessible songs of substance. The latest album Graceless released on November 17 via the band’s own label BbyV Records and available for digital download and streaming. It is a particularly focused and emotionally wide-ranging record from the band yet still retains a freshness of spirit that has been a hallmark of its previous recorded output and sustained song to song with a sense that the whole album is an emotional journey rather than a collection of resonant pop songs. It feels like a creative next step for a group that has been consistent in quality throughout its career thus far. For those interested the band’s generous back catalog is still available and in a handful of cases on a physical format, each worth a listen and all of which has aged well because Kissing Party seems to tap into timeless themes and aesthetics.

Listen to our interview with band founder, primary songwriter, guitarist and vocalist Gregg Dolan on Bandcamp and follow Kissing Party at the links below along with a few music videos for the new album.

Kissing Party on Twitter

Kissing Party on Facebook

Kissing Party on Instagram

HolyKimJo’s Immersive, Slowcore Sound Collage of “Photosynthesis In Your Love” is an Homage to the Invisible Forces of Our Lives That Sustain It

HolyKimJo, photo courtesy the artist

HolyKimJo recorded the music for “Photosynthesis In Your Love” on an old tape recorder to give it that unique touch of the analog experience which is closes to life and emotions as we experience them directly. The format preserves and communicates a constant flow of atmospheric sounds around the vocal melody like a keen awareness of environment and the rhythms of the world around you would convey to you if you stop to pay attention. The song itself is about the invisible forces we take for granted that sustain life and one’s well being that one can take for granted until the moment we focus on our own awareness whether that’s photosynthesis or the love of and for another and so many things that make our lives feel significant while we live it. The song is on a slowcore vein with minimal guitar work and breathy vocals akin to The Microphones circa The Glow, Pt. 2 or even an old Flying Saucer Attack song. But it isn’t derivative, it feels like its own universe of sounds, a collage of field recordings, guitar, processed vocals and drones that feel like a unified sensory experience which the beautifully enigmatic music video embodies perfectly with its sense of wonder at the great expanse of existence. Watch the video for “Photosynthesis In Your Love” on YouTube and follow Seoul, South Korea’s HolyKimJo at the links below. The album Her Name, Like a Fading Polaroid released November 29, 2023 and is now available on streaming and as a digital download on Bandcamp.

HolyKimJo on Instagram

Best Shows in Denver January 2024

Nabihah Iqbal performs at Lost Lake on January 25, 2024
Candy Chic, photo from Bandcamp

Friday | 01.05
What:
The Salesmen w/Billy Conquer, Tuff Bluff and Candy Chic
When: 8pm doors/8:30pm show
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: The Salesmen might be considered post-punk because its music has that angular aspect and seems informed by political edge in the more interesting end of punk but its eclectic style doesn’t fit a narrow genre tag. Its 2023 EP WAR IN COLORADO! sounds like they grew up listening to Red Hot Chili Peppers, pop punk and 90s art rock in the vein of Mr. Bungle and took what chops they learned that mutant route and made something decidedly different. Billy Conquer from Gunnison, Colorado unabashedly claims its garage rock roots but its 2020 EP Garage Hits has a flavor that sounds more like the guys grew up having their brains poisoned by classic rock and jam band overload (it happens whether through parents or peers) but then discovered T-Rex and Big Star and rather than follow the typical garage punk route of the 2010s actually honed their chops both technical and songwriting-wise to make something that dips into the classics a bit but so well developed you don’t mind. Tuff Bluff is the latest punk band to include Sara Fischer who some may remember for her time in old school Denver groups like Pin Downs, The Speedholes, New Idols, The Manxx, Bluebelle and others. So of course the songwriting is well crafted and both gritty and melodic Candy Chic has been around longer than one might assume since its cachet has caught on a bit more over the past year. Its music doesn’t seem beholden to surf rock, indiepop or post-punk though general fans of that kind of music will find something to appreciate about the band’s deft navigation of a sound that may remind some of early Slumberland bands or even Sarah Records acts with a gentle touch and a knack for tender and ethereal melodies and richly emotional vocals.

Daniel Donato, photo by Jason Stoltzfus

Friday and Saturday | 01.05 and 01.06
What:
Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country & Trouble No More (A Celebration of Allman Brothers Band)
When: 7pm doors/8pm show both nights
Where: Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom (01.05) and Cervantes’ Masterpiece Ballroom (01.06)
Why: Daniel Donato released his latest album Reflector on November 10, 2023 and its richly diverse sounds and styles are entrancing and lively. It’s the kind of country one would expect from an artist rooted in modern Nashville in that he seems to have absorbed the sounds where country intersects with psychedelia, indie rock and the jam band universe and produced an orchestral yet accessible sound of his own. Donato’s songwriting isn’t same-y and through the album and his body of work he offers uplifting and thoughtful tales of human existence with great imagination and energy.

Equine in 2019, photo by Tom Murphy

Sunday | 01.07
What:
Equine, Church Car (NYC) and Adam Baumeister
When: 7 pm
Where: St. Pauli Tavern
Why: Equine is Kevin Richards’ long-running, solo, free jazz-inflected, avant-garde guitar drone project with several albums in his body of work to date. Richards was once the genius guitarist of post-hardcore band Motheater and a member of noise band Epileptinomicon and Equine reflects that background some in that he brought truly unorthodox jazz chords to post-hardcore guitar style and a structure, albeit one more intuitive, to noise. Church Car is the latest project of Ian Douglas Moore who was known in Denver more for his time in punk adjacent and Americana bands. Adam Baumeister? Who knows what you’ll get because his wide-ranging creativity has meant he was a member of Bad Weather California, art-punk weirdos Navy Girls, his own experimental guitar and cosmic country grunge pop band Littles Paia and Lil’ Adam as well as numerous other musical endeavors over the years including his running of lathe cut imprint Meep Records.

Nocturnal Prose, photo from Bandcamp

Sunday | 01.07
What:
Nocturnal Prose w/Hex Casse, Empty4400 and Luna’s
When: 7pm
Where: Seventh Circle Music Collective
Why: Nocturnal Prose is a noisy post-punk/shoegaze band from San Antonio, Texas. Hex Cassette is the one man cult and industrial dance extravaganza who always seems to find a way to joke darkly with the audience while getting them to dance by bringing the performance into the crowd. Empty4400 is a true fusion of noisy shoegaze and emo. Luna’s is a hardcore band from Denver.

Plaid, photo from Bandcamp

Thursday | 01.11
What:
Plaid w/Rameau Control
When: 8
Where: Meow Wolf
Why: Plaid is the influential and foundational IDM duo from the UK. From its early days when Andy Turner and Ed Handley were part of The Black Dog Plaid has been pioneering forward thinking electronic musical ideas, forms and methods of composition including crafting their own electronic instruments in software form not to mention its creative use of hardware. Plaid’s diverse body of work has pushed the boundaries of modern electronic music and its latest album 2022’s Feorm Falorx is one of its most accessible records with bright melodies and finely sequenced beats like dance music for the soundtrack to a deceptively utopian thriller set in an off world holiday resort.

Clarion Void, photo from Bandcamp

Friday | 01.12
What:
Poison Tribe w/Upon a Fields Whisper, Clarion Void and Empire Demolition
When: 8
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: Poison Tribe is a crusty hardcore band from Denver whose body of work thus far seems like a caustic critique of state violence and the horror of the dystopia that is too obvious from any remotely realistic assessment of world events and American national and local politics. Upon a Fields Whisper is an atmospheric doom/blackened crust band from Colorado Springs comprised of noteworthy musicians from that city’s always surprisingly great local music scene including Brian Ostrow of numerous other bands including 908 and formerly of Blighter. Also Bryan Webb who has also been a mainstay of Colorado Springs music in various bands perhaps most well known for some for his tenure in garage punk legends Nicotine Fits and The Conjugal Visits. Clarion Void also from Colorado Springs seems to traffic in the kind of existential blackened doom that means it is deft at both introspective melodies and blisteringly intense riffing that it often lets hang in the air like a harbinger of disaster. Empire Demolition is sort of a powerviolence/deathgrind band from Denver who are set to release their new album Defenestration on January 12, 2024 in time for this show.

Bluebook in 2022, photo by Tom Murphy

Saturday | 01.13
What:
Bluebook w/The Still Tide and Uhl
When: 8
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: Bluebook is the long-running musical project of Julie Davis that has undergone various incarnations as a vehicle for her jazz-inflected, experimental downtempo chamber pop. But the current iteration of the band is a bit of an all-star lineup including former Monofog and Snake Rattle Rattle Snake singer Hayley Helmericks on drums, Anna Morsett of The Still Tide on guitar and Jess Parsons (The Still Tide, Patrick Dethlefs, Alex Cameron) on keyboards, all of whom also contribute vocals to the project. The result of this amalgam of talent is a group that conveys an emotional depth like a brooding, dark folk art rock pop group. Not much else like it. The Still Tide proves that Anna Morsett isn’t just a gifted songwriter but one of the best lead guitarists in a band in Denver with a knack for using alternate tunings and expertly placed capos to create a unique sound palette alongside what bandmate Jake Miller is doing on his own guitar. Uhl is the art pop project of Isabella Uhl whose vocals focused compositions have garnered critical attention from national publications like Under the Radar and whose music might be compared to ambitious songwriters in a more dream pop vein like Kate Bush or perhaps more directly like Jenny Hval and Fever Ray.

Rowboat, photo by Tom Murphy

Saturday | 01.13
What:
Rowboat, Zealot and A Strange Happening
When: 9
Where: The Roxy on Broadway
Why: If you were to put the names of a dozen of the best indie rock bands in Denver in a hat and draw them out you couldn’t do better than this. Rowboat is a trio fronted by Sam McNitt who starts with a folk foundation on acoustic guitar in his songwriting process and builds them into emotionally charged and poetically insightful songs well orchestrated in the live setting on electric guitar and bass and synth from Scott Frank and drums by Brian Lepien. It is powerful and consistently underrated stuff in recent years in Denver from former members of Blue Million Miles and Fucking Orange. Zealot is a band that is comprised of brilliant songwriters and musicians in their own right but lead by Luke Hunter James-Erickson who perhaps is inspired greatly by the literary indie rock of The Mountain Goats but whose own creative muse has lead him down various fruitful paths and interests over the past couple of decades in Denver. But on board are former Fingers of the Sun and current Salads and Sunbeams songwriter, bassist and singer Suzi Allegra, former Facade and Violent Summer guitarist and singer Kitty Vincent and Michael King who is one of the great bass players in Denver indie rock but plays drums in this band. On the recording of the group’s latest single are Jacob Adamson and Elisha Coy from A Strange Happening whose own concept pop indie rock is a brilliant fusion of radio play storytelling style and indiepop in the classic 90s vein.

Pink Hawks, photo from Bandcamp

Saturday | 01.13
What:
Pink Hawks release of Elote w/Don Chicharrón, 2MX2 and Fuya Fuya
When: 7
Where: The Oriental Theater
Why: Pink Hawks came out of Yuzo Nieto’s fascination with experimental music, jazz and the possibilities in fusing those impulses with Afrobeat and other forms of African and Latin popular music. This show is a celebration of the release of the vinyl edition of the group’s new record Elote. So it’s only fitting that Latin psychedelic rock band Don Chicharrón is on hand on the bill as well as excellent Spanish language hip-hop duo 2MX2.

Cheap Perfume circa 2016, photo by Tom Murphy

Wednesday | 01.17
What:
Cheap Perfume, Dead Pioneers and Elegant Everyone
When: 8
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: Three of the most overtly political bands from Colorado on one bill? And all with lyrics that are smart, poetic and poignant? Each of these acts are also entertaining, energetic and those lyrics don’t feel like a lecture at all but a rallying cry for something important and a sharp, pointed and clever critique of some of the worst impulses of our collective culture and society. That’s what punk can, has been, and should probably be more often.

Deth Rali, photo from Bandcamp

Thursday | 01.18
What:
In Plain Air w/Corsicana, Deth Rali and Tarantula Bill
When: 7
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: Psych prog trio In Plain Air is launching its long weekend tour through Kansas at this show with support from dream pop band Corsicana, Deth Rali and it’s unorthodox blend of thrash and psychedelic prog and Tarantula Bill who, based purely on song streaming, seem to ably enough perform music clearly inspired by early 2010s psychedelic indie rock.

Wave Decay circa 2023, photo by Tom Murphy

Friday | 01.19
What:
Wave Decay w/Pale Sun and Galleries
When: 8
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: This will be a show of the heavier end of shoegaze and psychedelia. Wave Decay’s sound is rooted in the angular disorient and sonic discipline of krautrock but with dense atmospherics reminiscent of music done by Jeff suthers of Pale Sun whose own mastery of soundscaping and emotionally charged songwriting all at once is more or less unmatched in Denver. Galleries came out of the 2010s based in the classic rock resurgence and psych garage and its current musical offerings are in that vein but the band appears to have followed an instinct for expansive melodies and the kind of psychedelia one might more expect from the more rock and roll end of Deerhunter.

Moore Kismet, photo courtesy the artist

Friday | 01.19
What
: Wreckno w/Moore Kismet, Thelem and Eyezic
When: 8
Where: Ogden Theatre
Why: Wreckno is now based in Indianapolis but started out in small town Michigan and garnered a cult following as a queer rapper, producer and DJ in the bass music/EDM world with a presentation that is as colorful as it is inventive in genre bending and collaborating with a wide range of artists in his wheelhouse and beyond. But if you’re going definitely get there early enough to catch Moore Kismet whose 2022 debut album Universe, released when he was 17, revealed a gift for layering rhythms and atmospheres in a way reminiscent of the production of Flying Lotus and beats fusing ideas out EDM, trap and the more experimental hip-hop auteurs of the 90s and 2000s and progressing it into his own style. Fans of the aforementioned and the more electronic dance end of Jockstrap will get a lot of Moore Kismet’s creative experiments in the electronic music art form.

Quits, photo by Tom Murphy

Saturday | 01.20
What:
Broken Record, Quits, despAIR Jordan and DJ Listen Up Nerds
When: 8
Where: Hi-Dive
Why: Nothing Moves Me proved that Denver’s Broken Record had polished its already noteworthy songwriting into a shining body of work that has the emotional nuance and conviction of a great emo band but with power pop knack for hard hitting melodies like Dinosaur Jr had that band come up through 90s underground rock rather that influenced a lot of it. Quits is a juggernaut noise rock band who will be hitting the road to the West Coast in the first week and a half of February in support of its 2023 album Feeling It out on Sleeping Giant Glossolalia. DespAIR Jordan somehow came out of the punk scene and writes glittery and uplifting, shoegaze-adjacent pop rock that sounds more like The Dismemberment Plan than Sunny Day Real Estate but without truly sounding like either.

Squirrel Flower, photo by Alexa Viscius

Tuesday | 01.23
What:
Squirrel Flower w/Goon and Lu Lagoon
When: 7
Where: Larimer Lounge
Why: Ella O’Connor Williams was involved in the Boston DIY scene in her teens before moving to Iowa to attend Grinnell College where she wrote her first EP Early Winter Songs From Middle America as Squirrel Flower and releasing it herself in 2015. Eight years, two further EPs and four albums later Williams released 2023’s Tomorrow’s Fire. The songwriter already had more than a touch of that Low-esque talent for melodious vocals and emotional delicacy of expression baked into the music but also some of that scrappy energy that propels her folk-inflected songs into an elevated realm of sonic power. The new record simply opens up where Williams is able to go with her experiments with sounds and styles in unexpected directions and at times is reminiscent of the eclectic and explosive music of Wednesday. Except of course that Williams has her own perceptive observations about the challenges of modern, working class life told in musical shadings introspective and brash yet always sensitive and vulnerable in the way that only truly powerful music can be.

Nabihah Iqbal, photo from Bandcamp

Wednesday and Thursday | 01.24 and 01.25
What:
Nabihah Iqbal w/STAR Inc. and DJ Ladybug
When: 6pm doors/7pm show on 01.24 and 7pm doors 8pm show on 01.25
Where: Washington’s (01.24) and Lost Lake (01.25)
Why: Nabihah Iqbal was a human rights lawyer before crafting the music for which she would later be known though has likely dabbled in music across a lifetime. An early contributor to the work of the late experimental pop artist and producer Sophie, Iqbal released her debut album under her own name in 2017 with Weighing of the Heart. In 2023 she unveiled Dreamer via the respected avant-electronic imprint Ninja Tune with its intricate layers of hazy, luminescent atmospheres and flows of introspective vocals. The music casts light on the aspirations, challenges of joys of navigating the world and its sweeping dynamics intermingle the musically tactile with the ethereal for an effect that is transporting yet grounded. Iqbal’s navigation of these aesthetics and creative impulses is masterful and often attempted by more conventional shoegaze bands but not always to the same degree of effectiveness.

King Cardinal, photo from kingcardinal.com

Friday | 01.26
What:
King Cardinal w/Cous and Hunter James and The Titanic
When: 7
Where: Globe Hall
Why: Brennan Mackey of King Cardinal says on the band’s web bio that he moved to Denver on a whim after working a finance job he didn’t love and perhaps dreading what the rest of his life might look like he decided to throw that caution to the wind. Fortunately for us, Mackey is a gifted songwriter and musician and the 2017 debut album from King Cardinal, Great Lakes, is a choice example of when an Americana band can infuse its more homespun charm with mood and imagination. Dynamic flows of tones and textures in expressive rivulets around Mackey’s own fine singing. The group is now releasing its new album Landlines. Haven’t heard any of the new material but based on the attention to songwriting details and delicacy of delivery it’s likely to be another set of songs of pastoral beauty and sentiments that have made the group’s previous offerings eminently listenable.

Owosso in 2022, photo by Tom Murphy

Friday | 01.26
What:
Rowboat, Blacktop Musical and Owosso
When: 8 doors/9 show
Where: 715 Club
Why: Rowboat is making a rare live showing inside of the same month with this show and bringing some highly literate and passionate folk-rooted, shoegaze adjacent rock to this small room. Also on the bill is the Owosso whose members came up in the punk and early modern indie rock milieu and whose music has that scrappy angular energy blended with melodic songwriting acumen that made the many of the DC post-punk bands so perennially appealing.

Buck Meek, photo by Shervin Lainez

Saturday | 01.27
What:
Buck Meek w/Dylan Meek
When: 7
Where: Globe Hall
Why: Buck Meek is perhaps best known as the guitarist and backing vocalist of indie rock phenoms Big Thief. But for the past half a decade and more he’s carved out an musical identity to explore separate from the band and his third album Haunted Mountain was issued by 4AD in 2023. The cosmic, ambient folk/alt-country is at turns poetically fantastical, tenderly personal and organic in its arrangements. Each song seems to emerge, unfold and grow into charming, poignantly knowing vignettes of life. If you’re a fan it would be advised to catch him on this tour to see how the band pulls this off live.

Digable Planets, photo from Bandcamp

Tuesday | 01.30
What:
Digable Planets Reachin’ 30th Anniversary Tour w/Kassa Overall
When: 8
Where: Ogden Theatre
Why: Digable Planets began as a solo project of Ishmael “Butter Fly” Butler in the late 80s but the demos blossomed when Butler met and began collaborating with Mariana “Ladybug Mecca” Vieira and Craig “Doodlebug” Irving after he started interning at Sleeping Bag Records in NYC and in 1989 the current and classic lineup of Digable Planets was born. Like some of its contemporaries the trio was immersed in the aesthetics and creative impulses of jazz fused with highly literate lyrics and brought that sensibility firmly into hip-hop in a way that translated as particularly experimental and to this day surprisingly forward thinking. During its first iteration from the 80s through 1995 the group only released two albums, 1993’s Reachin’ (A New Refutation of Time and Space) and 1995’s futuristic Blowout Comb. The group has reunited twice from 2005-2011 and 2015 to the present and although it hasn’t released an album’s worth of new music its live show maintains a certain mystique and late night jazz vibe that is still deeply compelling.

Lost & Profound’s “Comet” is an Unorthodox Breakup Song in Tones Melancholic and Anthemic

Lost & Profound, photo courtesy the artists

A sound like a sitar opens “Comet” by Lost & Profound lending it an exotic quality before it drops out and Lisa Boudreau’s vocals come in with an intimate tone for quite an unorthodox breakup song. What might have been sitar reveals itself as potentially acoustic or electric guitar processed to give the bends a strange voicing. But which accompanies the vocals alongside low key percussion and a background pulse as though the words of the song are meditative and intentional rather than mournful. Our narrator uses the metaphor of being a river that can overflow for being a person of strong emotions while later in the song using the image of self as comet, fiery and headed to distant realms to the same effect. But the chorus “I’m a teardrop, watch me fall” that floats in the song in its most melancholic passages expresses the heartbreak and intense moment of regret that lingers but doesn’t last forever. Stylistically the song shifts from a more dream pop sound to a touch of country rock swagger mid-song when going into that bit about being a comet and the guitar is more expansive and crunchy and Boudreau’s vocals joined by backing vocals echoing her lines for the most anthemic moments of the song before the outro back into vulnerability and fadeout to some tasty backwards delay on the guitar to close out a chapter in a life story. Listen to “Comet” on Spotify.

Whipper Snipper’s Dark Dream Pop Single “I Fell” is a Brooding and Ethereal Journey Through Loss and Acceptance

“I Fell” by Whipper Snipper has a darkly wandering structure made up of seemingly interconnected circles of melody and rhythm. The music video depicts in black, white and grey tones a landscape of what look like legos of a person navigating a fantastical landscape dodging being caught up in the grips of gigantic arachnids. The moody bass line that introduces the song is a near constant presence that feels reassuring like a lifeline to reality from a realm of dreams and enchantment as seems depicted in the lyrics. The imagery of falling for someone and becoming lost and unmoored. When the percussion and bass drop out at around the 1:50 mark for haunting, teeming synth melody and a melancholic electronic piano figure filling that void it feels like emotional free fall. But all elements come together in the end and disappearing a little at a time before the final line of the song where the vocals sit all but alone and the vocalist sings, “Unchained, untroubled, unhinged.” And that captures the unsettling aspect of the song even though its atmospheres are beautiful and mysterious but at its heart it expresses that sense one can get when you think you got what you wanted in life in a relationship only to find out despite once feeling a deep sense of connection, attraction and affection all of those can dissolve for reasons you may never fully understand yet even in that liminal moment a sense of freedom, relief and acceptance can mix in with a sense of loss. Fans of Cranes and Just Mustard may appreciate the entrancing yet understated brooding quality of this song. Watch the video for “I Fell” on YouTube and follow Whipper Snipper at the links below.

Otis Mensah’s Mystical, Existential “That Mouth Of Rainfall” is an Avant-Downtempo Hip-Hop Exploration of Identity, Depression and Dreams

Otis Mensah, photo from cover of WINTERSKIN

Otis Mensah, the first Poet Laureate of the City of Sheffield in the UK, free associates spiritual imagery and experiences with those more earth bound throughout “That Mouth Of Rainfall” (featuring contributions from Rituals of Mine). In the music video we see Mensah walking through a church and the streets of Berlin captured on Super 8 which suits well the soft, soulful, pulsing synth and hushed, downtempo production and Mensah’s sentiments with each line of lyrics. Mensah navigates issues of perception and reality, of identity and aspirations and how those intersect with a life that can seem to throw you setbacks and opportunities at seemingly perversely random intervals. Mensah is open about an extended depression and contemplating surrendering to what seems inevitable and pulling back and finding vitality in new experiences and contemplating possibilities. In the soulful vocals of Terra Lopez aka Rituals of Mine (some may know Lopez for her tenure writing and performing music as Sister Crayon) we hear an emotional clarity as a companion to Mensah’s flow of existential sketches, an architecture of the song that reflects Mensah’s seemingly dialectical narrative with self. The effect of all these elements working in perfect sync with each other brings a great dimensionality to the song musically, thematically and emotionally all while pulling you into its gorgeously lush layers of melody and gentle rhythm. All in all a fine example of the kind of music we’ve come to expect from Sheffield in terms of being incredibly experimental and forward thinking and accessible in ways that aren’t immediately predictable. Watch the video for “The Mouth Of Rainfall” on YouTube and follow Otis Mensah at the links below. The album WINTERSKIN dropped on October 4, 2023.

Otis Mensah on Facebook

Otis Mensah on Instagram

Johnathan Maske’s Chilling Folk Single “Chasing Shadows” is Like the End Theme Music for a Haunted Spaghetti Western

Johnathan Maske, photo courtesy the artist

Johnathan Maske sounds like he immersed himself in some late 60s and early 70s folk singers on “Chasing Shadows,” the debut single from his forthcoming album The Down Valley (out in May 2024). The vocals tilt over the edge a little when hitting that falsetto with raw feeling but reel back in with the the chill melodies that run through the song. There’s a melancholic tone to the song and its orchestral songwriting is reminiscent of something out of a Spaghetti western but with all the desert tones turned icy and overcast rather than sun scorched, like a film Sergio Leone might have made based on an Edgar Allan Poe story. The shuffling beat and slightly lo-fi production lends the song a quality that feels like it’s from another decade like music you’d hear in the end scenes and credits of a baroque horror or thriller film from the UK or Europe in the aforementioned era of folk. The sentiments of the lyrics read like the thoughts of a person who is trapped by his own paranoid thoughts and visions of failure, petty revenge and futility and the song serves well the tragic mood of that kind of emotional isolation and that the song sometimes feels like it could fall apart the essential fragility of that headspace. And yet there’s a compelling hauntedness to the song that draws you in to the end. Listen to “Chasing Shadows” on Spotify and follow Johanthan Maske at the links below. In the months ahead Maske will release further singles from the album leading up to its issuance in the spring.

Johnathan Maske on Facebook

Johnathan Maske on Instagram

Johnathan Maske on Bandcamp

The Fog Enshrouded Melodic Drones of CoastalDives’ “Bloodline Through The Mirage” is Like a Conscious Sleepwalk Through a Long Dark Night of the Soul

Distorted, fast rippling pulses of tone rising and falling issue forth at the beginning of CoastalDives’ “Bloodline Through The Mirage” like something from the more industrial end of The Legendary Pink Dots. But streams of clear melody cut through that sonic fog after a minute or so like a lifeline of clarity through the haze to a zone of soporific drones that warp at the edges. Those guidance melodies arc into different shapes around you cleansing the grit of the earlier part of the song and replacing it with haunted fogs and spectral beacons to lead you further into the mysterious space that CoastalDives has crafted. In the last quarter of the song there’s a sense of being on the edges of that roiling cloud of melancholic haze that feels like it’s moving further away while you wake from what has felt like a mysterious dream all along into wakeful clarity and silence like Elena at the end of Beyond the Black Rainbow when she leaves the Arboria Institute free from years of experimentation,, the extended nightmare over. What did it all mean? Who can say but it is a listening experience that leaves your brain feeling better. Listen to “Bloodline Through The Mirage” on Spotify and follow CoastalDives at the links below. The song is the first single from the album Lineage due out in early 2024, mastered by composer Rafael Anton Irisarri of The Sight Below.

CoastalDives on Facebook

CoastalDives on Instagram

CoastalDives on Bandcamp

AUS!Funkt’s Art Garage Funk Punk Single “That’s a Fact” is an Exhilarating Anthem Against Xenophobia, Fascism, Racism and Misogyny

AUS!Funkt, photo courtesy the artists

AUS!Funkt sound like a futuristic garage rock band on the noisy and discordant funk punk of “That’s a Fact.” In the music video the four figures representing the band look like The Residents gone cyberpunk anti-authoritarian gang, appropriate to the subject of the song. Pulsing, seething, distorted synth over urgent guitar and an almost hypnotically steady beat are the back drop to lines like “I don’t want to stop and reflect, xenophobia’s real that’s a fact, I never know what to expect, racism kills, that’s a fact, social norms we need to reject, misogyny hurts, that’s a fact, I have a need to disaffect, fascism kills, that’s a fact.” Indubitably. The song sounds frantic and emphatic on those points and even with the breakdown section mid-song for a breather with a repeat of the lyrics, the Canadian band leaves us with no doubt about its intentions and the kind of presentation of these truths that we’ve been needing to remember for decades but the immediacy of which is more than looming on the horizon at this moment. AUS!Funkt’s song, the title track to its December 22, 2023 EP, doesn’t overcomplicate the messaging nor simplifies a complex set of issues, it simply states some core principles with clarity and sets it to exhilarating and exciting art punk. Watch the video for “That’s a Fact” on YouTube and follow AUS!Funkt at the links provided.

AUS!Funkt on Facebook

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Queen City Sounds Podcast S4E03: Best Albums, Songs and Shows of 2023

This isn’t a definitive list of the best music that came out in 2023 but just a selection of some of the best that seemed to stand out for Brian Tallman and myself (Tom Murphy). I already chimed in heavily on my Birdy column and will eventually publish my extended year end best albums list in the coming weeks. Tallman is someone I met when I would work out of coffee shops when I was still freelancing for Westword and getting Queen City Sounds and Art off the ground and he seemed very aware of newer music for someone close to my age and had seen plenty of shows going back to the 80s and worked at record store in NYC in the 90s and 2000s. We both went to college in Illinois around the same time, him at Northwestern in Chicago and me at Knox College in rural Galesburg and have a shared cultural background in underground and popular music. We began work on a podcast in 2022 that hasn’t yet seen the light of day discussing music scenes and albums and shows so I thought this year to ask him about a top list of albums and songs for 2023 and shows because he’s been living in other parts of the country and traveling to see shows across America and I’ve been only seeing shows in Colorado but as an active music journalist I’ve been able to see more than most people. Oh yeah, the Sex Swing record is a live album but its versions of previously released material is fantastic. Hopefully you find something of interest in our discussion and maybe discover artists you might not otherwise have known about or whose work you have heard of but have yet to explore. Listen to the discussion on Bandcamp and below I will include playlists for the albums, songs and music by artists at the shows covered.