“Up Comes the Tunnel” is Sun Blood Stories’ Harrowing Meditation on the Inevitability of Our Own Mortality

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Sun Blood Stories, Haunt Yourself cover (cropped)

“Up Comes the Tunnel” drifts in softly with tonal guitar swells, understated bass and nearly whispered vocals before Sun Blood Stories brings in the fire a little over a minute in. What starts as introspective quickly evolves into an urgent tale of impending doom. Dramatic, rapid swirls of synth coil around seething guitar work and plaintive, beckoning wails of warning. Listening, it’s like a whimsical dream in a mysterious land that turns into a nightmare in which you see your own death and doom rushing toward you. Like the tunnel in the title of the song you are in a car hurtling toward a passage into the next life whether metaphorical or literal. It’s a song that reminds us that no matter how much we’ve planned or thought through we can’t escape the fate of all living creates and it all too often comes before you or anyone you know is read and too soon. Dire stuff but the song has a life affirming quality that lifts it out of that personal darkness and musically Sun Blood Stories, who have always more than a few steps removed from the wave of psychedelic rock of the past decade and a half, have pushed themselves into realms of songwriting and soundscaping that avoid tropes of the genre. Look out for the new record Haunt Yourself on September 20, 2019. Listen to “Up Comes the Tunnel” on Soundcloud and connect with Boise, Idaho’s Sun Blood Stories at the links below.

sunbloodstories.com
soundcloud.com/sun-blood-stories
open.spotify.com/artist/32ipxyvZ3Is2o2PdxOi1jS
youtu.be/eZXtYUvuoDk
sunbloodstories.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/SunBloodStories
facebook.com/sunbloodstories
instagram.com/sunbloodstories

Eldren’s Emphasis on Rhythm and Vocal Aerobatics on “Hazy Days” Sets it Apart from the Modern Psych Rock Pack

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Eldren, photo courtesy the artists

Eldren’s sound has evolved a great deal over the last several years with the band exploring a fairly broad range of rock and roll sonics. Its latest single “Hazy Days” finds the band taking a sort of garage psych sound and stretching it beyond the softer, safer realms of some of its would-be peers into hard rock territory not unlike what you might expect out of, say, a Wand or King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. At the core of the song is a driving, fuzzy bass line that guides the melody through its various gyres and gimbles as the song cruises to its conclusion. The vocals effortlessly swing between Robert Plant-esque primal wails and Beatles-like vocal harmonies and one striking aspect of the song for a band writing music in this style is how guitars take a back seat to the rhythm, synths and singing. Where you might expect a trippy guitar solo, Eldren gives space for other aspects of the song to shine and as such its dynamics here and elsewhere in its musical catalog are fine examples of how a psych rock band can avoid the usual clichés of the loose genre. Listen on Spotify and follow Eldren at the links below.

facebook.com/pg/EldrenMusic
http://www.eldrenband.com

Handsome Naked Sends Up the Obligatory Summer Jam With Its Song and Video for, well, “Summer”

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Handsome Naked, photo courtesy the artists

Handsome Naked has the opposite of swagger in its single “Summer” featuring Becca Brown. Rapping about waking up coated in sweat all summer and the losing of one’s best pair of sunglasses as existential crisis is not quite Vic Berger territory with the surreal but it is a deft send-up of feel-good summer hits as an absurd subgenre whether hip-hop or otherwise. In delineating all the annoying and unromantic aspects of summer that most people can relate to, Handsome Naked definitely take the piss out of getting stoked on summer. Referencing chafing thighs and “booby sweat” the song nevertheless sounds like a legitimate downtempo pop hip-hop hit because Handsome Naked didn’t skimp on the songwriting and production in making comedy music up to and including its seventh and newly released album Doors. Like other comedy music artists like “Weird” Al Yankovic, Flight of the Conchords and Garfunkel and Oates, Handsome Naked had to put in some time learning songcraft to write songs that would actually be funny. Watch the video on YouTube and follow Handsome Naked at the links below.

soundcloud.com/handsome-naked
open.spotify.com/artist/1nSITZ48ppCY55h84d5w81
twitter.com/HandsomeNaked
facebook.com/hnake
instagram.com/handsomenaked

“Sleeping 2 Dream” is Soul Bandit’s Ode to Honoring the Tender and Overwhelming Emotions of Youth

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Soul Bandit, photo courtesy the artist

Soul Bandit’s single “Sleeping 2 Dream” sounds like something from the future when someone will look back on the four decades leading up to now and mulch all the musical and pop cultural references and assemble an aesthetic that is coherent sophisticated and considered imbued with a classic pop sensibility. The dazzling flow of sounds generated by various electronic instruments, some of them circuit bent, and production blurs the line between rhythm, melody and texture in a way that suggests a deep familiarity with all the elements to the point where they are compositional tools to employ in imaginative songwriting and not merely a cool gimmick. Creatively it makes one think of perhaps the type of artist that does comics or manga, then animation and then the music for such. Or film auteurs like David Lynch, Sophia Coppola, Gregg Araki and John Carpenter who not only create striking and powerful cinematic works but who are at least deeply involved in the music direction if not in composing music for the soundtrack as well. There is a fragile elegance to the composition of “Sleeping 2 Dream” that conjures imagery of dragonflies and the way they seem so delicate and composed but are stronger than they appear. The beautiful layers of the song suggest the same for itself. Insect metaphor aside, the song is about that time of life when strong feelings nearly overwhelm you and you don’t yet know how to articulate them or speak them in public so you dream of the times when you can with all the strength of your emotional core. Listen on Spotify and follow Soul Bandit at the links below.

soundcloud.com/soul-bandit
open.spotify.com/artist/6CvmQfgSYfxmjeH7C20LmQ
facebook.com/SoulBanditMusic
instagram.com/soul.bandit

Perfect Posture’s Melancholic and Nostalgic “Older” is the Perfect Snapshot of the Concluding Moments of a Chapter in Your Life’s Story

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Perfect Posture, image courtesy the artist

Hazy and nostalgic, “Older,” the closing song to Perfect Posture’s debut EP Window captures a liminal stage in a person’s life. Like when you’re through with a certain period in your life and you’re ready for things to move on but you’re stuck in your past life for the moment and that inspires some introspective assessment and sometimes uncomfortable self-examination. The echoing, effervescent tones and downtempo pace is the sound of that reverie and psychological processing anyone who has ever accomplished anything in life, even if no one else recognizes it, has felt—you’ve reached the end of a period in school, you’ve reached the point in your career where everything seems pointless and you’ve taken steps toward something else but there are aspects of your current job that you’ll miss, your band is drawing down after you’ve already agreed to split up after releasing your final album and going on your final tour. That ambivalence about the denouement of that chapter of your life, is exquisitely expressed in “Older.” Listen to the track on Bandcamp and follow Perfect Posture on the Preserve Records website.

Window by Perfect Posture

preserve-records.com/artists/perfectposture

The Kafka-esque Sarcasm of Abe Feigenbaum’s “Try to Speak the Language” is a Pavement-esque Critique of Bland Conformity

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Abe Feigenbaum, Space Police cover

The inspired sarcasm of Abe Feigenbaum’s “Try to Speak the Language” is especially choice given the tone of the music and it’s somewhere between 8-bit video game music and slackery indie pop. Even the guitar “solo” sneers at the compromises and imposed rhetoric, slang and jargon we’re expected to adhere to in order to gain access to society’s rewards whether in business, at jobs, in legal situations, in relationships instead of relating to each other as the idiosyncratic humans we all are. It’s not a critique of political correctness in the tired way that is often used to give a pass to abusive thinking and behavior, rather the conformity that makes everything seem uniform and takes the life out of life. The perspective in the song is Kafka-esque by way of Pavement and thus the humor while incisive is ultimately playful. Listen to the single on Soundcloud and follow Abe Feigenbaum on Spotify.

open.spotify.com/artist/0Ckz4P1cIyNVXrgRdNAYTs

Evoking Early 80s Synth Pop FYE & FENNEK’s “Better Lover” is a Complex Love Song for Troubled Times

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FYE & FENNEK “Better Lover” cover (cropped)

FYE & FENNEK have tapped into a corner of 80s pop influenced sound for their single “Better Lover” that casts some insight into why it’s re-emerged as a resonant style over thirty years hence. The song is rooted in the rhythm which in the original synth pop came out of post-punk, disco, Krautrock and R&B. “Better Love” echoes shades of Speak & Spell period Depeche Mode and, by extension through Vince Clarke, Yaz and Erasure. The bright melodies embedded into almost industrial rhythms served as an appropriate backdrop and sonic palette to comment on the nature of identity and relationships in an era of challenging politics between a right wing, austerity government (austerity for most, but not for the wealthy, naturally) and the threat of nuclear destruction while acknowledging the basic human need to have some joy out of life. It struck an interesting balance.

“Better Lover” has a similar vibe and, as it turns out, the political and economic environment is similar but the impending doom includes climate change ending life as we know it just on the horizon and more out of human control than simply exercising restraint and good sense in not launching nuclear missiles at one another. That background tension runs through “Better Lover” but so does the catharsis of finding fun in times of trouble. But the song is also about the virtue of being vulnerable and not always looking to trade up in your romantic relationships. Like the best pop songs there is more content than is obvious from the catchy melodies and lyrical hooks. Naturally, of course, FYE & FENNEK have brought modern sound processing, editing and current electronic music sensibilities to the composition giving the classic aesthetic a contemporary feel. Listen to “Better Lover” on Soundcloud and to other tracks from the production duo at the link below.

soundcloud.com/fye-fennek

“I Went Searching” Is Rusty Reid’s Call For a New Age of Peace, Love and Understanding as a Left Field Psychedelic Rock Anthem

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Rusty Reid, photo courtesy the artist

When Rusty Reid’s “I Went Searching” starts out you’re expecting to get lost in some Sinoia Caves style dark synth labyrinth into a murky dystopian science fiction future. But when the guitar, bass, drums and Reid’s vocals come in it morphs into an unconventionally psychedelic rock song about raising your own awareness and consciousness. It’s reminiscent of Kenny Rogers’ old band The First Edition and the sentiments reflect a search for peace, grace, love, truth and basic human decency and non-conformity. Hippie ideals. Marianne Williamson would be into these sentiments, the kind we need more of now in this rough age. The music, part psych folk and part country, is also grounded in a sound akin to Krautrock American style. It is fascinatingly out of step with what you might assume to be psych or country or art-y progressive rock and that’s what makes the song so immediately appealing if enigmatic. It’s not coming from a place meant to alienate or seem cooler-than-thou. And it’s unabashedly unusual, eccentric and ultimately accessible. Listen to the song on Soundcloud and follow Rusty Reid at the links below where you can also further explore Reid’s sprawling epic new album Head to Heart.

soundcloud.com/riopaso
open.spotify.com/artist/1nF30rOkQmQDkFji7aFmXB
youtube.com/channel/UCKRa5UNE-YEx-XzxXYN7xCQ
rustyreid.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/RustyJunzi
facebook.com/RustyReidSongwriter

memory theater Conjures Imagery of Future Conflict Solved Through Synth Pop Duels On “Eyes Within Night”

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Memory Theater, Some Sort of Paradise cover

Immediately “Eyes Within Night” sounds like you’re getting a radio transmission from an AM college station in the late 1980s playing underground music in the pre-alternative rock era. Some of the frequencies sound washed out like it’s being played from a tape lovingly listened to countless times and preserved for posterity using a four track tape deck to convert it to digital. The keyboards and the Casiotone play off each other toward the end of the song like dueling synthesizers the dramatic way they might in some weird science fiction movie about rival gangs competing against each other in synth pop bands but with the vibe of Night of the Comet after an apocalyptic event that destroys most of the human race and people are rebuilding civilization and re-creating culture while solving conflict in artistic ways rather than through violence. Or like a New Wave Goth version of Breakin’ or Krush Groove. Who wouldn’t want to see that movie happen? Well memory theater, the Filipinx band from Berkeley, California has the perfect music for the soundtrack. Listen to “Eyes Within Night” on Spotify and follow the group on their Bandcamp page.

memorytheater.bandcamp.com

“Sun Release” by Heron is a Musical Manifestation of the Moment When the Sun Sweeps Away the Night Into Day

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Heron, photo courtesy the artists

The title track to post-rock band Heron’s new album Sun Release is like the dawn itself. Guitar intones with an impressionistic figure, minimal and calm. Then around the three minute mark multiple guitars flood forth with a fiery swarm of majestic riffs to make one forget that it was once quiet and introspective like the dark of night between when there is a moonset and the inevitable sunrise. The song captures the false dawn and then the tentative flickers of illumination before the sun rises into the sky in all its cosmic glory illuminate the world into wakefulness. With drums and the full instrumentation engaging Heron captures that moment between a sleepy early morning and full-flung day. Listen to “Sun Release” on Soundcloud and explore follow Heron and explore Sun Release further at the links below.

heronband.com
soundcloud.com/user-376736334
open.spotify.com/artist/1eDflyuVvl6VwwEmm1NQXM
heronband.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/weareheron
facebook.com/weareheron
instagram.com/heron.band