“Tremolo” by White Elephant Orchestra is an Anthem to Emotional and Creative Awakening and Independence

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White Elephant Orchestra “Tremolo” single cover, image courtesy the artist (cropped)

The distorted, cycling synth that introduces White Elephant Orchestra’s “Tremolo” sounds like the title of the song as though a streaming synth were put through a hard panning tremolo effect so that it comes out the other end almost echoing. But the song quickly sweeps up into an anthemic realization of the need to shake up outmoded patterns and habits and training picked up from others to reconnect with one’s natural way of being and the genuine core of one’s creativity and passion. Songwriter Andy Stochansky certainly spent several years as a sideman and drummer for Ani DiFranco where his chops as a musician and performer got a workout. But with White Elephant Orchestra he’s getting to more fully explore his own musical voice and “Tremolo” is sort of a signature song for that process of discovery and the sense of awakening in the song is unmistakable. Expect his new album with the project, aptly titled Debut, out soon. For now listen to “Tremolo” below.

VIETNAMINGO$ Splice Cowboy and Outlaw Urban Culture With Swagger and Humor on “Khmer Krom Kowboyz”

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VIETNAMINGO$, image courtesy the artists

VIETNAMINGO$ display plenty of swagger on “Khmer Krom Kowboyz” splicing cultural references with a sly disregard for time frames and geography. Bookending the track with samples from Marty Robbins’ “Prairie Fire,” the the duo names the song by transforming the spelling of “cowboys” and imbue that with the kind of rebel/outlaw attitude of the present and giving it an alliteration using the term for the part of Vietnam that was once part of the southeastern part of the Khmer empire. The lyrics are about authenticity and hustling how you must to get by when no matter where you are your cultural status might be in question even as you’re making music in a country where there isn’t nearly enough Asian public representation in the arts. You know, a country where Joel Grey played a Korean in Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins, for starters. In adopting the gangster stance VIETNAMINGO$ is calling bullshit on all of that and asserting the ability of people of Asian extraction to draw on the stories and mythology both ancestral and urban American culture to create music that is informed fully by both.

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instagram.com/vietnamigos

Lindsey Stirling’s Colorful Video for “Underground” is a Science Fiction Fantasy Extravaganza For the Senses

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Lindsey Stirling, image courtesy the artist

Lindsey Stirling is rightfully known for bringing violin to electronic music and mixing a classical set of chops with a popular musical form without pretension. On her new single and video “Underground” Stirling conjures a sense of the fantastical and futuristic at once and that aesthetic compliments her eclectic style. Yes, the sort of hybrid of the aforementioned classical music and hip-hop and EDM, but also an expressiveness that crosses over into an amalgam of progressive rock and pop. Her precision as a player coupled with a fluidity and creativity that allows for a wide dynamic range is what truly sets this song apart from anything that defines itself by genre considerations. If Stirling merely had chops and if it was merely a gimmick to combine a broad musical palette with violin it wouldn’t be interesting. But Stirling’s cultivated imagination has long served her well. Look for her new record out in September through BMG. Watch the video below and follow Stirling at the links provided.

lindseystirling.com
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The Enigmatic “Ancestor” by Unseen Echo Evokes Remote Places of the World Where Humans Rarely Visit

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Unseen Echo, image courtesy the artist

“Ancestor” draws you into a deep soundscape of far horizons lightly shrouded in mist. Its streaming melodies and distant low end gives the track a sense of vastness into which the more fiery guitar line and tribal drumming can resonate out into. It works as an ambient track but has too many concrete sonic figures to fully work as background. Rather, as a soundtrack to life in the remote islands of the South Pacific rarely visited by humans, a companion soundtrack to Hans Zimmer’s score for Blue Planet II. Or of a documentary about the life cycle of the albatross with the songs elegant dynamics and a sense of comfortable solitude. The mixture of fluidity and heat in the composition is a bit like a New Age progressive rock song but way more introspective and far less busy than much of that music.

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instagram.com/unseenecho
facebook.com/Unseen-Echo-441519976255141

Lil Primo’s “Ignorant” is a Critique of Willful Ignorance as a Tool of Internalized Oppression

“Ignorant” is a critique of willful state of mind despite all the negative, violent stuff going on around you and in your own life from gun shots in the neighborhood, vulture developers, lack of self-accountability to making excuses for self-destructive and generally destructive behavior. It calls for an awareness and a conscious reaction to these things so the real conversations to address the roots of social and psychological issues rather than a passive acceptance of things as they are. Too often in America we accept not a status quo but a stasis that keeps us from challenging power whether from a corrupt presidential administration, a power tripping supervisor, our own position of power over others or others over us used to coerce and manipulate or a “system” that benefits the very few at the expense of the many based on lines of ethnicity, race, gender, sexuality or legal or economic status. “Ignorant” by hip-hop artist Lil Primo reminds us that to keep ignoring those pressures on an everyday basis means we will probably ignore it on the macro scale that more than a few people worldwide have been feeling so poignantly. The beat is haunting yet urgent and the emotional tenor of Lil Primo’s vocals compassionately concerned. Follow Lil Primo at the links below.

soundcloud.com/wessidelilprimo
open.spotify.com/artist/66bTiXhV6mBQT6ws1yuQdZ
instagram.com/wesside_lil_primo

Mystery Friends’ “See Right Through” is a Jaunty Anthem of Vulnerability and Personal Resilience

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Mystery Friends, Past & Future Self album cover (cropped)

The jaunty pace of “See Right Through,” the lead track from Mystery Friends’ debut album Past & Future Self, lends the song a freshness and charm that made all those C86-era and Sarah Records songs endlessly listenable. Combining a breeziness of tone with introspective and confessional lyrics, “See Right Through” reveals a vulnerability and personal resilience that is always a winning alchemy in pop music because everyone feels sensitive about so much in life and we get hurt or feel exposed and yet we have to find our peace with it and, if the situation calls for it, the strength to work through our insecurities and failings. Less synth-driven than some of the other songs on the record, this composition is given some of its dynamic buoyancy by Robbie Lee’s treble-y and melodic bass line that is the ideal counterpoint to Abby Sevcik’s luminous vocals. Listen to the single below and follow the DC band at the links provided.

mysteryfriendsmusic.com
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mysteryfriends.bandcamp.com
twitter.com/MysteryFriends
facebook.com/mysteryfriendsband
instagram.com/mysteryfriends

Hunnid Evokes the Spirit of Chicago’s Southside in “Drip Too Hard”

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Hunnid, photo courtesy the artist

With a relentless flow of references and imagery, “Drip Too Hard (CCG Mix)” by Hunnid draws for us in rich detail life coming up on the Chicago’s Southside. The gangs, the grind, the struggles, striving for self-improvement and ultimately keeping your head above water and the poetry that comes out of those experiences. The video for the song features Hunnid rapping with a brisk cadence and packing so much content into each line with an impressive economy. The insistent, dreamlike beat, a sample of warping guitar, shuffled claps and clicks like drum sticks on a wooden block, accents Hunnid’s storytelling perfectly. Throughout the song there isn’t some kind of tough pose, rather an attempt at preserving sensitivity and not being inured to hardship by becoming hard oneself. The music video is vibrant, urban scenery, graffiti and all, with Hunnid and his colleagues representing the kinds of people you might see every day in the Windy City. And of course a crane or two in the backdrop just like every rapidly gentrifying city of size in recent years. See the video below and check out Hunnid’s other musical adventures at the links following.

keepit1oo.com/home
soundcloud.com/hunnid-2
open.spotify.com/artist/2fA2gTgVlYNhArTuXvHwy0
youtube.com/channel/UCkIiLVOUS_yNjNPYMKTxq5A
twitter.com/Hunnid_CCG
facebook.com/HunnidCCG
instagram.com/hunnid_ccg

“Come Set Me Free” is Miles Monroe’s Psych Grunge Dub Noise Punk Cut-Up Extravaganza

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Miles Monroe, photo courtesy the artist

“Come Set Me Free” finds Miles Monroe getting things going with what might be described as a psych grunge dub of echoing vocals and riffs. As though he’d listened to a whole lot of Adrian Sherwood laying down the bizarro remix on a Siltbreeze noise punk cut-up tape. Something which the producer never did. But that’s the kind of strange Monroe brings to the first half of the song. Then it becomes some kind of lo-fi Alice Donut inspired stream-of-consciousness warped raga akin to early Butthole Surfers or Flaming Lips. If Eat Skull, Psychedelic Horseshit and Pink Reason decided to record with more conventional clarity they might be making something like this now. Take a big draught of the song below and follow Miles Monroe’s adventures to sonic outer space at the links provided.

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“Invisible Closet” by Sara Gougeon is a Tender Anthem About Respecting Personal Boundaries

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Sara Gougeon, photo courtesy the artist

Sara Gougeon’s “Invisible Closet” calls for coworkers, friends and family to respect the space of those who are not ready to come out yet. The spare guitar and gently strummed guitar melody and Gougeon’s intimate vocal delivery could apply to any situation calling for grace, sensitivity and respect for the boundaries of other people. The hush cymbals and minimal percussion and strings bring out the delicacy of the composition beautifully. While not obviously influenced by “Silent All These Years” by Tori Amos and “If It Be Your Will” by Leonard Cohen it shares with those songs a tender and compassionate sensibility that is rare in popular music where often ego, swagger and brashness are the most valued qualities. Sometimes a gentle touch is much more powerful and benevolent sensitivity a more effective frame of mind in songwriting. Listen below and follow Sara Gougeon at the links provided.

saragougeon.com
open.spotify.com/artist/0A27xj3ZrrkvKraFFjmuEN
youtube.com/channel/UCvMWgxAGFZZWj6JJWrTUKNQ
facebook.com/saragougeonmusic
instagram.com/saragougeon

“Lightworker” by Aura Gaze Evokes the Tranquil Spirit of a Vast, Hidden Forest Discovered at the Roof of the World

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Aura Gaze, image courtesy the artist

Like beams of sunshine streaming deep into the algae rich waters of a hidden lake, the melodic drone of “Lightworker” by Aura Gaze brings a sense of calm and wonder. The enigmatic wind chimes and breezy white noise swirl around a shimmering synth figure, following it beyond the immediate reach of that solar illumination, which in the field of sound becomes a vague notion in the blue green mist. Alternately it suggests great vistas of arboreal splendor protected from the ravages of human industry by mountain peaks forbidding to summit and to descend into the immense valley where earth’s oldest living plants have taken root since time immemorial. It’s reminiscent of Popol Vuh’s work for Werner Herzog’s Aguirre the Wrath of God. But whereas there is an immense sense of melancholy to that work, there is a one of warmth and benign spirits to this song. Listen below, listen more to the full-length Eternal Hymns and follow Aura Gaze at the links provided.

facebook.com/auragazemusic
auragaze.bandcamp.com