Swedish Avant-Pop Songwriter Czita’s Debut Single “Pretty Eyes” is a Psychological Horror Short Film in Musical Form

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Czita, photo courtesy the artist

Czita comments on standards of beauty and how we value other people tied to such considerations on her song “Pretty Eyes.” There is an unsettling but strangely alluring quality to the song as it sketches the ways people dissect the flaws of others and then decide what they find attractive and in the end discard the same people who can never, as real life humans, live up to the image, the fantasy, another person forms in their mind. The minimal bell tones and even more spare percussion, Czita’s darkly whimsical vocal delivery, the buzzy background melody and touches of synth give a spaciousness that feels like an emotional distancing connected to a paradoxical desire for the object of attraction. The song has a creepy edge but also otherworldly like a pop song for a Lucky McKee film. It’s Czita’s first single and promises a future of decidedly different, imaginative and boundary-pushing pop music. Listen on Soundcloud and follow Czita at any of the links below.

czitamusic.com
soundcloud.com/czitamusic
open.spotify.com/artist/40yYGiGlCiRcNj6v6Zd5bQ
instagram.com/czitamusic

“Saturday Eyes” by Inner Oceans is a Deeply Nostalgic Song About Honoring Loves Lost Without Trying to Live in the Past

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Inner Oceans, photo courtesy the artist

Though the tone of the new Inner Oceans single “Saturday’s Eyes” is one of melancholic nostalgia it’s misty melodies are anchored in early morning mind-wandering. The way the song builds into a gentle flow of emotions and imagery suggests indulging moments when you can look back fondly on a time when you had a love or a time in your life that retains that kind of feeling when things seemed bright and easy and open. But it’s more. The song also expresses how even if that time and those relationships are gone you can revisit them and honor the experience and allow it to illuminate your life in the present rather than surrender to the conceit that things were always better way back when. The accompanying music video was shot on an iPhone during the final year of songwriter and singer Griffith Snyder’s marriage which brings to pairing of song and image a poignancy and presumably a refreshing generosity of spirit and not just the ache and hurt feelings that are in many songs made in the wake of the dissolution of a relationship. Snyder has been writing affecting and adventurous pop music for years and this is the latest in a string of worthwhile releases. Watch the video below and follow Inner Oceans at he links provided.

soundcloud.com/inneroceans
open.spotify.com/artist/1u7T9riTxt6jCQsZTJX6nR

Rum for Breakfast’s Video for “Shoot You Down” is Like a Horror Short Without the Horrific Ending

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Rum for Breakfast, photo courtesy the artist

Rum for Breakfast’s “Shoot You Down” has some jangle and some psychedelia with a tinge of that idiosyncratic/eclectic folk rock of early Beck. Able yet unusual vocal harmonies, electric and acoustic instrumentation and a “Gimme Shelter”-esque dynamic apex. Which makes the video all the more mysterious with a character wearing a full head mask that could be a dog with no eyes. And that would be strange enough but the quality of the video is reminiscent of one of the segments of the V/H/S horror anthology series. Except this one like a horror short done by by Duplass Brothers Productions—odd but not inherently dark though suggestive of a serial killer’s video diary but one with more a surreal sense of humor than nefarious intentions. It could be disturbing but paired with the song’s charming melody it seems simply eccentric and we could certainly use more of that in a world where standardization and conformity is strongly encouraged. Watch the video and judge for yourself and follow Rum for Breakfast at the links below.

rumforbreakfast.com
soundcloud.com/rumforbreakfastrfb
facebook.com/rumforbreakfast
instagram.com/rumforbreakfast_

Colour of the Jungle’s Spirited “Steel Tray” is an Anthem to Weathering the Storm of Life’s Everyday Entropy

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Colour of the Jungle, photo courtesy the artists

“Steel Tray” by Colour of the Jungle starts off like a full list of examples of not being able to get a break from everyday setbacks and ailments while being assured it’s all normal. But Jack Evans’ voice makes it obvious that he’s on the edge from having to struggle and strive with every little thing from a stone in his show, being prescribed multiple meds with side effects that seem only slightly less worse than life without them, stubbing his toe and dreams in tatters in the face of mundane issues like not enough time and not feeling up to handling everything thrown your way every day and out of explanations for your litany of failings and shortcomings. But there’s a spirited energy to the song that in spite of all the flak that the fact of still being alive has to mean something even if its that for now you’re able to wade through the entropy that you shrugged off more easily in the past. Though the band is from the UK it sounds like they spent a whole lot of time listening to American Midwest rock and roll from places like Memphis and Cincinnati where bands on the Goner imprint and The Afghan Whigs wax poetic poetic about life’s rough and tumble times while writing impassioned and gritty music as a method of self-therapy. Listen to “Steel Tray” on Soundcloud and follow Colour of the Jungle at the links below.

www.facebook.com/colourofthejungle
www.instagram.com/colourofthejungle
twitter.com/Colourojungle

Orions Belte’s Playful Cover of “Cherchez La Ghost” by Ghostface Killa is the Sound of Mischief Afoot

 

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Orions Belte, photo courtesy the artists

In covering “Cherchez La Ghost” by Ghostface Killah from his 2000 album Supreme Clientele, Orions Belte have funked it up a little more but maintained its unusual rhythms. The guitar is more present and not as spidery, the keyboard more in the realm of mimicking Bernie Worrell at his most minimal. But all tasteful with flourishes of playfully warping the musical lines a bit. Like the original it’s well under three minutes but in that time the track goes through some changes suggestive of its pairing with visual narrative. The eccentric and whimsical quality of his cover sounds like something out of a Judd Apatow movie yet to be like a sequel to Super Bad as the song suggests that some mischief born of restlessness is potentially at hand. The cover will be released on July 12 when the group releases its Slim EP on Jansen Records. Listen below and further explore Orions Belte’s musical hijinks at the links following.

soundcloud.com/jansenrecords
orionsbelte.bandcamp.com
facebook.com/orionsbelte

warm nights Take You on a Journey to the Deep Places of the Heart on “cave dawnings”

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warm nights, image courtesy the artists

Is “cave dawnings,” the title of the single by Los Angeles experimental rock band warm nights, a reference to Plato’s “Parable of the Cave” in a way? Because it certainly seems to be about coming to realizations from a place of personal darkness with hushed tones to impassioned heights a more active pace before ending on a not of streaming off into the distance having reached the escape velocity of one’s own personal gravity of emotional funk. The realization also comes in the form of self-honesty in admitting love for another despite the inevitable complexities that lay ahead of the initial, simple, non-logical impulse to love. In the end the narrator of embraces the totality of the experience as something shared. It is, refreshingly, not a simple love song where the act of falling in love is a redemptive experience that always seems to place the burden of things not being ideal the whole time on one person or another with a need to place blame or find fault as a pretext for splitting and going with someone “better.” It is a song that is both melodramatic and realistic at once, a rarity in rock music or any music. Sonically, fans of early 2000s post-emo indie rock will appreciate the expressive guitar work and dual vocals complimenting and providing counterpoint but warm nights is an inherently adventurous group of songwriters and its recently released album all inside takes you through some fascinating changes. Listen on Spotify and follow warm nights at the links provided.

open.spotify.com/artist/59XKrXxXIRhsWfGFkETnjv
warmnights.bandcamp.com/album/all-inside

Maya Beiser’s Cello Driven Interpretation of “Moonlight Sonata: Adagio” Brings a Modern Avant-Garde Sensibility to the Beethoven Classic

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Maya Beiser, photo courtesy the artist

Maya Beiser’s actual heartbeat was recorded and used as the pulsating beat heard in the distance in her interpretation of the Beethoven classic “Moonlight Sonata: Adagio” from her forthcoming album delugEON due out August 30 on her own impirint Islandia Music Records. The layered cello rather than the original piano brings an especially sonorous tone to the piece. She expands, restructures and extrapolates throughout but returns to the iconic figure at the center of the composition on a recording that sounds like it was captured for an old 78 of music meant to be played during screenings of a Theodor Dreyer or F.W. Murnau film. Yet the subtle changes reflect a modern classical and avant-garde sensibility and knowledge of sound design and digital production processing that is used to give the song a wide sonic range as well as an intimacy with the original to give it a slower pace (and thus “Adagio”) when the original goes into its faster section. The effect being to give this version of “Moonlight Sonata” an emotionally weighty denouement to the outro of the nearly echoing heartbeat. With the deep level of immersion, skill with impromptu tonal inflection and sonic imagination it’s no wonder Beiser has worked with the likes of Brian Eno, Phillip Glass and Steve Reich, to name a few, over the years. Listen on Soundcloud and follow Beiser at the links provided.

youtube.com/user/islandiamusic
twitter.com/CelloGoddess
facebook.com/TheCelloGoddess
instagram.com/thecellogoddess

Zahn | Hatami | McClure Capture the Sonic Architecture of Life Inside of a Quantum Optical Circuit on “Prysma”

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Zahn | Hatami | McClure, image courtesy the artists

“Prysma” is an international collaboration between German sound design/electronic music composer Uwe Zahn, Iranian ambient/field recording producer/musician Porya Hatami and Irish textural ambient/synthesizer/production artist Darren McClure. The artists collective called Zahn | Hatami | McClure are releasing an album on July 12 called Ypsilon, from which this track is taken. There is a deep sense of space and distance conveyed here perfectly with volume control and dynamics in the track. Like what it would be like to live inside a giant, quantum, optical circuit outside of standard space-time as beams of light travel overhead and in the near and middle distance carrying data along nearly invisible pathways and directed automatically to the appropriate exits while processed to whatever mysterious purpose. From the melodic to the textural all the sounds seem incidental in creating a coherent musical as well as environmental experience in the listening and because of this seemingly effortless and natural quality the brilliance and chemistry of the collaboration is obvious. Listen on Soundcloud and follow the trio at the link below.

n5md.com/artist/Zahn-%7C-Hatami-%7C-McClure

Paso Viejo Take Us on a Post-Rock Journey With a Trickster Spirit on “Kitsune”

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Paso Viejo, photo courtesy the artists

Paso Viejo is an Argentinian band that mixes shoegaze soundscaping with post-rock structure and the textures and sensibility of native folk music styles. The result, at least in the “Kitsune” single, is music that sounds like it’s embodying elements of a landscape with branches of trees and grass blowing in a gentle wind—that level of detail that you take in but do not individually dissect yet intuitive understand. “Kitsune” is the Japanese word for fox and as the song progresses into moodier realms for tone and minor scale progressions it drifts further into more direct sonic movement like a fox meandering its way through a landscape shifting shape to suit its trickster goals as the animals are attributed with getting to in Yokai folklore. Later in the song the music becomes more intense and distorted perhaps representing the climax of one of the kitsune’s many caprices. Whatever the direct inspiration, the song is evocative and cinematic and goes beyond the usual tropes of the instrumental rock and post-rock genre by being more than pretty sounds and some conventionally solid musicianship. Paso Viejo are, after all, sonic storytellers whose language is the emotional content of their compositions. Listen below and follow Paso Viejo at the links provided.

open.spotify.com/artist/1NsKzt4PshyIXyw8lwgpZ2
pasoviejo.bandcamp.com

Charles Hamilton’s “Ralph Nader” is a Dreamlike Trip Down Memory Lane to Self-Liberation

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Charles Hamilton, photo courtesy the artist

Charles Hamilton’s lays out a litany of disrespect and nonsense blown his way from all corners on his new single “Ralph Nader.” In that way he has a self-deprecating pose like a low key, hip and jaded rap equivalent of Rodney Dangerfield. Except that Hamilton concludes that he doesn’t “give a fuck about what people say” and “neither should you.” As in not giving too much weight to the negative energy of anyone that only has time to chisel people down by picking them apart and trying to kick down their dreams because they have no real aspirations of their own. Cradled in an IDM-esque beat of ethereal bell tones the lyrics form a song that sounds day dreamily introspective and defiant at once. It should be mentioned that Hamilton has been through his fair share of ups and downs personally and professionally including struggles with bipolar disorder, being signed to two major label deals and losing both, encounters with music industry big wigs like Jimmy Iovine who he mentions in the song in a positive light. Those experiences, good and bad, are bound to leave you a little skeptical but it’s apparent Hamilton has been able to spin those tales from his real life into something as captivating and real as “Ralph Nader.” Watch the video and follow Hamilton’s new adventures in music at the links below.

soundcloud.com/charleshamiltonmusic
twitter.com/charleshamilton
facebook.com/charleshamiltonmusic