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Posts Tagged: Sub Pop

Still Corners - All I know

The latest track to drop from upcoming full length by Still Corners may be my favorite since their their OOP debut 7” from The Great Pop Supplement.  There’s something seductive in the simplicity of that track, and Tessa’s voice is at it’s best.    

All I Know is exquisite, balancing a mysterious quivering snyth in the background with Tessa Murray crooning alongside.  I certainly wasn’t as in love with Cuckoo when that dropped as the first single from Creatures of an Hour, so If the rest of the new album lives up to this track, I’ll be more than satisfied.  

Still Corners - Strange Pleasures LP SP1035 is up for pre-order from Sup Pop now.  First come first serve pre-orders will get the Sup Pop standard Loser Edition vinyl in some fancy color (i’m guessing a red to match the cover art) and a “…limited-edition scrap book featuring pages taken directly from Still Corners’ lyric book as they were writing the record as well as images from the recording process.” 

Sub Pop:

Earlier this week, Beach House & Pitchfork released the short film, Forever Still, a beautifully sounding and visually striking cinematic piece. The band issued a statement regarding Forever Still to explain what the goal of the film was and why they did it. From our standpoint, they surpassed their goal and created a enduring piece of work.

“Before releasing Bloom, we decided that we would only participate in “promotional” activities that we could control artistically and give substantial energy. We had previously been involved in too many live sessions, radio tapings, photo shoots, etc., where the outcome was far below our personal artistic standards. We also felt a need to distance ourselves from the “content” culture of the internet that rewards quantity over quality and shock over nuance.

The concept for Forever Still was about a year old when Pitchfork came to us about supporting a project that we really cared about.

Forever Still is directly inspired by Pink Floyd’s Live at Pompeii. We wanted to perform in a non-typical setting without losing the spirit of our music. We felt the songs would resonate in a more majestic and spiritual landscape. The experience was an intense three nights of filming. Everyone involved in production and crew was benevolent in their time and talented in their efforts. We were very lucky to have the help and hard work of many people who aided and lent their abilities to our vision.

The basic concept is four songs performed from sunset to sunrise.

We tried to keep the edits minimal with long takes in order to focus on the energy of the songs, the landscape, and the physicality of live performance. The entire film was shot in or around Tornillo, Texas, where we recorded Bloom. Like Bloom, we hope that Forever Still is experienced as a whole, long form.”

Check out their tour schedule at Sub Pop, and make an effort to catch them live, you shan’t be disappointed.  Promise. 

King Tuff - Love Potion

Brand new track recently released as b-side to the Screaming Skull 7” out on Sub Pop right now.  Two non-album tracks on one 7”, just in time to give you a fresh King Tuff fix.  Was Dead has been on constant repeat here since summertime (the new LP is pretty rad too), I’m always hungry for more.  Seeing as Screaming Skull has already blasted across the blogs, let’s give this one a listen eh?  I honestly like this one better, a little more rockin, as far as his new tracks go. 

I’ll be catching the star King Tuff himself in Providence at AS220 this upcoming Saturday for only six bones!  Cheap show, tiny venue, and you’ll prob be drinkin beers with Kyle before, during, after, etc.  Come on out and say hi, I’ll be the one with the big ol’ Polaroid camera.

King Tuff - Bad Thing

King Tuff + spooky Halloweeny monsters = ∞<3<3<3∞

Bobby Harlow:

A more charismatic, enigmatic nomad of a furioso frontman/artist/guitar legend could not be imagined. You can’t make this shit up.


Grinning gold teeth behind blonde shades, in black, skeletal denim, with a studded “KING TUFF” across the shoulders where feral locks fall around his infamous “Sun Medallion.” With an acoustic guitar slung over the shoulder, King Tuff slinks through the abandoned halls of Detroit’s Malcolm X Academy. His baseball hat reads “VERMONT.” It’s the 4th of July.


Will somebody please snap a photo of this animal before it escapes back into the wilderness from which it came??!!


Magic Jake pulls up on a motorcycle, riding left-handed with his bass guitar hanging from the right arm, shoeless.


Kenny arrives in a rusted van, drums stacked in the back atop a shedding sofa complete with coffee table and a thermos full of god knows what.


Captain Cox, prodigy engineer, is attempting to “fix” the mixing console, on his back, under the wires, a flashlight between his teeth and soldering gun in hand.


“COX!” I bark, “What the FUCK are you doing?”


“Just trying to get these channels to work,” he laments.


“What’s wrong with them?” I lean under the desk and practically fall into a pile of live spaghetti.


“I built them,” he confesses.


King Tuff sits, center stage between Magic Jake and Kenny, his trademark guitar, Jazijoo, on his lap while the rhythm section diligently loops the groove under Tuff’s frenetic fingering.


Silent on a marble staircase, a ghost of a child, King Tuff, expressionless, leans back into a half shadow, with rays of silver rings leaping under incandescent light. The sessions go long into the bordering hours of morning.


Never a dull moment. King Tuff exclaims, “I’m an expert on the vibraphone.” I laugh, and then he performs one, perfect take. Seriously.


My familiarity with Was Dead, his last release, was limited. Under the avalanche of thirty-something demos, I’d selected 16 to record for his Sub Pop debut.


After investigating Was Dead I realized that, with his latest offering, his songwriting was stretching far beyond the thrill of the immediate dance-floor reflex and now revealed a songwriter with a keen eye inside everyone. That was the stuff that I was interested in. Embarrass me! I don’t give a fuck about your ex-girlfriend.


King Tuff: “You always want to erase the imperfect in your beautiful face, and you think about the time you waste in this impossible place.”


“Loop those fucking beats, Kenny!” was my mantra. I shout at the session! Millions of albums arrive daily, yet for Tuff, this is the only one. And I understand that perfectly.


King Tuff sang 16 songs in two days. We chant: “Nobody gives a shit!” This is not precious, it’s priceless—ART. Make it, don’t molest it.


But how? More frustration! More saturation! More immediacy! Filthier! Frighten me! Shake it ‘til you break it! It’s a perversion of a language that sounds like Rock & Roll. But new, again.


Rock & Roll is dead. King Tuff Was Dead. Rock & Roll is alive. King Tuff is dead. The passion is all there is. We ARE wild strawberries.


An artist should never be careful, nor should the audience covet. Take the shot! Embrace the imperfection. Create more music, carelessly.


We’ve created something here. King Tuff should not be inspected or even listened to with critical ears. Cut your ears off. Rock & Roll is meant to be blasted into your cells, penetrated, and absorbed. It’s a visceral experience.


Seek solace in solitude when you’re dead. If you aren’t able to recognize the genius in this epic album, then you’re already dead. Kill yourself. Or get a job.


Your choice.


Stop here. Don’t pay attention. Blast it! It’s not precious; it’s real. It belongs to you. Do what thou wilt. It’s yours.


All that aside, this album fucking rules. I should know, I’ve heard it about a million times.

Source: youtube.com

Still Corners - Fireflies

Been listenin since their 1st epic 7” Don’t Fall In Love released by The Great Pop Supplement two years back.  Happy to see that hot on their heels of their Sup Pop LP they’re releasing another 7” on their upcoming European tour.  Snag this free SnDcLd download while its up, and if you’re hankerin for this 7”, like me, but don’t plan on being in Glasgow anytime soon, they’ll be a few copies available for sale online soon from Still Corners here.

Source: stillcorners

Dude York - Fuck City

Totally its own beast, but still reminds me of King Tuff circa Was Dead.  Super raw and upbeat, plus who doesn’t love a song called Fuck City, by a guy proclaiming himself Dude York, on an EP named Escape From Dude York

It’s kind of a triple whammy trump, wouldn’t you say?

Dude York - Escape From Dude York 7” is Ltd to 500 copies on white vinyl and is available from The Sounds of Sweet Nothing here.

p.s. King Tuff snuck a new 7” out just now, Screaming Skull b/w Love Potion, featuring two new non-LP tracks out on Sub Pop 10/9 Pre-order here

Source: thesoundsofsweetnothing.bandcamp.com

Dum Dum Girls - Lord Knows

The Loser Edition Ltd to 350 on clear vinyl is long gone, but you can still pick up one a the plain jane black ones from Sub Pop here

Dum Dum Girls - Trees and Flowers

Premiere from new EP End of Daze


Dum Dum Girls - End of Daze EP  is out next week 9/25 via Sub Pop and the regular black vinyl can still be got here.  Sorry kids, the Ltd to 350 copies Loser Edition on clear vinyl is plum gone.

King Tuff - Alone and Stoned

King Tuff is one rad dude, and if you haven’t figured that out by now, wake up & go listen to Was Dead. 

I was trying to decide if I should see him play in Montreal or Providence coming up in October, but then I just realized I was going to both.  The Providence show (my hometown) will be especially sick at AS220, a super small gallery/bar space where max capacity probably weighs in around >100 people.  Did I mention the show is only $6 too?   Maybe I’ll see you there.    

King Tuff - Wild Desire

King Tuff has been a major on constant repeat artist here for the past couple months, as I got introduced to him just prior to the new record.  The Sub Pop release is pretty solid (& sold out insanely fast), but its absolutely no match for his debut Was Dead LPcurrently garnering $75+ a copy on the tubes.  I snatched one up just before things got serious, and it falls in my top top ten favorite records.

But this little 7” from Suicide Squeeze definitely matches Was Dead in quality.  Also very sold out, but there’s a few copies floatin round.  Gotta love that crazy cover image.  This track is just freakin sick, and now that I have my 7”, its getting maximum playage.

One more for any other King Tuff obsessers: he’s got another 15 tracks of glory on a pre-album cdr called Mindblow from back in 2006.  Showcasing a couple of early demo versions of Was Dead favorites, but mostly unique, unreleased material.  Find it at your local torrent site, or hit me up.

Dum Dum Girls - I Don’t Care

The track is just an unrelated theme song she just wrote for Rookie Mag that I hadn’t heard yet, but below is an exciting email detailing the new Dum Dum Girls End of Daze EP out in December on Sub Pop.  Looks like we’ve got a lot of waiting to go till then…

Dee Dee said:

“In the world of the dreamer there was solitude: all the exaltations and joys in the moment of preparation for living.  They took place in solitude.  But with action came anxiety, and the sense of insuperable effort made the match the dream, and with it came weariness, discouragement, and the flight into solitude again.  And then in solitude, in the opium den of remembrance, the possibility of pleasure again.”

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                — Anaïs Nin, Children of the Albatross
 


I have always kept busy, even before this band, as a way to defeat stagnation.  As much as I hate verbal static in conversation (although I unintentionally participate), I fear its equivalent in life.  Sometimes my output may reflect a significant change, whether sonic or thematic, but it perhaps seems out of nowhere, as only I know how I’ve spent the time leading up to its release.  It is a back and forth, much like the above quote.
 
So then, a short guide to the upcoming DDG release, which from its title End of Daze, you can safely assume some sort of transmutation:
 
Two of the songs, “Mine Tonight” and “I Got Nothing,” were written immediately following the Only In Dreams session.  They were recorded in New York City with Sune Rose Wagner in February 2011, as was the Strawberry Switchblade cover of “Trees and Flowers”.  Intended as b-sides, their nature was too different, of another beast entirely, and so I set them aside for a future, more atmospheric release.
 
The simultaneous aloneness and togetherness of band life found me immersing myself in anything that could prompt a visceral response.  Imagine Lush’s album Spooky as a poem; James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room a wash of reverbed guitar; the concrete of New York City an intoxicating jasmine perfume.
 
The companionship of the rest of the band as always served as soother and muse, and I gratefully took their presence with me back to NYC to finish the new EP over a year later.  I re-joined Wagner and Richard Gottehrer, first in a studio in Chelsea, and then another among the Bowery ghosts and “Lord Knows” and “Season In Hell” fleshed out what was to become End of Daze.  
 
The time between these sessions contributed to the thematic evolution of their content.  End of Daze begins amidst the residual confusion and immobility felt during the writing and recording of its predecessor and ends on a more lucid note:  a bloomed lightness.  It is a post-traumatic trip that many take, many who’ve dealt with greater personal Hells than I, but I hope that my version of survival, all washed up in reverb and guitars, leaves a good taste upon the tongue.
 
XX DD

Source: wearedumdumgirls.com

Beach House - Lazuli

King Tuff - Connection

For the past few weeks I have been constantly listening to King Tuff.  Non stop, multiple spins a day.  This was all brought on when my fellow DJ’s introduced me to the new album and suggested I check it out.  After a quick preview from What I immediately snatched a copy for myself, and good thing cause it is super sold out/out of stock from Sub Pop.  Not even just the fancy Loser Vinyl, vinyl period.  I’m sure they’ll get more back in or you can always check the usual distributors. 

Much as I like the new album, the real gem is in his first album from 2008, Was Dead.  It is a pop rock masterpiece and I can’t believe more people aren’t talking about it with it with the advent of his sophomore LP.  Seriously I haven’t played this record for on person yet that hasn’t fucking up and bought it.  This is my windows down, speeding to the swimming hole/secret beach blasting tunes jam.  I picked up a copy of the second repress on discogs and was psyched to see my sealed copy happened to be on coke bottle, orange splashed heavy vinyl.  Fucking Brilliant.  The first two runs had Ltd colored vinyl thrown in randomly, score. Lucky for yall, its currently still in repress, and can be had for $13 bones directly from the label.

Grab both his LPs, but especially the first one.  Wish I’d heard this in 2008, can’t believe I missed out on this for the past four years. 

King Tuff - Was Dead LP (2008) is available from The Colonel Records here.  For now.

King Tuff - King Tuff LP (2012) was out on Ltd splattered Red, White and Blue vinyl with rad patches to the first 300 orders.  All very long gone, and even the normal vinyl is out of stock.  Insound may have copies still here but they’re pretty notoriously bad for not updating their site with stocked items so don’t get yur hopes up. 

Source: subpop.com

Dum Dum Girls - Coming Down

Beach House - Lazuli

Premiere from new LP Bloom

Well it’s out on the tubes, and after many listens, I’m quite happy with the new Beach House LP Bloom.  I particularly like the vision Beach House set out for this new album, as detailed via Sub Pop:

Bloom is meant to be experienced as an ALBUM, a singular, unified vision of the world.

Having the experience of listening through a full album start to finish is one of the most appealing distinctions that attracted to me to vinyl originally.  Not that you can’t skip the needle round, but it just lends itself to listening through the whole thing as the band intended.  For many artists, maybe the album flow wasn’t a consideration in this mp3 single age we live in, but I live for albums that have that magical flow.  Beach House nails it, and I feel that Bloom even surpasses 2010’s highly raved about Teen Dream.  I can’t fully articulate how, but Bloom seems to have more parallels with their earliest s/t LP, which remains my favorite. 

Album flow, its all about the album flow.

Beach House - Bloom LP is available for pre-order directly from Sup Pop here.  The standard Loser Edition will sport Ltd White 2XLP vinyl.  Loser Edition will sell out without a doubt.

Source: what.cd