Archive for July, 2012

Jul
18
posted by tommy

I made mention of a Melbourne three piece called I’lls a few months back. Today it’s my most unaffected pleasure to share with you the solo work of Simon Lam, vocalist and drummer for the very same I’lls. The track below is called ’1st Day Of No Uni’ and it pretty much polarises my own state of mind when I used to find myself at the helm of holiday extravaganza. “Find a place and settle down”. Not me Simon, first day of no uni and I’m doing everything all the time always and everywhere. Unlimited possibilities, that’s where my head’s at, but this song isn’t about that. It’s been a semester of bad grades, bad campus coffee and overzealous student body representative candidates and the guy needs a hug. Cups of cold unforgiving synth and droning/sweet pleas. “Keep me warm”.

You can pick it up along with six other tracks on Nearly Oratorio’s Showers EP for five big ones or you can download the single track free. It’s one of the more verbose of the seven. The whole thing reminds me of a 2012 Pinback. Very pretty, a little melancholy but not mired in the depths of self-pity.

Nearly Oratorio on: FacebookBandcamp

Jul
11
posted by tommy

If the name seems familiar to you it could be because Fawn Myers featured on two tracks from Oliver Tank’s Dreams EP. Gifted with a gorgeous voice, Myers is aided by Tank’s production on her debut solo track ‘You Know Me So Well’. If someone had pitched this to me saying it was an early cut from Oliver Tank’s next record I wouldn’t have batted and eyelid. His hand is heavy on this thing. That’s not to say that the song itself isn’t a subtle affair, far from it. The beat is slow, sparse and punctuated by Myers’ repeated line “I just can’t let you go”. Every time I hear that sax part I think of Bob Seger’s Turn the Page (in the best possible way) and I think it’s probably the most attractive feature of the track. I was about to say that for a a first offering this is brilliant but scratch that, this is brilliant regardless of career situation. More from Fawn Myers please.

Jul
10
posted by tommy

It’s like the aural equivalent of dropping a stone into the centre of a grand body of water and watching the ripples move out from their initially miniscule start to their final, lake sized circumference. One might ask how the stone-wielder’s presence in the centre of the lake is leaving the surface of the water unperturbed, or even if the wave form will retain its strength as it increases in diameter. One might ask those things, that is, if one were a complete twat. I’m happy to just think of it as a good way of depicting the gradual, cascading bloom of Exitmusic’s ‘Passage’. The song comes from their debut album of the same name and is quite simply, glorious. Aleksa Palladino’s voice is riven with pain and quivering vulnerability and though this might sound hard to listen to it’s far from it. Frail and empowering, pretty and strong. Big song from a big record.

Jul
07
posted by tommy

This one has been sitting in my inbox longer than reasonably explainable. Since mid August actually. Sorry Sky Squadron. In my defence I did download the tracks and they’ve been in my itunes library I’ve just you know, never listened to them or anything. It was when I saw them on the flyer for Phobiac‘s recent show that I thought it could finally be time to do this thing. I’m glad I did too because the four tracks these dudes have available are more interesting than most everything else in my inbox, that’s for certain. Muffled post-rock with vocals suspended like thousand foot condensation. I’m pretty sure it was recorded during a thick studio mist (rare but beautiful) before being mastered by Beef. It’s good to see the various meats entering the production game, I’ve been waiting on that for a while. Enjoy all four tracks below. ENJOY THEM.

Jul
02
posted by tommy

Today¹ The Paper Scissors released their brand new² EP. You’ve come at a good time too because I’ve got the exclusive streaming rights³ to first single ‘Held Down Threw Up’ which, after a quick google search, you’ll find nowhere else on the internet*. They’re four tracks of gravity free slow jam bliss. As I understand it, climate change means that in 2212 we’ll all be marooned on small islets with the water level roughly mid shin sipping on robotic coconuts. Most land will have melted and the sun will have run out of petrol and oil magnates will control movement tween day and night. Eventually aquatic habitation will become a possibility (most scientists believe this will occur around 2260) at which point we can abandon our islet stilt-huts and migrate to our final home in the Atlantic. Roboto-tropicana will be the flavour of the day and our Paper Scissor pals will be prying wallets open by the dozen. Take this chance to smoke a download while it’s free. I sent it to my pal Merrick and asked him his thoughts on it but he didn’t reply to me so either something has happened to him or he is disrespecting me. I hope he’s ok. I think he’d really like this too.

[EP DOWNLOAD: RIGHT CLICK + SAVE AS]

The Paper Scissors – Held Down Threw Up

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


The Paper Scissors – Down With Something

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

 

¹ Back in May
² Not that new
³ I don’t.
* Some places

Next
  • You are currently browsing the Sound Doctrine blog archives for July, 2012.