Posts Tagged ‘Chapter Music’

Sightings: Coolies, “Ghost Baby”

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

How do you psyche yourself up? What gets your blood flowing? Do you stretch, do a few push-ups? Most importantly, what is playing on your stereo when you run through these motions? If New Zealand’s Coolies do not occupy space on your personal “GET PUMPED!” playlist, then I must insist that you slide them in. “Ghost Baby” is a grade-A romp through traditional post-punk territory. I dare anyone to put off a morning workout or stay snuggled in bed while guitars swirl and collide, drums stomp along, and that distant voice shouts at you with that heavy sense of urgency. If noise itself fails to pump you up, then certainly the haunting ambiance of “Ghost Baby” proves intimidating enough to scare you straight into your running shoes. The summer of “chill” is waning. Get loud, and get pumped!

Coolies, “Ghost Baby” (Master, Chapter Music)

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.

(more…)

Sightings: Geoffrey O’Connor, “Now and Then”

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

“Now and Then”, the new single by Crayon Fields frontman Geoffrey O’Connor, feels like listening to Television’s Adventure for the first time after memorizing all the guitar solos on Marquee Moon like the cracks on the sidewalk on St. Mark’s place. Marquee Moon is the “perfect” rock record because it just feels so raw, funneling all the excitement and torment of youth through structures so elaborate and precise that the whole thing seems continually on the verge of collapse. With Adventure, we hear the sound of all that crude talent finally becoming aware of itself, shining its shoes and trading in its ripped jeans for tailored slacks. For better or for worse, the reverb-dripping, crystal-clear production on Television’s second album automatically signals that the band has reached a new level of “maturity” — and somehow this logic carries over to “Now and Then”, where Geoffrey O’Connor sounds like he’s finally read to trade in his Harry Potter glasses and reflect wistfully, even a tad elegiacally, on the salad days of his youth. Definitely couldn’t think of a better soundtrack for loosening your tie at the end of a date with a bottle of fine bourbon.

Geoffrey O’Connor, “Now and Then”

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.

(more…)

Sightings: Fabulous Diamonds, “Track 3″

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Fabulous Diamonds II, the Austrialian duo’s second full-length, opens with drummer and vocalist Nina Venerosa yelling something unintelligible at synth player Jarrod Zlatic as he counts off the first bar; still, seemingly against all odds, they begin in perfect unison. Chapter Music’s Guy Blackman, who will be releasing the album on CD next month, informs me that this detail is somehow characteristic of their sound: Fabulous Diamonds’ minimalist kraut-nostalgic jams cut are razor sharp, searing with the white-hot precision of two musical hearts that have learned, over the years, to beat as one. But all that repetition wouldn’t do anything for us if it weren’t for what lies beneath. “Track 3,” one of the album’s shortest and punchiest, is haunted by a certain nail-biting tension — one that pushes up against this primitive skeleton throughout, granting it shape, granting it movement. I’ve only tested this out in my apartment late at night, but I think it may have the same effect on actual bones.

Fabulous Diamonds, “Track Three” (Fabulous Diamonds II, Chapter Music/Silt Breeze)

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.

(more…)

Reviews: Some Twerps from Australia Drop Self-Titled EP on Chapter Music/Night People

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

l_465867627bd75b563e06daf4689037c5Lazy internet journalist types would have you believe that Melbourne’s The Twerps are the Australian Real Estate. This comparison may make sense in the hallowed halls of MP3 hype, but it doesn’t hold much water upon closer aural inspection. If dudes playing guitars and singing earnestly makes them Real Estate soundalikes, then we’re in trouble. Regardless of your entry point to The Twerps’ world, the group recently released their debut recordings on the lovely Night People label (in the perennially beloved cassette format) and Australia’s Chapter Music (in the increasingly popular 7” + Bonus CD format). The Twerps cover a lot of ground here in 25 minutes and 9 tracks, from the tossed-off spoken word of “Dance Alone” to “Drunk On Me,” an acoustic ballad which nails woozy high school relationship drama with uncanny precision.
(more…)