Independent Record Label | Est. 2009
Wilmington, North Carolina

 
 

EVENT CALENDAR

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Shelby Smoak: Dancing





[Repost from Here Comes the Flood; by Hans Werksman, August 21, 2024]

Indie rocker Shelby Smoak is in a post-punk mood on his new single "Dancing", with pleading vocals carefully draped over repetitive guitar motifs and off-kilter drums. He wrote it for his wife, reminiscing about holding her tight on the dance floor without a care in the world. Busting a move on this particular track will be a challenge for most, but as an 80s inspired love song it can stand on its own.

"Dancing" is released via Fort Lowell Records.
» shelbysmoak.com

Friday, August 30, 2024

OUT NOW: Fuzz Jaxx & CoolOutSessions + Tercel [Digital Singles]







The Digital Singles from each of the artists — Fuzz Jaxx & CoolOutSessions "Welcome to Hip-Hop" and Tercel "L.O.L. (Lap of Luxury)" — featured on Volume IV of our This Water is Life series are available now everywhere!  

Fans of A Tribe Called Quest, Black Thought, Common, Del, Dilla, GangStarr, J Cole, Kendrick Lamar, Little Brother, Method Man, MindsOne, Nas, Ras Kas, Redman, and Souls of Mischief will enjoy "Welcome to Hip-Hop" by Fuzz Jaxx & CoolOutSessionswhile fans of Archers of Loaf, Broken Social Scene, Built to Spill, Horsegirl, Japandroids, JEFF the Brotherhood, Pavement, Pissed Jeans, Sebadoh, Ty Segall, Sleater-Kinney, Sonic Youth, Superchunk, The Thermals, and Yuck will enjoy "L​.​O​.​L. (Lap of Luxury)" by Tercel.

Thursday, August 29, 2024

New album: Forest Fallows || Palisades



[Repost from Add to Wantlist; by Niek, August 9, 2024]

Decade-long musical partnership between Mike Barnett and Alex Morton pays dividends on latest LP

Tucson-based bedroom recording project Forest Fallows, comprised of Mike Barnett and Alex Morton, release their sophomore album Palisades today. They’ve enlisted the expertise of John McEntire (known for his work with Stereolab, Tortoise, and Modest Mouse) to produce the record.

The synergy of the decade-long musical partnership between Barnett and Morton sure is palpable in this collection of songs, and I am enjoying it a lot. I believe the press release is spot on by highlighting that the new album is “a blend of the production and style of the 60’s and 70’s with the quirks of 90’s indie and post rock.” It’s a warm sound that is far from dull, a sound that is familiar yet full of surprising touches and sidesteps.

The relaxed nature combined with the creative genius, multi-instrumentalism and stylistic variation makes Palisades the kind of record that’s perfect for early morning listening. It may as well lighten up your daily commute or provide the soundtrack to your daily strolls. Palisades is a subtle and lush record, and it is out now on vinyl at Fort Lowell Records.

Monday, August 26, 2024

Al Foul 'Come Back a Dog' [Final Album] — Pre-Order Vinyl Record Now





When Al Foul left this world in the twilight hours of May 25, 2022, he roared like a lion. His arms were stick-straight, precisely parallel to his body, fists clenched and holding a posture not unlike a daredevil diver heading feet first into some sort of otherworldly, aquatic abyss.

It was a frightening, beautiful, and fully fitting exit for a man and musician who had already been described as a living legend long before he was diagnosed with the laryngeal cancer that took his life.

Over his 50 years on this mortal coil, Alan Lewis Curtis overcame a bleakly violent, impoverished childhood in Hyde Park, Boston and went on to live a richly adventurous, extraordinary life, primarily under his stage name, Al Foul.

After forays into punk rock, mostly with his Tucson-based band Al Foul and The Shakes, he settled into a solo configuration, occasionally augmented with various players from Tucson and always with his reputation for charming showmanship and ribald humor intact. The joyous mayhem of his delivery made his performances memorable and eventually underground iconic.

He toured Europe for decades and gained a particularly devoted following in France and Germany where his shows took on a more Lynchian quality with the input of his touring partner, DJ Laurent Allinger ( a.k.a. “The French Tourist”), who added surreal samples and textures that echoed Foul’s chosen Southwest home. Whether he was playing biker festivals in tiny villages or sharing larger stages with King Khan and The Shrines or The BellRays, Al was always utterly unforgettable.

During the pandemic, Foul was diagnosed with laryngeal cancer and was cared for by his wife, KXCI DJ Hannah Levin, until his death in 2022. Al’s battle and their love story was chronicled by local PBS station AZPM and in 2024 the resulting documentary “Al & Hannah” won the Edward R. Murrow award for Best News Documentary.

Come Back a Dog is Al Foul's final album [Release Date: October 11, 2024], a combination of originals and covers that were fan favorite staples of his live sets. From the starkly prophetic title track and his gleeful take on the Muscle Shoals’ staple “Six Days on the Road” to the neo-noir spin on the American traditional murder ballad “Frankie & Johnny” and the haunting atmospherics of “Darker Shade of Blue”, Foul sketches a gritty-yet-compassionate portrait of raw Americana that could sit comfortably on a shelf between a Raymond Carver anthology and a Tom Waits’ boxed set.

Sunday, August 25, 2024

Shelby Smoak – “Dancing”





[Repost from The Alternative; by Ryleigh Wann, August 19, 2024]

Shelby Smoak’s “Dancing” is intimate and tender—the instruments are simplistic and ride the wave of a steady bassline, while the lyrics are just as sweet as they are confident beside rhythmic chords. It builds into a heartfelt ballad and when I listen to it, it sounds like the opening track to a road trip movie—one where I’m going after my girl who got away, and I’ll get to see her again, eventually.

Saturday, August 24, 2024

New album: Naïm Amor || Stories



[Repost from Add to Wantlist; by Dennis, July 26, 2024]

Master guitarist's soundtrack without a film

“I want the listener to be traveling through their imagination, I hope they will feel moved by the melodies and the textures, and would get to the end of the album and feel a bit nostalgic that it’s the end, like a really good movie.” French-born/Arizona-based musician Gabriel Naïm Amor is back with Stories, his twelfth LP since the mid 2000’s, an alternative pop/rock soundtrack without a film. The six instrumentals and three vocal songs make two things clear: we are dealing with a master guitarist here, and everything is in service of creating a certain mood that evokes cinematic images and feelings. It takes a few listens, but then you would almost start a crowdfunding campaign to have your thoughts made into footage to go with the music.

Stories, recorded in one marathon session by Jim Waters, is out now digitally and on vinyl LP through Fort Lowell Records. Featuring Naïm Amor (guitar, violin, vocals), Ben Nisbet (guitar, violin), Thøger Lund (bass) and Casey Hadland (drums).

Friday, August 23, 2024

OUT NOW: Al Foul "Down Hill" [Digital Single]





The first single "Down Hill" from Al Foul's (1971-2022) final album Come Back a Dog — a combination of originals and covers that sketch a gritty-yet-compassionate portrait of raw Americana — is available now on all digital music platforms.  

For fans of Hasil Adkins, Bloodshot Bill, Johnny Burnette, Johnny Cash, Raymond Carver, Nick Cave, Eddie Cochran, The Cramps, Dave Dudley, Elvis, Charlie Feathers, Howe Gelb, Earl Green, PJ Harvey, Richard Hawley, Trini Lopez, Carl Perkins, Reverend Horton Heat, Dex Romweber, Nick Shoulders, Jon Spencer, Mark Sultan, Kip Tyler, Gene Vincent, Tom Waits, Link Wray.

Monday, August 19, 2024

Naïm Amor Has ‘Stories’ to Tell with His “The Start Over” Music Video [Premiere]



[Repost from V13; by Aaron Willschick, August 12, 2024]

As Naïm Amor shows us on his latest album, words are not a prerequisite for stories. He shows you why on his new single “The Start Over” and his new album Stories out now via Fort Lowell Records. Today marks the debut of the official music video for “The Start Over,” a hard-driving, colourful performance video that shows you just how good Amor is at the guitar. You see many close-up shots of his masterful playing, and while there are some lyrics, the guitar does most of the talking in this song.

For a guitar-based, mostly instrumental song, Amor shows you how it’s done, keeping things rocking throughout. The song never lets up, with a guitar sound reminiscent of an old Western film. You might even liken it to the iconic theme of Quentin Tarantino’s legendary film Pulp Fiction.

Explaining “The Start Over” and elaborating on the album, Amor tells us:

“The album Stories is an expression of not only a musical one but also one following a concept. The concept consists of displaying my interest towards diversity in music through different stories. These stories are rendered hopefully using one voice in a consistent homogenous style. ‘The Start Over’ song in particular is a story evocative of a great American freedom imagery, a guy that has nothing to lose anymore and only has the move forward for himself. Other songs are instrumentals, the title itself will be the only clue to direct the listener’s imagination.”

Stories is Naïm Amor’s twelfth record he has released since the mid-2000s. Born and raised in Paris and now residing in Arizona, he had time to finetune this record, maybe more than he liked when the pandemic lockdowns arrived. He emerged with a finished album featuring six instrumentals and three tracks with vocals. On the surface, Stories may not seem like an appropriate name for an album featuring two-thirds instrumentals, but when you dive deeper into the concept, it makes perfect sense.

For his latest album, Amor wanted to take a cinematic approach to songwriting. Within the songs is a story for everyone to discover and interpret in their way. Each track is meant to evoke images and feelings with the listener the one left to guide those feelings. The narrative of a human voice is unnecessary when you have songs like these. The tones, combination of instruments, and arrangements are intricate and complex. Each song can stand alone in its own right, but they work best as a group. It would suit Amor quite well if you buckled up your imagination for a ride, where textures and melodies will do all of the talking.

Saturday, August 17, 2024

Forest Fallows: Palisades





[Repost from Here Comes the Flood; by Hans Werksman, August 9, 2024]

Mike Barnett and Alex Morton have an uncanny knack for creating purring psych-pop melodies. Palisades, the new album by their Forest Fallows project, is a collection of carefully crafted tracks with surprisingly off-kilter rhythms, creating a playful game of tension and release.

The album flows like a brook making its way through forests and meadows, speeding up and slowing down where boulders and smaller rocks are slowly smoothed over. Shout out to producer John McEntire (Stereolab, Tortoise, Modest Mouse) who made the transition of a lo-fi labour of love sound to a richer, multi-layered approach, an easy one. Forest Fallows will still be an underground act after this release, but they have casts their nets a bit further and came back with the spoils to keep them going.

Palisades is released via Fort Lowell Records (Coke bottle translucent vinyl, digital).

Tracks:
  1. Better Each
  2. Reservations
  3. Clams Casino
  4. Saturday Rose
  5. Ain't Gonna Last
  6. Just Another Day at the Ace Lounge
  7. Hotel Radisson
  8. In Light
  9. Another World
  10. Palisades (ft. John McEntire)

Friday, August 16, 2024

OUT NOW: Shelby Smoak "Dancing" [Digital Single]





Shelby Smoak’s “Dancing” is an intimate, heartfelt affair. Whisper-crooned lyrics ride atop a simple, heartbeat bass line; delayed guitars; and scattershot drumming. Two years in the making and three recorded but unreleased versions eventually led to this one. Tracked in Smoak’s Carolina Beach, NC garage and mixed in Adam Smith’s Nashville studio, this final version captures the upbeat and honest delivery Smoak sought for the song. Dedicated to his wife, and the first song written exclusively for her, Smoak turned away from the dark, brooding lyrics of his past to channel something more positive and focused.

For fans of Arcade Fire, The Chameleons, The Church, Cola, Echo & The Bunnymen, Film School, Flyying Colours, Interpol, Ist Ist, Joy Division, Lauds, Modern English, The National, Red Lorry Yellow Lorry, Stray Fossa, Thus Love, U2, and Sharon Van Etten.

"Dancing" by Shelby Smoak is out now on all digital music platforms.

Sunday, August 11, 2024

Tercel - "Holiday"





[Repost from If It's Too Loud; by Ken Sears, July 31, 2024]

If you listened to college radio religiously in the 90's, you're going to adore the latest from Tercel. Hailing from the Cape Fear area of North Carolina, the band's released "Holiday" last week, and it sounds like that song you always played on your radio show but just can't remember who it is by. It has all of the interesting quirk and pure indie rock oddness from a band like Archers of Loaf with the harmony and melody of Apples in Stereo. Tercel even throws in some country and surf guitar somewhat unexpectedly, but delightfully. Hearing a song like "Holiday" is a pure joy.

You can listen to "Holiday" below. The single is out now via Fort Lowell Records. For more on Tercel, check out the band on Instagram.

Friday, August 9, 2024

OUT NOW: Forest Fallows 'Palisades' [Sophomore LP]





Forest Fallows, the bedroom recording project of Mike Barnett and Alex Morton, has teamed up with John McEntire (Stereolab, Tortoise, Modest Mouse) to produce their sophomore album Palisades, a mellow, vintage-esque indie record. Based in Tucson AZ, their sound is a blend of the production and style of the 60's and 70's with the quirks of 90's indie and post rock. Their influences range widely from pop outliers Steely Dan and Gerry Rafferty to underground visionaries Tortoise and Michael Nau.

Palisades, their second LP, is a step forward in production from their first with a cleaner overall sound thanks to improved home recording techniques and the adept mixing of John McEntire. The album is characterized by vocal harmonies lush with spring reverb lacing through a clockwork of acoustic guitars and a closet full of various percussion and noise makers. While stylistically the songs vary from one to the other, Palisades maintains a familiar cohesion, with the last song opening into a vast instrumental piece featuring McEntire on drums. The lyrical content of the album includes reflections on past relationships as in the opening track "Better Each", while other tracks read like colorful dreams and visions, as in "Saturday Rose" and "In Light". As a whole, the album is light and upbeat but not overly sweet.

Forest Fallows is a passion project of two like minds who have lived and worked closely together for more than ten years. Through their constant back and forth of ideas and music they've developed a shared aesthetic. Palisades reflects where their diverse musical tastes have arrived, reaching for something new in the music of the past and the future.

Forest Fallows Palisades is now available everywhere.

Friday, August 2, 2024

Single Review – Holiday by Tercel





[Repost from Janglepophub; by Darrin Lee, July 24, 2024]

Following the success of Tercel’s first Tiny Towns debut single in May 2024, the Wilmington, North Carolina quartet (seen above) has returned with a second Holiday single that pierces your innermost being WITH IT’S JANGLY INTENSITY.

Commencing with a jangled riff that has a Lost Ships or the Radio Field early 90s type of clarity, the first vocal drop consumes the sound with a gloriously manic Garbage meets The Cure off-kilter vocal mania and a musical aesthetic that juxtaposes the jangly indie-rock/post punk aesthetic of RGV and DIIV with the jangle rock/punk edges of The Wends and Ryan Allen and his Extra Arms dynamism.

I am not sure whether the release of these two singles so close to each other signals a full-length release is coming soon… I can only hope!

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Happy 50th Birthday to Tracy Shedd!

Tracy Shedd; photo by John Ciambriello

Friday, July 26, 2024

OUT NOW: Naïm Amor 'Stories' [12inch LP]





Like many musicians worldwide, Naïm Amor was working on the tracks for a new album when Covid hit and sent the recording and live music worlds into hibernation. And also like many, when he emerged he did with a finished record ready to be released into a music-hungry world.

For Stories, his twelfth record since the mid 2000’s, the Parisian born and raised, long time Arizona resident Amor has crafted six instrumentals and three vocal numbers. While Stories may perhaps seem like an offbeat title for a record with several instrumental tracks, it’s also indicates what’s within; it’s raison d’etre is a cinematic approach to music making, one crafted to evoke images and feelings, unlock corners of known and unknown worlds, and yes, to tell stories; with or without the narrative of a human voice. Amor says “I called it Stories because, like a lot of what I do, the tracks have a film soundtrack quality. The album has a unity of tones, instrumentation, arrangements, while each song has a ‘stand alone potential.’ He also says “I want the listener to be traveling through their imagination, I hope they will feel moved by the melodies and the textures, and would get to the end of the album and feel a bit nostalgic that it’s the end, like a really good movie.” Virtually any of the tracks on Stories could, in fact, be soundtrack material.

The songs on Stories all reflect the sophistication and gift for expansive, memorable melodies that Amor has always brought to his work, whether it’s pop, jazz, lounge, as a solo singer/songwriter, rock & roll or even rockabilly. He says “This one incarnates my desire to play with a band in a more rock & roll format.” The opener, “Amorsonic,” glides by with a sweet/salty mix of guitars that are both clean and slightly dissonant. “Abusive Chaos” wraps snaky guitars around a jazz lounge groove; “Freeway Race” has the forward motion befitting its title; and “September Escapade” sounds like it should be played while driving a fast sports car down a winding road in Monaco. “Home” is meditative and lovely, “The Last Dance” drops smoldering guitars over a cocktail lounge groove, while “The Start Over,” and “Tucson Safari” rattle with more heavy guitars. The closer “Santa Rita Park West” sends the listener off on a gently rolling cloud, as the credits roll.

On Stories, Amor is joined by three long-time collaborators from his adopted city of Tucson, AZ: rhythm guitar and string player Ben Nisbet, bass player Thøger Lund and drummer Casey Hadland. It was recorded in one marathon session by the legendary producer/engineer/studio owner Jim Waters at his Waterworks Studio in Tucson. Waters also mixed the album, with some overdubs and string arrangements added on in Amor’s own studio. The sound is clean, warm and immediate, with a live in the studio feel, and lots of room for Amor’s outstanding guitar playing to shine on every track.

Naïm Amor Stories is available now everywhere.

Friday, July 19, 2024

OUT NOW: Tercel "Holiday" [Digital Single]





Hailing from The Cape Fear region of North Carolina, the Tercel sound carries reverence for its homeland. The lyricism of Robin and Savannah Wood pull from the beliefs of climate activism, societal collapse, and the ennui of existence in the modern world. But Tercel is fun. Tercel is joyous. These are heavy words, lightly thrown. Wall-of-noise guitars in alternate tunings, the give-and-take singing between the vocalists, Chris Vinopal’s pedal steel in all its brightness, Taylor Salvetti’s driving drum beats to accent the changes: Tercel knows the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. And in this, we are all smothered in the green glow of existence. Go outside. Enjoy the light.

Recorded and produced by Jerry Kee of Duck-Kee Studios in Mebane, North Carolina (Archers of Loaf, Polvo, Superchunk), "Holiday" is the second single to be released by Tercel, and is available now on all digital music platforms.

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

La Cerca 'Western Tour' July - August 2024

  • Sat July 20 - Denver CO -  Skylark Lounge
  • Sun July 21 - Moab UT - 86 House  
  • Mon July 22 - Reno NV - Lo Bar Social
  • Wed July 24 - Pacifica CA - Winter’s Tavern
  • Thu July 25 - Oakland CA - Golden Bull 
  • Fri July 26 - Eureka CA - Siren Song
  • Sat July 27 - Seattle WA -  Central Saloon
  • Sun July 28 - Olympia WA -  Three Magnets, 3pm   
  • Sun July 28 - Portland OR - The Twilight  
  • Wed July 31 - Sacramento  CA - Cafe Colonial
  • Thu August 1 - Nevada City CA - The Fern
  • Fri August 2 - Carson City NV - Tap Shack
  • Sat August 3 - Tucson AZ - Wooden Tooth Downtown

Friday, July 12, 2024

OUT NOW: Forest Fallows "In Light" [Digital Single]





The fourth and final single "In Light" from Forest Fallow's sophomore album Palisades is available now on all digital music platforms. Enjoy!  —— For fans of Animal Collective, Ariel Pink, Atlas Sound, The American Analog Set, Beach Boys, Broadcast, Mac DeMarco, Destroyer, Drugdealer, Ducktails, Esquivel, Goth Babe, Richard Hawley, JPW, Lauds, The Ocean Blue, Peel Dream Magazine, The Radio Dept., Radiohead, Real Estate, The Sea & Cake, Stereolab, Sugar Candy Mountain, The Sundays, Kurt Vile, Yo La Tengo, Wild Nothing, and Woods.

Friday, July 5, 2024

Naïm Amor: September Escapade





[Repost from Here Comes the Flood; by Hans Werksman, July 1, 2024]

French guitarist and violinist Naïm Amor has the final single from his forthcoming new album Stories. September Escapade is like a slowly unfolding flower, showing off its colours one by one to create an aural spectacle that needs to revisited time and again to fully appreciate all the intricacies. It has a late 60s Nouvelle Vague soundtrack vibe, spiced up with a bit of noise, a dash of post-rock and Tex Mex.

Stories will be released on vinyl by Fort Lowell Records (vinyl, digital). The album is available for pre-order here. Release date: July 26th.

» naimamor.net

HCTF review of Amorsonic.

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

ALBUM: Blab School-Blab School

[Repost from Small Albums; June 26, 2024]

North Carolina's Blab School has one of the coolest band names in the world, and a sound to go along with it. There's a music descriptor trope that I hate, and that is the concept of "windows down on a summer day" sound. Blab School is 100% the antithesis of this sound and mindset. Play, "I Hate the Summer" and feel the bad vibes rise.

Blab School works in a certainty of heaviness without a tipping point. It stays on the shores of oceans full of red-eyed creatures and furious fangs, but who gets bit? And who just gets startled?

From the start, the darkness in the chord changes and the sickness in Ryan Seagrist's snarling delivery of lyrics, there's no room for a window to even be cracked. The smoke is staying inside. Elizabeth Killian shares lead vocal duties with a carelessness like screaming into a broken mirror and already having an answer you don't want to have to hear anyways.

The tumbling guitar lead of "Scrolls," or the absolute punishing of "Never Enough" keep a continual dirge of days that can't be differentiated from night. It's just all bleak and sounds amazing.

All the way through to the closer with the most appropriate title of this bummer-fest "(Don't Forget To) Give Up," Blab School leads in like a storm cloud and multiplies through the album into a crushing galaxy.

It's music to listen to when the sun devours space or vice versa.

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Female Gaze | Interview | New Album, ‘Tender Futures’



[Repost from It's Psychedelic Baby Magazine; Klemen Breznikar, June 24, 2024]

Female Gaze releases sweet and swirling indie-rock with ‘Tender Futures.’

Finding patience in agony is like trying to dig a tunnel in the desert sand by hand. While it is almost certainly an unfathomable task, what else can you do to bide your time and preoccupy your mind? When life puts you in impossible situations, make possible decisions; keep going until you get to where you need to go. Nelene DeGuzman was forced into one such impossible situation, so she made a possible decision: Make music about it.

‘Tender Futures,’ the newest album from seasoned songwriters Female Gaze, comes from a place of increased and constant suffering, the dreadful sort that distorts the temporal and obfuscates your reality, so the soundscapes reflect this loss of space. Nelene DeGuzman (vox, guitars, piano), Kevin Conklin (bass, backing vox on ‘Severance’), and Nicky David Cobham-Morgese (percussion) combine their strengths to present just over a half hour of psychedelic shoegaze desert rock. DeGuzman has persevered through chronic health issues for most of her life thus far, but it was the most recent year where things turned overwhelming while awaiting a crucial surgery. During this prolonged difficulty, DeGuzman put pen to paper and came away with five new songs encapsulating this trying time. Thus, it’s a bit of a loose concept record, one in which you can start it from any point and loop through it just as effectively as if you started at track one and listened through. As the days and nights blurred together in real life, so too do the tracks on this record.

Starting from track one, ‘ghosts,’ we get a little taste of the meditative energy to come – whispery, willowy vocals and patient guitar passages with field recordings gently placed in the mix, effectively incorporating that sense of lost time as sunshine and moonlight coalesce. The following and longest track, ‘broadcast,’ ebbs and flows with Cobham-Morgese’s pounding percussion, driving the band wherever they want to wander. Conklin’s steady bass is a stalwart foundation for the ideas to incorporate, introducing budding branches on which DeGuzman’s effects-drenched guitars can roost. The title track embodies the idea well – futures that are tender, at mercy of the tides of life, as dissonance and harmony cascade throughout the extended jam. Track four ‘in the mezzanine’ serves as another pensive exercise for the weary of heart and soul before we reach the gentle closer ‘severance,’ my personal favorite, which feels almost triumphant before the chaotic end loops us right back around to the intro birdsong – another languid day gone by.

The journey you will take listening to this new Female Gaze release comes just in time for the approach of summer in the northern hemisphere. Its sun-battered melodies and murky rhythmic depths compliment one another like a classic summer cycle, hoping to provide relief from the heat and a compassionate blanket in the cold. Enjoy the art during these trying times, and embrace those impossible situations with possible decisions.

How did the name “Female Gaze” come about? What does it mean in relation to your art?

Nelene: The name first popped into my mind during a transitional period in my life. I was on a solo tour in 2019 which turned out to be a really transformative and meditative experience for me. In its literal sense, it is the inversion of the film concept of the male gaze. Donning the moniker felt like I was giving myself permission to be unapologetic in my identity as an artist. I was giving myself the liberty to just exist in these artistic spaces and not have to explain or justify my perspective or presence.

How long have you folks been together as a band now? What do you feel your strengths are when you work as a unit?

Nelene; Kevin (our bassist and also my husband) and I have been playing music together for over a decade, initially in our previous project, The Rifle. Nicky joined in 2020 just before we released our last LP as The Rifle. As Female Gaze, the three of us have been together since 2021. I feel like we have a natural rhythm together as a three piece and can groove in our own little language which allows us to be really improvisational live which I find really freeing. I love being surprised by things that arise naturally in the moment when we’re playing together.

For DeGuzman, what has helped you press on in defiance of your personal health struggles? How do you find the motivation to create and continue when faced with such difficulties?

Nelene: When I’m not feeling well, the only thing that seems to get me through is to put blinders on and just focus on translating pain or whatever is going on into art. Creating is how I understand myself and my experiences and sometimes when things have been bad, I won’t really understand how bad they were until I’ve expressed those experiences back to myself via something I’ve created if that makes sense.

If you could collaborate and/or perform with any current musician/group, who would it be?

Nicky: Witch!

Kevin: King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard!

Nelene: Mitski!

If you had to start over from scratch without any of your instruments or gear (minus a computer), what would you buy first?

Nicky: a synthesizer!

Kevin: a Hofner Beatle Bass!

Nelene: hmmmm maybe a sweet petite lil parlor guitar.

Friday, June 28, 2024

OUT NOW: Naïm Amor "September Escapade" [Digital Single]





The fourth and final single "September Escapade" from Naïm Amor's twelfth studio album Stories is out today on all digital music platforms. For fans of The Black Keys, Black Midi, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, Nels Cline, Edwyn Collins, The Cramps, The Fleshtones, Richard Hawley, King Krule, La Luz, Los Straightjackets, Man or Astro-man?, JD McPherson, Messer Chups, The Meteors, Roy Orbison, The Shadows, Shannon & The Clams, The Sonics, The Surfrajettes, Surprise Chef, Tijuana Panthers,The Tremolo Beer Gut, Whatitdo Archive Group, Jack White, and Link Wray.

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

New album: Blab School || Blab School

[Repost from Add to Wantlist; by Niek, June 12, 2024]

North Carolina quartet Blab School are a Craigslist success story. Veteran drummer Dave Cantwell (Analogue, Cold Sides, and In the Year of the Pig) put up an ad on the site and ended up forming a kind of supergroup that includes Ryan Seagrist (Discount, The Kitchen), Lizzie Killian (Glowing Stars, Teens in Trouble), and Fikri Yucel (Veronique Diabolique).

Their self-titled debut LP is out now on Fort Lowell Records. If you spun a carbon copy of this record, you’d find it rooted in the ’80s and ’90s alternative rock, new wave, and post-punk scenes. The diverse backgrounds of the musicians shine through in the variety of sounds Blab School explores. They practice a kind of DIY democracy where every member’s ideas get equal play, yet their collective sound remains as tight as a drum, striking with the impact of a single, unified vision. Bands like The Wipers, Superchunk, and Jawbreaker come to mind, but there are also echoes of Killing Joke.

Blab School is a noisy and dynamic record where nostalgic vibes and fresh energy go hand in hand. Don’t miss out!

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Rosy Overdrive’s Top 40 Albums of 2024 So Far





[Repost from Rosy Overdrive; June 17, 2024]

Female Gaze – Tender Futures

Release date: May 17th
Record label: Fort Lowell/Totally Real
Genre: Psychedelic rock, art rock, desert rock, post-rock, jazz rock
Formats: Vinyl, cassette, digital

After retiring the name of their old band, The Rifle, Tucson’s Nelene DeGuzman and Kevin Conklin formed Female Gaze with Nicky David Cobham-Morgese, and the former garage rockers undergo a remarkable transformation on Tender Futures, their debut album under the name. Stretching five songs across thirty-two minutes, Tender Futures is an expansive, vast record, with the band embodying the American southwest more than any of their projects ever have before. Inspired in part by DeGuzman’s chronic health issues that had left her in a “painful limbo”, Tender Futures explores the desert using empty space and towering nothingness as its language, intentionally evoking haziness and disorientation through psychedelia, post-rock, and even a bit of jazz-rock. (Read more)

Saturday, June 22, 2024

BMN Exclusive Premiere: Tercel "Tiny Towns" - Your New Fav Indie Rock from NC





[Repost from Blood Makes Noise; May 9, 2024]

Melodic up-beat despair, sparking nostalgia for things you’ve never known. Tercel’s debut single release “Tiny Towns” is a symphony of escape and acceptance, a tune you’ll surely hear in your wildest dreams.

 Both Robin and Savannah Wood's vocals bring the sound of wind through wheat grass, sweet like honey suckle and you can taste a subtle southern root just the same. Poetic lyrics keep the water in your eyes, instead opting for a heavy longing in your chest that hurts just right. Picture the wrought iron fences, striped shirt lawn jockeys, wrap around porches piled high with broken parlor pianos, diaper changing tables waiting for another generation, loud calls for another beer to the kitchen, that’s the America Sound I found in Chris Vinopal’s guitar. Riffs I’d swear I’ve always known found in this song, reaching through my memories and making them dance. Soft drums from Taylor Salvetti tap out a metaphor of life's passing. As the snare cracks the dawn of rising intensity there’s a feeling that this moment might last, only for a slow fall to take us back down to the soft rhythm that brought us in.

 Tercel has the glow of a summer tan, of lightning bugs, of the final days on the coast before vacation's over. Music to dance to, to make you feel life between your fingers and toes as you roll around in Bermuda grass, to repeat quietly, without realizing, as you make eggs in the morning. The soundtrack of being alive.

 “Tiny Towns” is being released by Fort Lowell Records on Tuesday, May 14th as a digital single that will be available on all music platforms worldwide.  The track is Tercel’s official debut release, although there is one earlier Bandcamp-only release Tercel made available last year titled Grow Light – The Stowe Tapes.  Today, Blood Makes Noise is excited to provide you with the World Premiere of “Tiny Towns” in advance of the release.

Monday, June 17, 2024

Blab School – Blab School | Album Review



[Repost from Swim Into the Sound; by Brad Walker, June 10, 2024]

When you grow up in the orbit of an older brother, especially an older brother who could be considered “cool,” there is a sort of unapproachable quality to the bands he listens to… Or at least I think that’s how it is; I don't actually have any older siblings, cool or otherwise.

This is a long walk, but go with me.

I was twelve years old in the year 2000, so all the cool older brothers in my orbit were into bands like AFI, Deftones, Green Day, Bad Religion, Nirvana, Tool, Nine Inch Nails, etc., etc. Being one step removed from these bands may have actually made them seem even more unapproachable and cooler to me. There was something about the scorching disaffection and pseudo-masculine rage of this era of music that I found dangerously alluring at the time. It felt like I was getting into these bands at my own risk, which was part of the appeal.

Blab School’s self-titled debut album reminds me of this era of rock music, not necessarily in tone and sound, but in pure, intimidating coolness.

So, how does one talk about a band whose defining characteristic is that they sound cool? They say comparison is the thief of joy, but this is a band that wears its influences on its sleeve. In addition to my projecting the likes of Deftones, AFI, and Tool onto Blab School, it’s easy to hear the bands they’ve been openly inspired by. In their bio on the Fort Lowell Records website, they namecheck the Wipers, Talking Heads, Joy Division, and Killing Joke as their sonic and philosophical progenitors. More contemporaneously, it wouldn’t be out of the question to see them sharing a bill with bands like Flasher or Protomartyr. This is a record that is steeped in nostalgia, but you’re going to have to adjust your idea of whose past lives we are talking about when we use the word “nostalgia,” this isn’t The Strokes or The Black Keys.

Blab School doesn’t have a narrative arc; that’s not the kind of band they are. In fact, the record is a pretty lean affair, clocking in at just over in just over twenty minutes. Blab School is not trying to tell a story with this record, but that is not to say that they aren’t trying to convey a feeling, and that feeling is chilly disaffection. This fire-and-ice combination of unattainable coolness and simmering rage puts them in a lineage with every band they have likened to by both me and the band themselves. It’s also a proven method for creating compelling music.

This can be heard from the jump with the first two tracks: “Small Simple Ways” and "Scrolls." The former sounds like it would fit beautifully alongside The Smashing Pumpkins on the Batman & Robin soundtrack, and I mean that in the best way possible. The latter is a particular favorite of the band, as it is the first song they wrote post-lockdown, which seems appropriate for a song about doomscrolling (“can’t seem to stop, I’m clicking on buttons, just staring at nothing, back to the top… scroll down, scroll down”). This feeling of dissatisfaction with modern society is on display throughout the record, from “Quit Yr Job” (particularly poignant to me as I write this article while on the clock at a job I’m getting laid off from at the end of the month), to “Never Enough” (we all hate capitalism in this house), to the closing track, “(Don’t Forget to) Give Up” (try the refreshing taste of nihilism today).

But one of the most fascinating tracks on the record is “I Hate the Summer.” On this penultimate track, the band sings, “I hate the summer, I pray for rain. I hate the sunlight, mimosas, and champagne. I hate the beach and all the sand it brings. I hate the blue skies; I hate most hot-weather things.” They’ve got that summertime sadness! Now I’m from Ohio and Blab School is from North Carolina, so we experience very different summers, but I have always found folks that detest the sun and revelry of summertime a little… dorky? But you see, that’s what makes this song so important! In the context of the record, it might be the most important song of all. I’ve gone on and on about how impenetrably cool this band is for this entire article, and we get to the second-to-last song on the album, and it’s just someone whinging about how they’re too hot? It’s brilliant! It makes them human! It invites other dorky folks who get cranky when the weather gets above 72° to be like, “Yeah! They get it!” before bringing it back around to the realm of the unfathomable and the unflappable to wrap things up with “(Don’t Forget to) Give Up.”

Ultimately, there’s something to be said here about the anachronistic idea of “coolness.” What does it even mean to be “cool” in 2024 when the internet has rendered each and every one of us “cringe”? That may be overstating it, but at the very least, social media has revealed that most of us are relatively ordinary in our day-to-day lives... or maybe it’s just leveled the playing field. You can see pictures of Blab School all together as a band on their Instagram, and they look very normal despite the fact that they have made a profoundly cool record. They just look like me and my friends, and I appreciate them more for it. Not to put too fine a point on it, but you can see that as a testament to everyone’s humanity. Just as your friends’ cool older brothers eventually become regular accountants, bitcoin miners, and managers at Chipotle, cool rock musicians are regular people, too. The coolness is part of the performance.