Featured Music Laura Gibson: Lush Life on the Oregon Trail

December 9, 2011 - 5:40 am

As I write this, the outside thermometer reads a crisp 41 degrees. The fire in the living room is roaring while the dog maintains safe distance for optimal warming. The bourbon is marinating on the side table. The laptop hums with intention. Native Oregonian Laura Gibson’s latest long player, La Grande, coasts through the speakers. Marimba, pump organ, woodwinds and vibraphones create a pastoral menagerie of sound, as traces of folk music, soul, jazz and jangling, confident rock ‘n’ roll dip in and out of the foreground. Her voice has a vintage quality to it; a delicate lilt that makes each song sound like a lullaby, even when the tempos kick up a notch. The music is medicinal, and it’s going down smooth.

The trailer in the lead photo above is a 1962 Shasta, originally built to provide housing for members of the US Armed Forces when the company was founded back in 1941. This one belongs to Gibson. She’s transformed it into a makeshift writing space. While the majority of the record was recorded in a proper studio with temp control and soundproofing, the Shasta personifies the independent, roughshod romance that lies at the core of her songs. The follow-up to 2009’s Beasts Of Seasons, La Grande is the first great album of 2012—sample a smidge by downloading the title track here—and with indie darling label Barsuk behind it, it’s sure to get spins in high profile areas. We caught up with her for a pre-holiday chat. Gibson will also be touring across the country in January and February, so make sure to scroll to the bottom for dates.

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Music New Stateless Album Is Worth Its Wait In Gold

March 1, 2011 - 11:04 am

Stateless

Not to be terse or anything, but let’s skip the formalities and just get straight to the part where I say the new Stateless album, Matilda, is one of the best albums of the year. On “Assassins,” decomposing chimes inlayed with hand-played Arabic percussion give the feel of a possessed children’s music box before the whole song explodes into a half-time, hard rock headbanger. “Miles To Go” is a post-rock ballad that gives Massive Attack’s “Teardrop” a run for its money, and don’t even get me started on “I’m On Fire.” Just pay special attention at the eight-minute mark of the Matilda Mini-Mix (after the jump). You’ll smell what I’m cooking.

The fact is, Chris James, Stateless’ lead singer, is a visionary composer whose grasp of soul music, electronica, rock and classical themes is relatively unparalleled. He also knows how to surround himself with players that squeeze every last ounce of inspiration out of any given tune. On Matilda, he teamed up with producer Damian Taylor (Björk, U.N.K.L.E.), whose programming DNA as kidkanevil provides a titanium-like skeleton on which the flesh of the album is wrapped around. I hooked up with James to find out a bit more about the collaboration, his friendship with DJ Shadow, and the stories that reveal themselves throughout the album’s 50 minutes.

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Music Lamb Return With Their First New Album in 8 Years

February 24, 2011 - 9:36 am

Lamb 01

Being an electronic music fan back in the mid-’90s was a magical thing. Fresh sounds and new movements were popping up everywhere. The era of the superstar DJ was in full effect, and the seeds were sown for what inevitably became the complete post-modern fusion of indie rock and electronic music. One of the most exceptionally relevant and unique artists of that time was Lamb, a group that could reduce tens of thousands of pogoing festival-goers to a weeping, motionless mass in the course of back-to-back songs. After releasing their fourth studio album, Between Darkness And Wonder, back in 2003, the group split. Vocalist Lou Rhodes went on to release three critically acclaimed solo albums, while Andy’s just released his first solo album (as LOWB) earlier this year. Last December, Lou and Andy announced that they were officially back in the studio working on new Lamb material. The album, entitled 5, will be released in May. We got a chance to hear it. Then we jumped online for a lengthy chat with the dynamic duo. You can read the interview after the jump.

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Music Radiohead: The Kings Of Limbo

February 22, 2011 - 11:16 am


Radiohead - The King Of Limbs

It was ironic that news of Radiohead’s latest album came like a flash while early morning risers were still scanning Facebook for lingering commentary of the previous night’s Grammy Awards. Indeed, the undisputed sovereigns of post-rock had slipped quietly through the night, undetected even by those who considered Esperanza Spalding a shoo-in for Best New Artist. But here we are in the wake of Radiohead’s latest foray into the great unknown—The King Of Limbs—a “newspaper album” named as such for the large collection of artwork that accompanies the physical version, or because it reports on the current state of its creators, or maybe it’s a tongue-in-cheek commentary on the “hear today, gone tomorrow” nature of today’s recorded music product. With Radiohead, there’s rarely one definitive answer. No doubt you’ve already heard bits and pieces of it, so let’s get on with the show.

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Film Gallery “Life’s a Pitch”- Voxhaul Video Contest

February 10, 2011 - 10:13 am

At this year’s inaugural Los Angels Music Video Festival (LAMVF), a very interesting experiment took place. An event titled “Life’s a Pitch” provided aspiring music video directors with the opportunity to pitch their ideas for a video to accompany the new single of Los Angeles rockers Voxhaul Broadcast. The band, named one of LA’s best new indie bands of 2010 by LA Times, plopped on a couch and sipped beer while four participants took turns standing before them and presenting their video concepts for the song, “Leaving On The 5th.” The prize for the winning pitch was the opportunity to produce Voxhaul Broadcast’s new video with the use of a Sony HDW F900 camera, provided courtesy of Alternative Records.

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Film Gallery Los Angeles Music Video Festival

February 1, 2011 - 11:59 am

The First Annual Los Angeles Music Video Festival (LAMVF) took place January 23rd at the Downtown Independent Theater in Los Angeles. To celebrate a communal love of music videos, guests spent the day watching screenings, listening intently to speakers, and participating in discussions.

Out of 200 submissions from directors in over 16 countries, the screenings for student and independent videos resulted in awards being offered to:

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Music So How Did Kate Moss End Up In Your Video, Evan Voytas?

January 27, 2011 - 10:54 am

Kate Moss TOMORROW NIGHT WE'LL GO ANYWHERE

You’re an up-and-coming pop songwriter with one proper release to your name and a hazy vision for a music video, and one day you open your browser and find Kate Moss grinding to one of your songs. How does that make you feel, Evan Voytas?

“I had no idea how hot or sexy it would be,” the Los Angeles-based 27-year-old says of the video for “Tomorrow Night We’ll Go Anywhere.” “When I imagined a video for that song, it was with headlights illuminating something — it never occurred to me that something would be Kate Moss.”

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Music The Electric – “Beautiful” Video Premiere

January 18, 2011 - 11:45 am

The Electric

If you haven’t already heard the rumblings, The Electric are shaping up to be one of this year’s hottest collab projects. Featuring Ninja Tune beat aficionado DJ Vadim, soul singer Sabira Jade and Chicago’s MC Pugs Atomz, the group is releasing their debut full-length, Life Is Moving, on March 14 through Vadim’s Organically Grown Sounds. The group has kindly offered to debut the video for their first single, “Beautiful,” right here in the ChinaShop, so feast your eyes and ears on some soothing sounds. Then pop on over here to cop the single.

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