Posts tagged with Downloads

Social Studies

Social Studies

On the eve of Social Studies leaving for Chicago to kick off their upcoming tour, I spoke with Natalia Rogovin, lead singer for the SF-based indie darlings. I caught the smooth-voiced songstress on the phone whilst in the middle of packing her personal effects and bundling her beloved keyboards in loads of bubble wrap; hoping they’d traverse the distance safely. She shared with me about the history of her shape-shifting band, they’re forthcoming album Wind-Up Wooden Heart, her ingrown love for classical music, and her penchant for coming up with song titles. The conversation felt a bit brief for as much as Natalia had to share, but she was nonetheless able to illuminate much on the source of her band’s interesting brand of “avant-pop.” -Patric Fallon

Plastic Milk: So tell us a bit about yourself, your band Social Studies, and what you do for the band.

Natalia Rogovin: Okay. I’m Natalia Rogovin. I’m the singer and keyboardist in Social Studies. I also do most of the songwriting. We kind of have a rotating cast of characters, and then me and the drummer, Mike Jirkovsky, who have been in Social Studies from the beginning. We’ve had a lot of different people on the project.

PM: How many years have the two of you had the band?

NR: We started in 2006, so going on about four. We actually started out with four of us. Basically, we were all involved in the San Francisco music scene and wanted to do something different from the other bands we were in. Different stylistically. We started playing and weren’t really sure where it was gonna go. We spent a really long time working on songs and had different people helping us out with the music. We had a solid line-up of four members for a while. Then, because of various… We were all people who’d been in a lot of different bands, so there was kind of the idea of a rotating element to it. We’ve had different temporary members that have been with us for a while and then moved on and then [we've] brought someone else in.

PM: What are some of the other bands you guys have been in?

NR: I was in a band called Rion Rinker, which was mostly based in Santa Cruz. We’ve had two members that are in Maus Haus, and then Tyler McCauley who’s in Tempo No Tempo. Aaron Weiss and Mike were both in a band called… Oh Lord, what’s the name of that band… Oh yeah, Capital. They’re kind of a rock and roll band.

PM: That’s a lot of different projects.

NR: Yeah. It’s actually a really cool thing because we get to work with so many friends that are really talented musicians and we get to have their creative ideas and input.

PM: Do your schedules ever end up conflicting? Cause I know Tyler’s band just had an album come out, and I think they’re touring or just finished touring. You guys are just about to start your tour. Does that create problems for Social Studies?

NR:
Actually, Tyler was playing guitar with us for a while and helped us a lot on our upcoming album. He played a lot on that, but he’s actually not a permanent member of the band.

PM: Oh, okay.

NR: On this upcoming tour we’re actually playing with Tom Smith, who’s in Office, on guitar. That’s another band, though they’re not a SF band. They’re based in Chicago.

PM: Tell me how would you describe Social Studies’ sound to someone that’s completely unfamiliar with indie or pop or any of the basic elements that you take your music from?

NR: My friend actually uses this term that I really like, ‘avant-pop.’ I think that actually describes our music very well. It’s very melodic [with] melodies that I think people can relate to, but at the same time it’s structurally adventurous. We kind of tell stories in our songs. They’re more like an old symphony where you start some place and then you’re taken on a journey throughout the song.

PM: That’s a great explanation. I got a chance to listen to the new single you have out. Well, I guess I don’t know what you’d call it. Like a single or a teaser or something?

NR:
We’re calling it a double.

PM: (laughs) That makes sense. Well, the digital double is called The Hourglass, but neither of the songs on there have that name. The album they’re taken from doesn’t have that name either. So where did that come from?

NR: The concept behind the release was that we wanted to put something out there that gave people a sense of what the new album is about. In trying to figure out what we wanted to release as a single, both of those songs, well, we basically couldn’t decide. The sound of our band has a lot of light and dark elements in it. We do things that are really uplifting and happy, but we also do things that are a little more dark and serious. Every time we tried to settle on a song we felt that it didn’t really represent the range of what we do. The idea of releasing this double is that it shows how we play with emotion and go back and forth between light and dark. That’s where the concept of the hourglass came from. These two sides. Emtpy, full. Dark, light. This kind of oppositional force.

PM: That makes total sense. Entirely enlightening. Good job! (laughs)

NR: It’s funny. We’re a band that does a lot of thinking. We spend a lot of time thinking about how the music works and where it goes. Coming up with ideas. With all of these things we spend a really long time planning them out and making sure they have an idea behind them.

PM: Okay. So you have a new album coming out, which you kind of talked about, called Wind-Up Wooden Heart. Can you tell me more about the record? When it’s coming out and what not?

NR: Well, the plan is to release it in spring of 2010. As of yet, it will be self-released, although we’re not entirely sure about that. It’s a little bit up in the air.

PM: I feel like self-released is the way to go these days. Sometimes working with labels is almost too much of a hassle when you can do it yourself just fine.

NR: I totally agree. I think that a lot of what labels can offer you… Well, it really depends. A lot of what bands really need is someone else to show that they are a fan and support them. It’s almost like people don’t believe that you’re legitimate until you have someone backing you. I think that’s really a big thing that labels can offer, but with our music, it kind of just speaks for itself. People relate to it, so if we can just get it out to as many people as possible, why do we really need a label?

PM: What was your favorite part about making Wind-Up Wooden Heart?

NR: Hmm… Well, I love songwriting. I’m kind of a nerd when it comes to songwriting. I really like details and working a song to death. When we’re working on writing songs we’re incredibly methodical. We’ve had songs that we’ve basically workshopped for six months before being finally satisfied with them. I think writing the songs is the most rewarding part of it. Of course, recording is really fun, but it’s also incredibly stressful. Especially when you’re doing it with a limited amount of time and you have to make sure to get everything done.

PM:
Right.

NR: So yeah, I’d say songwriting. (laughs) And then maybe coming up with song titles. (laughs)

PM: Totally. I love song titles. I’ve always said that I have more song titles than I do songs.

NR:
Exactly! I get really into it. A lot of the content of the songs is about history or historical events, so it’s really fun to do research and find out about a lot of different things and delve into them while I’m writing lyrics and coming up with song titles.

PM: In the music I’ve noticed a lot of similarities with, say, The Fiery Furnaces and a little bit of Rilo Kiley. That sort of Saddle Creek indie-pop stuff. What are some of your influences that are maybe less apparent to the listener?

NR: I actually studied classical piano while growing up. I have always been influenced by classical music, especially the Romantic period. I love Vagner and Beethoven and Mozart. I love symphonies and classical pieces. I think of modern day pop music as more like classical music, just updated. If you listen to the melody and structure there’s a ton of similarities. Melodically it’s been a huge influence on me. A lot of the melodies I write are very classically based.

PM: I can definitely hear that. The way your songs go through their changes. Like little vignettes that change from one feeling to another that rise and fall. It definitely has a classical feel to it.

NR: Absolutely. That definitely comes from my background of growing up with that style. It’s an influence that isn’t obvious at first, but once you realize it it displays itself more. Of course, I listen to a ton of modern bands as well. I’m kind of obsessed with the band Broadcast. Vocally she’s [singer Trish Keenan] a huge influence on me.

PM: They’re a great band.  They just did a collaborative mini release and I think they have a full new record coming soon.

NR: That’s exciting.

PM: Yeah, it is. So I know you have your new record coming out, and I guess your tour starts really soon. What else do you see in the future for Social Studies?

NR: We’re really excited about this tour. We’re working on another album as we get ready to release this next one. Oh, and we’ll be touring nationally in the spring as well.

PM: Are you touring in support of anyone or will it be just your band?

NR: It will be in support of a band. Um… Details TBA.

PM: Okay.

NR: Yeah. I’m just really excited to get back into the studio and start work on the next record.

PM: Awesome! That’s great. That’s all I have. Is there anything else you’d like to say?

NR: I guess, just… Um… (laughs) Go check out the double! (laughs)

PM: Right! Free download. You can’t beat that. And both those songs will be on the new record, yeah?

NR:
Yes, they will.

PM: Awesome. Well, thanks so much for talking with me Natalia. Have a safe trip to Chicago!

NR: Thanks. I’m praying my keyboards will be okay.

Links and Listen:

Download-”Time Bandit”-Social Studies, The Hourglass

MySpace

“We Chose Our Own Adventures”-Social Studies, The Hourglass

“Time Bandit”-Social Studies, The Hourglass

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
0 comments

Vangel + Mp3

Vangel

Vangel

Toronto-based producer Vangel creates music that will make you want to get your zen on in one track and your dance on in the next. The eclectic producer first made his mark in Canada’s hip-hop scene where his work was described as “beats so gloriously fucked, they make EL-P sound like a more accesible Moby” (Now Magazine). His variety-pack musical leanings shine through in his work where the songs serves as a melting pot of musical genres: jazz, hip-hop, folk..the list goes on.  While he grew up playing in his grade school’s band and strings ensemble, attending summer music camp and rehearsing with his city’s symphony orchestra, he realized that playing music wasn’t for him.  “I hated playing. I wanted to put it together”. Lucky for us,  Vangel is a master at musical collages and “putting it together.”

His days of searching through flea markets for interesting vinyl lead to DJing which eventually resulted in his passion for beats. “I wanted to make beats so bad. I had so many ideas I wanted to try out. I bought a computer, quit my job, and moved home”. For the past four years, Vangel has released a string of instrumental EPs that have won over critics and music-lovers. His work has resulted in comparisons to DJ Shadow and Mr Scruff. Listen to “Eat Your FootLoose” below and enjoy the beautiful soundscapes created by a man whose ear for instrumentation unifies the musical genres and keeps things interesting.-JM

Links and Listen:

MySpace

Download-“Eat Your FootLoose (Live Mix)”-Vangel

“Eat Your FootLoose (Live Mix)”-Vangel

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
2 comments

New Music: Toon

Toon

Toon

North Carolina lyricist Toon (aka Kurrell Rice) is bringing the freshest lyrics and performances to the table. Like the Saturday cartoons of childhood’s past, Toon is an animated entertainer. Making music for the past two years, he flew solo for the first time with his project/mixtape The P.R.E.. The 2 discs that make up the The P.R.E. consists of 29 tracks that blend the hip-hop and pop worlds. “My music comes from both sides of the fence. I don’t make ‘hood music. I don’t make suburban music. I make great music,” says Toon.

Whether he’s remixing Estelle’s “American Boy” or rhyming about the H1N1 virus on “R.O.Y. featuring Anthem,” Toon keeps things interesting. The un-dull moments are not limited to his tracks. “His performances are freaking awesome….He just entertains. He jumps on bars, he gets in people’s faces…. The energy—you feel whatever song he’s singing at the time,” said producer John Harmon.

Jump on the Toon train, “put your lighters in the air” at his shows,  and download some free tracks below.-JM

Links and Listen:

Facebook

Download-Gotta Go”-Toon

“Gotta Go”- Toon

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
Brillaint Colors

Brilliant Colors

Just when you think San Francisco can’t get anymore colorful (or brilliant for that matter), enter the DIY three-piece girl band Brilliant Colors. Their lo-fi, post-punk sound is reminiscent of bands like The Raincoats, The Slits (guitarist Michelle Hill used to tour with them), and The Ramones. Singer Jess Scott’s melodic vocals will have you thinking that the queen of pop punk, Debbie Harry herself, has sprinkled her musical dust on the current indie music scene, and that perhaps instead of 2009, it’s more like 1979.

Like their friends and allies Grass Widow, Brilliant Colors is surfing the lo-fi indie pop wave and bringing a refreshing, nostalgic sound to the city by the Bay. They’ve got punk, spunk, and a debut album (just under 24 minutes) that will make any walk or ride in this city just a little bit more vibrant. Their album Introducing will be released November 3rd on Slumberland records. According to their press release, it’s a “scrappy gem.” I couldn’t have said it better myself.

Personal favorite on the album is the song “Motherland” which has an electricity and restless energy that is Brilliant Colors at its best, not to mention a very Yeah Yeah Yeahs-esque yelping/chanting chorus going on throughout.  Scott’s pretty punk rock vocals over the driving guitars and rhythms on songs like “Mythic” and “Should I Tell You” will make you want do the pogo dance or at least watch some footage from “Blitzkrieg Bop-LIVE at CBGBs.” If you want to see them play, pay close attention to their MySpace as the ladies will be taking a “semi-hiatus/playing very irregularly” due to the aug-dec school semester. Irregular is better than nothing so be sure to check them out when you can.-JM

Download-”Motherland”-Brilliant Colors, Introducing

Links and Listen:

MySpace

“Motherland”-Brilliant Colors, Introducing

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
Claude VonStroke

Claude VonStroke

Those who put their ears on Claude VonStroke’s curatorial work for Fabric earlier this year caught a taste of what the VonStroke camp is calling “VonStroke 2.0” – the natural progression of CVS’s sound as it has moved stylistically from hometown Detroit to San Francisco, the quirky producer’s chosen home. Capturing the uniquely varied mood of the San Francisco scene and its people, Bird Brain keeps the groggy sinister chuckles ala “Deep Throat” and “Who’s Afraid of Detroit,” but moves into a controlled flurry of off-kilter synths and self-produced samples that could match the chaos of Haight Street or The Mission. The dirt is still there, but so is a strange new lightness of mood that doesn’t for a second compromise CVS’s omnipresent booty-shakin’ antics.

Claude VonStroke (a.k.a. Barclay Crenshaw) builds his nest out of bass, but, as always, this is home for no ordinary bird. Irresistible single “Vocal Chords” oozes VonStroke’s trademark strangeness: ascending androgynous vocal synths pave a bizarre, and unexpectedly rich, melody that the eccentric producer expertly builds and breaks completely apart. His inherent funkiness comes across most directly in “The Greasy Beat,” which CVS playfully punctuates with soulful grunts courtesy of Bootsy Collins (“Bootzilla here!”) and nearly grotesque bass synths that explode occasionally beneath it all. On perfectly sleazy “Big n’ Round,” CVS bounces throbbing synths and irresistible booty bass over some choice anatomy; meanwhile “Beat That Bird,” co-produced by Justin Martin, is distilled SF-earthquake-ready drum & bass. Mr. VonStroke, you’ve served us well.

Bird Brain comes out digitally Oct. 19 on Crenshaw’s own dirtybird(sic).-LU
Links and Listen:

Stream-Bird Brain

“The Greasy Beat (ft. Bo0tsy Collins)”-Claude VonStroke, Bird Brain (Oct. 19,2009)

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
White Hinterland

White Hinterland

I was introduced to Casey Dienel (a.k.a. White Hinterland) through her Drum’s Not Dead-meets-gospel choir rendition of Justin Timberlake’s ‘06 chart-topper “My Love.” The sweet novelty of a song piqued my interest, but was strangely a bit of a misrepresentation for the majority of the Pacific Northwestern singer/songwriter’s catalog. Casey Dienel’s repertoire takes some of its sounds from the base percussion and reverberated vocals found in her free-form cover, but as a whole she seems far more interested in jazzy rhythms, psychedelic soundscapes, piano-led melodies, and haunting vocal work; sounds which all coalesce into something like Stereolab and Nouvelle Vague re-imagining Radiohead’s mid-career albums. It’s an odd mix, but it works in spades.

Sung completely in French, White Hinterland’s latest release, 2008’s Luniculaire EP (Dead Oceans), is as cohesive and calm as it is fractured and frantic. Each of the five songs carry the same playfully brooding mood, but can take on a more serious and daunting tone upon repeated listens. Despite my lack of French understanding, I found myself waiting for each foreign word she delivered in the songs’ alluring melodies, and felt like I could infer the lyrics meanings based on her poignant delivery alone. According to her Myspace page, Miss Dienel has relied on the help of many different musicians to help deliver her varied albums and tours, but it’s nonetheless apparent that, despite the wonderful and irreplaceable musicianship, Casey’s original voice and songwriting is White Hinterland through and through. -Patric Fallon

Download-”My Love”-White Hinterland-Fresh From the Garden Tour

Download-”Chant de Grillon”-White Hinterland, Luniculaire EP

Links and Listen:

MySpace

“My Love”-White Hinterland, Fresh From the Garden Tour

“Chant de Grillon”-White Hinterland, Luniculaire EP

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz
Leopold and His Fiction

Leopold and His Fiction

San Francisco’s Leopold and His Fiction succeed where many of their local revival-influenced peers don’t, and that’s in the talent department. Frontman Daniel James can actually sing soulful verses while playing mean guitar licks and the rhythm section, made up of Micayla Grace and Jon Sortland, perform like they actually care about playing off what the other is doing. Oh, and they write classic rock songs without coming off the least bit contrived or tired. On their latest release, Ain’t No Surprise, Leopold and His Fiction solidify their knack for presenting song as storyteller, ala My Morning Jacket or Okkervil River, and crafting Midwestern blues anthems not unlike The Black Keys. Fans of any of the aforementioned acts, take heed and give this Fiction a thorough read over.

Ain’t No Surprise was released earlier this year, but Leopold and His Fiction are already back in the studio with Thom Monahan (Devendra Banhart, Little Joy, Vetiver) as producer! -Patric Fallon

Download-”Ain’t No Surprise”-Leopold and His Fiction, Ain’t No Surprise

Links and Listen:

MySpace

www.leopoldandhisfiction.com

“Ain’t No Surprise”-Leopold and His Fiction, Ain’t No Surprise

  • Print
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • MySpace
  • Current
  • Technorati
  • Yahoo! Buzz