Daniel Blumberg, the frontman of Yuck, is working on his debut solo LP titled Forget under the name of Oupa. The 7-track album is set to be released in June 2011. You can listen to “Forget”, the brand new title track of Forget, right here.
Oupa will be making his first live performance at SXSW this year at the Transparent x Gorilla Vs Bear showcase. After, he will be touring in the UK, New York, and Tennessee. Check out the dates below.
Oupa Tour Dates:
03/17 Austin, TX Transparent / Gorilla Vs. Bear SXSW Party
03/25 London, UK St. Pancras Old Church *
04/03 London, UK Blue Flowers (Curated by Oupa)
04/07 New York, NY Glasslands *
04/09 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom #
04/11 Nashville, TN The Basement *
* = w/ Porcelain Raft
# = w/ Sebadoh
We Are The Ocean will be releasing their second album Go Now And Live on April 25, 2011 via Hassle Records. You can listen to the band’s first single from Go Now And Live, titled “What It Feels Like”, right here.
During the end of April and early May, We Are The Ocean will be heading off on a headling UK tour. You can check out the dates below.
We Are The Ocean UK Tour:
April 27 – Cardiff, Millenium Music Hall
April 28 – London, Electric Ballroom
April 29 – Manchester, Academy 2
April 30 – Glasgow, Garage
May 1 – Newcastle, Academy 2
Anarbor will be releasing The Mixtape for free download on their website on March 8th. The band has described the release as “a free download… featuring unreleased songs, covers, remixes, & special guest vocalists.” One of the songs included will be the winning remix of “Let The Games Begin”.
When the time comes, the free release will be available here.
The Strokes made an appearance on Saturday Night Live last night to perform two songs from their new album Angles. They performed new single “Under Cover of Darkness” (listen here) and “Life Is Simple In The Moonlight”.
Watch the performances below.
“Under Cover Of Darkness”:
“Life Is Simple in the Moonlight”:
GAYNGS have released a new seven-track remix EP titled Affiliyated for free download and streaming. The project features seven songs “regrinded” by members of the Minneapolis hip-hop collective Doomtree who randomly chose 10 stems from the album and then created something entirely new and unique.
You can listen or download the EP in its entirety below.
“To create the GAYNGS’ Regrind EP all of the stems from the bands debut album,Relayted, were arbitrarily named and compiled into a list … [A] collection of producers and musicians … were then instructed to choose only 10, without knowing what songs they came from or what instruments they contained. One could choose anything from four sax solos and six bass lines, to eight keyboards and two background vocals. The combinations that could be chosen were indefinite…the only certainty was that the parts would all be set to the tempo of 69 beats per minute.
From there, the re-grinders were free to chop, pitch-shift, and otherwise pulverize the stems into a new, cohesive song. The only rule was that they must use all 10 stems they were given, and that the tempo must remain at GAYNGS’ standard 69 bpm.”
Brian Fallon of The Gaslight Anthem performed an acoustic live session with triplej, performing “Bring It On” and a cover of Jack Johnson‘s “Sitting, Waiting, Wishing”. Listen to the interview and performance below.
Lykke Li dropped by on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” late last night, performing first single “Get Some” from her second studio album Wounded Rhymes. The performance is simple and raw, with Lykke allowing her voice and the instrumentals to really shine through. Check out the video below.
Released: October 12, 2010
Label: I Surrender Records
Purchase: iTunes | Amazon
Every night, as we are about to lazily drift off to a wonderful place known as sleep, most of us go into a deep state of thinking. Whether it be about what we’re going to do the next day, a contemplation of life, or just why our room smells so bad, we all think about something leading up to that glorious state of unconsciousness. These things may or may not affect the way that we dream. Dreams can be anything from happy, to dark, to just bizarre (or all of the above!) and as we listen through the third album by the five-piece alternative/pop-punk group, Valencia, titled Dancing With a Ghost, it can somewhat be comparative to the different stages and/or types of dreaming.
As the album opens with the light, poppy guitars and sing-along vocals leading into the first few tracks, we are submerged in a blissful state of a fun and happy dreaming (“Dancing With a Ghost” and “Still Need You Around”). As frontman Shane Henderson sings along to the spirited guitar riffs of Brendan Walter, JD Perry, and George Ciukurescu and the delicate drums of Daniel Pawlovich, Henderson remits an uplifting message. We, as the listeners, will find ourselves floating along jubilantly through the sunny dream world, not a care in the world.
But as we are all familiar with, dreams aren’t always such a playful environment and constantly change as we sleep so soundly in our beds. As Dancing goes on, our sunny dream world slowly shifts to a bit more serious atmosphere as we slowly realize that everything is not as happy as we originally had thought (“Consider Me Dead” and “Losing Sleep”). The scenery changes to a still pleasant, but slightly bizarre world. As Henderson exclaims “Give me the chance to speak my mind/My opinions are the social kind/If it’s you for you and I for I/Then one of us will leave here blind/You know I won’t give up without a fight/Even if I’m the one who’s wrong and you’re who’s right” leading the way accompanied by spacey guitars, troubles begin to surmount in the dream, setting the stage for an unwanted antagonist to arrive.
Then, suddenly, the effervescent world is crudely interrupted entirely by the deeper problems hidden in our subconscious and the dream becomes a dark, perplexing place; the previously whimsical feeling is almost entirely gone, replaced with a worried uncertainty as the music becomes increasingly frantic in our minds (“Friday Night”). Storms sweep in in the form of sadistic guitar tones and dark lyrics (“When desperate we collide and disappear in fear/We’ve been living in a dream/Selfishly, I try to blur the lines that hide that I/I guess I fucked up/I guess I was wrong”), and pounding drums coupled with the thunder of the guitars begin to interfere with the previously bright sunlight that was shining so beautifully and as suddenly as the storms had appeared, they subside.
We are now left feeling lost, and somewhat alone (“Somewhere I Belong”). The words “My life has always been a dead end street/with heavy eyes that shoot through me/I slipped somewhere in between what’s right and wrong” ring through the light gray clouds backed by an arrangement of strings, and we start to question what just happened, why it happened, and if things will go back to the way they were before. But at this point, we can’t even remember what was so happy about the dream in the first place. Perplexity sets in once again, and we begin to question whether our dream is reality or in fact a dream. The pace of the music begins to increase and this state of confusion leaves us in a very odd, yet somehow pleasing mood as delightful guitar-work reveals a certain hope as they back the worried lyrics (“Days Go By” and “The Way”).
Abruptly the dream changes once again. Making a quick transition from spaciness and confusion, to a more familiar pop-punk driven urgency, we finally realize what we have to do to get back to the once-happy world that is slowly fading from our memories (“Stop Searching”). As we come to a certain light, the dream starts collapsing around us as we begin to finally awaken. We know what we want, but everything is becoming so blurred around us, and as our happy place is nearly in reach once again, the dream ends. We are awake with nothing but a vague memory of a long journey of happiness, struggle, and emotion that we long to see again. Luckily, in the case of Dancing With a Ghost, we can revisit this dream whenever we please, and admire its brilliance and intricacy with the same enjoyment each and every time.
Standout Tracks: “The Way,” “Friday Night,” “Losing Sleep”
You can now preorder The Dangerous Summer‘s An Acoustic Performance of “Reach for the Sun” on iTunes. The album will be released on March 15, in digital format only.
The band also just announced dates for their headlining tour with Sparks The Rescue, The Graduate, and The Scenic. Dates and ticket information are available here.
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