A few months back, we came across the Brooklyn band Eskimeaux and we were immediately hooked, wasting no time in heading to their bandcamp page and purchasing their new full-length, O.K. Their earnestly introspective + positive song-writing is a welcome, refreshing change and singer-songwriter Gabrielle Smith’s words + voice pull you in with welcome warmth.  We reached out to Smith to find out more about the young band, inquire about the Brooklyn creative collective Smith helped to start, and talk about a common subject on these pages—the changing creative landscape of New York City, a subject she’s got a pretty encouraging take on. Read on and stream the excellent new album O.K. below.

O.K. by eskimeaux

raven + crow: You started Eskimeaux as a solo project, right? Kinda like an experimental bedroom recording project?

Gabrielle Smith: Yes, exactly.

What inspired that? Were you in any bands before or do you have a background in music?

I was the singer of two bands before starting Eskimeaux, but I was never satisfied with them. I was also a member of many of my friends’ bands before having a live Eskimeaux band. I had to gain my on-stage confidence before I could present my own work.

But O.K. was recorded with a full band, right?

Yes! Each of us played the parts we had worked out for the live set on the recordings, except in the case of “Everything You Love.” We never worked that one out live, so Jack Greenleaf and I went wild on the arrangement of that one. We thought about all of the other songs’ arrangements as “embellishments upon the live version.”

Makes sense. Speaking of the live version, was that a big adjustment, blowing up the whole singularity of what Eskimeaux used to be with a full band?

No, it was a big relief! I performed solo always feeling frustrated because I was the only one who could hear the full arrangements in my head. Now that I have a band there are obviously still some parts of the recorded arrangements missing, but each person’s part fills out a necessary sonic range.

That’s good to hear—I feel like that transition can be tough for some. Ya’ll just finished a big tour, right? Howe was it?

It was amazing! We toured around the country with Mitski and Elvis Depressedly; both bands are extremely talented and fun to be around. All of the shows were really wonderful!

Yeah, I heard your all’s show at the Echo was jaw-dropping—congrats. Were there any tour highlights or places that surprised you on the road?

I was really surprised to play in places I had never been to with Eskimeaux, like anywhere past Chicago and Texas (headed west), and hear people singing our songs back to us. It was cool.

That’s awesome. So, what is The Epoch?

What is The Epoch…we aren’t even really sure. It was a name that my friends and I came up with to give ourselves a sense of collective purpose as artists during a time when we were the only ones who listened to each others’ music. Now, it serves the same purpose; it’s something that keeps us united as our styles and levels of recognition fluctuate. The name has since gotten away from us, in a way, but the traction it seems to have gained is pretty cool.

Very much so. Are there other bands or publicly performing artists that are part of The Epoch?

Yes. I’m not going to list them because I’m not even sure who considers themselves to be part of it or not, but we have a website with a list of members!

Right—I just realized we featured an Epoch-er on our most recent mixtapeFlorist. So, I don’t know how long you’ve been in New York, but I hear a lot of people griping that it’s quickly turning into a kind of playground for the rich and that creativity is dying in the city, David Byrne amongst them. Would you give that a big ‘hell no’?

New York City is definitely very expensive and I feel very privileged to be able to live here. I grew up here and have definitely had to move pretty far away from Manhattan to be able to afford it, but part of the fun of living in any city is getting to explore the “nether-regions” of the place. I don’t think that creativity is dying here, especially since I’m constantly surrounded by inspiring, creative geniuses, haha. I can’t even begin to run off the long list of musicians, visual artists, and community organizers I’ve been lucky enough to get to know in the past couple of years.

Good to hear. What are some ways that you think the city’s changed for the better recently? Like, what are some developments or businesses or public works that you hold up as truly awesome?

The Silent Barn is a really cool DIY venue in Bushwick that’s trying to be self-aware about the gentrification element of opening venues that host predominantly indie rock bands and don’t interact with the community around them at all. Silent Barn regularly hosts hip-hop and other art from people effected by rent-hikes in Bushwick and tries to be a positive force in the neighborhood, not just a gentro-center. They actually just had a fire in the apartments above their venue and can use donation money, which you can give via their site.

Man, that place sounds like it’s doing it right. Speaking of the city changing, I saw that you all had played Glasslands a good bit—SO bummed that placed closed down; it was one of my favorite venues in New York.

Yeah, it was really cool!

Dogs—or, your dog, I’m assuming—seem pretty front + center in your album art, promo shots, et cetera, which I wholeheartedly applaud. Are you a big fan of animals?

I love dogs. My dog Frankie is my best friend.

Who did the album artwork? Is that…embroidery?

Yes, it is! Susannah Cutler made the album artwork. She’s an incredible visual artist and a very talented embroiderer.

The album cover’s awesome—more embroidery in rock. Finally, can you talk to where the name Eskimeaux came from? What’s with the spelling?

I’m adopted and the only information I have about my ancestry is that my birth father is Tlingit Eskimo. The name came from a period of anxiety about my identity. Discovering my racial ancestry helped give me a more concrete image of myself as a person, which is something I try to do with music also. The spelling is just a silly jumble of words, it doesn’t really have a meaning.

Well I like it, even more so now. Thanks again for taking the time to talk with Gabrielle.

You can listen to and purchase Eskimeaux’s new album O.K. directly from the band via their bandcamp page; they’ve just settled in after a long, cross-country tour, but they’re back at it again this + next month, so check their Facebook page for tour dates and do try to catch them if you can. New York, they’ll be playing the aforementioned Silent Barn Friday, December 11; Los Angeles, they’ll be at one of our favorite venues, The Echo, with the also awesome band Pity Sex Friday, December 18th.

Photo of Gabrielle by Manuela Insixiengmay.

Alright, as we near year’s end (crazy) and nearly a year of doing this series (also a little crazy), we aim to hone our skill in curating these monthly mixtapes. To that end, the goal is making them less simple, crude lists of 15 new songs by new (to us) artists and more sincere, sentimental nods to the cassette tapes we spent so many hours making so many years back. In those days, we sought to impress friends and hopeful girl-/boyfriends with thoughtfully arranged songs from sometimes obscure bands, being careful to never repeat a band on the same tape, and dedicating considerable time and energy to tape covers (like this one).

Today, technology’s made most everything in this aspect easier, but it’s also flooded our collective creative consciousness with an immeasurably deep field of artists, making the simple act of appreciating music daunting at times. Which leads me to another goal of these mixtapes—highlighting and sharing new sounds from new artists that might otherwise go unnoticed.

…okay, true, Santigold‘s on this mixtape and I don’t think there’s any fear she’d ever go unnoticed these days, but we just couldn’t resist her brand new, awesome single. Same goes for the new Miike Snow + Kate Boy—we’re suckers for good pop.

But, digging deeper, we start off this month’s mix with a magically beautiful new track from Stockholm-based songwriter, Johanan (highly recommend also checking out his other new track, “Holy Spirit”) before moving on to an amazing song from British multi-instrumentalist Georgia—think Missy Elliot meets the Knife—one of two female rappers this mix features, the other being the stunning Little Simz out of London. We’ve also got a new song from Canadian duo Majical Cloudz—a band we’ve never been into live but who’s wowing us with their new material—one from longtime favorite Computer Magic off her debut full-length (you can read an interview we did with her back last February), a bizarrely beautiful song from Dublin’s Cloud Castle Lake, and a ton more. Er. Six more. Math. Not our strong suit.

Give it a spin below or on our SoundCloud page and feel free to catch up on previous months’ entries.

Some pretty pleasant pop from Richmond, VA’s own Natalie Prass today in the form of her colorful video for “Bird of Prey”. Natalie’s debut, self-titled full-length is out now and available via iTunes. She’s playing LA + San Diego in the next couple days and continuing to tour across the country into November—dates on her site.

Alright, we promise to write about something that’s not music soon, but we are seriously seriously seriously obsessed with the band TEEN (all caps, seemingly) from NYC (and Halifax, seemingly?).

They truly reflect everything we love and nothing we hate about this whole indie psych revival and throw it up against the wall to reinvent it in a beautifully creative way, bringing in less buried, more vibrant vocals, great use of melodic electronics and vocal harmonies, and excellent lyrical content with provocative themes. They somehow remind us of an awesomer Warpaint that somehow melded with Braids and Dirty Projectors. Not that we like creative comparisons.

Just listen. Start at the beginning.

And—as I’ve already told multiple friends in NYC—go see them when they come to town. New York, they play Brooklyn’s Saint Vitus this Saturday with the also excellent Ava Luna. Go. Full tour dates via their Facebook page.

Album art by Rob Carmichael, SEEN.

The Way And Color by TEEN

We just picked up the doubt full-length from British band Boxed In and it is quickly burning up the motor on our turntable.

KCRW’s championed the band since early this year and we even included their track “Foot of the Hill” on our April Mixtape, but this our first start-to-finish listen of the entirety of the record and it truly is superb.

The band started as a solo project of songwriter Oli Bayston, who stated in an interview that he’d wanted to write an electronic record played out by largely analog musicians. The end result are songs with beautifully stark structures and meticulously stacked  layers of melodies and rhythm, playing off of rhythmic, hyper piano, coldly frantic drum lines, and insanely catchy bass lines.

One track we’d had yet to hear that’s stood out amongst an album full of standouts is “False Alarm”. You can watch the video for it below, hear more on the band’s SoundCloud page, and buy the album through iTunes + at your choice record stores.

Cross-post sharing a piece from our sister Web journal, Forgotten Favorite (which we announced here at the beginning of 2015).

Brooklyn-based contributor, Lovett Hines, writes about his introduction to hip hop and how it shaped his identity as a black kid in America, focusing specifically on Public Enemy’s “Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos”. As he writes, “It expressed our mistrust of a system we believed to be corrupt and a spirit of purposeful defiance. This song was the father of N.W.A.‘s ‘Fuck tha Police!‘”

Read more and listen along over at Forgotten Favorite. And remember—if you ever want to contribute, simply send your piece via the mail icon on the upper right.

Some pretty cool art and an interesting teaser accompanied an announcement by Brooklyn band Chairlift today that they’d be premiering some new music Wednesday.

You can see the very brief teaser on their Facebook page; video of them performing the new song “Ch-Ching” at the film festival Tropfest New York this past June below.

Though, as Henry Rollins recently eloquently explained, Autumn is much more a concept here in Los Angeles, less an actual season, we welcome October as the first full fall month and one of our favorites nonetheless. Even if it is going to be in the triple digits Friday.

With it, we present our October mixtape, being an accumulation of new sounds that we’re really digging of late.

This month we’re featuring some great new tracks from the likes of Montreal-based newcomers, Seoul; Jonquil frontman Hugo Manuel’s excellent solo electronic-R+B project Chad Valleyanother newcomer, Bayonne—AKA, Roger Sellers—from whom we’ve only heard a single track, but, man, that track; an impressive Battles-esque  track from OK City’s Tallows; a new showing from someone we haven’t heard from in a bit, Brooklyn’s Small Black; a new one from someone we really haven’t heard from in a while, German ‘indietronica’ band, Ms. John Soda of Morr Music; and, of course, much much more.

Listen below or on our soundcloud page, and be sure to check out past mixtapes if you’re looking for more.

As we continue our very gradual coming down from the high that is seeing Ms. Grace Jones live at the Hollywood Bowl this past weekend, we’re reminded of that legendary post-disco diva in the music of new-comer, Monika Christodoulou, the Athens, Greece native who goes by the simplified Monika.

Monica’s already made a name for herself in her native Greece with her first two albums and has been peaking interest stateside with her new album, Secret in the Dark, out today on Other Music Recording Co. (the relatively new label and offshoot of our longtime favorite NYC record store, Other Music).

The title track provides a groove-filled, disco soundtrack for New York City nights, regardless of your locale. Check out the video below.

You can order Secret in the Dark on CD + LP via OMRC and digitally on iTunes.

Excellent photo by Eilon Paz.

No huge piece here, just, if you ever get a chance, definitely go see Grace Jones perform live.

No matter what else is going on.

Just. Go.

Photo above by Drew A. Kelley; below, a shot Katie got of of Ms. Jones performing alongside the supermoon lunar eclipse at the Hollywood Bowl last night.

Epic.

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