There’s one thing you need to know here, Reader—this week’s Song is fucking excellent.
True, true—everything we bring you is fucking excellent, but this gem, from Rhode Island band, Magic Man, has got us hopping up and down on one foot. Which is what we do when we’re excited about something. We’re not sure why. We’re seeing someone about it.
We actually wrote up Magic Man way back in 2011, when they were a duo + we couldn’t quite figure out from where the band hailed. Fully acknowledging the risk of straying into the dense, unnavigable territory of wild pretentiousness, we boldly quote ourselves:

“I know little to nothing about the band, Magic Man. They seem to be from Boston, though there’s a good bit on their bandcamp page about recording in the French countryside, so I guess they’re fancy Boston. And, though the name is singular, there appear to be two primary Magic Men, if you will—Sam Lee + Alex Caplow. But despite our severe lack of knowledge on the subject of Magic Man, we’ve got the one insight needed to write up a band…we really like their music. Indisputable fact. Prove me wrong.”

Though they’ve clearly expanded beyond a two-piece, the latter sentiment remains true. And that actual expansion—both in terms of the size of the band + the development of their sound—is what has us so excited about this week’s Song, “Texas”, and the other two tracks that make up the EP they released last month, The Fox Den Demos.

We feel like we’re witnessing one of those significant steps in a band’s career when they build out from a solo or duo project into something much more complex, compelling, and complete. The result is a fuller sound that still resides within solid, creative song-writing while benefiting from the dynamic creativity of a larger group.

We “really liked” Magic Man before; now we fucking love them.

Listen to “Texas” to see what we mean. We’ve also embedded the The Fox Den Demos below so you can hear the other two tracks, also stellar. Finally, we re-posted their track, “Darling”, which we originally posted in 2011, so you can hear a little bit that evolution from ‘awesome’ to ‘aaaaaaaaaaaaaawesooooooooooooooome’.
The band will be playing Terminal 5 with Cincinnati’s Walk the Moon this September—not our favorite venue, but maybe worth the hardship given that lineup.Album art by Ted Wiggin.
 

The Fox Den Demos by Magic Man

Well-played, iStock. Well-played.

Reader, we may not be in our mid-twenties any more, but we know a summertime drinking anthem when we hear it. Wise Blood’s new track “Universe is Blessed” is just that.

Wise Blood—AKA, Pittsburgh’s Chris Laufman—plays what can easily be described as very hard to describe music. Call it lo-fi bedroom pop; call it glitched-out hip hop; call it fighting your way through a tar pit of electronic sounds + creeped out lyrics—we call it really, really good.

Laufman hit the scene out of nowhere back in 2010, when he quietly posted a superbly gritty EP to bandcamp (you can still download it over there for $5). He followed it up well with a slightly more polished release, These Wings, and then, after some very well-recieved supporting live shows, seemed to drop off the face of the earth.

This past March, it was announced via a very bizarre video (below) that Wise Blood would be resurfacing with his highly-anticipated debut full-length, id, out on Dovecote Records June 25.

Download “Universe is Blessed” to listen to Laufman detailing his recipe for this year’s must-have summer cocktail—”double martini with two olives on the side / a little rat poison and a shot of turpentine”. Just wait, you’re totally going to start seeing that on the old-school artisanal speakeasy menus of Brooklyn. Note that the MP3 for this one’s pretty large, so you may or may not be able to play it on-screen. If it gives you trouble, just go ahead and right-click to download. It’s a good one.

You can stream another track from id below—the equally trippily awesome “Rat”—and watch the very strange video announcing Wise Blood’s new album, during which Dog the Bounty Hunter slo-mo chases down…Dog the Bounty Hunter as Laufman looks on eerily, inapplicable child in-hand. Which oddly seems like a kind of fitting analogy to Wise Blood’s music….

Laufman + company will be playing a sure-to-sell-out record release show right here in Brooklyn Tuesday, June 25 at the Glasslands in Williamsburg. Maybe Dog will be there.

 
 

A huge thanks to everyone who came out to the Bell House last night as we all celebrated the Smiths, Mr. Steven Patrick Morrissey, and his 54 years on this earth with the tremendous Sons & Heirs. It was like stepping back into the mid-80s.

We’d also like to thank all of our sponsors + participants for making the evening truly special: Brave Gentleman • Laika Magazine • MooShoes • Monk’s Meats • Isa Chandra Moskowitz • Regal Vegan • Terry Hope RomeroTres Belle Petit Medi-Spa • Vaute Couture.

We’ll have one final related giveaway from one of these lovely sponsors next week, but, in the meantime, everyone have a great holiday weekend! Here’s a Vine of John from MooShoes bestowing his some crab-dance-love on the Sons & Heirs to send you off! Thanks to Neysha for shooting this one.

I know, right? What’s with us + single-syllable plural electronic bands from LA lately?
Baths is 24-year-old Will Wiesenfeld, a classically trained musician who began learning the piano at age 4. Though he’s since ditched the ivories for a largely electronic sound peppered with blipping, clicking, clacking real-world samples, Wiesenfeld’s training comes through in his complexly layered song-writing + the striking ability to develop what could easily be unexciting background atmospherics into compellingly beautiful music.

Though Wiesenfeld’s released varrying music under other names, Baths’ debut release was 2010’s Cerulean, an album that he recorded in two months in his bedroom + that earned him year-end “Best Of” recognition from the likes of Pitchfork and The Onion’s A.V. Club.

Baths’ sophomore album, Obsidian, is due out next Tuesday, May 28, and it promises to be deeper emotionally + musically, with darker themes + more prevalent vocals than Cerulean. But don’t worry—the admittedly positive Wiesenfeld is just tapping into these themes for the good of the record, as he’s quick to point out:

“The songs and lyrics all came out of a pretty fucked and arduous process of trial and error. But I hope people understand that I’m not the depressed, suicidal, and death-obsessed person the record may paint me as being. These are just darker areas that I wanted to explore.”

I for one thank Wiesenfeld for his dogged pursuit in the spirit of intrepid musical explorers before him—what we’ve heard of Obsidian to date tells us it has more than paid off.

Download + listen to the album opener, “Worsening” below + then stream the much more upbeat “Miasma Sky” to get a feel for the new one. You can pre-order Obsidian on CD or vinyl via Baths’ label, Anticon, or digitally via iTunes. Baths is on tour in North America now + will be hitting up New York’s Webster Hall on June 15th.

It’s no secret that, of late, many indie bands have been looking back to 80’s popular new wave for inspiration. Call it dream pop or chillwave or whatever you like—the similarities in sound + style are pretty undeniable. The trick if you’re going to do this, of course, is throwing in a new twist so you’re not just regurgitating what some of us are old enough to have heard the first go ’round.

Lately, we’re hearing a few good takes on this sound coming out of LA. There’s Sky Ferreira, who we wrote up a few weeks back (and, yes, now lives in NYC, but whatevs), then there’s Los Angeles’ Kisses, made up of duo Jesse Kivel (right) + Zinzi Edmundson (left). And yeah, right? Zinzi’s an awesome name. Well-played, Zinzi’s parents!

We enjoyed the band’s 2010 debut, The Heart of The Nightlife, but we couldn’t quite get past the overly 80’s pop facade. Maybe we’ve changed, maybe they have, or maybe we’ve been LA-brain-washed, but we’re feeling the band’s follow-up, Kids in LA (out tomorrow).

Where Nightlife hooked us every now + then with some solid song-writing, the end sound was just a little too hollow + uncertain as to what it wanted to be, especially in the percussion department. And, whereas Kids is no less 80’s-sinpired—it may be even more so—it seems to have fully embraced its own sound and, overall, feels more full in sound + fully developed in song-writing. From the album bio:

“Kids In LA is a departure from the luminosity of their first album, focusing instead on the starker wintertime in Southern California. While The Heart of the Nightlife took listeners on a neon-hued journey through Palm Springs at peak vacation season, Kids in LA inverts that thematic motif, opting to explore the empty and slightly-haunted off-season of the vacation world. The glimmering parties and easy social experiences of the first album make way for the disquieting stillness and vacuous silences of abandoned beach chairs, covered pools, and peeling wallpaper.”

Fair enough, but their wintertime is like our early summer. I bet there’s not a frost warning there tonight.

Listen to “Hardest Part” from Kids in LA (below) + see if it leaves you feeling cold. If not, check it out on iTunes or pre-order the vinyl + (yes) band-sanctioned Hawaiian shirts from Kisses’ label, Cascine. The band is on tour now, playing San Francisco tomorrow night followed by a few more western destinations before jaunting over to Japan + then coming full-circle—I assume? I don’t know how planes work—to play Brooklyn’s very own Cameo Gallery during the Northside Festival next month. You can see their full show listing on the band’s Facebook page.

Top photo by David Kitz; photo below by David Studarus.
 

Alright, Reader, this is our third + final giveaway leading up to At Last I Am Born—the show at we’re sponsoring at Brooklyn’s Bell House next Wednesday.

Last week’s Moz Birthday Gift Set went to Ms. Kim Seventeen, who won a whole wealth of animal-friendly, Morrisey-approved goods, from cookbooks to gourmet spreads to a spa treatment. Congrats, Kim! Enjoy!

This week, we’re finishing things off in in style with some more help from our very kind friends.

Again, all you need to do to be entered is buy a ticket to the show before this Friday. If you’ve already ordered tickets to the show, you’ve automatically been entered in this drawing, so no worries! We’ll randomly chose a winner from all the pre-sale ticket buyers (minus the two who’ve already won) this Friday at, say, noon or so.

This week’s giveaway includes:
• A beautiful waxed canvas motorcycle jacketfrom Vaute Couture, NYC’s independent fashion house devoted to developing apparel + fabrics that are better than wearing animals ever could be (NOTE: the winner will contacted via email + asked to chose men’s orwomen’s jacket (each pictured above) + jacket sizing);
•Two more cookbooks from authors Terry Hope RomeroIsa Chandra Moskowitz—co-authors of vegan cooking bible, Veganomicon—the oh-so-sweet Vegan Cupcakes Take Over the World + Vegan Cookies Invade Your Cookie Jar;
• Another $25 gift certificate from award-winning Boerum Hill medi-spa, Tres Belle, who offers environmentally + animal-friendly skincare treatments;
• A final copy of the premiere issue of Laika Magazine—the new vegan lifestyle magazine;
• And a final gift certificate for a dinner box from Monk’s Meats—New York’s seitan specialists—that’s good for one ready-to-eat dinner like the one pictured below, including truffled house-made seitan, mashed potatoes with wild ramps, + sautéed local greens.

Buy your tickets now + get those fingers crossed. And if you haven’t yet checked them out, watch The Sons & Heirs—who will be performing at the show—play their spot-on version of “This Charming Man” below.

I know—we can’t stop talking about LA, can we?

But check out this cute video of speed-dating dance parties for a track from Sweden’s Shout Out Louds new one, Optica. From the band’s frontman, Adam Olenius:

“In Sweden, to get 25 people to dance and act or even show up for a video shoot or anything in that area you have to buy them copious amounts of booze and lure them with money. In LA, the city of dreams, they show up for nothing and shimmer!”

Oh, LA.

You can stream Optica in its entirety over on the site of the band’s label, Merge.

Like we announced last week, leading up to At Last I Am Born—the show at Brooklyn’s Bell House that we’re sponsoring in honor of Morrissey’s birthday with The Sons & Heirs—we’re celebrating three weeks of giveaways from some of our favorite animal-friendly establishments.
Last week’s Moz Birthday Gift Set went to one Mr. John Gazley, who, in addition to experiencing a rollicking good time in a couple weeks, will now also be receiving a bevy of vegan + veg-friendly products just for buying a ticket to the show.We have two more drawings coming up—our final one, next week which we’ll announce next Monday, and this week’s, which features a couple awesome cookbooks from one of our favorite cookbook authors, some animal-friendly pampering products + services, + some delectable vegan eats (see below).

Again, all you need to do to be entered is buy a ticket to the show before we’re done with the drawings at the end of next week. If you’re planning on attending, it’s what one would call a “no-brainer”—order tickets now + you’ll be entered into this week’s + next week’s drawings.

This week’s giveaway includes:
• Not one but TWO cookbooksViva Vegan! +  the recent collection of international recipes, Vegan Eats World—from author Terry Hope Romero, co-author of vegan cooking bible, Veganomicon (we interviewed Terry on the occasion of her publishing of Viva Vegan! back in 2010 if you care to read it);
• A $25 gift certificate from award-winning Boerum Hill medi-spa, Tres Belle, who offers environmentally + animal-friendly skincare treatments;
• The Beard + Body Brick—a natural black pepper + geranium soap from 100% vegan NYC clothier + groomer Brave Gentleman;
Gourmet spreads from Brooklyn-based Regal Vegan + a Regal Vegan tee shirt;
• Another copy of the premiere issue of Laika Magazine—the brand new vegan lifestyle magazine;
• And a gift certificate for a dinner box from Monk’s Meats—New York’s seitan specialists—that’s good for one ready-to-eat dinner like the one pictured below, including truffled house-made seitan, mashed potatoes with wild ramps, + sautéed local greens.

Buy your tickets now and see you at the show!

Listening to twenty-year-old self-taught British singer/songwriter, Lewis Watson, many musicians (your writer included) may initially have a reaction akin to that of Doogie Howser‘s older counterparts. Something along the lines of ‘How the hell is this kid so good/what have I done with my life?’

Poor other doctors.

Watson’s endearing, beautifully delicate music makes it pretty easy to come to terms with one’s own antiquated feelings of inadequacy though. His soulful vocals and stripped-down, rootsy, guitar-based songs strike an affecting balance between subtle R+B and your traditional emotive new folk that easily pulls you in as a listener.

Though Watson’s now on the British imprint of a major label, he rose to prominence through what’s now become a fairly familiar method—posting videos of himself covering other people’s music on YouTube, gaining particular recognition for his cover of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car”.

Listen to the almost-title lead track from his new EP, The Wild, “Into the Wild” below and then download another wonderful cover he’s recorded—”Hold On” originally by London-based electronic artist, SBTRKT.

You can also check out his video for “Into the WIld” below and purchase his new EP digitally on iTunes or head to Watson’s site to order signed CDs + vinyl.

Listen to more music on Watson’s SoundCloud page.

Top photo by Josh Shinner; live photo below by Sarah Louise Bennett.