News Archive: January 2010

Parenthetical Girls premiere first music video in Privilege series

Friday, January 29th, 2010

VIDEO: “Evelyn McHale” (Dir. by Judah Switzer)

MP3: “Evelyn McHale”


Parenthetical Girls


**PLEASE CONTACT US WITH INTERVIEW OR DIGITAL PROMO REQUESTS**

“We never meant you any harm.” Ever the pragmatists, Parenthetical Girls are set to release Privilege–the band’s new full length–as a box set of five extremely limited 12″ EPs on their own Slender Means Society label. These EPs will be sold separately in sequence every quarter over the next 15 months, each as they are completed. They will not be distributed to stores. As the cycle concludes in May of 2011, the fifth and final 12″ will come packaged in a beautiful, aesthetically cohesive LP box designed to house all four of the preceding releases, forming the complete Privilege album. Limited to 500 physical copies per EP, the 12″s will each feature original art by renowned Swedish illustrator Jenny Mörtsell, and will be hand-numbered in the blood of their respective band members. The first 12″–subtitled On Death & Endearments–will be released on February 23, 2010.

When last we left Parenthetical Girls, the group had undergone a seismic shift in both scope and purpose, shedding the trappings of their past–and of indie rock altogether–with their critically acclaimed Orchestral Pop opus Entanglements. An experiment in Pop maximalism, Entanglements took perverse pleasure in blending the bloated chamber arrangements of a century’s worth of pop history with the rhythmic dissonance of modern classical composition–and then topping it all off with a dense, Joycean novella narrated in part by a pedophile. Needless to say, it was all a lot to swallow.

Having taken pop extravagance to its logical conclusion, Parenthetical Girls have given the orchestra their leave–and the resulting transformation is no less momentous. Returning to its core membership of vocalist/songwriter Zac Pennington, multi-instrumentalist Rachael Jensen, and producer/arranger Jherek Bischoff, the group set about a path that they have heretofore never really charted: that of sonic restraint. And though the results could scarcely be called subtle, the language of Privilege is direct and unambiguous–a new creative candor that’s felt in both its words and music. It’s Parenthetical Girls in fighting trim, and the difference is both immediate and undeniable.

The group inaugurates this ambitious experiment with Privilege, pt 1: On Death & Endearments–a compelling four-song suite drenched in the long-latent glam-racket so often suggested in Pennington’s androgynous lilt. Nowhere is this more apparent than with lead-off track “Evelyn McHale,” a Bolan-ian homage that–much like Entanglements’ “A Song For Ellie Greenwich”–imagines the infamous title character as a springboard for more allegorical confessions. The cinematic desperation of “Someone Else’s Muse” follows–its pulsing grandeur underscoring a tale of emasculation and resentment in the face of another’s deserved success. The deathbed march of On Death & Endearments–punctuated by gloriously gated snares and a haunting angel chorus–simultaneously recalls the staggering Hounds Of Love heights of Kate Bush, and the calculating, icy croon of early Roxy Music. The EP concludes with “Found Drama I,” a tragic, Eno-indebted lullaby whose atmospheric longing swells with heartbreaking sweetness. Together, they comprise a bold, strikingly cohesive pop clarion call that further solidifies Parenthetical Girls’ place amongst the most surprising and uncompromising pop groups at work today. And there’s more where that came from.

SELECTED ACCOLADES FOR ENTANGLEMENTS

” one of 2008’s great misunderstood albums.”–The Onion

“A grimly satisfying mix of perversion and symphonic decadence.”–Spin

“There’s a sickness threaded through the intricate gorgeousness of this curious album… A f***ed-up fantasia.”–NME

“sexy to the point where I can’t bear it, it becomes dangerous, dark, harrowing… a story full of moments lush, carnal, and true.” - Said the Gramophone

“more erratic and wretchedly erotic than even the first tow records… beware Pennington, also: he’s a man who could make the ‘cunning linguist’ epithet seem almost serious.” - Plan B

“…as exciting as maybe the first time you heard The Smiths, but much scarier and challenging; I would beg the listener who is bored with bands not taking things far enough, not saying a little too much, to throw in with me and recurrently enjoy what might be my favorite record of the year.” - Three Imaginary Girls

“☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Singularly cohesive… a perfect mess.” - Slant Magazine

“Album of the Year” - Owen Pallett/Final Fantasy, Gareth Campesinos!/Los Campesinos!, & Abe Vigoda

“Songwriter(s) of the Year” - Sound Magazine
privilege
Parenthetical Girls
Privilege: Pt. 1 - On Death & Endearments
(Slender Means Society)
Street Date: Feb. 23, 2010
Formats: Vinyl and Digital only

Track list:

Side A
1. Evelyn McHale
2. Someone Else’s Muse

Side B
1. On Death & Endearments
2. Found Drama I

PARENTHETICAL GIRLS LINKS:
MySpace - myspace.com/parentheticalgirlsband

Press Materials - slendermeanssociety.com/PRESS/privilege1.html

Fol Chen to tour with Liars, new music video, plus covers of Prince & Pink Floyd!

Friday, January 29th, 2010


VIDEO: “The Longer U Wait”




MP3: “In The Flesh” (Pink Floyd Cover)

MP3: “The Beautiful Ones” (Prince Cover)

Fol Chen

Fol Chen had an incredible 2009, with rave reviews of their debut album on Asthmatic Kitty, Part One: John Shade, Your Fortune’s Made. They shot a video with the Laker girls. They covered Prince’s “The Beautiful Ones” for Spin’s Purplish Rain compilation and Pink Floyd’s “In The Flesh” for MOJO’s tribute to The Wall. They hit the airwaves with live performances on the BBC and KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic and were featured on NPR’s Fresh Air with Terry Gross. They were remixed by many (including Liars) and did remixes of many others (including Junior Vasquez)

So, how do you top that for the new year and the new decade? Well, you start with a tour with the Liars, start work on a new LP and in your free time work with Emmy award winning director, Chris Wilcha to provide folks on a high concept music video shot in India to tide everyone over til the next record.

What the press has said about Fol Chen:

“Sinister fun” - Los Angeles Magazine

“L.A.’s best new band? Probably. Fol Chen’s beguiling, witty synth-pop with guitar, funky keyboards and West Coastian harmonies.” - LA Weekly

“[Fol Chen] has already garnered online buzz with the first single, “Cable TV.” The wildly infectious dance tune begins with a dash of sitar before digital blips and drum machine hand claps jump in, with smooth female vocals. “Won’t you come away with me?” she asks…The result is a record that balances light and dark, and is fresh enough to hold listeners captive.” - NPR

“Eclectic enigmas devise eerie pop conundrums.” - SPIN

“Fol Chen has a tasty way about them with a minty tang reminiscent of Hot Chip, Subtle and other quality contemporary layer lifters and psyche pokers…So hardtack-slippery, so jagged-smooth, so bouncing-still is what Fol Chen has wrought that pinning it down in “reviewer-speak” seems a disservice. It’s catchy as f*** in places and a touch scary in others but it’s never a dull ride.” - Jambase

“The music itself is alternately catchy and dark, following a typical story arc with moments high and low, jubilant and brooding…the result is a disc whose intricate songs fuel both cerebral readings and trips to the dance floor.” - Impose

“The Highland Park-based combo plays deadpan electro-pop that should be all arched eyebrows, but it’s arranged so warmly and invitingly that its precision feels less cold than careful.” - Los Angeles Times

“There’s a little bit of Grizzly Bear/Animal Collective density in their sound, but Fol Chen are poppier, sunnier, befitting a West Coast disposition.” - Brooklyn Vegan


FOL CHEN

04/10 Los Angeles, CA El Rey *
04/14 Washington, DC Rock ‘n Roll Hotel *
04/15 New York, NY Bowery Ballroom *
04/16 Philadelphia, PA First Unitarian Church *
04/17 Boston, MA Paradise Lounge *
04/18 Brooklyn, NY Music Hall of Williamsburg *
04/27 San Francisco, CA Slim’s *
04/29 Portland, OR Hawthorne Theatre *
04/30 Vancouver, BC VenueCanada *
05/01 Seattle, WA Neumo’s *

* = w/ Liars


FOL CHEN LINKS


MySpace - myspace.com/folchen

Press Materials - asthmatickitty.com/fol-chen

Moon Duo announces West Coast tour dates, playing SXSW

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

MP3: “Stumbling 22nd St.”


Moon Duo

San Francisco’s Moon Duo was formed in 2009 by Sanae Yamada and Erik Johnson (Wooden Shjips). Inspired initially by the legendary duo of John Coltrane and Rashied Ali, Moon Duo counts such variant groups as Silver Apples, Royal Trux, Moolah, Suicide, and Cluster as touchstones. Utilizing primarily guitar, keyboards, percussion and vocals, the duo plays space against form to create a primordial and disorienting sonic stew. The group released two acclaimed records in 2009: the debut 12″ single, Love on the Sea, on Sick Thirst, and the Killing Time EP on Sacred Bones. Their follow-up long-player, Escape, on Woodsist, marks the fullest realization yet of the young group’s evolving sound.

MOON DUO

2/11 · Hemlock Tavern, San Francisco, CA *
2/12 · Synchronicity Space, Los Angeles, CA #$
2/13 · Showcave, Los Angeles, CA #&
2/15 · KDVS Radio, Davis, CA
2/16 · Brookedale Lodge, Santa Cruz, CA %
2/18 · Rendezvous, Seattle, WA +
2/19 · ANZA Club, Vancouver, BC ^
2/20 · East End, Portland, OR @
3/17 - 3/20 SXSW Austin, TX

* = w/ Nothing People, Epikurs Euforie
# = w/ Psychic Handbook
$ = w/ Pocahaunted
& = w/ Former Ghots, Popdrone
% = w/ The Entrance Band, Lights
+ = w/ Du Hexen Hase, Midday Veil
^ = w/ Stellar OM Source, Pacific City Nightlife Vision Band
@ = w/ Urinals, Leaders, Eat Skull

moonescape

Moon Duo
Escape
(Woodsist)
Street Date: Feb. 16, 2010

Side A
Motorcycle, I Love You
In the Trees

Side B
Stumbling 22nd St
Escape

MOON DUO LINKS:
Label Page - woodsist.com

MySpace - myspace.com/moonduo

The Fresh & Onlys announce Spring tour dates

Monday, January 25th, 2010

MP3: “Dude’s Got a Tender Heart”

MP3: “Invisible Forces”


The Fresh & Onlys photographed by Brian Pritchard

When Tim Cohen told Shayde Sartin he was writing a song called “Be My Hooker,” the Fresh & Onlys bassist looked at the singer/guitarist and said… “‘There’s no way we’re gonna have a song with that title, dude,’” explains Sartin. “But sure enough, he laid a riff down and I was like, ‘Jesus Christ, I can’t believe you pulled something meaningful out of such a stupid line.’”

Welcome to the push/pull dynamic that’s fueled the Fresh & Onlys’ steady stream of releases over the past year, including last spring’s self-titled LP (Castle Face) and last fall’s Grey-Eyed Girls (Woodsist). And to think it all started the old-fashioned way-with Sartin and Cohen simply hanging out after work, playing their favorite punk (Buzzcocks, The Mekons) and classic rock (Country Joe and the Fish, cued up alongside slabs of psych from the group’s homebase, San Francisco) records alongside a growing collection of empty beer cans.

“I can’t really explain what happened or why,” says Sartin. “I guess we listened to records until we were on the same page, and from that point on, we never stopped recording.” As simple as all of that sounds, the duo first bought a tape machine five years ago. When that failed to produce any concrete cuts, Cohen focused on his previous avant-pop band, Black Fiction, and Sartin split his time between session and live work for such bands as the Skygreen Leopards, Papercuts and Citay. Not to mention his close friend Kelley Stoltz, who ended up releasing the first Fresh & Onlys 7″ (the limited Imaginary Friends EP) in early 2008.

With so much music hitting shops in such a short time (Sartin says the band already has boxes of backlogged tapes), you might think the Fresh & Onlys camp have a problem with quality control. Quite the contrary; Sartin and Cohen are very careful about what they release. And while the duo writes and records the band’s songs, the arrangements are usually fleshed out with guitarist Wymond Miles, drummer Kyle Gibson, and backup singer Heidi Alexander. “If we take a song into the studio or a live setting and it doesn’t have wings,” says Sartin, “Then we just ditch it and keep the charming demo version.” The final mix of Grey-Eyed Girls sounds like a natural bridge between the raucous garage rock of the group’s debut and the full-on studio record they plan on wrapping for In the Red later this year. That goes for the galloping grooves of “Happy To Be Living,” the shadowy post-punk of “Invisible Forces,” and the firework finale freak-outs that drive “The Delusion of Man.” Not to mention a stack of hook-slinging tracks that nix any ’shitgaze’ assumptions you may have. “We’re not trying to hide melodies or do the blown-out thing,” says Sartin. “A lot of those bands are great, but I don’t want to ever cater to what’s popular. It’s not that I’m being reactionary; we’re just trying to make recordings that are as rich and ear-friendly as possible.”

It’s working.

THE FRESH & ONLYS

02/24 San Francisco, CA Rickshaw Stop (Noise Pop) *
03/12 Goleta, CA The Hard To Find Showspace #
03/13 Los Angeles, CA Spaceland #$
03/17 - 03/20 Austin, TX SXSW
03/23 Tallahassee, FL The Engine Room %
03/24 Orlando, FL Backbooth %
03/26 Tampa, FL Crowbar %
03/27 Atlanta, GA The Earl &
03/29 Carborro, NC Cat’s Cradle &
03/30 Asheville, NC Orange Peel &
03/31 Chattanooga, TN JJ’s Bohemia &
04/01 Nashville, TN Exit In &
04/02 Memphis, TN Hi-Tone Cafe &
04/03 Birmingham, AL Bottletree &
04/05 Austin, TX Emo’s Alternative Lounge Outside &
04/06 Dallas, TX Sons of Hermann Hall &
04/08 Denver, CO Bluebird &
04/09 Salt Lake City, UT Urban Lounge &
04/10 Boise, ID Neurolux &
04/11 Portland, OR Wonder Ballroom &
04/12 Vancouver, BC Venue &
04/13 Seattle, WA Neumos &
04/15 San Francisco, CA Bimbo’s 365 Club &

* = w/ Foreign Born, Free Energy
# = w/ Wounded Lion
$ = w/ Surf City
% = w/ Woven Bones
& = w/ King Khan & The Shrines
alby
The Fresh & Onlys
Grey-Eyed Girls
(Woodsist)
Street Date: Sept. 15, 2009

1) Black Coffin
2) Grey-Eyed Girl
3) No Second Guessing
4) What’s His Shadow Still Doing Here
5) Invisible Forces
6) Dude’s Got a Tender Heart
7) D.Y.
8) Happy To Be Living
9) What Goes In Circles
10) I’m Gonna Be Your Elevator
11) Clowns (Took My Baby Away)
12) The Delusion Of Man

THE FRESH & ONLYS LINKS:
Label Page - woodsist.com

MySpace - myspace.com/thefreshonlys

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