Unknown Mortal Orchestra releases crunchy new single, “American Guilt,” ahead of upcoming tour.

UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA SHARES NEW SONG
“AMERICAN GUILT,” ANNOUNCE 2018 TOUR DATES

Today, Unknown Mortal Orchestra returns to the world with a new song and a bounty of tour dates that span the globe. The new song, “American Guilt,” hints at more new material to come, while the dates indicate that this will be a busy year for the band. Purchase tour tickets at www.unknownmortalorchestra.com.

LISTEN TO “AMERICAN GUILT”
Spotify: http://spoti.fi/2n3TzOb
Apple Music: https://apple.co/2F1OcpP
 

Linkfire: https://unknownmortalorchestra.lnk.to/americanguilt

“American Guilt” Single Artwork
UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA TOUR DATES:
April 22 – Northampton, MA @ Pearl Street w/ Makeness
April 23 – Portland, ME @ Port City Music Hall w/ Makeness
April 25 – Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Steel w/ Makeness
April 26 – Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Steel w/ Makeness
April 27 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club w/ Makeness
April 28 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer w/ Makeness
April 30 – Boston, MA @ Royale w/ Makeness
May 1 – Montreal, QC @ Corona Theatre w/ Makeness
May 2 – Toronto, ON @ Danforth Music Hall w/ Makeness
May 3 – Chicago, IL @ Vic Theatre w/ Makeness
May 4 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue w/ Makeness
May 7 – Seattle, WA @ The Moore Theatre w/ Makeness
May 8 – Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom w/ Makeness
May 9 – Portland, OR @ Roseland Theater w/ Makeness
May 10 – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater w/ Makeness
May 11 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Wiltern w/ Makeness
May 12 – Pioneertown, CA @ Pappy and Harriet’s w/ Makeness
May 18 – Hamburg, Germany @ Uebel & Gefährlich w/ Makeness
May 19 – Berlin, Germany @ Kesselhaus w/ Makeness
May 20 – Heidelberg, Germany @ Karlstorbahnhof w/ Makeness
May 21 – Düsseldorf, Germany @ zakk w/ Makeness
May 22 – Paris, France @ La Gaîté Lyrique w/ Makeness
May 24 – London, United Kingdom @ Roundhouse w/ Makeness
May 25 – Bristol, United Kingdom @ SWX w/ Makeness
May 26 – Manchester, United Kingdom @ Strange Waves
May 27 – Leeds, United Kingdom @ World Island
May 28 – Brussels, Belgium @ Ancienne Belgique w/ Makeness
June 10 – Hilvarenbeek, Netherlands @ Best Kept Secret Festival
July 6 – Richmond, VA @ The National w/ Shamir
July 7 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel w/ Shamir
July 8 – Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse w/ Shamir
July 9 – Athens, GA @ Georgia Theatre w/ Shamir
July 11 – New Orleans, LA @ Republic w/ Shamir
July 12 – Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall w/ Shamir
July 13 – Austin, TX @ Stubbs BBQ w/ Shamir
July 14 – Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater w/ Shamir
July 16 – Englewood, CO @ Gothic Theatre w/ Shamir
July 17 – Ogden, UT @ Ogden Amphitheatre w/ Sylvan Esso, Shamir
July 18 – Las Vegas, NV @ Vinyl at Hard Rock
July 19 – Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom
UMO Online:
https://twitter.com/umo
http://unknownmortalorchestra.com/
http://instagram.com/unknownmortalorchestra
http://www.jagjaguwar.com/artist.php?name=umo
https://www.facebook.com/unknownmortalorchestra

Interview: Steve Davit

Multi-instrumentalist Steve Davit is well-known for his bass and saxophone work with Marian Hill, but he is also a fine solo artist in his own right who blends jazz with electronica, hip hop, and even video game music-influenced cuts.  His first EP, Coniferous, will be out soon.

I spoke with Steve Davit about Coniferous, his work with Marian Hill, jazz, video games, and dreams.

7th Level Music: I’m really looking forward to this new EP.

Steve Davit: Yeah, me too.  I’m just about done with the third track.  I just need to do some mastering tweaks, making sure it sounds right, and finish up the fourth track.

7LM: Is it going to be four tracks?

SD: It’s going to be four tracks.  For physical copies, there’s going to be a bonus fifth track that’s like an improv type of thing.  Timeline wise, I don’t think it’s possible to get an actually produced fifth track before I’m going to release it, which is sometime in March.  It’s a little nebulous now, but Marian Hill is going on tour in April.  I want to have some stuff ready for that, so I came out with four tracks.  I figure, if and when I write more music, I’ll just make another EP.

7LM: How long have you been working on this one?

SD: I didn’t intend to make an EP, so it didn’t have a set start date.  I’ve been writing music for a while.  Early last year, maybe late early 2016.  It basically started with me being upset that I hadn’t written any music in a while because I had been doing a lot of touring.  I had released an album in May 2012 for my senior project, but I hadn’t released any music since then.  So every year, I’ve been like, “I’m going to write more,” but I never did.  So I set a challenge for myself that for sixty days I would write a groove every single day.

7LM: Oh wow.

SD: A groove could be four bars, it could be just a drum beat, a drum beat with chords, or [something] more fleshed out.  A lot of the beats [were from] me on a plane or in an airport beatboxing into my earbud microphone.  I’d record that on my phone and translate that onto my computer.  From that I had maybe ten that I thought were pretty cool.  I showed them to (Marian Hill’s) Sam[antha Gongol] and Jeremy [Lloyd] because I needed some feedback from the outside world, from people whose opinions I respect, and I trust them.  They said, “These few are really cool.  You should make an EP.”  I thought, “Huh.  Okay!”  A lot of the music is a long process of having the idea, letting it germinate, [and] building a way to more efficiently write music and create sounds.  It’s kind of nerve-wracking that I’m finally putting stuff out there, but I’ve found that it’s really resonating.

7LM: You’ve kind of already answered a question I was going to ask you.  I know improvising is a big part of your songwriting structure, and I was wondering if improvisation was part of the process for the EP.

SD: Improvisation to me is, obviously, played out a lot on the saxophone.  Some times I would come up with melodies on the saxophone that were cool, but then little germinations would come from it as I would think of some groove.  I’d start working with a kick drum pattern here, and that wouldn’t be quite right so I’d tweak that, and then I’d have this beat and [I’d] try to come up with some saxophone line that sits on top of that.  That was where the next level of improvisation would come.  With Coniferous, that whole drum craziness thing started off with me having an idea for a five-pattern over a three-pattern and then I thought, “What if I remove every other one?” or “What if it’s all weird, rhythmic stuff that just turns into something cool?”  I thought, “I should do something with this, because it’s really cool, but I don’t know what.”  Sometimes I’ll improvise something and then cut that up and be more meticulous about what it ends up being.  That said, a lot of it does stem from me having an idea, recording it, and then translating that or keeping it as is.  It’s all over the place, really.

7LM: You mentioned you went to Jeremy and Samantha.  I don’t know how you got hooked up with them.  Did you know them from way back when?

SD: Yeah, we were high school buds.  I knew Sam but didn’t talk to her much, because she was a grade ahead of me and she was a girl.  Jeremy was in the jazz band with me in middle school [and] a bunch of my high school friends.  We’re all still pretty tight, which is really nice.  It’s been great having that connection to Sam and Jeremy.  After college, they knew they wanted to work together.  I would help them record stuff.  Sam and Jeremy would still write, and I would record and try to make it sound good even though I had no idea what I was doing.  They made some other tracks where they needed to find a cappella horns, and I said, “I’ll just record it for you.”  I sent them twelve minutes of stuff and that turned into “One Time” and “Got It,” and it just kind of grew from there.

7LM: Your set with Marian Hill was one of the best my wife and I saw at Mamby on the Beach last year.

SD: Thank you.

7LM: You mentioned in an e-mail that your bass rig was having trouble at that show.

SD: Yeah, something happened.  I had to unplug my bass because it was making this loud popping noise.  Mid-song I’m switching cables.  [My bass] just stopped.  It wasn’t making sound.  I thought, “This is bad,” but I was able to fix it.  I’m glad it didn’t show.

7LM: Yeah, no one noticed.

SD: I love performing the music.  I don’t contribute to the songwriting or production, but I really like the music.  I like being able to interpret that music and perform it live.  Festivals are great because people are there to have a fun time, and a lot of them don’t know you so you’re winning them over, and you can see the crowd growing over time.

7LM: That was a crazy festival. Did you have any other odd stuff that happened on that tour?

SD: Nothing that crazy for me, but there was one festival…I play with a clip-on mic on the saxophone.  I put that down and pick up the bass and switch back and forth.  Sometimes, when switching, it will fall off.  So I go to play this solo, and I lift up my horn to be all dramatic and the mic pack just slides off and I grab it and I’m able to clip it and be on for the next downbeat.  Sam was like, “I’m really impressed you got that together in time.”  She was frozen.  She didn’t know what to do.  At one point, this is the most terrifying thing, the microphone cable, as I was picking it up from the stand, got hooked on the stand and hooked on one of the keys of my saxophone and it popped out.  You don’t need to know much about the saxophone, but if a key pops out it’s bad.  Luckily though, it was one of the lowest keys.  The lower the key, the lower the pitch.  So if that key is just flopping around and not connected, it doesn’t affect any of the higher pitches.  I was lucky that I could still play the song without affecting it, but there was this thing jangling around and I was freaking out.  There are some songs where I don’t play so I could run backstage and jam it back in and go back out.  It worked, but I needed to get it fixed.  It was partially messed up for a good two weeks.  I’ve been performing for a while, and I know that the audience doesn’t know what you know.  If you mess up, they don’t know as long as you play it off.  I’m usually able to keep my cool when catastrophic things happen.

7LM: Speaking of audiences, have you discovered that your music is popular somewhere you never thought it would be popular?

SD: Yeah.  It’s kind of tricky [because] my current stuff is so new that I don’t have enough data or reach to figure out who found me organically or who found me because I’m with Marian Hill.  There are tons of Marian Hill fans who are all over the globe.  We have an amazing fan account from Brazil.  We’ve never been to Brazil, but this person has their own Marian Hill fan page.  The first time we went to France, they were singing along.  We were like, “What?  We haven’t even been here before and you know our music in English!  This is crazy!”  Even age range-wise, we have parents with their kids who say, “I love your music.  I took my daughter here,” and then you have twelve-year-olds who are in love with Sam.  For my music, I haven’t done too much to actively push my stuff out there, so the fact that you came across it is pretty awesome.

7LM: I got a press release about “Forward,” and I was telling everybody that was easily one of my top dozen singles of the year.  It just floored me.

SD: Thank you.

7LM: Do you have any influences your fans might find surprising?

SD: Yeah, it’s funny you say that.  I was listening to a random mix of songs on Spotify and this one track by Stereolab came on called “Brakhage.”  That is one of my all-time favorite songs, and I can’t quite put my finger on why.  It’s just a phenomenal song, but it doesn’t necessarily seem to influence a more jazz / electronic musician.  That’s kind of a strange influence.

SD: But yeah, I have a lot.  Frank Zappa, Medeski, Martin, and Wood…

7LM: Those guys are great.

SD: Bela Bartok, Brian Eno, Steve Reich.  Steve Reich is one of the most influential.  I got really, really into rhythm and phase shifting and layering rhythms on top of each other, which is what sparked the initial thought of Coniferous.

7LM: I really like how you blend jazz with a little acid house and some electro stuff.  It’s a really cool sound you’ve put together.

SD: Thank you.  I’ve always known that it’s important to listen to a wide array of styles of music.  My Dad liked a lot of music.  He started his jazz world with Keith Jarrett.  Pretty much all the jazz music I listen to came through him.  I met up with Medeski, Martin, and Wood.  One of the big points that they like to stress is how much world music they like to listen to.  I met Bob Moses, who’s a phenomenal drummer.  He’s full of crazy ideas.  He’d play a solo improv with bamboo sticks, a snare drum, and a weird V-shaped triangle thing.  That was back in 2010.  It was getting me down non-traditional paths of music and tying that into connecting with a wider group of people.  It’s one thing to play really weird sounds and noises and stuff, and ten people in the world like it.  There’s a way to take what that thing is trying to say and share it with a thousand people.  I can’t remember who it was, but somebody was saying there are so many people in the world now that, for the most part, you can find a million people who like what you’re doing.  I just want to be able to make music that’s still me, but comes from a lot of different areas and can reach people.  Not be too far out of left field, because I wouldn’t want to listen that necessarily.  I want to do something that I’d want to listen to over and over again, and hopefully other people will find it and listen to it.

7LM: I read that you’re a big-time gamer, and I was wondering if video game music influenced you as well?

SD: Yeah.  For a while in college, in my free time, I worked with my freshman year roommate and a couple people who were in a video game design class.  Their whole job was to create their own video games, and I always jumped on the opportunity to write music for them.  A friend of mine, Andrew Aversa, has this sample library company called Impact Soundworks.  He started getting me into the idea of making money composing for video games.  I went down that rabbit hole for a bit, but decided it was too annoying working for someone else telling you what music they wanted without knowing how to communicate what music they wanted.  I would make something and they would say, “Well, I don’t know.  That’s not quite right.  It’s needs a bit more of this…”  A group of people’s senior project was to create a video game that was playable and had music and all these different sound effects.  I was in that course as an independent study.  I was supposed to have another guy working with me, but he dropped out so all the music and sound effects landed on me.  They kept telling me to redo this one track.  I had one track for six weeks and I said, “Guys, I want to start making other music.”  They were all, “No, this one is really important.”  I thought, “I’m just going to make my own stuff and be the boss of what I’m making.”  It has influenced me, though, because I listen to a lot of that music.  There are certain melodic sensibilities within that, so it’s still in the back of my mind because games have played a big role in my life.  I think as I start to make more music I’m going to start pitching to music houses and other places that license music.  So, instead of writing specifically for a video game, I’ll say, “Hey, which of you people think this music fits with your game or movie or TV show or whatever?”  A good friend of mine was saying “Forward” sounds like the opening theme song for a new Seinfeld.

7LM: Do you have any favorite video games right now?

SD: Zelda: Breath of the Wild is too addicting for my own good.  Video games are too easy to access.  I deleted all my computer games so I can actually be productive with music.  A friend of mine and I have always played Super Smash Brothers together.  He recently started streaming video games online.  He was having a lot of fun of that.  I said, “Hey, I heard this Zelda game is one of the best games ever made.  Let’s get it and share it together.”  I got it recently and started playing with him.  He said, “You can hold onto it for a bit.”  I said, “All right.”  So I played it a little bit, and I kept playing it.  If I’m not careful, it’s going to take over my life.  I’m putting heavy restrictions on my video game playing, but Breath of the Wild is absolutely phenomenal.

7LM: I just dug out my old Sega Genesis.

SD: Oh nice.

7LM: In a weird way, I’m thankful I don’t have the cables yet to hook it up to my high-def TV because I’m going to have to ration it so hard.

SD: Oh yeah.

7LM: Is there anything else outside of music you’re really passionate about or just love to talk about?

SD: The biggest one is dreaming.

7LM: Oh very cool.

SD: Yeah, the psychology of sleep and how it affects your life.  I’ve been keeping dream journals since at least 2005.  I’ve recorded over two thousand dreams.  I’m very into dreaming, controlling your dreams, using your dreams to enrich your life and be creative.  I’ve come up with some music and in dreams.  I’ve come up with game ideas and artwork in dreams, story ideas.  I recently found out that dreaming about traumatic events in a normal functioning brain will actually decrease the emotional response to that event.  Dreaming is kind of an overnight therapy.  There’s a book I’m reading called Why We Sleep (by Matthew Walker).

7LM: Thanks for this.  It’s been great.

SD: Yeah, thanks, man.

Keep your mind open

[Don’t forget to subscribe before you make like a tree and leave.]

The Sword’s new album, “Used Future,” is due March 23rd, but the first single is already here.

Metal masters the Sword will release their next album, Used Future, on March 23rd and are planning a U.S. tour to promote it.  They’ll be touring with another fine stoner rock band – King Buffalo.

The first single from Used Future, “Deadly Nightshade,” is already available and will be an instant download if you pre-order the record.

Keep your mind open.

[Embrace the future!  Subscribe!]

Clutch announce spring tour with Red Fang, the Bronx, and Fireball Ministry.

CLUTCH ANNOUNCE SPRING HEADLINE TOUR DATES 
January 30th, 2018 – Clutch has just announced a string of Spring headline tour dates starting on April 27th in Chattanooga, TN.  Supporting the tour will be The Bronx, Red Fang and Fireball Ministry.  Fan club pre-sale tickets will go on sale today, Tuesday, January 30th at 2:00 pm and will be available through Thursday, February 1st at 10:00 pm.  Fan club tickets will be available at https://www.mt.cm/clutchPassword: fans1. Tickets will go on sale to the general public Friday, February 2nd at 10:00 am at local outlets as well as at pro-rock.com and  www.facebook.com/clutchband.
The band is currently in the studio working on their new record with producer Vance Powell (Jack WhiteChris StapletonOld 97sTyler Bryant & The Shakedown, Red Fang) at Sputnik Sound in Nashville.
Clutch, The Bronx, Red Fang and Fireball Ministry Spring Tour Dates:
*Festival date 
04-27-18  Chattanooga, TN  The Signal
04-29-18  Jacksonville, FL  Welcome To Rockville*
04-30-18  Athens, GA  Georgia Theater
05-02-18  New Orleans, LA  House of Blues
05-03-18  Birmingham, AL  Iron City
05-04-18  Memphis, TN  Beale Street Music Fest*
05-05-18  Lexington, KY  Manchester Music Hall
05-06-18  Charlotte, NC  Carolina Rebellion*
CLUTCH:
Neil Fallon – Vocals/Guitar
Tim Sult – Guitar
Dan Maines – Bass
Jean-Paul Gaster – Drums/Percussion
For more  information, check out the band’s website:
Official: www.pro-rock.com
Keep your mind open.
[Don’t forget to subscribe before you go.]

The Coathangers announce winter and fall tours.

The Coathangers are heading out on tour this winter and spring, starting on the west coast, to promote an upcoming live album.  Some of these dates include shows with Death Valley Girls, Dengue Fever, and Minus the Bear.  Catch them if you can!

Keep your mind open.

[Subscribe and I can be your captain of music news.]

Good rest to you, David James – a local Irish music legend.

Many of you might not know who David James was, but I’ll try to sum up his amazing life in a blog post.

David James was well-known in the South Bend / Mishawaka (“Michiana”) area as a legend in the Irish music scene.  He pretty much put South Bend on the map as a hotspot for Irish music, and he wasn’t even Irish.  He loved the music, promoting it, and most of all playing it.  He played banjo, fiddle, bass, harmonica, and probably half a dozen other instruments I’ve forgotten about as I write this.  He was best known, however, for his mastery of the hammer dulcimer.  David won multiple prestigious awards at Irish music festivals for his dulcimer skills.

He was a Notre Dame graduate with a degree in political science and he remained an avid advocate for social justice all through his life.  He championed workers’ rights, LGBTQ and racial equality measures, education reform, and many other causes that sought to help the underdog.

The way David affected my life was that he co-founded Nocturne – the WSND program for which I DJ in the summer and winter – in 1968.  David worked at WSND as the host of “Celtic Traditions” for many years, broadcasting Celtic music all over the world.  He would often be there when I showed up for my Nocturne shows and tell me stories of playing grimy blues clubs with blues legends, Irish music festivals with hardcore hippies, and being in the middle of the politically charged 1960’s.

He was a lover of all kinds of music and often asked me about the music I spun on my show.  He’d hang out for the first couple tunes I’d play while we chatted and sometimes stop in mid-conversation and ask, “Who is this?”  I introduced him to Ancient River when I played one of their tunes and he said, “Sounds like someone’s been listening to a lot of Doors.”  I also turned him on to Gary Wilson and Earthless one of the last times I saw him over the summer of 2017.

I’ll always think of him when I spin at WSND now, and I wish he could’ve seen the new station once the construction is done.  I’m sure his spirit will slide into the booth now and then when he’s not kicking back a ghostly pint at the Fiddler’s Hearth in South Bend.  I plan to play a tribute to him this summer on WSND with lots of psychedelic rock, blues, and his own music.

Oh yeah, as if his local legacy, national tours with multiple bands, and international awards weren’t enough, he released two albums – Tiompan Alley in 1992 and The Lone Man’s Path a decade later.

Good rest to you, sir.

Keep your mind open.

 

The Damned’s “Evil Spirits tour” has begun, and their new album is out April 13th!

THE DAMNED ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM ‘EVIL SPIRITS’ TO BE RELEASED APRIL 13th VIA SEARCH AND DESTROY/SPINEFARM RECORDS
LISTEN TO NEW SINGLE ‘STANDING ON THE EDGE OF TOMORROW’ ON SPOTIFY

Photo: Steve Gullick
Formed in 1976 at the forefront of the fledgling London punk scene, The Damned kickstarted the birth of punk as we know it, leaving an influential legacy for generations to come. Their musical journey has seen the quintet intent on moving forward, courageously exploring sights and sounds way beyond their brash wide-eyed beginnings – and they’re back to do it all over again.
Some ten years since the release of their last studio recordings, The Damned return with a new album, ‘Evil Spirits’, to be released April 13th on Search And Destroy/Spinefarm Records, preceded by the new single ‘Standing On The Edge Of Tomorrow’, streaming online today ahead of their forthcoming Evil Spirits UK tour starting January 26th.
Propelled by an enormously successful Pledge funding campaign, the band headed to Atomic Sound Studios in Brooklyn in early October 2017 and began a frantic, high-energy, nine day burst of creativity with famed producer Tony Visconti, whose list of past working-relationships reads like a who’s who of popular music. (David Bowie, T Rex, Morrissey, U2, The Stranglers, Iggy Pop and Thin Lizzy to name but a few), Reunited with former bassist Paul Gray (who played on the legendary ‘Black Album’ and ‘Strawberries’ in the early eighties), the renewed line up took full advantage of the studio’s classic Neve recording desk, valve gear and vintage equipment to form the new record.
“We deliberately recorded the album retro style,” explains guitarist Captain Sensible.The same way our debut album was made, basically. There’s something wonderful about the seventies sounds; glam, rock and punk records, they all sound so great and Tony specializes in beautifully crafted old school production. He had us all playing live, bashing it out in the same room with a focus on getting the initial band version of each song as close as possible to the finished thing.“
The first taste of ‘Evil Spirits’ comes in the form of ‘Standing On The Edge Of Tomorrow’, a song penned by frontman Dave Vanian, that packs a punch and carries a melody that is impossibly hard to shift once heard.
It’s supposed to be very optimistic, even though it’s about a dark subject,” states Vanian.As an artist, you can’t help but reflect the times, because that’s what art does. I think we always do it, but in a slightly different way. So a song like ‘Standing…’ may seem quite joyous and uplifting musically, but some of the lyrics might be about quite dark things. That’s what I’d like to think this album is – an uplifting album, not a moaning old album – not ‘this is terrible, and that’s terrible’, and then not offering any answers. It’s more a case of, ‘If we get it together, maybe we could change things a bit”.
Across the album’s ten-tracks, The Damned get to the root of their collective song-writing and ‘Evil Spirits’ is an album which doesn’t shrink from opposing the dastardly political forces at work in 2018, and indeed triumphs in seeking higher ground, to progress beyond them.
“This album is filled with a lot of influences from our earlier, pre-’70s tastes – the ’60s stuff. ‘Standing…’ is really linked into Joe Meek, ‘Telstar’, and that kind of stuff,” continues Vanian. At first, I’d said in an interview before we started writing this stuff that the album would be psychedelic, and maybe a trip through the historical side of The Damned, as in what we like. It didn’t happen in the way I thought it would, but it still does the same thing. It still has all that in there, but it’s not as obvious as it could’ve been, which is good. It’s not like pastiches of songs you remember, it’s more a case of, what was great about something you loved as a kid has somehow influenced a guitar sound, or the way the drums are. You might not even know it if you’re one of our younger fans, but if you’re a little older, you’ll hear it, which is kinda cool.”
And of the ‘Evil Spirits’ that the album intends to dispel?  “I started buying records in 1967, the Summer of Love,” adds Captain Sensible. “There were so many positive changes happening through the 60s and 70s; civil rights, feminism, the anti-nuclear demos in particular. Whatever happened to all that? Where are today’s anti-war marches? Whatever happened to the beautiful hippy dream of worldwide peace and love?”
Evil Spirits will be available on digital download via Spotify and i-Tunes, on CD and 180g vinyl available to pre-order HERE

TRACKLISTING: 
1. Standing On The Edge Of Tomorrow
2. Devil In Disguise
3. We’re So Nice
4. Look Left
5. Evil Spirits
6. Shadow Evocation
7. Sonar Deceit
8. Procrastination
9. Daily Liar
10. I Don’t Care
Catch the band on tour this January and February. Main support comes from fabled Stray Cats drummer Slim Jim Phantom (*except Koko), whilst support at Koko and The Forum comes from Kristeen Young.
See The Damned on their ‘Evil Spirits’ tour 2018
27th January – Dundee, Caird Hall
28th January – Glasgow, O2 Academy
30th January – Leeds, O2 Academy Leeds
31st January – Manchester, Academy 1
1st February – Birmingham, O2 Academy
3rd February – Leicester, O2 Academy
4th February – Nottingham, Rock City
6th February – Folkestone, Leas Cliff Hall
7th February – Southend, Cliffs Pavilion
9th February – Cardiff, Great Hall
10th February – Bristol O2, Academy Bristol
11th February – Bournemouth, O2 Academy
13th February – Southampton, O2 Guildhall
14th February – Bexhill De La Warr Pavilion
16th February – Koko, London*
17th February London, O2 Forum
Tickets available HERE
Follow The Damned at:
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Ty Segall – Freedom’s Goblin

It’s hard not to like an album that opens with a song about the lead singer’s dog.

That’s exactly what Ty Segall does on his newest record, Freedom’s Goblin, a sprawling double-album with rock riffs galore, wild horn sections, funk jams, new wave trips, ballads, and psychedelic freak-outs.  The opening track, “Fanny Dog,” launches like a Polaris missile with a full brass accompaniment and Segall shredding his guitar like his dog probably shreds a stuffed animal.

Segall makes a hard right turn on “Rain,” which seems to reveal his admiration for Radiohead with its simple piano chords, unadorned vocals, slightly warped horns (which are all over this record, really) and lyrics about pining for a lover.  His cover of Hot Chocolate’s “Every 1’s a Winner” is outstanding, and one of the best covers anyone has put out in a couple years.  Segall and his crew keep the funk but up the fuzz on it, and we’re all winners for it.  Speaking of funk, the bass on “Despoiler of Cadaver” is downright slick, and the rest of the tune is a weird, disco / new wave fun zone.

“When Mommy Kills You” is appropriately hard-hitting.  “My Lady’s on Fire” is a ballad that displays Segall’s love for 1960’s folk rock, and the saxophone solo on it  immediately gets your attention.  “Alta” is stadium rock brilliance.  Want more cowbell?  There’s plenty of it on the groovy “Meaning,” which blends hot beats with guitar freak-outs.  “Cry Cry Cry” isn’t a cover of the Johnny Cash song, but it does sound like a nice salute to ELO‘s ballads.  “Shoot You Up” is a slugging, chugging song that I think is about the dark side of the record industry, or fame, or both.

“You Say All the Nice Things” and “The Last Waltz” are two love songs, one about love in the now and one about a love lost to death.  One of the longest tracks on the record, “She,” is a wild jam that would be appropriate for any lady wrestler’s entrance music or the theme song for any metal-loving dominatrix.  “Talkin’ 3” is almost a free-form acid jazz session, but with a noise rock band playing at the same time.  “The Main Pretender,” with its skronking, squealing saxophone by Mac DeMarco, was one of my top 10 singles of 2017.  “I’m Free” gets back to Segall’s love of 1960’s folk, and “5 Ft. Tall” has some 1960’s power pop touches to it and then evolves into a garage rock fuzz-fest.  The closer, “And, Goodnight,” is a twelve-minute psychedelic jam and a great finale.

As you can guess, Segall is all over the map on Freedom’s Goblin, but it all works.  He’s created a record that embraces his many influences and is having a great time exploring all of them.  It’s a treat for us as well.

Keep your mind open.

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Loma release “Joy” from upcoming album due February 16th.

LOMA SHARE NEW SINGLE, “JOY”

https://youtu.be/IMUApFRVfRw

SELF-TITLED, DEBUT ALBUM OUT FEBRUARY 16TH ON SUB POP

(photo credit – Bryan C. Parker)

 

Loma, the new project comprised of Jonathan Meiburg, best known as the singer of Shearwater, and Emily Cross and Dan Duszynski of Cross Record, will release their self-titled debut album on February 16th via Sub Pop, with their first North American and overseas tour to follow and more dates to be announced. After presenting singles “Black Willow” and “Relay Runner,” Loma shares the first song the trio wrote and recorded together, “Joy,a song about the giddy, terrifying experience of falling in love, especially against your better judgment. Of that initial session, Meiburg noted “There was something special about the combination of the three of us, and very different from either of our bands. But I think we were afraid to say so out loud, for fear of jinxing it. I remember the hairs on the back of my neck standing up when Emily hit that high, screaming note on the clarinet on ‘Joy’; it sounded like a human voice.” That sense of discovery, stoked by the album’s urgent and searching lyrical themes, is felt throughout the entirety of Loma and extends to the listener.

Listen to Loma’s “Joy” –
https://youtu.be/IMUApFRVfRw

Watch:
“Black Willow” Video – https://youtu.be/u4yA8zM0ifY
“Relay Runner” Video – https://youtu.be/GAIeORh7TLs

Pre-order Loma
http://smarturl.it/loma

Loma Tour Dates:
Fri. Apr. 6 – Phoenix, AZ @ Valley Bar
Sun. Apr. 8 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Bootleg
Wed. Apr. 11 – San Francisco, CA @ Bottom of the Hill
Fri. Apr. 13 – Portland, OR @ MS Studios
Sat. Apr. 14 – Seattle, WA @ Sunset Tavern
Tue. Apr. 17 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
Thu. April 19 – Taos, NM @ Taos Mesa Brewing
Sat. Apr. 21 – Austin, TX @ North Door
Thu. April 26 – Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
Fri. April 27 – Asheville, NC @ The Mothlight
Sat. April 28 – Carrboro, NC @ Cat’s Cradle Back Room
Tue. May 1 – Charlottesville, NC @ The Southern
Wed. May 2 – Washington, DC @ DC9
Fri. May 4 – Brooklyn, NY @ Baby’s All Right
Sat. May 5 – Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda’s
Sun. May 6 – Allston, MA @ Great Scott
Tue. May 8 – Montreal, QC @ L’Esco
Wed. May 9 – Toronto, ON @ The Garrison
Thu. May 10 – Detroit, MI @ Deluxx Fluxx
Fri. May 11 – Chicago, IL @ Schubas
Fri. May 25 – Kortrijk, BE @ De Kreun
Sat. May 26 – Amsterdam, NL @ Paradiso (London Calling)
Sun. May 27 – Brussels, BE @ Botanique
Wed. May 30 – Brighton, UK @ The Hope
Thu. May 31 – London, UK @ Lexington
Fri. June 1 – Bristol, UK @ Rough Trade
Sun. June 3 – Manchester, UK @ Gullivers
Mon. June 4 – Leeds, UK @ Headrow House
Tue. June 5 – Glasgow, UK @ Hug and Pint
Thu. June 7 – Dublin, IE @ Whelan’s
Fri. June 8 – Liverpool, UK @ Buyers Club

Download hi-res press images and album art –
www.pitchperfectpr.com/loma/

MIEN release first single, “Black Habit,” and it’s a doozy.

Is it too early to say I’ve already heard one of the best singles of the year?  MIEN, consisting of the Black Angels‘ Alex MaasElephant Stone‘s Rishi Dhirthe Earlies‘ John Lapham, and the Horrors‘ Tom Furse, have released “Black Habit,” the first single from their debut self-titled album due out April 6th.

The single is a heady, almost nightmarish trip blending psychedelia with a bit of dark wave.  The album is available for pre-order and the band will play live at Levitation Austin this April.  I already have my tickets for their performance.  Don’t wait to get yours, or to order this record.

Keep your mind open.

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