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Tony Williams – Another You (Feat. Kanye West)

kanye-west-tony-williams

The always fly Tony Williams has come through with the full version of “Another You”, his collaboration with longtime friend Kanye West. A snippet of the track appeared on Williams’ Some of My Best Friends Are Rappers mixtape. This final version is slated for inclusion on TW’s upcoming King or The Fool LP. “Another You” is that feel good, sunday afternoon, bbq with the family type R&B. You know these guys had a great time cutting this record.

Tony Williams – Another You (Feat. Kanye West)

Tony Williams texas (Myspace)

Rating 8.5

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reviewed by
02-13-12

Kurt Vile – Baby’s Arms

By Trevor Meyer

kurtvile

Kurt Vile is such a talented artist. “Baby’s Arms” is the opener off of Smoke Ring for My Halo. This is a beautiful, flowing track with patented melodic refrains and that sweet reverberated twang that soothes the soul. To quote my friend, Pat, “Kurt Vile just gets me man, he just gets me.” I think this speaks for all of us.

Kurt Vile – Baby’s Arms

Kurt Vile pennsylvania (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

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reviewed by
02-13-12

TIX GIVEAWAY: A Very Special Valentine’s Day featuring Daniel Ahearn & The Jones, The Sweet Hurt, Correatown and more! @ The Mint, Los Angeles

vdayshow

For those in LA looking to satiate their hearts (with or without that special somebody) with the sound of song this Vday, then A Very Special Valentine’s Day at The Mint is your special… something. The night of song features sets from Daniel Ahearn & The Jones, The Sweet Hurt, Correatown, and Monsters Calling Home. Interested? B3SCI has you covered! Drop us a line and we’ll enter you in our drawing for a pair of tickets to the evening. Because we choo-choo-choose you.

Correatown – All The World (I Tell Myself)

The Mint california (Event Info)

Rating b<3sci

i-choo-choo-choose-you

reviewed by
02-13-12

St. Lucia NYC February Residency!

stluciaresidencynyc

Brooklyn based Neon Gold artist St. Lucia is performing a weekly residency every Tuesday at Pianos in N.Y.C. throughout the month of February with a culminating gig on Thursday, March 1st at Santos… which will also feature a set from The Knocks! If you’re in The Big City, get in the mix for one of these sets from the to-be-2012-noise-maker! Also, get in the mood with this Disco Arcade flip of the St. Lucia track “All Eyes On You”, which is your new singalong for the rest of the day.

St. Lucia – All Eyes On You (Disco Arcade Remix)

St. Lucia newyork (Soundcloud) (Facebook)

reviewed by
02-13-12

Chromatics – Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black) (Neil Young)

chromatics

Chromatics are about to bum you out with their take on the Uncle Neil classic “Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)”. A consensus b3 staff Top 10 Neil song, the bar here for a b3sci co-sign is a lofty one. How do the PDX Chromatics crew measure up then? The cover is cinematic, it’s grand-gesturing but it’s also, at times, sort of tortured and unnecessarily languid; however we think it ticks enough “sweet Neil cover” boxes for us to give it a small “yes”.

Chromatics – Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black) (Neil Young)

Chromatics oregon (Facebook)

Rating 7.8

brown71

reviewed by
02-12-12

Nicki Minaj – Young Forever (Prod. Dr. Luke)

nickiminaj

The Two Nicki Minajs. “Young Forever” is more of the “Super Bass”, appearances on “Ellen”, emulated on YouTube by 10 year olds Nicki that became a pop star last year. That fierce Nicki, that Nicki that reps Young Money (you know Slim, Baby) that chews up just about every rap track she’s featured on, (“Monster”, “All I Do Is Win”, “Bottoms Up”, etc) is all but bottled up on this Dr. Luke produced track. Is this a sustainable dynamic for her? For certain, “Young Forever” is a huge Top 40 track. Like it doesn’t have that instant hookiness or cool uniqueness (like nothing else sounds like it on radio) that “Super Bass” had. “Young Forever” sounds like EVERYTHING on radio right now. This track though will get ramrodded so hard into Hot Hip hip/R&B/Pop radio rotation; the breaking of its’ audience is nothing short of certain. We’re calling a peak at Billboard #4.

Nicki Minaj – Young Forever (Prod. Dr. Luke)

Nicki Minaj newyork (Facebook)

Rating 8.2

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reviewed by
02-12-12

Drake – Crew Love (Feat. The Weeknd) (Shlohmo Remix)

shlohmo

Yessssss! the HQ version of Shlohmo’s lights-down-low (like realllllly low) “Crew Love” remix is finally live. The b3sci fav knocks this mix straight down. Do not miss.

Drake – Crew Love (Feat. The Weeknd) (Shlohmo Remix)

Shlohmo california (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

brown8

reviewed by
02-12-12

Field of Wolves – Don’t Explain

field-of-wolves

Downtempo syncopation and a loose flowing guitar progression frame the soulful jazz-influenced vocal featured on “Don’t Explain”. Field of Wolves is the new project fronted by London-based Aussie-born singer Holly Bestic, who has no doubt done her history-of-soulful-music homework. There’s so many neat diverse textures and layers to sample here. It’s trip-hop, it’s chill, and it jams, and we’ve got our replay set for “Don’t Explain” this Sunday.

Field of Wolves – Don’t Explain

Field of Wolves england (Facebook) (Official)

Rating 8.1

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reviewed by
02-12-12

B3SCI INTERVIEW: Coco Morier

coco-morier1

We recently had the chance to ask budding LA scenestress Coco Morier a few questions. We got her thoughts on music labeling, guilty pleasures and rodeo costumes! Check out the Q&A and her song “Explosions” below.

Q: So who is Coco Morier in a shifting blackhole between commercial and independent music?

A: The satellite of love.

Q: Do you have a take on if there’s an increase in the popularity of independent music and art?

A: I dont see it that way really. There’s always gonna be people that listen to what’s spoon fed to them, and those who dig a bit deeper. It just depends on what the people decide to spoon feed us that might change a bit. But “independent” in the true sense of the word artistically is always there. People just doing what they love with no corporate backing and a community that supports them.

Q: What sort of things entertain you as a fan?

A: I love to see people who put on a show or add some kind of visual element to their performance. That gets me pretty excited and inspired.

Q: Let’s talk dancing. What’s your take on choreography and how important is dancing to you and your music?

A: I never had the budget to really have choreographed dancers or anything but I love it. For me it would be more as a performance art thing and less of a pop type deal. But I love that stuff too, its just not really where I am musically.

Q: You’re rather multi-instrumental, can you see yourself working in a world of remix projects as well?

A: Yeah, I’m working on some remixes right now!

Q: What’s something you listen to that might come as a complete surprise to fans?

A: Ha! I would think if you were a fan and really knew all of my discography there would be little that surprised you. My taste is all over the place. R. Kelley? Slayer? Boney M? The Pointer Sisters?

Q: True that. So then what kind of headspace inspires you to write?

A: All kinds of moods, locations, and studios. I really love to be far away from home like Sweden or Vietnam or something, then I get really creative.

Q: Is there a first instrument that you’ll grab for?

A: Guitar or maybe a drum machine.

Q: Have your prior experiences as a musician effected the way that you approach your music today compared to the past?

A: Well, its nice to be involved in all the different facets of making music. I started out playing live mostly but as soon as I made a record I realized the possibilities in song writing, and that in turn informed my live show because all of a sudden I had to perform stuff how it sounded on the record and not the other way around.

Q: Your live show, that reminds us, who is your mini ‘tiger friend’ that you bring on stage for your live performances? Does it have a name?

A: Not yet, he’s an orphan. I will take suggestions if you got em.

Q: B3tiger. So gotta ask, if you weren’t playing music today then what would you be doing today?

A: I’d be in the rodeo, only for the sequence costumes.

Coco Morier – Explosions

Coco Morier california (Facebook)

reviewed by
02-11-12

B3SCI on VML 2:1 (ft. interview w/ The War on Drugs)

thewarondrugs_bygrahamtolbert

Our first mix of 2012 hit VML yesterday! The show features some choice jams plus a phone-in with Adam Granduciel from The War on Drugs who chatted with Chris Gedos about writing, the band, Zeppelin, and more. Get it below:

TRACK LIST

Intro
Fast Years – Young Heart
mic up: Yuna – Live Your Life
Schoolboy Q – Hands On The Wheel (feat. A$ap Rocky) [edit] mic up: Bruce Rave with Rave’s Fave of the Week
The 2 Bears – Work
The War On Drugs – Brothers
mic up: Chris Gedos phone-in interview with Adam from The War On Drugs
The War On Drugs – Baby Missiles
The Record Company – Born Unnamed

Release date: Feb 10, 2012

Check more b3sci on Virgin Mobile Live, Fridays and Saturdays 12pm pac/ 3pm east. 2:1 on Soundcloud.

Click for b3radio archives.

reviewed by
02-11-12

SHOW REVIEW: Snowmine / Via Audio / Sea of Bees / Beat Radio @ Piano’s, New York 02/09/12

By Erin Routson

snowmine

When I was sixteen, a boyfriend who was leaving for college made me a mix tape with Dashboard Confessional’s “Age Six Racer” on it. His expression was earnest and correct: “Hey thanks, thanks for that summer” would echo in my head repeatedly when he moved away. That was what we used music for when we had just gotten our driver’s licenses and fumbled around each other’s bodies awkwardly any time we were alone. Instead of saying things out loud, or forming our own articulations, we relied on someone like Chris Carraba to say it for us. But we did it. Tapes gave us that veil to be shy but revealing at the same time.

Last night at Piano’s, that same kind of fervent declaration ran rampant, and if I were still a girl of sixteen, you can bet some of the songs would’ve ended up on my mix compilation replies to those boyfriends.

beatradio

Beat Radio started things off, drums & guitar only, giving the music a little more urgency and a little less polish. Brian (drums) and Brian (guitar) led with the most declarative of all, “Teenage Anthem,” the homage to the very mixes I have on the brain. Their material conjures up aimless drives around suburbia, speaks directly to punk rock shows at VFW halls, and most of all seems to focus on that which all rock musicians find their way to express: feelings about love. What I found endearing was the continuum between lyrical exposition and physical exertion: the drummer’s dreamy half-smiles during a particularly strident passage or the singer’s verge into higher register making their songs more heartfelt than an old curmudgeon like me would normally allow herself to fall victim to.

seaofbees

This wade into the soft tissue of everyone’s hearts continued when Sea of Bees took the stage, alone, acoustic in hand. Julie Ann Bee, Jules to her friends, let us into her world of first love and giving without expecting anything in return. Common tropes, maybe, but her voice and turns of phrase during these meditations kept them from being trite. As she expounded on what each song was about prior to playing it (as this was mostly new material), it was hard to stay steely. “I mean these words,” she remarked at one point, after getting a little too open-mic night for New York, and it was obvious she was saying it without any pretense. Her songs were vulnerable without being weak, fragile without any sense that they’d break. I was hoping for a cover of “Don’t Fear the Reaper,” but maybe that’s only because I wanted something, anything, to temper the feelings that welled up.

Via Audio gave me the break I needed. Their pop-over-indie sensibilities reigned as they also worked through new material. Opening with “Tigers,” they set the tone that we weren’t just mining diaries anymore. What they seemed to do, more than anyone last night, was have fun. Their feelings are mixed in their music, but the band is in touch with a little more primal energy than their bill-mates. By the time they reached “Babies,” they actively acknowledged that sometimes, honestly, emotions are only the half of it – capitalizing on pure human attraction is another matter altogether.

Finishing out the night were Snowmine, in the middle of a residency at the venue visiting from the faraway land of Brooklyn. If Spacehog had come out of music culture now, expanded on “In the Meantime” and taken it to a psychedelic, more percussive place, they might have had a chance at being this band. Mossy clumps growing from their keyboards and projections of a density of trees in full force, it was clear we were being taken to the forest. Their spacey, atmospheric sound also allowed me to break from the feelings-fest of the beginning half of the night, but I also didn’t know exactly how I was supposed to feel about what they were saying. In a way, I feel like I lived a whole adolescent life of formative emotions within the walls of Piano’s, just one less fraught.

If I made a mixtape for someone now, it would probably contain music less overt than Beat Radio, somewhere closer to the slightly more ambiguous nature of Snowmine. When talking about it with a friend, we were both sort of ashamed to acknowledge that the directness we’d carried through our teenage years, the years of unabashed declaration of love and adoration, had been buried under irony and detachment, under fear. I know I’d never lead off a mixtape with something so bold now. I have too much guard up; I’d rather you work your way through my twists and turns and figure me out because I feel like I could never be sure enough, now, to start with something so open.

All of the bands last night were sure about how they felt and said it, even if, as their listener, I’m still not.

Snowmine newyork (Facebook)
Via Audio newyork (Facebook)
Sea of Bees california (Facebook)
Beat Radio newyork (Facebook)

reviewed by
02-10-12

Mint Julep – I Never Wanted You (Headphones Cover)

mintjulep

Portland-based husband and wife duo Mint Julep turn in this beautiful subtle version of the Headphones track “I Never Wanted You”. The cover strikes a really nice line between the urgency and tension of the song’s instrumental track and the more withdrawn stylings and delivery of singer Hollie Kenniff. It’s quite the compelling dynamic. Listen.

Mint Julep – I Never Wanted You (Headphones Cover)

Mint Julep oregon (Facebook)

Rating 8.5

brown8

reviewed by
02-10-12