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Breton – Population Density

“Population Density” is the new single from Breton, which comes complete with the bands signature attack and one seriously epic bridge. The UK collective from London will release the track, along with “Governing Correctly” plus Heavy P remix, on November 5th via FatCat Records. The band also recently dropped a new video for the track which you can check out below. One thing for sure, fresh off their successful stint in the States, “Population Density” is one way to keep the momentum going. Keep your radars tuned for more to come from the prolific Breton Labs crew.

Breton – Population Density

Breton england (Official) (Purchase)

Rating 8.4

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reviewed by
10-17-12

Interview w/ Trails and Ways

Team B3SCI recently got to chatting with guitar and synthsmith K B B from hotly tipped, Oakland based quartet, Trails and Ways. Back-and-forth we went about geography, the band’s explosion to the heights of the blogosphere, and even philosophical aesthetics. For those of you in Los Angeles, you can catch Trails and Ways at The Bootleg on Thursday, October 25th for their first ever gig in town. Tickets and details for the show here, and take a look at our conversation with the band below.

B3SCI: What inspired the formation of Trails and Ways, and is there a particular vision behind the tropical rhythms and melodies that the band explore?

T&W: We all knew each other living in the student cooperative houses at Berkeley; after graduating, Emma and I lived in Spain and Brazil, respectively, and came home full of little skeletons of songs. Quirk and I started playing shows in the middle of 2011, and Emma and Hannah joined us later that year.

B3SCI: You guys have mentioned Jorge Ben and Joao Gilberto as influences. We love Brazilian
music. What can you tell us about the impact the music of that country has had on the band as writers and as people, etc…?

T&W: When I lived there, the music was a way for me to understand something more whole than what I got through the colander of words. If I were to make a list of what really left an impression on me from Brazilian music, that list would start: how the old samba or forro songs are cultural bedrocks to the point where everybody at the street parties sings along to every word; how the music isn’t about a spectacle of famous musicians, but about amateurs showing up at bars and playing the hits as a community ritual; how Joao, in “Corcovado”, says “que lindo”.

B3SCI: There’s so many textures and colors throughout your recordings. What’s the most unique instrument that you’ve ever used on one of your tracks?

T&W: The bass drum on our cover of “Animal” is a sample of Quirk rhythmically dropping a large book.

B3SCI: No secrets that Trails and Ways has taken the music blogosphere by storm. How has this effected the band, it’s career and what’s next?

T&W: Definitely feels like it’s opened a lot of doors to us, and it’s great to have felt that a range of folks out there are touched by what we’re doing. We’re cruising along on recording our album right now, getting our live act super on-point, and getting set for an LA tour.

B3SCI: What else can you tell us about the album?

T&W: We’re working on it now, it’s called Trilingual and it’s about what language can and can’t say, and it’ll be out when it’s ready.

B3SCI: Any more details on touring?

T&W: We’re touring to LA 10/25, with a few other Southern California dates around that. We play SF like once a month, so hopefully everybody here knows that! We aim to do some serious touring behind Trilingual when it’s done, so NYC, we’ll see yall in 2013.

B3SCI: When the band isn’t making sun drenched tunes, what do the members of Trails and Ways find themselves doing to bide their time?

T&W: Quirk and Emma are surfers, Hannah and I rockclimb, also Emma and Hannah urban homestead and paint, Quirk and I also work in the clean energy bizness, ACTIVE LIFESTYLES.

B3SCI: Where does Trails and Ways see itself in five years? Where has the band’s evolution lead to?

T&W: Where we wanna be in five years is feminist socialist utopia.

B3SCI: We loved the Marxicized cover of Miguel’s “Sure Thing” (which is really great song btw). Where’d the idea come from to do that with it?

T&W: I’d been living over the summer at a house full of community organizers who loved R&B and Grace Lee Boggs with about the same heft; we blasted Miguel all the time. I knew if we were going to cover an R&B standard I wanted it to speak more from our Oakland reality than Miguel’s LA original.

B3SCI: Troy from our crew studied aesthetics in college. Theodor Adorno’s notion of pseudo-individualization is pretty apt in describing the current indie milieu. Any thoughts?

T&W: Shit, you’re trying to get me to write an essay. Indie music has become part and parcel of the culture industry; it’s a DIY outsourcing of the formerly-studio-centralized songwriting/recording process, and it just leads to nominally quirkier pop music that is no less challenging to the capitalist reproduction of art than is Katy Perry (much respect to her though, she worked damn hard to get what she’s got). This makes me think about something Mike Davis asked in regards to the crass commercialization of NWA; “If the dream factories are equally as happy to manufacture nightmare as idyll, what happens to the oppositional power of documentary realism…?” Indie music does documentation of cool subcultures and bizarre minds, and the culture industry has found a way to package up and resell nearly all of it, from Nirvana pitch-dark or Bombay Bicycle Club sugary. In deep ways, the music business model is changing to make advertising the most lucrative source of revenue for most young indie artists. Advertising becomes dependent on indie music to do its social networking—to make you say, “Whoa cool song, this product must be targeted towards people like me.” And the artists become slyly dependent on the ad revenue, and maybe unconsciously start to make pseudo-individualized hooks and safely quirky production choices that suit 30-second TV spots. In the long run, there is only one solution; public financing of art, like Sweden and Brazil do already in a limited way. In the short term, what’s a band to do? To come back to Mike Davis (can you tell I’m transfixedly reading City of Quartz right now in preparation for our LA tour?), I think we need to make art that is not “advertising art that advertises itself as art that hates advertising”. I don’t know exactly how to always do that, but I think you start by making music that is explicit and proud in its politics, and then by setting clear lines as a band as to what kind of advertising and business bullshit you will not ever take part in.

TRAILS AND WAYS – Mtn Tune (Facebook)

reviewed by
10-17-12

Kendrick Lamar – Poetic Justice (Feat. Drake)

One of the more anticipated good kid, m.A.A.d city has emerged, the (awesome) Janet Jackson-sampling “Poetic Justice” featuring Drake. The smoothest sounds in the cut. Cooler than cool.

Kendrick Lamar – Poetic Justice (Feat. Drake)

Kendrick Lamar california (Facebook)

Rating 8.5

reviewed by
10-17-12

Mitt Romney – Binders Full of Women (Scott Melker Mix)

New genre: Political Trap. Binders full of women, Mitt Romney has them. Cheers to our dude Scott Melker for the absolutely brilliant mix.

Mitt Romney – Binders Full of Women (Scott Melker Mix)

Scott Melker (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.8

brown8

reviewed by
10-17-12

Daughter – Run

“Run” is the b-side to Daughter’s new single for “Smother” (which is equally mindblowing).

Daughter – Run

Daughter (Facebook) (Label)

Rating 8.5

reviewed by
10-16-12

Steffaloo – Can’t You See

We’ve been fans of L.A. singer Steffaloo for a while now (mostly through her collaborations with other artists). Here she takes the lead on beautiful new single “Can’t You See”, which will be on her Would You Stay LP (due next week). Steffaloo is a really special singer with an outstanding capacity to focus intense bodies of emotion into spare and simple melodies and phrasing.

Steffaloo – Can’t You See

Steffaloo california (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

reviewed by
10-16-12

The Family Rain – Trust Me…I’m a Genius

The Family Rain manage to condense many things great about classic British rock in the jangly guitar-driven track “Trust Me…I’m a Genius”. These Bath based rockers render it rowdy and they do it with all the rising star attitude one might expect from a trio of brothers. You can check out this excellent group at the SWN festival in Cardiff, Wales on October 20th and the song will also be released as the bands debut single November 19th via bigger SPLASH. By Erin Feathers

The Family Rain – Trust Me…I’m a Genius

The Family Rain (Facebook)

Rating 8.2357

brown8

reviewed by
10-16-12

Thus:Owls – White Night

“White Night” comes to us via Stockholm collective Thus:Owls. We haven’t been able to stop listening to this. The song’s pop sensibilities and pensive strings serenade us in a way not reminiscent of much anything we’ve heard since a release like Elysium by The Velvet Teen. It’s a pretty undeniable night-cap for any music fan capable of becoming entrenched in a well crafted melancholy. Thus:Owls sophomore new album Harbours is available now via Avalanche/Hoob Records.

Thus:Owls – White Night

Thus:Owls sweden (Facebook)

Rating 8.7

brown8

reviewed by
10-15-12

Eric Prydz – Everyday (Preview)

The Notorious E.P. delivers his latest, the big soulful “Everyday”. You’ll want to turn this one up.

Eric Prydz – Everyday (Preview)

Eric Prydz sweden (Facebook)

Rating 8.6

brown8

reviewed by
10-15-12

Hunting Grounds – Star Shards

Star Shards, the latest single from Aussie band Hunting Grounds, packs a wallop. The track, which is excerpted here from the band’s debut LP In Hindsight, is full force forward from second to start. Punchy melodic bass, reverbed guitar atmospheres, dreamy synths, basically all the b3sci boxes ticked for this sort of style; that and the song, which is really really good too. Give Hunting Grounds your attention in the play box.

Hunting Grounds – Star Shards

Hunting Grounds (Facebook)

Rating 8.3

brown8

reviewed by
10-15-12

RAVE’S FAVE: San Cisco – Awkward

This near-perfect garage pop tune stormed Australia last year and wound up #7 for 2011 on the highly-watched Triple J Hottest 100. San Cisco are uber-young and come from the Aussie town of Freemantle. If you are hooked on hooks, you will probably love the clean guitar intro as well as the boy/girl interchange on the vocals. Awkward is the title of their EP, which drops in the US October 23. They will be at CMJ this week and then will celebrate their record release next Tuesday at The Echo in Los Angeles. By Bruce Rave

San Cisco – Awkward

San Cisco (Facebook)

*Check out Bruce’s Moheak Radio “Go Deep” show on Sunday nights 7-9 pm Pacific, 10-12 am Eastern, 3-5 am GMT. Also, for the benefit of you Europeans the show will now be replayed Wednesday mornings 2-4a Pacific/5 -7a Eastern, so they too can hear it at a civilized time. Listen to past shows at Bruce’s blog and follow Bruce on Twitter.

reviewed by
10-15-12

Gallant – Die Young (Ke$ha Cover)

New York singer Gallant and producer Felix Snow link up for an absolute must hear collaboration. The two restyle Ke$ha’s lukewarm-performing “Die Young” single into an after hours R&B slow burner. Felix Snow’s production choices are especially top class here; the selections in the drum tones and harmonics in the support chord voicings are really special. This cover is BEAUTIFUL. Do not miss it.

Gallant – Die Young (Ke$ha Cover)

Gallant (Soundcloud(/a>)

Rating 8.7

brown8

reviewed by
10-15-12