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Caribou – Can’t Do Without You

caribou

Indie journeyman Dan Snaith readies Our Love his sixth record under the name Caribou. The LP, the follow-up to 2010’s Swim, has a great lead single in the instantly infectious and danceable “Do Without You”. Our Love is out October 6 in the UK on City Slang and on October 7 in the US via Merge.

Caribou canada (Official)

Rating 8.4

brown8

reviewed by
06-03-14

AlunaGeorge – Superstar (Cosmo’s Midnight x Lido Remix)

alunageorge

The terrible twosome of Lido and Cosmo’s Midnight spin a tinkling pianos-aided bit of 2014 electronic music around AlunaGeorge’s track for “Superstar”. The spread between Cosmo’s trop-style rhythms and Lido’s more counter-melodic instrumental technique creates for a very cool dynamic. Do listen.

Cosmo’s Midnightaustralia (Label)
Lido norway (Facebook)

Rating 8.7

brown8

reviewed by
06-03-14

Premiere: Over Sands – Twin Peaks Theme (Falling)

Over Sands Band

Over Sands are a new London-based (via Somerset) duo specializing in cinematic psychedelia-tinged songs with a found-sound/inventive-type percussion element. Aptly, the twosome take on the dramatic sweep of “Falling”, the theme from the David Lynch TV series Twin Peaks on this excellent new cover. The original having the appropriate swirl and space to give Over Sands the right latitude in shaping “Falling” to their taste, it makes for an excellent source material choice. Sample the B3 Premiere of Over Sands’ cover of the Twin Peaks theme “Falling” below.

Over Sands england (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.4

reviewed by
06-03-14

Tennis – Never Work For Free

tennis2

Sample below “Never Work For Free”, the summery new indie pop single from Tennis. From the band’s forthcoming sophomore LP on the brilliant Communion Music Ritual in Repeat, “Never Work For Free” finds Tennis in a bit more finely honed and compact arrangement-wise as the single has an immediacy of pop sensibility that is a level up from LP #1. September 9th is the date to know for the release of Ritual in Repeat.

Tennis colorado (Facebook)

Rating 8.3

brown8

reviewed by
06-03-14

WRAP: The Great Escape 2014 in Brighton, UK

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The Great Escape continues to be an awesome event for new music enthusiasts wanting to get a leg-up on international bands poised to make moves. With the 2014 edition including 400+ bands playing over three days in 30+ venues, there’s no lack of good music to check out. The festival is growing quickly with 100 more bands compared to last year. While The Great Escape (a.k.a. TGE) does share the SXSW danger of becoming too big for its own good, this event (for now) still has far more intimacy than the aforementioned Austin festival. Like always, more bands also means more schedule conflicts, and also like SXSW, even top tier Delegate and Press credentials won’t penetrate lines (or in some cases no lines) at venues. For example, Future Islands sounded great… from outside, and the TGE showcase for Wild Beasts would have been great to review had we also remembered to buy a ticket for it (thought that’s what passes were for)? And so for festivals like this, it seems the best plan of attack is to focus on artists that, to date, either haven’t or rarely play live. Both Bruce and Mike from team B3SCI were on the grounds for TGE and here’s their report:

Some 2014 faves for Bruce included Courtney Barnett, who is not only blowing up in the US but in England as well. She plays a mean guitar as it turns out. The melodic electronic artist East India Youth has been an NME darling this year, and as TGE proved, is doing quite well in England. His one-man show has a clean sound and he’s quite animated on stage. The Isle of Wight brothers, Champs, serenaded us in a church at TGE with their sweet harmonies and were also major highlights. Two UK bands, growing in local buzz, who delivered nicely onstage were Childhood and Jaws. The Australian band Calling All Cars is a metal/electronic hybrid with great songs, and they blew the walls down. Interestingly, they will soon be relocating to Manchester. Fellow Australians Sheppard just had a #1 pop single in their homeland and have a commanding stage presence to back it up. The UK’s Echotape have forsaken their art-pysch direction for a more straight forward rock direction that shows strong potential. Amber Run was a fave (see below). Finally, Portland’s Rare Monk must get a shout out. I joined Mike from B3Sci for their 1:30am set on Saturday night. This Portland band is making major forward strides. Their mid-tempo bluesy rock is played with precise power and competence.

Some 2014 faves for Mike came from both the expected and unexpected. Amber Run won audiences with pitch perfect harmonies and pop songs primed for college campuses throughout the world. The young 3-piece of/from Blaenavon lived up to their radar worthy hype with a stellar rock show to boot – big promise here. Hozier was good, while “Take Me To Church” stole the show; the band dynamic felt a bit on the safe side. After being tipped from a friend, Brussels band BRNS were a favorite surprise of TGE, with an energetic and expressive live show that was, at times, reminiscent of heavy pop pioneers WU LYF and indie rock mainstays Local Natives. Rare Monk’s alluring melange of atmospheric indie rock proved a powerful UK debut. Annie Eve drenched listeners with her knack for clever song and a live band including an accordion no less. Peace performed a pleasant ‘surprise’ set at the NME showcase, which was definitely a highlight, and Khushi was another favorite with his live band set up, showcasing what really counts… his songs.

Have a listen to some of our favorite picks from the TGE Festival below:

The Great Escape england (Official)

reviewed by
06-02-14