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Interview w/ Josef Salvat

Sam Hiscox - Josef Salvat - Beach

This week marks the release of “Hustler”, the new (and just) second single from internet and UK based pop sensation Josef Salvat. B3SCI writer Erin Feathers recently caught up with Salvat for a quick Q&A about his rise to notoriety, knack for brooding lyrics and other messy cerebral stuff. Have a peek at their conversation below.

B3SCI: You are quite the internet sensation this year. Congratulations. Do you find yourself constantly smiling or are you overwhelmed by all the attention?

Josef Salvat: I haven’t really had time to think about it all, which is probably a good thing! But when I do it’s a little bit of column A and a little bit of column B.

B3SCI: Earlier this year your beautifully understated ballad “This Life” premiered with a bang. Your catchy maudlin lyrics and vocal cadence have people comparing you to Lana del Rey. Do you feel like you can relate in any way? What sort of an opening statement is “This Life” for you as an artist?

Josef Salvat: The comparisons are really flattering, I think she’s excellent. I think “This Life” is probably more a part of an opening statement than ‘the’ opening statement and hopefully that will become clearer as I release more stuff.

B3SCI: While we are on the subject, what are you most grateful for in this life?

Josef Salvat: The people in it – my parents, my friends, people I’ve worked with – I’ve been amazingly lucky in that department.

B3SCI: How is it finding your sound and image as an artist in light of becoming such an ‘overnight’ success?

Josef Salvat: I think the term ‘overnight success’ might be a bit premature. But essentially I’m still just doing what I want, to my own standards, which is what I’ve always done. The one difference is, now that people are watching, I have to learn from my mistakes faster than I used to.

B3SCI: Can you picture yourself crossing over from Pop to another music genre? If so, what genre(s) entice(s) you?

Josef Salvat: ‘Pop’, as I conceive it, is a pretty broad genre and one that allows you to dip into a whole bunch of different styles at the same time – so whilst my influences might shift around I don’t think I’d stray so far as to leave it altogether. But you never know. At this point I’m not sure where I’d go.

B3SCI: Your latest track “Hustler” is an immense hit amongst the blogosphere. The video is beautiful as well. Can you tell us a little about the song and how the video concept relates with your vision?

Josef Salvat: I guess “Hustler” was me trying to voice the psychology behind certain self-destructive behaviours. I tried to reflect that in the video and draw that distinction between the process of thought and all the messy cerebral stuff that goes on inside.

B3SCI: We noticed you have a gift for brooding lyrics. Is it difficult ever to translate seemingly real life struggles into your music?

Josef Salvat: It’s not something I can consciously do very well – if lyrics come about something then they come. If I sit down and go ‘I’m going to write a song about this’ I’m rarely happy with the end product.

B3SCI: Now that you are based in London, have you taken into the live music scene?

Josef Salvat: Absolutely – there’s no place like it.

B3SCI: As an artist what basic message do you hope to convey for posterity?

Josef Salvat: I don’t really have a basic message – I think I’d find that kind of limiting. And if one appears, it probably won’t have been dictated by me but inferred by others, which I think is usually what happens.

Interview by Erin Feathers

Josef Salvat england (Facebook) (Purchase on iTunes)

reviewed by
06-13-13

Nightbox – Utopia

nightbox

Toronto-based Nightbox excel on a tremendous melodic sense and a great feel for well hewn pop songwriting with new single “Utopia”. Bright synth lines, enough rhythmic pizzazz to get yr Grams stepping & a big shiny infinitely singable chorus highlight Utopia’s quality. The band will be dropping (and we’re definitely psyched!) an LP later this year produced by MSTRKRFT’s Al-P and DFA79’s Sebastien Grainger.

TOUR DATES

JUNE 14 – Grand Central – Miami, FL
JUNE 15 – The Social – Orlando, FL
JUNE 17 – Jack Rabbits – Jacksonville, FL
JUNE 18 – Vinyl Music Hall – Pensacola, FL
JUNE 19 – Terminal West – Atlanta, GA
JUNE 20 – Local 506 – Chapel Hill, NC
JUNE 23 – IOTA – Arlington, VA
JUNE 24 – Mercury Lounge – New York, NY
JUNE 25 – Middle East Upstairs – Boston, MA
AUG 02 – Summer In The Park – North Bay, ON
AUG 03 – Grove Festival – Toronto, ON
AUG 04 – Osheaga Festival – Montreal, QB
AUG 09 – Squamish Valley Music Festival – Squamish, BC
AUG 11 – Crankworx Festival – Whistler, BC
AUG 17 – Bootleg Theater – Los Angeles, CA
AUG 19 – School Night! @ Bardot – Los Angeles, CA
AUG 20 – Check Yo Ponytail @ Echoplex – Los Angeles, CA
AUG 25 – Chicago, IL – Schuba’s

Nightbox (Facebook)

Rating 8.3

brown8

reviewed by
06-13-13

Lovelier Other – Wonderkind

lovelier other

Lovelier Other do one better in approaching “B3SCI favorite band status” with the dreamy whimsical new song “Wonderkind”. Following up on the B3-approved “Hidden Shelters” and “Leave This Behind“, Wonderkind explores a bit more pop-centric side to the little-known-about band. We call it one of our favorite tracks of the week.

Lovelier Other iceland (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.3

brown8

reviewed by
06-12-13

Wise Blood – Alarm

wise blood

“Alarm” marks another winner from Wise Blood’s upcoming debut id LP. Built on a percussive, repetitive piano figure and a looped sax that acts a neat bit of counterrhythm (also the track’s main hook), “Alarm” should have zero problems quickly embedding itself into the stickiest parts of your auditory senses, where if (you’re like us) it will get stuck in your head all day. id is out June 25 on Dovecote.

Wise Bloodpennsylvania: (Facebook)

Rating 8.3

brown8

reviewed by
06-12-13

Safia – Listen To Soul, Listen To Blues

safia

“Listen To Soul, Listen To Blues” is the latest from Australian newcomers Safia. Wow, just wow. What. a. track. “Listen To Soul” is, well, very soulful; but that doesn’t really begin to describe the track’s power, it’s otherwordly grasp. Listening to “Soul” is like receiving some sort of revelation from the universe’s supreme beings or something, it’s that heavy. We understand this is very hyperbolic praise for such a relatively unknown act but damn, yeah, you will just have to listen.

Safiaaustralia (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.7

brown8

reviewed by
06-12-13

Treasureseason – Don’t Hold Back

treasureseason

The sunny “Don’t Hold Back” reunites Treasureseason; a duo who’s primaries met as ex-pats in San Francisco, released an EP “Ocean Beach” (which is a cool place in SF), then returned to their native UK and Sweden to each finish their university degrees. “Don’t Hold Back” warms up nicely; building it’s dynamic steam through it’s first few stages and releasing into a nicely textured bit of synth-driven warmth. We can dig it.

treasureseason california (Facebook)

Rating 8.0

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reviewed by
06-11-13

Interview w/ Chapel Club

chapel club

We recently caught up with synths/guitarist Alex Perry from Chapel Club to chat about the band’s anticipated sophomore full length Good Together. It’s no secret that music critics and fans alike have always had much to say about this London quintet. In a sense, Chapel Club’s Good Together LP is a musical proliferation of boundaries. Our contention is the psychelic, time-warped and synth pop medley of Good Together is as honest a rock record we’ve heard in years. It’s a collection of songs that play distinctly as Chapel Club, while sonically swapping the band’s traditional instrumentation for mostly synths and electronics alongside the melodic register exploration of frontman Lewis Boman’s voice. You can sample the album below and have a look at our brief conversation together here:

B3SCI: What makes for a great pop melody?

Perry: Woah, cool question, but there really isn’t any answer I don’t think, its just about finding the right combination of parts. A melody isn’t really a melody to me unless it has the right chords and rhythm and stuff to sit under it.

B3SCI: Are there trends in music right now that you find boring or tired? Has nu-garage begun to wear on you as much as it has on us?

Perry: I’m sure there are some whole groups of music that I wouldn’t like, if I sat and listened to a bunch, but I mainly just judge songs on their individual merit. It seems to me that music is mostly around 80% terrible, but a good song is just that for me, regardless of the frame its in.

B3SCI: How do you find the reporting in the press about the band’s stylistic evolution on Good Together? Do you find it hackneyed or annoying?

Perry: Yeah, a little, but that’s just journalism for the most part, so it doesn’t bother me too much. I’ve read that we’ve changed our direction and become a synth pop group, and I definitely don’t think that’s true, but they’ve got to write something!

B3SCI: Is there any about synth pop that appeals to Chapel Club and is there a certain era that’s most inspiring?

Perry: Synth music is really versatile and dynamic, and what we were trying to do with guitars, we eventually had to admit would be easier and more effective using synthesizers. I wouldn’t say the synth element of the record is limited to pop though, even though its a sort of pop album. Stuff from the late 70’s, songs like Walker Brothers’ “Nite Flights” and David Bowie’s “Art Decade” were some of the main influences musically.

B3SCI: Is there anything specific about Good Together that you guys find most cleansing as a band?

Perry: It feels great playing live now. There’s a lot more dynamic variation in our set than there was before, and it feels like all the shifts and changes add to the performance. Like when a new instrument or sound is introduced, its another lift, in addition to the structured parts of the song. Its exciting for us to do and I think (hope) audiences get it too.

B3SCI: Would yourselves consider Good Together a concept album?

Perry: Not really, we didn’t have anything in mind, and the songs don’t sound to us like they’re all clearly connected by anything. I’d be interested to know if anyone did hear some obvious linearity though! Having said that, I think recording in LA, and the artwork of the album, does tie in to the music inextricably, so I guess its conceptual in that sense.

B3SCI: Looking back at your lives during your debut album Palace, and all of the hype that surrounds such a release, what if any advice would you give to young bands and artists submersed in similar whirlwinds of ‘buzz’?

Perry: Consider your options, do as much as you possibly can on your own terms, and don’t rush anything (and don’t take too long over anything).

B3SCI: Chapel Club more than most bands strike us as having a bottomless catalog of influences. But still, we have to ask, do you guys have a go-to track for the Jukebox at the local pub?

Perry: Haha! I’m pretty much always in the mood for Roxy Music “Avalon” or Janet Jackson “Let’s Wait a While”, stuff like that, but I guess it depends what kind of night it is…I have my reasons for never making Jukebox selections.

B3SCI: Is there anything that makes for a classic song, in your opinion?

Perry: I would say a classic song should be pretty simple, so that its memorable and accessible. Having a message is usually quite important for me too. I don’t mean a political one or anything necessarily, it just helps when a song is about something, you know?

B3SCI: What music is inspiring you right now?

Perry: A lot of American rap at the moment, like Azealia Banks and Kendrick Lemar I’m digging a lot. Also this DJ/producer Morri$ has definitely sparked my interest, I’ve found out about a lot of music through him.

B3SCI: Can you feel a pull into any specific direction in the band’s current writing?

Perry: Currently we’re not writing anything as a band, but our listening is definitely headed in a similar direction. I think we just get into whatever’s most progressive, and that has some impact on what we do as a band. I imagine our next output would be an expansion on this album. More American soul, more samples and beats with a splash of psychadelia.

B3SCI: What forthcoming with the album release can fans look forward to, and will you be touring the states anytime soon?

Perry: I would really hope so, our manager is desperate to get us out there, and so are we, so we’ll see. Hopefully! They can look forward to hearing an album that hopefully means something to them, and will hopefully take a while to really get into and will them last forever. Its out now, go get it!

Chapel Club: england (Facebook)

reviewed by
06-08-13

Johnny Stimson – Human Man

Johnny Stimson

Electro pop musician Johnny Stimson drops a dancefloor stomper with the new age disco funky “Human Man”. In juxtaposition to the song’s concept that Johnny himself describes as about ‘being human,’ “Human Man” itself is an EDM machine with it’s automated-like medly of sync syncopation and analogous flowing pop melody throughout. We’re dancing everytime we listen. Your turn next… press play.

Johnny Stimson (Facebook)

Rating 8.1

brown8

reviewed by
06-07-13

Cosmo’s Midnight – Phantasm feat. Nicole Millar

Surge

Take a load off this weekend and listen to this ambient offering from Cosmo’s Midnight. Australian twins, Cosmo and Patrick, please the masses with their just released EP Surge off Yes Please Records. “Phantasm” feat. Nicole Millar is one to keep on the playlist for those cool summer nights. By Brian Litwin

Cosmo’s Midnight – Phantasm feat. Nicole Millar

Cosmo’s Midnightaustralia (Label)

Rating 8.7

brown8

reviewed by
06-07-13

Trails and Ways – Como Te Vas

trails and ways

The great Trails and Ways (one of our favorite bands in any genre or anywhere) return with new music. “Como Te Vas”, which is previewed below from T&W’s upcoming “Trilingual” EP due 6/11 on Non-Market Records, was inspired by bassist Emma Oppen’s travels in Spain and is informed by polyrhythmic chants and compound half-time beats characteristic of the folk music of that country. A+.

TRAILS AND WAYS california (Bandcamp)

Rating 8.1

brown8

reviewed by
06-06-13

Antonio // Paul – Made In China

Antonio :: Paul - Made In China

If a coastal summer sunset could be embodied in a song, it would be “Made In China” from Antonio//Paul. The duo has surely created a perpetual wave of blissful indie-pop on this one. With a catchy hook, distorted vocals and guitars, upbeat percussion and bass, this song keeps that warm feeling and doesn’t go down when the moon comes up. By Desiree Autobee

Antonio // Paul australia (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.2

brown8

reviewed by
06-05-13