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Showing posts with label minty fresh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label minty fresh. Show all posts

May 20, 2008

Reality Check - Alison Galea of the Beangrowers

CWG: How did you all come together as a band?


Ian and Mark started a band with another friend of theirs when we were 16 and I was asked to join as a keyboardist. Soon after, I picked up a microphone, ditched the idea of playing keyboards live and taught myself how to play the guitar.

After a couple of years we ended up as a 3-piece and things have stayed that way ever since.

CWG: In an indie rock band, one of the rules is that one male member and one female member have to be married to one another or seriously dating. Is this the case with the Beangrowers? Please feel free to use adjectives, like "boink."

This was never the case with Beangrowers and we never “boinked!”

I guess we get a medal for being one of the few bands to break the rules! With us it would be repulsive and considered incestuous because we have always had a relationship of the “sibling kind.”

CWG: Do the Beangrowers have an on-going rivalry with any bands?

None of that Oasis vs. Blur stuff has happened yet but there have been bands who have decided to use our achievements as a means of competing with us.

They’re alone on this as we don’t compete with anyone.

CWG: "Not in A Million Lovers" - very cool video. How did you guys come up with the concept?

Thanks - glad you like the video. We absolutely love it!

The idea came to life thanks to Duncan Bone’s vision, Ian’s assistance and my patience - posing with a mouth like a goldfish for about 2000 photos.

The video’s storyline follows me through a series of relationships and the only thing which remains from the relationships are photos which show different guys coming in and out of my life - not really a million of them but we fit in what we could.

CWG: Is there a story behind "Life's A Bitch and Then She Sings in Your Band" and "Good Band Bad Name?" If so, does it have to do with the Beangrowers' on-going rivalry with another band?

There’s no talk of rivalry at all. “Life’s A Bitch and then She Sings in Your Band” is something of a reference to what Ian and Mark always say about me.

Since Ian and Mark can’t use the traditional quote when referring to me, they had to rearrange it to fit their situation.

I went along with it (because it’s no use fighting their machismo) and I actually sing proudly that “Maybe i’m a bitch, but i’m the best.”

Obviously, we’ve all had a few good laughs about it.

I think it’s our best song title! As for “Good Band Bad Name” it’s a song about a band which gets shunned by the record industry but that doesn’t stop them from having a good time.

CWG: Do you guys have any weird hobbies or guilty pleasures, like para-gliding?

Not really. We sometimes pick our noses but that’s about it! My guilty pleasures usually involve gourmet food.

CWG: If you weren't in the Beangrowers, what would you be doing?

I’d probably be an ice-skating queen, Ian a porn star and Mark would be out fishing in the Mediterranean sea.

CWG: What was the inspiration behind "Not In A Million Lovers" the album?

I think this album captures the essence of a band that has matured over the years and that it is heartfelt and genuine. What you hear is what we want to hear.

The inspiration for it came from a reflection on different kinds of relationships that are not necessarily all of an amorous nature.

CWG: The Beangrowers have been compared to Blondie meets Joy Division. What do you think of that comparison?

We were never good with comparisons nor do we know if any of them are any good. It’s up to you and our audiences to decide for yourselves.

CWG: You're compared with PJ Harvey and Nina Persson. What do you think of that comparison? There are very few female rock singers on the scene, do you see yourself as a role model for other females?

I am aware that there are far too few women on the rock scene and even less of them who play an instrument other than their vocal chords, which is a shame.

It is an honour to be compared to the likes of PJ and Nina Persson but I always feel that there are too few female musicians to be compared to and that the choice is limited, and therefore not always accurate.

I hope that I can be an inspiration to other women so that they can share their musical talents with the rest of us. If there were more women on the scene, people would stop judging me and other female musicians simply for the fact that we are female, i.e. the minority in this case.

CWG: What was it like to be in Malta and then in Berlin? Did it change the approach to creating music? How are the music scenes different?

Imagine the difference between an island country in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea where life is much slower than in most European countries and where the sun is always shining; then imagine a northern, bustling city of Berlin or any other capital city for that matter.

It’s a phenomenal difference which has inspired us in so many positive ways. We love both worlds, but our hearts will always be down south where it’s warmer and where we can write our music without any external pressure and where we feel at home.

Lives, loves, music scenes and so on, are all relative to the size and influences of a place. We feel lucky to have experienced the best of both worlds.

May 15, 2008

White chicks On Rap - An Introduction to Sepiatone

Written By: White Chicks On Rap

Label: Minty Fresh
Rating: 4 Guns


Buy On:
Sepiatone

I would like to introduce you to Sepiatone. A duo from Sicily who’s sound is airy and jazzy. Their new album, “An Introduction To Sepiatone” is their first US album- they have released two other albums in Europe.

This album is a true introduction as it contains some songs from their previous releases. The songs on the album flow right into another. The combination of trip-hop, chill-out and jazz along with Marta Collica’s voice is just brilliant.

The album opens with “Sunstroke”. The sounds of the beach echo all around and reminds me of carefree summer days.

I just love “New World” “Green House” and “Darksummer”. The dramatic tones and simple background effects remind me so much of Portishead.

In listening to the album I found it to be beautiful as each song has its own characteristics. I hope this is not the last we hear from this promising act.

Like this band? You may also like: Beangrowers, Firefox AK, Portishead

May 13, 2008

Firefox AK – If I Were A Melody

Label: Minty Fresh
Rating: 4 Guns


Buy On:
Firefox AK

Imagine a female version of the Postal Service, with a twist of 80s New Wave….. picture it…. Yep, I’ll bet Firefox AK popped up in your mind. If it didn’t, it should have. “If I Were A Melody,” Firefox AK’s grammatically correct new offering combines the sweetness of female-fronted pop, with the electro-aggressiveness of industrial.

“Where Are We Going,” the albums lead track, starts off slow, and breaks into a chorus that’s as catchy as a bear-trap, and is followed by the up-beat “Once I Was Like You.”

“Winter Rose (featuring Tgr Lou),” an aggressive techno-bopper blends Stabbing Westward-influenced synthesizer with Euro-pop.

“Flutter Of A Wing” is a dark, brooding, and ambient synth ballad that puts any emo or indie wannabe band to shame. “The River” follows suit with “Flutter Of A Wing,” equally brooding, but slightly upbeat due to the airy underpinnings of piano and synthesized percussion.

“Pushing,” “A Faint Idea,” and “All I Hear,” flow seamlessly into one another, providing an ambient journey through sound. “All I Hear” is also a male/female duet… pretty cool. “All I Hear” fades into “Shero,” another dark and brooding song.

The pop-infused “Lucky” blends the celtic nature of U2 with the aggressiveness of Nine Inch Nails, a beautiful recipe for ambient dreamscapes.

“Everytime I Ride My Bike” closes the album with a bang. Althought I have no urge to ride my bike, I do however have the urge to buy this album… and so should you!

May 8, 2008

Artist to Watch - Sepiatone

Buy On:
Sepiatone

Sicily, 1999. Marta Collica and Hugo Race created Sepiatone to experiment with ‘solar’ sounds. Inspired by the mystique of old European films (Godard, Bertolucci, Antonioni, etc.) and using found materials like retro samples and major sevenths, they gradually discovered their own feel between dreams and desperation. Working with friends like DJ Stefano Ghittoni and Cesare Malfatti from acid-jazz-tinged Dining Rooms (Guidance Records in the U.S.), Riccardo Gerbino and Giovanni Arena from the folkloric Sicilian band Dounia, and Giovanni Ferrario, leader of the Italian avant-pop group Micevice, Hugo and Marta delivered two classic albums: "In Sepiatone" (2001) and "Dark Summer" (co-produced with the Bad Seed’s Mick Harvey). Now signed to Chicago label Minty Fresh Records, their US debut “Introduction to Sepiatone”, containing selected cuts from the first two albums.

SEPIATONE creates a timeless pop music that merges sonic textures of Euro-sounds of the 60s and 70s with a contemporary cutting-edge feel. In "Dark Summer", Sepiatone fused genres and time zones, bittersweet summer feelings and hallucinatory mood swings, juxtaposing nostalgia with the present in a fashion both totally unique and truly modern. The soulful, seductive Sepiatonic sound is the fruit of a collaboration between Italian singer and songwriter MARTA COLLICA and Australian artist HUGO RACE.

Sepiatone - "Green House"



Sepiatone’s live shows have blown away European audiences with the duo’s soulful minimalism and psychedelic undertow. Marta and Hugo’s vocals compliment the sonic mesh of layered guitar and piano. This style hints at the expanded arrangements of their recent studio recordings where gurus of orchestration such as Phil Spector and Billy Strange are subtly referred to in the context of the duo’s original combination of soul and songwriting.

Meanwhile, Hugo and Marta returned to the studio in Berlin to continue working on their third album, provisionally entitled “Echoes On”.

Marta began singing with the Australian-Italian group Micevice (1997), and along with playing with Hugo's ‘musical collective’ The True Spirit, is a key member of the new solo project of UK producer John Parish (PJ Harvey, Eels). The John Parish Band recently released the group's debut “Once Upon a Little Time” through Thrill Jockey (USA). Marta plays piano, rhodes, hammond, synth, and likes to explore a wide range of electronic and analogic sounds; her original style combines minimal arrangements and a unique kind of playing, stumbling unpredictably between delicacy and distortion.

Critics compare Francoise Hardy and Julie Cruise to describe the unmistakable character of Marta's voice with it's "Indifferent intensity", evoking the slightly disquieting atmosphere of a road movie in slow motion. She also appeared on recordings by The Dining Rooms, Pola, and Italian singer/songwriter Cesare Basile. Marta founded the European "Super Group" Songs With Other Strangers in 2004, a creative encounter between a diverse group of international songwriters and musicians. She finished her first solo album, "Pretty and Unsafe" which debuted in February 2007 and received a warm and enthusiastic feedback from audiences and press.
(More: www.sepiatone.netwww.myspace.com/martacollica

Hugo is a prolific and visionary performer, songwriter and producer. First introduced to the international stage as a teenage founding member of Nick Cave's Bad Seeds, he left that band and found the seminal Australian garage-blues cult band The Wreckery. Following that demise he moved to Europe in 1988 with his solo project Hugo Race + True Spirit. Hugo is perceived as a cult figure, unpredictable, brilliant and inspired. Within the last 3 years, he released a stream of albums: the elegant trip-hop of Sepiatone’s “Dark Summer”; the ambient abstraction of Transfargo’s “Mil Transit”; the psychedelic Italian montage of “Merola Matrix”; the raw cosmic blues of the True Spirit’s “Ambuscado” (2005) and “Taoist Priests” (2006). In April 2008, Hugo and True Spirit released their collective masterpiece, the double album “53rd State” (in Europe through Glitterhouse and Bang! Records, in Australia through Spooky Records). In late 2007, Hugo, together with Chris Brockaw (Thurston Moore, Come) and Chris Eckman (The Walkabouts, Chris & Carla), released the debut album of their ‘acoustic’ project Dirtmusic.

(More: www.myspace.com/hugoraceandthetruespirit www.myspace.com/dirtmusicband).

May 6, 2008

Beangrowers - Not In A Million Lovers

Label: Minty Fresh
Rating: 4 Guns

Buy On:
Beangrowers

Picture Death Cab For Cutie with a female singer and actual musical talent, and you’ve got the Beangrowers. “Not In A Million Lovers” is a journey into the cerebral, complete with oceans of clean-guitar and shining sparkles of synth-pop.

The album leads with the synth-infused “Quaint Affair,” blending european indie rock with American scenester. “Untitled Forever” reminisces of U2’s best days, but sung by a girl.

“Not in A Million Lovers,” the album’s title-track is single-worthy; infectiously hooky and complete with an accompanying music video. The song is pretty cool… but the video is by far the coolest music video we’ve ever seen. (Check it out below).

“Love Can Do You No Harm” rocks out, blending 90s alternative with 80s New Wave, and “Ours is A Small Falt” is an electronic ballad that puts the Postal Service to Shame, with heavy Brit-pop overtones and a groovy beat that kicks in part way through the song.

“Available” just plain rocks. You wouldn’t think a pop band could be heavy, but this song is one to bob your head to with its fuzzy guitars and loud drums.

“Depths of Bavaria” and “Machine” are the yin and yang of the album, going from upbeat and happy, to dark and brooding. Definitely worth checking out.

“Good Band, Bad Name” is the epitaph of Indie Rock – musically and metaphorically! “Life’s a Bitch, Then She Sings In Your Band,” takes yet another shot at Indie culture, brutally honest, and terribly catchy, these two tracks define not only the album, but a whole genre.

The last two songs ending with “Interlude” and beginning with “Like Ken” close the album. “Interlude,” although put at the end of the album, as opposed to the middle, is a .35 second song, completely acoustic, and exceptionally dark; WAY much more than a throw-away, the “Interlude” is a strong song on an even stronger album.

Beangrowers – “Quaint Affair”




More on the Beangrowers:
Amongst the broadening horizons of the European music scene you will find the Beangrowers. Hailing from the Mediterranean island of Malta, this female-fronted three-piece has become known for their unique style and infectious mixture of guitar-based pop and quirky keyboard sounds: think Blondie meets Joy Division. "Keeper of the angelic vocal chords" – front-woman/lead guitarist Alison Galea is up there alongside PJ and Nina Persson. and supported by band-mates Mark Sansone (bass, synths) and Ian Schranz (drums, synths).

The Beangrowers music has always been defined as pop-rock that’s short, sharp and to the fuzz-guitar driven point. While that can still be heard on their new self-produced album “Not In A Million Lovers” (Minty Fresh), there’s also a noticeably more mature element to their latest release, both lyrically and musically.

Even with a new year unfolding, and a new album, you can still hear their familiar brand of fuzz and pop on the lead single, “Love Can Do You No Harm”, with its hopeful lyrics of: “now this great war is over, let’s find out who speaks the truth….”

But listening to the album’s sixth track, “Available,” we hear another ready single that shows the Beangrowers have clearly expanded their musical perspective beyond the shores of Malta and even Europe, and outside of what regular fans of the band might expect to hear. When in that song Galea sings “forced to grow, steps to climb…””, it not only reflects a certain new sophistication in the band’s musical style throughout the album, but in how they want to move forward artistically, alongside their fans.

With three albums under their belt, the Beangrowers are to date best known in continental Europe, but are continually expanding their reach to fans everywhere. Based in Berlin for a number of years, they were signed to Rough Trade's German division and built a strong fan-base through video rotation on VIVA and MTV Central while touring with the likes of Elbow, Tindersticks, Stereophonics, dEUS and Trashcan Sinatras. Director Wim Wenders (Buena Vista Social Club, Wings of Desire) became a fan and used the song “The Priest” from their 2005 album, “Dance Dance Baby” in his film "Land of Plenty."

They wowed audiences in the USA when they visited in 2004 and 2005, playing SXSW in Austin and the legendary Sine' club in New York. A return to this year’s SXSW is scheduled, with more tour dates to follow. With the release this year of “Not In A Million Lovers” in North America, the UK and Europe, fans old and new are sure to follow the Beangrowers to anywhere they happen to land.

Like This band? You may also like: The Cardigans, Juniper Lane, The Killers, The Postal Service

Video – Not in A Million Lovers

Jan 29, 2008

Ezra Furman & The Harpoons - Banging Down The Doors

Label: Minty Fresh
Rating: 3.5 Guns

Download "Banging Down The Doors" From
Ezra Furman & The Harpoons

"I wonder what would happen if someone forced the Violent Femmes at gun-point to play a show with Radiohead and Beck?" I thought to myself, as I wandered to my mailbox.

I slipped the key in the slot only to discover a large white envelope with the magazine's address scrawled in Yellow crayon. I ripped the envelope open in a fit of curiosity, and to my amazement, inside the envelope was Ezra Furman & The Harpoon's debut album "Banging Down The Doors."



I slipped the CD into my car stereo only to discover the answer to my previous question. "Hello, this song is called 'Mother's Day,' it's about a whore that I knew in Chicago," a voice eerily similar to Gordon Gano's shouted at me over booming drums.

"Banging Down The Doors" is Ezra Furman's Minty Fresh debut, and it delivers like a sonic folk explosion. Just like the Femmes, this band relies heavily on acoustic guitar, and subdued, yet in-your-face rhythm section.

"I Wanna Be Ignored" (see player under album cover) is the album's first single, and sounds like it could take dorm rooms by storm across the country. "Mother's Day" and "Hotel Room in Casablanca" are strong songs as well. "Casablanca" follows the Folk Rock format, using harmonica and thick acoustic guitars to highlight Ezra's stunning voice.

"Halloween Snow" is reminiscent in sound to a snowy winter in Chicago, and gives off the same Midwestern vibe as the rest of "Banging Down The Door"

A few other key tracks are: "How Long, Diana?," "God Is A Middle-Aged Woman," "My Soul Has Escaped From My Body," and "She's All I Got Left."

This album is definitely worth a few dozen spins, go out and buy it.

Check them out at EzraFurman.com

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