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Search Results for: Пылающий смотреть онлайн smotretonlaynfilmyiserialy.ru

by Baby Robot Media

Ghost Cult Magazine premieres ALL BITE’s new single “Partisan”

The history of true Punk Rock is dotted with sharp minds giving commentary on the politics of the time when we most need it as a people. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Ghost Cult Magazine

by Baby Robot Media

Spill Magazine premieres new darkwave/synth-pop single “Waiting” from Brian Michael Henry

New York darkwave/synth-pop artist Brian Michael Henry is preparing to release his new EP, The Horror! The Horror!, a five-track collection of New Wave-inspired alt-pop tracks that examine love and desire from the perspective of classic horror characters. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Spill Magazine

by Baby Robot Media

Americana UK has reviewed the latest record from Matthew Check, The November Album, calling it “acoustically-driven, rootsy country-pop … with a definite early ‘70’s Laurel Canyon sound at times.”

Matthew Check is a singer-songwriter based out of Brooklyn, New York. ‘The November Album’ originally dates from recordings made in 2013, but which are finally seeing the light of day eight years on. This is a really enjoyable collection of acoustically-driven rootsy country-pop songs, with a definite early ‘70’s Laurel Canyon sound at times. 

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Americana UK

by Baby Robot Media

Folk Radio UK calls Kiely Connell’s debut LP, Calumet Queen, “A late in the year contender for the best-of lists”

Hailing from Hammond, Indiana but now Nashville-based, Kiely Connell recorded Calumet Queen live with longtime guitarist Drew Kohl. It’s a terrific alliterative debut and a late in the year contender for the best-of lists. READ MORE…

Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Folk Radio UK

by Baby Robot Media

Check out Angela Perley’s exclusive solo acoustic performance + 5Qs with Ditty TV. New single, “Here for You,” out NOW!

Americana rocker and Columbus, Ohio-based artist Angela Perley is hard at work on her next LP, the follow-up to 2019’s 4:30. She says that the next album has a different feel than 4:30 but that she wants to keep the details a surprise until closer to the release date.

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Filed Under: Client Press Tagged With: Ditty TV

Under the Rug

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A change in perspective can paint a picture in a whole new light. Austin, TX trio Under the Rug took this idea to heart when creating their stunning LP, Dear Adeline, a ten-track collection of emotive, dynamic indie rock that chronicles grief, tumult, and healing after the loss of a loved one and simultaneous dissolution of a romantic relationship. Like Richard Linklater’s Boyhood, Dear Adeline was written and self-produced in real time over the course of five years, each track capturing a specific moment in time that, when put together, creates a beautiful, three-dimensional portrait of the grieving and healing process. “If you’re not surprising yourself or learning something through the songwriting process then your songs will probably be boring,” says vocalist Casey Dayan. “The first few songs we wrote for Dear Adeline were written right after my mom died and my relationship ended and are really reactionary, and then the rest I wrote as I was figuring things out over the last few years. Each song on the album is a different stage of dealing with those events.”

Since forming over a decade ago, Under the Rug have cut their teeth as songwriters and engineers, writing and recording dozens of projects, amassing a dedicated fanbase, garnering praise from major publications like American Songwriter and independent tastemaker blogs including Mystic Sons, Two Story Melody, Comeherefloyd, LA On Lock and more, and even receiving a co-sign from The Mountain Goats’ John Darnielle.

In addition to the natural growth that comes with the passage of time, Dear Adeline was written in part during a major shift for Under the Rug, as the trio—Dayan, guitarist Sean Campbell, and drummer Brendan McQueeney—relocated from Los Angeles to Austin, Texas. That change spurred their creativity in a new direction, pulling them out of a self-described rut that was the result of staying in one place for too long. “There’s something exciting about being in a new area and experimenting in a new space,” says McQueeney. “We had no idea how anything was going to sound in our new studio, so we were like kids, just trying things and playing around and it gave us this new energy.”

Stretching out such an emotionally raw project over a period of years, however, took an understandable toll on the group and Dayan in particular, whose own experiences are the primary inspiration for Dear Adeline. “Making this record was hard!” says Dayan. “There were times when I felt done with it—I’d moved on and was happy—but I’d started this years’ long project that was asking me to keep putting myself back in that headspace.”

Listeners will find that the group’s trust in one another and willingness to lay themselves emotionally bare results in an album that is as emotionally resonant as it is sonically compelling. At its core, Dear Adeline is a stadium-ready indie/alt record, but it continuously twists in different directions, dipping into prog, bluegrass, and folk territories throughout its runtime.

Dear Adeline kicks off with its title-track, a reflective folk/rock song written immediately after Dayan’s mother passed away and his relationship dissolved. It finds the vocalist attempting to write from the perspective of his future self, a self-penned reminder that one day things will be better. “I was in a really dark place when I started writing,” says Dayan. “But what was harder was trying to figure out how to end the saga, trying to see ahead. The way it finally ended is way more mature than it started, more of an observation about relationships in general rather than just the immediate anger I was feeling. In songwriting, you kind of have to be empathetic towards your characters, which is hard when it’s someone who hurt you. But I’m definitely better for it.”

Elsewhere on the album, the group takes a more high-concept approach to examining the grieving process. “Go To Sleep” is a mesmerizing ballad about the weight of insomnia, while “Eating Carrots” is a raw, somewhat humorous depiction of desperation in the throes of emotional distress.

To hear Dear Adeline as it is being released is to hear an empathetic chronicle of the healing process, but also an impressive exercise in restraint when it comes to editing. “These songs were all written at a specific moment in time,” says Campbell. “When we look back at them it’s easy to judge them and want to update them, post-healing, post-closure, but you have to leave them alone.” 

“Some of these songs are just downright salty, if I could now, I would go back and edit some of them,” adds Dayan, “Be a little more mature, maybe, but I think that vulnerability is where the magic is. Just gotta let them sit and be what they are.”

Dear Adeline is out February 25th, 2022.


 

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