Young Magic have released a SSENSE mix which combines Martin Denny’s exotic piano jazz before weaving into Japanese band Mariah’s melancholic single, Door to the Heart. Young Magic’s collaboration with Montreal duo Purity Ring, Grandloves, with its winding landscapes and ethereal vocals soak into splintered samples of Arca’s DOEP and later, S.Maharba’s haunting vocals, before the introduction of Hype Williams’ South African dance influences and Icelandic band Samaris’ eerie electronica
Listen to the SSENSE mix below via Soundcloud.
Comprised of New Yorkers Isaac Emmanuel, Melati Malay and Michael Italia, Young Magic formed in 2010 out of mutual music interests and self-proclaimed restless spirits. Their first full-length LP, “Melt”, released via Carpark Records in 2012 combined field-recordings from their individual travels around the world with varied samples of soul, psychedelic, trip-hop and electronica that eventually became a key ingredient to their lauded experimental dream-pop sound.
Melt tracklisting:
1. Sparkly
2. Slip Time
3. You With Air
4. Yalam
5. Jam Karet
6. Night In The Ocean
7. Watch For Our Lights
8. The Dancer
9. Cavalry
10. Sanctuary
11. Drawing Down The Moon
Young Magic heads out on a North American tour with Culture Addicts faves Purity Ring in January 2013, adding a second date in NYC.
2013 Tour dates:
01/10 Montreal, QC @ Le National ◊
01/11 New York City, NY @ Webster Hall ◊
01/12 New York City, NY @ Webster Hall ◊
01/14 Washington, DC @ 9.30 Club ◊
01/15 Baltimore, MD @ Ottobar ◊
01/17 Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse ◊
01/18 Orlando, FL @ The Social ◊
01/19 Tampa, FL @ The Orpheum ◊
01/21 New Orleans, LA @ Maison ◊
01/22 Austin, TX @ Mohawk ◊
01/23 Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater ◊
01/24 Memphis, TN @ Hi-Tone Cafe ◊
01/25 Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge ◊
01/26 Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel ◊
01/28 Charlottesville, VA @ Jefferson Theater ◊
01/29 Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer ◊
01/30 Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club ◊
02/01 Toronto, ON @ Phoenix Concert Theatre ◊
Thanks for popping by to check out this week’s edition of the music video picks which showcases our favourite videos of the week. It was a long, tough week, but we were still able to scrape together some great videos for you. Sit back and listen / view, and make sure to share and / or leave a comment since we love to hear from you. We hope you enjoy the tracks as much as we have this week.
The Joy Formidable: The Ladder is Ours – new guitar laden JF track.
Telepathe: Destroyer - loving the vibe of this song.
PS I Love You: Saskatoon - their tribute to this Canadian city.
Purity Ring: Lofticries - another beautiful one from Purity Ring.
Class Actress: Need To Know - nice dark synth sound.
Human League: Lebanon - the chorus is so catchy on this track.
Thanks for watching this edition. We’ll be back again next Sunday with more music videos for your viewing and listening pleasure, so pop back in again and look back in the archives for older editions.
This edition of the music video picks comes to you on the Simcoe long weekend here in the lovely province of Ontario…so, we get a bank holiday tomorrow. However, we still wanted to get you the vids for this week. Take a listen / view, and make sure to share and / or leave a comment since we love to hear from you. We hope you enjoy the tracks as much as us.
Io Echo: When The Lilies Die – thanks to @shellzenner for introducing me to this track.
Jesus & Mary Chain: April Skies- amazing, classic 80s track.
Angel Haze: New York – cool hip-hop with stylish video (NSFW).
Phèdre: In Decay - weirdo video (NSFW) but interesting track.
Purity Ring: Belispeak (Live At Pitchfork Festival) - love the echo on the vocals.
Mount Eerie: The Place Lives - mellow video, but loving it.
Thanks for watching this edition. We’ll be back again next Sunday to with some more videos for your viewing and listening pleasure, so pop back in again and look back in the archives for older editions.
Another Sunday, and we bring you some more music videos that we were liking this week. Take a listen / view, and make sure to share and / or leave a comment since we love to hear from you. We hope you enjoy the tracks as much as us.
The Raveonettes: She Owns The Streets- the latest vid for their ultra catchy track.
Dusted: Into The Atmosphere - Holy Fuck side project.
The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart: The Body- nouveau shoegaze.
Bat For Lashes: Laura - latest vid lifted from upcoming album.
Purity Ring: Fineshrine - another cool track from the band.
The Alchemist: Flight Confirmation (f/ Danny Brown & Schoolboy Q) - NSFW, but coolest video editing I have seen in ages.
Thanks for watching this edition. We’ll be back again next Sunday to with some more videos for your viewing and listening pleasure, so pop back in again and look back in the archives for older editions.
A pair of critically acclaimed artists at very different points in their respective careers made their way to Toronto’s Danforth Music Hall last Friday night to kick off an eight-leg joint tour. Both Dirty Projectors and Purity Ring have had strong interest surrounding them in 2012, with the buzz approaching a fever pitch in early July as both bands prepare to release albums. For Montreal’s Purity Ring, it will be their highly anticipated debut album following on the heels of a string of singles beginning in 2011 that seemed to grow in quality and appeal with each release. For Brooklyn’s Dirty Projectors, the art pop veterans are on the verge of a breakthrough into mass appeal. Their unique brand of disjointed rhythms and aggressive vocal harmonies has been divisive in the music community but has converted a cult of followers large enough to ensure that no Dirty Projectors release goes unnoticed.
With doors opening at 9 p.m. and Purity Ring not set to take the stage until 10 p.m., a sizeable crowd showed up early to enjoy a beverage in the spacious venue while Purity Ring’s simple-but-bizarre stage setup awaited. At 10 p.m. sharp Megan James and Corin Roddick took the stage to a venue over three quarters full with energetic fans. It was a nice surprise for an opening act and likely a result of both proper promotion of the double bill by Embrace (concert promoter) and Purity Ring’s fast rising star.
A timid and unsure crowd seemed puzzled as Purity Ring sauntered through slow-building opener Cartographist. By the time the band transitioned in 2011 hit single Belispeak, progress had been made – feet tapping, heads bobbing and a growing sense of energy in the room. The duo played almost exclusively in the shadows, illuminated only by glowing lights pulsating around Roddick with each transition in tempo.
After six songs, Megan James decided the seating in the Danforth Music Hall didn’t lend well to her band’s hypnotic brand of synth pop and invited the crowd to leave their seats. Launching into Obedear with the crowd at arm’s reach, the band seemed infinitely more at home and closed their set triumphantly with Crawlersout and Ungirthed. Up close it was impossible not to notice the grin creeping across James’ face at the prospect of yet another crowd won over on their rise to prominence. See the full setlist below.
Dirty Projectors hit the stage just past 11 p.m. to the expected wild applause. With four days to go before the much-anticipated release of the band’s latest album Swing Lo Magellan, I had expectations of a balanced blend of new and old material. Instead, the band launched into new album opener Offspring Are Blank right off the bat and didn’t look back, rattling off five new tracks in a row to an enthusiastic if not mildly perplexed crowd. It was an interesting decision and one that perhaps demonstrated lead singer David Longstreth’s willingness to hedge his bets on the power of the internet: “Swing Lo Magellan” had leaked online nearly two weeks before, which was followed shortly by an official stream.
The new material is played confidently and lends itself well to the live atmosphere: the album is without a doubt the band’s most accessible effort to date. Still, it appeared not everyone had downloaded the leak or spent time streaming it. “This next one should be a little more familiar”, Longstreth says before finally playing Cannibal Resource (the opener off of 2009’s acclaimed album “Bitte Orca”) and we get a surge of energy in the room. Taking a cue from Purity Ring before them, Longstreth takes advantage of the growing buzz and invites the crowd to leave their seats and move up to the front. With the crowd on their feet, even the new material seems to leave a stronger impression. The highlight of the evening is wisely saved for the encore with crowd favourites Stillness is the Move and No Intention leading off and the bombastic new track ‘Unto Caesar’ closing out the evening. As expected, Caesar lends itself extremely well to the live show and will no doubt be closing out Dirty Projectors shows for some time to come.
Overall, the night was a tremendous success. Rarely do a pair of bands from such distinct genres blend so well together. While Dirty Projectors’ choice to lean heavily on new material (10 of the night’s 15 tracks) may have alienated and disappointed fans not yet familiar with the songs, as someone who has spent the last two weeks with the album I can say with confidence that the live renditions will leave fans extremely pleased on future tour dates.
Dirty Projectors setlist:
Offspring Are Blank
See What She Seeing
About to Die
Gun Has No Trigger
The Socialites
Cannibal Resource
Beautiful Mother
Maybe That Was It
Dance for You
Just From Chevron
Useful Chamber
Impregnable Question
Encore:
Stillness is the Move
No Intention
Unto Caeser
We’re back with another edition of the weekly music video addiction picks. This week is themeless, just good videos. Take a listen / view, and make sure to share and / or leave a comment since we love to hear from you. We hope you enjoy the tracks as much as us.
Purity Ring: Belispeak- loving the dark synth sound on this track.
Recondite: Tie In (Acid Test) - so mellow but loving this track.
Ghosting Season: Far End Of The Graveyard- cool video.
Baio: Sunburn Modern - suntanning mannequins…can’t beat it.
The Timelords: Doctorin’ The Tardis - The KLF before they were called KLF.
Morrissey: Everyday Is Like Sunday - sometimes I wish this was true.
Thanks for watching this edition. We’ll be back again next Sunday to offer up some more videos for your eyes and ears, so pop back in again for more music vids and look back in the archives for older editions.