VIDEO OF THE DAY - ISAAC'S AIRCRAFT - CHEW THE FAT
Showing posts with label barfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barfly. Show all posts

18 October 2011

Jukebox the Ghost getting fresh with Freelance Whales



Jukebox the Ghost

New Album: Everything Under The Sun
UK Release Date: 7 November

London’s Barfly – Thursday, 3 November
Further UK dates to follow

‘Sardonically joyous’ The Guardian
A refreshing reminder that the lighthearted electricity of a fantastic pop song is still filled with live wires’ Spin

Philly trio Jukebox the Ghost release their new album Everything Under The Sun in the UK on November 7 through Yep Roc Records.  The album, produced by Peter Katis (Interpol, The National), will be preceded by the single ‘Schizophrenia’ on 24 October.  The band come to the UK to play London’s Barfly on Thursday, 3 November with further UK live shows to be announced shortly.

Originally formed whilst at university in Washington D.C., Jukebox the Ghost (the name’s an amalgam of Captain Beefheart and Nabakov references) gelled quickly, despite their disparate musical backgrounds in everything from classical piano to prog to indie to 80s Brit-pop.  The band - Ben Thornewill (vocals and piano), Tommy Siegel (vocals and guitar) and Jesse Kristin (drums) - collectively deliver an unabashedly upbeat, playful sound, which won accolades for that first record, Let Live and Let Ghosts, which Spin Magazine called “a refreshing reminder that the lighthearted electricity of a fantastic pop song is still filled with live wires.”

Jukebox the Ghost’s pop sensibility is still on display on the new record, but now rounded out with more emotional heft and an expanded musical palate. For starters, there’s an emergence of synths, most notably on the Phoenix-like opener ‘Schizophrenia.’ (Says Thornewill: “I was such a classical pianist for a long time that I was sort of against using them...and then I started fooling around and realized how much they could open up our sound.”). Elsewhere, the album veers through gorgeous AM radio throwbacks (‘The Summer Sun’), Beatles-esque twists and turns (‘Mistletoe’) and even a little prog-rock in ‘The Sun,’ ‘The Sun (Interlude)’ and ‘The Stars,’ a three-part “philosophical/cosmological pondering” by Siegel that’s actually quite...dance-able.
  
As for the Beatles fixation of the record (like ‘Nobody,’ which Thornewill calls their “most McCartney-esque song”), the band gives some credit to their adopted hometown of Philadelphia, where the group relocated to from Washington D.C. on a whim after their first record. “The music scene here is amazing,” says Siegel. “A lot of bands here, like Dr. Dog, have a heavy Beatles vibe going– I think that made us realize that it's OK for us to wear our influences on our sleeves a little bit.”

Jukebox the Ghost plan to continue touring, adding to the 300+ shows the band  have done since the release of their debut album. It was out there, with the likes of Ben Folds, Adam Green (Moldy Peaches) and Ra Ra Riot, and appearing on festivals like Lollapalooza and a jaw dropping performance of ‘Schizophrenia’ on the Late Show With David Letterman, where the group built up a fervent, wide-ranging fanbase. “Our growth as a band has been from word-of-mouth and just being on tour,” says Siegel. “We seem to attract everyone from hipsters to parents to kids to college students. It never ceases to surprise me.”

Besides delivering a raucous live show, one other thing will stay constant with Jukebox the Ghost, newfound maturity or not: the lack of a bass player. “That’s how we started,” says Kristin. “And we take a lot of pride in coloring every section of every song just with the three of us. We’ve sort of proven to be a successful oddity without one.”
 
JtG have kindly let Queens indie dudes Freelance Whales tinker about with 'Empire' from the new album 'Everything Under The Sun'(Nov 7). Happily, they've smeared a sticky slice of jam toast over JtG's ebony-tinkered pop, and rewired Ben Thornewill's vocals into a glitched, chime-pealing take 2-
 
http://soundcloud.com/partisanpr/jukebox-the-ghost-empire-1

http://jukeboxtheghost.com/eur.html

20 October 2010

Mitchell Museum @ The Masque Liverpool


“Tiger Heartbeat”

Electra French Records on 4th October 2010

“Giddy-making sonic kaleidoscopes. A wonderful new band” – Sunday Times

“Wonderfully tuneful, dream-pop racket” – The Guardian

“Summer’s soundtrack has arrived right on time” - Uncut

“Dense rhythms that invoke Mercury Rev’s busiest psych-pop” - Q

Mitchell Museum release their new single, ‘Tiger Heartbeat’ on the 4th October 2010 through Electra French Records. It is taken from their forthcoming debut album, ‘The Peters Port Memorial Service’ on the 18th October 2010.
Scottish oddball pop maestros Mitchell Museum have quickly become a much-touted young act. Introducing themselves in the early Summer with the leftfield and frenetic ‘Warning Bells’ single, it marked an exciting introduction to these youngsters who have since gone on to headline the new band’s tent at T In The Park.
Shirking the advancing chequebooks of both the major labels and larger indies in order to do it themselves with the help of edgy, independent t-shirt designers Electra French, these fiercely independent young Glaswegians are determined to do things exactly how they want to.
Living together in a cramped, dank flat above Glasgow’s Nice N Sleazy venue, Mitchell Museum create and nurture their technicolour magic, oblivious to the mundane daily grind that occurs behind the net curtains facing onto Sauchiehall Street.
Tiger Heartbeat is another melody heavy pop song that provides another fitting introduction to the forthcoming debut album ‘The Peters Port Memorial Service’. The album’s title derives from the town on the Isle of Benebecula in Scotland where vocalist Cammy was shipped out to live as a kid by his parents, and was treated for ‘losing his mind’. Although close friends, he and brother Raindeer count those lost years as monumental in bonding their relationship, and the band has become an extension of that bond.
Raindeer met guitarist Dougie at music college in Glasgow. The pair were lectured to by Ted McKenna from The Sensational Alex Harvey Band, who had a habit of recounting his old rock’n’roll stories to the class. Raindeer and Dougie were thrown out of the class during one such tedious diatribe for attempting to drown him out by playing the theme tune to The A-Team on a £1 keyboard from Cash Convertors. Meanwhile, bassist Kris was discovered at a house party, drinking whisky-infused coffee by the pint glass. A mutual appreciation of US college bands WHY? and Menomena was mused upon, and Mitchell Museum were formed.
Splattering the more instantaneous moments of Animal Collective, Flaming Lips and Modest Mouse Pollock-style onto a fluorescent canvas, and capped by a healthy dose of hyperactivity. It’s a sunshine sound that cult US acts achieve so cleverly, but with their distinctly British twist of wry lyricism, Mitchell Museum have pitched up with a sound all of their own.
Mitchell Museum are:
Vocals/Keyboard: Cammy MacFarlane, Guitar: Dougie Kennedy, Bass: Kris Ferguson, Drums/Vocals: Raindeer
Mitchell Museum Live Dates:

Aug 11: The Edge Festival: Electric Circus - Edinburgh

Oct 21: The Cockpit - Leeds

Oct 22: Koko - London (Club NME)

Oct 23: SWN Festival - Cardiff

Oct 25: Bungalows & Bears - Sheffield

Oct 26: Little Civic - Wolverhampton

Oct 28: The Masque - Liverpool

Oct 29: Head of Steam - Newcastle

Oct 30: Saki Bar - Manchester (with Kid Canaveral)

Nov 3: King Tuts - Glasgow

Dec 3: The Arches - Glasgow (with Menomena)