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Divider imageOUT NOW: LA’s Baths Presents “Cerulean” On Anticon


Baths presents Cerulean on anticon.

MP3: “Hall” via Pitchfork
MP3: “Hall (One AM Radio Remix ft. Los Feliz Ladies Choir” & “Maximalist” via Stereogum

For mercurial L.A. music-maker Will Wiesenfeld, Baths has been a long time coming. The 21-year-old has spent the better part of his days living amidst “pleasant” and “unremarkable” in the suburbs of the San Fernando Valley, so perhaps it’s due to a general lack of local inspiration that Wiesenfeld’s own work has never fit into a prefab box of its own. Over the last six years, under the handle of [Post-Foetus], Wiesenfeld has gainfully explored the intersections and outer reaches of both electronic and acoustic music. With Baths, his eclecticism finds its greatest focus yet, in a hail of lush melodies, ghostly choirs, playful instrumentation and stuttering beats.

Wiesenfeld’s trip began at age 4, when he willed his parents into enrolling him in piano lessons. (The family upright, purchased that same year, sits in his bedroom today.) By 13, he’d begun recording his own music using Digital Performer and a MIDI keyboard – a brief, ill-advised foray into Eurobeat that was set right when Wiesenfeld heard Björk for the first time. Mind blown, he quickly boned up on viola, contrabass, and guitar and took the name [Post-Foetus], stringing together countless live configurations to execute his increasingly inimitable compositions. [Post-Foetus]‘ fourth album – a Dntel-ish, song-based mélange dubbed The Fabric – was released on Mü-Nest in January.

Though Baths represents the next evolution in Wiesenfeld’s oeuvre – which also includes the excellent ambient project Geotic – it came together under nigh-opposite circumstances. Last September, [Post-Foetus] was invited by L.A. electronicist Daedelus to share a bill with a handful of local Beat Music luminaries. Witnessing a burgeoning movement firsthand sparked something in Wiesenfeld that the ‘burbs never could. In a fit of inspiration, Baths was born, though not into a preexisting scene. As is to be expected, this music goes its own way: fueled by spontaneity, tempered by Wiesenfeld’s background in classic songwriting. Those two influences collide in glorious ways on Cerulean, Baths’ stunning debut.

Posted by Jay on July 6th, 2010 in Free Music, Out Now, and tagged with , , , . | Leave a comment



Divider imageTerrorbird Turns Four! Party Tonight @ MilkBar With Baths, Man/Miracle, Splinters, Sister Crayon

Epicsauce & Terrorbird team up to celebrate the Four Year Anniversary of Terrorbird Media! Some of our favorite bay area artists are in tow for the festivities (Man/Miracle, The Splinters, Sugar & Gold, Disco Shawn), as well as Sacramento’s Sister Crayon (who you’ll be hearing lots about very soon, trust) and Los Angeles’ Baths (who’s been popping up just about everywhere). All this good shit for only $5! We hope to see you there.

TONIGHT Thursday, May 20th @ MilkBar SF
1840 Haight St.
8pm, 21+
**ONLY $5**
$3 Trumer Pils All Night

Man/Miracle (Third Culture)

“It seems the only person who dances at shows anymore is the blazed guy up front. The thing about Bay Area-based Man/Miracle’s new song from their first full-length album, The Shape of Things, though, is that it makes me want to shelve my Puritan ways, join said guy, and flail my hands around.” Pitchfork

“The Shape of Things is an infectious collection of nervy songs recommended especially for fans of Talking Heads, The Feelies, and Clap Your Hands Say Yeah.” The Bay Bridged

“Oakland’s Man/Miracle caught us by surprise late last year with their stunning debut LP, The Shape of Things. With ten infectiously catchy tracks in under thirty minutes, The Shape of Things is that rare all-meat, no-filler album that you will find yourself playing on repeat throughout the day, subconsciously awaiting that self-satisfying moment where the last track ends and you get to start the whole affair over again.” 7×7 Magazine

Baths (Anticon)

“As Baths, Chatsworth, Calif.’s Will Wiesenfeld connects the dots between the sun-drenched haze of glo-fi torchbearers (Washed Out, Toro Y Moi) and the woozy beat math that lights the spliffs of Los Angeles’ Brainfeeder collective (Flying Lotus, the Gaslamp Killer).” Pitchfork

“If Toro Y Moi had the chops of Matmos and the beat savoir-faire of FlyLo, it might sound something like “Maximalist.” XLR8R

The Splinters (Double Negative)

“Four women from the Bay Area chirpily asserting their vision of garage-pop: less hazy than Vivian Girls, less vintage than Dum Dum Girls, less stoned than Best Coast. Just unclutttered, punky, and fun.” RCRD LBL

“Girl-group sounds-meets-90s punk attitude.” Gorilla Vs. Bear

“They perfectly channel the devil-may-care, DIY, girls-in-the-garage sense.” The Fader

Sister Crayon (Manimal Vinyl)

“The band makes gorgeous, ghostly tunes that blur the line between lo-fi electronics (drum machines, synths) and rich analog atmospherics (organ tones, human voice).” LA Weekly

+

Sugar & Gold (Antenna Farm) – DJ Set

Disco Shawn (Bersa Discos, Icee Hot) – DJ Set

(Show Flyer by Ernest Gonzales)




Divider imageIntroducing Baths; “Maximalist” Leaks On Pitchfork

“As Baths, Chatsworth, Calif.’s Will Wiesenfeld connects the dots between the sun-drenched haze of glo-fi torchbearers (Washed Out, Toro Y Moi) and the woozy beat math that lights the spliffs of Los Angeles’ Brainfeeder collective (Flying Lotus, the Gaslamp Killer).” Pitchfork

MP3: “Maximalist” via Pitchfork from a forthcoming LP on anticon.

Posted by Jay on March 31st, 2010 in What's Next, and tagged with , , , , , , . | Leave a comment



Divider imageWin Entrance To the Friends of Friends Record Release Party at Low End Theory Tomorrow Night

Been Meaning To Tell You header
FRIENDS OF FRIENDS RELEASE PARTY
Wednesday, February 17th 2010
@ The Airliner: 2419 North Broadway Los Angeles, CA 90031-2218
Featuring Ernest Gonzales (FoF Music, Exponential), Shlohmo (FoF Music, WeDidIt) & Sodapop (anticon.) plus residents, guests and lots of bass

Tomorrow night is the Friends of Friends release party at Low End Theory. Win a +1 to see Ernest Gonzales, Shlohmo, & Sodapop along with residents Gaslamp Killer, Daddy Kev, Nocando, DJ Nobody, D-Styles, and more…

Click the button below to enter. You’ll be prompted to give an e-mail address (and in exchange you’ll get an MP3 from Ernest Gonzales’ Been Meaning To Tell You!) Your e-mail address counts as an entry; the winner will be notified by tomorrow afternoon. Best of luck, and please retweet, tell your friends, and join Friends of Friends tomorrow night at The Airliner!




Divider imageOUT TODAY: Son Lux “Weapons” EP on Anticon

Weapons EP

MP3: “Weapons III (Polyphonic Remix)” via XLR8R Exclusive
MP3: “Weapons V” via LA Record

Classically-trained composer Son Lux (Ryan Lott) has kept busy in the wake of praise for his last album At War With Walls & Mazes, capturing the attention of tastemakers as diverse as NPR, Okayplayer, Pitchfork and composer Nico Muhly. He will release his Weapons EP on anticon. this February while working up his sophomore follow-up. This week, Asthmatic Kitty will release multiple EPs of My Brightest Diamond remixes, one of which is all reworks by Son Lux. Lott also recently spent a good deal of time working on the upcoming These New Puritans album arranging brass and woodwinds.

Much of what gave At War With Walls & Mazes its unique appeal was Lott’s central objective: to create a body of songs that inhabited the pop spectrum whilst ditching binary form (verse-chorus) for something more akin to chant. On record, rhythms and words moved uninhibited around anchoring melodies; live, this freed Lott to reinvent each track during performances, either reorganizing bits solo via piano or arranging the parts for new ensembles and instruments.

Son Lux

In the time since Mazes, Lott has stayed busy composing – among other things – hours of music for dance companies from New York to Paris. But for him, the chant-based concept of the Son Lux debut required further investigation. The Weapons EP is Lott’s self-issued challenge to do just that – to use Mazes standout “Weapons,” whose primary melody haunts various points of that record, as a launch pad for a complete EP of material derived from a single source.

To this end, Lott built three new compositions around the original’s essential kernel and enlisted three trusted collaborators – Anticon artists Alias and Polyphonic, plus Muhly himself – to do the rest. The result is not only six unique reincarnations of “Weapons,” but a fractal work where melody becomes song becomes cycle, with one essence woven throughout.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted by Jay on February 16th, 2010 in Out Now, and tagged with , , , , , , , , . | Leave a comment



Divider imageOut Today: Themselves, “CrownsDown”

CrownsDown

MC Doseone (Adam Drucker) & best buddy beatmaker Jel (Jeff Logan) are back with CrownsDown, their first proper LP as Themselves since 2002’s The No Music.

Here’s what people are saying about CrownsDown out now from anticon.:

“The clash of hoary hip-hop tropes and future-jacking excursions creates a discordant feeling; it’s like reading a novel with every fifth word translated into Martian. The record is so crammed with bizarre details, and so relentless in its full-frontal attack, that it verges on being indigestible. Themselves, whose platform surely includes anathema for instant gratification, probably wouldn’t have it any other way.” Pitchfork

“Despite their strange position as elder statesmen of left-field rap, Themselves are still hungry and eager to prove themselves. CrownsDown certainly achieves its obvious intent, its impeccable production, and untouchable vocal dexterity, firmly reestablishing the group as a definite talent.” Tiny Mix Tapes

Listen to “You Ain’t It” from CrownsDown:

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Themselves - CrownsDown

Posted by Jay on November 3rd, 2009 in Free Music, Out Now, and tagged with , , , , , , . | Leave a comment



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