Not bad. Makes me think of Fleetwood Mac… combined with what sounds a like a visit from Phil Collins at 3:52…
Buy it at http://mantravega.bandcamp.com
Not bad. Makes me think of Fleetwood Mac… combined with what sounds a like a visit from Phil Collins at 3:52…
Buy it at http://mantravega.bandcamp.com
Review of The Receiver, All Burn (Kscope, 2015). 11 tracks.

Formed a decade ago, The Receiver is the brothers Cooper – vocals, synths/keyboards, bass. Each of the brothers handles vocals while Casey plays keyboards and bass and Jesse plays drums. ALL BURN is the band’s third album, the first with Kscope. The thing that strikes the listener immediately upon hearing the new album is the quality of the vocals and the vocal lines and melodies. They are gorgeous. Absolutely and completely gorgeous. So gorgeous in fact that one could drown in their beauty.
Kscope has labeled The Receiver as “symphonic dream-prog” and if they had to be compared to another Kscope band, they would come closest to Sam Healy’s always-stunning North Atlantic Oscillation. The Receiver resides on the pop end of Kscope’s offerings, they’re still far more pop than NAO. Indeed, the best comparison would be to Thomas Dolby’s first album or something from mid-period OMD. Though the production—for the most part—is 2015, the sound is very 1982.
[As a side note, I’ve often wondered what a Big Big Train or a Porcupine Tree would do with One of Our Submarines.]
A moment ago, I mentioned the vocals. Again, let me state: they are amazing, and these two brothers know how to sing together, and they especially know how to write vocal lines. They use their voices rather perfectly for the lyrics. In this way, they are far superior to Dolby or OMD.
If there’s a problem with the album, it’s the production of the bass and keyboards. The musicianship is excellent, but the end product sounds tinny. Frankly, I’m having a hard time gauging what’s exactly “not right” with them. I think it’s that the vocals are so good and so well done that the bass and drums sound a bit thin and superficial, as though they were added on merely to make this a pop album. It’s possible this is also due to the limitations of streaming the music—I’m listening to it streamed through an online promo on my MacBook Pro. So, not ideal listening conditions.
Back to the good. All Burn is pop in the best sense. There are lots and lots of catchy hooks and lots of returns and repeats to key sections in the music. Still, there’s enough mystery and variety in the music to make it not simply another pop outing. Songs such as “Dark Matter” have a Steven Wilson feel, and “April Blades” might have come from a Vangelis album. The music grows moodier and moodier as the album progresses. My favorite song, by far, is the penultimate track, “How to Be Young,” an existentialist pop navel gazer with lots of backwards production. The final song, “These Days,” is probably the poppiest, taking us back to an Alphaville moment.
Don’t let my criticisms hold you back. If you like good pop or pop prog, this album is for you. If you want to imagine what a “Golden Age of Wireless” would sound like in 2015, buy this. Or, if you simply love glorious vocals and vocalists, get this. I probably won’t come back to this album too often, but I am quite interested to see what they do next.
There are times on District 97’s new album, In Vaults, when a “because it’s there” vibe rises like a Himalayan peak from the Plain of the Killer Riff: a successful descent doesn’t always follow the climb. But that’s what this band has signed itself up for, and the risk-taking on record plays, happily, with the irony of vocalist Leslie Hunt’s American Idol background. All the nonsense that is associated with Hunt’s alma mater plays a like a game of One of These Things Is Not Like The Other, as the singer, evidenced by her work with District 97, is about the last thing you’d expect to come out of the Idol scene but simultaneously the kind of artist you’d want to actually win. So, In Vaults is downright, and mostly satisfyingly, weird, something that maybe could only come out of a Chicago-based metal band with a conservatory pedigree and an Idol runner-up with some serious jazz chops. It is an exhaustive — at times exhausting — record that, despite its bumps and its occasional tendency for showing off chops over songs, brims with an energy that damns torpedoes and old dudes like me.
It’s no surprise that the band has been embraced by the likes of Bill Bruford and John Wetton, with whom District 97 has toured and recorded. King Crimson and Yes is in the lineage for sure, but Soft Machine, Opeth, and Abbey Lincoln all have a claim to some of the ground District 97 has planted its flag on. The lurching, Coltrane slabs of sound erupting from Jim Tashijian (guitar), Patrick Mulcahy (bass) and Jonathan Schang (gonzo drums) back-and-foreground Hunt’s jazz phrasing and hard rock smarts with an inventiveness that can move instantly from crushing doom metal to modal jazz and all stations in between, not least of which is strong affinity for pop melody in (often too) small doses. Rob Clearfield’s keyboards are like a less bitchy version of Roxy Music, less self-important than Kansas or ELP — for the volume of notes he pumps out, none seem wasted.
In Vaults ups the ante on District 97’s more melodically charged Trouble with Machines. This is a band not short on ideas, and Jonathan Schang’s songwriting is up for articulating a range of lyrical emotions over arrangements that don’t let up. There’s no getting bored, although there’s also little room to slip into a groove of any duration, something that would build tension in songs as long as these, and something I think the group would be really good at (when it happens in “Learn From Danny,” the moment really pops). What we do get, though, is a hyper-shifting Zappa-fueled jazz rock buffet that goes to new places on the shoulders of giants, so that in “Takeover” the nod to Zeppelin’s “Black Dog” is like Zeppelin nodding to Fleetwood Mac’s “Oh Well.” There is a lot going on in In Vaults, and District 97 is on to something fairly unique in the prog scene, matched really only by Seven Impale (and perhaps it is the youthfulness of both bands that accounts for this): a palpable search for that seam that both delivers the goods while not dwelling on long-worn paths.
Review: Mandala, Midnight Twilight (2015).

I’ve been following the work of Rhys Marsh for several years, but not to the extent I should have. Even a cursory examination of his website and the realization of all he’s done in the music world over the past is somewhat overwhelming. He’s a singer, a songwriter, a musician, and a producer. I’m sure he’s a million other things as well, but this is what he has listed as his main occupations and pre-occupations. He also looks like he could easily grace the cover of GQ or Esquire. I would also add: he’s a perfectionist, a quality common in the progressive music world but all-too often absent in the vast majority of earth’s citizens.
Marsh has his own solo career as well has being a member (I presume the lead member) of Mandala and Kaukasus.
As it turns out, his most recent album, made with his band Mandala, originated eighteen years ago. And, some of the songs on the album still seem haunted by the grunge of that decade. Indeed, there’s a strong Soundgarden, Alice in Chains, and Screaming Trees aura that lingers over about half of the album.
This isn’t a bad thing. Quite the opposite. It really adds texture to the album.
That Marsh is immensely talented is written into every single word and note of these various and varied albums, but they are especially evident on on Mandala’s Midnight Twilight. His ability to make diverse things while also maintaining his own singular integrity and injecting his unique spirit into each project reminds me of the work of Arjen Lucassen, Steven Wilson, and Sam Healy. Not that he sounds like any of them, but he shares that perfectionist, OCD, creative streak that so predominates some of our best musicians in the rock world.
As readers of Progarchy know, I’m no musician. Back when complex stereo systems were the norm, I joked that the instrument I knew how to play was the stereo receiver. The on/off switch. I’m actually trying to teach myself piano, but my wife tells me I sound more like a percussionist when playing than a pianist. Regardless. . . I know what I like, and I know what I love. I am usually most taken with the texture of the music, the flow of the album, the beauty of its resolutions, and the power of the lyrics.
When it comes to the four things I most admire in music, Mandala is aces. Totally and happily aces. No song on Midnight Twilight is like any other, and, yet, rather than feeling like a mix of singles, Midnight Twilight holds together perfectly. The flow is excellent. From the already mentioned grunge to the experimental time signatures of King Crimson to the intensity of Rush, Midnight Twilight is a thing of wonder.
And, it’s a must own for any lover of prog or rock.
Just be forewarned. Once you start following Marsh’s career, you won’t stop. I guarantee that listening to Midnight Twilight will make you grab the credit card for more. Just remember: your spouse won’t see the statement for at least a month. Time heals all wounds.
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Lights That Change Voices Ear to Ear Records |
| Wales’ Lights That Change dish up slow-burning ‘Voices’ single feat. Mal Holmes (OMD)
“A truly beautiful slow burning slice of dreamy bright pop” – Louder Than War “A brooding intro brings us into a sonic world, suggesting something of classic shoegaze flavour whilst shooting firmly for the mysterious unknown future…a radiosexy reinvigoration of early 4AD spirit” – Joe Foster (Creation Records) FOR FANS OF: Dead Can Dance, Cocteau Twins,The Cure, This Mortal Coil, Marissa Nadler Lights That Change is an alternative ethereal dreampop outfit, hailing from North Wales and headed by Marc Joy. After many years producing other artists, he finally turned his attention towards his own creative endeavours. Thus was born Lights That Change, channeling new energies into sculpting horizons of perfect dreamscapes, primarily based on guitars. Lights That Change released their debut EP ‘Rainbow On Your Shoulder’ in 2013, followed by ‘Whispers in February’ and have received support from BBC, Tom Robinson, and Amazing Radio, among others. Louder Than War has premiered the new single ‘Voices’, which was released on May 11. The newly-released video is simultaneously premiering on 50thirdand3rd and Jammerzine. “I listened to the track hundreds of times to get a solid feel for the music. Images fell into place in my mind and then I reproduced them on the screen,” explains British filmographer Jason Sheppard, who created this video. “This has a lovely gothic feel to the sound but also a soundtrack theme to it. A soundtrack to your life.” Over the past year, Lights That Change have undergone a reformation, with Mandy Clareon vocals, John Bryan on bass and Marc Joy on guitars. Rebecca Palin (Golden Fable) and drums from Mal Holmes (Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark) both appear on this first single ‘Voices’ and elsewhere on their forthcoming debut LP ‘Byzantium’, expected later this summer. “I’m extremely happy to be involved in Lights That Change,” says Mal Holmes. “This has given me the freedom to create something special for ‘Voices’ and the new album doing what I love to do … this is why I started playing drums in the first place”. The first single from this forthcoming album, entitled ‘Voices’, is chalked full of ethereal wave post-punk magic reminiscent of 4AD’s golden era. Mandy Clare lays mesmerizing vocals over a bed of drifting, powerfully moving soundscapes. Lights That Change will also be bringing their new permanent lineup to U.K. live audiences soon. “A haunting, shimmering, deceptively simple slice of widescreen shoegaze that knows 100% what it’s all about. A winner” – Producer Fran Ashcroft (Damon Albarn, Lords of Acid) “Sublime slice of dream-pop inspired heaven, full of hauntingly beautiful vocal tones, floating progressions & blissfully unassuming guitar lines” – Primal Music Blog
“Stunning and haunting…outstanding showmanship and seductive melody” – The Sound of Confusion Keep up with Lights That Change Keep up with Ear to Ear Records
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Great news from Zee:
STAY TUNED
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Alfahanne Blod Eld Alfa Dark Essence Records 11 September 2015 |
| With a mix of Black Metal with Classic Rock and Punk, and topped off with some New Wave and Goth influences, Alfahanne has created a style of music that is powerful and beautiful, yet ugly at the same time. With members from 90’s Black Metal bands such as Vinterland and Maze of Torment, Alfahanne formed in 2010 and released their debut album, “Alfapokalyps” in 2014. The debut got a great response, and the band followed up with live appearances at festivals like Inferno, Blastfest, Mörkaste Småland and Incineration.
“Blod Eld Alfa” buileds on the style Alfahanne started on “Alfapokalyps”, with an overall sound that combines a unique mix of the dark and grim atmospheres of Black Metal, the attitude and energy of Punk and Classic Rock and the melodies and feeling of 80’s New Wave and Goth. The band have been able to attract the services of Kvelertak’s Erlend Hjelvik, Shining’s Niklas Kvarforth, Spellgoth (Horna, Baptism) and Nattfursth (Sorhin) as guest vocalists, on one song each. With Alfahanne, there is one way in and no way out! SELLING POINTS TRACKLIST Band website: www.facebook.com/alfahanneofficial |
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THE RECEIVER, NYLON.COM LAUNCH “TRANSIT” MUSIC VIDEO New album “All Burn” out now on Kscope |
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COLUMBUS, Ohio – Midwest symphonic dream-prog duo, The Receiver, has teamed up with Nylon.com to launch a music video for the track “Transit,” taken from the band’s recently released full-length, All Burn, out now on Kscope. The video was shot in Beirut by director Youssef Nassar, a Lebanese-born Canadian responsible for the acclaimed promo for Steven Wilson’s recent single “Perfect Life.” Stream the new “Transit” music video exclusively at: http://www.nylon.com/articles/video-premiere-the-receiver-transit. “The music is simply superb!” said Nassar of “Transit.” “Very dreamy, filled with layers of sounds and emotions and I did my best capturing that feel in its video. I think the video has a strong concept behind it, showing a certain type of a fantasy happening, in an abstract and emotional way.” The band commented: “‘Transit’ was written during the beginning of a new relationship. It expresses the emotional highs associated with falling in love, and makes a promise of commitment, regardless of whatever change or loss may come. Youssef played well off of these themes. As the lyrics speak of undying love and unwavering commitment, the video expresses the heartache, tension, and feelings of loss that we all experience.” Comprised of brothers Casey (vocals, synths/keyboards, bass) and Jesse Cooper (drums & vocals), the siblings call All Burn their “best material to date which focuses on a dreamier aesthetic than our earlier work.” All Burn, the band’s Kscope debut, is also the first self-produced Receiver album, with mixing handled by Danny Kalb (Beck, Ben Harper, Foster the People, Karen O) and mastering by Brian Lucey (Sigur Ros, The Shins, The Black Keys, Arctic Monkeys). All Burn can be purchased now via iTunes at: http://smarturl.it/TR_AllBurn_Download and Amazon.com at: http://www.amazon.com/All-Burn-The-Receiver/dp/B00XIQNL36.
1. Drift 2. Transit 3. To Battle an Island 4. Collector 5. Dark Matter 6. April Blades 7. The Summit 8. Let It Dry 9. All Burn 10. How to be Young 11. These Days
“a majestic, expansive record filled with electronic flourishes, soaring vocals and melody to spare.” – AllMusic.com “Every element of [‘All Burn’] is pristine, poignant, and poised, basking its forlorn melodies and harmonies in glistening regality.” – Big Takeover “On their third album, ‘All Burn,’ brothers Casey and Jesse Cooper set complex, bright melodies and heartbeat-pulsing rhythms adrift.” – NPR.org Formed in 2005 at The Ohio State University, The Receiver released its debut album, Decades, in 2006 on the New York-based, Stunning Models On Display Records. The duo returned with the sophomore offering, Length of Arms, in 2009 through Vital Music Records. The Receiver is an incredibly active touring partnership, having played throughout North America and sharing the stage with notable acts such as St. Vincent, Midlake, The Album Leaf, Mono, Dawes, Royal Canoe, Maserati, Telefon Tel Aviv, Mr. Gnome and Operators to name a few, as well as performing at 2014’s CMJ Festival in New York. The brothers have been featured on MTV2’s “Bands on The Rise,” and have songs included on the FX Network’s series, Dirt, as well as a number of independent shorts and films. Stay tuned for more information on The Receiver and All Burn, out now on Kscope. -###-
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| The Receiver is…
Casey Cooper – vocals, synths/keyboards, bass Jesse Cooper – drums, vocals The Receiver online… |
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Maff Maff EP 6 July 2015 |
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Shoegaze altrock clan MAFF emerges from Chile with debut ‘Maff’ EP
FOR FANS OF: Editors, Bob Mould, Husker Du, Pavement, Dinosaur Jr. and Slowdive (for ‘Someday’) RECOMMENDED TRACKS: Linger Around, Walking On Fire, You, Million Year Picnic, Blue Seas, Someday
“Magical and ethereal. A shower of electric noises that echo out into the swirling space that is song. Reminds me of early Flaming Lips and Yo La Tengo with more shoegaze tendencies“ – The Equal Ground
“Where shoegaze meets grunge, but with wavelengths of beaming positivity“ – The Record Stache
Hailing from Chile’s capital Santiago, Maff present their debut self-titled EP, featuring 8 tracks that delightfully whisp you in a whirlwind through such genres as shoegaze, alternative rock, noise pop and indie verging on grunge, but with a dose of electronica thrown in the blend. They are inspired by bands such as The Jesus and Mary Chain, The Pixies, Ride, Sonic Youth, and My Bloody Valentine.
It’s no wonder that Maff has caught the attention of Creation Records’ Joe Foster (also producer of both MBV and Jesus & Mary Chain), who says “Maff’s music shows the worldwide spread of this particular style of very non rock electric guitar music. A whole world exists in which these guys excel. Love em”. Maff is clearly having a beautifully combined love affair with guitar pedals and synth, bringing the listener into a cosmic zone, with feelings ranging from revolution-bent to melancholic and even romantic at times. “After 15 years of personally searching and making music, each band member came to encounter an inflexion point in their lives called Maff,” says Richi Gómez, founding member of Maff. “Maff is about serving music that liberates us from all our prior misconceptions,” explains bandmate Talo Correa.
Although a young band, their sound has made its way into some notable ears. Upon hearing them, celebrated dreampop duo Ummagma has embraced their music and even created a radio edit for ‘Walking on Fire’, which is premiering on The Record Stache. “It’s rare that music this good from as far away as Santiago, for instance, finds a place among your faves, but that is exactly what has happened here. This warms your skin and gives you goosebumps,” explains Ummagma.
Maff was originally founded in 2012 by Ricardo (Richi) Gómez (Vocals / Bass / Guitar) & Nicolás (Nek) Colombres (Drums), who have been friends since childhood and have previously played together in various punk rock bands. They were later joined by Martín Colombres (Guitar) and Gonzalo (Talo) Correa (Guitar / Bass / Vocals / Synth). Maff composed, recorded and produced this EP in their own studio, lovingly called ‘The Lab’ owing to the experimental output they concocted there. This album explores such themes as innocence, mystycism, true love, loss, drugs, freedom and timelessness.
The Maff EP is available on Bandcamp both digitally and on CD. “Our flavour of the month, immersed in post-punk echoes” – The Blog That Celebrates Itself
“A stunning band” – Primal Music Blog
“Maff bring something new and refreshing to the musical scene, despite the fact that they are based as far as you can get from its “hub”, but that is perhaps why their music can be so noticeably rooted in positive atmosphere” – Jammerzine FOR SHARING
Bandcamp https://maffmusica.bandcamp.com/album/maff-2
Soundcloud https://soundcloud.com/maffmusica/sets/maff-ep-2015 YouTube sampler https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RgcpXqDPyE TRACKLIST
1. Act 1 03:30
2. Linger Around 02:54
3. Walking On Fire 04:57
4. Million Year Picnic 04:33
5. Someday 06:13
6. You 05:06
7. Planet Wave 03:10
8. Blue Seas 04:00
9. Walking On Fire (Radio Edit) 03:20
Keep up with Maff
Keep up with Shameless Promotion PR
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