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Album Review: Dust Red Skies - Dust Red Skies

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Dust Red Skies is the new self-titled album and collaboration from San Francisco based John Brian Kirby, who I've previously featured on BlackPlastic.co.uk in his Nonagon guise.

Yet this is a very different album to Days Away, The Nonagon album that I last heard from Kirby. Where that was an album that felt enjoyably lost in the left-field this is a more polished affair, not that Days Away lacked finesse. For starters, this is a partnership - so Kirby is joined by a vocalist in the form of Vibrasol's Angie Donkin, whose vocals grant this album a more human feel with a tangible emotional core. Donkin's vocals feel very much like the centre to these tracks - they are full and soar over some of these tracks to create a sparse feeling sound where the music creates auditorium's for her to sing in.

Dust Red Skies

Which isn't to undermine the music itself. Kirby's productions glisten with little details - the subtle strumming of a guitar or crunchy rhythms that then at times endure the full-frontal assault of massive wobbly bass lines. But there is an undeniable accessibility to this music - it feels like in their collaboration Kirby and Donkin have tempered each other, and often the result is positive, as on the sparkling melodies and vocal harmonies of "Shadowless".

The sound Kirby is going for feels like dusty desert evenings of the near-future - there is almost a country feel to the songwriting itself and it feels like that is where the album's title comes from. It is reminiscent of Hybrid's more melodic vocal moments.

The only downside of this is that it feels a little like some of Kirby's rough edges have been worn down in the creation of this album. The production still impresses in it's technical ability, but it may not have quite the same verve when it is bound to supporting vocals so much of the time.

Dust Red Skies helps to demonstrate Kirby's enduring and varied talents if nothing else, and is well worth a listen. You can stream and purchase it on Bandcamp

 

Video: In The Cold - Lewis May feat. Eleanor

Free Download: http://www.triplejunearthed.com.au/LewisMay http://www.facebook.com/LewisMayMusic https://soundcloud.com/lewis-may-music-1 Filmmaker - Michael Knight Editing - Luke Griffiths Typography - Dustin De Souza Model - Caitlin Jenkins Bass Guitarist - Martin Kruit

More dub-step influenced melancholic indie R&B from Lewis May, who brought us the excellent "Blurs" by Bleeding Colours last year. This comes from a similar place but feels a little less minimal with just a bit more warmth and soul.

It's an atmospheric track that still manages to deliver a catchy hook.

 

EP Review: Feel Like Movin' / We Got A Love - The Juan Maclean / Shit Robot

order vinyl & high-quality digital at http://store.dfarecords.com/products/dfa2408 The Juan Maclean Feel Like Movin' (featuring Nancy Whang) DFA2408

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This fantastic new split single from DFA showcases some inspirational new stuff from label stalwarts The Juan Maclean and Shit Robot. Neither song significantly changes the sound each artist has been pushing recently but both feel like they've been honed to close to perfection.

The Juan Maclean's "Feel Like Movin'" features vocals from regular collaborator and (technically ex-) LCD Soundsystem member Nancy Whang, who delivers the kind of semi-deadpan, semi-loved up vocal she used on The Juan Maclean's "Happy House". The track is an upbeat twisted piano-house track full of uplifting and optimistic vibes. Whang's vocals plead you to dance and the track has a weird parallel to The Juan Maclean's beautiful "Dance With Me". Where the latter was aloof but touching, robotics trying to break through into humanity, this is the opposite: sweaty and familiar and up-close. "So let your heart get crazy / and let your head get dizzy / let yourself get busy, it's easy" calls Whang, probably as she disappears into the throng of the dancefloor. It's the rushing intimacy that only comes from lost evenings with lost boundaries.

Shit Robot's "We Got A Love" features comedian and musician Reggie Watts and comes from a similar place but it is a little more understated. Deep throbbing drums and a dubby bass create a momentum whilst the piano loop recaptures early-90s urban distance. Watts' vocal is scattershot and adlibbed, flipping from falsetto to baritone and back within the same verse. It feels like one of Shit Robot's most fully realised tracks since the excellent "Simple Things (Work It Out)".

Both The Juan Maclean and Shit Robot are due full releases in 2014. Feel Like Movin’ / We Got A Love is out now through DFA and is limited to 500 stamped and numbered copies. Grab the digital release of "Feel Like Movin'" and "We Got A Love" from Amazon.co.uk [affiliate links].

 

Video: Elliot - Roosevelt

Click here now to subscribe to THUMP: http://bit.ly/Subscribe_to_THUMP Greco Roman drops this new video for Roosevelt's disco pop tune "Elliot."

I basically feel like my soul is consumed by this beautiful track from Roosevelt, taken from his debut EP of the same name. It follows on from single Sea, released late last year.  There's a hypnotic tropical surreality to both the song and the video as the vocals pay tribute to a girl named Elliot.

Elliot is released on 7 October through Greco-Roman, order the digital release from Amazon.co.uk here [affiliate link].