December 20, 2008

(New Music!) Pic Vicious Strikes with LA Dreamer!

Pic Vicious are a three piece electro-pop group out of California who sounds like the slinky sound child of Gary Numan and Depeche Mode or Jim Morrison resurrected by Kraftwerk. Their new single LA Dreamer Utilizes all the analog keyboards and mega compressed drum sounds sure to drive you to the dancefloor.

(New Music!) A Truly Beautiful Disaster Strikes Greece and London!

Gold seems to be a fashionable color for up and coming electro artists. First MSTRKRFT, then Heads We Dance, and now Truly Beautiful Disaster. The band is composed of one member from Greece and one from London. Combined they make the kind of electronica that makes me want to put on a cape and mask and fight crime with Hong Kong inspired impossible martial arts.

TBD – Miranda’s Veranda

Truly Beautiful Disaster Myspace

Elkland/Goat Explosion Reforms as The Drums!

Some of you might remember the short lived but excellent New Wave band Elkland that formed out of Horseheads, NY (Upstate New York!). The band released their debut album Golden in 2005 and supported such bands as VHS or Beta as well as Erasure before breaking up. Singer/Songwriter Jon Pierce soon after reformed his old band Goat Explosion with old friend Jacob Graham and produced a 4 song EP entitled Hope Is Alive. Then the band went quiet. Jacob resurfaced with a new band called Horse Shoes just recently and even more recently the two have announced they got back together under a different name; The Drums. They had this to say on their new Myspace:

‘ “We just wanted to start a band that sounded like The Wake.” say The Drums, “We heard their song ‘Pale Spectre’ and went crazy! Maybe our music didn’t turn out sounding too much like The Wake but we’re really just like everybody else, chasing that perfect pop song. And that’s not so bad right?”

Jonathan and Jacob met each other at summer camp when they were children. they’ve been best friends ever since (except for a five year period when they hated each other). They’ve both had successful musical careers individually, but this is the first time they’ve sat down and written songs together. “We’ve always wanted to make music together, but distance and violence has always stopped us.”

the band is hard at work on their first record, tentatively titled “Forever”, which should be out just in time to be your perfect summer soundtrack, or the soundtrack for your perfect summer. ‘

The Drums – Me and the Moon

December 18, 2008

The Rakes Ring in the New Year with "KLANG"! New Album and Tracklist!

The Rakes are set to release their third album entitled ‘KLANG’ on the 23rd of March and will release the album one week earlier (March 16) on 7″ and download through V2/Co-operative. The album was recored at Planet Roc Studios in Berlin by Chris Zane who has produced Les Savy Fav, The Walkmen and Passion Pit.

The Full Tracklisting is:

You’re In It
That’s The Reason
The Loneliness Of The Outdoor Smoker
Bitchin’ in the Kitchin’
The Woes Of The Working Woman
1989
Shackelton
The Light From Your Mac
Muller’s Ratchet
The Final Hill
Never Get Married

The band also managed to film a bike/walking tour of the recording facilities where they recorded the new album and set it to the first single from the album ’1989′! The new single comes complete with jittery rhythms, neurotic lyrics, and shambly harmonies. For sure, a preview of good things to come!

December 17, 2008

Microfilm Release a Free Song for the Holidays!

In the spirit of giving this holiday season, the newly relocated Portland Oregon electro-duo Microfilm have released a special Christmas single called There’s No Snow Here (For Christmas). The song is full of pulsating beats, mesmerizing synths, cello, and just a touch of sleigh bells. Perfect for slumbering by the fireplace, background music for your uber-indie Christmas party, or just rocking out in your puffy holiday sweater.

Microfilm – There’s No Snow Here (For Christmas)

You can also get the song for free at the Microfilm Myspace

David Byrne at the Landmark Theatre! A Review!


At the end of November I was able to cross off an item off of my “Before I Die To Do List”. I went to see David Byrne perform live at the landmark theatre in Syracuse. After a startlingly short drive (Less than an hour!) I arrived and with the help of an elderly usher found my spot. Always up to date on the current topics in the areas he tours, David Byrne opened with saying he hoped there were no shopping related deaths in the Syracuse area.

Then Byrne and his first class band and three dancers all adorned in white clothing began the show. Starting with the lead single off of the new album he made with longtime friend Brian Eno “Everything that Happens Will Happen Today”; “Strange Overtones”, then moved onto another cut off of the new album “My Big Nurse”. Following this David Byrne played a satisfying smattering of songs from the Talking Heads albums that Eno produced back in the late 70′s and early 80′s. Including “Air” and “I Zimbra”.

Byrne also played “Help Me Somebody”, a track from the album that he and Eno collaborated on in 1981 (27 years ago!) from their singular album “My Life in the Bush of Ghosts.” He even paused for a moment to remark that the “Found Sound Vocals” featured in the album would be called “Samples” today. During the song the two female dancers and one male dancer frenetically bounded across the stage and made various poses, looking springing alarm clocks or penguins carrying around eggs in between their legs.

As if waiting for the perfect time to strike, David Byrne unleashed a veritable A-Bomb of dance/funk elation on the crowd with a rousing rendition of “Houses in Motion” from the Talking Heads album “Remain in Light”. The song differing from the introspective groove on the album seemed much more like Stevie Wonder’s “Superstition” i.e. a full on funk fest. There was not a soul in the place not getting down. When the song ended there was so much applause I was worried we were going to standing ovation ourselves out of a concert.

Luckily, David kept on trucking playing even more highlights from many Talking Heads albums, including the hit “Once in a Lifetime”, “The great Curve”, “Life During Wartime”, and “Heaven”.

All throughout the dancers seemed like kids during bring your kids to work day, as if Byrne said to them: “You can be on stage, but you have to do something really cool behind me!” Their euphoric expressions made them look like ridiculous puppets or kindergarteners let loose on stage. You couldn’t help but smile for looking at them.

One cool move the dancers had in their arsenal was to lay the backup singers on the ground and turn the mic stands upside down. Their inclusive dancing found all kinds of ways to incorporate the backup singers and sometimes even David himself. At one point one of the dancers even hurdled over Byrne’s head while he played guitar. The stage was quite literally their playground. They later even brought guitars out to mimic Byrne and dance around him, forming a line of faux-guitaring playing which Byrne was all too happy to hop around with.

The crowd that was present at the David Byrne show was profoundly interesting. There were the uppity indie kids (like me) along with all kinds of other people. From kids who were dragged along with their parents, to parents reliving thier 80′s heyday, to the aged college doof. Yes, I have seen the future of doof-dom and it is annoying. A man with a hat on and a beer in each hand, dancing in the isle next to a gimli look-alike hippie that thinks standing and dancing in his seat is some kind of grand way of sticking it to the man and testifying to the music…when it’s just making the people in the row behind you mad because they paid just as much to be there as you did.

After much cheering and stomping and all the other things that crowds do at good shows, Byrne and company returned to the stage. They encored three times. first with a blazing version of “Burning Down the House”. Then they played the Talking heads breakthrough hit “Take Me to the River.” Their final encore was a sublime rendition of “Everything That Happens will Happen Today”, the title track off of the new album. That song could quite possibly be the best song put out this year. I couldn’t think of a better end to such a perfect night.

Talking Heads – Houses in Motion

David Byrne & Brian Eno – Help Me Somebody

Davidbyrne.com

December 15, 2008

AZLTRON Interviews Justin Sconza of Walter Meego!

10 Questions with Walter Meego
By: Aaron Z. Lee

1. I recently had the chance to see you guys play at the Bug Jar in Rochester and the thing I was most impressed with was how you guys use all kinds of samplers and gadgets to bring your beats live. How did you guys come up with that method of live drumming?

We used to use computers and a program called ableton live. But then two tours ago we switched to samplers only. We wanted to lose the computer. We felt like our set was a 45 minute promo for apple computer with the apple light shining right in the middle of our setup on stage. And plus we wanted to make the set more interactive so we got samplers instead. It’s been way better. Now we can improvise more. It’s fun.

2. I love the use of piano in your song Keyhole; it adds this whole epic atmosphere before the face melting guitar solo drops. Was it always your intention to have Keyhole be your virtuoso level song or did it just evolve that way?

Keyhole was a little melody I came up with on the bass actually. Then I discovered it sounded kind of like clockwork orange or something on the piano, which I liked ‘cause the music from that movie is awesome. Yeah, so then everything evolved from that opening on the piano. I think we’ve always tended to make things sound big. so keyhole becoming epic sounding was really just a combination of us doing what we do and the song lending itself to that more than the others.

3. You guys have said that you are influenced by jazz and oldies as well as bands like Nirvana and the Beatles, who are some of the jazz musicians and oldies musicians that influence and inspire you?

I grew up listening to oldies on the radio with my mom in the car. And then after the fifties, it was the sixties. So I always thought songs had to be written like an Everly Brothers song or a Beatles song. I mean, simple like less is more. And then I also grew up playing the piano and one of the styles I got way into was ragtime. And ragtime was kind of like classical music converted to a pop format with bouncy syncopated bass/chords and stuff like that. So again it was this pop thing. And then when I started playing guitar, I got into jazz standards like ‘all of me’ or ‘bye bye blackbird.’ And when I say jazz, I don’t really mean people like Miles Davis. I prefer melodic guys like Duke Ellington or just the older songs with verses and choruses. So again it’s this pop thing. And then also, when I started guitar, I thought nirvana was the greatest thing since the Beatles. I still think so.

4. What band or musician are you guys listening to right now?

I’ve actually been listening to a lot of Tchaikovsky. I think he’s awesome. I really like Swan Lake and the piano song called June. He’s probably my favorite classical person. Other than that, it’s been a long run this year. I can’t remember everyone but people like John Mauls got lots of spins at rancho Meego. We don’t pay royalties though. Sorry.

5. The synth sound in Girls sounds very similar to the synths used in the song Run by Air, is that a coincidence or homage?

I hadn’t even thought of that. No intentional homage or anything. But we really like Air. I think Moon Safari and Virgin Suicides were their best. They had a big influence on us.

6. You guys have had songs used both in a Heineken commercial and at the end of Ugly Betty, how did you guys arrive at having songs used on nationwide ads and major network programming?

That was all our label. they’re really good at that stuff.

7. What do you think of the string of indie songwriters like Stephen Merritt of the Magnetic Fields and Kevin Barnes from Of Montreal writing and licensing songs for commercials?

I don’t stand one way or the other on that. I think selling out is lying to yourself and to the people you give your music to. so if you write a song called ‘happy thanksgiving’ and it gets licensed by hallmark and then you put it on your album and you’re trying to tell people that it was just a coincidence then you’re being insincere. But if you say ‘hey, I wrote this song called ‘happy thanksgiving’ for hallmark and I don’t care so whatever’ then you’re not pretending so who cares. I think this concept of selling out comes from an era where people bought records and now they just don’t. Everything’s internet now. The internet is like this hoover vacuum that sucked up everything and then accidentally sucked up itself and now we’re all lost in this nowhere land of anything goes and nothing at all. So I think it’s a case by case thing and I also think it’s just as much about how you do it as it is about what you’re doing.

8. You guys just recently released three demos on your blog with the theme Fun Songs about Things that Aren’t Fun. Is this theme a result of a lot of touring and music industry turmoil or something completely different?

Those songs are just about how I think it is. I like being simple and songs like those give me a chance to do that. I also like negative themes with a positive twist. I guess it has to do with the music industry only because that’s the thing I’m in. But it has to do with everything really. I’ve always felt torn between being knowingly selfish and doing what makes me happy and then on the other hand, just going completely to the other side and saying fuck it, I don’t care, you can have it, because competing for it turns it into something different than what I wanted in the first place and so I don’t want it anymore.

9. You guys are headed off to Australia for a show at the end of December and a few in the beginning of January, what are you most excited about seeing or doing in Australia?

I just saw the movie Australia last night. I have to say it was too long and I never really connected with the story or the characters. That aside, I’m really excited to go. I’ve never been so I’m an open book ready for Australia to do the writing.

10. Will you be taking any pictures with Kangaroos?

I guess I hadn’t planned on it. But I’m open to it.

Thanks for doing this interview and best of luck in your Australian Tour!

Here are their Australian Tour Dates

Dec 31 @ The Capital Nightclub in Perth
Jan 1 (3:45P) @ The Domain in Sydney
Jan 1 (8:00P) @ The Riverstage (City Botanic Gardens) in Brisbane
Jan 3 @ The Mornington Racecourse in Mornington (Rural Victoria)

Walter Meego – Forever

Walter Meego – Dollar Signs Demo

December 8, 2008

Super Powered Musicians, a Biodiesel Bus, and Dancethinking with My Dear Disco!

I recently had the opportunity to meet up with the up and coming Ann Arbor band My Dear Disco at the Ithaca venue Castaways. Everyone in the band was personable and excited about their music. Under the primary colored lights of the Castaways’ stage it was made extremely apparent that each member brought something fresh and essential to the group. Later on in the show one couldn’t be sure if the smoke onstage was from the fog machine or from the pure chemistry of the constantly smiling group. Adorned in shirts featuring all the symbols featured on your favorite music player (stop, play, pause, fast forward etc.) the band rifled through hits off of their new Dancthink LP, like the scorching hot White Lies and the hyper-melodic My Dear Disco as well as an energetic cover of the Eurythmics’ Sweet Dreams as well as a soulful cover of the Stevie Wonder sampling Wild Wild West complete with a rap breakdown from their generously bearded drummer. It’s safe to say they blew the roof off the joint.

10 Questions with My Dear Disco

By: Aaron Z. Lee


1. You guys have some pretty impressive credentials already; a 3-time World Champion instrumentalist, a 1st place Michigan Idol winning singer, and two 1st place Block-M Records “New Music on the Block” winning recording artists. Did you guys have a secret meeting for super-powered Michigan area musicians and the result was My Dear Disco? How did you guys get together?


Haha. Well, we all met in the secret underground genetics laboratory at the University of Michigan, where we were all students, and slowly augmented our genetic code to allow for musical abilities previously unimaginable. In addition to our genetic work, we were all students in the school of music, taking classes together, playing in school ensembles together, studying anything ranging from classical percussion to jazz theory to electronic music composition. I guess because there is a lot of common ground between us as people as well as musically, a bunch of us all moved into a house together in Ann Arbor, and this really kick started the music making that eventually led to My Dear Disco.


The band originally started as a drum & bass duet with bagpipes as the lead instrument. As the duet slowly accrued members its musical identity evolved with each additional member, the last of which was our singer, Michelle. Before that point everything was instrumental and the band was called Toolbox. Then she guested on a tune that was to be recorded for the Toolbox record, and, wait, stop everything, holy shit this is the band. That first tune become White Lies. Tracking for the toolbox record was already 85% finished, but it didn’t matter. The bagpipe player, Tyler, learned to play synth, we renamed the band, and hit the ground running. A year and a half later, we released the Dancethink LP. Tyler will still break out the bagpipes at shows when it seems like a good time for an all-out thrash. People go crazy for that, it’s amazing to witness. We’re also planning to release an EP in the spring of 2009 of some of that older material for the fans who really get into the bagpipe-rave stuff.


2. You guys have talked about your particular brand of music as Dancethink, can you talk about what that term means to you?


Dancethink is a term that kind of serves two functions: First, it is an identifier for the music that we make. It functions like a genre title to describe our sound. We get asked so much about how we label our music, and we came up with this term to use rather than going through the dozen or more genres that we listen to, love, and draw on when we make music. Second, it is a concept which we aspire to achieve with our music. We want to make high energy dance music that gets people moving but we want it to be in complete balance with creative integrity and making music that is fresh, exciting, and interesting. Dancethink is both a descriptor and something that we strive for.


3. The music on the Dancethink LP cycles through so many styles so quickly in so many songs. From jazz to electro, to neo-soul, to bluesy duets, was it your intention to make an album so diverse or did that happen more organically?


Well, it was certainly never discussed ahead of time that this would be such a diverse sounding album. I think it is so diverse simply because we make music that reflects our interests, and our interests have a lot of variety. I think that is one thing about My Dear Disco that stands out to me as different from a lot of the other bands we meet out on the road or on the internets or whatever: we really don’t try to have a single concise image or sound. Nothing is really out of the question stylistically for us, as long we all dig it. Each member of the band has a really strong musical personality and so whether we are trying to play soul or techno or pop or whatever we all express ourselves in that music, and I think that is why whatever we do will sound like us.


We write our material in a very collaborative way, we almost never actually write out the music (though we do a lot of little demo type recordings along the way), and so it takes a really long time, but it is a very organic process. I think that the Dancethink LP is a reflection of this aspect of the band. Some of the takes of certain instruments on the final record were recorded almost two years before the album was put out, and so the record itself and its recording and production kind of came together in an organic way. Also, the way that we work is based a lot around doing most of our production and mixing, and a little bit of tracking, in a home studio environment so time and flexibility were things we had at our disposal so the whole record just kind of “grew up” over several months.


4. On the Dancethink LP you guys worked with Mark Saunders whose studio is responsible for the sound of Shiny Toy Guns’ “We Are Pilots”,” David Byrne’s. “Feelings”, and The Cure’s “Wish.” Can you talk about his contribution to the album?


It is worth saying first that it was a really amazing experience for us to get to work with Mark on some of the tracks on this record. He has an incredible sound that seems to compliment anything he chooses to work on. It was the shiny toy guns record that really put him on our radar, though at that time it was more like, “Could you ever imagine if we ever got to work with Mark Saunders?” He made that record sound so huge, but also focused — an extremely difficult balance to achieve, and an ability was extremely desirable for us since we were working on 100-120 track sessions. We originally just called his project manager hoping to work with a side-business he runs called “RE-EQ,” an affordable way to have your mix stem mastered (using separated tracks of select audio: usually kick, snare, vox, bass, and band) by one of his assistants, which he listens to at the end and gives a quick once over.


When we started sending our tracks over, the project manager (an amazing guy named Ollie Hammett) told us he really loved the music and thought it might be something mark would want to work on personally. He dug it, and we worked out an arrangement to have him do 3 tracks: White Lies, For Your Love, and All I Do.

The beginning was all over the phone (many cumbersome cell phone conference calls . . . not recommended), picking the tunes, talking about directions to take, references to use, arrangement changes, etc. Then we toured to New York and stayed an extra week to work with him in the studio. Mark is extremely honest and to the point. He’ll tell you if he loves something and he’ll tell you if he thinks something is shit — right away. It was challenging at first for us to say goodbye to certain sections or parts we had grown attached to. But, after giving a mix a few days, we started really hearing the incredible improvements and appreciating that critical ability. He’s also extremely open, so if we happened to disagree (which did happen more than once), we’d have amazingly productive conversations that would always lead to an ever better result.


At the end of the day, I can honestly say that working with Mark changed the way I will ever make music again. I’m always excited to put our disc any peoples hands because i know every single detail has been attended to with the highest level of attention and consideration, from the tom feel in the 4th measure to the 119th track of those 120 track sessions.


5. You guys have a bus that runs on bio diesel as well as regular diesel; can you talk about how and why you came into possession of such a vehicle?


It all started when a band from Kansas City called Bent Left stayed at our house in Ann Arbor a couple of years ago. They were running a veggie oil powered bus, and they kind of got us hip to the idea. Maybe a year later we were gearing up to start doing some serious touring, we had all graduated and were basically going full time with the band thing and so we decided we needed to get a touring vehicle. We debated for a long time about whether or not we should get a gasoline or diesel vehicle, with the intention of converting it to run on veg if we got a diesel. We eventually found this lumbering, awkward beauty of a short bus on ebay, located somewhere in Massachusetts. The price was right and we had done enough homework on the Veggie Fuel front to feel comfortable doing it so we went for it.


We got in touch with a company in Oberlin, OH called Full Circle Fuels (http://www.fullcirclefuels.com/) and they did the conversion for us. But it is really an interesting thing to do because there is a lot of education involved in doing it right, because there are not mechanics everywhere that you can take the system too to fix it, so you really have to have a good understanding of what is going. We have learned a lot about the process and about the system since we started running it. BTW, anyone considering this option should understand: you are collecting and using 100′s of gallons of liquid garbage. It has its ups and its downs, as I am sure you can imagine, but at the end of the day were glad we do it.



6. I read that you had not named your bus anything, have you since bestowed your beloved bus with a name?


We do have an unabridged book of bus names, and we have it narrowed down to 175 ear marked pages, but you can imagine how hard it is to make a decision like this in a seven person band, so our beloved veggie bus is still nameless. Believe me though, we’re trying to get it sorted out ASAP.


Some nicknames we throw around: “The Batmobus, “The Vicky Vooten Veggie Vagon,” and, “Big Shorty.”


7. What are you guys listening to on the bus during long drives?


Lately: the Supremes, the Jackson 5, Michael Jackson’s Bad, The Talking Heads, the White Album. It is kind of funny though because our bus doesn’t have a CD player or anything like that built into the bus, so we bring a boombox on the road with us to listen to while we drive. Since it is just some ordinary boombox though, it doesn’t have anything like skip protection, so CD’s basically won’t work so we only listen to cassette tapes while we are on tour. When we got the bus a bunch of people contributed and donated cassette collections to us, so we have a lot but it is all kind of dated. Funny enough, we currently have the legendary blues harmonica player Mad Cat Ruth’s tape collection from the 80′s on the bus . . . it’s a long story.


8. So far, what show have you enjoyed playing the most on your tour?


Well, we are kind of in a semi-constant kind of touring situation because when we aren’t out on the road on long runs, we do 3-4 day weekend runs out from Ann Arbor and back. This particular East Coast run, which is a little longer, we’re out for a whole week on this one, is just getting started, and we play our first show tonight in Buffalo, NY.


That having been said, I will share with you a little bit about a recent gig that we played on Halloween at an anime, music, movie and TV convention called Youmacon (pronounced YO-MAH-CON). It was basically one of the wildest and weirdest gigs we have ever played, but in a really awesome way. Youmacon is basically an opportunity for 6000 of the most fanatic kids and adults to get together, dress like video game, movie, and television characters and completely take over and transform the Dearborn Hyatt in Dearborn, MI. It is a little bit like a festival (think Bonaroo or Rothbury) that happens inside a hotel, and you are surround by massive multiplayer online gaming, dance dance revolution contests, rockband contests, voice acting workshops, anime music video dance parties, raves, and what have you. It gets pretty insane and it goes on for 3 days straight. Non-Stop. It is mind altering in and of itself. We got asked to perform two sets, one of which occurred at this massive rave-style event. People just went crazy; there were glowsticks galore, people dressed in elaborate outfits like a giant domokun suit that was 7 feet tall and 4 feet wide. People just raged. It was awesome. There are number of wonderful youtube videos to document it that you can find here: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=18AC27FEC4AE3DC0

or here: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=My+dear+disco+youmacon&search_type=&aq=f


9. What show are you most looking forward to in the remainder of your tour?


Well both NYC and Boston have been really great to us the last several times we have been out. I expect there to be some good vibes at those shows and lots of friendly faces, which we always love. But honestly, I am really excited about all of the upcoming shows on the tour! We are playing some new towns like Buffalo, Ithaca, and Philly, and I can’t wait to see what the crowds are like there! Being out on the road is amazingly fun. The band is really like a big family, and I love being with all the band members, and we see so many old friends and make so many new friends every time we go out. It is great!


10. Have you ever thought about performing in the costumes you wear in the album art?

Ha. Not really. The main reason for that is that the costumes were so cumbersome and were really difficult to wear even while standing still. The album art and pictures obviously don’t reflect that, but we had to readjust and reset between almost every photo. We could barely stand, and the thought of trying to play an instrument in those costumes is painfully hilarious. We do have outfits that are based on that concept which we wear at shows, and are currently in the process of designing a new set that incorporate EL wire (glowing threads!). We’re taping for a TV show called Fearless Music on Fox which we’re hoping to have those outfits ready by. We’ll see . . . we could always dress up as the 7 dwarves too.


Thanks for doing this interview and best of luck on the remainder of your tour!


For more with My Dear Disco check out this interview with Bob, Tyler and Joey from the group as girls from Hobart and William Smith College showed up in a limo. For Real.

AZLTRON – Interview With My Dear Disco

My Dear Disco – White Lies

My Dear Disco Myspace

Official My Dear Disco Website

December 3, 2008

DNTEL Releases Free Song for the Holidays!

Jimmy Tamborello of DNTEL a.k.a. James Figurine has released a new song for the holiday season entitled “Can’t be Sure”. The track is full of synthetic pop goodness, from Tamborello’s almost spoken word vocals filtered through a high pitched vocoder and his trademarked bendy sinebass grooves to some full on feel good 80′s new wave synths and minimalist German ticks. This is the kind of electro that sticks to your ribs in the cold months of winter.

James Figurine – Can’t Be Sure

You can also get the song here under DNTEL
Jimmytamborello.com

December 2, 2008

The Boy Least Likely to Release Holiday Single "The First Snowflake"!

The Boy Least Likely To are back with a Holiday single entitled The First Snowflake. Enjoy its twinkling holiday glory below.

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