December 19, 2009

Peter Hook Performs with The Detatchments!

Peter Hook of Joy Division/New Order fame recently performed with The Detachments to benefit the Salford Foundation Trust. Also there’s a cool little New Order Tribute album coming out to benefit the trust as well. Here are a few of the tracks.

September 11, 2009

Horse Shoes Come Back!

As if they ever left, Horse Shoes the prodigious band out of Brooklyn is set to release their Imperial School EP very soon, and the EP is a twinkling nastolgia dance party. The band (Composed of Drew Diver and Jacob Graham) lets all of their influences show featuring some songs that emulate the Smiths self deprecating intelligence and others emulate New Orders restless longing. Throw in a bit of twangy surf guitar and some gentle vocals and you’ve got the overall flavor of Horse Shoes new EP. Surely a delieght for the ears.

May 25, 2009

Solid Gold Are Out Thumping Bibles!

Filed under: bible thumper,minneapolis,New Order,Solid Gold — AZLTRON @ 8:48 am
Solid Gold, the band behind the stellar single “Get Over It” released back in November has returned with a new single from their forthcoming album “Bodies of Water” due out in late summer. If the video is anything like the church the band goes to, count me in.

March 30, 2009

Delphic offers a Counterpoint!

Filed under: counterpoint,delphic,Joy Division,New Order,We Are Performance — AZLTRON @ 2:39 pm
Delphic is an up and coming electro band from Manchester, UK that has played with The Streets and Bloc Party among others. Their hypnotic new single “Counterpoint” is set to be released April 13, 2009. The nifty video for it is above this text! Imagine that!

January 4, 2009

Exclusive! 10 Questions with Thieves Like Us!

10 Questions with Thieves Like Us (#2 Best album of 2008!)
By: Aaron Z. Lee

Thieves Like Us is an electro band that’s two thirds Swedish, and one third American that creates indie electro pop that’s akin to a sonic mix of New Order and Daft Punk. I corresponded with their singer, Andy.

1. You’ve said that Play Music is your autobiography. What kind of events and experiences do you draw from to write a song?

Most of the songs on the album were about breaking up. The three of us were living in Berlin. I had gone there expecting a crowded German metropol… I hadn’t even done my research that the town had been bombed. And I thought everything would look like Christiane F. But. The town was empty. People were only listening to techno. No pretty girls would talk to me. The music scene sucked. But, there was this promise, that you could make something in Berlin. AS, it wasn’t a “finished city” like NYC or Paris. The three of us were all down, I suppose. Bjorn and I hated everyone and everything. I was binge drinking. Every day. Starting at noon. All through the night. Luckily Pontus stepped in. He wasn’t on this mad romp in substance abuse like Bjorn and I were. I had met a sexy Austrian girl. she sang in Sex In Dallas. Which I thought were shit. But she was good in bed. And seemed to love me. I was acting stupid. And I freaked out one night cos of the booze. She just split up with me. And then, I think most of the songs were about losing. We are a band of losers. I think Miss You is the only up song on the album. That one is about being a waitress in a nightclub and also about Angela and David Bowie (I had a dream about them). I don’t want to keep writing about losing, though.

2. The sonic vocabulary you guys employ on Play Music is like a rediscovered language of electronica, beyond New Order, where do you guys look for inspiration?

Bjorn and I were sampling our favorite records. And I had two really expensive old delay pedals. I don’t know. At that time. We wanted to sound like some late seventies kraut record. I think now… hmmm. We are listening to a lot of seventies stuff. I think Hate it Or Love it by 50 cent is a great example of a song which combines this sixties soul feeling with some modern keyboards. I also think V-2 Schneider and Sound and Vision on the Low record by David Bowie are a really cool fusion of 60s soul and “THE FUTURE”. So, I guess we want to combine the past with the far future.

3. How is it to work with bandmates who are from different countries? What unique influences do each of you bring to the music?

Bjorn and Pontus are more pop or up than me. If it weren’t for them, I think every song would sound like Broken Heart by Spiritualized. Bjorn is always researching some older obscure music, to look at. Pontus. He. I think he had listened to alot of R and B and soul. He started drumming at 8.

Bjorn and I aren’t real musicians. Or we were just hobbyists. We were both big fans of the edge. He saw u2 in 1992 in Malmo and I saw them in 1992 in Denver.

4. While you were in Germany DJing you confused clubbers by mixing into some hip hop and rap into the mix. Can you describe their reactions?

But back then. In 2003…. They hated it. I was working in a hip hop club in nyc as a bus boy. I would take a plane on the weekends sometime to Berlin and play the same songs. This was 2003 before everything was up on the web. So a song would come out in the states and not get released in Europe until six months later. It was like having secret weapons. But a lot of people hated hip hop and r and b. They are so serious. Hmmm. I remember somebody in Berlin getting really angry. Grabbing me by the head and telling me not to play Nigger Music. Fuck. I used to say we were trying to wipe out fascism by playing all those snooop songs.


5. When you were recording the album in Berlin, London, New York City and Stockholm was it all together as a group or did you record parts and send them to each other via e-mail?

It was mostly as a group. I had very little to do with Desire and Miss You actually. I wrote the singing parts after the backing tracks were done.

6. Do you remember the moment that you as a group decided that you could make music that was better than the stuff you heard in nightclubs night after night?

Hmmm. Well that must have been my first month in Berlin. I saw some really silly guy get up with a cd for a backing track. People loved it. I hated it cos it was so tongue and cheek. I was listening to Blonde Redhead a lot. And I think I had this idea for a kind of slightly galmerous but tragic disco band. THat would be us. Hopefully we will morph into the bee gees and make some momey soon.

7. Your songs are so minimalist yet so funky, one of the best examples is the infectious jam “Miss You” that’s one part 80’s rap and one part new wave, how do you make songs so danceable with so few parts?

We work on an Akai MPC. Which has limits. Which is good. It’s like Dre’s “STILL DRE”. It’s pretty minimal. Or xxplosiv. I think these are good examples of how to compose.

8. I love the spoken word on “Program of the Second Part”, it’s like reading poetry to the Blade Runner soundtrack. Where did the idea of spoken word in this interlude come from?

We had the instrumental first. And I think I was too proud, somehow. I wanted lyrics for everything, so I wrote a poem for it. I always want our lyrics to be printed. Lyrics are important. Language is important. Poetry is important. That song is maybe about watching time fade away.

9. The Video for “Program of the first Part” works so well with the footage from the Tron movie, did you guys write the song with that in mind, or did it all just fall in place?

Hmmm. It was probably in the back our heads when we made the tune. So, a gift from God maybe.

10. What’s in store for Thieves Like Us in 2009?

We are making a second record, which we want to have out before the end of the year. And hopefully we will tour a lot. If we can get some extra finances, I’d like to see us pimp out our stage show with some lights and special effects.

November 28, 2008

Asian Singing, Piano & Dance Beats with Gejius

Gejius is an electronic artist out of Portland, Oregon whose real name is Aaron. What a great name. His work features innovative and melodic uses of electronic instruments. His work on the track Makkuro Kurosuke even features some kind of Asian chant with ballad worthy piano. On his So Sad(Gravity/Love) remix he stretches the vocals 40 yards past autotune and plants it in the endzone of innovative electro. If I had to categorize it, I would say it’s like Radiohead, Mouse on Mars, and the Notwist roadtripping across the USA

November 27, 2008

Lowfish Burns the Light Out on New Album!

Toronto born Gregory De Rocher has been using the moniker “Lowfish” since 1995 to label his unique brand of electronic that stradles IDM and old school synth pop. He got his name because he prided himself on the “lo-fi-ish” sound of his recordings, and the name stuck. On his new album Burn the Lights Out, Lowfish again uses vintage technology and analog skills to make music that fans of Depeche Mode, Skinny Puppy, Giorgio Moroder, Aphex Twin or Modeselektor will no doubt enjoy. Sometimes dark, sometimes poppy, always innovative, Lowfish has got the goods.


November 21, 2008

Wesley The Robot is being Attacked by a 60 Foot Lesbian Octopus!!!! Plus a Friday Mix!

If a giant octopus is attacking a power plant, that’s probably not good. That’s also probably the reason the power went out when Wesley was charging. I think maybe Beatrice owes Wesley an apology.

Does It Offend You Yeah? – Attack Of The 60 Ft Lesbian Octopus

The Octopus project – Truck

Laromlab – Sid Attacks

Mr. Oizo – Feadz On

New Order – Dream Attack

Simian Mobile Disco – Sleep Deprivation

Tin Can Telephone – Spak Attack

Battle – Demons

The Cinematics – Break

David Bowie – Breaking Glass


Justice – Let There Be Light (Breakbot Remix)


DJ Krafty Kuts – The Message (Accapella) – Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five

Lykke Li – Breaking It Up

Thomas Dolby – Commercial Breakup

Go! Motion – A Broken Argument

Stryofoam – Safe + Broken

November 6, 2008

(NEW MUSIC!) Solid Gold is Getting Over Bodies of Water

Solid Gold is an electronic indie band from Minneapolis. They were picked by UK indie popsters The Ting Tings to support them when they visited the Mini Apple. They have an album coming out entitled “Bodies of Water” that is sure to thrill those out there who love the warm hum of a melodic synth and pleasant, poignant vocals. If their lead single “Get Over It”, we’ll soon be treated to a whole lot of classy synth pop.

Solid Gold – Get Over It

Solid Gold Myspace

October 26, 2008

The Banshee’s "Your Nice Habits" is akin to a Grad Student with Intravenous Caffiene. In a good way.


The Banshee are an electro/punk band from Genova Italy. Their post punk stylings call to mind the likes of Gary Numan, XTC, wire, Talking Heads and many others. Their music is rife with angled jagged riffs and huge grooves with gooey bass filling.

Their debut album Your Nice Habits features production from former Clor member Luke Smith, who has also produced such bands as Shit Disco, frYars,
Theoretical Girl and he’s now working on the new Depeche Mode album. His influence can be felt on the twitchy rhythms and loud quiet tensions that can be found on many of the songs.

For all of their intelligence and desire to be a unique quirky bunch of skinny white boys from Europe, their music doesn’t always sound a lot different. They have a lot of nearly impossibly complicated all over the place plunked melodies and rhythms similar to that of Clor or Shit Disco that are incredibly catchy, but sometimes it’s a bit much. While they don’t bring much new to the table in the terms of their format as an indie electro punk band, they execute their ideas flawlessly, and they show incredible potential when they poke some air holes in their grooves on closing tracks “People Around” and “Colder”.

At it’s core, Your Nice Habits, is like a college student at 4am with a quart of caffeine circulating his veins and ADD thoughts flashing in his mind of partying, papers, and prudent action in our day and times.

The Banshee – Cut Me Clear

The Banshee – Colder

The Banshee Myspace

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