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25
Jan

Fresh Track: Isaac Joel “If I Hear Music”

Isaac Joel, otherwise known as Isaac Karns of Cincinnati’s Pomegranates, dropped a 6 song EP on Monday entitled Back to the Bassics.  An aptly named record because Isaac recorded all six tracks using only a bass guitar, it’s an experimental mix of ambient tracks with a touch of folk and gospel.   “If I Hear Music”, the second track on the EP which stood out to me the most, features a repeating bass line throughout before Isaac brings his voice in softly.

If I am Singing

I’m Singing For You

If I am Loving

Help My Love Be True

What sets this track apart is that after the first verse is repeated twice, a gorgeous, almost spiritual, harmonization of vocals pierces through, inspiring an uplifting moment of zen that carries through the end of the song. “If I hear music” Indeed, if I hear music.

Written by Greg Dahman

24
Jan

Video: Hotfox “Esplanade”

Yesterday, Bloomington, IN’s Hotfox released the official video for their song “Esplanade” from the album You, Me and the Monster out last year. The video opens with shots from “The Stacks” at IU’s Herman B. Wells library, a scene that at once made me nostalgic and incredibly anxious – immediately thrown back into a caffeine-infused cram session that only college requires. The track is one of the milder efforts from Hotfox’s debut release, an acoustic slow-roll, meditating on the fear that comes with living in a world where the nutters have been given the keys to the nuthouse. “The asylum is waging war upon the streets…” Fortunately, amidst the chaos lies something pure – a phoenix, a burst of color. Heavy stuff for what is otherwise one of the lighter tracks on the album. Check out the video below, shot and edited by Kristine Morgan.

Connect with Hotfox via Facebook | Twitter | Bandcamp

Written by Rob Peoni

24
Jan

Album Review: River Whyless ‘A Stone, A Leaf, An Unfound Door’

In the Internet Age, listeners are forced to watch first hand as bands cut their teeth. This often results in as many mediocre, or even bad, songs as good as the band finds its voice. Such is not the case with Asheville, NC’s River Whyless. Their debut album A Stone, A Leaf, An Unfound Door has the confidence and mature songwriting of a band with more experience.

The songs never fall flat or feel lost. They have an undertone of traditional folk music, but there is more Caroline Smith and The Goodnight Sleeps and Givers in this release than Bill Monroe. River Whyless did not shy away from ambitious, bold songwriting on this release. Every aspect of the album is large, from the subject matter to the arrangements. It has the thoughtfulness of a major studio release, without the frills or overproduction.

The album opens with “Leaf.” Running water leads toward a simple, repetitive guitar riff before breaking into resounding strings. The intertwining vocals of Ryan O’Keefe and Halli Anderson are what generate the Givers comparison. A rustic, earthier version of Tiffany Lamson and Taylor Guarisco. However, the comparison ends with the vocals.

By the album’s third track, “Stone”, River Whyless has settled in. The song has a certain theatricality to it, sprawling across a broad spectrum of melodies and subjects. Religion, love, self-doubt and loneliness all appear – themes the band will return to throughout the remainder of their story.  “Stone” reminds me of Fleet Foxes’ “The Plains / Bitter Dancer”. Both songs begin with a cascading wave of oohs and aaahs. They have the same epic quality, as if both bands were attempting to make music fit for a church.

If “Stone” serves as the intrepid, statement piece of A Stone, A Leaf, An Unfound Door, then “Cedar Dream II” serves as the album’s invitation. This track is the most immediately accessible and addictive of any on the release. See our Fresh Track post from earlier this month to stream the song and read a more detailed analysis. “Pigeon Feathers” is another track that comes close to “C. D. II” in immediate relatability. The finger snaps and claps at the song’s bridge offer one of the album’s most unabashedly joyous moments.

River Whyless takes us back to the undaunted, ambitious outline of “Stone” with closing track “Yu.” This time the instrumentation starts out jammier, feeling less calculated. The album closes with some of the first tastes of synth, sending the listener off in a brief, tripped-out haze.

Connect with River Whyless via Facebook | Twitter | Bandcamp

Written by Rob Peoni