CAMERAS

The Recommender has been invited to be part of a yet another global music blog collective. Talks are going on in the background to discuss the eventual site and relationships are being forged between all the bloggers. It’s a hugely rewarding experience, particularly when we all join up for a natter on a Google Plus ‘Hang Out’ – a form of webcam conference call on the new social network. Through this we’ve been planning a CMJ showcase using the brand of the new collective, which will act as an introduction and a teaser for the collective’s plans. The full launch of the site and an inevitable giant party will hopefully follow either later this year or early next.

During these discussions a handful of bands have been touted as possible candidates for the CMJ showcase. Unfortunately we can’t actually remember who suggested this new trio from Sydney, otherwise we’d happily credit/link them on this post, but it’s during these connections that new discoveries such as this are already occurring – surely one of the major benefits from networking among other music bloggers. So today we can now share with you an exciting prospect called Cameras.

The trio first formed in late 2008 and have been seen on the Australian gig circuits and on radio stations, such as Triple J, ever since, culminating in their debut EP which arrived late last year. They’re now signed up with the LA-based Indie label, Manimal (who have released the likes of Warpaint, Rainbow Arabia and Bat For Lashes), as well as Cargo Records for releases in the UK market. The next big release will be their debut album, In Your Room, which is due on October 24th. Having had a peek at some of the tracks we’re pleased to suggest it’s one to get excited about.

The UK should fall for them, as they produce a broad range of atmospheric indie tunes that are deadly and caliginous whilst still being warm and tender. They never wallow so much you lose interest, like glazing over when you’re listening to your mate moan for too long about a problem you cannot help, instead they keep the melodies coming in attractive waves. On occasion they tower like Interpol, on others they drift without form, like the more balladic ends of Wild Beasts‘ spectrum. These differences are mostly shown when they swap vocals, which are lead by either Eleanor Dunlop, or Fraser Harvery, giving the band two very different faces.

On the tune, June, we find Dunlop on lead vocals, and the tone is set to darker shades. She holds the key to their atmospherics and the song shares the kind of excellent throbbing rumble that we once got with Warpaint’s slacker indie, and with another Dunlop-fronted song, June, her voice seems as threatening as the doom delivered more recently by Anna Calvi. When you hear the excellent track, Defeatist, you find Harvey front and centre and we think we slightly prefer it. Obvious comparisons with David Bowie will allow you to imagine his style and confidence, but the overall tune feels like a true champion, as it climbs skywards throughout, layering up until you have something on a totally different scale.

They have a few shows set for America through October in support of their album’s launch and they are visiting CMJ in New York at some point, but we cannot confirm or deny whether that will be part of the showcase we are involved in. We’re not teasing, it’s just the show is still being formed. One thing for sure is that we can imagine their live set would be equal parts hypnotic and striking. This discovery is a lesson in networking and the fruitful bounties that sharing can deliver, which is why The Recommender is proud to be part of such collective projects. Of course, this is only the start, so we’ll let you know when we uncover more. (MB)

CAMERAS – DEFEATIST

CAMERAS – I KNOW

ZULU WINTER

We’re all aware of the term ‘buzz band’, right? It’s something applied to emerging artists who are riding the (usually online) cultural chatter, the ‘band of the moment’ if you will. It’s obviously a horrific title to apply to any new band, as although it suggests excitement among the taste-makers, it’s likely to burn bright, but ultimately burn out as fast as it arrived. It’s temporary. It’s brief. It’s deadly and no bands want their hard work to be labelled as something that’s so instantly due for rapid decline. It’s the media coverage equivalent of striking a match – hot, bright and utterly useless in an instant.

So how do bands get set up for such a brief encounter? What are the boxes that need to be ticked in order for the buzz label to be unscrupulously slapped upon them, immediately starting the countdown on their career’s few seconds. Well, the hype of blogs is a good start, particularly those ones that post nine times a day in the endless race to be first to stuff, because being second is so, well, like behind yeah. Then a cracking debut gig at somewhere like The Shacklewell Arms or in some crackhead’s kitchen in Dalston or somewhere similar is a must. All this needs to be swiftly followed up by the debut single arriving through one of the hottest new labels in the UK.

London five-piece, Zulu Winter, have been busy doing precisely all of these things to the letter over recent weeks. The things is, they may well be labelled as the current buzz band, but rather than panicking, they’re not going to give a flying fuck. Their sincerely fantastic music means that they will definitely burn bright, but there’s no way they’re going to burn out. They’re simply too good. It’s a relief to all as we run up to the release of their lead single, Never Leave, which comes out on Double Denim (home to the likes of Outfit, Stay +, Blackbird Blackbird) on November 7th.

Comparisons with Friendly Fires will rightly bounce around, as this group also contain all the ingredients for the top, with Guy Henderson’s drums rolling around the room on the single. It’s a very strong track, with singer Will Daunt calling out the excellent chorus “I will never leave“, which is sure to have the crowd swept along. It’s the kind of excellent euphoric indie that another fantastic new band, Peace, are aiming for, but Zulu Winter seem to arrive with required polish already applied. Silver Tongue continues the high standards, with a few glacial synths providing an exhilarating wall of sound behind yet another towering tune. Let’s Move Back To Front introduces a matured slower pace, but the easing up loses none of the craft.

On the early evidence this seems like a band that’s clearly able to not only write tunes that are instantly engaging, but that are ready as singles. That’s a rare skill, but a mighty useful one. It’s fine to tread the buzz band path, as it’s a vital channel if you want to direct yourself into the public’s attention, but the real skill is delivering great music upon arrival. It’s this that will keep your fire burning brightly well beyond the initial scrutiny. Rather than suffering under the pressure Zulu Winter should ride the wave with confidence, as they definitely have what it takes to last well beyond any facile, brief blog obsession. On the one hand labels, gigs, hipsters and blogs get excited all too easily, but on the other they don’t even look in the first place unless the band has something to offer. However, this band can ignore the short attention spans of the current adulation as they have exactly what is needed for the long game. Well after this first few months of hype is over we predict that this band will go on to be the success that 2012 doesn’t yet know it’s waiting for. (MB)

ZULU WINTER – NEVER LEAVE

ZULU WINTER – SILVER TONGUE

ZULU WINTER – LETS MOVE BACK TO FRONT