MAFIA LIGHTS

It’s quite hard for us to get our heads around the fact that there are still people out there that don’t quite ‘get’ online social networks. We pour scorn upon these poor people. Well, OK, we’re not that snobbish and wicked, but online social media is something we are very proud to endorse. We can hold up lesson after lesson and example after example of how social networks can make your life better. Don’t believe us? We’d suggest that you’re not doing it right. Whether it’s Gchats, or G+ Hang Outs, or Facebook, and particularly on Twitter, we directly engage with our audience on a daily basis and it produces a multitude of satisfying results. Recently we found ourselves online having a good example of such an encounter.

There we were minding our own little social world, when a chat box popped up on Facebook. “great great great great great website, x“, it said. “Moi?“, we replied, and a conversation with Joel Amey, the singer in Mafia Lights, duly followed. It turns out we’ve covered a few artists on this blog that they also like. He explained that Mafia Lights are a part of a small collection of bands that are emerging from Guildford in Surrey, including Amusement and Disclosure, the latter of which helped them record by getting them into their home studio. Joel passed us some links to his music and we immediately liked what we heard. With all the PR email campaigns, the constant stream of links and a variety of bulging inboxes, it seems that in reality it really is good to talk, or at the very least, chat.

Mafia Lights are a trio, with Joel the singer, and James Balmont on bass, guitars and keys, with Cameron Knight on lead guitars and beats. The band have received some coverage on blogs and Joel briefly mentioned that they’d received a “tiny mention” on NME. Turns out they were listed by NME as one of their best new bands of 2011. Understatements like that go a long way to helping us like them. It’s still early days, but they’ve already got Teeth Records on board, after Max from the label watched them play a showcase gig at Manchester’s In The City festival.

Hampton was a track that began a turning point for the band. Previous incarnations found them working a different sound, with a more traditional rock edge, but upon return from a Los Angeles trip Joel started writing the week he got home and the results have driven them in the direction in which we now find them. The new songs reveal a more experimental approach, working with atmospherics and unusual sounds that riff around the tunes like a helter skelter. It’s a trick that’s repeated on Spiriting, which is more immediate, but once again finds echoing vocal refrains that mimic the voices in your head. Each tune is an example of how to start light, but add more and more weight as the song grows.

The evolution is continued with their latest work, which brings us to perhaps the finest song to date. West starts out as something ethereal, more akin to a Grimes tune, that doesn’t seem that accessible at first, but as the bulk of the tune emerges you realise it’s arms are wide open and as it reaches the resulting vocal refrain it feels like a warm embrace. It’s utterly arresting. What we have here is a brutally honest tale, as he Joel sings “I smoke more than I eat, I dance more than I sleep, I collide with everyone“. It seems like a man spiralling, but who’s redemption can be found in his honesty. Each instrument arrives in waves with some guitars hovering above the tune as if they’d been sprayed into the air like a mist.

Those readers from our home city of Brighton can see them playing a show at The Green Door Store on October 29th, in support of Amusement and Regal Safari. Elsewhere, you can catch them in Manchester, supporting Fixers on November 24th as part of the 20th birthday celebrations for the Night And Day Cafe. Should you not be fortunate enough to live in either of these cities, do not worry, as with all new bands there’s one place you can always catch them – online. Today’s recommendation is a lesson in taking part in online social networks and all the genuine connections and bright discoveries that it can reveal. Ultimately it serves a deep-rooted need in all human beings, to feel part of something bigger than their immediate environment. Mafia Lights got onto these blog pages simply by striking up a conversation. It was as real and as human as if they were stood next to us. Perhaps that’s the way forward for other bands? To paraphrase The Four Tops, just reach out, we’ll be there. (MB)

MAFIA LIGHTS – WEST

MAFIA LIGHTS – SPIRITING

YOHUNA

photo by Gregory Crewdson

We all assume that the truly memorable moments in your life are the rushes of adrenaline, as some scary drama sideswipes you unexpectedly, or when everything changes following the birth of your first child, or a marriage with the one you love – you know the really big things. Well, as John Lennon once insightfully stated “life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans“, so today we want you to imagine the moments in between the large, obvious life-changers.

Imagine the seconds you take to pause in life and ponder. It might be a quiet moment watching  the rain hit and run down the window, or the silence you meet in the countryside with nothing but a beautiful view or the breeze on your face for company. It’s your own Lost In Translation moment as you stare out of the car window from the back seat. Well, Yohuna soundtracks those moments.

Yohuna is the female solo artist, Johanne Swanson, who currently calls the University of New Mexico home, although she’s originally from Wisconsin. She recently got in touch with us and informed us of her plans to join up with another artist, known as Vacation Dad, in Los Angeles in the summer. Vacation Dad helped produce, record and mix her debut EP, Revery, which together they turned into four tracks of masterful, emotive music.

It was initially released in January of this year, but she told us that it’s likely to get a re-issue this summer with a fresh impetus. The opener, Keep Apnea, is a great example of what lays ahead on the EP, as the music arrives like mist, creeping into it’s gentle layers as the atmospherics begin to surround you. Echoing beats add structure to a tune that otherwise doesn’t ever seem to fully punctuate.

Her vocals are just as ethereal, which hit their most tearful on the track, Matteo. As with all of her songs they are kept deliberately epicene, as she strips her muliebrous music of any masculinity. Like another Recommender favourite, Grimes, this seems to be the kind of music that a male solo artist simply couldn’t sing.

It’s All Yours introduces a slight change in pace, mainly due to the reverbed drumming. It’s less patient than the other songs and feels less like a soundtrack to the closing scene in a David Lynch movie, but still maintains her ghostly aesthetic. It adds a refreshing rate to the centre of the EP as it’s layers find a propulsion upwards, seeming like Enya being backed by the reverbed gutaring of Jesus & Mary Chain‘s William Reid.

The final tune, Hometown Key, returns to the close-your-eyes-music, as her melodic voice once again leads us into the mist. It’s a stunning closer. It’s so tender and so cinematic that it never fails to pause you. It makes you think, which is actually a very difficult trick to pull, but she repeatedly manages it throughout this EP. She told us that she’s planning a few gigs throughout the Pacific Northwest in the summer, so you may get the chance to witness her hypnotic show if you live in that area of the world. In the mean time, listen to the below tracks and be prepared to have one of ‘those’ moments.  (MB)

YOHUNA – MATTEO

YOHUNA – HOMETOWN KEY