KO KO

With the agreeable and temperate weather, that both the north and south of the UK has been enjoying this week, we have something of a perfect selection for you, with today’s band proving your ideal afternoon soundtrack. There’s a theme to the top and tail of the UK with today’s post as our blog is based in the South, but it’s the Northern music blog, Crack In The Road, to thank for today’s tip, so credit to the Newcastle blogger Josh and the gang for this delightful highlight. If you’ve never visited Crack In The Road, then you really should. They share lots of taste with The Recommender, post lots of new music every week, establishing themselves as a useful member of this countries online music discovery service. The UK is blessed with a history that’s rich with a wonderful musical heritage, so it’s only right that our blogging community – and it is a community – reflects that, but it’s actually from California that today’s recommendation arrives.

The people behind the group, KO KO, are the Lawhorn brothers, Ryan and Taylor, who grew up in the North of California, but now reside in the south, where they’ve collected together a range of additional musicians to create some wonderful music. It’s a State known for it’s perpetual summertime, which has served to bleed into their gorgeous music. We got in touch with Ryan recently and he described his group as being “friends with simple lives, writing songs which, like us, have never seen a real winter“. They only started this project in January 2012, but the early output has delivered some bright music, suffused with light and a delicate, refined quality. A three-track single was made available online a few weeks ago on their Bandcamp and each tune is beautifully exemplary. Josh likened them to Miike Snow, which is true to a large extent, but for anyone who is aware of Freedom Or Death, a duo that have earned many pages on The Recommender, you will find many similarities. It’s music that feels truly alive, as you get melodies with heart, ideas that are as clear as air and synths that breathe throughout.

You will be hard-pressed to find a more touching chorus than the one found inside of their song, So Strange. It’s central lament is so expansive and free, as they sing about the liberation from mortality, “I try to run to free my soul, wide open space can be so cruel“. As it’s such early days, they of course remain unsigned – for now – and are yet to put together a live show, but we would love to see their music played on a sun-drenched outdoor stage. Their tune, Float, continues their trademark light touch, with themes of hope in the face of adversity and the weight of youth as they look out upon the life before them. It’s another delight, as they bravely whistle a melody and skip through at a lightly tapped pace, although we are yet to see them try and either push the boundaries of their expansiveness further, or any darker themes deeper. The best chance we have to observe how capable they are of removing any heartbeat and wondering through the dark is with the tune, Intermission. They play the part of a character alone, begging for the “show to stop“, offering to “pay you back if you can drive me home“. Its sparse imagery still maintains a wonderful sense of storytelling, so what they lack in heartbeat, they make up for with soul.

They may suggest that they make music that has never experienced winter, but they’re capable of taking things to a colder temperature, even though their music only ever has the weight of a summertime breeze. This is a lesson in maintaining depth without any real avoirdupois. Their songs come from a place of substance but drift around you like butterflies. It’s a remarkably mature craft on show from this collective, suggesting this isn’t their first attempt at making music, but although that fact remains un-confirmed, this isn’t a collective that can enjoy the history of the super-group, Gayngs, or their more recent reincarnation, Polica. KO KO are setting themselves up well for some wider attention, as they’re delivering songs with such a tidy and spotless production. Like those other bands that we’ve mentioned on today’s post, this is music that will appeal to a British audience, so we hope that one day they can make it over here. We suggest they not only literally have a distance to go before they can manage getting over here, but metaphorically speaking their careers will also have to travel further first. However, whether it’s the North or South of California, or the North and South of the UK, good music will always transcend geography and distance. (MB)

POLICA

As the British intellectual, Stephen Fry, once said, “it is the useless things that ultimately make life worth living, and that make life dangerous, too. Wine, love, art, beauty, music“, the list goes on. It is with this thought in mind that we turn to today’s recommendation. At the heart of every musician you should locate a creative of the useless. They should simply be a spout pouring music all over our experiences. An outlet for their imagination, a resourceful talent for their inspired artistry. Why most artists stick to one genre, or one band for that matter, should surely be too restrictive for a true artist, a pure musician? Why confine yourself to one outlet? Why channel your creative talents through one prism? Well, you could argue that Ryan Olsen is a shining example of one such unrestricted musician.

If the collaboration that gave us Gayngs is anything to go by then this new project by many of the same protagonists is all set for something special. Leader on that occasion was Ryan Olsen who began Gayngs alongside a multitude of collaborators, including artists with true caliber, such as Justin Vernon of Bon Iver, but tucked in there on some of the vocals was the singer Channy Leaneagh, who was also selected to tour with them. Olsen enjoyed working with her talents so much that they’ve now set about an entirely new project, a new outlet, with her placed front and centre and with him on production, although he’s strangely left off of the credits. So today’s recommendation would like to introduce you to Poliça, (pronounced “poe-lisa”). This new project is like Gayngs, but not as we know it. What we do know is that the early results are very awesome indeed.

You will hear the Olsen factor inside much of Poliça’s music, so much so in fact that there is a risk they may suffer from sounding like Gayngs 2, but we can think of far worse sequels. Their debut album Give You The Ghost was due for a release on this year’s Valentines Day, but arrived earlier than planned. The release is a consistently bright and classy list of tunes. The aforementioned Justin Vernon has been quoted as stating that this “is the best band I’ve ever heard“, but perhaps he’s simply being supportive of fellow Bon Iver bandmate, Mike Noyce, who supplies backing vocals on some of Poliça’s tracks. With him being so close to Olsen’s projects it’s not to be taken too definitively, but the album is without any doubt an enjoyable piece of work. OK Stephen, it may well be useless, but with an experience this rich we are happy to wallow like wasters.

The glowing star of the show is Channy Leaneagh, who some of you may know from the folk rock band Roma di Luna, although this project is entirely departed from that, introducing vocals in a style not seen before. Olsen has selected to use her voice like an instrument, via auto-tune, in a way quite unlike anyone else. Auto-tune is a tool utilised not because Leaneagh cannot sing – she clearly has a stunning natural voice – rather it is there to warp and twist her singing into shapes that would have contortionists tongue tied. It tweaks the voice into an otherworldly, alien-esque dimension, never too much so it ends up irritating the listener as you could imagine, rather it’s just enough to keep things fresh and original. This team clearly aren’t afraid of their own creativity – a compulsory lesson that perhaps could be learned by other musicians. In contrast to this twisting inventiveness there’s much territory that will be familiar to fans of Gayngs, with a smoker’s pace to it all and an atmospheric, slowed, urbanised, hip hop beat.

The songs often swell into lengthy crescendos. Take the three minute mark into Lay Your Cards Out and you find a finish that’s so rapidly tapped out on the snare drums that we imagine the rhythm section’s sticks were an inch shorter by it’s close. Dark Star pulls a similar trick for it’s ending, although in fairness the song starts with a faster pace to begin with, but this time they pull in layers of brass over the jogging pace. Wandering Star is smoother, but less defined, like trying to catch smoke rings in your hand, and again this style is developed through Leaneagh’s ghosted vocals. A full North American tour is happening right now and running throughout March, including a home town show for Leaneagh in Minneappolis. It will be interesting to see who joins them on stage when performing this live, as they clearly have connections across the industry. Collaborative indeed, this project can confidently be classed as a successful experiment. With Olsen and Leaneagh we have a pair of true artists, proper musicians, genuine purveyors of all things utterly futile, that aren’t going to sit still any time soon, so we’d like to take this opportunity to say thank you to Ryan and Channy. Thanks for being so magnificently useless. (MB)

POLICA – LAY YOUR CARDS OUT

POLICA – DARK STAR