VISIONS OF TREES

This London duo are about as hard to pigeon hole as we imagine it is to physically squeeze an actual pigeon into an actual hole. As you know, The Recommender usually deals in emerging music, so you may be wondering why they’re appearing on here, seeing as they’ve been floating around since 2009. That’s understandable, but in all honesty they’re one of those bands that feels like they’ve established a foothold on the underground music scene without actually releasing much original work to date.

One search on the Hype Machine and you’ll see a reasonably lengthy list of entries, so supportive are blogs, but in fairness most of them are remixes of them or by them. A quick scan through the list will reveal a prolific but always excellent re-work of bands such as Everything Everything, Memory Tapes, Alice Gold and Filthy Dukes, among others, as they introduce their trademark late night atmospherics to the more traditional commercial market. It’s a lesson in building a following via a remix. However, the reality remains that the duo have only officially delivered one single before now, which was their Sometimes It Kills release, from back in February, on Royal Rhino Flying Records. It’s only this week that we’ve received the follow up, Sirens (Novocaine).

This new single, which is out on October 17th on Deadly People Recordings, is our favourite track to date from the pair. Joni Juden brings it thumping and slapping into view like a pissed off Destiny’s Child tune, before Sara Atalar’s vocals sweep in like a broad of silk. Tweaks and synths give it a mixture of doom and stuttering interruptions that counter the otherwise obvious pop tune that it is, in the same juxtapositioning style that Sleigh Bells are known for. The drums totally own the song, darting around like a paranoid drum machine, switching in a blink from afro hip hop to a pace more akin to the kind of raving house tip-tap build up we used to hear in the 90s. It’s a fizzing second single, marking them out as a proper deadly dance act, taking us one more step closer to the full début album, which is due in 2012.

Other recent available demos, such as Everything Awaits, which will draw further comparisons to Crystal Fighters (a band they’re supporting at an upcoming live show – see below). Like that band they are once again found harnessing 90s dance music, but they also avoid the obvious soulless pitfalls that cleared many of that era’s dancefloors and instead mix in a classy variety of breaks and more glacial vocals that lift the song skywards. The other demo, Turn 2 U, has clearer vocals, but darker synth chords. We can easily imagine her vocals could have been utilised in something more akin to commercial house, (think Freemasons, Planet Funk et al), but thankfully she simply takes that chart-friendly corner of dance’s euphoric escapism into something altogether more palatable, alternative and atmospheric.

We imagine they’ll be quite the powerhouse live, as the available imagery on their Blogspots and Tumblrs has been just as arresting as the moving music, clearly showing us a sense of design alongside their clever productions. We list below a run of live shows they’re planning for throughout the late Autumn, in support of the single. Although they sound like a billion fragments of different dance and pop genres, making it virtually impossible to give them a correct shelf – something we’re positive they’re more than happy with – where they can be truly satisfied is their ability to make every shard like a well-crafted snowflake, all ice cold and beautiful. Now that’s something well worth catching if you can. (MB)

15/9 Manchester, Sound control w/Crystal Fighters
19/10 Nottingham The Bodega
20/10 Oxford, The Jericho
21/10 Cardiff, SWN Festival
22/10 Leeds, Nation of Shopkeepers
26/10 Sheffield, Forum
03/11 London, CAMP
11/11 Liverpool, Music Week festival
12/11 Glasgow, Death Disco

VISIONS OF TREES – SIRENS (NOVOCAINE)

VISIONS OF TREES – CULT OF COBRAS

VISIONS OF TREES – THE SCIENCE OF HATE

SLEIGH BELLS GIG NEWS

Our editor, Mike, is part of the management team for the promotions at Digital in Brighton, but this ‘gig list’ post isn’t some self-serving attempt to push ticket sales. No, no, no. For one thing it’s an external promoter running this show, Brighton’s Lout Promotions, who seem to be about as on the money with their bookings as you could be, managing to make credible selections, whilst still keeping one eye on their commercial business. The other reason is that this show is going to be so packed with energetic bands that there’s a risk the sea’s tide could well be forced back from our beach-fronted venue. They come to town on February 15th and you can purchase the last few tickets right here. Like. Now.

SLEIGH BELLS
We all know that this Brooklyn duo were one of the biggest features on 2010′s landscape, having released their debut album, Treats; a piece of outstanding work that topped The Recommender’s ‘Album Of The Year‘ chart. Alexis Krauss seems like an icon in the making, looking killer in photo shoots, whilst being full of energetic showmanship on stage. To think this shades-wearing, baseball-bat-swinging vixen used to be a school teacher. That’s one class you would never skive. Their music is often an immature crash at full volume, but with the latest single, ‘Rill Rill‘, we see them pushing to the front the nursery rhyme style that also flows through the album.  The accompanying video arrived this week and instantly swirled around the blogs. It shows the band are just as deadly alongside each other as they are with a crowd when playing live. This upcoming headline show, at the largest venue they’ve played in Brighton to date, is one where we hope they come armed with their full array of weapons.

SLEGH BELLS – A/B MACHINES

TEETH
If you can survive the earlier onslaught of You Love Her Coz She’s Dead, then prepare yourselves well for this London trio. Not only is their sound an avalanche of maxed-out synths and crashing cymbals, but nutty lead singer, Veronica, will be guaranteed to launch herself into the crowd at some point. Yes they’re very noisy, and yes they’re very hipsters-go-nuts, but amongst the left and right hooks there’s their signature set of laser-beam house chords that help their powerful live sets take the roof off. There’s been some decent remixes floating around of their ‘See Spaces‘ single too, particularly from producer de jour, Dreamtrak, and also from hot property, Visions Of Trees. Both are excellent and soften the harsher edges of the original.

TEETH – TIME CHANGES

YOU LOVE HER COZ SHE’S DEAD
You wonder if this British duo would exist were it not for Crystal Castles, so similar is both their aesthetic and their music. Admittedly there are far worse inspirations and where they lack originality, they more than make up ground with tight productions. Aggressive pogo beats, Gameboy samples and simple synth chords are interrupted with mantra-like burnt vocals that are always, always shouted. At worst it sounds like the noises made by tapes loading for the ZX Spectrum 48k, but at best they can go toe to toe with Hearts Revolution or the aforementioned Crystal Castles, although they’d probably end up headbutting Alice Glass in the face. Signed to Kitsune, you can hopefully expect the self-titled début album in August.

YOU LOVE HER COZ SHE’S DEAD – SUNDAY BEST

BLONDES IN TOKYO
This three piece group from Brighton are aiming to be a genuine crossover band between punk and electro, fusing metallic guitars, with machine-punched beats and samples. The singer can’t sing particularly well, but it doesn’t stop him trying, and it actually adds to their punk attitude; and let’s face it, Jonny Rotten was hardly operatic! There’s a snarled style woven into every track and with early examples, such as ‘Running Miles‘, you get a well-constructed tune that shows us they also have a more matured song-writing ability. They’re first on at this show, so expect them to get the crowd pumped from the outset. (MB)

BLONDES IN TOKYO – RUNNING MILES