MAP - Music Alliance Pact #74


MAP - Music Alliance Pact



Eccoci a un nuovo appuntamento mensile con il progetto MAP - Music Alliance Pact, ovvero una ventina di blog di tutto il mondo che selezionano per voi una nuova band interessante del proprio Paese, ve la presentano e vi regalano una canzone. Un ottimo modo per scoprire nuova musica in modo non convenzionale. Per chi volesse capire di cosa stiamo parlando, questo è il riassunto delle puntate precedenti.



Tra i nomi che mi hanno incuriosito a questo giro:

- l'indonesiano Barokka, con una electro-dub che non va certo per il sottile, ma che oltre la sua apparenza trash mostra sfumature oscure e ostili;

- The Dagger Complex, dal Perù, che confermano quanto sia universale l'eredità di suoni alla Echo & The Bunnymen e di certi Ottanta;

- lo scozzese Billy Jeffrey Jnr, con un folk caldo e tradizionale che piacerà ai fan di Iron & Wine e Bon Iver;

- Da Culkin Clan, che a quanto pare rappresentano il meglio dell'hip-hop equadoregno, e viaggiano su beat molto rilassati che mi prendono sempre bene;

- il maltese Fastidju, al secolo NIgel Baldacchino, con un post-rock che sembra partire da ambientazioni Sigur Rós e poi prende una piega più notturna e angosciosa molto efficace;

- lo scanzonato rock'n'roll a presa rapida dei portoricani Los Vigilantes.





Gli italiani di questo mese sono i Klam, quartetto toscano che ha da poco debuttato con l'album Bleak. Un disco di post-punk pervaso da atmosfere goth e nervose, spettrali e senza luce. Suoni cesellati con precisione (li immagino dividere un palco con i Soviet Soviet, per esempio) e titoli che non lasciano scampo. Potrebbe sembrare tutto già sentito ma il meccanismo mi pare funzioni a meraviglia perché i Klam riescono in qualche modo a preservare brandelli straziati di melodie. Sconsolate e intrise di melodramma, pur sempre melodie azzeccate e forti, capaci di restarti addosso. Un esordio molto promettente.



(mp3) Mess With The Best, Die In A Nuclear Test



Clicca qui sotto per leggere il resto della playlist del MAP di novembre, con il link per scaricarla tutta in un colpo solo.







Click the play button icon to listen to individual songs, right-click on the song title to download an mp3, or grab a zip file of the full 22-track compilation through Dropbox here.



ARGENTINA: Zonaindie

Tomás Ferrero - Cuando Te Hablo

In March 2013, a mixed group of musicians gathered together in Cordoba and Buenos Aires to play some songs and sound pieces composed with lyrics taken from the work of a federal collective of artists called Esta Vida No Otra. Some of them recorded the results several months later, and those tracks were then released as a compilation titled 15 Artistas Cantan Esta Vida No Otra. The song we have selected from this album, also available for free at Bandcamp, is Cuando Te Hablo by Tomás Ferrero from the band Rayos Láser.



AUSTRALIA: Who The Bloody Hell Are They?

Open Swimmer - Sugar Bowl

Open Swimmer's version of pop is jarring, even discordant at first, but it's this blatantly simple approach that has us hooked. (Dirty Projectors fans, pay attention now.) Sugar Bowl is a brilliant introduction to the band; playful yodelling is cut and pasted along a steady 4/4 drum beat, while witty banter takes the fore. Songwriter Ben TD was based in Glasgow for seven years, touring extensively and landing multiple sessions on BBC Radio One and a stint at T in the Park before settling in Melbourne. The band comprises some of Melbourne's most admired independent music alumni (The Harpoons, Seagull). Expect to hear a lot more from this group.



BRAZIL: Meio Desligado

Alessandra Leão - Mofo

Alessandra Leão shows off her experimental side with Mofo, taken from her new EP, Pedra De Sal. Avoiding the world music sound from other works, this song has dark music and some weird programming that fits the angst of the lyrics.



CANADA: Ride The Tempo

Beach Season - Midnights

There's not actually much out there on Beach Season besides the fact the project is from Calgary. The smooth vocals of Midnights complements the hip-hop influenced rhythms. This is a duo that won't be much of a mystery for long.



CHILE: Super 45

The Dagger Complex - Velvet Moon

The Dagger Complex were formed in 2013 by Hernán Díaz (vocals/guitar), Michaela Boman (vocals), Abraham Vicencio (guitar), Gonzalo Chandía (bass) and Ignacio Álvarez (drums). Their debut EP, Vibrant, released by Beast Discos, is a collection of songs inspired by early 90s shoegaze and dream-pop, one foot set in the cadence of bands such as Slowdive or Mojave 3, the other one in the fuzzy mass of noise of The Jesus And Mary Chain and My Bloody Valentine.



DENMARK: All Scandinavian

IAmFire - Burn Your Halo

IAmFire have their debut EP ready and apparently it sounds like a "massive drug experience" to frontman Peter Dolving. Come December, he and the rest of the gang will be releasing this groovy stoner metal dragon and here's Burn Your Halo as a MAP exclusive download.



DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: La Casetera

Gnómico & Victor Victor - Mesita De Noche

Hip-hop producer Gnómico has always been interested in preserving Dominican musical culture for the present and future generations. Now he's embarking on a new project called Sinergia that will add an urban twist to many songs from past decades. The first one is Mesita De Noche, a famous 90s bachata by Victor Victor, now remade with a funky fresh attitude, Gnómico's own rap verses and Mr Victor himself singing its signature chorus.



ECUADOR: Plan Arteria

Da Culkin Clan - Sometimes You Make Love

From the city of Cuenca, Da Culkin Clan represents the most weird and experimental contemporary hip hop of the country. Their lyrics and music are a bunch of random, powerful and creative ideas - a mixture of carnival and fiction figures. From debut album Special Dark, we present its first single, Sometimes You Make Love.



GREECE: Mouxlaloulouda

Babis Papadopoulos - Spring

Babis Papadopoulos blends the organic nature of Greek traditional folk music, rhythms rich with contemporary elements and avant-garde jazz and succeeds in creating a sequence of lush, varied and nostalgic tracks. Spring, the splendid first preview from his forthcoming album, Joy In Pain, Pain In Joy, is dominated by a delicate, recurring melody in bouzouki, mournful violins, a broody viola and the warm restlessness of his guitar.



INDONESIA: Deathrockstar

Barokka - Barapantura

Dangdut Koplo is one of the most famous electro genres in the shady underground clubs of Indonesia. This trashy dance anthem was created by the guy behind Dubyouth as an introduction.



IRELAND: Hendicott Writing

SPIES - Moosehead

Hyped up by authorities as hefty as The Guardian and NME, Dublin's SPIES are widely seen as the city's next big thing. Moosehead is the latest of their slow to emerge singles, released on the band's own Trout Records label. Leaning on the same glorious desolation that fronted Factory Records' world-renowned soundscapes, it's a jittery, dingy piece of indie-rock that brings atmospheric depression up to date. Think social awkwardness meets Interpol, and put a hefty bookmark on this space.



ITALY: Polaroid

Klam - Mess With The Best, Die In A Nuclear Test

On the cover of Bleak, the debut album by Klam, there is a foggy road, a city in the shadow, a storm seems to be approaching. It's a perfect introduction to the sound of the band: dark shoegaze with post-punk sharp edges. They can create hazy clouds of feedback, but they can also write vibrant and trembling songs like this one.



JAPAN: Make Believe Melodies

Toyohirakumin - Cliff

If the term 'vaporwave' gives you chills, either turn back now or try to think beyond whatever concepts of the internet microgenre you have. Toyohirakumin makes music that is often filed as - and in some cases sounds like - vaporwave, but Cliff is far more than an exercise in aesthetics. It is a slow burner, and a minimal one at that, but a compelling throbber from a promising Japanese producer.



MALTA: Stagedive Malta

Fastidju - Kukkuzejt

Fastidju was born when Nigel Baldacchino (essentially a non-musician) started conceiving vague sung melodies and aural structures for existing pieces of writing compiled for the exhibition, Sajda, in 2012. Nigel started seeking collaborations with electronic producers he admired, such as Istishhad Hheva and Cygna, to provide flesh to his musical skeletons. An album was devised and a band took on the task of developing some of the structures - and even creating new songs. Cygna ultimately ended up being the main crucial guiding light in the final studio phase.



MEXICO: Red Bull Panamérika

Pumcayó - Don Jacinto

Hailing from Guadalajara, Pumcayó is a band that weaves their region's folkloric heritage, with patterns found on Grizzly Bear or Fleet Foxes' music. Following a Kino-Pravda aesthetic - as in Dziga Vertov's Soviet documentary from the 20s - the video for the song Don Jacinto follows the semi-industrial art of making colourful papercrafts, a simple decor in Mexican celebrations with a beautifully complex craft.



PERU: SoTB

Mind Blank - Cocaine

Mirella Bellido is the songwriter and lead singer of Mind Black. These Days is her debut five-track EP that moves through different emotions such as anxiety, perversion, obsession and regret. Mind Black, as defined by its creator, is a balance between the emotional and rational.



PORTUGAL: Posso Ouvir Um Disco?

A Jigsaw - No True Magic

Coimbra band A Jigsaw are back with a new album, No True Magic. Jorri and João Rui, the two members of the folksy alternative band, invited Carla Torgerson (The Walkabouts) to join them on vocals for one of the tracks, Black Jewelled Moon. They also produced the record, which will find new fans in those who appreciate artists such as Tindersticks, Leonard Cohen or Tom Waits.



PUERTO RICO: Puerto Rico Indie

Los Vigilantes - Ahí Ya No Estoy

After an exhaustive and intense European tour, garage-rockers Los Vigilantes returned to Puerto Rico with a new record under their belt. Aptly titled Al Fin (At Last), it perfectly showcases the band's brand of melodic surf punk: both infectious and melancholy, it makes your bones rattle, a bit from pain and a bit from joy. Los Vigilantes recently shared a video for the record's second single, Ahí Ya No Estoy, in which a scorned lover wills himself into feeling hopeful for the future with a little help from his friends, cheering us all up in the process. Dance those blues away with Los Vigilantes.



SCOTLAND: The Pop Cop

Billy Jeffrey Jnr - Eternal Blue

Billy Jeffrey Jnr's debut album, Eternal Blue, received modest attention when it was released in early 2014 but - thanks to the power of word-of-mouth and mesmeric live performances - it continues to gain the Glasgow songwriter a host of new fans and followers with each passing week. Possessing the same otherworldly quality as Bon Iver, it is a record full of elegant moments, with title track Eternal Blue being a personal favourite.



SOUTH KOREA: Indieful ROK

We Hate JH - 20

Emo/power-pop band We Hate JH made the finals of this year's edition of the foremost South Korean rookie competition, Hello Rookie. A brand new single will be out very soon, but 20 is the charming and extremely likeable opening track off the official debut EP Officially, We Hate JH released earlier this year.



SPAIN: Musikorner

Role - Shrine II

Role are a four-piece from Madrid whose sound is influenced by dream-pop, trip-hop and even art-rock. They have played live at Valle Eléctrico, one of the most important experimental electronic club nights in Spain, and their first album is due to be released in the first quarter of 2015.



UNITED STATES: We Listen For You

Jenna Dean - Blown

Funk-based hip hop is alive and well in the form of this brilliant track from Jenna Dean. Smooth guitars open into a locked groove that swarms around a controlled lyrical outpouring. It's a song that builds and builds, never letting the listener down.




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