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September 2nd, 2009

Manimal Festival 2009

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Pappy & Harriet’s, a hidden gem that makes you feel like you’re in a wild west saloon set from Hollywood’s golden age because, well, it is, plays host to the second annual Manimal Festival on October 3 and 4. The atmosphere of the place is enchanting, what with a blanket of stars overheard and the crisp air of autumn in the open desert. It’s without compare, especially in LA county. The lineup is one to be reckoned with too. On one hand you have the primal stomp and swagger of Edward Sharpe, Fool’s Gold, and Warpaint, and on the other you have the intoxicating, cosmic explorations of Rio en Medio and Amanda Jo Williams, mentioned yesterday on this very blog.  Take a sweater or at least a blanket; it’s going to get chilly. Especially if you plan on wandering out into the desert buttes and sleeping under the moon, this festival will be magical.

=tyler=

June 4th, 2009

Leaves of Life + Bonus Rant

leavesoflifepress

Define ‘folk’ as you will. The term, with its divergent meanings and connotations and applications, has lost its ability to capture a contemporary “genre” in the strictest sense of the word. But as an essence, a philosophy, an outlook, it is still vital. It is still alive when musicians (or anybody, for that matter) share their songs or their stories or themselves with one another. Folk is about sublimating the human condition into art, plain and simple. And though the traveling bards may be working at Guitar Center and the hootenannies relegated to places that serve $6 Pabst, the urge to share, to trade, and to express keeps the folk tradition alive. Compilations are, perhaps, the closest thing the digital realm has to embodying the folk ethos. The artists join hands, so to speak, and share one, maybe two songs apiece. It’s like being around a campfire or in Washington Square Park, minus the whole live human thing. Any reader of this blog knows that compilations have been vital in the transmission of contemporary folk and psych music and, to me, it makes perfect, natural sense. Folk was never about headliners, it was about equal billing.

Curated by Buck Curran of Arborea, Leaves of Life will be released June 23rd on Borne Recordings. All proceeds benefit the UN’s Food Aid Agency, World Food Programme, and human rights advocacy monitors, Not On Our Watch. There will also be a digital version of the album with Bonus Tracks by Jozef Van Wissem, Plains, Denise Dill, and Laurent Brondel, so be sure to pick up a copy and hear some great songs.

[ First Listen ] Silver Summit – “Oaks”

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Leaves of Life Track List
1. Alela Diane with Mariee Sioux, “The Cuckoo”
2. Rio en Medio and Israel Cilio, “Mary”
3. Fern Knight, “Our Mountain the Mother”
4. Marissa Nadler and Black Hole Infinity, “Dead Wives Club”
5. Devendra Banhart, “Hotel St. Sebastian (demo)”
6. Arborea, “Son of the Moon, Daughter of the Sun”
7. Micah Blue Smaldone, “The Clearing”
8. Larkin Grimm, “The Butcher”
9. Mi and Lau, “The Funeral, The Pray”
10. Mica Jones, “Best Life”
11. Starless and Bible Black, “All the Finest Beams”
12. Cursillistas, “Mothers Taught”
13. Silver Summit, “Oaks”
14. Big Blood, “Sick With Information”
15. Eric Carbonara, “Sundown at Parakeet Park”
16. David Garland, “Splinter Heart”
17. Magic Leaves, “Lasso Reason”
18. Citay, “Little Kingdom”
19. Ora Cogan featuring Anni Rossi, “My Belle”

=tyler=

February 26th, 2009

Brightblack Morning Tour the Southland

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February 20th, 2009

Rio en Medio: The Naturalismo Interview

I drove from Boston to Brooklyn in the Spring or Summer of 2007 to see Vetiver play with Vashti Bunyan at Southpaw. There was no real idea of where we would stay or, for that matter, how to get to the venue. Afterthoughts. This was going to be a great show, well worth the mapless adventure. We didn’t know that Danielle would be opening the night, but I was happy to see her name when we arrived. The impact of unexpected joy is always deep. It was a good night.

Rio en Medio has just released Frontier, the followup to her 2007 debut The Bride of Dynamite. She’s also traveling the country with Brightblack Morning Light as we speak, so don’t miss her if she stops in your world.

~~~

NATURALISMO: Much time has passed since the making of your debut, Bride of Dynamite. Like us all, the person you are today is not the person you were then. What paths has your life taken since your first record, and how have those directions, choices, and experiences manifested themselves on your new record, Frontier?

RIO EN MEDIO: I moved to New Mexico in Winter 07 and started right away to write the songs for Frontier. I spent a year without phone or internet, living in a tiny rural village in a small room with windows all around. In the dead of winter I would run out of food and firewood. I was scared of intruders and scared of myself. I never regretted leaving New York though. Moving (back) to New Mexico sent an immediate, direct message to my heart that put it front and center. Letting go of many assumptions of what life should look like and how it should be processed helped reveal to me many mysteries and types of magic inaccessible to me the midst of city living. Mixing heart landscape with imaginary worlds and natural messages of the land stimulated the narratives and soundscapes in Frontier.

N: Your songs seem rooted in folk; they often evoke the pastoral, the natural, the verdant, the organic. Yet, especially on Frontier, there is an embrace of the artificial. Do you believe that digital technology is the natural evolution of the “folk music” idiom (or consciousness in general)? Is this the Frontier, so to speak?

REM: Music is most powerful to me when it contains elements in violence and harmony, when there is tension in the music reflecting the struggle around us. I find wild beauty, spirituality and liberation in synthesizers and drum machines, offset with the delicate human and string voices, framing the carefully articulated ukulele and vocal parts with more chaotic patterns. So I’m singing about something that’s happening in the music environment the way we sing about what’s happening in our world environment. Yes, as a metaphor to feel before reflecting on.

N: In my opinion, our generation’s greatest identity struggle stems from the opposition of nostalgia for what is “natural” with an increasingly symbiotic relationship with technology. How do you balance these seemingly conflicting elements in your own life?

REM: I would say instead that our generation’s greatest identity struggle is with our individual authority, our right to free thought, to decide for ourselves what we believe. It is surprising in this so-called free society how few people take advantage of their cosmic right to be alive and make choices. To me there is no conflict, only choice. Music seems to be one of the best ways to get that idea across, to work that muscle. Go home and make a song and make it yours. Don’t give me or anyone else or some institution your soul or wrongly assume that you are free of the responsibility to make your own light apparent.

N: You have created art in many mediums and in many different styles during your life. What about music appeals to your personal sensibilities, and how has music changed your approach to other forms of creation?

REM: I am interested in the intellectual message that is felt for its obvious trueness, that changes you as it awaken its friend in your heart. Music rocks the gut and contains sexual magic which is the most creative.

N: What contemporary artists have you been enjoying recently?

REM: Terry Riley, the Dirty Projectors.

N: Most importantly, do you prefer shwarmas or samosas?

REM: Samosas are tasty but they are so hard in their little shells, it’s a bit daunting to bite in, know what i mean?  I like falafels best.

[ download ] Frontier

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=tyler=

November 17th, 2008

Arborea curates African Relief Project / World Food Program Benefit CD

Our good friends Buck and Shanti Curran of Arborea are putting together an incredible benefit CD for the African Relief Project and World Food Program… this is NOT to be missed. Incredible lineup, all around.

From Buck:

“Hi everybody, Shanti and I have been busy organizing and curating a compilation cd of some of our very favorite folks.  The tentative release date for the comp is March 21st, 2009 and  will be released on our label Borne Recordings/Acuarela (U.S. distribution through Darla Records). All proceeds are going to be donated to World Food Program (United Nations agency) to help with special and Very important relief operations and emergencies in places such as Darfur region of Sudan,Uganda, and the Congo. The confirmed lineup is – Marissa Nadler & Black Hole Infinity, Devendra Banhart, Mi and Lau, Fern Knight, Rio en Medio, Larkin Grimm, Arborea, Alela Diane, Mica Jones, Big Blood, Micah Blue Smaldone, Cursillistas, Magic Leaves, The Plains, Starless and Bible Black, David Garland, Ora Cogan, Eric Carbonara,  Jozef Van Wissem, and Silver Summit. Also, our friend Lyndsay recently introduced us to an intense and beautiful film called War Dance, about 3 children from the Acholi tribe in Uganda.  Music is a very important part of their lives.”

Click above for a clip of War Dance!

=tyler=

October 3rd, 2008

Rio En Medio album premiere party @ spaceland

the show will also be the premier of the first rio en medio music video which was shot in joshua tree a few weeks ago. danielle’s new album Frontier will also be for sale and will feature hand made cover art by danielle as well!

more details here:

http://clubspaceland.com/2008/sunday-100508-rio-en-medio-voices-voices-weave-exitmusic/

[ stream ] Rio En Medio – “Heartless” from Frontier

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or [ download ]

=tyler=

August 19th, 2008

Mariee Sioux covers The Cure

Mariee Sioux’s cover of The Cure’s “Love Song” can be found on Manimal Vinyl’s “Perfect as Cats” tribute album, alongside tracks from Silver Summit, Kaki King, Rio en Medio, and many many more. Head over to the Perfect as Cats MySpace for more info.

[ stream ] Mariee Sioux – Love Song

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or [ download ] Mariee Sioux – Love Song

=tyler=

June 18th, 2008

Rio en Medio explores new Frontier

I first saw Rio en Medio perform live in the early Spring of 2007, where she was opening for Vetiver at Southpaw in Brooklyn. Not only had I never heard her perform live, I had never heard any of her music, period. The night was frigid. Inside, warm and woozy, I stood amongst Brooklyn’s hipster elite waiting to hear Danielle Stech-Homsy. As she and her band took the stage and performed their first musical mosaic, I was equally frozen as I had been in the will-call line outside the door. My shoes were glued to the floor, my jaw somewhere alongside them. My thoughts leaped in all directions but were instantly cradled and comforted by the ethereal atmospherics of a plaintive ukulele.

Well, time has passed and the world has certainly changed. With her debut LP The Bride of Dynamite behind her, Rio en Medio just announced the title of her new album and has released a new song for us to enjoy! Frontier will be released by Manimal Vinyl Records this September…but until then, enjoy “Fall Up.”

[download] “Fall Up” from Frontier

=tyler=

May 15th, 2008

Rio En Medio unplugged

The fine folks over at Mp3.com sat down with the always enigmatic Rio En Medio and recorded two beautiful unplugged performances of “My Star” and “Kill the Messenger.” Its always fascinating to hear musicians stripped down to the core of just them and their instrument. Danielle’s simple, plucked baritone ukulele and delicate voice create a lilting yet unsettling dynamic, made even more so here with the removal of the sonic elements found on record.

[link to videos]

May 5th, 2008

rio en medio catches saturday night fever, tours europe

In the seventh decade of the twentieth century, a cultural phenomenon swept this great country – nay, the world – faster than the common cold in a subway car full of sneezers. No, I’m not referring to wide lapels or polyester pants. I’m referring to disco. But before you scoff or tilt your shaggy-haired heads back in disgust, shall we revisit the antiquated sounds of disco’s greatest golden hits through the lens of one today’s most enchanting performers? Yes, we shall.

The Seven Inch Project has just released a limited edition vinyl pressing of two classic disco covers from Gnomonsong’s own Rio En Medio, aka Danielle Stech-Homsy. From their site:

“The inspiration for these disco covers came to Danielle as she was promenading through the local West Indian grocery store in Flatbush, Brooklyn. It was late and Danielle was exhausted from work. As her dazed eyes drifted over bruised plantains she suddenly became aware of a song that was playing on the radio. For days the melody filled Danielle’s head and obsessed her imagination. She had only caught a few words but managed to dig it up on the Internet…”Let this groove get you to move…It’s alright…alright…a-a-al-right.” Weeks later Danielle found herself in a Montreal hotel tapping the beat out on the desk in her room, trying to be as quiet as possible so as not to alert the staff to her nefarious recording activity. The song, one could say, had bewitched her. It had awakened a certain hitherto obscured spirit inside her that, once unleashed, had the power to change her, which it did, causing Danielle to abandon her current life in pursuit of a more dangerous personal freedom and aliveness that she had never known. That’s when she understood DISCO – what must have moved so many people, as silly as it now seems to many of us – the magical hold it had on being Alive, struggling against the odds, and for no reason other than to feel something moving in your body and soul…

[download] “Let’s Groove” (Original by Earth, Wind, and Fire)

[buy the vinyl]

Click below for current European tour dates with CocoRosie!

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March 13th, 2008

CocoRosie, Rio En Medio, Mariee Sioux to play Cure Tribute

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