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Lewis Watson Performs “Once Before” [Exclusive Live Session]

Lewis Watson elias kdrphnc

We recently spent some quality time in Los Angeles with Oxfordshire, singer-songwriter, Lewis Watson and Music Supervisor and KCRW DJ Jason Kramer. Together we played some ping-pong, caught Lewis woo-ing his fans for a takeaway performance near the Beverly Fountain, and captured this exclusive session at Elias Arts in Santa Monica. Have a look below and be sure check out his new single “Calling” from Watson’s latest Four More Songs EP release.

Lewis Watson england (Facebook)

Lewis watson ping pong

reviewed by
06-03-13

Looking Back: The Great Escape 2013

The Great Escape 2013

By Bruce Rave

For years, the UK has had smaller versions of Austin’s SXSW. Several continue to thrive, and none more so than The Great Escape. It takes place in Brighton every May. 300 bands play in this charming party town, which is located on the English Channel. The event is more of a regional European festival with attendees and bands arriving from far and wide: Australians came to play even US bands like The Orwells, Phosphorescent and Parquet Courts, not only showed up, but blew people away in the process. A few established Brits such as Billy Bragg and Everything Everything played for those willing to shell out extra pounds to see them. For me, it was all about the up and coming peeps… just as it is at SXSW.

I saw about two dozen bands over the course of three days. If I were to give you one group that hit the biggest home run for me, it was The Strypes. These Irish mid-teens hammer out an intense R&B/garage blend of early Stones and Yardbirds. If you like this kind of music as much as I do, their live show is a “10” and it will be impossible not to have a smile on your face. They have amazing poise for their age, on and offstage. I interviewed them during the weekend, and that chat will soon be posted on B3SCI – stay tuned. Strypes hope to hit America next March for SXSW 2014. Another band that I interviewed was Tribes, who are also great live. Look for that post in the near future. This London band borrows more from the 70’s glam period and just released a new album in the UK. It follows up their top ten debut. They had the misfortune of following The 1975, who flashing-back had dazzled us at the B3SCI SXSW party in March. With two serious UK hits now under their belts, The 1975 drew such a huge throng that many Tribes fans gave up waiting in line. Temples matched the keen expectations I had for them, of which were mostly based on their first single “Shelter Song”. Their set contained several more songs with hit potential, and Temples absolutely deliver live. All four guys in the band ooze stardom, and front man James Bagshaw sports a perfect Tommy Bolan hairdo (bonus points). Temples played two unannounced shows, one being a few hours in advance of the also secret 2am set from Palma Violets. I didn’t see PV that night, but I recall they killed at SXSW.

Some other highlights among a slew of strong artists: Catfish and the Bottlemen came highly recommended to me by BBC honchos, and I loved their melodic, guitar-driven energy. Echotape are up and comers with huge potential that remind me a bit of The Horrors and even Temples. The Family Rain are three brothers, including two twins, who play like Wolfmother’s second album should have sounded. Owen McGarry is a promising Irish singer-songwriter with a crystal clear voice and lots of potential. Merchandise hail from Tampa and have become NME darlings with their dark and dirty post-punk power. An added bonus for me was at one point winding up in a private courtyard where Little Green Cars were taping a beautiful cover of Neil Young’s “Philadelphia” for VEVO. A major buzz artist was London Grammar. Her sweet voice attracted a huge outside line. I got in and can see why people are excited, even if her softer, slower style isn’t quite my glass of white wine.

While TGE is smaller than SXSW, it’s still impossible to cover everything due to schedule conflicts. One US band I hated to miss was electropop band Feathers from Austin. They definitely cut through the clutter and were on lots of lips. For SXSW, 6th Street in Austin has become such a shitshow that attendees avoid the street at all costs at night. Not the case in Brighton. Sidewalks, bars, and cafes were filled with college types and other mellow locals who seemed unfazed by the festival, so walking between venues was a real pleasure. We really lucked out with the weather. Brighton had endured ten consecutive stormy days, but not a drop of rain fell during the festival. One downside shared by both TGE and SXSW: As both events grow, there are more and more lines that make it impossible to gain admittance to certain showcases. Both festivals now have the task of trying to grow without being too big for their own good. I hope TGE can retain the casual intimacy that it still has at this point. I highly recommend it to anyone who can attend, but I’d do it within the next couple of years.

The Great Escape england (Official)

* Links and playlists from Rave’s weekly new music show can be found on his blog and be sure follow Bruce on Twitter too!

reviewed by
06-01-13

Phoenix – Trying To Be Cool (Breakbot Remix)

phoenixbreakbot

We close up the B3 doors for the week with a great summer Friday sort of track from the King of “Summer Friday sort of tracks” Breakbot and his excellent delectably funky “Trying To Be Cool” remix for Phoenix. In here it’s always Breakbot day.

Breakbot (Facebook)

Rating 8.2

brown8

reviewed by
05-31-13

Market East – Evergreen

marketeast

“Evergreen”, excerpted here from Philadelphia band Market East’s new Children of Summer EP, ably blends 60’s pop & the more pop-leaning tracks of great British Invasion bands (without sounding kitschy or tired) with a tremendous conveyance of melody, harmony & soul. Soul, that’s “Evergreen”s weapon, the track will immediately get at the most visceral parts of your music listening palette.

Market East (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

brown8

reviewed by
05-31-13

Laura Welsh – Cold Front

Laura Welsh

The super sultry-voiced UK R&B songstress follows up her great Dev Hynes collaboration “Unravel” with the doubly strong and infinitely sexy “Cold Front”.

Laura Welsh england (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.4

brown8

reviewed by
05-31-13

Jaymes Young – Wondering

james young

Newcomer Jaymes Young delivers a sharp blend of disparate yet complementary influences and highly skilled melodic phrasing with his piano-driven track for “Wondering”.

James Young california (Facebook)

Rating 8.3

brown93

reviewed by
05-30-13

FYFE – Conversations

FYFE

FYFE, a/k/a former David’s Lyre frontman Paul Dixon, is name on the lips, tweeters, spotify playlists of seemingly all the world’s music bloggers/tastemakers/rigmarole, on the strength no less of just two (VERY VERY GOOD) tracks. “Conversations” is FYFE’s latest and is neither a departure in quality nor progression for the UK-based artist; as both “Solace” and “St. Tropez” have been uniquely engaging in sound, such is the slightly more hip-hop/beats-tinged “Conversations”.

FYFE england (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

reviewed by
05-30-13

Ellie Goulding – Tessellate (Alt-J Cover)

goulding tesselate

The girl Ellie shows out for all the Alt-J fanboys and fangirls on the interwebs with this 100% spotless vibed-out sax-featuring cover of “Tessellate”.

Ellie Goulding (Official) (Purchase Halcyon on iTunes)

Rating: 8.8

brown8

reviewed by
05-28-13

Eli Mardock – Everything Happens for the First Time

Eli Mardock

NYC singer songwriter Eli Mardock rejuvenates new life into the Arcade Fire-like indie rock orchestration we’ve heard lax so many times before. “Everything Happens for the First Time” is the title track from his forthcoming debut album on Paper Garden Records which recently premiered via Virgin Mobile. This track is just begging for our next road trip spin, windows down required. We’re into it. Have a listen and sing-along to “Everything Happens for the First Time” below.

Eli Mardock (Official)

Rating: 8.3

reviewed by
05-24-13

Quadron – Better Off (Feat. Kendrick Lamar)

Quadron

Oooh baby. B3 all-time faves Quadron break off a little something for you and yr boo to slow dance to with the new Kendrick (!)-featuring “Better Off”. It’s about to get very sexy on this blog.

Quadron (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.4

reviewed by
05-23-13

Daithi – Chameleon Life (feat. Raye)

Daithi

“Chameleon”, new from Irish electronic musician Daithi, wins (without engaging tired current dance music tropes) on it’s fantastic you’ll-be-humming-them-immediately-and-for-days-afterwards melodies both instrumentally and vocally. Do not miss.

Daithi ireland (Facebook)

Rating 8.2

brown8

reviewed by
05-23-13

Baby Alpaca – Wild Child

baby alpaca

New York band Baby Alpaca ably blend current wave alt R&B & more eclectic far-off folk melodies that reminds a bit of (dare we say) one David Robert Jones a/k/a David Bowie. High, perhaps even hyperbolic praise for sure, but “Wild Child” is really that good. Sample below.

Baby Alpaca (Soundcloud(/a>)

Rating 8.2

brown8

reviewed by
05-23-13