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GIVEAWAY! Florence + The Machine – Ceremonials [Vinyl]

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Because B3SCI cares and because we’re in that holiday spirit, we’re about to drop a killer contest on y’all! We are giving away to one lucky reader a 12″ of one of the year’s most celebrated LPs, Ceremonials by Florence + the Machine. Yeah!

To win just drop us a line HERE and you’ll be entered to win this 12″ vinyl gem. Our winner will be raffled and contacted Thursday, 12/15/11. Be sure to put Ceremonials atop your gift-list this year and if you don’t win from us you can take your chances with this other sick contest here.

Official DAS Remix: Florence + The Machine – No Light, No Light

Florence + The Machine england (Official and Purchase)

Rating 8.3
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reviewed by
12-14-11

Redanda – This Bed Is A Rock

Contributed by Chris Gedos

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Redanda hails from Hamilton, Ontario, Canada’s Steel city. Comparison cities in the US would be Youngstown, Cleveland and Pittsburgh; in England, Manchester. They wear their love for gritty, greasy rock on their blue collars just like b3sci. “This Bed is a Rock” is industrial music because it comes from a city of industry. Frills and accoutrement need not apply. Be sure to check Expanda and Carl, their two EPs from 2011.

Redanda – This Bed Is A Rock

Redanda canada (Bandcamp)

Rating 8.1

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reviewed by
12-14-11

Stone Darling – You’ve Been On My Mind

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Love 50’s and 60’s pop as much as we do? Love Patsy Cline and Linda Ronstadt? Love 90’s Weezer? Yeah, you’re gonna love this. We love it too. Stone Darling is four girls out of L.A. and “You’ve Been On My Mind” is excerpted from their s/t EP, which is out today.

Stone Darling – You’ve Been On My Mind

Stone Darling california (Facebook) (Bandcamp)

Rating 8.1

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reviewed by
12-13-11

Common – Raw (How You Like It)

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So we haven’t given much love to Common’s upcoming Dreamer/Believer joint yet, cause if we’re being real, fam, we haven’t been that nuts about what’s leaked so far. “Raw” is a definite step up “Blue Sky” or “Believer” or whatever Lily Allen shit Com is on. Here, Lonnie does his best Yasiin Bey with pretty good results. We’re spinning it.

Common – Raw (How You Like It)

Common illinois (Twitter) (Myspace)

Rating 8.2

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reviewed by
12-13-11

Lee Fields – You’re the Kind of Girl

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Our homey the soul vet Lee Fields returns with new single “You’re the Kind of Girl”. Sounding as if it was ripped off some killer never-heard-before 70’s soul LP, (think Bobby Womack or Willie Hutch), “You’re the Kind of Girl” still does go pretty fresh. It was produced by Jeff Silverman and Leon Michaels (Jay-Z, Aloe Blacc, Ghostface). Give the first single from Lee’s upcoming A Faithful Man a spin below.

Lee Fields – You’re the Kind of Girl

Lee Fields northcarolina (Myspace) (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

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reviewed by
12-13-11

SHOW REVIEW! The Sea and Cake w/ Lia Ices @ The Troubadour, West Hollywood, CA, December 6th, 2011

Contributed by Chris Gedos

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Considering there’s more bands than people these days, I’m afraid to say that I’d never listened to The Sea and Cake if only because I wasn’t quite sure what to make of their name. Band names with lowercase articles are highly uncommon in today’s indiedom. I still think The Sea and Cake sounds more like a collection of short stories by the most recent fiction MFA from Hunter College, but presented with the opportunity to see the Chicago collective at Doug Weston’s Troubadour on Tuesday, December 6th 2011, I partook in a 24 hour cram session and familiarized myself with their nine albums: The Sea and Cake, Nassau, The Biz, The Fawn, Oui, One Bedroom, Everybody, Car Alarm and 2011’s The Moonlight Butterfly. They are that rare one trick pony. It’s indie meets jazz, a true marriage at the left end of the dial, a highly professional Chicago sound emanating from the most (i.e. only) outwardly-looking city in the Midwest. First cousin: Tortoise. Second cousin by marriage: Wilco. Third cousin/ black sheep: Smashing Pumpkins.

The Troubadour pays homage to its singer-songwriter alumni in the bar to the left of the entrance, a classic roadhouse with a video feed to the main event in the next room. The venerable institution sports autographed pics of Harry Chapin and Joni Mitchell next to a gold Cure record and a plain OK Computer vinyl sleeve. Few venues in America have adapted to the whirlwind times so commandingly.

Opener Lia Ices played in a minimalist minor key on her red, Nord Electric 3 keyboard, with her brother providing accompaniment on a plugged in acoustic guitar which toes an interesting middle ground. Innumerable comparisons will be drawn between Lia Ices and Feist, but whereas Feist always retains her emotional vulnerability, Lia Ices also has the vocal capacity to go big like Sinead. The fact that she doesn’t speaks to an untapped potential in her music, although the minimalist ethos does provide for some lush ambiance. Her last song, a haunting ballad off her first album, was performed solo and bookended the set nicely. The unavoidable fact is that Lia Ices is very beautiful to the point where it would be purposefully oblivious to ignore it— hopefully the populace will look toward the beauty in her music that’s more than skin deep.

The crowd was older; mean, median and mode each hover around 31. The Sea and Cake are genre-benders, but they’re also a slow burn since they don’t hit you over the head with their experimentation. Therefore, their listeners are older and more mature, having come upon the band at some point during the past 15 years. In spite of their niche status, their music is accessible and conveniently packaged, generally without longer jams and solos; few of their songs stretch beyond six minutes.

The Sea and Cake took the stage and started right off with one of their more recent songs more indie than jazz. The fact that they’re a little older in Rock years, late 40s instead of early 30s, makes their more ‘mainstream’ appeal seem like a strong creative choice as opposed to a dive to the middle. What could easily be four dads from Evanston who play for the agricorp softball team, in fact is one of the more decorated bands in recent memory. What’s even more interesting is they predated the sub-genre craze we’re dealing with right now. Their versatile set spanned a careers worth of material and rang a noteworthy loudness that commanded the audiences attention. Think a little bit of Jonathan Richman next to a little bit of Charlie Haden? The Sea and Cake invites those disparate comparisons, which is precisely what makes their live show so compelling.

Set Highlight: “Afternoon Speaker” off 2000’s Oui.

The Sea and Cake illinois (Official)

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Rating 8.5

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reviewed by
12-13-11

Eliza and the Bear – Trees (demo)

Contributed by Trevor Meyer

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Folk/Indie Rockers Eliza and the Bear from Essex have recently released their first demo, “Trees.” This is a brilliant folk rock song with more of an open, loose flowing melody, which is nice because it leaves room for vocal nuances, melodic shifts, and vocal/rhythmic dynamics. “Trees” features an emotive build up that leaves you in a state of contemplation and reflection. This song is mesmerizing from start to finish. They are set to release an EP soon, so stay tuned. Can’t wait to hear more from this band.

Eliza and the Bear – Trees

Eliza and the Bear england (Facebook) (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.2

brown8

reviewed by
12-13-11

The Cast of Cheers – Family

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Watch out for Cast of Cheers. The Irish band, coming off a 150k-downloaded (!) bandcamp album, are readying their proper debut which is due sometime early next year. Our first spin of that debut is the track for “Family”. Angular, dynamic, and rhythmic as hell, “Family” might remind of The Futureheads or Maximo Park. Big track, expect this one to some serious Radio 1 airplay.

The Cast of Cheers – Family

The Cast of Cheers ireland (Official) (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

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reviewed by
12-12-11

Au Palais – Pathos

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The Au Palais train rolls forward with the second single from the Tender Mercy EP, “Pathos”. It’s dark, it’s eerie, it’s synth-y but with enough soul/underbelly/songwriting skill to separate it (and the band) from their other dreampop-low-fi-synth peers.

Au Palais – Pathos

Au Palais canada (Bandcamp) (Facebook)

Rating 8.0

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reviewed by
12-12-11

Mystery Skulls – When I’m With You

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Mystery Skulls is a DJ out of Dallas. Mr. Skulls’ top shelf synth pop jam “When I’m With You” just became your new favorite song.

Mystery Skulls – When I’m With You

Mystery Skulls texas (Tumblr) (Facebook)

Rating 8.4

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reviewed by
12-12-11

DJ Khaled – I’m On One (Shlohmo Remix)

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Our dude Shlohmo dropped this lights down 4 AM screw of “I’m On One” over the weekend and we’ve had it on repeat ever since. Double M-G til we get the chair.

DJ Khaled – I’m On One (Shlohmo Remix)

Shlohmo california (Facebook) (Soundcloud)

Rating 8.1

brown8

reviewed by
12-12-11

EVENT REVIEW! Re:Mix Labs in Los Angeles

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Last week Re:Mix Labs took on Los Angeles at 401 S Main in Downtown. The City of Angels was the final stop for Re:Mix, which started at CMJ in NYC and made pit stops in Miami, Chicago and Las Vegas, of the Hyundai Veloster-sponsored multimedia event. Check out a recap of the week’s happenings below as well as earlier coverage during the event here.

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Exhibiting at the LA Artwalk on Thursday was Robert Reynolds, whose gallery is located at 4th and Spring, one block away from the Re:mix festivities. His ship sculptures have a Nordic, medieval fantasy element to them, but are still unmistakably contemporary at the same time. There’s also much to love in his tactile and inviting mixed media piece that depicts a bonfire in the woods.

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Friday’s Re:mix events kicked off with a Q&A session featuring English filmmaker Edgar Wright. He’s curator/guest programmer for the third year at The New Beverly Cinema at 7165 Beverly Blvd. LA; this year’s theme: movies Edgar has never seen! The humility of such an idea is commendable in a world where everyone’s too quick to boast their intellectual prowess. The screenwriter/director of Shaun of the Dead and Scott Pilgrim vs the World further retained his humility as he was showered with praise by several admirers. The most interesting part was a discussion re: the innate comedic value in a wide angle lens, popularized by the Coen brothers in early classics like Raising Arizona, and how film directors moved away from the style after it was copycatted by the funny commercials of the 90’s.

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The second Q&A was with Jane McGonigal, TED fellow and author of Reality is Broken: Why Games Make us Better and How they Can Change the World. She was interviewed by Shira Lazar, HuffPo contributor and founder of What’s Trending. Both proud supporters of the new ‘geek chic’, McGonical argued that the old stigmas attached to video games have dissipated, as the public has grown to accept that games make us resilient and bring us into contact with a host of positive emotions: joy, relief, love, surprise, pride, curiousity, excitement, awe/wonder, contentment and most importantly, creativity.

A set by chiptune indie band Anamanguchi, who also composed the Scott Pilgrim videogame soundtrack, was the perfect compliment to McGonigal’s discussion.

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On Saturday, VIBE sponsored a 101 crash course for all the wish-to-be DJs in the house. The event was followed by creative innovators and close friends, Director Jason Reitman and turntablist Cut Chemist who discussed using music as a connecting point in their personal discussions, in an interview curated by KCRW Morning Becomes Eclectic host Jason Bentley. The conversation was nice. Reitman was dropping “cool dude” bombs left and right (“Why won’t people stop asking me to direct Ghostbusters 3?”, “I do script readings at LACMA with Natalie Portman and Steve Carell.”) and the Chemist sharing insight on what it is to be a turntablist in the year 2011. Following the interview, the duo joined forces on the 1’s and 2’s, (Reitman: a capellas, Chemist: beats) mashing up everything from Playaz Circle and Dr. Dre to Soundgarden and Donna Summer.

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UK’s The Boxer Rebellion took stage after an epic soundcheck (seriously, you should’ve seen it!). Having seen the four-piece several times in the last few years, their performance on Saturday easily ranks atop their best. The band opened strong with “Step Out of the Car” and didn’t look back. Despite some onstage technical difficulties, the band rolled forward with fan favorites like “If You Run“. TBR proclaimed it was the “first time we’ve played in a bank” in fact the downtown space centered in LAs old bank district was actually the first time I’d partied in a bank. So there was that and there was also the fact that the band’s guitarist looks like that dude from this season’s X Factor. He had that certain Krajcik-esqueness to him. The band’s set while brief, had the right rockus and stood a highlight to the week’s mix of events.

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Re:Mix Labs california (Event Info) (HyundaiVeloster)

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reviewed by
12-12-11