Extended Exclusive Interview with Iggy Azalea for NylonMag.com

I sat down with Iggy Azalea for NylonMag.com in June, but since we weren’t able to run the entire eight page interview on the site, I’m sharing it here for your viewing pleasure. Be sure to check out her new video for “Change Your Life,” which she mentions at the end of our conversation! Kira…… Continue reading Extended Exclusive Interview with Iggy Azalea for NylonMag.com

All Good Things Must End

The title is a little dramatic. I’ll be back soon. It’s been a very short summer in NYC, and while I have a few days left, they’ll be spent packing. In the meantime, here’s what I’ve been up to in collage form. I STAY SNACKIN’ GETTING COCKY I didn’t start drinking until I turned 21…… Continue reading All Good Things Must End

NylonMag.com – Good Listener

Annie - "Back Together" We've waited four years to hear from Norwegian pop artist Annie, but from the looks of her new video for "Back Together," off The A&R EP, it kind of feels like we've taken a time machine with her back to the 1980s. The freestyle jam reminds us of the Material Girl herself,… Continue reading NylonMag.com – Good Listener

NylonMag.com – Good Listener

Mazzy Star - "California" Mazzy Star released "California" this week after almost half a decade of reunion rumors to give us a taste of Seasons of Your Day, the band's first new album in 17 years. Not much has changed since '96, and we aren't complaining--Hope Sandoval's gentle vocals are as pensive and romantic as ever.… Continue reading NylonMag.com – Good Listener

NylonMag.com – Good Listener

Pity Sex - "Keep" Nothing says summer like an impromptu road trip to your favorite festival or beach--windows down, blown-out speakers rattling with every fuzzy bass line. "Keep," the second track on Pity Sex's Feast of Love (out now on Run For Cover) delivers all the volume and low-end necessary to make your rear-view mirror crack. Don't… Continue reading NylonMag.com – Good Listener

Travel: Unique Nightlife in Boston

Being goth used to seem like a bad word to my friends, and electronic music was viewed as strictly for ravers. But in Boston, goth and drum ‘n bass theme nights provide a refreshing evening away from the typical bar scene. Home to the country’s longest running drum ‘n bass night and dress code enforced…… Continue reading Travel: Unique Nightlife in Boston

Album reviews for FG Magazine

Album reviews for FG Magazine

Blouse - Self-Titled (November 1, 2011)

Blouse, a dreampop trio from Portland, Oregon, came together in 2010 after members Charlie Hilton and Patrick Adams met in Los Angeles. By way of the internet, their synth tracks caught the attention of Captured Tracks of Brooklyn, New York, who released their 7” single Into Black in March of 2011. By November, their full-length album was released and indie bloggers quickly took notice. Their self-titled is reminiscent of the new wave of the late 80s, with a soft, pop touch. “Videotapes” juxtaposes melancholy lyrics – “What it would be like to see you again?/ You’re not in my hands,/ But I see you often in my head.” –with a bright, synth-driven soundscape. While electronic elements serve as the album’s common thread, their first single, “Into Black,” features more traditional instrumentation and an unbearably catchy guitar hook. Hilton’s indifferent delivery makes this the perfect album for the age of apathy.

Chairlift - Something (January 23, 2012)

Originally from Boulder, Colorado, and now based in Brooklyn, New York, the story of Chairlift can only be described as a 21st century fairy tale. After rising to prominence thanks to the appearance of their song “Bruises” in an iPod Nano commercial, Chairlift’s Caroline Polachek and Patrick Wimberly have just released their second full length on Columbia Records/Young Turks – their first album since 2008. While the opening moments of the album sound like they come straight from a video game soundtrack, it quickly finds its footing. The album’s first single, “Amanaemonesia,” is equal parts 80s jangle and contemporary Williamsburg electropop. What sets Chairlift apart from the try-

hards are Polachek’s convincingly confessional lyrics, as in “Wrong Opinion”; “I lay my guts out on the table/ and you said no.” Eschewing the overwrought poeticism that has become the common lyrical faire of indie stars, Polachek’s lyrics are better for their comparatively raw simplicity. In Something, Chairlift have delivered a bare bones approach to electronic pop music and proved the maxim that less is more.

Hospitality - Self-Titled (January 31, 2012)

Hailing from Brooklyn, New York, the indie pop capital of the world, Hospitality’s new self-titled released by Merge records is not as inviting as their name would suggest. The track titles—“Friends of Friends,” “Sleepover,” “Argonauts,” and “Liberal Arts” in particular—read like the lineup card of a Wednesday night gig at a Williamsburg dive bar, and do little, if anything, to suggest what this band may or may not stand for. There is nothing particularly offensive about this music to be sure, but Amber Papini’s vocals and guitar do little to galvanize me either. The album begins promisingly enough—a simple chord pattern gives way to seemingly authentic voice—but by “The Birthday” the music has veered wildly toward Eastern European folk worship. The end result is an album that feels completely disjointed and without definable character. If trying to please too many people at once is the worst sin a band can commit, Hospitality seems doomed to an eternity of flames.