The Prairie Joggers - Moving Into Tucson - Olive Louise - Vectralux

The Prairie Joggers - In The Wake.

Describing themselves as a gritty folk-rock band The Prairie Joggers (Cody Goertzen (guitar/vocals) and Adam Hill (drums) will release their new EP, ‘Going Nowhere’, Friday June 9th. We have to say this is a very impressive showcase for the duo, who produce some notably original and addictive music. The second single is out today, we will let the band tell you the rest.

All three tracks were written throughout various lockdowns while the two were stuck inside straightening out their sound. The EP was mixed by Riley Hill at No Fun Club Recording Studio and mastered by Philip Shaw Bova.

Blending warm electric guitar, raw vocals and dampened drums, The Prairie Joggers form a thick vintage sound that cushions their bleak but not entirely hopeless lyrical themes. What the band lacks in bells and whistles they make up for with a sincere sense of nostalgia that agrees with their minimalistic approach to instrumentals.

The songs, which derived sluggishly throughout isolation, all stem from personal past experiences surrounding sketchy jobs, hometown funerals and unhealthy habits. “Writing the songs came pretty easy,” explains Goertzen, “making the music feel good was what took awhile.”

Frank and dry with a punchy groove, the first single, ‘Move Along’, reflects on the life and times of a shady work environment. “It’s about being a fly on a wall somewhere for far too long,” says Hill. Laid back cynicism litters each verse while the chorus delivers a more obvious mantra, “find a space that isn’t this place, whatever you do move along.”

The second track off the EP, ‘In the Wake’, is a somber but not entirely sober account of what going home for a funeral might stir up. “Had a few late nights throughout lockdown digging into tired grief,” Hill recalls, “ended up with a song about a funeral that never happened.” “Although the songs suggest a bleaker meaning for the title, sometimes going nowhere is a pretty good place to be,” says Goertzen, “locked down with your best pal making music in your living room.”

 

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Moving Into Tucson - Never Gonna Be Easy.

Moving Into Tucson is basically the side effect of the COVID epidemic. Why, you will ask. Well for the simple reason that the band was formed during the pandemic. Can you call Moving Into Tucson a band? Well, yes as in, it's a band, with a singer, guitarist, bassist, drummer etc. But also no because it's not a band as usual. Band members do not come from the same city or even country, but from different parts of the world.

When the world was in lock-down and many were forced to stay at home, there wasn't much left for musicians to do other than work from home. But, how? And better, with whom? Like for many, Zoom video brought a solution. Fortunately, we live in an advanced digital world and a lot is possible without necessarily having to be somewhere. Only someone who arranges it. This is where the label TCBYML, the label of the various artists in the band Moving Into Tucson, stepped in.

Result, twenty songs composed over a period of 18 months. These have now been brought together, mixed, mastered and provided with artwork. In 2023, five of them will be released as singles and together with eight more songs will form the album "Distraction" that will see the light on November 24 of this year. A great initiative that may be followed up in 2024. Who's to say.

Moving Into Tucson's music is comparable to that of the early 90's. The sound that all who participated could very much agree on. Moving Into Tucson is therefore for fans of: REM, Lemonheads, Sugar, The Posies, Buffalo Tom, Teenage Fanclub and the Counting Crows but also reminiscent to bands as U2 or The Police. Recognizable indie pop rock, sometimes dark, sometimes mysterious, or vague, but with depth in the music and certainly in the lyrics.

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Olive Louise - Moroccan Oranges.

The new single "Moroccan Oranges" from NY confessional singer/storyteller Olive Louise is released today. The song was inspired by her mother's passing and the vibrant folk/pop single juxtaposes poignant lyrics about inner strength and trying to hold life and family together even when you are in grief.

Olive confides, "the song is about the summer I traveled to Morocco and Paris with my dad and sister after my mom passed away. It’s about the dissonance I felt looking at my dad trying to hold it together and make us feel okay, knowing that even though we were seeing stunning views, and trying new foods, and were there together, we felt completely shattered."

The single is off of her debut cathartic and enthralling EP 275 Kings Point Road, titled for the place where she grew up the actual Main House of The Great Gatsby estate. Olive’s newest music offers an earnest perspective of the stages of grief, something she knows all too well, losing both parents at a young age. She has received praise for the likes of Refinery 29, Wonderland, American Songwriter, LADYGUNN and more. Elle Magazine is set to cover her unique and storied past.

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Vectralux - The Subtle Extravaganza.

Atlanta Indie Pop Band Vectralux read between the lines, reveling in the subtleties of human life on "The Subtle Extravaganza", out April 28th on streaming platforms. This release thematically addresses the ever-changing flux of thought and emotion as a common, shared experience. Musically, "The Subtle Extravaganza" dances slyly through the shadows and back alleys of the subconscious, resilient and poised with layer upon layer of melodic hooks. Fans of indie rock and indie pop innovators like Guided by Voices, Pavement, Dinosaur Jr., The Pixies and Blur should enjoy this new collection.

Vectralux follows up on 2021's impressive debut "Each Morning and the Morning Thereafter" with a new EP, "The Subtle Extravaganza". This new short set represents as much a maturation of the writing style as a departure from the first record. Still displaying the same decades-spanning influences, but incorporating darker themes and new sounds, this EP still shines with effervescent optimism served with a wry grin.

About the new record, producer/bassist/singer Andy Tegethoff said "We all have contrasts and contradictions that pile up in our lives. Plusses and minuses, details and generalities. There's a sine wave of highs and lows but when you look back, eventually we perceive those ups and downs more as a line than a wave. A blur of good days and bad days -- many days both at once. We may remember peaks and troughs, but on the whole it's a plainsong pageant. Just your typical tornado. A stationary journey. It's a Subtle Extravaganza."

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