Showing posts with label The Green Apple Sea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Green Apple Sea. Show all posts

Friday, 20 February 2026

Joe Pernice ft. Aimee Mann - Bea Elmy Martin - The Foot & Leg Clinic - The Green Apple Sea - Fur Blossom - Chloe Violette - St.Arnaud

 Photo - Colleen Nichollson
Joe Pernice - Deep Into the Dawn (ft. Aimee Mann).

Joe Pernice of the Pernice Brothers and Scud Mountain Boys will release his debut solo studio album Sunny, I Was Wrong on April 3, 2026 via New West Records. The 11-song set was produced by Pernice and features Aimee Mann, Norman Blake of Teenage Fanclub. Rodney Crowell, Jimmy Webb, and includes liner notes written by Warren Zanes (author of Deliver Me from Nowhere: The Making of Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska). Pernice is also joined by Jim Creeggan of Barenaked Ladies, Mike Belitsky of The Sadies, Mike Evin, and Mike McKenzie as his backing band across the album. Sunny, I Was Wrong follows the 2024 Pernice Brothers album Who Will You Believe. 

This week, Pernice shared the album highlight “Deep Into the Dawn (ft. Aimee Mann).” He says, “Of all of the recordings I have ever made, this is my favorite. The musicians played beautifully and what can I say about Aimee Mann’s singing? As I was writing the song I had her voice in mind. I’ve said a lot already about her greatness as a songwriter, musician and performer. She’s a legit hero of mine. Obviously, I was pretty stoked when she agreed to sing with me. And she sang perfectly. I’m so pleased with how the song turned out. I’m almost able to listen to it as if it were not mine. Almost.” Pernice previously shared the album’s first single, “The Black and the Blue” as well. 
  
For the past 30 years, Joe Pernice has crafted a remarkable catalog that boldly reinterprets and recasts classic American pop. First with the alt-country legends Scud Mountain Boys and then with the indie-pop mainstays Pernice Brothers, he has etched bittersweet stories out of songs that echo Jimmy Webb, Burt Bacharach, and Paul Williams. Instead of the Pernice Brothers moniker, he emerges as a solo artist with Sunny, I Was Wrong, his first studio album under his own name (after two solo efforts home-recorded and self-released during the pandemic in 2020: Richard and the Barry Manilow tribute Could It Be Magic).  “It was always just me and other people, but in this case there’s almost none of those other people. My brother Bob sings one vocal and Patrick Berkery plays one drum track. They’re the only two left who I was playing with regularly. It felt like it was time to move on.”


============================================================================

Bea Elmy Martin - Anouk.

Bea Elmy Martin is quietly carving out a vital space within the UK alternative landscape. London born and bred, her music is defined by emotional precision, blending ethereal vocals, orchestral intimacy and brooding electronics. Raised on the sounds of classic soul artists like Stevie Wonder, Aretha Franklin and Donny Hathaway, Bea developed an early understanding of melody and feeling, using songwriting as a way to process life, love and loss from a young age. She describes songwriting as her journal, a way of breaking overwhelming emotions into something tangible and manageable, allowing moments of beauty, pain and connection to surface gently rather than being forced.

After the release of her 2021 debut single “Blue Escape”, which earned early BBC tastemaker support from Jack Saunders and Lauren Laverne, Bea began a slow, intentional creative journey alongside her producer Dominick J Goldsmith (HÆLOS). That collaboration led to Under The Yew (Vol. 1), released in May 2025, a luminous, grief-to-beauty infused meditation on loss and renewal. Rather than chasing momentum, Bea allowed the work to unfold over time, sustaining its emotional thread through subsequent singles “Lost” and “Born To Fly” from Under The Yew (Vol. 2), before returning in January 2026 with “Unscarred" a track that continued her exploration of transformation and inner strength.

Her new single “Anouk”, offers one of her most intimate moments yet. Written about her best friend, whom she met at university, the song evolved slowly as their relationship changed and deepened over time. “Anouk is a song I wrote about my best friend,” Bea explains. “While recording it, we were living on opposite sides of London, which was challenging at times, but we made it work. Because the song is about someone I love very deeply, every session I felt a push to make it sound more and more ethereal because she is so special to me.” The track became one she revisited more than any other, its structure and feeling shifting alongside the friendship itself. “In a way, the song moved alongside our friendship as it grew and changed. Going back into a song multiple times doesn’t mean you lack intention. Sometimes it’s exactly what a song needs.”

============================================================================

The Foot & Leg Clinic - Where did all the fruit go?

Glasgow wonk-rockers The Foot & Leg Clinic (fka The Wife Guys of Reddit) return with Sit Down for Rock and Roll (released March 13th via Bingo Records), a raucous, restless and unexpectedly tender debut album led by the urgent new single ‘Where did all the fruit go?’. The Foot & Leg Clinic — Niamh R MacPhail, Arion Xenos, Angus Fernie and Elise Atkinson arrive at this album following what MacPhail describes as “a bit of a shiter the past couple years.” Written and recorded across illness, close bereavements, and a year-long break from live shows, Sit Down for Rock and Roll is the sound of a band forced to slow down and discovering they benefit from it.

With a new name and a deliberately slower creative process, the album marks a clear turning point for the band, grappling with adaptation — personal, societal, and bodily using humour, surreal imagery, and sharp hook. “We were kind of forced to work at a slower pace,” says MacPhail, “but probably for the better of the final product.” Xenos agrees: “It still feels eclectic, but it’s a little bit more focused. We definitely thought about this as an album project when working on it, as opposed to other things before.”

The lead single ‘Where did all the fruit go?’ distills generational unease into a deceptively simple question: “I’ve got nothing to show”. Breathless, hook-heavy and charged with live energy, it’s one of the band’s most immediate and relatable songs to date, pairing jangling urgency with a chorus that lingers long after the last note. “It’s about getting to a point in your life where you thought you’d have a bit more to show for it,” says MacPhail. “To find that you don't.”


============================================================================

The Green Apple Sea - dark kid (Album).

The theme running through the episodes on the album "Dark Kid" is Stefan Prange's not always easy childhood and adolescence. The fact that his stepfather nicknamed his father "Satan" only seems a bit strange in retrospect. The fact that his stepbrothers chained him to a stair railing with a bicycle lock when no one else felt like watching him might seem a bit cruel in hindsight. But for 10-year-old Prange, it was nothing out of the ordinary. When he tells these stories and sings lines like "I wasn't afraid to die, I was just waiting to die," it's meant with the same pragmatic naiveté with which the protagonist, "Dark Kid," accepts his surroundings.

"Dark Kid" isn't about making the audience feel childhood trauma or depression. It's about transforming sadness into melancholy, bitterness into a shrug, anger into an outstretched hand. The resulting folk songs are so smooth and gentle, so utterly timeless. The term "indie" is only used because The Green Apple Sea have always played in small clubs, stoically carrying on. They were one of the first bands to make this distinctly American music here in Germany. Long before the hype and long after.

The album titled "Dark Kid" doesn't try to impose itself, but Prange can sing the songs on it hundreds of times without ever growing tired of them. The stories hidden within can be told countless times. As a listener, you can hear the songs a hundred times, discovering small, loving details and finding new meaning in individual lyrics. (We know this because we already have.) The tracks on "Dark Kid" are episodic, like a new season of a TV series. But if "Dark Kid" is a season of "The Green Apple Sea," then the series is rather old-fashioned. One in which the heroine sends a demon back to hell in every single episode. One in which she ends up holding a hand, or strolling in a sunset, or—best of all—laughing with her friends. The Green Apple Sea distills all the album's stories down to a single sentence in the final song. It's a quote from Terence McKenna: "Oh, I know this now. It's all about love. Making someone else's life a little bit better." Freeze frame, end credits.


============================================================================

Fur Blossom - Goldsmith.

Coming back out of the haze, Melbourne’s Fur Blossom are fronting the evolution revolution with their latest single ‘Goldsmith’, out Friday, February 20. In 2025, Fur Blossom released their debut EP ‘The She Said Sun EP’, a kaleidoscopic exploration of psychedelic rock. Following up with a regional Victorian tour, the four-piece band have taken to the scene with an unrelenting ferocity. This year will see the band make their festival debut, first at Mordi Festival (Melbourne), then in Tasmania this March at Good Gumnuts Festival, before heading up the East Coast in support of their new single ‘Goldsmith’.

Combining classic elements from the pioneers of the 60s and 70s, and the sleek modernness of the 21st century, ‘Goldsmith’ is a zeitgeist in its own right. Musically, it evokes the time and spirit of an era from the past, but lyrically speaks to the ageless conundrum of changing yourself for someone else, or someone from your past.  

An articulated and undulating guitar riff immediately sets the tone for the slow burn of the extended introduction. The subtle fade in of each instrument creates a false sense of security, and before you know it, you are sucked into a sonic vortex. The crisp and contemplative vocal performance from Craig Tees rises above the instrumentation, before fading back in the chorus, creating depth and dimension to allow every part of the arrangement to speak and demand attention. 


============================================================================

Photo - Emily Dynes
Chloe Violette - Colourfast.

‘Colourfast’ is made to last. A musical narrative of resilience and reflection, ‘Colourfast’ by Chloe Violette is set for release on Friday, February 20. An artist unafraid to champion topics such as mental health, grief, and claiming space, Chloe blends atmospheric soundscapes with captivating honesty in an indie pop and folk style on her upcoming album.
 
Originally shaped between inner-city Melbourne (Naarm) and regional Victoria on Brataualung Country, ‘Colourfast’ traces Chloe’s shift from city life to small-town living. Swapping the No. 11 tram to West Preston for long V/Line journeys, the now Gippsland-based artist captures a recalibration of pace, place, and identity through songs balancing heartache and hope.
 
‘Colourfast’ is an album born out of lockdown, reflecting Chloe’s inner and outer worlds at a time when motivation felt fragile. It explores themes of monotony, heaviness, and hope, tracing a contrasting emotional journey alongside the sweet, simple moments of humanity.
 
Traces of optimism emerge in the title track ‘Colourfast’, which centres on endurance and forward movement. The lyrics chart a story of graduated resilience, while the music weaves folky acoustic guitars, buttery piano, steadfast rhythms, and subtle harmonies.


============================================================================

St.Arnaud - Midwest Superstardom. 

St.Arnaud, the indie pop project of Ian St.Arnaud, is set to release "Midwest Superstardom," another insight into their upcoming album, St.Arnaud, due out April 10th, 2026 via Cordova Bay Records. The single arrives February 20th alongside two additional tracks, "Blue Paper" and the already-released "Love You! (For Real)."

The title track chronicles the slow-motion fade of a road warrior who's equal parts delusional and self-aware, chasing the sunset of a forgettable career with a grin still plastered on their face. Built on swaggering, country-soaked instrumentation that explodes into full-throated Americana anthemics, "Midwest Superstardom" asks the question every gigging musician secretly contemplates: "What if the best we can hope for is to be the local touring band? Is that so bad? Are we making it?"

Ian expands on the core concept: "This was an old idea that grew quickly in the fertile soil of a band under pressure in the studio. The question of 'what if the best we can hope for as musicians is to be the local touring band?' wasn't a tough sell of an idea for anyone in the room to reckon with." While maintaining St.Arnaud's signature indie sensibility, the track is part honky-tonk heartbreak, part arena-rock bombast—all delivered with a knowing wink. Ian recalls the creative breakthrough: "After a brief, but very loud, jam of us putting on our best Alberta country band impression, we discovered a little bit of Meatloaf that we tried to lean into."

============================================================================

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Em Spel - Ninå - Chalice Sect - Brother Wallace - The Green Apple Sea - MUKI

Photo - Deidre Huckabay

Em Spel - Geographic.

Em Spel is scheduled to release the new LP "Bird or Snake" on the 27 March on Birdwatcher / Carilloni, the first single "Geographic" is released this week. Em Spel's intricate, flute-driven alt-folk sounds like nothing else in Chicago. Led by songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Emma Hospelhorn, Em Spel's debut album, The Carillon Towers, was hailed by the Chicago Reader as "Scintillating" and by Dusted Magazine as "a folktale turned oddly, surreally modern, a magical realist scenario set in the right now." 

Hospelhorn is a flutist in avant-classical group Ensemble Dal Niente, and her discography includes work on flutes, bass guitar, and keyboards for V.V. Lightbody, Mute Duo, and others working in a diverse array of genres including folk, drone, garage rock, post-punk, and classical. In this solo endeavor, she fuses all of these influences with story-driven lyrics to create invitingly strange folk vignettes.

Em Spel’s second full-length album, Bird or Snake, finds the artist teetering joyfully between art-folk and intimate indie rock. Recorded in Chicago by veteran Califone and Iron & Wine producer Brian Deck, Bird or Snake is an exuberant leap forward for Em Spel. Hospelhorn is at her arranging best, folding dizzying vocal harmonies, elegant instrumental writing, and deftly deployed electronics into a musical tapestry that evokes the warmth and wildness of an industrial Midwestern landscape. The album pulses with life, from the driving drums and propulsively patterned guitars of “Poet” (featuring guest Sam Wagster on soaring pedal steel) through the organ and vocal-driven road trip love song of “Fruiting Body,” which features bird songs Hospelhorn recorded on a handheld microphone at an artist residency in Maine.


============================================================================

Ninå - Truth or Dare.

Ninå’s “Truth or Dare” blends pop-soul with a bluesy edge and an unmistakably adult feel, classy, confident, and made for late-night rotation. Driven by a locked-in bass line and acoustic guitar, the track moves with effortless groove while letting the vocal lead with warmth, control, and attitude. 

The songwriting keeps it timeless: sharp, vivid lyrics, a chorus that sticks after the first listen, and a guitar solo that seals the mood with real personality. It’s the kind of record that feels both intimate and bold, polished but still human.

Behind it is Ninå, a vocalist who turns real-life turning points into music that feels honest, fearless, and alive. She doesn’t oversell the emotion, she delivers it, and that’s what makes the song hit. "Truth or Dare" is the latest single leading into her upcoming album Bloom with Fire.

============================================================================

Chalice Sect - Violet Grey.

“Violet Grey” is the latest single from Los Angeles-based electronic darkwave project Chalice Sect. Merging electro-industrial style vocoder, darkwave romance, and dance-driven club rhythms, “Violet Grey” is ready to rouse goth boots onto dancefloors worldwide.

With “Violet Grey,” the band forges a path into goth club rotations with their characteristic blend of industrial-rich beats reminiscent of Kontravoid resculpted with New Order-esque melodicism. Showcasing a unique blend of dark dance fare and '80s alt-inflected songwriting sensibilities, "Violet Grey" delivers a charged reanimation of classic darkwave sounds into heavy electronics for a retro-futuristic sound all its own.

Chalice Sect is a darkwave/post-punk project from Los Angeles, drawing from post-punk, new wave, and dark electro while maintaining a modern electronic edge. Built around driving basslines, synth-heavy arrangements, and direct songwriting, the music balances atmosphere with momentum.

Rather than leaning on nostalgia, Chalice Sect focuses on clarity, rhythm, and energy — creating songs that reference classic influences without sounding dated, and delivering a sound that is both recognizable and current.


============================================================================

Brother Wallace - Electric Love / Who's That?.

Some artists spend their whole lives getting ready for the moment the world finally hears them. Brother Wallace is one of them. This week, the West Point, Georgia-bred singer, pianist, and soul revivalist announces his debut album 'Electric Love', out on 8th May via ATO Records, and shares the album’s title track—a Motown-esque number that’s equal parts playful, revelatory, and gloriously cathartic—alongside an official music video.

On “Electric Love,” Brother Wallace doesn’t just sing about joy—he fights for it. The song moves like a shot of sunlight through a storm cloud: Stax-and-satin soul, piano-driven, and bursting with momentum, it’s built for the exact moment when you decide you’re not going to let the world harden you. “It’s about choosing connection,” Wallace says. “Finding that current again—the thing that reminds you you’re alive.”

Across its 13 songs, Electric Love is less a debut than a revelation—a body of work fueled by gospel roots and classic soul lineage (Sam Cooke, Little Richard, Southern soul greats) while refusing to live in nostalgia. Wallace writes in lived-in scenes and hard-earned feeling: heartbreak without defeat, joy without naïveté, vulnerability without apology. The album’s rhapsodic opener “Who’s That?” (released last fall as his first ATO single) entered the Top 30 at Triple A radio in the US for the first time this week—an amazing feat for his first-ever single. Now, the title track “Electric Love” expands the frame: this is an artist building a world where joy is radical, and connection is survival. Now, the title track “Electric Love” expands the frame: this is an artist building a world where joy is radical, and connection is survival. 



============================================================================

Photo - Nic Knelleken
The Green Apple Sea - Big Heart.

German Indie Folk/Americana institution The Green Apple Sea are releasing their new, very personal album "Dark Kid" on February 20th via KF Records. “Big Heart” is a song for and about people who would rather say nothing at all than say something wrong. For those who sneak out of parties without saying goodbye. Who don't answer the phone when it rings because they're afraid of an awkward situation. For people who postpone or don't do important things at all, for fear of messing everything up. 

Those who laugh too loudly at the wrong time. For those who avoid eye contact when talking. For those who use "one" when they mean "I." For those who lower their heads when spoken to. For those who don't reply to a message for weeks because they're afraid of saying the wrong thing. For those who are actually quite funny, but also very strange. For those who feel they don't fit in. For those who know they can't. For those who are far too honest for anyone to take seriously. For those who rarely reply, "Very good. Thank you. And you?" For those who are best off on their own. For those who rarely plan more than a few weeks ahead, because who knows what might happen then. For those who talk to themselves far too loudly when others are around. For those who can't simply be happy when something good happens, because it's supposedly impossible and will inevitably turn into crap. For those who are constantly preparing to die in every possible way. For those whose philosophy of life is more or less reduced to the phrase "I'd rather not."

The theme running through the episodes on the album "Dark Kid" is Stefan Prange's not always easy childhood and adolescence. The fact that his stepfather nicknamed his father "Satan" only seems a bit strange in retrospect. The fact that his stepbrothers chained him to a stair railing with a bicycle lock when no one else felt like watching him might seem a bit cruel in hindsight. But for 10-year-old Prange, it was nothing out of the ordinary. When he tells these stories and sings lines like "I wasn't afraid to die, I was just waiting to die," it's meant with the same pragmatic naiveté with which the protagonist, "Dark Kid," accepts his surroundings.


============================================================================

MUKI - Gasoline.

MUKI (pronounced mʊk.ie) makes his first impression with 'Gasoline', an emotionally charged indie pop and folk-leaning debut, out this Wednesday, January 21. Born in Dubai with Indian roots, the now Naarm/Melbourne-based Mukul Jiwnani has built his life around making and performing music. A full-time performer, 'Gasoline' marks his official debut under the MUKI moniker, a project shaped slowly and deliberately after years of writing, refining, and searching for the right moment to step forward.  

'Gasoline' unfolds with a gentle sense of space and restraint. Layers of finger-picked electric guitar sit against a spacious kick drum and a hypnotising, echoed snare. While piano drifts through the arrangement to create a lush, dreamlike atmosphere, subtle guitar licks and warm bass lines add colour without crowding the song.  

MUKI’s vocals move between intimacy and emotional release, shifting from wispy softness to impassioned cries and airy falsetto, before opening out into a chorus lifted by layered, choir-like harmonies that wrap the song in warmth.   The result is a loving, immersive intensity that feels deeply personal.  Captured in its slow-burning, impassioned sound, 'Gasoline' reflects on the aftermath of a relationship where love has faded, and acceptance begins to take its place. It captures the moment when holding on no longer makes sense, even while the feeling still lingers. Speaking on the single, MUKI shares:  
 
“'Gasoline’ is my debut single as MUKI, and it’s deeply personal. With ‘Gasoline’, I wanted to capture the tension of a relationship that wouldn’t survive despite every effort. It’s a breakup song, but one about acceptance and moving on.”


============================================================================

Mollie Elizabeth - The Yesters - GALVEZTON - Jillette Johnson - Malia Rogers

Mollie Elizabeth - Dog Eat Dog. Mollie Elizabeth returns with a new song that deepens her distinctive sonic and visual universe, weaving ee...