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Palm Provide Sonic Snack at Hometown Show
Palm – Music Hall of Williamsburg – November 30, 2022
I have waited long and patiently for the return of Palm, the abstract art-rock foursome whose debut full-length, Trading Basics, oh so quietly blew my mind in 2015. Thank the good and many gods that the band has returned — not only to recording music, with this year’s Nicks and Grazes, but also to playing live. On Wednesday night at Music Hall of Williamsburg, Palm put on a stunning and intoxicating show so delectable that you could nearly see the crowd salivating.
Vocalists Eve Alpert and Kasra Kurt, bassist Gerasimos Livitsanos and drummer Hugo Stanley hadn’t put out a studio album since 2018’s aptly named Rock Island, a balancing act of jagged and oppositional time changes, loops and dreamy psych-like vocals that have been stretched and pulled like taffy. The band drew quite a bit from that album on Wednesday, playing “Composite” early on to whoops and shouts from the crowd. Kurt’s vocals — not to mention his lyrics — are deeply reminiscent of droned-out Beach Boys: “God only sees it from both sides / Take a chance to clean His foggy eyes.”
On “Composite,” as on “Dog Milk,” as on “Heavy Lifting,” as on … well, a great much of what Palm played last night, the music warps and twists midway through, like a real-time record scratch, which is simply tantalizing when performed live. The foursome’s jammy outro on “Heavy Lifting” (Rock Island) was exhilarating, as was the build on “Feathers,” off Nicks, which started slow, soft and doomy and worked up to a percussive, near-danceable tune: “Make it up,” Alpert sang, “like a performer.”
Despite their adventurousness, Palm have managed to carve out a truly distinct sound, often punctuated by steel drum. That’s carried over into Nicks, on songs like “On the Sly,” which smacks of Animal Collective and Deerhoof. The live effect was one of buoyancy, keeping the room’s energy lifted all evening. But Livitsanos’s bass kept the floor in sight. Stanley’s drums are just a feat to behold, like a mathematical proof that has somehow been through the looking glass of a Pollock painting. The band encored with “Ankles,” the hit off Trading Basics, an angular, math-y classic of their genre that rippled across the room. Palm playing live is such a special sonic snack. Leave your expectations of form at home, though, and open your brain portals to some seriously excellent music. —Rachel Brody | @RachelCBrody
#Animal Collective#Beach Boys#Deerhoof#Eve Alpert#Gerasimos Livitsanos#Hugo Stanley#Kasra Kurt#Music Hall of Williamsburg#Nicks and Grazes#Palm#Rachel Brody#Review#Rock Island#Trading Basics
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# 3,549
Omega Radio for September 26, 2020; #241.
Beije “You Got It Dude”
Kasra Kurt “Rough Rug”
Beth Israel “Seventh-Inning Strays”
R.M.F.C. “Connector #1″
Angels In America “Keep The Aspidistra Flying”
Tropical Fuck Storm “Planet Of Straw Men”
Vacation “My Fake Life”
Blue Ray “Smack Me”
Dan Drohan “Pretty Sure”
Mezzanine Swimmers “Kneelin’ On A Knife”
Duchess Says “I Repeat Myself”, “Talk In Shapes”
Indian Jewelry “Eva Cherie”
Ariel Pink “Stay Here With You”, “Chapter 8 Some Tutorials”
Territorial Gobbing “A Shopping List Of Sorts”
Golden Ivy “Delta”
Transfix “New Fix”
Crickets “Elastic”
Really Big Pinecone “Go Hoping, Go Big Time”, “High Speed Drifting”
Sneaks “Someone Like That”
Naked Roommate “Mad Love”
Erasers “Pass You In The Night”
Immolation “Mango Seals”
Treble Clef “Chillin’ Wave”
Bruce Gilbert “Eline Cout II”
Brainiac “Fresh New Eyes”
J. Zunz “Circle Of Time”, “Four Women Of Darkness”
Wild card broadcast.
#omega#music#mixtapes#reviews#playlists#experimental#d.i.y.#electronic#cassette#Kasra Kurt#Beth Israel#R.M.F.C.#Angels In America#Tropical Fuck Storm#blue raptor#Dan Drohan#Mezzanine Swimmers#Duchess Says#Indian Jewelry#Ariel Pink#Golden Ivy#Transfix#Really Big Pinecone#Sneaks#Erasers#Treble Clef#Brainiac#J. Zunz
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SEPTEMBER 26, 2020 (#241)
Beije “You Got It Dude”
Kasra Kurt “Rough Rug”
Beth Israel “Seventh-Inning Strays”
R.M.F.C. “Connector #1″
Angels In America “Keep The Aspidistra Flying”
Tropical Fuck Storm “Planet Of Straw Men”
Vacation “My Fake Life”
Blue Ray “Smack Me”
Dan Drohan “Pretty Sure”
Mezzanine Swimmers “Kneelin’ On A Knife”
Duchess Says “I Repeat Myself”, “Talk In Shapes”
Indian Jewelry “Eva Cherie”
Ariel Pink “Stay Here With You”, “Chapter 8 Some Tutorials”
Territorial Gobbing “A Shopping List Of Sorts”
Golden Ivy “Delta”
Transfix “New Fix”
Crickets “Elastic”
Really Big Pinecone “Go Hoping, Go Big Time”, “High Speed Drifting”
Sneaks “Someone Like That”
Naked Roommate “Mad Love”
Erasers “Pass You In The Night”
Immolation “Mango Seals”
Treble Clef “Chillin’ Wave”
Bruce Gilbert “Eline Cout II”
Brainiac “Fresh New Eyes”
J. Zunz “Circle Of Time”, “Four Women Of Darkness”
Tonight on Omega Radio we showcase our now-annual* 'second chance’ special. Sounds we discovered over the course of the year that didn’t fit our usual deluxe broadcasts have their one and only time of the year to shine. From d.i.y., lo-fi, electronic, and the abstract, all tracks on tonight’s show are experimental in nature.
New sounds from Dan Drohan, Mezzanine Swimmers, Territorial Gobbing, Crickets, Naked Roommate, and J. Zunz.
Next deluxe Omega airs October 10, 2020 (10PM, New York City). Next bonus Omega airs October 12, 2020 (midnight) when we fill-in for Purple Starlight for our fourth and final vinyl / resonance broadcast of the year.
Thanks to all tuning in to Omega.
#omega#music#Kasra Kurt#Angels In America#Tropical Fuck Storm#Blue Ray#Mezzanine Swimers#Duchess Says#Indian Jewelry#Ariel Pink#Golden Ivy#Transfix#Really Big Pinecone#Sneaks#Naked Roommate#Treble Clef#Brainiac#J. Zunz
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(▶︎ Nicks and Grazes | Palmから)
Nicks and Grazes by Palm
Palm’s live performances are revered for their uncanny synchronicity; one gets the sense that, on psychic levels unseen, the members share an intuition unexplained by logic. But as the Philly-based band has grown up and moved on from the sweaty basement shows and self-booked tours of their formative years, the costs of maintaining such intense symbiosis started to build. “I used to think of Palm as an organism, a single coherent system, and at a younger point in our lives, that seemed like the ideal way to be a band,” Eve Alpert reflects. “I’m realizing now that it’s unrealistic, that for this band to grow we had to tend to ourselves as individuals – little pieces – who create the whole.” To confuse parts for the whole is inevitable with Palm. Drummer Hugo Stanley, bassist Gerasimos Livitsanos and guitarists/vocalists/high school sweethearts Alpert and Kasra Kurt started making music together as teenagers, and spent much of their twenties in the kind of proximity unusual for adults, outside of touring bands and the International Space Station. For a number of years the band consumed the lives of its members to a point of exhaustion: “To be honest I think we got a little burnt out. There were times where it wasn’t clear if we’d make another record,” says Alpert. It was only after multiple freak injuries followed by a pandemic, forced a pause - from touring but also from writing, rehearsing, even seeing each other- that the four were able to regroup and see a way forward again. On their latest effort, Nicks and Grazes, Palm embrace discordance to dazzling effect. “We wanted to reconcile two potentially opposing aesthetics,” Kurt says. “To capture the spontaneous, free energy of our live shows while integrating elements from the traditionally gridded palette of electronic music.” In order to avoid what Kurt refers to as “Palm goes electro,” the musicians spent years educating themselves on the ins and outs of production by learning Ableton while also experimenting with “the percussive, textural, and gestural potential” of their instruments. To this end, the band continued the age-old tradition of instrument-preparation, augmenting guitars with drumsticks, metal rods and, at the suggestion of Charles Bullen (This Heat, Lifetones), coiling rubber-coated gardening wire around the strings. The unruliness of the prepared guitar on songs like “Mirror Mirror” and “Eager Copy” contrasts with the steadfast reproducibility of the album’s electronic elements. While Palm cite Japanese pop music, dub, and footwork as influences on this album’s sonic palette, they found themselves returning time and again to the artists who inspired them to start the group over a decade ago. “When we were first starting out as a band, we bonded over an appreciation of heavy, aggressive, noisy music,” Alpert reflects. “We wrote parts that were just straight-up metal.” Kurt adds, “I found myself rediscovering and re–falling in love with the visceral, jagged quality of guitars in the music of Glenn Branca, The Fall, Beefheart, and Sonic Youth, all important early Palm influences.” Returning to the fundamentals gave Palm a strong foundation upon which they could experiment freely, resulting in their most ambitious and revelatory album to date. “Music isn’t about things. It is things,” Richard Powers wrote in his novel Orfeo. While making Nicks and Grazes, Kurt found himself returning to this quote as a guiding philosophy as Palm spent days and months on end working out songs together in their practice space. Though a single narrative remains elusive, Stanley points out echoes of the members’ individual and collective experiences in the use of samples. Snippets of conversation on tour in Spain, the blare of a Philly high school marching band’s early morning practice, and the refracted reverberations of Palm’s friend Paco Cathcart performing as The Cradle are just a few examples of daily sonic flotsam the band incorporated with instrumentation to create a new communal experience. The album’s titular track is a prime example; Anderegg combined the band’s disparate field recordings into a diaristic kaleidoscope of sound, as much a collection of memories as it is its own composition. “We’re constantly grabbing at sounds that move us,” Stanley says. “In a sense, the record is cobbled together from these pieces of our lives.” クレジット2022年10月14日リリース Producer: Matt Anderegg Mixer: Matt Anderegg and Matt Labozza Recording Engineer: Matt Labozza Mastering Engineer: Ryan Schwabe Composed by Eve Alpert Hugo Stanley Gerasimos Livitsanos Kasra Kurt Performed by Eve Alpert Gerasimos Livitsanos Hugo Stanley Kasra Kurt Matt Anderegg
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Palm - Dog Milk
Dog Milk is the second single from Palm's forthcoming LP, "Rock Island", out February 9th, 2018 on Carpark Records.
Palm is an American experimental rock band from Philadelphia. Palm was formed by songwriters, guitarists and vocalists Eve Alpert and Kasra Kurt, who recruited bass player Gerasimos Livitsanos and drummer Hugo Stanley from Bard College in New York.
#Palm#Dog Milk#new music#new video#indie#indie rock#rock#alternative#alternative rock#Rebjukebox#experimental rock
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Music Review: Palm - Rock Island
Palm Rock Island [Carpark; 2018] Rating: 3.5/5 The quartet of Philadelphian post-punk Dadaists called Palm locate the point of confluence between the inscrutability of noise rock and the directness of pop music on Rock Island, the group’s second album and Carpark Records debut. Bright, chiming guitars and steel drum loops tangle into heterodox time signatures and undergird brash, yet opaque vocal non-melodies, with a centrifugal, hiccupping deconstruction of easy listening. At the fore of this freak-pop paradox is the Janusian vocal duo of Eve Alpert and Kasra Kurt, whose distinct singing styles occasionally convene in harmony, but more often than not provide two markedly different approaches to vocalization. “You only like me in my most peculiar state,” sings Kurt on “Composite,” enunciating with a guilelessness that hearkens back to the bright-eyed cooing of Beach Boys golden child Carl Wilson. Alpert, on the other hand, sings with far more furtivity, often subjecting her vocals to studio manipulation. On closing track “(Didn’t What You Want) Happen,” Eve sings, “Now we’re out of step, but you don’t ever seem to mind,” with her voice buried in the instrumental mix and compressed nearly to the point of incoherence. Never at odds with one another, Kurt’s and Alpert’s vocals explore the poles of sincerity and self-effacement present in both pop and experimental music. The album begins with a percolating processed drum salvo akin to the sounds on Death Grips’ Bottomless Pit or Government Plates. And like the Sacramento trio, Palm display a propensity for off-putting experimentation that confounds unfamiliar listeners and rewards the patient ones. Yet where Death Grips unrelentingly employ images of ultraviolence and anomie in their music, Palm’s lyrics instead conjure innocuous, nondescript touchstones of modernity. In other words, Death Grips seek to normalize radicalness while Palm work to radicalize normality. The song “Bread,” with its plainly unpretentious title and 35-second false-start, cultivates an unassuming atmosphere that allows Kurt to promulgate his quotidian conceits of societal disarray: “A population of people who deal in clichés/ And there’s no punctuation to grant you relief.” For Palm, bread, dog milk, and open-plan offices are the stuff of chaos, wreaking as much havoc as MC Ride’s divinations of internet hackers and culture-shocked psychopaths. Rock Island is a work of vitiated beauty and entrancing disaffection. Disquieting but somehow quite familiar, the record contorts the warm sounds of yacht rock and island music into something primal yet alien. The end result is a sound that you’d swear has been done countless times before in the avant-rock pantheon, but in reality, its direct musical forebears are few and far between. And though Palm’s excursions into experimentation at times feel more rote than inspired (particularly the instrumentals “20664” and “Theme from Rock Island”), the group maintain a relatively consistent style on Rock Island, offering a unique take on the possibilities of contemporary indie rock. http://j.mp/2BMwj0D
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Palm (band)
Palm is an American experimental rock band from Philadelphia. Palm was formed by songwriters, guitarists and vocalists Eve Alpert and Kasra Kurt, who recruited bass player Gerasimos Livitsanos and drummer Hugo Stanley from Bard College in New York. [1]
Palm's music often features abrupt time changes and unconventional song structures – in a positive review of their Shadow Expert EP, Pitchfork referred to their dualing melodies and intertwined vocals as "constantly communicating in esoteric shorthand, often in several cross-talking conversations at once." The New York Times, which called the band "one of the most ambitious and promising acts in today’s art-rock scene," described Palm's music as "teeming with unorthodox time signatures, unexpected bursts of guitar noise, and other trapdoors and tricks." [2] NPR described the band's songs as "jagged edges and complex, interlocking pieces ... that demands – and rewards – your full attention." [3
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In describing Palm to the uninitiated, it’s sometimes necessary to clarify the meaning of the group’s name by raising one’s hand in the universal symbol of greeting and goodwill. The act of corroborating the aural with the gestural occurs everywhere in their work. On their latest EP, "Shadow Expert," the syntax of popular music is regarded suspiciously and often subjected to revisions or reversals. Without formal training in their instruments, the players are left to determine their own musical language.
Eve Alpert and Kasra Kurt’s guitars occupy themselves most often with the pace-keeping work typical of a rhythm section. Meanwhile, Gerasimos Livitsanos’ bass and Hugo Stanley’s drums seem to perform commentary and reportage from deeply embedded positions at the front. Their contributions remain necessary to the composition, generating the kind of friction that other motion can be charted against: the grinding of teeth, the turning of an engine.
The record begins with the skittering appeals of one guitar to another, hard-panned left and right. They produce a groove, stop on a dime, and begin a series of nimble paces that might suggest the artful recovery from a skipped step. Here and elsewhere, the guitars confer and conspire with each other, finishing phrases and figuring it out. There is a faint delay to be heard in their communication, perhaps equivalent to that which exists between an object and its shadow, broken across several surfaces.
On the vocal track, Alpert and Kurt trade the barbs and bristles of a familiar argument and share the blissful cries of discovery. The “How could I forgive that? / How could I forget that?” refrain of “Two Toes” recalls the capricious turns of the gut in moments of grievance and doubt. These sonic and thematic dissonances are sustained, rather than resolved. This music draws the thought as it bounces around the head, draws the conversation as it circulates the room. Its most important questions are never answered but always rephrased.
On 2015’s "Trading Basics," Palm’s experiments were more alchemical, more preoccupied with the impossible. Much of that music was submerged in some viscous and delicious substance, which often seemed to burn and bubble over. Two years and several tours of the United States later, the group sounds more limber, more acclimated to the press of events. At seventeen minutes in duration, these six songs are efficiencies of form, cutting quickly and decisively among scenes of bodies, systems, and intrigue.
released June 16, 2017
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Palm’s “Walkie Talkie” Is Colorfully Chaotic Art Rock
Palm are carrying the torch for freaky art-rock. The Philadelphia band build harmonies from coarse, atonal punk, reviving the noise of vintage Black Dice and eccentric song structures of Dirty Projectors. “Walkie Talkie,” the first single off their Carpark Records debut Shadow Expert, is a colorfully chaotic introduction to their world.
“Walkie Talkie” avoids traditional verse-chorus song structures, which could sound disorganized, but instead their songs have the calculated illogic of an M.C. Escher painting: dissonant chords, constant tonal shifts, and calculated percussion. The song’s tempo is unstable, held together by guitarists/vocalists Kasra Kurt and Eve Alpert’s prickly chords and wonky singing. Alpert rotates between sugary falsettos and stubborn shouts, avoiding harmonies with Kurt, who in turn trips over himself to finish her sentences. The guitars follow in a similar pattern, their plucks chasing after each other. On “Walkie Talkie,” Palm sprint through the musical equivalent of a three-legged race and manage to stay nimble the entire way.
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Palm – “Walkie Talkie”
Palm – “Walkie Talkie”
We named Palm a Band To Watch in advance of the release of their 2015 debut album, Trading Basics, and the Philadelphia band is as enigmatic as ever on “Walkie Talkie,” the lead single and opening track to the crew’s forthcoming Shadow ExpertEP. It features a characteristically intense interlocking groove and urgent trade-off vocals from singers Eve Alpert and Kasra Kurt, and it sounds like the…
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Omega Radio for May 9, 2020; #228.
Misster Spoon “Heatwave”
Sophrosyne “A Thousand Wounds”
Strangling Glass “Grained N Brained”
Ye Gods “Configuration”
Yokel “Pappa’s Got A Brand New Cornea” (f. Franco Franco)
Half Nelson “Sweet Sensation”
Calles “Nnux”
Kah X McKenzie “Decree For A Refugee”
Giant Swan “Architectural Hangover”
Lanark Artefax “Corra Linn”
Gladio “Fist Of Gladio”
KL/BE/DH/RS “Land”
Kasra Kurt “Tumbleboy”
Corporate Park “Benevolent Surveillance”
G.S.O.H. “Interlude 1″
Nick Klein “Microscopic Cop”
Scandinavian Star “Regal V”
Daniel Avery “Glitter”
Burial “Claustro”
Bvrth “Warden”
Christoph De Babalon “Raw Mind”
Lurka “Choke”
Ossia “Hell Version”
Rezzett “100%Profit”
Pedazo De Came Con Ojo “Maybe Don’t”
Debby Friday “Neight Fictive” (f. Chino Amobi)”
Powell Tillmans “Feel The Night”
Flying Lotus “Auntie’s Harp” (Rebekah Raff RMX)
All electronics volume.
#omega#music#playlists#mixtapes#electronic#dance#techno#Flying Lotus#Debby Friday#Rezzett#Ossia#Christoph De Babalon#Burial#Daniel Avery#Nick Klein#Giant Swan
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# 3,416
Omega Radio for May 9, 2020; #228.
Misster Spoon “Heatwave”
Sophrosyne “A Thousand Wounds”
Strangling Glass “Grained N Brained”
Ye Gods “Configuration”
Yokel “Pappa’s Got A Brand New Cornea” (f. Franco Franco)
Half Nelson “Sweet Sensation”
Calles “Nnux”
Kah X McKenzie “Decree For A Refugee”
Giant Swan “Architectural Hangover”
Lanark Artefax “Corra Linn”
Gladio “Fist Of Gladio”
KL/BE/DH/RS “Land”
Kasra Kurt “Tumbleboy”
Corporate Park “Benevolent Surveillance”
G.S.O.H. “Interlude 1″
Nick Klein “Microscopic Cop”
Scandinavian Star “Regal V”
Daniel Avery “Glitter”
Burial “Claustro”
Bvrth “Warden”
Christoph De Babalon “Raw Mind”
Lurka “Choke”
Ossia “Hell Version”
Rezzett “100%Profit”
Pedazo De Came Con Ojo “Maybe Don’t”
Debby Friday “Neight Fictive” (f. Chino Amobi)”
Powell Tillmans “Feel The Night”
Flying Lotus “Auntie’s Harp” (Rebekah Raff RMX)
All electronics volume.
#omega#music#playlists#reviews#electronics#experimental#dance#techno#Calles#Franco Franco#Avon Terror Corps#Kasra Kurt#Nick Klein#Daniel Avery#Burial#Christoph De Babalon#Ossia#Rezzett#Powell#flying lotus
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MAY 9, 2020 (#228)
Misster Spoon “Heatwave”
Sophrosyne “A Thousand Wounds”
Strangling Glass “Grained N Brained”
Ye Gods “Configuration”
Yokel “Pappa’s Got A Brand New Cornea” (f. Franco Franco)
Half Nelson “Sweet Sensation”
Calles “Nnux”
Kah X McKenzie “Decree For A Refugee”
Giant Swan “Architectural Hangover”
Lanark Artefax “Corra Linn”
Gladio “Fist Of Gladio”
KL/BE/DH/RS “Land”
Kasra Kurt “Tumbleboy”
Corporate Park “Benevolent Surveillance”
G.S.O.H. “Interlude 1″
Nick Klein “Microscopic Cop”
Scandinavian Star “Regal V”
Daniel Avery “Glitter”
Burial “Claustro”
Bvrth “Warden”
Christoph De Babalon “Raw Mind”
Lurka “Choke”
Ossia “Hell Version”
Rezzett “100%Profit”
Pedazo De Came Con Ojo “Maybe Don’t”
Debby Friday “Neight Fictive” (f. Chino Amobi)”
Powell Tillmans “Feel The Night”
Flying Lotus “Auntie’s Harp” (Rebekah Raff RMX)
Springtime for Omega Radio is on its way to a close. For now, it’s unloading two hours of current non-straightforward electronics as always.
New sounds from Calles, Rezzett, and Pedazo De Came Con Ojo.
Recent sounds from Lanark Artefax, Gladio, Corporate Park, Nick Klein, Burial, Bvrth, Christoph De Babalon, Ossia, and Debby Friday with Chino Amobi.
Also featuring sounds from the Avon Terror Corps roster.
Final Omega Spring 2020 broadcast airs May 23, 2020 (10PM, New York City).
#omega#music#radio#electronic#techno#dance#Avon Terror Corps#Giant Swan#green#neon green#Lanark Atrefax#Kasra Kurt#Nick Klein#Daniel Avery#Burial#Christoph De Babalon#Rezzett#Debby Friday#Chino Amobi#Flying Lotus#Powell
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Palm - Shadow Expert
Shadow Expert is taken from Palm's EP, Shadow Expert, out now on Carpark Records.
Palm is an American rock band from Philadelphia that explores various genres, from noise rock to new wave to more straight-forward pop. They consist of Eve Alpert (guitar, vocals), Kasra Kurt (guitar, vocals), Gerasimos Livitsanos (bass) and Hugo Stanley (drums).
#Palm#Shadow Expert#new music#new video#indie#USA#indie rock#rock#alternative rock#alternative#Rebjukebox
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Omega Radio for September 26, 2020; #241.
Beije “You Got It Dude”
Kasra Kurt “Rough Rug”
Beth Israel “Seventh-Inning Strays”
R.M.F.C. “Connector #1″
Angels In America “Keep The Aspidistra Flying”
Tropical Fuck Storm “Planet Of Straw Men”
Vacation “My Fake Life”
Blue Ray “Smack Me”
Dan Drohan “Pretty Sure”
Mezzanine Swimmers “Kneelin’ On A Knife”
Duchess Says “I Repeat Myself”, “Talk In Shapes”
Indian Jewelry “Eva Cherie”
Ariel Pink “Stay Here With You”, “Chapter 8 Some Tutorials”
Territorial Gobbing “A Shopping List Of Sorts”
Golden Ivy “Delta”
Transfix “New Fix”
Crickets “Elastic”
Really Big Pinecone “Go Hoping, Go Big Time”, “High Speed Drifting”
Sneaks “Someone Like That”
Naked Roommate “Mad Love”
Erasers “Pass You In The Night”
Immolation “Mango Seals”
Treble Clef “Chillin’ Wave”
Bruce Gilbert “Eline Cout II”
Brainiac “Fresh New Eyes”
J. Zunz “Circle Of Time”, “Four Women Of Darkness”
Wild card broadcast.
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# 3,063
Omega Radio for November 30, 2019; #213.
Black Marble “One Eye Open”
Duchess Says “I’m An Idea”
Xiu Xiu “Scisssssssors”
Men I Trust “Norton Commander (All I Need)”
Kasra Kurt “Are We Technical?”
Ariel Pink “So Glad”
Red Fetish “Spanish Meths”
Ice Cream “Receiver”, “Plastic”
Exploded View “Dark Stains”
Stereo Total “Einfach Kompliziert”
Low Red Center “Olive Shaped”
Operators “Come And See The Radiant Dawn”
0th “Crazyhorse”
Knife Wife “Fruity Void”
Odwalla 88 “What The…”
Final Autumn broadcast of the season, Year Seven, and the decade; also ends WUSB’s broadcasting week and month.
#omega#music#mixtapes#reviews#playlists#electronic#synthwave#synthpop#d.i.y.#experimental#Black Marble#Duchess Says#Xiu Xiu#Men I Trust#Kasra Kurt#Ariel Pink#Exploded View#Stereo Total#0th
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