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New Video: Wine Lips Share Breakneck Ripper "Stimulation"
New Video: Wine Lips Share Breakneck Ripper "Stimulation" @Winelipsband @auteurresearch
Toronto-based outfit Wine Lips started back in 2015 as a part-time project between its founding members Cam Hilborn (vocals, guitar) and Aurora Evans (drums). But with the release of 2017âs self-titled debut, the band quickly amassed international attention, which resulted in tours across North America, followed by an unexpected tour of Hong Kong and China in 2018. 2019âs sophomore albumâŠ
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#garage psych#garage punk#garage rock#indie rock#music#music video#New Video#The Sugar Shack#Toronto ON#video#Video Review: Stimulation#Video Review: Wine Lips Stimulation#Wine Lips#Wine Lips Mushroom Death Sex Bummer Party#Wine Lips S/T LP#Wine Lips Stimulation#Wine lips Super Mega Ultra
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âIâm on some new shit,â Taylor Swift sings in the opening lines of Folklore, announcing with a smile and a wink that the many Taylor Swifts of her previous seven albums â even the not-quite-year-old Taylor of Lover â canât come to the phone right now.Â
Swift has always conceived of herself, first and foremost, as a singer-songwriter. But sheâs never presented herself to the world that way with quite so much clarity as on Folklore, the surprise LP that she spent the past four months recording with a whoâs who of atmospheric indie rockers, including Aaron Dessner and Justin Vernon. The most surprising aspect of the album, though, is just how ultimately unsurprising it feels to hear Swift on her new shit, singing over fluttering High Violet trumpets, morose Dessner piano runs, and gently thundering 22, A Million programming glitches.
Thatâs because Swift has spent the past 15 years developing an internal world of melody and song structure so sui generis that her songs now belong more to her than to whatever sonic palette sheâs working in at any given time. Take âBetter Man,â the 2016 power ballad she wrote for country group Little Big Town, or âThis is What You Came For,â the EDM hit she co-wrote for Rihanna that same year. Dressed up slightly differently, either song could have fit seamlessly on any of Swiftâs last three albums â because at heart, neither of them is a country song or an EDM song, so much as theyâre both Swift songs.
Swift could have chosen any number of directions for her latest step forward, but on Folklore she clearly relishes working in a realm that might be a little closer to the way sheâs always heard her own songs in her head. âJust like a folk song/Our love will be passed on,â sings the woman named after James Taylor. Even if these songs donât actually present as folk music in any strict musicological sense, it makes sense that Swift has chosen folk music as the broad aesthetic template for her deepest dive into writing third-person character sketches. âI found myself not only writing my own stories,â she said of her new album, âbut also writing about or from the perspective of people iâve never met.â
Like many who were melodramatic twenty-somethings in the late aughts, Swift has likely spent time with Bon Iverâs For Emma, Forever Ago, the album that redefined folk in the popular imagination a music of deeply felt cabin-in-the-woods seclusion. Faced, then, with an unfamiliar period of physical isolation under quarantine, Swift did what anyone in her position might: She called up Justin Vernon and started writing some sad songs.Â
Swiftâs ability to effortlessly try on new sounds and styles comes from her lifetime of devouring every record she could get her hands on. As with all of her albums, there are hints of her wide-ranging listening all over Folklore: the Dashboard Confessional singles she obsessed over as a teenager; the light Avril Lavigne and Colbie Caillat singer-songwriter pop that helped inspire her first two albums; the Death Cab for Cutie, MGMT, Band of Horses, Tunnel of Love-era Springsteen, and Flaming Lips tunes she expressed love for on the Speak Now tour; and yes, the various National and Justin Vernon-related songs sheâs been putting on her own curated playlists since as early as 2017. (In 2018, Swift shouted out the Nationalâs âSlow Show,â which features the bandâs all-time most Swiftian couplet: âYou know I dreamed about you/For 29 years before I saw you.â)
As such, Folklore doesnât signal any sort of declarative pivot from the past, so much as it opens up a new world of future costumes thatâd surely fit her just as well, from pop-punk (as others showed on ReRed, last yearâs scrappy garage-rock remake of 2012âs Red), to the spectral Ingrid Michaelson indie-pop she always seems one step away from diving into headfirst, to the dobro-laced Patty Griffin roots record Swift seems bound to one day gravitate towards a decade or two down the line.
Thereâs no question what genre any of those records would ultimately belong to â her own. But part of the fun of watching her genre-hopping is in the way she enjoys playfully embodying the outward aesthetics of her latest collaborators. In the case of Folklore, sheâs been referring to newfound musical buddies like Vernon in public since at least 2014, and you can hear her taking up the role of a record-collector nerd even as she commands her own sound. On the chorus to âCardigan,â Swift tries on her best version of Matt Berningerâs wine-tipsy âThis is The Last Timeâ mumble, singing the word âIâ as âi-i-i-i.â âYour favorite song was playing/from the far side of the gym,â she sighs later, alluding to the Nationalâs 2017 song âDark Side of the Gym,â one of Swiftâs favorite of their tunes. (Leave it to Taylor to write a line about the fact that she placed a certain song on an Apple Music playlist.)Â
That line comes 14 songs into the album, on the Dessner-produced âBetty,â a rootsy, harmonica-driven number that, on one hand, feels like one of the precious few purely acoustic tunes you might expect from an album with a title like Folklore. On the other hand, the melody of âBettyâ feels like an amalgamation of Swiftâs entire balladeering career: the tender, âTim McGrawâ loping verse phrasing, the folk-pop Fearless pop turn in the chorus, the gently ascendant Speak Now bridge. âI showed up at your party,â Swift sings in the song, addressing, in part, any skeptical genre gatekeepers wondering what sheâs doing with her newfangled sounds. But Swift has the last laugh once again. She knows sheâs been at the party, lurking over on the dark side of the gym, the whole time.Â
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Dust Volume 4, Number 9
The Long Hots
We enter the pumpkin latte season with a full slate of short reviews, covering both anticipated and overlooked releases from rock, pop, jazz, punk and unclassifiable genres. Contributors this time included Bill Meyer, Ethan Covey, Jennifer Kelly, Isaac Olson, Jonathan Shaw and Justin Cober-Lake. Â
Baked â II (Exploding in Sound)
II by Baked
Baked, out of Brooklyn, belches a lava flow of viscous guitar sound over sweetly unassuming pop melodies. If J. Mascis ever wrote a song to impress the women of Look Blue Go Purple, if Beat Happening experimented with a whacked out set of fuzz pedals, it might sound a bit like this â in short, itâs fetching DIY pop with serious muscles under the anorak. When soft, vulnerable tune meets the bristling heft of feedback, thereâs a palpable fizz, never more so than on âHope Youâre Happy,â sung by Isabella Mingione. âThe Hartlett Anthemâ does the same trick with Jeremy Aquilino singing tender hooks over the droning surf of dissonance like a sleepier Teenage Fanclub. This particular recording is Bakedâs third, after 2014âs Debt and 2017âs Farnham but earns the âIIâ by being the second in Exploding in Soundâs Tape Club series. Thatâs undoubtedly why itâs so short, but brevity is tantalizing. These five songs leave you wanting more.
Jennifer Kelly
 Big Blood â Operate Spaceship Earth Properly (Feeding Tube Records)
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Massachusetts-based Feeding Tube Records favors such a frantic release schedule that itâs easy to miss the consistently strange, often delightful albums they spit out. Earlier this summer, the label dropped Operate Spaceship Earth Properly, a fresh & freaky 45-minutes of scuzzy psychedelia from Big Blood. The Portland, ME duo of Colleen Kinsella and Caleb Mulkerin â joined here in some capacity by their daughter, Quinnisa â have been delivering properly furry trips since the 1990s, originally as founders of Cerberus Shoal. The spin this time involves a tip of the hat to authors such as Octavia Butler and Ursula K. Le Guin via a science fiction-inspired song cycle. Yet, concept aside, the songs have serious teeth, stomping forward in a heady slop of bullying riffs, martial drumming and Kinsellaâs third-eye rants. Itâs headphone music for the deep forest, a turned-on reality-strip far more properly psychedelic than the jammed-out noodling frequently paraded by those dressed in thrifted tie dyes. Listen at your own risk; be changed. Â
Ethan Covey
  Manu DelagoâParasol Peak (One Little Indian)
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Manu Delago, a classically trained percussion who specializes in the steel-drum-like instrument known as a hang, isnât doing things the easy way. For this album and the accompanying film, he convened a chamber group of seven people and led them, instruments and all, on a mountaineering expedition in the albums (pity the cellist). These eight tracks were recorded outside, in all kinds of weather, using natural elements like sticks, rocks and trees for additional textures. The result is a rather lovely blend of percussion-dappled Reichian minimalism, augmented by the sounds of water, thunder and wind. The music works its way to the summit, beginning in the leafy, sun-warmed environs of âParasol Woods,â where reedy, breathy clarinet and pensive trombone catch the light sparkling off intricate webs of tonal percussion. By âRidge View,â sounds have turned chillier and more remote; flute and chimes are buffeted by gales of wind. A mournful, solitary whistle frames âListening Glacier,â a trebly coating of ice on a grounding drone of cello, but there is exuberance and accordion wheezing triumph in âParasol Peak.â Fingers and lips must be pretty frozen all round by this point, but a warm, pulsing joy emanates from this brass-y, syncopated reel. The question arises: why would anyone do such a difficult thing?  But the answer is right there in the accompanying video. Because it was beautiful, because it was hard and because it made a sound no other new chamber group could make, with woods, mountains, stones and  physical effort built right in.
Jennifer Kelly
 EthersâEthers (Trouble in Mind)
s/t by Ethers
Ethers spun out of the late Chicago drone-punk-garage outfit Heavy Times, pulling front man Bo Hansen and bassist Russell Calderwood into this new enterprise and adding Calderwoodâs wife Mary McKane and drummer Matt Rolin. Along the way, Hansen et al seem to picked up a heightened appreciation for melody and hook (and percolating keyboards thanks to McKane). âItâs a Rip-Offâ lurches and jitters on slashed guitar riffs and hard, straight up and down drumming, but thereâs an undeniable lilt in its fuzzy tune, and âEmilyâ balances bluster and tenderness in equal parts. If Heavy Times drove a post-punk freight train through a long, shadowy tunnel, Ethers breaks out into sunshine on the other side of the mountain, the darkness in the music but not all of it. âSomethingâ ends the disc on a high note, chiming guitar notes streaking like meteors down to a burnt-bare beat, an intoxicating smell of sleeping gas all around.
Jennifer Kelly
 Iron & Wine â Weed Garden (Sub Pop)
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Sam Beam has somehow become a master of the EP. Last year's full-length Beast Epic from Iron & Wine received critical acclaim and a Grammy nomination, but it never really settled the way much of his earlier work had. Given that Weed Garden draws from that album's leftovers, the new EP could have been a quick toss-off to turn a few dollars on otherwise dead songs. Happily, though, Beam delivers a strong, quick set. Where he had traded in resignation, this one starts with an immediate rally, the call in âWhat Hurts Worseâ to âbecome the lovers we need.â His awareness of brokenness becomes the grounds for a fragile restoration, his voice and the smooth production serving the message.
A few years old but until now unreleased, âWaves of Galvestonâ brings the necessary precision to a complicated situation, and the continuing Croce-like sound fits the mood perfectly. âLast of Your Rock 'n' Roll Heroesâ brings a steady bounce to a series of impressions that eventually give way to the darkness. Closer âTalking to Fogâ uses language to resist pending dissipation, offering gentleness among hardness and âreaching outâ despite knowing safer options. Beam's writing relies on visuals until he makes blurry images come into focus, even if he maintains that âit's hard to find.â It's a strong statement from Beam, an album's worth of care in a little EP, again.
Justin Cober-Lake
 The Lavender Flu â Mow the Glass (In The Red)
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Heavy Air, The Lavender Fluâs 2016 debut was a double album of feel-bad rock sent forth from the Pacific Northwest damp to soundtrack an endless bummer. Chris Gunn, formerly of The Hunches and Hospitals, assembled the album at home, on analog tape, building and reworking the tracks into one of the yearâs most impressive collages of sound. The second time around, with Mow the Glass, the approach is different. Here, Gunn is backed by a proper band â brother Lucas Gunn, former Hunches drummer Ben Spencer and Eat Skullâs Scott Simmons. Those folks all lent a hand to Heavy Air, yet here they are in the same room, playing together to the buzz of warmed amps and a view of the sea. The album is trim and clear, focusing Gunnâs aesthetic without losing sight of the mindset that got him here in the first place. A couple of cuts from the first LP â âDemons in the Dark,â a cover of Townes Van Zandtâs âLike a Summer Thursdayâ â reappear with fresh coats of paint. âYou Are Preyâ begins tipsy and unraveling, with the band chasing a whip of stereo-panning guitar, before setting into a reverb-rich ballad. The mood is subtlety sunnier throughout, like a crack of light on the horizon viewed from the soak of a storm. Â
Ethan Covey
  Long Hots â Monday Night Raw (Self-Released)
Monday Night Raw by Long Hots
You should listen to Trouble Anyway, the new LP by Rosali Middleman. Middleman is a talented songwriter, but part of what makes Trouble Anyway so listenable is its lush instrumentation, all-star band, and pristine production. Middleman is also a member of The Long Hots, and their debut tape, Monday Night Raw sounds, by contrast, like it was recorded on a Fisher-Price tape deck by a band with about three weeks of musical experience between them. Itâs glorious. The members of Long Hots are rock and roll lifers, so Monday Night Rawâs amateurism is both affected and effective, and sure to satisfy anyone who thinks Here Are the Sonics!!! is too slick. Of particular note is the ten minute âBoogie Trance,â which delivers exactly what it promises, no more, and âDie Die Die,â the chorus of which goes, you guessed it, âDie, Die, Die, Die.â Â
Isaac Olson
  Paul Lydon â SjĂłrinn Bak ViĂČ Gler (Paul Lydon)
sjĂłrinn bak viĂ° gler by Paul Lydon
When youâre on your own, labels donât mean much. Paul Lydon is an American musician who has been based in Reykjavik, Iceland since the mid-1990s. His discography is small, and heâs never made the same record twice. Heâs sung alone and with a partner, in English and Icelandic, and kept the accompaniment varied each time. On SjĂłrinn Bak ViĂČ Gler there is no singing at all, but itâs the most lyrical music of his recording career. The albumâs title translates as The Sea Behind, and given Icelandâs prevailing clime you might want to keep it that way until thereâs a closed door behind it and you. Lydonâs touch on the instrument betrays close acquaintance, and itâs easy to imagine him spending hours playing and ruminating on what heâs played. It doesnât fall easily into any genre; its stream-of-consciousness flow is too perambulating for pop, too elaborate for minimalism and it doesnât fall easily into any classical form. So letâs not worry about what it isnât, and instead appreciate its confidently open-ended melodies and comfortably solitary mood.
Bill Meyer     Â
 Thee Open Sex â White Horses (Sophomore Lounge)
THEE OPEN SEX "White Horses" by Thee Open Sex
Indiana might seem like an odd place to give birth to a combo committed to diving deep into Krautrock concepts but think again. Youâve got highways and flat land that doesnât afford much of a view once youâre over the cornfields; what could be more practical than motoric music? The Open Sex makes music thatâll whittle away the road miles, and White Horses is cut precisely to get you 35 minutes closer to home. Thatâs how long guitarist John Dawson and drummer Tyler Damon bear down on a groove thatâs more metronomic than equine. Three guests use their playing as a foundation for a wheeling superstructure of squelchy notes and spacey textures. This is white line meditation music; be sure to stay mindful of the weight of your foot upon the gas.
Bill Meyer
 Rob Noyes & Ryan Lee Crosby â Modal Improvisations on 34 Strings (Cabin Floor Esoterica)
[CFE#68] Modal Improvisations on 34 Strings by Rob Noyes & Ryan Lee Crosby
On record and in concert, 12-string guitarist Rob Noyes displays a clarity of intent that you donât often see from an artist who is young and new. But not only does he keep his picking clean and lyrical through rustic rounds and mystery-laden excursions, he keeps his head in the presence of a very different guitarist. Ryan Lee Crosby plays chaturangui, a sort of hybrid veena / dobro guitar developed by Debashish Bhattacharya. The chaturangui is suited to the swoop and chime of Hindustani ragas, and thatâs how Crosby plays it. Noyes embroiders the contours of his partnerâs voluptuous lines and pushes back with pure-sound strumming. He manages to sound quite supportive and engaged without compromising the very different character of his playing. This short (not quite 28 minutes) tape is a typically atypical Cabin Floor Esoterica product; home-dubbed and hand-wrapped, a first edition has already gone out of print, but a second run is imminent.
Bill Meyer Â
 Riesgo â Demo MMXVIII (Self-released)
Demo MMXVIII by RIESGO
Itâs not often that you can claim a tape is both a throwback to and a continuation of a vital movement in punk, but listen to Riesgoâs new demo. You can hear both of those historical trajectories as soon as âLobxsâ kicks it. The bassâs rubbery warbling and the guitarsâ razoring buzz recall the initial tones of Black Flagâs âNervous Breakdown.â Then Carlos Ruiz starts singing, and the tapeâs sound snaps into sharper focus. Chicagoâs South Side, Latinx punks, thrashy attitude: Riesgo have picked up the baton from the excellent and underappreciated Sin Orden, who in turn had received it from the nigh-legendary Los Crudos. (Or, in a couple cases, band members just held onto the baton: Ruiz sings for Sin Orden, and Jose Casas played guitar for Los Crudos.) Razacore is alive and angry. Thatâs good news, and very timely. Given our current national moment â the current bullshit hating on Latino American identity and the reactionary responses to the violence in Chicago â this bolus of pissed off, politically fierce punk is precisely whatâs needed. âAhĂłgateâ is a standout track. The vocals and lead guitar are pretty unhinged, while the rest of the band hammers away at a compelling hardcore riff. Itâll sound great in a sweaty basement. Viva, Riesgo!
Jonathan Shaw
  Rocket 808 â Digital Billboards b/w Mystery Train (12XU)
Digital Billboards b/w Mystery Train by Rocket 808
Rocket 808 is the latest incarnation of the garage guitar phenomenon John Schooley, whom you might remember from the Revelators (or if not, enjoy this set of Billy Childish covers laid to tape in a record store in Columbia, MO in 1996). A frequent solo performer (his website is called John Schooley and his One Man Band), Schooley does it all on these two tracks. âDigital Billboardsâ overlays the cheerful cheesiness of a vintage drum machine with incandescent flares of whammy and deep reverbed guitar darkness. Surf rock, sure, but evil and skeletal and scary, with shades of Suicide in the wild ghostly automatism. Side twoâs âMystery Trainâ amps up the rockabilly, the drum machine cranked to the breaking point, the guitar arcing and spitting in turbulent bursts. Schooley sings on this one, steering classic blues lines around hard bends until they lift off the pavement. This sort of blues-referencing, early-rock-aware music always has an element of parody, but Rocket 808 seems less performance-art-ish than Bob Log III or Heavy Trash. Itâs dark and dangerous, a heightened reality rather than a pose.
Jennifer Kelly
 Sam Weinberg â A/V/E (Anticausal)
A/V/E by Sam Weinberg
Sam Weinberg has contributed some raw sax to some harsh ensemble settings, particularly the duo W-2 and various gigs with Weasel Walter. But when he closes the door to his Brooklyn apartment, things get real. The sounds from outside his window and on his kitchen table prove equally valuable as he constructs a mutating environment out of inscrutable industry, passing traffic and critters, the mechanical parts of his horns and some vigorously scoured surfaces. This is the stuff of life, or at least Weinbergâs life. Layer upon layer of sonic activity coexists like the residents of a big old NY apartment building, close in proximity yet not particularly interested in each other.
Bill Meyer
#dust#dusted magazine#baked#jennifer kelly#big blood#ethan covey#manu delago#ethers#iron and wine#justin cober-lake#lavender flu#long hots#isaac olson#paul lydon#bill meyer#thee open sex#rob noyes#ryan lee crosby#riesgo#jonathan shaw#rocket 808#sam weinberg
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When Art Meets Music â 14 Stand-Out Album Covers Featuring Australian Art
When Art Meets Music â 14 Stand-Out Album Covers Featuring Australian Art
Creative People
by Elle Murrell
Ken Done in his home studio. Photo â Nikki To for The Design Files.
âPainters and musicians have long been friends and collaborators with varying degrees of success, but in my experience, there is tremendous mutual respect and almost an awe of each otherâs craft,â tells artist Luke Scibberas. Austinmer-based band Shining Bird enlisted the Hill End-based artist in creating the cover of their 2016 release, Black Opal. Luke first became acquainted with the members of this experimental pop band by reputation (âtheir excellent workâ) and then by social media.
In another collaboration, Collingwood-based artist Stephen Baker created artwork for The Smith Street Bandâs fourth album, More Scared of You than You Are of Me, which was a first for the band and âextra specialâ for Stephen. âHaving known the members for some time, I definitely had an intimate connection to the artwork and their personalities,â Stephen explains. A portrait of the singer, Wil Wagner, was decided on unanimously for the album cover. Additional new art, all in Stephenâs artistic style and a specific colour palette, was used across a range of merchandise for the release, from covers to posters, T-shirts and even 50 hand-painted guitar pedals!
From the other perspective, Alexander Gow, frontman of Melbourne-based indie rockers Oh Mercy approached Ken Done by email seeking something âvibrant and boldâ for their sophomore album back in 2011. âI was also very aware of his place within the Australian psyche. Knowing the title was going to be Great Barrier Grief, I knew itâd be a perfect match,â Alexander explains. He visited Kenâs gallery at The Rocks. âI met his family, and we just had a chat about art and music. It was enough to make him say, âYeah, Iâll do it.ââ
When creative forms like music and fine art coming together, there is an opportunity for mutual growth and the reaching of new audiences. While mass distribution may at first seem at odds with an exhibiting painterâs priorities, both Luke and Stephen found their collaborations to be incredibly enriching.
âI think itâs a great thing if you trust the musical artist youâre working with, and the result is in keeping with your ideals and aesthetics. Being inspired by someone elseâs work is also exciting, having the trust of a musicianâs opus to render or capture visually is an amazing experience!â praises Stephen.
âOne canât fathom just how the others wrest their respective works. Iâve worked with and maintained friendships with pop musicians, classical and contemporary composers and music is a constant in my studio, adding a lyrical inflexion to my visual story,â adds Luke. âMay it ever be so.â
We take you through some stand-out collaborations below. *With more than 11,377,191 albums released at the time of writing, weâve no doubt missed some of your favourites â please pop them in the comments!
Crayon works by Ken Done. Photo â Eve Wilson. Ken Doneâs artwork on the cover of âGreat Barrier Griefâ by Oh Mercy.
KEN DONE â âGreat Barrier Griefâ by Oh Mercy
Paul Kelly reviewed this 2011 album as like âsailing on a beautiful boat on a calm blue sea under a cloudless sky. Only thereâs a shadow moving under the water. Something dark and hidden ready to strip the flesh from your bones before they wash to the shoreâ. So, we can see how it was this ocean-pun-inspired release that got the attention of the renowned, water-loving artist.
Jonathan Zawada â âSkinâ by Flume.
Jonathan Zawada â âHi Vizâ by The Presets.
JONATHAN ZAWADA â âSkinâ by Flume and âHi Vizâ by The Presets
The Perth-born, LA-based artist is fascinated with âthe intersection and blend between the artificial and the naturalâ. With early roots in web design, Jonathan has expanded to into commercial graphic design, illustration and art direction and more recently object and furniture design, sculpture, video, installation and painting. He has taken out two Australian Record Industry Awards (ARIAS) for album artwork (Flumeâs 2016 release (pictured above) and Apocalypso by long-time collaborators The Presets in 2008) as well as presented solo exhibitions and installations in contemporary galleries around the world.
âI worked across the full breadth of Flumeâs Grammy-winning Skin album life cycle,â explains Jonathan of his album and single artwork, merchandise, promotional videos, creative direction of the live show, and even an exhibition of audio/video works and printed silks presented in LA and Sydney. âThe work aimed to explore ways of making the digital become organic and find tension points between comfort and discomfort,â he adds.
(left to right) Dane Lovett and Dave Snow â âBlack Fingernails, Red Wineâ by Eskimo Joe. Graeme Base â âSteal the Lightâ by The Cat Empire. Jack Vanzet â âBloomâ by Rufus.
DANE LOVETT + DAVE SNOW â âBlack Fingernails, Red Wineâ by Eskimo Joe
Melbourne-based artist Dane Lovett (who opens a new exhibition next week) teamed up with Dave Snow on the 2006 release by the Fremantle-formed alternative rock band. The artwork, stylised portraits of the three-piece, was nominated for the ARIA Award for Best Cover Art (and took out the Single of the Year for its titular track).
GRAEME BASE â âSteal the Lightâ by The Cat Empire
You may recognise the style of this cover from your childhood, more specifically the book Animalia, illustrated by legendary author and artist Graeme Base. The Melbourne-based creative worked with the alternative rock band on their sixth studio album, which features his signature, magical animal art.
âAt college, I had always wanted to be the guy who did the record covers,â reflected Graeme when he spoke to The Garret Podcast. Though he missed out on a job at a major record label, weâre glad he got a chance in 2013 to collaborate with what couldnât have been a more fitting group!
JACK VANZET â âBloomâ by Rufus Du Sol
The creative director and multi-disciplinary artist has created everything from music festival branding to identities for tech companies and restaurants. then there is, of course, the record cover art, including the 2016 chart-topping album from alternative dance RĂFĂS DU SOL, which was nominated for an ARIA for Best Album Artwork.
Jack is also a recording artist himself and boasts further artistic collaborations with the likes of Childish Gambino, The Australian Ballet, Vance Joy, Chet Faker to name a few.
Stephen at work in his studio. Photo â Sam Wong for The Design Files. Stephen Baker â âBirthdaysâ by Smith Street Band.
Stephen at work in his studio. Photo â Sam Wong for The Design Files. Stephen Baker â âMore Scared Of Youâ by Smith Street Band.
STEPHEN BAKER â âMore Scared of You than You Are of Meâ by The Smith Street Band
The Collingwood-based creatives and friends worked together on the 2017 rock release, which expanded to single covers and a host of merchandise.
âThe cover art had to reflect the honesty of the lyrics that had been written by Wil Wagner, the lead singer of the group,â explains Stephen of the album collaboration.
Right sections of Brett Whiteleyâs artwork Alchemy, 1972-1973.
Brett Whiteley â âAlchemyâ by Dire Straits.
BRETT WHITELEY â âAlchemyâ by Dire Straits
The British rock band released live album Alchemy in 1983, featuring an adapted section from an original painting, also entitled Alchemy, by artist Brett Whiteley.
The epic oil-and-mixed-media painting was created between 1972 and 1973 and spans across 18 wood panels (203cm x 1615cm). Â Regarded to be a self-portrait, it is currently in the collection of the Art Gallery of NSW and you can read an insightful essay about it here.
The cover of the Dire Straits album includes the far-right section of the artwork, with the addition of a guitar with lips held by a hand.
Luke Sciberras studio. Photo â Robyn Lea. Luke Sciberras â âBlack Opalâ by Shining Bird.
LUKE SCIBERRAS â âBlack Opalâ by Shining Bird
The Austinmer-based experimental pop band selected Luke Sciberrasâ artwork, Buffalo Country for their 2016 release.
This painting came about after âa wild night spent on the edge of the Katherine River in the Northern Territory, full of rumblings and myths of buffaloes and crocodiles but also stars and poetic gloaming,â Luke tells. He believes it was a perfect match; âItâs dark and earthy but has a warmth that I think suits the album nicelyâ.
Tin & Ed â âBuilt on Glassâ by Chet Faker.
Julian Hocking â âTelevisionâ by City Calm Down.
TIN & ED â âBuilt on Glassâ by Chet Faker
Melbourne-based creatives produced photography, art direction and design for Chet Fakerâs debut LP.
âThrough a series of still lifes, the artwork talks about the impermanence of objects, memories and relationships. Weâve used objects that are millions of years old and others that are man-made and very new to create an expanded sense of time and history. The series also explores a number of themes from the album, one of which is strength and fragility and how these two things can co-exist,â they explain of the collaboration, which saw them awarded the 2014 ARIA Award for Best Cover Art.
JULIAN HOCKING â âTelevisionâ by City Calm Down
The Melbourne four-piece will release their third album next month, and have enlisted Melbourne-based artist to create art for its cover. Julian is known for his richly conceptual exhibitions of mixed-media abstract and figurative works.
Karen Lynch â Civil Dusk by Bernard Fanning.
James Drinkwater â âPaintâ by Holy Holy.
KAREN LYNCH â Civil Dusk by Bernard Fanning
An analogue collage artist who uses paper, scissors and glue to reinvent vintage imagery into surreal retro-futuristic landscapes, Karen worked with Bernard Fanning on his 2016 solo release.
The albumâs name is drawn from a photography term, civil twilight, â[talking] about the light in the sky when the sun has gone below the horizon, but you can still make out all the objectsâ and is a direct reference to the core theme of decisions and their lasting consequences.
Bernardâs wife came across Karenâs work on Instagram and he found her style to fit âperfectly with the lyrical themesâ.
JAMES DRINKWATER â âPaintâ by Holy Holy
The Newcastle-based painterâs work spans painting, sculpture, assemblage and collage. He teamed up with Melbourne-based duo for their sophomore record album, and they made a film about their artistic collaborations.
âJamesâ paintings are richly patterned like an intriguing carpet â the shapes varied and inventive, the colour subtle with strong contrasts of light and dark and warm sonorous passages. As James says, they are about memory and intimacy and oneâs eye can wander through the paintings imagining a multiplicity of images in this richly layered world,â describes his contemporary, artist Elisabeth Cummings.
Reg Mombassa â âGarageâ by Mental As Anything.
Reg Mombassa â âFoggy Highwayâ by Paul Kelly & the Stormwater Boys.
REG MOMBASSA â âGarĂ geâ by Mental As Anything + âFoggy Highwayâ by Paul Kelly & the Stormwater Boys
Before he co-founded new wave/pop-rock band Mental As Anything, Chris OâDoherty studied art, and exhibited his own paintings in a now-iconic signature style.
Though he is widely known for his work with Mambo and Greenpeace, the Sydney-based artist has also created several covers for his own band, as well as other notable musicians including Paul Kelly (2005).
Chris draws inspiration from âthe wind, semi-professional birthday clowns, heavy machinery and the behaviour of domestic animalsâ.
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New Video: Toronto Garage Psych Outfit Wine Lips Releases a Furious Ripper
New Video: Toronto Garage Psych Outfit Wine Lips Releases a Furious Ripper @winelipsband @StompRecords @NiceMarmotPR
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