American Foursquare

September 27th, 2019 , by

American Foursquare is a meditation on empathy, on love, and on the meaning of home.

Denison began writing American Foursquare after he and his family relocated from Philadelphia to his hometown of Lancaster in 2014, trading their 800-square-foot row home for a 100-year-old house on the edge of Lancaster City. Denison wrote and recorded the songs as a response to the major life changes of moving and domestication, all the while taking a general hiatus from music to start a carpentry business and spend time with his wife and small children.

Denison named the record after the architectural style of the “new” house. Designed in reaction to the ornament of late-nineteenth century architecture, the foursquare emphasizes simplicity and function, with an open four-by-four room layout and a balanced, boxy shape. It’s one of the most common styles of American architecture.

As Denison wrote and recorded these songs, the simplicity, ubiquity, and plain-spoken utilitarianism of the American Foursquare house became a centering stand-in metaphor for many of the themes on the record: loss, change, settling, transition.

Denison began recording American Foursquare with Thomas Bartlett (Sufjan Stevens, The National, Norah Jones) and finished/mixed in Seattle, WA with Andy Park (Death Cab For Cutie, Pedro The Lion, Noah Gundersen) with additional string arrangements and vocals by Abby Gundersen and electric guitar and mandolin by Aaron Campbell.

 

The Decalogue

June 10th, 2019 , by

The title of “The Decalogue” has a touch of the grandiose: it means “The Ten Commandments.” Yet this score, composed by Sufjan Stevens for a dance work choreographed by Justin Peck that premiered with the New York City Ballet in May of 2017, is quiet and experimental. Stevens’s piano score, as played and recorded by Timo Andres, sounds like etudes in the Romantic-modernist tradition, as if prompted by Debussy.

With “The Decalogue,” releasing digitally and on deluxe edition vinyl on October 18, 2019 and standard edition and CD on December 6, 2019,  Sufjan is making—gently, without ostentation—new departures.

Love Yourself / With My Whole Heart

May 28th, 2019 , by

In celebration of Pride Month, Sufjan Stevens is releasing two new songs on the topic of love: “Love Yourself” and “With My Whole Heart,” available on limited-edition 7” vinyl June 28th, 2019 and on all digital platforms May 29, 2019. “Love Yourself” is based on a sketch Sufjan wrote 20 years ago. The original 4-track demo he recorded in 1996 is included as well as a short instrumental reprise. “With My Whole Heart” is a completely new song that Sufjan wrote as a personal challenge to “write an upbeat and sincere love song without conflict, anxiety, or self-deprecation.”

Sufjan also designed a new Gay Pride T-shirt that is available on his new merchandizing platform Sufjamz (sufjamz.com). A portion of the proceeds from this project will support two organizations that offer help for LGBTQ+ homeless kids in America—the Ali Forney Center in Harlem, NY, and the Ruth Ellis Center in Detroit, MI.

Design by Sufjan Stevens.
Back photograph on 7-inch by Nicole Mackinlay Hahn.

Lonely Man of Winter

October 26th, 2018 , by

In 2007, Sufjan Stevens wrote and recorded “Lonely Man of Winter” and, as part of a holiday marketing contest to promote Stevens’ Songs for Christmas boxset, traded ownership of the song to the winner, Alec Duffy. In turn Duffy gifted his song, “Every Day is Christmas,” to Stevens.

But instead of widely releasing “Lonely Man of Winter,” Duffy held listening sessions in his home and around the world, sometimes pairing the private listenings with cookies and hot chocolate.

In an end to that years-long project, Duffy – now founder/Artistic Director of the non-profit Brooklyn performance venue JACK – has decided to release the song “Lonely Man of Winter” on Asthmatic Kitty Records, digitally and on limited edition 7 inch, with funds going to support JACK’s mission of fueling experiments in art and activism.

The 7-inch,  which arrives in early December, includes the originally- shared song on side A and an updated mix by Thomas Bartlett (Doveman) featuring Melissa Mary Ahern.

The digital single, released on November 9th, 2018, includes both versions, and “Every Day is Christmas” by Alec Duffy.

 

Tomb

October 15th, 2018 , by

Tomb is a beginning.

Read the Rest...

Swim Inside the Moon

May 22nd, 2017 , by

Swim Inside the Moon is a record by 24-year-old Angelo De Augustine. This second full-length of Angelo’s career captures a sound he’s been looking for since he started playing music a decade ago.

Read the Rest...

The Greatest Gift

April 28th, 2017 , by

The Greatest Gift is a mixtape of outtakes, remixes and demos from Sufjan’s 2015 album Carrie & Lowell. This collection serves as a companion piece to the Carrie & Lowell Live album released earlier this year (and as an expansion to the original album). In the same way the live show featured re-interpretations of the songs from Carrie & Lowell, the mixtape unveils new remixes by several longstanding collaborators: Roberto C. Lange (aka Helado Negro) remixes both “Death With Dignity” and “All Of Me Wants All Of You;” Thomas Bartlett (aka Doveman) remixes “Exploding Whale,” a song previously only available as a 7-inch single; and James McAlister (aka 900X) remixes “Fourth of July.” The album also features Sufjan’s own remix of “Drawn to the Blood.”

The mixtape also includes a few alternate and/or demo versions of songs from the original album, including a “fingerpicking” version of “Drawn to the Blood,” and a guitar demo version of “John My Beloved,” which Sufjan recorded on his iPhone. The digital release also contains an iPhone demo of the song “Carrie & Lowell.”

Finally, the mixtape features four previously unreleased new songs, “official” outtakes from Carrie & Lowell (they were recorded at the same time as the album). These include “Wallowa Lake Monster,” “The Hidden River of My Life,” “City of Roses,” and “The Greatest Gift.” This new material,  in its investigation of love, life, death, God, and the beautiful state of Oregon, serves as a contemplative companion to the original album. We hope you enjoy.

Truly Gone

April 26th, 2017 , by

This limited edition 7 inch marks the signing of Angelo De Augustine to Asthmatic Kitty Records. “Truly Gone” will appear on a forthcoming record, while “Magical” is exclusive to this 7 inch. Includes digital download. Limited to 100.

[bandcamp album=3700727671 bgcol=FFFFFF linkcol=4285BB size=grande]

Carrie & Lowell Live

April 17th, 2017 , by

Performed November 9, 2015 at North Charleston Performing Arts Center in South Carolina.

Read the Rest...

Private Energy

July 28th, 2016 , by

Private Energy is the fifth album from Roberto Carlos Lange a.k.a. Helado Negro. Written and produced by Lange, Private Energy is an interpersonal communication of sounds about his surroundings past, present, and future. In fourteen tracks, Private Energy coalesces into a truly established musical voice.

For the past thirteen years, Lange has created music under a variety of monikers that have allowed him to express and explore experimentation in sound, performance, and music. When he moved to New York City in the mid-2000s, Lange became Helado Negro. It was in New York where Lange began to sing for the first time — at age 28. The development of his voice is chronicled through each Helado Negro release, an evolving collection of delicate pop songs punctuated by his singular style of singing in both English and Spanish.

Private Energy, which follows 2013’s Invisible Life and 2014’s tour de force Double Youth, continues the work Lange has done as an artist, culminating in the most captivating artistic statement of his career. The music draws from his expansive knowledge of sampling, sound synthesis, recording and history of references, and the album was created as a performance piece in tandem with his Tinsel Mammal dancers. Present at each Helado Negro show, the Tinsel Mammal dancers, costumed head-to-toe in silver strands, are a visual representation of sound and a sensual gateway to profoundly personal lyrics. The Tinsel Mammals are not representative of any human form. They work as a shimmering objects that represent the ideas of genderless and raceless beings and Private Energy’s themes of self-love, pride, and the embrace of constant change.

Five songs into Private Energy, when Roberto Lange spins from Spanish canto to English singing so gently the unilingual forget they don’t speak both, he recites the words of a robot.

“No love can cut our knife in two.”

Pulled from an Isaac Asimov story (as is the song’s name “Runaround”), the phrase is the poetic result of the machine’s cognitive dissonance when presented with a task that breaks two programmatically intrinsic laws of its existence: 1)obey orders and 2)don’t hurt yourself. Until engineers intervene, the robot is going in circles, quite literally and wildly verbally. For Helado Negro, it’s easily a sing-along, maybe a come-on, and somehow a mantra — and it’s spoken in that in-between language that Lange has developed over a decade of, in his own words, “organizing sounds to make music.”

« Previous PageNext Page »