Culture Creature Exclusive Premiere of Quin Galavis’s “No Return”

Premiere: Quin Galavis, ‘No Return’

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quin galavis

Austin, Texas songwriter Quin Galavis returns this month with his new album, The Battery Line. Today we’re premiering ‘No Return,’ listen below.

The Battery Line is Galavis’ follow-up to his epic 2016 double LP, My Life In Steel and Concrete. Galavis told Culture Creature that his new album was a return to basics after the double album. “My Life in Steel and Concrete was very emotionally draining,” he explained via email, “and I let it consume all aspects of my life. The Battery Line was such a departure from that. I wrote and demoed all the songs well before going to the studio, rehearsed them with a full band, and didn’t do nearly [as much] overdubbing. The feeling was light, so I ran with it.”

Galavis explained that ‘No Return’ reflects this “reprieve from the intensity” of his prior album: “I wanted to do less overwrought and more straightforward songwriting, and ‘No Return’ is probably one of the better examples of that approach.”

The Battery Line is due June 16th via Super Secret Records, and it’s available for preorder now. Listen to ‘No Return’ here:

This is not a Drill Album Review of New Berlin’s “Basic Function”

New Berlin – Basic Function (Super Secret)

(Originally posted here)

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The perks of living above a bar/live music venue is that, more times than not, the shows are free. It also serves as an antidote to the days when you don’t want to be alone but you also don’t want to venture too far from the safety of home.

A few nights ago the bar was hosting the record release party of a local band. It was a four band bill. I didn’t really care about the record release, and I didn’t know any of the bands playing. But I wanted to be out, and I wanted to listen to something, anything, live. I didn’t stay for the headliner. That’s because New Berlin, a punk band out of Austin, by way of McAllen, Texas, got all my attention and my money as I grabbed their LP. Before the third band took the stage, I was back upstairs headphones on, and the hi-fi turned way, way up.

When Greil Marcus first saw Gang of Four, he called them “the most interesting band [he’d] seen since the Sex Pistols—and the most exciting.” I’m not saying New Berlin is Gang of Four, but I am saying this: New Berlin is a band you should pay attention to.

Three unassuming young men: Michael Flanagan, Gustavo Martinez, and Andrew Richardson. Guitar, bass, and drums—straight forward, energetic, and full of attitude. New Berlin aren’t trying to melt anyone’s face with noise. Their album, Basic Function, is stripped down to the skeleton; it’s 24 minutes of perfect punk. Deceptive in its simplicity, it’s a record filled with wry, catchy lyrics, forceful guitars, chunky bass lines, and hyperactive drumming.

This is like late ‘70s UK punk. New Berlin would be right at home sharing a bill with the Desperate Bicycles, the Buzzcocks, and Honey Bane. That would be a show. I think what I’m trying to say is that New Berlin bring a number of punk sub-genres together under the umbrella of Basic Function. And it works.

‘Hardcore Punk’ lays out the band’s intentions—a kind of ethos— “I am a hardcore punk // dance with my arms outstretched / fist clenched bang chest / I am better than all the rest.” Which pairs well with ‘Service Bell,’ when Michael Flanagan sings “too cool for mom / too cool for dad / too cool for school / too cool too bad.” 

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But it’s not just manifestos and sneering disaffected cool. They show their laid back side with a down-tempo cover of Daniel Johnston’s ‘Mountain Top.’ And at their live show, they played a surf-punk version of The Rivieras’ ‘California Sun’—they did this with a kind of straight faced irony—showing their versatility and willingness to interpret classics of different genres.

I’m aware that I didn’t catch the boys at their best—technical difficulties plagued their set. But even at less than optimal, their set had me sat upright focused on the stage. What a surprise on a night when all I wanted was some sound to block out the silence. We all find out about our new favorite band in different ways, but, damn, there’s nothing quite like the thrill of being wowed for the first time during a live performance.

9 / 10

Pick up Basic Function here.

Song Premiere: Quin Galavis – “Any Head”

SONG PREMIERE: QUIN GALAVIS SHARES DEFIANT AND CATCHY ROCKER “ANY HEAD”

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Austin songwriter Quin Galavis has built a solid reputation in the studio, producing music for bands like Nazi Gold and The Dead Space. As a solo artist,Galavis is unpredictable and experimental from record to record and with his live performances. In other words, you never know what you’re going to get, and that isn’t a bad thing. He’s also a pro at writing pop-infused rock and roll that is concise and properly hard-hitting.

Now Galavis is back with the followup to 2016’s My Life In Steel and Concrete, the more refined yet lyrically weighty The Battery Linewhich comes out this Friday, June 16th on Austin label Super Secret Records. The Battery Line was recorded with Aaron Blount (Knife in the Water) and John Michael Landon at Austin’s Estuary Recording Facility. The album’s powerful, expressive and hook-laden songs show that Galavis isn’t beholden to the dark avant rock of his previous album. Catchy riffs and quasi power pop moments give the album a lifting spirit. Today Glide Magazine is premiering the song “Any Head”. With a touch of gritty barroom punk and jangly guitar, Galavis sings defiantly like the long lost son of Paul Westerberg. Much like Westerberg, Davis proves to have a penchant for writing songs that are are fast and at times heavy while still managing to be insanely catchy.

LISTEN:

The Battery Line will be available on LP, CD and download on June 16th via Super Secret Records. For more music and info visit quingalavis.com

Quin Galavis “Guiding Light” Song Premiere

SPILL MUSIC PREMIERE: QUIN GALAVIS – “GUIDING LIGHT”

Quin Galavis “Faces in the Crowd” Song Premiere

Quin Galavis Track Premiere

Dark songwriter lets a little light in

(Originally posted here)

Less than 10 months after releasing his melancholic magnum opus, My Life In Steel and Concrete, emotionally intense songwriter Quin Galavis returns with The Battery Line, his personal pop apex. Don’t worry, it’s not as uplifting as it sounds.

Congregation of one: Quin Galavis (Photo by Shelley Hiam)

Austin Chronicle: The Battery Line is remarkably more upbeat and melodic than My Life in Steel and Concrete. Are you less despairing these days or just better at hiding it?

Quin Galavis: No, if anything I’m a lot more despairing now. The Battery Line came when I was completely sober, exercising, and getting my shit together. I was trying to explore a lighter side of myself musically. I’ve always been able to write pop songs, I just never really committed to putting them on an album. I had lighter songs on records, but it’s always mixed in with some other shit. Lyrically, The Battery Line is just as fucked, so it was just a musical divergence.

AC: Who plays on the new disc?

QG: It was kind back to the older band: me, Graham Low, and Matt Hammer did the core tracking. Shelly McCann from Knife in the Water sang a bit. My fiancé Annecy [Liddell], who plays in our current live lineup, sang a little as well. Garrett Hadden from The Dead Space played some guitar and so did Ben Maddox from Skin Drips and Hundred Visions. I know I just listed seven people, but compared to My Life in Steel and Concrete it was a super small group.

AC: My Life in Steel and Concrete was such an artistically and emotionally epic production. How did making it change you as a songwriter and how does that experience inform what you’re doing going forward?

QG: That record is such a narrative of pure helplessness with the theme of some sort of optimism in getting things right that aren’t there. I think it will always shape things. That’s why The Battery Line was such a divergence. Even the cover of the record is a nice mauve color. I couldn’t physically or mentally make another My Life in Steel and Concrete right afterward. That’s how it affected me.

I’m going into the studio in the next few months and I’m going to make a record that’s going to make My Life in the Steel and Concrete look like Yellow Submarine.

AC: Down in the hole for the next one?

QG: Yeah. With The Battery Line, I wanted to let in a little sweeter air before I truly dive into the next thing. A lot has happened between The Battery Line and now: I’m estranged from my ex, I don’t get see my kid as much, I drink more, and I focus this energy into something pretty intense.

AC: Many people still know you from the Dead Space and Nazi Gold. Are you now fully focused on being a solo artist?

QG: I am. I do Dead Space just to play with Garrett and Jenny. Nazi Gold we could try to do again, but Thor [Harris] is really busy. Those are kind of gone. My focus is just on my solo stuff and changing and growing, and trying to gear up every album with a whole new personality that goes with it.

AC: We’re premiering a new track today called “Faces in the Crowd.” What can you tell us about it?

QG: I like that song a lot. It’s really poppy. It’s about trying to get out of the scene and escape. It’s got kind of a weird Breeders vibe to it or something.

The Battery Line arrives Friday on Super Secret Records. Galavis appears tonight – Monday, June 12 – at Cheer Up Charlies with New Berlin, Moist Flesh, and Caleb De Casper.

Vinyl Review – Suspirians’s Ti Bon Ange

Vinyl Review: “Ti Bon Ange” by Suspirians

(Originally posted here)

 

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Ti Bon Ange

What you may or may not know about me, dear readers, is that this guy right here is the biggest nerd you’ll ever meet.

Sure, most days, pimping brutal death metal, drinking craft beers, shaving with a vintage safety razor, and having a beautiful family, and living in a beautiful home that needs work…

You might not ever guess that I’m reading a fantasy novel, a Red Dwarf novel, and thinking about the space time continuum.

The eddies of the time stream fascinate me to no end. Recently, I had a very long dream about such things. In the dream, my biggest childhood dream could have been realized should I have been willing to go back in time and make a singular different choice.

Now, we could speak about the Mirror of Erised here and discuss my life and the ramifications, but what struck me about that dream was my understanding of what would have happened should the deal have been accepted.

Suspirians

The biggest moments of our lives were did not happen in a vacuum. When I think about my life and where it’s gone, it’s hard to forget a singular dinner I had with my ex-wife.

We were eating at our favorite Chinese food buffet and catching up. Really, at that point it should be noted her status had been changed from ex-wife and back to friend.

That night when we ate at Happy China, she changed my life and on the other side of the country, a similar conversation happened and it changed all of our lives.

The flotsam and jetsam of the world and the universe created the world in which we are living now.

Ok, tangent over.

Let’s connect that to the record at hand shall we? Recently, we took in X’s 40th Anniversary Tour at Delmar Hall. Like many of us, opening acts had largely been unkind to me. That night was different. Skating Polly took the stage and after about three songs, I turned to my wife and said, these kids had better start to suck or I’m going to walk over there and buy a record.

Which I did.

Seeing those, very young, kids playing on a stage, opening for X opened  my mind up to a different kind of music. It’s not right to call it progressive, because it’s more stream of consciousness.

Today’s review, Suspirians feel like an elder sibling to Skating Polly. Both in substance, style, and content. This is truly spectacular because there need to be more and more bands in this vein.

This vein is simply plugging in and playing.

It’s easy to lump this into the same brainspace as the the avant garde metal bands that frequently catch my hear and ensnare my heart.

These are all bands that are just playing on pure feeling. Standard musical tropes do not apply here. There are no verses, no choruses, and don’t even think you’ll be able to find the bridge.

Has anybody seen the bridge?

No. No they have not seen the bridge. Guitar solos, meaning that we all can get behind. There’s nothing remotely familiar on this record.

For those needing a better description of what we are hearing, it’s Lo-Fi Space Rock. It’s kind of like watching Star Wars for the first time…and not the cleaned up versions, but the original one. You know it’s supposed to be futuristic…and it almost is.

That’s what this is. It’s musical Star Wars.

This is the latest release from Austin, TX label, Super Secret Records. This record doesn’t feature gatefold covers, super thick vinyl, or any thing more than a no frills packaging, with a download code.

Must like the the music contained within, there’s nothing more than it requires. Because no one’s listening to the insert right?

Release: 6/9/17
Genre: Lo-Fi Space Rock
Label: Super Secret Records
Formats: LP/CD/Digital
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