Drapeaux Rouges Des Enfants Perdus

month

January 2012

7 posts

Seven Questions With Jordan Lee (of Mutual Benefit & Kassette Klub)

I’ve become pretty obsessed with the artists associated with Kassette Klub as of late. We’ve featured songs from almost every release in their discography, and are now pursuing interviews to the same effect. To complete this movement I sent Jordan Lee a few questions about Kassette Klub itself, as well as their flagship project, his own Mutual Benefit. Jordan is an incredible artist, as well as a sincere and generous person, so I just wanted to stop and say Thank You, Jordan. I hope we can work together again in the future.

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Jan 24, 201211 notes
#mutual benefit #kassette club #indie #tape #cassette #fmly
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“King Of The World” by First Aid Kit w/ Conor Oberst & The Felice Brothers

From 2012’s The Lion’s Roar, out on Wichita Records

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This is a great track, but lets face it: I will publish and promote any piece of art created by either Conor Oberst or The Felice Brothers, let alone both of them coming together to support someone or something else. But that’s not fair to First Aid Kit. This is very much their song and they’ve created something far beyond what anyone imagined when we were watching them perform Fleet Foxes covers on youtube a couple years ago.

Another example, along with The Tallest Man On Earth, of Swedish folk successfully embracing Americana and taking it farther than most Americans.

I don’t want this gallery to ever become a hype-machine. I don’t usual publish music so close to its release; I like to give albums time to sink in and show their warmth through different modes of life. That being said, I just want to publish and promote artists that I genuinely enjoy, and I don’t need any more time to figure out how much I love the artists involved with this piece.

Jan 24, 201215 notes
#first aid kit #conor oberst #felice brothers #wichita #saddle creek
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“Dirt” by WU LYF

From 2011’s self-released Go Tell Fire To The Mountain

WU LYF definitely strays from the aesthetic direction that this gallery has unintentionally decided.  Regardless, I can’t get enough of this fucking album right now and felt obligated to promote the band. Go Tell Fire To The Mountain is a fantastic LP, released on their own LYF Recordings last year. Buy it and let it loop over and over again through your home. Then, join the World United Lucifer Youth Foundation here.

As if the songs weren’t good enough on their own, they also have some fantastic videos as well. Here’s the video for “Dirt,” as well as a couple more:

Jan 17, 20126 notes
#punk #soul #wu lyf #lucifer youth foundation #satisfying music
Seven Questions With Mark Sultan

 

Mark Sultan shouldn’t need an introduction. He’s one of my favorite musicians around right now, with one of the best voices in music today, which is only made better by the shear amounts of music he puts out.

I’ve wanted to interview Mark for a while, but he seems more like the guy you’d want to drink and converse with instead of a formal “interview,” let alone one through e-mail. And, maybe someday I’ll have the opportunity to do so. I only mention all of this because when I look back at this, I really wish I hadn’t played the safe, “just checking in”, generalized bullshit route and just asked some more interesting questions; I asked a couple lame questions and Mark called me out on it (look to #6).

I’m genuinely fucking happy that he did so. I wish more people I talked to we’re as no-bullshit as he seems to be. It would make me a better journalist and a saner person. So, thanks for going along with this all, Mark. I’m glad I got to ask you a few questions, and I’m glad you answered them.

(I also really loved the first answer, in reference to Pitchfork. I’m not going to use this space to talk shit, but yeah, I’m not crazy about most of my contemporaries.)

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Jan 12, 20124 notes
#punk #soul #mark sultan #bbq #sexareenos #spaceshits
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“La Grande” by Laura Gibson

from La Grande, to be released January 24th on Jealous Butcher/Barsuk

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I had never listened to Laura Gibson before this album. It wasn’t until I saw that one of our favorite bands, Breathe Owl Breathe, was opening up for her in Denver that I became curious.

Laura Gibson writes poems in the vein of early western-American hunger spun around a modern, playful wanderlust. “La Grande” is far and away the fastest, loudest song on the album, but serves as a good introduction. The entire album is available to stream via NPR, and “La Grande” is available on 7” via Jealous Butcher (b/w Leadbelly’s “The Pines,” one of my most beloved traditionals). Go and listen to the entire album, its already one of my favorites of 2012 and we’re only 9 days in.

I have to be honest, when an mp3 becomes available I’ll most likely be changing the featured single to the 2nd track on the album, “Milk-Heavy, Pollen-Eyed.” The title track is, ironically, so different from the rest of the album that it almost feels like a big war-call before the album actually starts.

Here is video performance of “Milk-Heavy, Pollen-Eyed,” thanks to Mason Jar Music:

Jan 09, 20123 notes
#indie folk #laura gibson #breathe owl breathe #la grande
Seven (7) Questions With Little Kid

I’m really excited to welcome London, Ontario’s Little Kid to the Red Flags Family. This is a great interview with a seriously talented up-and-comer. I’m also pretty honored to admit that this is his very first interview. That’s all going to change pretty quickly though, so enjoy his music peacefully before the rest of the world finds out.


1.What inspired you to start this project? What inspired the name?


I played in a lot of bands in high school, but they were mostly just stupid bands with goofy concepts that my friends and I thought were funny. It was a lot of fun, but people would always make comments along the lines of “You guys have a lot of talent - why not make music you actually like?” They were obviously right, but it was pretty difficult for me to actually start releasing songs like these - really personal ones - because I was so used to just making music my friends and I could laugh at. “Train” was the first song I recorded as Little Kid, in the summer of 2009. I showed a couple people more-or-less right away, but it took a few months until I was confident enough to show everyone else. The reception was very positive, though, so I think I felt encouraged to try to write a few more songs in the same vein.

I often use this project as something of an outlet for my thoughts on God, faith, religion, spirituality - things that have always been quite important to me but aren’t always all that easy to discuss. I was wrestling with some pretty serious doubts during the year or so that I spent recording the bulk of this album, and writing these songs was actually quite important for me, in terms of both assessing what I do and don’t believe, and trying to forge some sort of coherent identity / belief system out of that. I’m far from arriving at any definite conclusions, but I think this project has helped me find some peace in the process.

As for the name, I’m not sure exactly how I came up with it. I just said it one day, and liked the sound of it. I wish there was a better story behind it…


2.Walk me through your songwriting process. Which element comes first? Last?


Most of the songs on Logic Songs started out as an idea or concept that I wanted to address in a song. Usually it would be a mindset I’ve noticed in myself or others that I would try to take on and then write a song from that perspective. So most of my songs can’t really be taken literally - sometimes I’m saying the opposite of what I actually believe. I would kinda sit on these ideas for a few months, every once in a while coming with a bit of the lyrics in my head, maybe writing some words down, thinking about the songs every once in a while. All the while, I’d be playing guitar or piano pretty much every day, and holding onto melodies or progressions that I liked. Then one day, I’d find something that seemed to work, I’d match it with one of the lyrical concepts, and I’d just sit down and write the whole song in a couple minutes. It had been baking in my head for so long, I guess, that it was just ready to come out.

As for the arrangements, they would more-or-less be made up as I recorded. I usually had a main guitar part, which I would record, usually while singing, on one track, and then use the other three tracks to fill in the sound a bit - sometimes some piano, maybe some organ - whatever was available and seemed to suit the song. The field recordings were something I used to do once in a while, as a hobby, even before I started recording these songs… If the song seemed like it needed something more, I’d try to find a recording that fit it. As much as I like the sound of them, I don’t think I’ll be including so many field recordings in my albums from now on - in hindsight, they seem to make Logic Songs drag on a little bit.


3.Did you imagine Logic Songs as a whole, or are they more often a collection of songs written separately?


Somewhere in between. The songs came somewhat sporadically at first, but by the time I had a few written, I guess I started figuring out what I wanted to say with this album, and it got easier and easier to write new songs. So they all work together pretty well, I think, both lyrically and musically, but it’s sometimes pretty evident that they were recorded in separate bursts - the recording quality is all over the place. I’m a huge “album person” - I pretty much only listen to full albums, very rarely individual songs, and almost never on shuffle - so I put a lot of thought into what songs I chose to include and the order I placed them in. And, when I listen back to the album, I think its flow and pace are two of its greatest strengths.


4. Do you record/produce the album alone, or do you have some support? If so, who, and in what capacity?


This was very much a solo effort… Everything you hear on the album was played, sung, recorded by me. I had some help, though, in that I borrowed a lot of equipment and instruments from my friends and roommates. To this day, I still don’t own my own a microphone, and I only recently bought a classical guitar for myself - the classical you hear on almost every song on the album belongs to my friend Jessiah, who I lived with last year. So, although I made this album independently, it really could not have happened without the generosity of my friends.


5.Looking forward, what do you see for this project? Touring? Recording? 


I’ve been slowly writing new songs for my next record. I did a short EP a couple months ago to maintain momentum, but it’s been a slow process. I had a lot to say on the last album, and having said it all, I’m having a hard time finding new things to write about. I think I’ll always write about God/religion in some capacity, but I’m slowly forming a new perspective to write from, I guess. Just trying to be careful not to be stuck in a lyrical rut.


Otherwise, I’m planning on moving to Toronto in May, so that should mean more shows and hopefully more people to play for that haven’t heard my music yet. I’ve been playing shows with my friends and their various bands/projects every couple months here in London but it’s mostly just the same friends who come out to see us (which I really do appreciate, obviously, but it’s always good to have some new ears to listen).


Also, I’ve been playing in a band with two of my friends who also make music on their own - we kinda swap instruments every song and play a few songs by all three of us. We’re hoping to get some recording time in with a friend in a music recording program at college this month… If they turn out well, we’re gonna try to get some money together and put out a 3-song 7-inch later this year (which will fulfill something of a lifelong dream for all of us). 


6. Please tell me a little about the cassette version. Self-released? Original cover art?


I put a lot of work into making these cassettes and their packaging look as bad-ass as possible. The covers are cut from a couple of books I bought second hand at The Salvation Army in Sarnia, Ontario. They have a sort of “silent auction” type thing where you can write down how much you would pay for the items they have on display, so I bid $12 for these two books along with a couple of others, and won. They have really sweet, grainy old photos of trains, mountains, lakes… Very lovely stuff. Wasn’t sure what I’d do with them at the time, but they ended up being pretty useful. I cut all the covers myself, using an exacto-knife and a ruler, and then used a typewriter to type the artist and album name on some white stickers that I placed on each one.


To make the cassettes themselves look pretty, I got a custom stamp made at Staples and bought some crazy super-permanent ink to stamp each cassette. I’ve bought tapes from little labels and bands over the years, and I’ve found that the labels on the cassettes are always a little cheesy looking, and take away from the whole package - I did my best to avoid that, and I think they turned out looking pretty excellent. The inserts were printed at Kinko’s on some really nice looking, recycled chipboard-type paper - I stole the red trim from an old book of John Donne poetry, and just put my own text inside. Altogether, I’m really happy how the cassettes turned out. Hoping to have a new batch ready by the end of this month, or early the next.


7. Do you think that music (or art in general) is more powerful to the artist as its being created and performed, or to the audience as its being received and interpreted?


A tricky question, for sure. I think a lot of music’s power lies in the communication that takes place between the musician and the listener. Listening to music can seem like a very solitary experience, but when you think about it, you’re basically involved in a sort of (one-way) communication every time you listen to a song - someone recorded this music, maybe years ago, and now you’re listening back to what they had to say. It’s crazy. But it is still an individual experience, in that the song might mean something different to every person who hears it. Sometimes, I even find that my interpretation of the meanings of my own songs can seem to change from day to day.


That being said, I think any music you put out there should be something you would have made even if no one else would ever hear it - it should be able to exist independently of that interaction. But, I don’t view the act of making music a particularly powerful experience - it just isn’t a word I would use to describe it - therapeutic, perhaps, and definitely something very meaningful and heartfelt, but not necessarily powerful, at least from my perspective. I find listening to music by bands and artists that I love to be a much more powerful experience than writing or playing my own songs, and I’m always thrilled to hear from people who are connecting with my music on that level. I don’t know if I’ve even answered the question at this point - sorry if I’ve strayed too far - but there are some of my thoughts on music.


Bonus Request: any new bands/artists to recommend?


I’ve been pretty bad at keeping up with new music this year, unfortunately, but there are a few 2011 albums that I’ve really come to love. David Bazan’s Strange Negotiations and TW Walsh’s Songs of Pain and Leisure come most readily to mind, and Bon Iver’s new album is pretty beautiful, too. Lately, I’ve just been revisiting some of my old favourites - been really loving Radiohead, Deerhunter, and Headphones, especially. I’d also like to recommend checking out Wooly Mammoth and Soft Water on Bandcamp - those are the two guys I’ve been playing in a band with, and they are seriously great songwriters.

Please go support this kid by checking out his music on Bandcamp.


Jan 03, 20120 notes
#indie folk #interview #little kid
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“Happy Old Year” by Erika Ryann

I’m really excited to be publishing a new Erika Ryann track.

I’ll let her speak for herself:

erikaryannsedmak:

Happy Old Year - Erika Ryann

Written and recorded by Erika Ryann

Just a little something.

I wrote this tonight on my way home from the liquor store.

I had gone on a walk ‘round the neighborhood, past the old structures supposedly haunted from the early 1900’s. They loom above the streets of Cap Hill (Denver), dark and seemingly forbidden as though, as I stand before them, I could never understand the life they have seen. The handles turned and opened doors.

I don’t think they’d understand our lives either. Years come and people go. We find our own ways of dealing with loss, starvation and death and what comes of it is just. us.

I can say it has been one of the best years of my life.

I can say I both look forward to and am intimidated by what is to come.

But, regardless, on we all shall go

cheers

to auld lang syne,

Erika Ryann

Jan 01, 20125 notes
#indie folk #western #erika ryann
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