PREMIERE

PREMIERE

Baseball Gregg - Calendar

By Phillipe Roberts

Deadlines aren’t sexy, but they sure get things done. If you’re reading this, you’ve likely had dozens of artist friends who’ve taken on a “write a song a day” challenge, fought tooth-and-nail to hold themselves to the grind of Inktober, or ground down the keys on their laptop for National Novel Writing Month. Though our bodies and minds chafe at the idea of taming our creative impulses those seemingly artificial constraints can produce some wildly organic results.

Reigning in their substantial creative powers and assembling a cast of all-star DIY collaborators, Baseball Gregg did the damn thing and put out a single every month of 2019. Now assembled into the appropriately named album Calendar, the singles surprisingly coalesce into a fun, satisfying whole that miraculously avoids sounding haphazard and disconnected. Instead, it threads seasonal obsessions and changing moods through with the band’s expert command of winking indie pop sincerity and gift for peppy hook-writing.

Baseball Gregg gently glides across a spectrum of genres - surf, rock, even feather-light R&B–but generally sits in a more grounded version of early aughts indie pop kings The Unicorns, mixed with the bedroom psych of Brooklyn upstarts Crumb. Colorful album opener “Toursong” lays out the palette that Baseball Gregg works across Calendar–bright, beach-ready guitars, whispered voices piling on top of one another, and no-frills, groove-forward drumming conducive to solo dancing in your room or softly bopping around to at the front of an outdoor concert. An ode to friendship on the road, its bubbly heart-on-sleeve nostalgia feels almost religious in its faithful lack of cynicism, and carries through into “Waiting”s slow-hand phaser solo strut. The optimism is so infectious and hits so suddenly that, if your head wasn’t already nodding, you might think Baseball Gregg is deflecting from some hidden inner darkness.

Thankfully, the floor never quite disappears from under you; anywhere the album gestures towards grim reality, the band assert, forcefully, that there’s nothing but love at the heart of it. Even death isn’t safe from a rose-colored re-evaluation on “Gratitude”, where we’re urged to chalk the transition into unconsciousness (or whatever else awaits) up to having the “best dream you’ve ever had”, as placid acoustic guitars and watery synths weave a cozy hammock of sounds from which you’ll gladly doze off into the hereafter. Warbling keyboards and goofy guitar turnarounds subvert the creeping dread of poorly-managed mental illness on “Pleasure and Pain.” The frank discussion of packing a bowl when you know that “this much weed / it’s not good for me” and the numbing effect that self-medication leaves you with is somehow made more effective by keeping it to these diaristic snippets of epiphanies on the journey. Existential dread doesn’t need to be so heavy all the time, and Calendar is better off for its levity.

Guest stars make a huge impact on Calendar. For all of Luca Lovisetto and Sam Regan’s expert songcraft, the album’s undeniable highlight is “The Movies,” featuring prominent lead vocals from Brooklyn’s own Pecas. Played against a delightfully jazzy solo from William Corduroy, her intimate innocence in connecting a beautiful first date to a lifetime of bliss through breathy, utterly dreamy vocals makes it feel almost criminal that it’s the album’s second shortest song. Similarly, a knockout saxophone feature from Jacopo Finelli kicks album closer “Never Bored” well past its almost blindingly on-the-nose use of the unstoppable Young Folks-esque whistle hook, and gives you something concrete to hold onto as the album itself slips off into the distance.

In a twist of fate, Calendar is less a time-capsule documentation of specific emotions and times, and more of a playlist of sturdy indie pop hits that can stand the test of time. Baseball Gregg and their deep bench of featured artists are onto something here. Unlike its namesake, don’t throw this one away after just one year; slide the dates to the right, rewind, and connect the dots.

Check out Baseball Gregg on their Bandcamp.

PREMIERE

alexdgoldberg - Stay the Same

By Charley Ruddell

In our darkest hours, hitting a low isn’t what defines us; it’s how we handle the low that does. When Alex Goldberg hit a low, he asked life’s most stoic questions in search of answers, despite how evasive and impossible they might be.

On the Brooklyn-based composer’s new single “Stay the Same,” from his forthcoming debut album Loste, Goldberg addresses his own existential struggles through the variegated lense of jagged baroque pop; think Sufjan’s 50 States-era, arranged by Andrew Bird at his most-menacing. From the song’s anxious introduction—a fleet of hurried cellos and Sgt. Pepper’s-era schizophrenic voices—Goldberg brings to light the sensational rush of an oncoming panic attack; just when the dissonant strings approach tunnel vision, they resolve in a simple breath. It’s a theme that fluctuates in the song, and one that sheds light on his own empirical perspective. 

Goldberg hit his low during his 20s when a streak of anxiety left him sleep deprived, isolated, and starving. After passing out on the job and a subsequent ER trip, he was left to reassemble his pieces by asking the hardest questions to answer. “Will I go on?” he spouts in a cavernous falsetto (Caribou’s Dan Snaith, anyone?). “Will I ever change?” follows, his voice floating in tandem with the strings. A glimpse of speculative acceptance reveals itself in his final question: “Or will I stay the same?” In these cynical, unsettled moments, Goldberg shows shows his earnest, yet profound sense of character, sharing a likeness to John Cale, cunningly operatic and deranged all the same. 

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PREMIERE

Field Guides - Lucky Star in the A.M.

By Abigail Clyne

Brooklyn collective Field Guides’ newest single “Lucky Star in the A.M.” is a sparkling musical meditation. The folk pop track is the band’s second single in the lead up to the release of their album, This Is Just A Place, out September 27. Written in the wake of a breakup, singer/songwriter Benedict Kupstas uses percussive rhythm and powerful vocals to paint a picture of a relationship on the rocks, singing “We were all waiting for some change in the season.” Kupstas’ invocation of Nabokov’s novel, Pale Fire, paired with his reference of the Chinatown bus to Boston, the title and chorus of the track, artfully invokes high culture against the pedestrian. The closing line “all the happenstances have been adding up apocalyptic” relays the need to filter our experiences through the lens of the world, the turmoil of our current times.

Alena Spanger, of Tiny Hazard, provides a beautiful female counter to Kupstas’ baritone in the chorus. The expansive instrumentation and the tempo of the single feels like watching the world world go by while aboard mass transit–the track, like a good bus ride, is a trip well spent.

PREMIERE

Bichkraft - Desire

By Phillipe Roberts

Long before “dystopia” lost its edge in a buzzword death spiral, Urkanian four-piece Bichkraft were conjuring up squalls of noise-forward post-punk that gleefully bit back at the rise of global authoritarianism. Their first three Wharf Cat releases culminated in last year’s liberating 800, which saw the band take a sonic leap towards a tighter, more refined sound. Back in the studio yet again, Bichkraft fashion a subversive new sound on “Desire,” a bombshell in their discography that downshifts on the nervous energy towards a swaggering dance rock track that takes a brutal government to task. 

PRE-ORDER - https://www.wharfcatrecords.com/store/bichkraft-desire PRE-ORDR ON APPLE MUSIC - ADD LINK PRE-ORDER BANDCAMP - ADDLINK About “Desire” Kiev, Ukraine’s Bichkraft is back with their first single in English, "Desire" b/w "Rod." Where Bichkraft's lauded 800 was comprised of sprawling collaborations with Sam York (Public Practice), Elizabeth Skadden (Finally Punk, WALL) and Carson Cox (Merchandise, Too Free), here we see Bichkraft streamlined to the duo formation of Jenia Bichowski and Dima Novichenko. These concise and hook-driven tracks do not shy away from addressing the chaos and uncertainty of living in Ukraine. A-side "Desire" is about a police raid in a bar where young men were forced into military service afterwards. You can hear the fatigue and disappointment in Jenia Bichowski’s voice as he sings, “Baby, baby it's true / There's no safe place for you.” The B-side “Rod” sees Bichowski taking his vocal delivery to new places over an endless stream of Novichenko’s concise and morphing riffs. These two songs hint at an exciting new direction for Bichkraft, and we can't wait to hear more. The 7" flexi-disc is a limited run of 200 and comes with artwork designed by the band and a download card. About Bichkraft Dima Novichenko and Jenia Bichowski formed Bichkraft in the winter of 2014. They were joined by bassist Serzh Kupriychuk and recorded the Mascot LP. Shortly after, Zenya Fenec joined to play live drum machines. This four-piece recorded the album Shadoof in their hometown of Kiev, Ukraine. While visiting New York they recorded tracks for their most recent album, 800. They followed up 800 with the release of the "Desire" single in August of 2019. Bichkraft have played with such groups as WALL, Merchandise, Sonic Death, Selbram, The Sediment Club, Bambara, Ian Svenonius and Lust for Youth.

Lounge-style keys and bouncing percussion cover for lyrics indicting the repressive Ukranian regime for raiding dance clubs to forcibly conscript young men into the military, a relatively common occurrence in Bichkraft’s native Kiev. Vocalist Jenia Bichowski’s anguished delivery of the haunting hook - “Baby, baby it's true / There's no safe place for you” - speaks to the depth of dread churning beneath the surface of their collective minds, poisoning romance with fear. Guitars gleam like knives in the background, shifting between angular melodicism and frayed noise as they stumble, seasick, over each other. With the track careening to a close, Bichowski sings “I’m just hanging on” in a stupor, wounded by the violence he’s seen and anticipating the violence that’s sure to come as men are ripped off the streets. As both reportage and rock n’ roll, “Desire” hits the mark, dead center.

You can pre-order a 7” of “Desire” over on Wharf Cat’s site here.

PREMIERE

0 Stars - Home Alone 2: Lost in New York

Gerard Marcus

Mikey Buishas is a Brooklyn-based artist who has the amazing ability of depicting the emotional energy of passing thoughts. His new single from his project 0 Stars, “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York,” is a one-minute melancholic tale of fear, self-analysis, and love. Buishas says his inspiration for the song was “an immediate response to Leica [his dog] barking herself awake after a baby in the adjacent apartment screamed.” In this short minute, he explains his reasoning for not reprimanding Leica, choosing instead to sympathize with her, understanding that barking in this situation is just her way of expressing fear. And everyone should be allowed to express fear without judgement. The attention of the song then shifts and Buishas turns the lens on himself, using Leica’s fear to analyze his own sadness at driving away someone he loves. But if he’s the reason for them not being there, is it fair for him to depend on them to make him feel better? It’s beautiful, simple songwriting about a complex idea, presenting its emotional weight in a tight package, allowing it to linger long after its short running time is over. “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York” is the first single off of 0 Stars debut album, ‘Blowing on a Marshmallow in Perpetuity,’ coming out August 30th on Babe City Records. Pre-order the album HERE.