2010: Best Tracks Part 2 - Henning.

15 Dec 2010 — Henning Lahmann
So Tonje told you something about a relaxing day at a café or something, right? Right. Except that it wasn't a café, it was a bazaar where we spent our afternoon. After ending up with roughly 33 best tracks after an initial first round of picking, she started bargaining for bigger and bigger lists, and after hours of tough negotiations we finally agreed on a top 15 list instead of the originally planned top 10. After that, the so-called café turned into a slaughterhouse when Tonje knocked one nice tune after another out of her list, so if you're a musician and you remember feeling a stabbing pain in your chestal area yesterday around 4 p.m. CET, then most likely you were just being erased from the long list. And though Tonje is right in claiming "We love you all equally and thus we hate lists", there's no way of abstaining from this beloved routine, so without further regrets, here are my top 15 tracks of 2010: #15. Herbcraft - Road to Agartha If songs were journeys, this one would cross continents. Road to Agartha is a mind-boggling experience of this year's most beautiful psychedelic folk and the ultimate statement regarding that thing we used to call New Weird America. Marvelous and visionary in every possible sense of those terms. #14. Julian Lynch - In New Jersey Whenever 2010 became too hectic and stressful, I knew I could come back to this song. If suburbia life is like this, sunshine and birds and trees and happiness, I might reconsider planning my future in the city. Ok not really, but this sounds so tempting when Julian Lynch is telling you. #13. Keep Shelly in Athens - Running Out of You My dance track of the year. With the complete change of mood, turning the mystic/ethereal into an outright disco stomper, with vocal samples suddenly exclaiming "Break it down" which would have led to a complete failure in almost every other constellation imaginable, and with the most hazardous synth fanfare since The Final Countdown, Running Out of You must be called a truly bold move. #12. The Sweethearts - Burnin' Through the Night Whatever one might think about David Keenan's term "hypnagogic pop", the concept itself or the inclusions and exclusions, it certainly had a strong impact on this year's underground music scene (supposedly mainly through Altered Zones and its contributors, of course). So I won't say the things Outer Limits Recordings/The Sweethearts come up with necessarily are h-pop (though I think they are), but in any case Burnin' Through the Night is one of those tunes you'll never grow tired of listening to precisely because there's so much more to them than you could ever notice on first encounter, the inheritance and reinterpretation of so many lost years of music that you don't need a half-conscious state somewhere between being awake and asleep to feel all those memories coming back to you. Oh, and this one is also a crazy amount of fun, too. #11. Twin Sister - All Around and Away We Go I think it was March when I wrote that All Around and Away We Go has this year's most irresistible and most beautiful chorus, and it turns out that I haven't changed my mind about this seven months later. #10. Elephant Paintings - Shores There are two versions of this song and the one you can play above is actually not "by" Elephant Paintings, being that certain Albuquerque, New Mexico duo consisting of Emma Crane and Bryce Hample that has delivered one of 2010's most fragile and intimate collection of songwriting with their self titled cassette, with Shores being the album's most beautiful song. This is Emma performing alone as The Arsonist, and her acoustic guitar drenched in reverberation and subtle bits of tape manipulation as the only effects in this stripped down piece of sadness, combined with her beautiful, unobtrusive voice, make these four minutes nothing less than pure, devastating magic. #9. Real Estate - Out of Tune 2010 was not the year of Real Estate. Which is only fair cause 2009 already was. However, our favorite Garden State offsprings nonetheless managed to provide one of my absolute favorites of the last twelve months, or actually maybe even my favorite Real Estate tune so far. Out of Tune is a gorgeous song, not "beachy" or "lo-fi" but simply amazingly beautiful garage pop by some insanely talented friends from Ridgewood, New Jersey (plus Oneohtrix Point Never's Daniel Lopatin on synth), who happen to like watching cars on the 95, and seriously, who couldn't connect to this certain kind of suburban blues? #8. LA Vampires & Matrix Metals - Berlin Baby There might be a little bias involved concerning the song's title, but you could also consider its inclusion a mere proxy for all the wonderful things Amanda Brown has done for us this year with LA Vampires, Pocahaunted, and of course Not Not Fun and 100% Silk. But apart from that, "Is it the champagne talking?/It says I want you/And I guess I do" is a ridiculously fabulous line. #7. Emily Reo - Witch Mtn Emily. My friend Emily is not only one of the loveliest human beings on Planet Earth but also one of the most devoted musicians I know. Whatever is gonna happen next year, I'm sure Ms. Reo will come up with something worth waiting for. Witch Mtn is of otherworldly beauty, I think that's all I have to say about this one. #6. Girls - Broken Dreams Club In a way being the sad sequel to last year's masterpiece Hellhole Ratrace, as if Christopher Owens eventually had to find out that success doesn't necessarily pay by happiness, and now almost all hope is gone. Musically, the song itself is an amazing and surprising step ahead for the still young band, adopting almost every technique of classic American rock music without ever making any compromise. We'll try to help you out. #5. Autre Ne Veut - Drama Cum Drama The apotheosis of synth pop. I could've picked every single song of Autre Ne Veut's close to perfect album, but I kept turning to Drama Cum Drama, a song that easily bridges three decades of popular music with stupendously few means. This is, in a strict sense of the term, unbelievable music. #4. Hype Williams - The Throning Now that the London/Berlin duo Hype Williams is getting more and more popular, including Stereogum coverage just today, comparisons with Salem ant the so-called witch house movement increase - which is of course bullshit. However, it is actually almost equally impossible to name Hype Williams along hypnagogic father figures like James Ferraro or Spencer Clark. Though it's hard to deny certain similarities concerning the cultural technique of recycling de-contextualized elements of past decade's popular music, tracks like The Throning show a more radical, almost disrespectful approach of total deconstruction. Of course in a very obvious this is still Sade's Sweetest Taboo, but it is undressed in a way that more or less nothing remains of the original's twisted yet sweet romanticism, and it is somehow still a captivating, irresistible piece of pop music. Something that Salem will never come up with. #3. Beach House - 10 Mile Stereo I guess everything has already been said about this miracle of a song. From a musical point of view, we could keep on discussing if this is only dream pop but also shoegaze or rather some transcendental form of it, but everything that could be analyzed here must fall silent once Victoria Legrand starts begging that it can't be gone. And indeed, we're still right here. #2. Games - Shadows In Bloom Together with the accompanying, sick video, Shadows In Bloom is two and a half minute, true-to-the-letter power synth pop that seriously speaks for itself in its own ill way of perfection. The only thing I want to add is that one year ago, we all might have turned this down with a shudder. But it's not 2009 anymore. #1. Herzog - Cautiously Optimistic Though this might be considered a too obviously personal choice, even with some distance to myself, this remains my song of the year. Actually, this is the one position in my list that has never been questioned during the whole process. What makes this song so extraordinary to my ears is the fact that despite being melancholically toned, it is everything but sad. On the contrary: Whatever last year might have been like, there's no reason whatsoever not to remain hoping that after all, everything will turn out right.

Photograph by Florian Reischauer. Pieces Of Berlin buy this print! 15x15cm | 30x30cm

Read more → So Tonje told you something about a relaxing day at a café or something, right? Right. Except that it wasn't a café, it was a bazaar where we spent our afternoon. After ending up with roughly 33 best tracks after an initial first round of picking, she started bargaining for bigger and bigger lists, and after hours of tough negotiations we finally agreed on a top 15 list instead of the originally planned top 10. After that, the so-called café turned into a slaughterhouse when Tonje knocked one nice tune after another out of her list, so if you're a musician and you remember feeling a stabbing pain in your chestal area yesterday around 4 p.m. CET, then most likely you were just being erased from the long list. And though Tonje is right in claiming "We love you all equally and thus we hate lists", there's no way of abstaining from this beloved routine, so without further regrets, here are my top 15 tracks of 2010: #15. Herbcraft - Road to Agartha If songs were journeys, this one would cross continents. Road to Agartha is a mind-boggling experience of this year's most beautiful psychedelic folk and the ultimate statement regarding that thing we used to call New Weird America. Marvelous and visionary in every possible sense of those terms. #14. Julian Lynch - In New Jersey Whenever 2010 became too hectic and stressful, I knew I could come back to this song. If suburbia life is like this, sunshine and birds and trees and happiness, I might reconsider planning my future in the city. Ok not really, but this sounds so tempting when Julian Lynch is telling you. #13. Keep Shelly in Athens - Running Out of You My dance track of the year. With the complete change of mood, turning the mystic/ethereal into an outright disco stomper, with vocal samples suddenly exclaiming "Break it down" which would have led to a complete failure in almost every other constellation imaginable, and with the most hazardous synth fanfare since The Final Countdown, Running Out of You must be called a truly bold move. #12. The Sweethearts - Burnin' Through the Night Whatever one might think about David Keenan's term "hypnagogic pop", the concept itself or the inclusions and exclusions, it certainly had a strong impact on this year's underground music scene (supposedly mainly through Altered Zones and its contributors, of course). So I won't say the things Outer Limits Recordings/The Sweethearts come up with necessarily are h-pop (though I think they are), but in any case Burnin' Through the Night is one of those tunes you'll never grow tired of listening to precisely because there's so much more to them than you could ever notice on first encounter, the inheritance and reinterpretation of so many lost years of music that you don't need a half-conscious state somewhere between being awake and asleep to feel all those memories coming back to you. Oh, and this one is also a crazy amount of fun, too. #11. Twin Sister - All Around and Away We Go I think it was March when I wrote that All Around and Away We Go has this year's most irresistible and most beautiful chorus, and it turns out that I haven't changed my mind about this seven months later. #10. Elephant Paintings - Shores There are two versions of this song and the one you can play above is actually not "by" Elephant Paintings, being that certain Albuquerque, New Mexico duo consisting of Emma Crane and Bryce Hample that has delivered one of 2010's most fragile and intimate collection of songwriting with their self titled cassette, with Shores being the album's most beautiful song. This is Emma performing alone as The Arsonist, and her acoustic guitar drenched in reverberation and subtle bits of tape manipulation as the only effects in this stripped down piece of sadness, combined with her beautiful, unobtrusive voice, make these four minutes nothing less than pure, devastating magic. #9. Real Estate - Out of Tune 2010 was not the year of Real Estate. Which is only fair cause 2009 already was. However, our favorite Garden State offsprings nonetheless managed to provide one of my absolute favorites of the last twelve months, or actually maybe even my favorite Real Estate tune so far. Out of Tune is a gorgeous song, not "beachy" or "lo-fi" but simply amazingly beautiful garage pop by some insanely talented friends from Ridgewood, New Jersey (plus Oneohtrix Point Never's Daniel Lopatin on synth), who happen to like watching cars on the 95, and seriously, who couldn't connect to this certain kind of suburban blues? #8. LA Vampires & Matrix Metals - Berlin Baby There might be a little bias involved concerning the song's title, but you could also consider its inclusion a mere proxy for all the wonderful things Amanda Brown has done for us this year with LA Vampires, Pocahaunted, and of course Not Not Fun and 100% Silk. But apart from that, "Is it the champagne talking?/It says I want you/And I guess I do" is a ridiculously fabulous line. #7. Emily Reo - Witch Mtn Emily. My friend Emily is not only one of the loveliest human beings on Planet Earth but also one of the most devoted musicians I know. Whatever is gonna happen next year, I'm sure Ms. Reo will come up with something worth waiting for. Witch Mtn is of otherworldly beauty, I think that's all I have to say about this one. #6. Girls - Broken Dreams Club In a way being the sad sequel to last year's masterpiece Hellhole Ratrace, as if Christopher Owens eventually had to find out that success doesn't necessarily pay by happiness, and now almost all hope is gone. Musically, the song itself is an amazing and surprising step ahead for the still young band, adopting almost every technique of classic American rock music without ever making any compromise. We'll try to help you out. #5. Autre Ne Veut - Drama Cum Drama The apotheosis of synth pop. I could've picked every single song of Autre Ne Veut's close to perfect album, but I kept turning to Drama Cum Drama, a song that easily bridges three decades of popular music with stupendously few means. This is, in a strict sense of the term, unbelievable music. #4. Hype Williams - The Throning Now that the London/Berlin duo Hype Williams is getting more and more popular, including Stereogum coverage just today, comparisons with Salem ant the so-called witch house movement increase - which is of course bullshit. However, it is actually almost equally impossible to name Hype Williams along hypnagogic father figures like James Ferraro or Spencer Clark. Though it's hard to deny certain similarities concerning the cultural technique of recycling de-contextualized elements of past decade's popular music, tracks like The Throning show a more radical, almost disrespectful approach of total deconstruction. Of course in a very obvious this is still Sade's Sweetest Taboo, but it is undressed in a way that more or less nothing remains of the original's twisted yet sweet romanticism, and it is somehow still a captivating, irresistible piece of pop music. Something that Salem will never come up with. #3. Beach House - 10 Mile Stereo I guess everything has already been said about this miracle of a song. From a musical point of view, we could keep on discussing if this is only dream pop but also shoegaze or rather some transcendental form of it, but everything that could be analyzed here must fall silent once Victoria Legrand starts begging that it can't be gone. And indeed, we're still right here. #2. Games - Shadows In Bloom Together with the accompanying, sick video, Shadows In Bloom is two and a half minute, true-to-the-letter power synth pop that seriously speaks for itself in its own ill way of perfection. The only thing I want to add is that one year ago, we all might have turned this down with a shudder. But it's not 2009 anymore. #1. Herzog - Cautiously Optimistic Though this might be considered a too obviously personal choice, even with some distance to myself, this remains my song of the year. Actually, this is the one position in my list that has never been questioned during the whole process. What makes this song so extraordinary to my ears is the fact that despite being melancholically toned, it is everything but sad. On the contrary: Whatever last year might have been like, there's no reason whatsoever not to remain hoping that after all, everything will turn out right.

Photograph by Florian Reischauer. Pieces Of Berlin buy this print! 15x15cm | 30x30cm

2010: Best Tracks Part 1 - Tonje.

15 Dec 2010 — Tonje Thilesen

Some songs speak for themselves, while others don't. After a long day at a relaxed Berlin café with Henning, this is the result of my top 15 personal favorites that has been playing on repeat during the year that is about to end.

#15. The Dawns - Mirage Music is all about the atmosphere. It took some extra time for me to realize how good this track by the mysterious, dark noise project The Dawns really is. It gives us a nearly 10 minute long peak through the surface of the earth, as we stumble around in complete darkness among rats and four-eyed insects. None of us are sure how it will end. #14. Korallreven - Honey Mine (feat. Victoria Bergsman) On a little brighter side, Korallrevens newest masterpiece featuring Victoria Bergsman from Taken By Trees once again manages to capture us into their lush and care-free, tropical island pop. #13. The Morning Benders - Sleeping In 1:48. #12. Gem Club - Spine I am, and have always been, a big fan of the melancholic music. My personality would probably say the opposite, but after being fed up on sad, Norwegian indie pop most of my life, I guess tunes like these are one of my 'weak spots' within music. This utterly beautiful track by Gem Club is nothing but a soundscape masterpiece in its own. #11. Coma Cinema - Blissed Mat Cothran aka Coma Cinema probably makes the most honest and well-composed music I've heard in a long time. All though very bedroom recorded-sounding, one cannot question the fact that this guy is a pure pop genius. #10. Jónsi - Tornado I loved this song with all my heart the first time I heard it. Seeing Jónsi playing it live at Øya Festival this year simply just confirmed my love for this musical composition genius; building up an atmosphere so great, so perfect, that I found it hard to believe that Tornado hadn't reached the top 10 of other 'best of' lists this year. #9. How To Dress Well - Ready For The World #8. Caribou - Sun When the city lights are fading, close your eyes and wait for the sun. #7. Crystal Castles - Vietnam #6. Four Tet - Sing

#5. James Blake - CMYK This year we've basically witnessed a 'rebirth' within electronic music, with rising producers such as Star Slinger, Baths, Gold Panda and of course James Blake, making glitchy, chopped-up electronic pop, often leaning over at instrumental hip-hop (in Star Slinger's case), which music simply wants me to make me put on my prettiest and tallest heels and go out dancing till the sun rises. CMYK has nearly been featured on every "best of" list already, but I still can't deny it: this is electronic perfectionism.

#4. Blue Hawaii - Belize It's impossible not to love the tunes of the tropical/dream pop duo Blue Hawaii, creating soundscapes that can easily make you forget about your current surroundings and instead feel the pricking of solar heated sand beneath your feet.

#3. Susanne Sundfør - The Brothel Susanne Sundfør has been one of the most hyped names in Norway this year, and that for a reason. With live shows which can make the earth shake, Sundfør's voice aims to pierce the heavens.

#2. Beach House - Norway It's nearly an impossible task to choose a favorite song from Beach House's Teen Dream, but being the "patriotic Norwegian" as I am (note the "), there was no doubt that Norway was the right pick. As a few of you might know already, this hit was born on a jamming session while on tour with their 2008 record Devotion — driving through miles and miles of mountains, lakes and Norwegian woods.

#1. Moddi - Floriography Moddi is a hard nut to crack. His music needs to be given the right amount of time before being able to fall in love with it, but I can definitely assure you that it's worth it — with tunes that picks up the echoes of northern Norway in Moddi's beautiful noice, as well as sounding very Icelandic and Björk-like at the same time. For some reason this astounding track was only released on vinyl and not on CD, but to make up for that, it was recently also featured on Moddi's Rubbles EP this fall, a long with three other breathtaking pieces.

Runner-ups: Deerhunter - "Helicopter",  Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - "Round and Round", Star Slinger - "Slow N' Wet", Jai Paul - "BTSTU", Ghost Society - "Under The Sun".

Photograph by Florian Reischauer. Pieces Of Berlin buy this print! 15x15cm | 30x30cm Read more →

Some songs speak for themselves, while others don't. After a long day at a relaxed Berlin café with Henning, this is the result of my top 15 personal favorites that has been playing on repeat during the year that is about to end.

#15. The Dawns - Mirage Music is all about the atmosphere. It took some extra time for me to realize how good this track by the mysterious, dark noise project The Dawns really is. It gives us a nearly 10 minute long peak through the surface of the earth, as we stumble around in complete darkness among rats and four-eyed insects. None of us are sure how it will end. #14. Korallreven - Honey Mine (feat. Victoria Bergsman) On a little brighter side, Korallrevens newest masterpiece featuring Victoria Bergsman from Taken By Trees once again manages to capture us into their lush and care-free, tropical island pop. #13. The Morning Benders - Sleeping In 1:48. #12. Gem Club - Spine I am, and have always been, a big fan of the melancholic music. My personality would probably say the opposite, but after being fed up on sad, Norwegian indie pop most of my life, I guess tunes like these are one of my 'weak spots' within music. This utterly beautiful track by Gem Club is nothing but a soundscape masterpiece in its own. #11. Coma Cinema - Blissed Mat Cothran aka Coma Cinema probably makes the most honest and well-composed music I've heard in a long time. All though very bedroom recorded-sounding, one cannot question the fact that this guy is a pure pop genius. #10. Jónsi - Tornado I loved this song with all my heart the first time I heard it. Seeing Jónsi playing it live at Øya Festival this year simply just confirmed my love for this musical composition genius; building up an atmosphere so great, so perfect, that I found it hard to believe that Tornado hadn't reached the top 10 of other 'best of' lists this year. #9. How To Dress Well - Ready For The World #8. Caribou - Sun When the city lights are fading, close your eyes and wait for the sun. #7. Crystal Castles - Vietnam #6. Four Tet - Sing

#5. James Blake - CMYK This year we've basically witnessed a 'rebirth' within electronic music, with rising producers such as Star Slinger, Baths, Gold Panda and of course James Blake, making glitchy, chopped-up electronic pop, often leaning over at instrumental hip-hop (in Star Slinger's case), which music simply wants me to make me put on my prettiest and tallest heels and go out dancing till the sun rises. CMYK has nearly been featured on every "best of" list already, but I still can't deny it: this is electronic perfectionism.

#4. Blue Hawaii - Belize It's impossible not to love the tunes of the tropical/dream pop duo Blue Hawaii, creating soundscapes that can easily make you forget about your current surroundings and instead feel the pricking of solar heated sand beneath your feet.

#3. Susanne Sundfør - The Brothel Susanne Sundfør has been one of the most hyped names in Norway this year, and that for a reason. With live shows which can make the earth shake, Sundfør's voice aims to pierce the heavens.

#2. Beach House - Norway It's nearly an impossible task to choose a favorite song from Beach House's Teen Dream, but being the "patriotic Norwegian" as I am (note the "), there was no doubt that Norway was the right pick. As a few of you might know already, this hit was born on a jamming session while on tour with their 2008 record Devotion — driving through miles and miles of mountains, lakes and Norwegian woods.

#1. Moddi - Floriography Moddi is a hard nut to crack. His music needs to be given the right amount of time before being able to fall in love with it, but I can definitely assure you that it's worth it — with tunes that picks up the echoes of northern Norway in Moddi's beautiful noice, as well as sounding very Icelandic and Björk-like at the same time. For some reason this astounding track was only released on vinyl and not on CD, but to make up for that, it was recently also featured on Moddi's Rubbles EP this fall, a long with three other breathtaking pieces.

Runner-ups: Deerhunter - "Helicopter",  Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti - "Round and Round", Star Slinger - "Slow N' Wet", Jai Paul - "BTSTU", Ghost Society - "Under The Sun".

Photograph by Florian Reischauer. Pieces Of Berlin buy this print! 15x15cm | 30x30cm

Little Thrones and Rotten Ropes.

15 Dec 2010 — Henning Lahmann
Heading across the ol' Rhine for some seriously awesome ambient drones by the French one man endeavor Archers by the Sea, reduced and cold synth and noise soundscapes that slowly alter your state of mind until you actually feel your loneliness in a world of hostile rocks and ice and snow, making you become aware that there will never be a way back to your loved ones. Last christmas, if you know what I mean. Archers by the Sea's self titled full length is now out on La Station Radar, limited to 300. Archers by the Sea - Little Thrones and Rotten Ropes Read more → Heading across the ol' Rhine for some seriously awesome ambient drones by the French one man endeavor Archers by the Sea, reduced and cold synth and noise soundscapes that slowly alter your state of mind until you actually feel your loneliness in a world of hostile rocks and ice and snow, making you become aware that there will never be a way back to your loved ones. Last christmas, if you know what I mean. Archers by the Sea's self titled full length is now out on La Station Radar, limited to 300. Archers by the Sea - Little Thrones and Rotten Ropes

Sugar Water.

15 Dec 2010 — Henning Lahmann
I'm not exactly sure what these guys are up to, but Sex Beet's upbeat garage glory kinda made my morning so far. This is nothing too complicated, but the cheap, mid-nineties synth hookline at the beginning kinda got me. So I suppose it's safe to say that above anything, you would have one hell of a good time seeing them live. Purely coincidentally, you can check that out this night at Berlin's West Germany. Doors at nine. Sex Beet - Sugar Water Read more → I'm not exactly sure what these guys are up to, but Sex Beet's upbeat garage glory kinda made my morning so far. This is nothing too complicated, but the cheap, mid-nineties synth hookline at the beginning kinda got me. So I suppose it's safe to say that above anything, you would have one hell of a good time seeing them live. Purely coincidentally, you can check that out this night at Berlin's West Germany. Doors at nine. Sex Beet - Sugar Water

New Einar Stray single.

14 Dec 2010 — Tonje Thilesen

Photography: Hilde Mesics Kleven

One of my very favorite Norwegian pop talents, Einar Stray, just released the first single taken from his upcoming debut album Chiaroscuro, sent to us via the oh-so-lovely Spoon Train records. Stray has been releasing music for several years already (most of them available on his Urørt profile for free download) and is probably one of the most exciting names next year within the Norwegian music scene. As well as working on his solo project or his experimental moniker Baksete, Stray has spent the last year showing off his incredible piano talent with Moddi, both on tour and in studio, whom also put out one of my top 10 favorite records of this year. Download the track from soundcloud. Einar Stray - Chiaroscuro Read more →

Photography: Hilde Mesics Kleven

One of my very favorite Norwegian pop talents, Einar Stray, just released the first single taken from his upcoming debut album Chiaroscuro, sent to us via the oh-so-lovely Spoon Train records. Stray has been releasing music for several years already (most of them available on his Urørt profile for free download) and is probably one of the most exciting names next year within the Norwegian music scene. As well as working on his solo project or his experimental moniker Baksete, Stray has spent the last year showing off his incredible piano talent with Moddi, both on tour and in studio, whom also put out one of my top 10 favorite records of this year. Download the track from soundcloud. Einar Stray - Chiaroscuro

Christmas With Naive Twins.

14 Dec 2010 — Henning Lahmann
It's that time again, the season of family cuddling and insane happiness and oh yes, cheesy christmas songs. But really, no intentions to ruin this here on our blog (just imagine a christmas tree in the upper right corner), so I'll bless you with this lil' treat by our favorite Californian twee sisters Summer Twins who've dropped two unrestrainedly romantic holiday tunes that they've recorded together with Naive Thieves. And who could say something against something as sweet as this? Right. So grab your nearest fellow human and go snuggling now. Summer Twins & Naive Thieves - What Better Time Than Now? Summer Twins & Naive Thieves - Holiday in the Sand Read more → It's that time again, the season of family cuddling and insane happiness and oh yes, cheesy christmas songs. But really, no intentions to ruin this here on our blog (just imagine a christmas tree in the upper right corner), so I'll bless you with this lil' treat by our favorite Californian twee sisters Summer Twins who've dropped two unrestrainedly romantic holiday tunes that they've recorded together with Naive Thieves. And who could say something against something as sweet as this? Right. So grab your nearest fellow human and go snuggling now. Summer Twins & Naive Thieves - What Better Time Than Now? Summer Twins & Naive Thieves - Holiday in the Sand

New James Ferraro: Leather High School.

14 Dec 2010 — Henning Lahmann
Here's a cut from James Ferraro's brand new album, Leather High School being a comparatively accessible and straightforward pop tune, "comparatively" meaning that without further description you do know that it is blurry as fuck and of course featuring Ferraro's signature effects, samples and sounds. Suffice it to say: it's brilliant. Night Dolls With Hairspray is now out on Olde English Spelling Bee. Order your copy here. Read more → Here's a cut from James Ferraro's brand new album, Leather High School being a comparatively accessible and straightforward pop tune, "comparatively" meaning that without further description you do know that it is blurry as fuck and of course featuring Ferraro's signature effects, samples and sounds. Suffice it to say: it's brilliant. Night Dolls With Hairspray is now out on Olde English Spelling Bee. Order your copy here.