Showing posts with label The Telepathic Butterflies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Telepathic Butterflies. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Embed Tuesday.

A bunch of power poppers have discs out today, and I'm embedding the Lala widgets for each so you can give a listen. (For those outside the USA, I'm including a MySpace link and those in the EU can always check Spotify for these tracks).

Telepathic Butterflies-Wow & Flutter!. These French-Canadian Rainbow Quartz vets are back with their fourth disc. Their 2004 release Songs from a Second Wave is a must-have (esp. the great "Bonhomie", which I'm embedding as well), and last year's Breakfast in Suburbia was pretty good, so I have high hopes for this one. The touchstones here are The Kinks, The Hollies and the Fab Four. MySpace




The Singles. The Singles have been on a roll lately issuing (what else?) singles. The latest is the He Can Go, You Can Stay single, which features that track from their last full-length Better than Before, along with two new songs. This is the fourth "single" they've released this year, the previous three were A/B sides with 2 new tracks each. For the uninitiated, they're a Detroit band that specializes in British Invastion-styled power pop. MySpace



Cinderpop-Cinnamon Winter EP
. This Vancouver band put out the wonderful A Lesson in Science last year, and this EP includes its title track and "Boomerang" from that disc, plus three unreleased tracks that sound quite excellent. They have kind of a baroque style of indie pop - think Elliott Smith with a lot of piano. MySpace

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Wednesday Roundup.

The Telepathic Butterflies-Breakfast In Suburbia. I've been a big fan of this Canadian band, and they follow up their brilliant 2004 release Songs From a Second Wave (which featured one of my favorite songs that year, "Bonhomie") with this concept album of sorts about suburban life. While the topic may not be terribly profound, the songs are great. They're back on Rainbow Quartz, and they are the quintessential RQ band: hooky, Nugget-y sounding and unashamedly retro. Key tracks here: "The Trouble In Keeping Up With The Joneses", "Mr. Dysfunctionality" and "Facing Id". Plus, their main man is Rejean Ricard - with that kind of name, he ought to be in The Strokes. Kool Kat | Not Lame | MySpace | eMusic

Rinaldi Sings-Bingo. Are you ready to swing? London's Steve Rinaldi goes by the name Rinaldi Sings, and his latest disc is an effervescent pop confection that is characteristically English, bringing to mind the Swinging 60's, Northern Soul and all of that good stuff - I tend to see Austin Powers in my mind's eye when I listen to this disc. "You Take Me There" takes you there - right to Carnaby Street, and "End of an Error" is a pop triumph that evokes time and place as well as The Pearlfishers' "London's In Love" did last year. And the very cool instrumental title track sounds like a lost late 60's TV show theme. For those who loved the Red Button disc last year but thought it needed to be more British - here's your album. Yeah, baby!

CD Baby | MySpace

Maramalade Army-Johnny Cake and Moonpies. Speaking of pop confections, here's a band with pastry in its album title (in fact, I'm getting hungry just typing this out). Anyway, this Boston band has baked up a melange of pastoral pop that touches on XTC, Brian Wilson, and many others. "Flower Girl" is a lovely short (1:43) number that captures their sound perfectly, while "She's My Dream" is a charming Beatlesque piece that features a fun whistling outro. Meanwhile, I'll give you three guesses as to who the "BW" is in "2BW" (you'll only need one guess after hearing it), and "Marigold" sounds as if it came off XTC's Oranges & Lemons disc. A nice little sleeper of a disc, but don't listen on an empty stomach.

CD Baby | MySpace