The Duke Spirit Offer Up New Song, “Villain”

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The Duke Spirit are giving us a taste of their upcoming album Bruiser, due out on Shangri-La Music out in Spring 2011, with a free download of their new track, “Villain,” premiered on SPIN.com.

On this fiery track, we find the band’s leading lady, Liela Moss, on the piano, and singing as seductively as ever over hauntingly carnal guitar riffs. The British rockers are sure to leave you yearning for more new sounds with this one.

Listen to the “Villain” below, and download it for free HERE:

The Hush Now Release Free Holiday Single

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The Hush Now look like they might be starting a tradition. After last year’s sing-along tune “Wishing You A Happy Christmas,” they are returning this year with “On Holiday,” an ode to tropical end of year celebrations. With a Brazilian groove and cheery horns, the Bostonians’ new release will make you want to ditch Christmas trees, white snow and hand-knit deer sweaters for a cool cocktail on a beach with white sand and a guitarist playing a bossa nova arrangement of “Jingle Bells.” The single was recorded with Benny Grotto and Jeff Lipton, the same team behind the band’s latest EP, Shiver Me Starships, which you can get for free on their website HERE!

Listen and share The Hush Now’s love of Christmas below:

Regina Spektor Releases First Live CD And Concert Film

Regina Spektor is releasing her first live CD and live concert film this Monday November 22nd, LIVE IN LONDON, on Sire/Warner Bros Records. Directed by Adria Petty, the 64-minute film captures the energy of Ms. Spektor’s concerts and is dedicated to Regina’s cellist and band leader Daniel Cho, who passed away this summer in Switzerland.

Spektor will be promoting the concert film/live CD combo this Tuesday, November 23rd by performing on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, but if you want a larger than life experience of the film, you can see it in select U.S. theaters over the weekend, starting November 19th! Check if a theater near you is screening it after the jump and grab your tickets HERE, they are bound to run out fast!

And here’s a sneak peek of what you’ll see, with the LIVE IN LONDON performance of “Dance Anthem Of The 80s:”

LIVE IN LONDON SCREENINGS:
November 19 – Doris Duke Theatre – Honolulu, HI
November 19 – Hollywood Theatre – Portland, OR
November 19 – 25 – Village East Cinema – New York, NY
November 20 – Zeitgeist – New Orleans, LA
November 20 – Downtown Independent – Los Angeles, CA
November 21 – Northwest Film Forum – Seattle, WA
November 21 – Palace Theatre – Syracuse, NY
November 21 – Roxie – San Francisco, CA
November 21 – Zinema 2 – Duluth, MN
November 21 – Studio Movie Grill Atlanta – Alpharetta, GA
November 21 – Studio Movie Grill Houston – Houston, TX
November 21 – Studio Movie Grill Royal – Dallas, TX
November 21 – Middle East Downstairs – Boston, MA
November 21 – Alamo Drafthouse @ The Ritz – Austin, TX
November 22 – Lincoln Hall – Chicago, IL

The Morning Benders’ “Excuses” Get the Golden Filter Treatment


If you missed The Morning Benders’ shows in the US and unfortunately cannot afford a Christmas/New Years’ vacation in Australia where they are headed next, this may not quite be enough to counter the disappointment, but it can at least provide you with one extra tune you can impress your friends with. New York City electronic duo The Golden Filter have remixed the Californians’ ballad “Excuses,” off their album Big Echo (Rough Trade). In this shiny new arrangement, Chris Chu’s voice is complimented with Golden Filter singer Penelope Trappes’s for an eerie, echoed beginning. It quickly transitions into a steady beat that replaces the original song’s twirling guitars. Instead, a never ending keyboard loop will have you entranced, so much that the abrupt breaks in the song will have you disoriented, until you realize they were just there to let you catch your breath before another round of frenetic dancing.

You can download this remix for free on The Morning Benders’ website HERE but make sure to get a first listen below:

Self-Reflection With Jesse Malin

Jesse Malin took some time off from packing for his European tour with his band, The St Marks Social, to talk to us about his new adventures and his long career, and how it went from punk and hardcore to softer styles.

Modern Mystery: Can you tell us about the St Marks Social? Who’s involved? What it’s about?

Jesse Malin: I’ve had a lot of backing bands… I love bands, and being in band, being part of a gang, a social club. And as a New Yorker, St Marks was the place where you were free to express yourself, where you came to find like-minded people, artists, drug addicts… Anyone who was a a little outside of society. Most places in the world have an area like that, which is not for the mainstream person. Now of course that’s changed, it resembles more Little Tokyo now but it still has that history with the beats, the record shops, Lenny Bruce lived there… So the band was getting a group of guys together, like Todd Youth that I’ve known since we were kids. It’s a great line-up; it feels like a band, like a five-headed monster. And now we’re going to Europe and we’re doing a Holiday Tour in the North East where we’ll be back playing in New York on December 11th at the Bowery Ballroom.

MM: How long did it take you to record Love It To Life?

JM: The producer, Ted Hutt, knows how to make a records fast and cheap. We laid the basic tracks down in three days, then spent about a month on overdubs and mixing. We worked in LA, as well as Greenpoint in Brooklyn. His method is to do a lot in pre-production and get everything into place before you even enter the studio.

MM: How do you write songs? What inspires you?

Watching the movie of life and feeling it. Listening to people talk, reading, films, listening to other music… I always carry a pen with me. I like to record on tape as well. You can enter this unconscious trance where you’re singing melodies and you may get a sense of where a song is going, then you connect the dots. Finishing the song is the work.

MM: How do you keep the songwriting process fresh? You’ve been doing this for quite a while now…

JM: Hearing new things. When you hear something for the first time, it gets the juices flowing. When you’re walking around New York as well, songs just happen. I read in a book about the Clash that Joe Strummer said, “No input, No output.” It’s about challenging yourself with new things. Maybe it’s tuning your guitar differently. Sometimes I write with rhythms; I ask my drummer to give my a beat and start working on that. It’s about motion and stimulating that side of the brain.

MM: Tell us about your experiences in the studio. Do you like working there? What are your favorite parts of the recording process?

JM: The stage and the studio are two different animals and I like them both. When you play live, you have the instant gratification from the audience and then the free beer [laughs]. When you come in the studio, you think you can create things one way but the elements and the ingredients you have available can change a song you may have bashed out in rehearsals. It can morph. I had thought my first solo record out as a mellow, piano record. In the studio, it can go the other way!

I like analog a lot and old mics. I like tape. I don’t mind Pro Tools and all that but I try to use analog technology as much as I can. I mean, I write in notebooks, those black and white composition notebooks from high school. I like the art form to be physical.

MM: With all that you are doing as a musician, how do you find the time to co-own two bars, The Bowery Electric and Niagara?

JM: It’s this club house, Sinatra fantasy that turned bigger [laughs]. We get good people, and we can hire friends and give them support. It’s a lot about having a great staff at both places because, you know, I don’t know how to make a screwdriver. But I like to have a good time.

MM: Why did you decide to go solo after D Generation split?

JM: I was scared of going solo. I thought it was very adult and I needed to grow a mustache and I didn’t think it was very rock’n’roll, but my friend Ryan Adams convinced me. D Generation was a real band; every member was key. We’d been together 7 years, we’d recorded 3 albums, it was time for a change. I wanted to strip it down, write something more personal and quiet. I think D Generation was misunderstood. People paid more attention to the hair, the mascara and the slam dancing. I wanted to give more attention to the writing.

MM: What made you decide to go back to a band now?

JM: I missed being in a band. It was like a benevolent dictatorship as solo artist. But now I like that I can do both. I can do an acoustic tour by myself, and now we’re going to Europe with The St Marks Social and we have a rocking album. I like having the freedom of doing both. They’re different physical challenges. With the band, I can work off their energy.

MM: You’ve touched on this a little earlier, but could you tell us more about your favorite aspect of touring?

JM: It’s the idea that you can do it every night. And the ore you do it, the better you are at it. It’s like a muscle to train all the time. The feeling of taking something private to people, the give and take with the audience, you can’t get that any other way. It’s a sort of religious, guttural, tribal experience. You get very hooked. I don’t love all the bad food, the border controls, the time zones, the bed bugs in some hotels, but I’m always grateful for the audience.

MM: Where are some of your favorite places to perform?

JM: I like Chicago, Stockholm, London, Italy… I love playing in Glasgow, Scotland. And of course New York. At the end of this tour, we’ll be back performing here around Christmas time. The beer always tastes better after hard work.

MM: You collaborated with Ryan Adams with The Finger. Is there any chance of a second collaboration? Possibly outside of the punk genre?

JM: Ryan’s been a big part of my career. He’s played guitar in every studio record I’ve released. I’m sure we’ll work together again at some point. He produced my first solo record, he has a raw, tough, 1950’s approach. He lives in LA, and I’m here in New York so we’re both doing our own thing but who knows? It’s always a good time with the kid.

MM: How have you evolved as an artist since your beginnings?

JM: I’m still angry, although probably less angry. I’ve worked hard to have a stronger voice, to play my guitar better. It comes from practicing. I think I’ve come full circle with genres… The more you do, you get confident and comfortable. You find your own spin on everything. It’s about mixing what you hear and seeing what comes out with your own twist. I like the “happy-sad” thing like Sam Cooke, with the happy music and the sad lyrics. I’m still working to get on his level though.

MM: What would you be if you weren’t a musician?

JM: That’s always a tough question. I always think that I wouldn’t know what to do and that’s why I’m a musician [laughs]. But I like film, movies, writing stories, DJing, spoken word – I’ve dabbled in that a little bit. Maybe I’d be a bank robber or an archeologist or a rabbi, although I’m not so much into organized religion. I’ve always been into PMA, “Positive Mental Attitude.” Maybe I’d teach, or I’d be a student to learn again. I’m also into healthy food and finding alternatives to dead animals. Maybe I could write a book of all the places to get good vegan and vegetarian delicacies.

Catch Jesse Malin & The St. Marks Social with Marah at the Bowery Ballroom on Saturday, December 11th. For more info about the show go HERE.

Listen To The New Single From The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart, “Heart In Your Heartbreak”


The Pains of Being Pure at Heart is continuing to ride the wave of success they had with their self-titled first album for not only did they just release a new single, “Heart In Your Heartbreak,” but they are also hitting up the concert halls of the West Coast! The new single will drop on 7″ vinyl on December 14th, and their new LP will drop in March 2011 on Slumberland Records.

On tour they will be joined for these dates by Weekend, Stars, Sonny and the Sunsets and Glasser, so if you are in the general area of California, Oregon and Washington this coming week, be sure to check them out! Details are below.

Here are their remaining upcoming tour dates:

Nov 9 – The Independent San Francisco, CA (with Weekend)
Nov 10 – SoHo Santa Barbara, CA (with Weekend)
Nov 11 – The Loft UCSD La Jolla, CA (with Weekend)
Nov 12 – Echoplex Los Angeles, CA (with Weekend and Sonny and the Sunsets)
Nov 14 – Glasshouse Pomona CA  (with Stars)

The Pains of Being Pure at Heart – Heart In Your Heartbreak by forcefieldpr