Tuesday, August 13, 2013



from the Saddle Creek Records newsletter:

The Thermals - The Sunset
from the album Desperate Ground

For their latest video, "The Sunset", Thermals bassist Kathy Foster took lessons from professional boxer Molly McConnell to prepare for her role as "The Boxer". You can also the band live at a handful of shows later this summer, a full rundown is below.

The Thermals tour dates
Sat-Aug-17, Omaha, NE, MAHA Music Festival
Fri-Aug-23, Eugene, OR, Kaleidoscope Music Festival
Sat-Aug-31, Grand Rapids, MI, The Pyramid Scheme
Sat-Sep-07, Portland, OR, Mississippi Studios
Thu-Sep-26, Cincinnati, OH, The Taft Theatre

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Shugo Tokumaru - video for Katachi






Polyvinyl Records press release:



Watch the amazing video for "Katachi": http://youtu.be/Q-WM-x__BOk

"...a giddy celebration of pop music's potential for mayhem...it all comes together in a beautifully sharp series of technicolor audio bursts." -Pitchfork

"This is a whimsical Flaming Lips-meets-Sufjan Stevens trip through the mind of one of the finest producers of psych pop working today." - Under the Radar


For the first half of 2012, Shugo Tokumaru locked himself inside his home studio while working on In Focus?, often forgetting to eat and sleep for long stretches of time while crafting the record's 15 songs -- each of which contains an average of 20 instruments and hundreds of recorded parts that are meticulously mixed together to create a single, cohesive track.

As a result of this extreme care and attention to detail, In Focus? -- despite its title -- represents the clearest manifestation of Tokumaru's multifaceted musical vision to date.

From slow building album opener "Circle"'s perfect transition into standout track "Katachi," to lead single "Decorate" and the beautifully delicate acoustic ballad "Tightrope," it's clear that Tokumaru has again succeeded in writing universal melodies while singing in his native Japanese.

After Tokumaru completed recording and mixing, In Focus? was mastered at Abbey Road Studios -- a fitting location for an artist who grew up listening to the Beatles and Japanese pop music and whose music builds on the best elements of both to produce a unique sound irresistible to listeners regardless of their generation or the language they speak.