Nightlands, Jaze Uries, Madelyn Ilana and Eric Congdon release new albums

Chalk up one other victory for Harvest Information co-owners Mark Capon and Matt Schnable.

Along with protecting locals equipped with music for the previous 18 years, the West Asheville entrepreneurs have cast bonds with up-and-coming artists who’ve since change into international sensations, together with Grammy-winning different rockers The Struggle on Medication.

“Truthfully, they had been among the first champions of the band exterior Philadelphia,” says Dave Hartley, the group’s bassist. “The primary time we performed The Gray Eagle for Transfigurations [in 2009], there have been all these individuals there to see us, which was a novel expertise on the time. And we grew to become quick mates with them.”

Subsequent tour stops and exploratory days off on the town, plus extra friendships with business friends and studio periods at Echo Mountain Recording, additional endeared Western North Carolina to Hartley. And in April 2019, he, his spouse and their toddler moved to Asheville, the place he quickly constructed a stand-alone residence studio and started working on Moonshine, the fourth album for his facet undertaking, Nightlands.

Listeners anticipating a group in keeping with The Struggle on Medication’ cinematic rock sound and frontman Adam Granduciel’s blistering guitar solos is likely to be stunned to search out layered vocals — upward of 100 tracks on sure songs — and digital instrumentation extra akin to latest releases from Animal Collective and Toro y Moi.

“I’m nonetheless honing in on it,” says Hartley of Nightlands’ sound. “With every successive report, I’m getting nearer to expressing my platonic splendid of what I like to listen to.”

That want listing contains an general sonic lushness crafted with cascading harmonies and a mirrored image of Hartley’s self-identification as “an enormous sucker for melodies.” Serving to him obtain these ends on Moonshine is a Wurlitzer digital piano, plentiful vocoder voice manipulation and his Maestro Rhythm King, an analog drum machine popularized by Sly and the Household Stone, in addition to The Seashore Boys.

“It’s an instantaneous vibe,” he says of the Rhythm King. “If I put that on and put it by an amp, you’d be like, ‘Oh, yeah. OK. You’re midway to a music already.”

Followers of the brand new album, nonetheless, gained’t be listening to Nightlands’ newest songs carried out dwell anytime quickly. The Struggle on Medication, making up for misplaced time as a consequence of canceled and postponed exhibits in the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, is touring extensively this 12 months. This, together with Hartley’s household life, has led the musician to show down solo present alternatives.

“Deciding that I wasn’t going to tour this album was a really liberating factor as a result of I had reluctantly toured my different albums,” Hartley says. “There are specific exhibits I can level to that Nightlands did that I believed had been transcendent.” However different performances, he reveals, had been “a whole prepare wreck.”

One of many important challenges of enjoying Nightlands’ songs dwell, he continues, is the layered vocals. If financially possible, Harley says, he would assemble a 30-person choir to carry out alongside a core band of drums, bass, guitar and keys and take this “indie choral rock band” out on a tour of planetariums.

“Logistically, it sounds fully insane,” he says. “However that’s what it could be. It will be fairly cool to see, and I believe it might be highly effective.”

To study extra, go to avl.mx/bvy.

Give the drummer some

Music followers know Jaze Uries as a drummer, however they’re about to get acquainted with him as a singer and songwriter — in addition to a producer and engineer.

The artist’s solo debut, Songs to Watch the Sundown To, is slated for a Friday, Aug. 26, launch and finds Uries combining his easy R&B/soul vocals over catchy ’80s-inspired soundscapes, a mix that appears destined to be the soundtrack of late summer time whereas encouraging heat heading into fall.

The combination of inspirations is smart: Uries is a longtime fan of ’80s synthesizer sounds, however with the eight-song assortment being made earlier than, throughout and after the peak of the pandemic, waves of various musical genres made their technique to his ears.

“I used to be listening to plenty of indie rock early on,” he says. “[New Orleans-based R&B/soul artist] Fortunate Daye has been an enormous affect recently. And Nick Jonas’ final album [2021’s Spaceman] is admittedly, actually good. So I’ve been doing a bit of homework with all of that stuff and happening little rabbit holes listening to these influences.”

To craft his personal contemporary, poppy tackle R&B and soul, Uries adopted a full-control strategy and wrote, sang, recorded, blended and mastered all the album in his Fairview residence studio. Although he’d lengthy needed to delve deeper into the technical facet of recording, he hadn’t dabbled in that world since producing a good friend’s songs in highschool. However after feeling burned out from years of touring as a drummer and seeing his good friend Ted Marks’ mixing expertise firsthand whereas engaged on their pop duo undertaking Tü Koyote, the time felt proper to make the leap.

“I at all times needed to put in writing and produce however by no means actually sat down and did it. So after I was [working with Marks] and listening to all of the areas in my head, I needed to study that complete facet of issues in order that I might translate my concepts the very best that I can,” Uries says. “It’s nonetheless a studying course of as a result of I’m fairly new, but it surely’s been actually attention-grabbing — like enjoying a brand new instrument.”

Amid Uries’ unique works on Songs to Watch the Sundown To is a chill cowl of fellow Asheville-based musician Indigo de Souza’s “Maintain U.”

“That was form of the music of that summer time,” Uries says. “I actually appreciated it, and sooner or later I used to be simply enjoying round, making an attempt to create one thing on my keyboard — and I’m not a proficient participant, however the first chord I hit, I instantly acknowledged it was the primary chord of ‘Maintain U.’ So then I simply labored it out and was like, ‘Why don’t I simply cowl that music?’ That’s the way it occurred. It was simply so caught in my head.”

To study extra, go to avl.mx/bvu.

Solar energy

Along with being a musician, Candler-based singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Madelyn Ilana works as a therapeutic artist with POiNT Well being Collective in West Asheville. There, she practices energetic herbalism and somatic power therapeutic — and listening to her new album, Coming Into the Mild, likewise proves rejuvenating.

As together with her 2019 album, Awake Dreaming, the gathering was coproduced with Chris Rosser, himself a gifted singer/songwriter and multi-instrumentalist with world music ensemble Free Planet Radio.

“I undoubtedly really feel a deep religious reference to Chris and a resonance,” Ilana says. “He calls his studio Hole Reed [Arts] Recording [Studio], and as I labored with him on the final report, I actually understood an increasing number of why he calls it that. There’s this idea of being an empty vessel to permit no matter your work is to come back by you — and on this case it’s music, and dealing with him actually is actually like that. I might really feel the way in which he was so purely current.”

So in tune had been the 2 collaborators that, on quite a few events, Ilana might say she needed to rerecord a sure part, and Rosser would know exactly what stretch she was referring to with out her figuring out it.

Ilana describes Coming Into the Mild as a completely emotional album, the results of a interval of deep private contemplation throughout which Spirit informed her to dwell alone. On a number of tracks, listeners can hear these elevated emotions in her voice, and moderately than rerecord to cover these sonic “imperfections,” she and Rosser saved them in.

“Being within the studio amplifies every part, and this time round I used to be experimenting lots with my way of thinking and what I used to be conjuring up,” she says. “And I used to be actually listening to that distinction within the takes the place I used to be in a position to get again into the sensation I had after I wrote the music.”

Snug together with her vulnerability, Ilana says she often cries in entrance of individuals and anticipated to be in tears all through her album launch present at Isis Music Corridor in late July. Her eyes, nonetheless, remained dry, however a number of concertgoers approached her afterward, having clearly gone by a couple of tissues over the course of the night.

“I believe one thing reworked, and no matter was transferring by me truly grew to become a transmission, and it cracked individuals open,” she says. “That was the suggestions I used to be getting: ‘You allowed me to really feel issues I wasn’t letting myself really feel. You gave me permission to be current with what’s actually occurring for me proper now.’ That was actually stunning to see and affirming.”

To study extra, go to avl.mx/bvz.

New instructions

Like many recording artists, Asheville-based singer/songwriter and guitarist Eric Congdon had an album prepared for launch in spring 2020. However in contrast to the majority of his friends who waited till the music business returned to quasi-normalcy to share these tunes, he put out one other assortment within the interim.

Slightly over a 12 months after the discharge of his first all-electric album, Circuit Breaker, Congdon reaches again to pre-pandemic occasions with Roadside Attraction, a return to his soulful, acoustic Americana methods. Although not precisely the identical album that will have been revealed in March 2020 — every monitor has been revisited and remixed — it nonetheless displays a time earlier than the worldwide well being disaster.

“It was written in a burst of exercise following a protracted highway journey by the Southwestern U.S. in late 2019,” Congdon says. “I saved a journal of what I noticed and felt, then went again to it for inspiration after I began making demos, and all of it fell collectively remarkably rapidly.”

The lyrics’ mixture of statement and introspection aided the pace with which the songs had been accomplished. Loads of private themes could also be discovered all through Roadside Attraction — Congdon says album opener “Mr. Moonlight” is very autobiographical —  however they’re balanced out by tracks just like the extra common “I’ll Be Your Buddy.”

“I attempt to stroll that high-quality line of not being preachy about issues however hopefully nonetheless say one thing that resonates with individuals,” Congdon says. “Then different issues are maybe open to interpretation. I’m no Bob Dylan, however ask 10 individuals what his lyrics imply and also you’ll get 10 completely different solutions, you realize?”

Roadside Attraction additionally marks Congdon’s first album in 15 years that has vocals on each monitor. Although singing and writing lyrics are probably the most tough features of constructing music for the celebrated guitarist, he stepped out his consolation zone on these 9 creations and labored exhausting to attain his finest outcomes so far.

Native musicians Zack Web page (bass) and Hope Griffin (vocals), who’re members of Congdon’s acoustic ensemble Autumnwüd, and blues singer Peggy Ratusz lend their abilities on the report as nicely.

“I do as a lot as I can myself, however I imagine it’s actually necessary to usher in exterior collaborators to see different views. It provides a lot,” Congdon says.

Whether or not in Autumnwüd, the ’80s tribute band LazrLuvr or his more and more experimental solo exhibits that embody looping, tapping, fingerpicking and Irish bouzouki jams, Congdon is thrilled to be again performing dwell regularly. To assist present his appreciation, he’s made it a degree to be extra optimistic and play with extra power than he had previous to the pandemic.

“My musical need for the viewers is escapism. I wish to take you out of the on a regular basis, and this strategy has actually paid off,” he says. “We’ve all been by it recently, and I’m placing all I’ve into my music as a result of it’s as a lot for me as it’s for the viewers. It’s a wonderful symbiotic relationship and it repeatedly conjures up me to maintain going.”

To study extra, go to avl.mx/bvt.

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