The
Metrolites' For the People
draws inspiration from a wide range of music composed during the
1950s and '60s - a time when America was obsessed with space
travel, the atomic bomb, and especially the motion picture.
On their second album, the Metrolites integrate themes and sounds from low-budget crime movies such as Diabolik (on "Diabolik Kriminal"), spaghetti westerns ("K Is for Kafka"), Japanese kaiju films such as Godzilla ("All Giant Monsters Attack Tokyo"), and spy flicks ("Today We Kill, Tomorrow We Spy").
During
the mid- to late '90s, Pat Stolley's band The Multiple Cat
released four albums, a multitude of singles, and a remix album. The
Secret of the Secret of the Multiple Cat is a retrospective that
makes use of songs from that period.
By
the time the trumpets enter the picture halfway through the opening
track of Tenki's new EP, the listener has been enveloped by
atmosphere. On top of muted drums and guitar come layers of gentle
keyboards - and are those voices harmonizing with the organ? Hints
of gull-like string sounds suggest the ocean.
Struggle
in the Hive's self-titled debut is caught in limbo - somewhere
between adolescence and adulthood, wakefulness and sleep, joy and
sadness, hope and loss.







