Tag: Death Bells

New Video: Death Bells Shares Brooding and Anthemic “Take My Spirit Now”

Since their formation in Sydney back in 2015, Death Bells — Will Canning (vocals) and Remy Veselis (guitar) — have firmly cemented a sound that effortlessly blurs elements of post-punk and garage rock, centered around Canning’s baritone and Vessels’ wiry, reverb-soaked guitar lines. And as a result, the duo quickly became a mainstay in the national and international alternative/underground/indie scenes.

As Canning and Vessels have grown up and matured, the band has evolved through a handful of releases — 2016’s self-titled debut EP, 2017’s full-length debut, Standing at the Edge of the World and a seven inch through Funeral Party Records and a 2019’s “Around The Bend”/”Life Stands Still” single through Metropolitan Indian

The Aussie duo relocated to Los Angeles in 2018. The band’s current iteration has managed to really blossom: They signed to Dais Records, who released their sophomore album 2020’s New Signs of Life, an effort that saw them embracing their diverse tastes to craft expansive, hook-driven songs. As a response to pandemic-related quarantines and lockdowns, the duo secluded themselves at Bombay Beach last year, to record a live session that featured five tracks off New Songs of Life titled Live from Bombay.

Last year’s Between Here & Everywhere was recorded with Colin Knight at Paradise Studios. The nine-song album saw the duo adopting a collaborative approach, as they collaborated with an experienced cast of players on keys, strings, piano and backing vocals. The album’s material represents the pair’s continued growth as artists and people and deeply inspired — and informed — by the the vastness, messiness and oddness of their adopted home. Featuring lyrics that the duo consider “narrative, but not autobiographical,” the album’s material ebbs and flows from harrowing to hopeful, and are born of intrigue, intimacy and a sense of “looking outward,” as the Sydney-born, Los Angeles-based duo explain.

The album featured two singles I managed to write about:

  • Hysteria,” which bristled with a sense of urgency and immediacy while being rooted in the personal and deeply universal — the search for meaning in a seemingly meaningless, mad world, and the desire to just pack up and leave it all behind. “’Hysteria’ was one of the last songs we wrote as we were putting together the new album,” the duo explain. “It was one of those moments where the tune just figured itself out. It feels urgent, immediate and honest, and we’re very proud of it.”
  • Lifespring” a brooding and hypnotic bit of post punk featuring Vaselis’ wiry bursts of guitar, thumping four-on-the-floor, glistening synths and a relentless motorik groove paired with a rousingly anthemic chorus. And while being inspired — and deeply indebted — to the sounds of the late ’70s and early ’80s, the song describes our bleak moment with an uncanny specificity.

Between Here & Everywhere‘s highly-anticipated follow-up Take My Spirit Now is slated for a July 21, 2023 release through Dais Records. Written and recored late last year in intimate, focused sessions at Paradise Studios, after months of touring across North America and Europe, the new material sees the band introducing a decidedly new sound — jagged guitars careening through towering feedback and textured drums. The band enlisted longtime friend Burning Rose Records’ Morgan Wright to mix the EP. Wright’s background in electronic music influenced the more programmed elements of the material.

“Take My Spirit Now,” the first single and title track off the forthcoming EP is built around a sinuous and propulsive bass line, fluttering feedback, boom bap-like drumming, angular and jagged. reverb-soaked guitars paired with Canning’s achingly plaintive baritone, a dreamy bridge section and the duo’s unerring knack for writing bombastic, rousingly anthemic hooks. But the song is thematically touches upon love, paranoia and destiny — and features a weary and uncertain narrator seemingly questioning everything.

“Take My Spirit Now” was the first song that began to feel fully realized when we were recording late last year,” Death Bells’ Will Canning explains. “There’s something wild and dangerous about the sound of it, which inspired some of the chorus’ lyrics. The song is more about a feeling than a specific time or place. 

Directed by Colin Fletcher, the accompanying video follows an assortment of characters, including the band’s Will Canning sitting in the backseat of a car, going off on a ride — to an unknown and unseen destination. At points, the car drives on, without passengers. “We’re portraying a simple analogy — the idea that sitting in the backseat, going along with the ride, is fun. Sometimes you’re on the ride alone, sometimes with someone else,” Colin Fletcher says. “Who’s driving? Doesn’t matter. Where are they going? Doesn’t matter.” 

New Video: Object of Affection Returns with Anthemic “Con-Man”

Los Angeles-based post punk outfit Object of Affection features members of acclaimed local acts Death BellsLOCK, and Fury. The project sees its members tapping into the primitivism of their diverse projects while elevating their capacity for both atmosphere and melody. While hints of gloomy punk, brooding New Wave and down-and-out Regan-era alt rock reverberate in their sound and approach, it’s not in pastiche; but rather in a sort of sonic kinship to the austerity and fatalism embedded in the previous generation’s dejected anthems. Plus. holy shit, things are really fucked.

Since the release of the project’s 2020 self-titled, debut EP, they’ve been busy: They’ve released “Through and Through” through Suicide Squeeze — and they’ve already shared stages with the likes of CeremonyFiddleheadSpecial InterestGulch, and a growing list of others. Building upon a growing profile, the members of Object of Affection signed to Profound Lore, who will release their highly-anticipated full-length debut, the ten-song, Alex Newport-produced Field of Appearances on March 3, 2023. 

Field of Appearances reportedly sees the band expanding upon their sonic palette with the addition of drum machines, synths, acoustic guitar and auxiliary percussion, highlighting their evolution — and a growing sense of experimentalism. Each of the album’s ten songs are part of a cohesive and complete statement, while standing part on their own, with the material exploding in character, contract and excitement. Thematically, the album’s material touches upon reflection, insufficiency and Déjà vu among others. 

Earlier this year, I wrote about the album’s lead single, album opener “Half Life,” an anthemic track that’s one-part angular post-punk, one-part mosh-pit friendly grunge with rousing hooks and a forcefully propulsive rhythm section. Bearing a bit of a resemblance to Ceremony‘s In The Spirit World Now, “Half Life” is rooted in an uneasy and palpable sense of existential dread right around the corner The song thematically touches upon the inevitable passage of time and the aching effects of hopelessness — both are which are often a weird part of life. 

“Con-Man,” Field of Appearances‘ latest single continues a run of material that meshes elements of of post-punk and grunge: Centered around a quiet-loud-quiet song structure featuring angular guitars, propulsive drumming and rousingly anthemic hooks, paired with a feedback-driven bridge, “Con-Man” is a remarkably accessible, almost pop-leaning track that throbs with palpable disgust — and a sense of betrayal. The song as the band explains is about “being ripped off and how we deal with wounded pride in the aftermath.”

Employing the use of silhouettes, strobe lights to create a sense of brooding unease.

You can pre-order and/or pre-save the forthcoming album here: https://linktr.ee/objectofaffection

New Video: Death Bells Share a Brooding, Post-Punk Anthem

Since their formation in Sydney back in 2015, Death Bells — Will Canning (vocals) and Remy Veselis (guitar) — have cemented a sound and approach that blurs the lines of post-punk and garage rock, centered around Canning’s baritone and Veselis’ wiry, reverb-drenched guitar lines. The duo quickly became a maintain in the alternative/underground/indie scene both nationally and internationally.

Naturally, as the duo have grown up and matured into early adulthood, the band has morphed and transformed through the releases of their debut EP, their full-length debut and a seven-inch through Funeral Party Records and a 2019 single through Metropolitan Indian

The duo relocated to Los Angeles in 2018, where the current iteration of the band has blossomed: They signed to Dais Records, who released their sophomore album 2020’s New Signs of Life, an effort that saw them embracing their diverse tastes to craft expansive, hook-driven songs. As a response to pandemic-related quarantines and lockdowns, the duo secluded themselves at Bombay Beach last year, to record a live session that featured five tracks off New Songs of Life titled Live from Bombay.

Between Here & There, the Aussie-born, Los Angeles-based outfit’s third album was released yesterday through Dais Records. Recorded with Colin Knight at Paradise Studios, the nine-song album, which sees the duo adopting a collaborative approach features an experienced cast of collaborators on keys, strings, piano and backing vocals, not only represents the pair’s continued growth as artists and people; but also is inspired by the vastness, messiness and oddness of their adopted home. While featuring lyrics that the duo consider “narrative, but not autobiographical,” the album’s material ebbs and flows from harrowing to hopeful — and are born of intrigue, intimacy and a sense of “looking outward,” according to the band.     

Earlier this year, I wrote about “Hysteria,” the album’s fourth single. Continuing a run of material that bristles with urgency and immediacy, the song is rooted in the simultaneously personal and universal: the search for meaning in a seemingly meaningless, mad world — and the desire to pack up and leave everything behind.

“’Hysteria’ was one of the last songs we wrote as we were putting together the new album,” the duo explain. “It was one of those moments where the tune just figured itself out. It feels urgent, immediate and honest, and we’re very proud of it.”

“Lifespring” is a brooding and hypnotic bit of post punk featuring Vaselis’ wiry bursts of guitar, thumping four-on-the-floor, glistening synths and a relentless motorik groove paired with a rousingly anthemic chorus. Yes, “Lifespring” is decidedly inspired by — and indebted to — the late 70s and early 80s while bristling with a forceful immediacy as it describes our bleak moment with an uncanny specificity.

“We initially wrote Lifespring at a friend’s studio, before the last record was even an idea,” Will Canning explains. “I thought I had lost the stems, but discovered them recently on a USB that had been sitting in my jacket pocket for the last few years, so we were able to finally finish the song. The lyrical inspiration for Lifespring came from reading about a fairly spurious organization of the same name that were around until the mid-90s. Musically, it feels very different from anything we’ve done before; sleazier, groovier.”

The accompanying video follows a motorcyclist on a dirt road. The camera gently pulls out to give the viewer a gorgeous, cinematic view of the motorcyclist’s surroundings — before they meet up with a truck full of people.