Showing posts with label Orindal Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orindal Records. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Advance Base - Washington Phillips and Our Cat singles on Orindal Records


Throughout Casiotone to Advance Base Owen Ashworth has continued to work in his distinct confessional style that reminds me of icons like Jonathan Richman or Tom Waits. Artists who can get away with blunt imagery and simplistic compositions make it seem deceptively easy to the rest of us. They manage to reach deep emotional places using less, walking the line of being really specific to their experiences and knowing which ones are universally overlooked. Owen just put out a couple more great examples of his raw, effortless songwriting on his own label Orindal Records a few weeks ago. The first is a tribute to Washington Phillips, a turn of the century outsider musician who built his own kind of double Zither. Owen covers four of his eighteen known tracks on this mini EP, and his literal confessional hymns about Jesus take on new meaning through Owen’s contemporary interpretations.

The second single one of the best examples of Owen’s classic songwriting. Guaranteed to hit you at the worst possible time, I’m glad I don’t have “Our Cat” on my ipod so I don’t happen to get dirt in my eye on the subway.

On "Mother's Last Word to Her Son", from the Washington Phillips EP, Owen manages to capture a similar texture as the original less than clear recordings. It’s nothing obviously lo-fi or distracting it’s the simple way the room is mic’d and you can hear everything; the hum from the cables, the click of the hammond keys and a toy piano striking imperfect metal strings. There’s a slight percussion beat that could be a holding click track or generated from one of those old church organs.
Advance Base is perfectly suited to cover these melancholy tracks about Jesus and his higher powers from Phillips. The echo and distance on Owen's vocal even adds to this voice coming down from the heavens and letting you in on Jesus in a comforting way but don’t forget 'He's always watching you'. Advance Base strips the melodies apart into two synth harmonies managing as usual to get to a melancholy place with nothing - or is it because there's next to nothing? When the keys come to a rest, all you hear is the humming silence of an empty room and recording hiss because he approaches the material like a live recording, the kind of thing that he does the best.

"Our Cat" started out as a super limited run of 80 lathe cut singles and due to popular demand has ended up as this repress. It’s from Owen’s classic, cheap canned percussion era which when combined with his vocal style and minimal synth is more than just lo-fi. But the song itself about a lost cat is the star here. Owen's contemplative deep vocal, close to the mic describes checking the local ASPCA’s and hanging up fliers in the neighborhood. I first heard this live and the audience took it lightly, like this protagonist was making a lot out of something as trivial as a cat that didn’t come home. Hearing this original track and it’s lightweight waltz rhythm under the heartbreaking direction this takes is too much. I won't ruin the track, because it manages to capture all the seriousness of the situation and when his voce starts to shake I always get something in my eye. The way pets are made so helpless gets me choked up. The track is perfect because of the minimalism and raw sincerity and I'd bet every word of it is true.

Owen says about “Our Cat”:
Our Cat was first released as a limited edition lathe cut single in November, 2011, & its 80 copies went out of print almost immediately. Since then, not a week has goes by without someone asking me if it'll ever be available again, so I'm finally re-releasing Our Cat as a 7" vinyl EP. Remixed, remastered, & with a new bonus b-side, Our Cat will be available as a deluxe colored vinyl package with original artwork, lyric sheet, & MP3 download on July 23. You can stream the title track, pre-order the vinyl, & get an instant digital download right now from Orindal Records. For international customers, I recommend ordering Our Cat & The World Is In A Bad Fix Everywhere together & saving on shipping!


Get it from Owen's own Orindal Records.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Julie Byrne on Orindal Records



This single from Julie Byrne shouldn’t have been able to catch me off guard. I should have been prepared for a certain amount of heartbreak coming from one of its greatest agents, Owen Ashworth and his Orindal Records imprint. It says a lot that she’s practically the only artist other than Owen on the label, and the endorsement is deserved.

A-Side’s "Holiday" taps into that grown up heartwrench, it’s moved beyond the chaotic angst of youth. Julie is right in that sweet spot of acceptance, the saddest kind of sorrow, when you realize it’s no use fighting anymore, lay down. Fighting it is a younger generations game. She’s laying this all out there in a beautiful, high, acoustic fingerpicking and cavernous reverb laying out pained situations in lower end Stevie Nicks register. It’s reminding of the place Elliott Smith immediately goes, right in that tiny closet off the bedroom, no room to move, a bare bulb with a knotty string dangling overhead and the middle of the night intimate quitting. Nothing is going to end well opening with the line, “We met in New York city on New Years day”. That’s going to be the beginning of a disaster. There are the hopes and dreams of new years and new people but (and it ALWAYS comes with a but) you know where this is inevitably going because of its delivery. That low end vocal it isn’t self conscious of being pretty, which can really take you out of a sentiment this raw if they’re trying to hit the right notes and remember what vocal coaches taught you. I'm all for training as a musician, but there's a point when you have to forget all those lessons. This is all the more perfect in a tiny dose, like the Angeles single of Elliott’s years ago, its almost bizarre how little it wants to be a part of the latest scene.
"Marmalade" continues to keep the acoustic guitar interesting and this side is a combination of Vashti Bunyon, and Chan Marshall…with something of a low southern drawl and Oldham sense of style. Her vocal is beautiful but that's besides the fact, like this guitar playing, it takes you right into an introspective place but the emotion carries this to another level. These two tracks should convince anyone that an entire album worth of this would be amazing. I didn't want to go here but unexpectedly it's like dad putting down the dog, you just didn’t see it coming. It shouldn't work like this and both tracks are truly, truly heartbreaking. I've been waiting to hear the “Cross Bones style” torch picked up again, and she's running with it. Recorded by Owen, almost exactly a year ago, she’s the kind of musician who can remind you that a simple acoustic guitar and restrained abstract vocals will always be the best sound in the world.

Pressed on an aqua green vinyl, screened red ink sleeves on grainy heavy paper, lyrics on
the inside, from Orindal Records.

Julie is currently on tour and even supporting Advance Base on a few of his dates.