SLOW MAGIC IN-STORE SUNDAY, OCT. 12

sm-summer-2014-press-photo-frontSlow Magic will perform live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.) at 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12. As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. Slow Magic is performing at The Crux later that evening and we have tickets for sale at the store!

ABOUT SLOW MAGIC
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A DIY project with worldwide scope, Slow Magic is universal and inclusive. It’s cosmic electronic music culled from the ether, yet crafted with human hands. It’s joyous, escapist, multi-disciplinary art that mixes transcendent performance with the nostalgic intimacy of two teenagers staying up too late on the phone.

How To Run Away, Slow Magic’s debut with Downtown Records, reflects this growth, oozing both otherworldly beauty and a mastery of production. Lead Single “Girls” is deconstructionist house with an organic pulse and collaged, handcrafted samples. “Hold Still” sculpts elastic organs and jazz piano into an emotionally-pummeling finale, while the melancholy “Let U Go” merges watery dub with spectral piano and “Closer” plays like a ‘90s R&B fever dream.

Slow Magic is music by your imaginary friend.

EDMOND DANTES RELEASE PARTY SEPT. 30; 'JUNO' COMES OUT THAT DAY, TOO!

EdmondPoster reducededmond dantes coverLISTEN TO MUSIC HERE
WATCH A VIDEO HERE

Genre-defying duo Edmond Dantes has wrapped up its second EP of original tunes. The EP, titled “Juno,” is set to be released on Tuesday, Sept. 30, and the band will celebrate with a free, all-ages release party that evening (6 p.m.) at The Record Exchange, 1105 W. Idaho St., Boise.

“Juno” consists of four original songs and a remix of the Edmond Dantes song “Decade” by Boise synth wizards The Dirty Moogs. “Juno” will be available in CD form at The Record Exchange during the in-store.

Who:

Edmond Dantes (the band, not the literary character)

What:

They made an EP with 4 new songs and a remix by The Dirty Moogs

Why:

Because Andrew and Ryan aren’t very good at any other endeavors

Where:

The Record Exchange

When:

Tuesday, Sept. 30, 6 p.m.

For a taster of the EP, visit edmonddantesband.bandcamp.com/album/juno or edmonddantesmusic.com.

ATMOSPHERE SIGNING THURSDAY, SEPT. 18; VIP PRIORITY-LINE WRISTBAND AVAILABLE WITH CD OR LP PURCHASE!

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Atmosphere will visit The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St.) for an album signing at 3 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 18. As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages. Atmosphere is performing at Knitting Factory later that evening (7 p.m.) and we have tickets for sale at the store!

Want priority line placement at the signing? Beginning Thursday, Aug. 28, purchase Southsiders on CD or vinyl prior to the event and we’ll give you a VIP line wristband! (There will be a secondary line for customers without wristbands, which will follow the VIP line.)

ABOUT ATMOSPHERE

atmosphere southsidersMinneapolis is known for many things — pretty lakes, the Mall of America, lutefisk. But 17 years ago, hip-hop act Atmosphere transformed the city into something else entirely: a nexus from which underground rap spiraled-out to the masses. And thanks to the duo’s indefatigable touring habits, Top 20-charting albums, and their galvanizing artist-owned label Rhymesayers (MF Doom, Aesop Rock), they’re still pushing the boundaries of what indie rap can mean.

It’s with that overachieving-underdog spirit that MC Sean “Slug” Daley and producer Anthony “Ant” Davis have named Atmosphere’s eighth studio album Southsiders, a shout-out to their native neighborhood. Because, says Slug, “We have spent the majority of our career — God, we can call it a career! — repping the south side of Minneapolis pretty hard.”

While Southsiders is a celebration of the group’s fortitude, it is also a deeply introspective, and sometimes conflicted, work. “It’s a natural progression from the last record, The Family Sign, which was about growing my family,” says Slug, now a father to three, who finds himself contemplating mortality. “I’m starting to think, ‘What is post–family man? What am I supposed to rap about now?’ I’m sticking to my roots, rapping about what I’m doing, what I think about. This record is — much like the other ones — a very detailed look at my life.”

The album captures everything from a blazing, anthemic takedown in “Southsiders,” to the ebb-and-flow of loss in the sauntering “Arthur’s Song,” to emotional abandon in the rousing “Kanye West.” The latter — and its mantra, “put your hands in the air like you really do care” — is a high-five to the rapper whose emotional reactions are often misperceived as not caring. Say Slug, “I wanted to write a song about loving something so much that you submit to the moment.”

All told, Southsiders took about ten months to complete. During that time, “I spent a lot of time agonizing over every detail, every word,” Slug says. He and Ant started out writing together in a Minneapolis basement. But these days, they trade tracks back and forth over email, with Ant triggering the creative flow by offering skeletons of songs.

Where Slug is the stalwart perfectionist, Ant persists as his healthy foil, finding beauty in sonic flaws. Says Slug: “He gives me the room to be as anal as I can be, even though he’s usually like, ‘Okay man, it’s okay. Let it go.’ He is the voice of reason I listen to.” Ant’s behind-the-board acumen is also key to Atmosphere’s unique sound: the live instrumentations provide vibrant tonal contrast to Slug’s often-weighty subject matter. Such as in album’s first single, “Bitter”: A condemnation of self-entitlement, it’s set, intriguingly, against sly synth percolations.

Much of Slug’s songwriting agony stems from his need to translate things he relates to into universal messages — which is why even after all these years, Atmosphere remains relevant in the rap game. “Do I want to leave a legacy of, ‘Oh, that guy was really dope. He figured out how to rhyme astral projections with gastral infections’? Or do I want to be a positive energy source for the movement in general?” Slug says. “There is purpose behind what I do than just talking about me.” And how does that impact his rhymes now? “Well,” he points out, “I have to keep things realistic: making sure the gross stuff represented itself as gross, and that the beautiful stuff stays beautiful.”

BUY ZAMMUTO'S NEW ALBUM, GET A FREE TICKET TO THEIR BCT SHOW!

1409025969_frontZammuto just released their new album Anchor, and this Sunday (Sept. 14) they’ll be visiting Boise for a performance at Boise Contemporary Theater.

While supplies last, purchase Anchor at The Record Exchange and get a free ticket to the show!

94.9 FM THE RIVER PRESENTS MIKE DOUGHTY LIVE AT THE RECORD EXCHANGE SEPT. 9 (HIS ONLY SHOW IN TOWN); GET HIS NEW ALBUM A WEEK BEFORE THE OFFICIAL RELEASE DATE!

MikeDoughty_by_DeborahLopez_0128-large94.9 FM The River presents Mike Doughty live at The Record Exchange (1105 W. Idaho St. in Downtown Boise) at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9. This is Doughty’s only show in town, and fans will have the opportunity to purchase his new album “Stellar Motel” (CD or LP) a week before its official Sept. 16 release date! As always, this Record Exchange in-store event is free and all ages.

ABOUT MIKE DOUGHTY

Mike Doughty has built a successful solo career in the 14 years since his departure from Soul Coughing. In the fall of 2013, after famously eschewing his former band’s repertoire for most of his career, Doughty released an album of re-imagined Soul Coughing songs titled Circles Super Bon Bon… (the full title is 41 words long — a list of every song on the album) and toured the U.S. in support of it with Catherine Popper on upright bass, Pete Wilhoit on drums, and Doughty himself on guitar, turntables, and sampler. Now, Doughty returns with Live At Ken’s House, a recording of the live show, featuring many Soul Coughing songs that were arranged for the tour, but weren’t on the album. Live at Ken’s House was banged out in a single day, four days after the tour’s end.

“The band was pretty spectacular,” Doughty says, “and the shows were intense. Obviously, we were at maximum tightness after 32 shows, and I wanted to take immediate advantage of that.” Doughty, who has a tendency to be almost psychotically busy, will follow this live release with his next studio album, titled “Stellar Motel,” in September, and will tour the country extensively in the fall in support of both releases.