Monday, March 30, 2015

Fire and the Scottish Winds

Tanisha's Pick

Natasha North's 'Fire' has similar eeriness to the music of London Grammar, but with a lighter gentler tone, with each note overlapping into the next. The high reverb is paralleled to the acoustics of a high vaulted church or a cave. 


The first song I heard of hers was a cover of The Cinematic Orchestra's To Build A Home- quite a sublime rendition. Her genre's vary with each of her songs, from country to folk to alternative pop imbibing styles of Bon Iver, Ingrid Michealson, Damien Rice and the likes. 





Sudhir's Pick


Scottish band Frightened Rabbit seem like a bunch of ordinary guys but there music is nothing but ordinary. Admittedly, I am not the biggest fan of music where the lyrics cannot be easily heard but somehow I forgive it when it comes to these guys. They have a very special way of blending instruments and genres into their songs which you possibly couldn't conceive. In one stretch, you feel like you are listening to Mumford and Sons, Indgrid Michaelson and Keith Urban. There is a certain something comfortable about these guys. Even though I like songs of theirs such as 'Swim till you can't see land' and 'The Twist' (in my top 10 of all time), I wanted to highlight this beauty today.


Monday, March 23, 2015

Musical Interlude: March Edition

Happy Monday!
This weeks post is the first of a series of guest contributors to the blog. Our first contributor is the awesome Manek D'Silva. Apart from being an artist and graphic designer, he is musician who writes and plays the guitar for the band Slain. Hope you enjoy his selections for this week. 


Poom : Les Voiles

Poom seems to have more in common with Daft Punk than just being from Paris: an infectious dance groove running from start to finish, a thick layer of nursery-rhymey unison voices, 'Les Voiles' somehow manages to be both smooth and rude in equal measure. The words being sung in French, rather than English, makes them simultaneously more comforting, and more haunting. I don't get most of the lyrics, but the line 'ce soir on va danser' means 'we're going dancing this evening', and that's all the French you really need. 




Celeste : Ezra Vines

Don't let the minimal start fool you, from clapping to nylon strings, to angelic choruses, to deep warm piano tones, Ezra Vine's 'Celeste' pours increasingly lush beautiful sounds into your happily welcoming soul. It's the sort of musical honesty that reminds you of Florence + the Machine. The video reflects the music's finest qualities: very simple, very organic, very pretty, and very stuck in your head for the rest of your life. 




We will be featuring guest contributors every month. 
Please write to us at mondaymephobics@gmail.com if you have great music to share.

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Summer Is Here

Tanisha's Pick

I discovered Milky Chance only a few months ago. So in love with the beats, the vibe and his hair. I think that Flashed Junk Mind has such a summer groove to it. It makes an excellent soundtrack to the Sunday afternoon I spent slacklining with a bunch of friends. Although I think the music video may have slightly influenced this opinion. :)




Sudhir's Pick

While songs like Yesterday, Help and Hey, Jude! continue to be sung (and resung) and have found a place in our collective memory as 'classic Beatles', today I wanted to highlight a lesser known tune. I discovered this one last week. I hate to disagree with the songwriter, the great John Lennon himself who said he was ashamed by the song's "abominable lyrics". The song's appeal lies in it's rawness. Lennon fully captures a feeling claimed to be felt by most of humanity, but giving it a twist you would not expect. More about this song can be found here.  And of course, below is It's Only Love.

Monday, March 9, 2015

The Ocean of Alternative Folk

Tanisha's Pick

Learnt of a new genre of music last week- Alternative Folk. allmusic.com  describes it as folk that combines acoustic sounds and a strong singer-songwriter bent with a more energetic, aggressive sound and often with intense emotional themes.

Ali Lacey's music is just that. Such short lyrics, but deep. It's hard to really concentrate on the music and I kept drifting off when I was trying to. But that's the beauty of music like this. 

I'll hold, so near and cold. You've exhumed my love.I'm sold and our story will grow old.
But you'll make dust from gold. And I'll know that your heart was once like mine,
Watch the flaws unwind. And I'll throw my love to the ground and I'll tear you out.





Sudhir's Pick

A great way to discover new music is by watching your favourite TV shows. I can't believe that it is a actually someone's job to soundtrack pivotal moments in a TV show. Obviously, some shows do this better than others. The ones I have noticed who do it incredibly well are Chuck, the Good Wife, the OC and of course, the show which is probably the best at doing it is Grey's Anatomy. This week's pick comes from Grey's Anatomy. Nope, it is not a Snow Patrol song. Someone with a spectacular taste in music recommended this song to me and also gave me the show's soundtrack for the first few season's. Guess I know what I will be listening to for the next few weeks.


Sunday, March 1, 2015

So Much Soul

Happy Monday!

Tanisha's Pick

Marvin Gaye left his voice behind. Jacob Banks found it, added some techno, hiphop, reggae, soul and a little rock and compiled his first EP, The Monologue. Such a work of art! 

I listened to his most recent piece, Move With You nonstop the whole of Friday and it is so so catchy. If you are in need for a peppy tune to get yourself awake and on your feet this Monday morning, this one won't let you down. I'm surprised this one hasn't reached the radio yet. Somebody make this guy famous soon!

But my choice for today is his track Worthy. So much soul! I can't even count how many genres he has tried to merge into one track. Along with the powerful lyrics, the song is hard to fault.




Sudhir's Pick

Much like a lot of music, I was introduced to this song through a friend. While I have never hear either Gregory Porter or Laura Mvula before, I am now a confirmed fan. As always the soulful lyrics being belted out in the form of Porter's raspy voice is pure gold and lingers long after the song has been on repeat several times.