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DHARMA

Hybrid sounds are offered up by Sunderland born producer Dharma on his Lone Romantic debut. His ‘Clear Glass’ EP lands on Maceo Plex’s left of centre imprint, offering up four tracks of futuristic garage and electro-tinged sounds.

Having previously released on esteemed labels such as R&S Records, Man Power’s Me Me Me imprint and Permanent Vacation, Dharma readies a bustling EP for Lone Romantic that showcases the young producer’s deft capabilities at working through various shades and rhythms with ease.

From the shuffling beats and choppy vox of EP opener ‘Clear Glass’, to the low-slung hip hop meets IDM influences of ‘Work Over’, Dharma serves up a highly accomplished release that effortlessly traverses genres and tantalizes the big rigs. Recommended! 

STAFF COMMENTS

Matt says: Future-proof, precision bass n breaks manoeuvres here by Dharma who unpacks a whole lot of pressure over four club friendly trax. TIP!

TRACK LISTING

A1. Clear Glass 
A2. BMO Tune 
B1. Scatty Brain 
B2. Work Over 

I Monster

Neveroddoreven Redux

    This is the 20th Anniversary re-issue on CD & LTD 2LP Gatefold Set - This is the original album plus three new singles and the acoustic version of Daydream in Blue (which has featured in ads for various brands including a worldwide year-long Magnum Ice Cream and many TV shows around the globe) - all new to physical.

    The re-issue follows a massive TikTok moment in 2023 resulting in 120M Spotify
    streams on one song (Who Is She?). 

    TRACK LISTING

    1. Some Thing's Coming
    2. Daydream In Blue
    3. Hey Mrs (Glamour Puss Mix)
    4. Everyone's A Loser
    5. Heaven
    6. Who Is She?
    7. A Scarecrow's Tale
    8. Stobart's Blues
    9. The Backseat Of My Car (Sticky Black Vinyl Mix)
    10. These Are Our Children
    11. Sunny Delights
    12. The Blue Wrath (Extended Mix)
    13. The Weather
    14. The Desert
    15. Won't Give Your Love
    16. Daydream In Blue (Acoustic)

    Annie Dressner

    I Thought It Would Be Easier

      4th studio album from the New York singer songwriter who is based in Cambridge, UK.

      TRACK LISTING

      Black And White
      Do You Want To Start A Fight
      I Just Realised
      Big Grey Couch
      Leather Chair
      Dance We Do
      18 Years
      Lofted Houses
      After The Storm
      Should've Seen It Coming

      Howlin Rain

      The Dharma Wheel

        Presenting Howlin Rain’s grand-scale new studio album: The Dharma Wheel, a six-track, 52-minute dive into a joyous fantasy realm. A sonic travelogue of prog funk, psychedelia, bygone West Coast jam music and watermelon rock. The triumph of a working band!

        Over nearly 20 years, Howlin Rain may have become the quintessential independent American rock ’n roll band: a steam-spitting Hydra of cranked guitars, kicking asphalt dust through a kaleidoscoping travelogue of desert motels and dives, volleying forth transmissions of sci-fi poetry from the blacktop veins of this cracked and aching country.

        Now, in America 2021, capping these strangest and sorest of times, the band returns with The Dharma Wheel, a six-track, 52-minute dive into a joyous fantasy realm of exaggerated present.

        “I wanted The Dharma Wheel to be a portal from our everyday world, the one from which you stand on hard ground and hold the album in your hands and peer into the artwork, and into another universe,” says songwriter, guitarist and vocalist, Ethan Miller. “You enter into that universe with your eyes and ears and mind and take a ride through free-form meditation on these ideas — from big, fundamental concepts about our existence right down to the grease that rolls down the arm of a pulp novel killer as he eats a gas station hot dog in an old Dodge in an alleyway.”

        Lyrically, Miller has completed his evolution into a mushroom-plucking Whitman of the West, singing outlandish tales in a topographic blend of Humbead’s Revised Map of the World and an inverted U.S. where downtrodden bodhisattvas roam the back streets and moonless country roads.

        “Down in Florida swamps, run by nature’s law, standing in the water, Eden gone. Two men loading rifles, beasts making time, they shot a boy from an orange tree and watched the colored birds take flight, watch the colors as they soar and dive.” — ‘Under the Wheels.’

        The band, Jeff McElroy (bass, backing vocals), Justin Smith (drums/percussion, backing vocals) and Dan Cervantes (guitar, backing vocals), again sounds hardwired into Miller’s vision, building tracks that swagger and sway in response to his verse. Lending a hand this time around is the legendary Scarlet Rivera (Bob Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue) on violin, and the endlessly inventive Adam MacDougall (Chris Robinson Brotherhood, Circles Around the Sun) on keys.

        Songs were shaped via the blast furnace of endless gigs, then recorded often mere hours after the band slipped the stage.

        “The captured sonic fact about this record is that it’s the sound of a band that rehearsed this material a lot and put a ton of work into its construction and was on the road a lot and recorded on days off in the tour schedule,” Miller says. “In some cases we were on stage on Saturday night playing these songs at quarter-to-2 in the morning and by Noon the next day we were sipping coffee in the studio playing them for the machine.”

        Rivera’s violin is the first sound heard as the album dawns on the instrumental “Prelude.” Soon, the band joins, twirling the theme into a psychedelicized awakening. “Don’t Let the Tears” brings the boogie, with MacDougall’s madcap synth work and wah-wah guitars showering 70’s glitter upon a parquet dance floor of the mind. “Under the Wheels” and “Rotoscope” center the album with taut, compositional epics populated by murdering drifters and fuzz pedal explosions. The blue hour comedown of “Annabelle” meditates upon the weariness of lost love, with Rivera again amping the heartache via her violin strings.

        “In the evening the trains go by, and shake the dust from dirty walls, sometimes I feel like a spider in an old mason jar, who threatens only convex light from down the hall. I’ve been lost to the world since the photos of the black hole, landed on my desktop screaming, perhaps the all and nothing all-in-one is just too much to take, for particles and matter that never found their way.” — ‘Annabelle’

        The record closes with the 16-minute title track, a multi-movement suite which cycles from Crazy Horse-meets-Traffic jams through colossal, mass-moving funk stomp, eventually cresting and washing into a sing-along gospel lament.

        The Dharma Wheel is an album of great depth, and one steeped in good vibes: a rich, glistening world of the ultra-vivid. As illustrated in Arik Roper’s cover art, the grand dharmachakra has been set in motion, churning off the California coast.

        “We were trying to build a world big enough that the imagination won’t go soft on you after just a few listens and where our love for this music, and music in general — along with a good dose of audacity — create a magic carpet ride through the world of The Dharma Wheel,” Miller continues. “In pursuing that I think we also managed to make a record that has a lot of joy in it: the joy of playing music, the joy of experiencing music, the joy of storytelling and poetry, the kind of singular joy and extended ecstatic moment that only a real ‘band’ can express in just that way.”

        And it’s this joy, this exuberance and dedication to the lines of cosmic expression — all centered in the exalted art of the everyday — that constructs the heart of the record. At its core, The Dharma Wheel is the triumph of a working band, a transmission from a never-paused before arriving for our strange, bruised, spectacular now.”

        TRACK LISTING

        1. Prelude
        2. Don’t Let The Tears
        3. Under The Wheels
        4. Rotoscope
        5. Annabelle
        6. Dharma Wheel

        Running From Dharma / Hoping For The Better

        Running / Hoping Split CD

          2 new bands full of dynamic, riffin' melodic hardcore. Running From Dharma have a huge following and this is their first major release and they're great. HFTB are more pop punk / hardcore . Discover them now!


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