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Showing posts with label Dawes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dawes. Show all posts

Sunday, June 30, 2013

INCOMING: The Cairo Gang at Millenium Park With Dawes





Homegrown sons The Cairo Gang are playing Millenium Park with Dawes on July 8th. The title track  from their upcoming album recently premiered on Pitchfork, you can check it out here.

Stereogum Premiere The Cairo Gang's 'Take Your Time'
Tiny Rebels Out July 23rd On Empty Cellar Records + Cassette Out On Burger Records





'Tiny Rebels' Track Listing:
Side A
1. Tiny Rebels
2. Take Your Time
3. Shake Off
Side B
4. Shivers
5. Father Of The Man
6. Find You With A Song
 

Praise For The Cairo Gang:
"The Cairo Gang cuts across musical movements of several years' span to create music sounding distinctly out of time.” 
-- Pitchfork

“Their slow-motion melodies and arrangements crest and ebb, coalescing in close-harmony choruses and easing apart, with each song emerging as a series of casual incidents.” – The New York Times

"Strong, true and uncannily beautiful" --Uncut [UK]

“One can’t help but feel that [Emmett] Kelly is a man with two great loves that he’s trying to reconcile: order and chaos, two contradictory forces that have fueled many of the greatest moments in pop. Other musicians have managed a balance in the past, but Kelly is admirably attempting to find some new ground.”-- Tiny Mix Tapes

"Kelly’s songs veer between the visceral incantations of Neil Young and the airy mysticism of British folk, but he reshapes 
both to fit his own strength." -- The Chicago Reader

 










Tiny Rebels is a new collection of songs by The Cairo Gang. They are about awareness. They show a new economy in the work of The Cairo Gang's leader Emmett Kelly, conjuring up quick and defined songs un-housed in the shimmering of two burning electric 12-string guitars. the sound of them a swirling desert night sky under which songs call to arms multiple voices that long to be freed from the contraints of song. to be re-blooded in a frenzy of hard hitting drums and bass. all the while set against a wild array of compressed overtones that jangle by the hand of Kelly's inversly delicate touch.

In The Cairo Gang's previous efforts The Corner Man and the Bonnie 'Prince' Billy collaboration The Wondershow of the World, Kelly displayed a heaviness in subtlety. The songs laboured over and performed so that the fire and rage were things to play in tandem with, as a pranaic exercise even. the result is audience for a certain type of in-tuneness, that although powerful and realized, nurture both the playing and the fire and the rage... this can be a dangerous place. this leads to Tiny Rebels

Recorded in a week, it is an epiphany of sorts. it is the boiling point that which Kelly surrendered to in one sense, but obliterated in another. the songs are empowering leaps of faith:  "Say what you want, babe. dont just sit and listen to what you are told. you've got what it takes.
Lord knows the only way that can suit you well."
And from that leap they fall at a speed..

The sound of this record is what distinguishes it the most from previous works. Each song has the same instrumentation. two electric 12-string guitars, bass, and drums, with many voices often double tracked exciting a gorgeous spring reverberation and cut fiercely onto quarter inch tape. always in the red and fighting for space, the layers are deeply compressed and pulsating, creating an un-ease that fluctuates as if the listener is in a vacuum, pushing and pulling. or a wave pool. when cranked, it sounds as if there is music happening beyond the music. in the abstraction of the guitar sound. in the spacial irrecognition of the tape and reverb. the non-presence of the drums.. the jagged tremoloes.. The Cairo Gang has armed itself well on this record. turn it up loud and let it wash over you like an ocean.

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