Website/Radio/Shareware/ATCs/Mini-Comics

What a headache I’m having with the website.  Who knew a linux subsite would be case sensitive?  Well, I know now.

More problems with the navigation bar when viewed in a non-expanded Internet Explorer window.  So I had to combine the about/faq/contact into one spot.  I feel like it still works okay as far as navigation time.

Found about 40 new radio stations for the Silber opt-in list.  I’ll still have to get their contact info.  I need more hours in my days.

Got out this week’s follow-up emails for the Carta & Sarah June.

So the software I got to manage my mailing list that is supposed to be shareware with a free limited version updated itself saying I had to purchase it to continue using it.  Well, I like the software & it functions so I thought, “Sure, I’ll pay them $30, it’s the right thing to do.”  So I go to pay for it & it’s 100 Euros!  Which kinda pissed me off since it seems like a lot of money & they’re advertising as being free.  So I went ahead & got a hack of it.  I would still be willing to pay them $25.  I still feel bad about it.

Got my first personal ATC drawn for the Silber ATC project.  So I’m closer to getting that project complete.

Wrote the rough drafts for Lost Kisses & Ultimate Lost Kisses for the mini-comic sampler.

That’s today, more tomorrow.

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Recent Reviews – Aarktica, Carta, Sarah June, Remora, Northern Valentine

AARKTICA: IN SEA REMIXED
Nuova produzione in edizione limitata quest’anno per il newyorkese John DeRosa, alias Aarktica, con il suo “In Sea Remixes”: rivisitazione dell’ultimo progetto “In Sea” al fianco della Silber Records. Una musicalità speciale quella di Aarktica, onde ed oscillazioni sonore sono l’impasto musicale preferito dall’artista americano; nel 1999 la perdita dell’udito da un orecchio ha colpito la sua sensibilità musicale, con la collaborazione occasionale di alcuni autori, ha elaborato un percorso artistico differente e di un certo impatto.
Ecco allora la rivisitazione da parte di alcuni artisti di “In Sea Remixes”, diretta ad attuare un esperimento a più mani, infatti tra i partecipanti troviamo Rameses III, Summer Cats, Mason Jones, Yellow6, Keith Canisius, James Duncan, Remora, senza dimenticare il lavoro sulla cover “Am I Demon” di Danzing, grazie al supporto di Declining Winter, Pan (of Suckers) e Landing. Il risultato è una grande atmosfera creata appunto dalle quattordici personali interpretazioni, da un Drone Ambient ad un profondo beat diretto alla Dance interrotto da basi vocali a tratti un pò Boards Of Canada. Emblematici il brano d’apertura “I Am” con le sue sonorità glaciali; “Hollow Earth Theory” con la sua atmosfera bucolica dove il suono della natura trova ampio spazio d’espressione, “Young Light” con una melodia eterea avvolta in un canto sensuale e “Corpse Reviver No.2″ all’ascolto di una nenia, quasi inquietante, che si fa strada arricchita da elementi elettronici.
Un grande lavoro d’equipe quello sperimentato da John DeRosa, il quale ha diretto con nobile maestria la produzione del progetto innalzando al meglio la sua multiforme intensità.
~ Alone Music

All’uscita di un album ci si può aspettare la pubblicazione di remix di varia estrazione, sia come sfogo dell’estro dell’artista sia come arricchimento delle canzoni con suoni nuovi.
In questa circostanza, non tanto tempo fa, uscì “In Sea” del collettivo musicale Aarktica, una graziosa composizione di toni tenui e melodici a cui, di logica, dovrebbero far seguito remix dai caratteri rivoluzionari. Ma non è così.
Sulla falsa riga del primo i toni si mantengono monotonamente uguali a parte qualche traccia più jazz o minimalmente più elettronica: insomma, si tratta del gemello eterozigote del primo album: a tratti distinguibili ma terribilmente simile.
~ Loud Vision

CARTA: AN INDEX OF BIRDS
Last, and most definitely not least, is ‘Index Of Birds’ (Silber, February 16) from San Franciscans Carta, the long awaited follow up to ‘Glass Bottomed Boat’ which totally rocked our world back in 2005. ‘Index OF Birds’ is more of the same, but that’s in no way a bad thing. It is utterly luscious, gorgeous strings back beautifully crafted melodies and all are accompanied by wonderfully laconic, understated vocals. ‘Building Bridges’ drifts in like the suggestion of a breeze but before you know it it has wormed it’s way in to your head and you find yourself humming it for days. The catatonically epic ‘Descension’ is another high point, a Slowdive like an excursion in to the dark depths of the soul beautifully accompanied by Lorealle Bishop’s heartbreaking voice. In all, a magnificent record.
~ Dan Salter, Echoes And Dust

Sounds of an out-of-print classic that is very much available. Gorgeous slowcore/post-rock album with its roots firmly planted in forgotten nineties subgenres languishing on used CD shelves somewhere in the midwest.
I can understand the obsession with vinyl. On a nice pair of speakers the music really does sound warmer and richer, the artwork on a nice gatefold record is something worth cherishing forever (Crawf showed me the Torche’s Meanderthal LP… AMAZING!), and the act of purchasing and owning a tangible recreation of an album lives up to the hype spun by independent record stores. I, on the other hand, do not have a record collection. Not because of a conscious choice, I just never got around to dropping the money on a nice turntable and speakers. I do own three records to date, Neil Young’s Everyone Knows This is Nowhere (a wedding present), Thursday/Envy Split EP (don’t judge me, released on Temporary Residence, limited edition), and a Woody Allen stand-up album I bought at a thrift store in Idaho (don’t ask me why). What I do have is a pretty rad CD collection. I am a CD advocate, for many reasons. It was the medium of my generation, the artists who adapted could do wonders with the mini format (The Magnetic Fields 69 Songs Box Set!? Get outta here!), and of course with the relatively cheaper format of releasing albums on CD guaranteed a bunch of crazy crap would eventually be released (although the LP owns the title of worst album covers. Nineties graphic artists just got cheap and lazy)
What I’m getting at here is that I can’t divorce some great records with the way I bought them, from dusty (inexplicably sticky) racks of used cds in the dank basements of record stores and pennies on the dollar for garage sale steals. These have been my most treasured possessions, even though they aren’t on vinyl. After listening to Carta’s An Index of Birds I can imagine this album being one of those finds. Everything from the creepy severed doll head album cover to the subdued color pallate, this is one of those albums I can see myself thinking “this looks intriguing”, buying it for 4 $, brining it home and being blown away. So, if you don’t find it in a dusty corner of a record store, consider yourself luck you found it here, on a dusty little corner of the blogosphere. Released on Silber Records, which has never let me down, An Index of Birds is a hushed, fragile, mostly instrumental record that marries charming ambient pieces centered on looped acoustic instrumentation with the decided post-rock march towards a climactic end. Carta take the prettiest moments of Low, the downcast shuffling rhythm section of unsung slowcore heroes Spokane, and the maritime steadiness of Unwed Sailor and processes them through the post-classical sensibilities of Rachel’s or this years amazing Slow Six. Gorgeous stuff, granted some of the more ambient tracks feel like segues, Carta knows how to write songs. Instrumental song-songs that have a purpose, direction, and determined end in sight. Although used sparingly, Carta uses vocals to counterpoint the general luminescence of their recording as a whole. The imagery on “Small Lights” creeped me out a little to tell the truth, and while “loud” isn’t beyond my list of adjectives, “Back To Nature” and “The Late Alfred M” do not hold anything back when voicing disappointment or near-threatening visceral song writing. The female vocals on “Descension” courtesy of Lorealle Bishop, posses the smoky, breathy emoting of Ida’s Elizabeth Mitchell. A standout moment on the album.
An Index of Birds, is a rare find these days, nostalgic but wholly original. A period piece of a faceless generation. A lovingly crafted musical statement. Silber Records, you’re doing it right.
~ Ryan Hall, Tome to the Weather Macine

Perdu de vue The Glass Bottom Boat paru en 2007 (mais enregistré en 2005), Carta revient sous un tout autre jour. Des années à composer et enregistrer dans leur coin, un line-up complètement remanié – finalement seul Kyle Monday, fondateur du projet, est encore présent -, les points cardinaux de Carta ont complètement changé. Si le groupe suivait l’étoile du berger Bark Psychosis en offrant de belles plages instrumentales vaporeuses empreintes tout d’un sentiment de mélancolie bleuté, An Index Of Birds suit un parcours bien plus alambiqué, avec des changements de caps, suivant des détours sur des chemins cahoteux pour flâner et des portions bien plus roulantes où les paysages défilent comme les idées dans la tête, voire une plongée claustrophobe dans la circulation d’une mégapole. On n’imaginait pas la bande de Kyle Monday capable de délivrer un morceau aussi noisy et percutant que Sidereal, de se heurter délibérém
ent à un mur du son sur The Likeness Is Undeniable ou carrément de foncer à tombeau ouvert (Back To Nature, instrumental frontal et obstiné). Ailleurs, les Américains distillent des chansons bien plus apaisées (Building Bridges) ou des instrumentaux cotonneux (le très “Hood-esque” Santander). Sous-titré You’ve Going Home In An Ambulance ( !!) laisse place aux échanges vocaux, à un traitement électronique discret, tantôt sur un ton dramatique et affecté, tantôt serein et onirique (comme l’odyssée de 11 minutes, Descension qui rappelle L’Altra ou The Halifax Pier). Entre ambiant, shoegaze, new-wave et post-rock, ce deuxième album frôle souvent l’excellence, mais ne laisse pas d’autre choix sur la longueur (presque 70 minutes !!) que de se laisser transporter au gré des humeurs du groupe, au risque de perdre l’auditeur en chemin.
~ Denis Frelat, Autres Directions

SARAH JUNE: IN BLACK ROBES
Come ogni Sabato passo a svuotare la casella postale di Ultrasonica e come ogni Sabato mi ritrovo nel viaggio di ritorno verso casa con qualcosa di nuovo da ascoltare.
Pesco dal mucchio e il primo cd che salta fuori è questo ‘In Black Robes’ di Sarah June, direttamente da Detroit. Play.
Fin dai primi sospiri e dalle prime note di ‘Cowboy’ si avverte una certa intimità, solo chitarra e voce per questo inizio che sa di piccolo club dove immagino di vederla seduta centro palco con il suo strumento e la sua voce volutamente sottile, quasi adolescenziale molto simile a quella di Allison Shaw dei Cranes. Candidamente malinconiche le note su cui poggiano i testi sono affascinanti e struggenti, può non piacere come viene usata la voce, gli amici a cui ho fatto sentire questo disco hanno storto un pò il naso… ma per me è la peculiarità che fa grande le sue composizioni, in questo folk che vira delicatamente verso una decadenza gotica (nella quale lei stessa si riconosce nelle note biografiche) riesco a sentire la genuinità e la spontaneità delle mani sullo strumento, il picking a volte ‘sporco’ sulle corde in una commistione di influenze derivate dal Jazz e dal Blues anche quando in sordina entra il contrabbasso ad incidere sulla ritmica del pezzo.
Una serie di intimi racconti, sussurrati che mi fanno venir voglia di tirar fuori dall’archivio i vecchi ‘Dogs’ di Nina Nastasia e le ‘Valli soleggiate’ di Kendra Smith altre due belle voci che in qualche modo si legano al percorso di Sarah June, tra ‘Cowboy’ in cerca di una storia in cui credere e ossute figure che ci ricordano che qui siamo solo di passaggio (molto gotico).
Personalmente è un disco che mi piace, che trovo piacevole ad ascolti successivi (senza esagerare) e che nonostante la marcata malinconia riesce a trasmettermi un senso di pace.
~ Ultrasonica

MOODRING: SCARED OF FERRET
The easy thing to write about Moodring’s new album “Scared Of Ferret“, is that it’s a side project of two Rollerball members – Mae Starr (Vocals, Keyboards) and Monte Trent Allen (Bass, percussion). Rollerball is by far one of my favourite experimental groups, and it’s a band that releases one great album after another. It’s really hard to understand how they manage to control these bursts of ideas and make a solid album out of them.
That’s why Scared is no surprise with its quality. But that was the easy part. Now you try to go ahead and describe this truly brilliant album, consists of free jazz extravaganza, with spooky keyboard layers, tribal gatherings, doomy psychedelia and an overall Sun Ra cloud hovering above. Wait, I just did.
But that’s not enough, coz Moodring’s album is much more then a random collection of under the influence tracks, happend to be found in an album. First, I should say it’s a daring addition to the already daring catalog of the fantastic North-Carolina label Silber Records. For those who misseed them so far, make sure you’ll go to their homepage and click on as many audio streamed files as you can.
Second, It’s worth pointing out, that although it’s a rather bizzare album, it doesn’t lose its focus and keeps the listener hooked to the captivating collection of abstract ideas and colors, gathered together in an album, by these two Rollerball musicians, joined by Jesse Stevens and Michael Barun Hamilton. Mae Starr’s voice is always haunting, scary at times, and constantly thrilling. She has the ability to put shivers down my neck as a last audiophilic supper before the too-early grave. The sound textures are vary from free jazz, esoterica, Can-style Groove, Gong-style textures, threatning keyboard arrangments and psychedelic horror film soundtracks. If Alejandro Jodorowski was to make another movie in 2010, it would be a terrific choice to take Sacred as the perfect soundtrack for it.
I’m a sucker for bedroom recordings, especially when it sounds like it was done with zero efforts and a constant joy of creation and band dynamics. This is no exception. Rollerball is around for too long and thus they understand how to make the home audio equipment work for you.
This a truly bizzare album. It’s dark yet not too heavy, it’s simple but then again has complex arrangemtns, it’s solid but each track is a master’s work. The many conflicts ain Moodring’s albums, like many Rollerball albuims, is what makes this band so special and this album to a delightful piece of work.
~ Small Town Romance

AARKTICA: IN SEA
“In Sea” ist eine Hommage an Terry Rileys “In C” und gleichzeitig auch der Verweis auf die ambientigen Kältelandschaften, die Jon DeRosa in wunderbare Gitarrenläufe packt und nebenbei immer wieder mit zuckerwattigen Shoegaze-Vocals versieht. Fabulöser Abschluss auch mit Danzigs “Am I Demon?”.
~ Daniel Krčál, Rokko’s Adventures

VLOR: SIX-WINGED
Vlor is a compilation of instrumentals sent around via snail mail to other musicians in the attempt to create a “chain-mail” approach to music. It’s interesting. Tracks drift in and out, neither ending too soon or wearing out their welcome.  Six-Winged has an ethereal quality, and its minimalism and experimentation meet to create a hybrid between post-rock and symphonics to create something genuine. The experiment is successful in its attempt to meld ambience, shoegaze, and soft electronics, but the record never really picks up. The work here is promising, but one might feel better inclined to pick up something less self-involved. Keep an eye out for them though, there are some great moments on this record.
~ Nick Gergesha, Hearwax

REMORA: DERIVATIVE
So, this one is interesting. Remora (Brian John Mitchell) has come up with an idea that is now committed to record on Derivative: play a short line from someone else’s song, loop it, and play over top of it. Thus the album name. Some of the derived segments you’ll recognize, some you probably won’t, but that’s OK. The music doesn’t depend on the samples as much as it builds on and departs from them.
“All Our Times Have Come” takes the signature melody from Blue Oyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear the Reaper” and opens with it. It’s played so slowly that you might mistake it for an accidental choice of notes if you didn’t get the memo on the album’s theme. (Seems also that Remora’s song titles come from the lyrics of the songs whose melodies have been appropriated.) After the intro, though, the song meanders way out into Flying Saucer Attack’s territory: droning, phased guitar chords. That’s how the album works generally. There are no percussive elements, save those created from sampled loops of guitar. The playing is expansive and modal. There’s a lot of reverb going on. Massive compression and sustain, too. The notes and chords go on forever.
Other sampled bits have reportedly been taken from songs by Pere Ubu, Journey, and Hefner, but you’d have to pay close attention to pick them out. There’s the sharp, repetitive melody that begins “Love Corrupt” that sounds vaguely familiar and the slow motion build of “Death Planes.” The latter m
ight be from Journey? Not sure… The most recognizable melody to fans of early post-punk will be “What Did You See There?” — which cribs the bassline from Joy Division’s awesome “Wilderness.”
Everything on Derivative gets spacey and spaced out, smeared against its own backdrop until the notes and chords set up point and counterpoint waves of sound. From cut to cut the songs don’t sound terribly different from one another. You’d have to take some time with the record to get its full depth. The point here isn’t to come away humming these tunes but rather to let the sounds resonate around you until they slowly fade away (“Highway Run”). Whatever drugs Blue Oyster Cult was into, I’m sure they didn’t imagine a re-working of their big hit to be so much like an opium dream.
~ David Smith, Delusions of Adequacy

NORTHERN VALENTINE: THE DISTANCE BRINGS US CLOSER
The booklet for The Distance Brings Us Closer is full of icy blue shots of horizons with white clouded skies & orange tinted sunsets, a souvenir from the band’s visit to Iceland last year; & most of the sounds found within it can be described just like that, with a frozen beauty emanating from the speakers as one catches the wind of a glacial-paced snail over a snowed-in neach a few feet from your feet as the lazy sun barely lights the world around you to reveal a blue that can remind you of being deep into the ocean except you’re in the surface drowning in oxygen yet leaving breathlessly over the gourgeousness of such conditions.  The husband & wife tag team plus others decided to field record their latest hike in soundscapes with a stereo machine, live in the studio with barely a theme discussed among the practitioners to develop the five slowly evolving pieces that make up The Distance, but making everything being alive even if we’re talking about atmospheric rock that flows through like a cool arctic draft in the middle on the most demanding dry-as-shit desert summer; Northern Valentine keeps everything in sight, with eyes on their goal & focused on their telepathic improvisational skills, presenting tracks that hardly overstay their welcome like many a droning record does, & refuse to become air-conditioning wallpaper for the listeners by giving us enough personality to their formless, breezy sounds to make them stand out from so many instrumental bands that fight over who to bore next.  Northern Valentine don’t bother even showing up to the ring, they rather stay where they are & let their wintery tones connect them to the nature of it all, inviting listeners to their igloo; sharing aesthetically some with bands such as Windy & Carl, Labradford, & others from the Kranky stable, The Distance presents us a band who freshly displays a way of making instrumental music.
~ Marcos Hassan, Bad Acid

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more coding.

Okay, I think I finally got the navigational drop down menus to work in a way resembling my vision at www.silbermedia.com (just on the front page right now).  Do you think I should move them over the logo & such

I have probably spent entirely too long on working on the website.  I was working on it for about ten hours.  I still don’t know how to do certain things I want, but the website is getting where it should’ve been ten years ago.

Gotta sleep.

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Advertising/Russian Signing/Help

The new issue of Razorcake is out with a pretty slanderous review of the Lost Kisses DVD.  I am confused by people not finding it funny.  But I guess that’s okay.

Did a bunch of research today in some Japanese review markets & record stores & that of course led back around to some more american blogs to add to my service list.

While I was visiting the Japanese sites I was trying to figure out how physical distribution of music has survived in Japan as it seems like they’d be ahead of us on the shift to digital music as they are more technically savvy & have less physical space to hold a music collection in general.  Anyone know much about this?  I couldn’t find any insightful articles on the state of music downloading in Japan.

Designed the ads for Delusions of Adequacy, Brainwashed, & Foxy Digitalis.  I know the adds probably won’t pay for themselves, but I like to think with as cheap as they are it’s a possibility.

I was talking to Jeremy Bennett (Sorry Welcome) a bit about the recent shift a lot of sites seem to have from soliciting ads to just using Google Adsense & how people are giving Google 100% ad placement through their site for $15 a month.  I wonder if these folks would give me 100% visibility on their site for such a low price?  Hard to say I suppose.  But I probably should just ask a site doing that “What can I get for $10?” if/when they review a Silber release.

I think I should mention one of the other upcoming people I’ll be working with at Silber.  Straight out of Russia – Thorn1.

I made a quick to do list & ended up with a couple of hundred hours of work.  While the majority of it is stuff only I can do for the label, some of it could be done by other folks if anyone has some spare internet time.

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Video Research

I spent the day going through the list of 100 video outlets that were allegedly targeted for the Vlor video.  I sometimes really don’t understand promotional people.  Of the hundred about 40 either no longer existed or were grossly inappropriate (& I’m assuming you think of metal as an appropriate outlet, but not hip-hop/rap).  So is it just laziness or a way to impress people with the list?  I mean, I suppose I could try to get someone to hire me to send 700 discs out to radio for promotion, but after 300 you are hitting some really useless places as far as the actual possibility of getting played.  I only send to 100 or so usually.  Anyway, looking at the video stuff is interesting because I guess one of the hip things right now is music videos piped in to businesses & there are a bunch of little companies doing this.  I guess I’ll know in a week or two if I wasted my whole day when I launch the promo for the stuff & find out if anyone has used it.  It still seems like the kind of thing to help raise Silber visibility.  To keep moving on like a juggernaut fueled by my personal desire to make it work.  Tomorrow I plan on doing some research for music video oriented playlists & channels on YouTube.  I think the research on video stuff is kinda fun & interesting in the same way I found doing radio research interesting from 1999-2001.  It makes me want to make music videos for sure.  & Remora’s theme would be “my videos are boring like my music.”  There should be a minimum of three videos associated with Mecha once it is ready to happen.  I probably should hire some hot girl to do a video for “Stripper Lessons” (a song based on the John O’Brien novel), but it seems kind of exploitive & creepy.  I’m trying to wrap my head around the ideas of what I am personally capable of as far as making a music video that isn’t a waste of time from a creative standpoint.

Part of the push towards me doing more video promotion is the new Aarktica video.

While doing the video research I ran into a couple lists of indie radio stations that I need to cross reference with my own.  See if there’s anyone new to work with on the lists.

I stumbled across this site www.mysiteworth.net & supposedly silbermedia.com is worth almost $20,000.  It seems interesting.  I wonder who it’s worth that much to?

I noticed my stats seem a little down on Alexa, but I did some research on some other labels sites & they seemed to have had similarly significant drops.  Probably people freaking out & looking at healthcare & sports stuff in their spare time.

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Some Things Done & Heading to the Future

Got all my paperwork for the first quarter essentially done.  Just need to wait for a few days to pass so I can get it turned in.

More research work done today.  I’m hoping to get a bunch of music video based research done soon.

Talked to Sarah June today about the possibility of a promotional free EP.  There were a couple songs that got cut from the record due to stylistic differences from the flow of the record, so it should be pretty easy to make it happen.

I’m never sure at exactly what points to announce things on here when dealing with artists because sometimes things keep rolling further back & then don’t happen, but it looks like we’ll be working a bit with both Lotte Kestner & Irata in the near future.

I’m planning on putting together a compilation that will have a track from every Silber release (in general they’d probably be the same tracks that are used as samples on the Silber site).  I’m thinking about putting on tracks of me talking for some of the releases that didn’t happen telling why they didn’t happen (like the Efanxtria compilation & the live If Thousands EP).  What do you think?  Too hokey?

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JAM/France/Taxes/Remix

Got the art for the Just A Man promo comic.  I gotta hand it to Andrew White for getting comics done quickly.  If I had my act together he might be able to crank out 50 issues of Just A Man a year.

Did some research towards places in France to push Silber.

Made a big dent in doing my paperwork for my taxes.  It’s a little sad because 2008 & 2009 had about the same income, but there were a lot more expenses in 2009.  But I guess that’s true with a lot of businesses.  I have to get the paperwork done for the end of the first quarter as well.

Planning on getting a bunch of things done for adding the back catalog to the digital download store.  I sometimes hate the tedious work, but I have to keep in mind that if I’m going to continue to have a record label, I need to do things that aren’t the fun side of music.

It looks like I’m going to be doing a few more remixes in the fairly near future.  I’m starting to have fun doing that kind of thing.  It’s satisfying to have a completed thing ready over the course of a single day instead of the idea of doing an album & working on it for a year & maybe no one ever hears it anyway.

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In Late.

Fell asleep before writing this last night….

Got the print layout for Marked #2 done & printed out the first run.

Cleaned up the collaborative song I worked on & sent it off.  It’s one of those things where it’s not precise or perfect, but I’m never happy with my work in that regards.  It’s recorded at the proper BPM so I figure he can cut up my bits to make them perfect if he wants to.

I’ve been thinking of writing a whole Remora album in the style of “Nevada Smith.”  Assuming I ever get back to writing/recording finished products instead of just having 100 demos on my cell phone.

Got out this week’s follow-up emails for Sarah June & Carta.

I’ve been thinking about how a lot of reviewers don’t want to do digital downloads because they say the only pay they get for the review is what they get from selling the CD after they review it.  I wonder how they’d feel about me sending them the $4 they get paid for the disc & I save the $4 of sending it to them (manufacturing costs plus shipping).  On the one hand it feels shady, but on the other hand it makes sense & seems fair enough.  I sometimes wonder if having CDs in the used bin is a way to advertise or a way to say “nobody likes this.”

Recent Dream:
My nephew died & everyone in my family seemed to just be saying “it’s no big deal, it happens.” & I was walking around screaming, “He’s fucking dead!  It’s a big fucking deal!”

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Video Sadness & Work to Do.

So I heard back from the promo company for the Vlor video.  They need $2700 & while the break down of it is that $2700 is a completely fair price for their service (it includes adding closed captioning & putting it in the required formats & duplicating for 100 markets) I just can’t justify it.  Really sucks.  Reminds me of how tiny Silber really is.  Maybe if I’d kept my day day job & my day-trading had kept working out I could’ve personally eaten the loss, but as it is… just beyond my range of investment.

Had a problem with the website I actually solved on my own.  It was caused by letting a Twitter feed fill a table in Internet Explorer.  Now my page is a little clunky in IE, but better than a few days ago.

Did the first layout for Marked #2.  Still have to print it out & check it & do the layout for mass production.

I got my mom this time lapse camera thing to use with her plants (& that maybe I could borrow for weird video stuff) & its quality leaves a little to be desired.  First off it didn’t come with an SD card?  (But it did come with batteries which I suppose is equal value these days.)  Then it’s not intuitive to get to work & the instructions don’t address issues like “How do I get this to make videos instead of just still images?” (isn’t that the point of a time lapse camera?).  Then it looked like crap on the HD TV.  Granted I didn’t use it in the outdoor light it is designed to work in.  If I can right my own instruction book for it, then maybe it can make it as a functional gift.  I wasted way too much time working on that.

Finished up my research for the next MySpace marketing campaign.  About 7000 people I think would be fans of Silber who I’ll be mailing soon. Bella Union has a thousand more friends than Silber & I think I should be able to pass them for weird indie with the most MySpace friends.  Though I’m really not sure it helps anything at all.

Going to try to do some recording for a collaborative piece I was asked to do vocals for.  We’ll see if it works out.

Got some bits for trying to work on making my own acoustic based effect units, not sure when I’ll actually have time to do it.  Speaker into xylophone bar into contact mic & I don’t know what it’s sound quality will be.

Herad back from the guy drawing the Mecha comic that it’s almost finished.  It’s interesting because he asked for details to finish it up that I wouldn’t think of.  Like he wanted the main character’s name & if you read anything I write, main characters never have names.  Why?  Because names disassociate you from identifying with a character.  At least that’s my theory.

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Sarah June Reviews

Here’s some recent Sarah June reviews:

Gothic-folk singer-songwriter Sarah June’s debut album In Black Robes can be a bit unsettling on the first listen. Her child-like voice, reminiscent of Johanna Newsom or Cranes’ Alison Shaw, and accompanied solely by acoustic guitar sounds ghostly, haunted and decidedly eerie. Get past that however and you discover beautifully crafted songs steeped in the folk and blues tradition. ‘Cowboy’, ‘Bluesy Melody’ and ‘Brand Of Bitterness’ have a jazzy feel to them while ‘Judgment Day’ (“The hooded man with the bony hand / he pointed to me one day”) and ‘The Reaper’ have that scary messin’-with-the-devil storyline of the old blues classics. ‘From My Window High’, Paper Lantern and ‘In Your Chevrolet’ are delightfully pure folk, June’s voice transporting the songs along while adding a distinctive and original element often missing in tradition folk fare. In Black Robes is a lovely debut record, unusual and unsettling and very enjoyable, with 13 distinctive tunes that should appeal to adventurous folkies and indie listeners alike.
~ The Music Fix

Sure the songs she writes are filled with themes of death, loneliness, and sadness, but Sarah Rose sings like an angel (a baby angel) and plays guitar with fantastic musicianship. The songs may be simple, but their lyrics are fascinating (4 is a sweet, sad love song, while 2, 5, and 6 deal with death, which June sees as “home”), and her versatility as a guitarist is admirable (alternating between folk, jazz, and blues). This is a must-play for The Suicide Watch, as well as for many others who will appreciate this talented musician.
~ Pax Humana, KFJC

Charles Schneider interviewed Sarah June for Dream #9, and I favorably reviewed her debut album This Is My Letter to the World (Hand-Eye 2008), I’m happy to report that her sophomore effort is easily up to the standards of her first. Still all created by Sarah alone in her apartment, armed with her distinctive voice and usually a guitar. One of the many standout songs is her gorgeous contribution to Dream #9’s CD, the sublimely spooky The Reaper, (a fact which is curiously not mentioned). Brand of Bitterness is beatnik jazzy coolness, and would sound perfect in a late night club. Her remarkable almost childlike voice recalls Julee Cruise, Joanna Newsom and Alison Shaw of Cranes. This includes a gorgeous rendition of Sally Go ‘Round Roses.
~ George Parsons, Dream Magazine

This is one pleasantly surprising CD to come out of the normally experimental/industrial/agitpop music to come from Silber Media, but for some reason, Sarah June made it on to the Silber label and is hence, ready and waiting for your attention.
Listening to it is pure bliss. It’s pretty much an almost “pizzicato” sound to it, a lot of finger picking with strong fingers, as well as just good picking all over; that and Sarah June singing in that sing-song, little girl pitch of hers, which is so beautiful sounding as well as damn cute it just can’t be ignored. I think that the clean, crisp acoustic guitar complements the perfectly pitched but precious and brittle voice, that of Sarah June.
The music is an ominous, darkly mirrored silhouette after silhouette of the coming of something. What is what the listener must find out for themselves, by personalizing it the listener can make it their own in that way.
Some stand-outs include: “Judgment Day”, “The Reaper” and the haunting, echoing “Brand of Bitterness”, one that features some fine work on the stand-up bass-fiddle and “Motown” – her “love letter” to Detroit, MI.
One other cut which really shows off some more of that great acoustic guitar work is the penultimate song, “Fencepost”. The final cut, “’Til You Hit the Pavement” is one of the first times in years that I’ve seen the abbreviation for the word “until” written correctly, as ‘TIL not TILL, which is a noun, meaning a drawer, as in a cash drawer in a cash register. It’s also a lovely, reflective song filled, not with anger or sadness but more of a “que sera sera” kind of attitude.
~ Kent Manthie, Reviewer Magazine

Sarah June is a product of her environment growing up. As a child in the urban wasteland of Detroit, June was surrounded by a city on the decline. Like any flower that grows up in the cracks of the street, in order to survive as an artist Sarah June needed to transplant herself. Chicago came first, but Sarah June ultimately settled in San Francisco. With a subtly intricate acoustic guitar style and a voice that will make you think she’s a young, uncertain child, June spins the sort of webs in song that grow from a childhood spent in a land where hope is a memory. Sarah June’s sophomore album, In Black Robes finds the artist embracing her voice as a songwriter and opening up to the world as unfurling to the morning sunlight.
In Black Robes opens with “Cowboy”, a song that’s more fulfilling musically than lyrically. It’s an odd start, but befitting of what is to come. “Crossbones In Your Eyes” is exceedingly odd lyrically, but there’s something magnetic about the song. You’ll find yourself revisiting this one based on an elusive and obscure beauty that hides within. One of the highlights of the album is “From My Window High”, a love song written from afar to multiple people. The song is very unusual, combining a pining vulnerability with a genteel creep factor that’s ultimately harmless. Sarah June gets inventive on “Bluesy Melody”, a nice change of pace from the more introspective material that haunts In Black Robes.
Sarah June shows a fine touch for imagery on “Paper Lantern”, an angst-filled tune that queries the future for answers that will only come in time. “In Your Chevrolet” seems like it might connect with “Crossbones In Your Eyes”, and it’s difficult to tell whether the song is full of subtle innuendo or just atypical imagery. The stark harmonies of the song are lovely and disturbing all at once. “Motown” finds Sarah June offering words of encouragement to her hometown. Closing out with “‘Til You Hit The Pavement”, Sarah June goes out with a bit of attitude in a powerful tune that will leave you with a strong impression of the artist.
In Black Robes has a number of levels of meaning. Depending on your age, perspective and tastes it’s going to appeal to different people in different ways for different reasons. The juxtaposition of a world-weary world view with Goth tastes and a vulnerably sweet, child-like voice is interesting enough to pull most listeners in for at least a few songs. Sarah Junes misses once in a while, but in general the songwriting is quite strong. In Black Robes was recorded entirely solo in Sarah June’s apartment, and the stark simplicity and isolated feel of the recording lends it significant power. Whatever your final opinion, In Black Robes and Sarah June will make a distinct impression on you.
~ Wildy’s World

Sarah June’s sophomore album, In Black Robes, is a breathy, soul-plucking follow-up to her 2008 debut entitled This is My Letter to the World. We’re going to go whole hog and just say it – we love this album. No objections there. Our only objection is the idea that in one way or another this is considered to be a “goth” album. Perhaps it’s us, but the closest thing to goth imagery we’re seeing is June herself in press shots – all of which is fitting of who she is, but not necessarily a reflection of her musical genre.
Quite thankfully, her goth-ness is not quite the selling point as Avril Lavigne’s “punk-ness”, but we digress. We’re actually getting more of a subdued ethereal rock with folk/Americana undertones and a bleary-eyed view of life. Sure, we are haunted by ghosts present, past, and future, brought to light by June’s signature harmonies in an at times otherwordly key. But all this does not a solely-goth album make. June’s style is much more than that, and whether or not she knows it, she owns it.
Of course, while that

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