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OFFICE Release 'A Night At The Ritz' Over the past two years, five-piece OFFICE has become one of the most popular bands in their hometown of Chicago: picking up raves all over the newstands and airwaves for their insatiably catchy indie pop and attractive boy-girl melodies, selling out all of their hometown shows and even playing the Q101 Stage at 2006's Lollapalooza.
During the Summer of 2006, the band caught the ear of Scratchie Records owners James Iha and Adam Schlesinger, and the heads of parent company New Line Records, and by November, OFFICE had signed a record deal. Their label debut, A NIGHT AT THE RITZ, due out this Fall, has already been touted as "One of 2007's most joyous albums...A sunshine-bright batch of glam-pop confections" by SPIN Magazine.
A NIGHT AT THE RITZ will be available in stores September 25th, 2007. Keep an eye out for OFFICE on tour this Fall!
OFFICE Tour Dates Just Announced
The Chicago-based rockers will hit the road this December, stopping into cities like Denver, Los Angeles, Portland, and Seattle before capping with a show in their hometown. Next, the band will break for the holiday season then return to the stage Jan. 12 alongside fellow Windy City resident Common for a benefit gig aiding the Chicago Youth Owning Their Future, a foundation aiming to raise money and awareness for the National Foundation for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE) and the Common Ground Foundation.
Click here to view all dates.
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Robbers on High Street - Grand Animals - Available Now!
"My favorite records are mood-altering," says Robbers on High Street frontman and songwriter Ben Trokan, "albums like the Kinks' Village Green Preservation Society, where you put it on and get so caught up in the songs that you immediately feel calm and happy. If we can have that kind of effect on people, that would be great."
As with Ray Davies' classic 1968 homage to English hamlet life, Grand Animals, the ambitious new album from New York City trio Robbers on High Street, is a wry, literate pop affair filled with oddball characters (a livery cab driver in "Keys to the Century," a small-time crook in "Crown Victoria," and a young boy who crashes his bike in "The Ramp") whose stories are told through bright, music hall melodies that recall the best of '60s British guitar pop and '70s AM radio rock. Laced with piano, strings, and horns (when's the last time you heard a tuba on a rock record?), the songs, which also flirt with unconventional rhythms (the bossa nova-esque "Your Phantom Walks The Hall" and the waltzing "Guard At Your Heel"), are playful, yet sophisticated, and often darkly funny, with tales of dead relatives ("Across Your Knee"), questionable fatherly advice ("Kick 'Em In the Shins"), and teenage newlyweds living in exit towns off the highway ("Married Young"). "I guess I find it easier to write about other people, rather than myself," Trokan says.
To get the musically textured sound they were seeking, the band turned to Daniele Luppi, a young Italian composer who arranged the strings on Gnarls Barkley's St. Elsewhere and John Legend's Once Again. He was an unusual choice, because Luppi, who grew up enamored of '60s and '70s Roman film soundtracks, had never produced a rock band before. "We were excited to work with him because I thought, 'Now we can get really orchestral because we have this guy with so much experience,'" Trokan says. "And Daniele was thinking, 'I'm working with a rock band, I can get this done in two takes.' So it was kind of a battle at first, but in the end I'm glad things didn't totally go my way because he helped us clear out a lot of space so you can really hear the melodies and catch the chord changes."
The album's'70s AM radio vibe is a different approach than the one Robbers took on their previous album, 2005's critically lauded Tree City, which Alternative Press praised for its "heart-on-sleeve pop that straddles the line between John Lennon's 'Imagine' and the Rolling Stones 'Sympathy For the Devil'." Filter called it "a sonically charged rollercoaster ride of infectious tunes over swaggering rhythms, boasting bold songwriting and myriad melodic gems.
The success of Tree City, with its nuanced observations about urban paranoia, led to high-profile tours with Hot Hot Heat, Brendan Benson, Gomez, The Dears, and Fountains of Wayne, whose co-founder, Adam Schlesinger, along with former Smashing Pumpkins guitarist James Iha, signed the band to their label, Scratchie/New Line Records, in 2003. Robbers first release for the label was an EP, Fine Lines, but the band's roots stretch back to Trokan and guitarist Steve Mercado's preteen years growing up in suburban Poughkeepsie, New York, where the two bonded over a love of Led Zeppelin and Cream. "But we couldn't write stuff like that because we'd listened to too much Beatles as kids," says Trokan, a multi-instrumentalist who also plays drums on Grand Animals. "My first step with song-writing is to impress Steve, which is harder than you'd think. If he likes it, I'm pretty sure it's going to be good." Bassist Morgan King joined Robbers before the release of Tree City and toured with them over the subsequent months, making his first appearance in the studio on the new album. "Having Morgan around has really changed the band," Trokan says. "He's such a good musician. He can play horns and get around on piano and guitar; I feel like we can do anything now."
That musical freedom is clearly evident on Grand Animals, which displays a stylistic versatility and inventiveness that is rare in young pop bands these days. "I like to challenge myself," Trokan says. "It was never our intention to keep making the same record. I think this album is a step forward in terms of the songwriting -- it's more refined. It's definitely not something I could have done if we hadn't made Tree City." He pauses for a moment and laughs. "I can't wait to do the next one!"
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Midnight Movies - Lion The Girl, Released April 14th
The sound of Midnight Movies conjures a certain Los Angeles - but it's no sun-drenched, glamorized metropolis. This is a decidedly noir L.A., replete with mystery, desire and yearning. On Lion the Girl (New Line), their second full-length release, the band explores haunting new vistas and back alleys of the soul, expanding the reach of their acclaimed "psychedelic pop" with an expanded lineup and more expansive songwriting.
Gena Olivier's elegant, beguiling vocals and Larry Schemel's buzzingly urgent guitar lines are, as ever, prominent sonic elements. But two new members, bassist Ryan Wood and drummer Sandra Vu, add considerably to the outfit's musical reach.
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Albert Hammond, Jr. Releases 'Yours To Keep' on March 6th
Albert Hammond, Jr. has released a solo album entitled "Yours To Keep" in the U.K., Europe & Japan through Rough Trade Records in October 2006. It will be released on Scratchie/New Line Records in the U.S. on March 6, 2007, and in Canada on Red Ink Records on the same date.
"Yours To Keep" was recorded at New York's Electric Lady Studios, LoHo Studios, and The Cabin In The City with Hammond, Jr. as guitarist and vocalist together with Josh Lattanzi on bass and Matt Romano on drums.
That basic trio has been augmented on various tracks by Julian Casablancas, Jody Porter (Fountains of Wayne), Ben Kweller, Sean Lennon, Chris Feinstein, Mikki James, Sammy James Jr. (The Mooney Suzuki) and Ryan Gentles.
The album was produced by Greg Lattimer who first came to attention as vocalist with New York's Thin Lizard Dawn in the late-nineties. The album comes in addition to Albert's role in The Strokes - he is not leaving the band.
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