Thursday, 3 January 2013

Goodbye 2012, Hello 2013


Happy New Year everyone, hope Christmas was as fun and rewarding for you as it was for Distorted Tapes! December was a busy month with two Christmas shows, the first Distorted Tapes t-shirt and the release of an extra-special download compilation featuring some of our favourite bands of 2012. If you missed any of these (where were you!?) you can catch up with them by doing the following:

Download the compilation, They're Flocking This Way, here (IT'S FREE!):


And if like me you love Jurassic Park-themed music things, why not pick up one of the sweet Jurassic Tapes shirts in the Distorted Tapes shop? They were screened by the wonderful Do Make Say Ink and they look beautiful even if I do say so myself. Don't believe me? See for yourself!

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE A SWEET SHIRT

Phew! Sexy isn't it? So before I finally draw a line under the excellent year that was 2012, here's a little video put together by Doug from Feral Goat Film, who documented our Festive All-Dayer at The Haygate on December 8th. He did a top job, and was real good of him to give up his time.


So what does 2013 have in store? Well, you'll have to wait and see. But let me give you a little hint... this Sunday prepare to hear a pretty big bit of news regarding the next release from a certain band from Wolverhampton. Excited doesn't cover it.

Until then, let me wish you all the best for 2013 - it's gonna be killer!

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

New Distro available now!

Youth Man - 'Youth' CDSelf-released, 2012

Punk as fuck and super-fresh newcomers to the Brum scene Youth Man have self-released their debut EP, 'Youth', and a bold statement of intent it is. A recent show left their frontwoman Kaila with a face full of blood. You've been warned.

Having already racked up some impressive support slots, including most recently playing with punk-rock supergroup Her Parents for Distorted Tapes, and with shows on the cards with the likes of Sauna Youth and The Bots the sky's the limit for this ambitious young three-piece.

Issued on vinyl-style CDs, in a sexy brown cardboard gatefold sleeve, with printed insert card, they really look the business. I've only got a few of these to share with the world, so get them whilst they're hot.




Bong Idle - 'Night of the Living Blunt' Cassette
Tape~stry, 2012

Formed earlier this year by three friends with a shared love of noise and narcotics, Bong Idle offer up 3 tracks of fuzzy, lo-fi surf 'n' roll straight outta Stoke-on-Trent.

Released on Tape~stry Records in October '12, Distorted Tapes has a few copies of this available through distro. As usual, once they're gone, I won't be getting any more.

Leo at Tape~stry has done a wonderful job: green cassettes with the full EP on both sides (because rewinding sucks), with fold-out inserts and limited to 50.

http://www.bongidle.co.uk

Order here: http://distortedtapes.bigcartel.com/product/bong-idle-night-of-the-living-blunt-cassette



Monday, 22 October 2012

DDT008 - Godard - 'Pizza Throwing' EP - Available Now!

Godard - 'Pizza Throwing' Cassette EP

1. Fountains
2. Stark
3. Sunday
4. Royalty

Distorted Tapes is proud to be teaming up with Don't Shoot the Messenger to bring you Godard's latest EP, Pizza Throwing. Hailing from the Isle of Wight, these South Coast pop-punkers have been catching eyes for their hard work and frankly ace songs. 50 copies - 25 green shells here with Distorted Tapes, and a further 25 orange shells with DSTM.


If you're a fan of Taking Back Sunday, Gnarwolves or Joyce Manor, and you like your emo with a pop kick you are going to love these guys.

We quickly sold out of our limited number of Don't Shoot the Messenger's fluorescent orange copies, so make sure you get a greenie before it's too late!

Includes download code, unleashing all 4 tracks as MP3s to listen to at your convenience!

Split release between Distorted Tapes & Don't Shoot the Messenger

Limited to 50 copies

DDT008



Friday, 19 October 2012

DDT007 - CAVES - 'Grunge on the Beach' - Available Now!

CAVES - 'Grunge on the Beach' 


1. Gold Beach
2. Rich Kids
3. Keanu Reeves 

Get your order in quick as this release will surely fly! CAVES are pretty new to the B-town scene, however they've already played some impressive shows, including supporting JAWS earlier this year. Lo-fi summer jams, FFO Surfer Blood, Beach House, Wavves et al. I hear they are big Nirvana fans too, so they get big thumbs up from Distorted Tapes.





Pressing info: Run of 50 cassettes, includes mp3 download code

Release Date: October 19th 2012

Order here: http://distortedtapes.bigcartel.com/product/caves-grunge-on-the-beach-pre-order



Saturday, 4 August 2012

DDT003 - Decadence in Berlin - 'Setbacks' - Available Now!


Greatest "hits"/live album from Decadence in Berlin, featuring all of their studio recordings plus a never before released live set from December 2009. The band have lovingly put this together to celebrate their reunion show at the Facts of Life & Distorted Tapes All-Dayer 2012 at The Haygate the very day it's released.

The cassettes feature a lovely fold-out sleeve with full lyrics, drawn by Robert Brown.

Pressing info - Run of 50 on pale blue cassette, includes download code, unleashing all 13 tracks as MP3s plus 2 additional exclusive tracks!

Release Date: August 4th 2012
Order now to avoid dissapointment, these won't be around long!

Monday, 2 July 2012

DDT005 - Lady Fortune - 'Brown Brogues & Plimsolls' EP - Pre-order now!



Lady Fortune - 'Brown Brogues & Plimsolls' EP Pre-order

 
Side A
1. Car Crash
2. International


Side B
3. Take It Back
4. You Know What You Do
5. Nylon






Distorted Tapes is stoked to be involved in the release of Lady Fortune's latest release, the stunning 'Brown Brogues & Plimsolls'. Featuring what is undoubtably some of their greatest material to date, the 10" will be out in early September and will be followed closely by a run of shows.

Pressing info - Run of 250 10" vinyl, includes mp3 download code

Release Date/Shipping: On or around September 3rd 2012

Check out the pre-order - first 50 orders will be shipped with exclusive lyric sheet and additional acoustic EP!

Monday, 25 June 2012

Distorted Tapes meets... Wrestling

Beyond the mat stage... Wrestling (L-R): Rich, Gareth and Andy 

On hearing Wrestling the last place you might expect them to come from is Wolverhampton. In fact, they have more in common with 90s emo-revivalists stateside than the landfill indie that their home-city usually tends to churn out. Y'know, the kind of bands that act like brit-pop never died. Please folks, regardless of what the NME tells you, it happened, get over it…. I digress. Yes, Wolvo, that’s exactly where they’re from.

One of the most exciting and, crucially, different acts currently plying their trade around the Midlands, the three-piece (comprised of Rich on guitar, Gareth on bass and Andy on drums) have already notched up some impressive gigs as well as releasing their debut EP, Wolf Town, on Man the Ramparts earlier this year. These guys have humour, passion and tunes, all wrapped up in a fuzzy lo-fi bundle that tugs at your ears and screams "Let's have a beer in the park!" It's hard not to smile with this trio on your stereo.

I went “beyond the mat” with the lads to find out how they came to find their sound, what’s in store for the future, as well as the all-important question… why Wrestling?!

For someone who has never heard Wrestling, how would you describe what you are all about?               

R: Fun! Foremost, we are about just having a laugh.  
A: If you’ve been to one of our shows you’ll know we don’t really take ourselves too seriously!
R: We know the band is never going to amount to very much or make any money, so we just want to have as much fun as possible while writing some sweet jams. We are all long-time friends and really enjoy playing and hanging out with each other and to me that is what being in a band is about – good times with good people!         
G: We play music that feels and sounds good to us. We're just 3 guys who enjoy jamming together and seeing what happens.
R: Sound-wise, we have been described as all sorts. I think my favourite one so far has been “you sound like Spy versus Spy... but not as good”! They are one of my all-time favourite bands so that was a real compliment for me.             
G: We're happy to be described as fun shouty party jams, or similar. We bring a fresh yet raw approach - for instance, we utilise a minimal setup, guitar, bass, drums. The drums themselves are stripped down, the guitars don't use distortion or any other effects allowing the bass to really get involved, and as for our vocal styles, none of us can really sing but we all go for it.
R: I suppose in a nutshell we are an 'emo' band, but we are very wary of using that term due to the negative connotations associated with the genre it eventually evolved into. We have all sorts of sounds going on in our music, from fast punky bits and twinkly instrumental sections to all out cathartic epic screamo jams.           
G: It's what I like most about being in this band, we're just raw and honest sounding.



How did you three meet, and why did you settle on the name Wrestling?

G: Richard and I go way back, high school and all that. We've been in numerous bands together including the legendary KRM, who were pretty much the greatest Wolf Town band of 2003.   
R: We have played in various bands on and off for around 8 or 9 years now. Our last band was a kind of screamo outfit that sounded like a cross between Yaphet Kotto and City of Caterpillar, but it never really went anywhere. After a few years of doing nothing, we decided to start something new and asked long-time friend Andy, to play drums!
G: I knew Andy from working on the bars of the Civic Halls about 4 years ago now, and he was also in a pretty sweet pop punk band I'd seen live so I knew he kicked ass on the kit. Rich and Andy did something together for a while a few years ago as well so Rich always had him in mind when we decided to get together and jam some ideas mid-2010. Andy joined us later that year once we had a few songs down and we took it from there.
R: We settled on the name Wrestling due to a mutual love of the amateur wrestling that takes place on a monthly basis at infamous Wolverhampton nightclub The Planet.
G: We didn't decide on the name for a long time but when we did it was basically when we realised the only thing we really did together, outside the practice room, was to go and watch the FCP dudes go at it
A: Sadler suggested it and it felt right. We all go down to watch the FCP boys wrestle
and we always have a right laugh.         
R: By naming the band after it, it again kinda reflects our desire to have fun and not take things too seriously.


Compared to other bands in the area you have a very different sound to your contemporaries. What have been your main influences as a band?

R: Sound-wise, I am really into the re-emergence of the whole 'Mid-West' thing that is happening in the US at the moment and to a lesser degree some bands over here. I grew up with all the original bands so that sound has always been with me and very prevalent in a lot of my song writing. I am also really into old screamo bands, like Saetia and Indian Summer etc., so I try to combine the intensity and honesty of those bands, with the clean sound that is present in a lot of the Mid-West-esque bands.
G: Personally I listen to all sorts of stuff, but we'd be here forever if you got me started! I'm into a lot of stuff right now, and strangely none of it sounds like Wrestling!
A: I feel we never really went out of our way to sound a certain way; we just started to jam and the sound of Wrestling happened. 
G: We never set out to emulate anyone… from the very beginning we would just jam riffs and ideas, we would do a lot of improv until we found something we liked. Some songs we've discarded along the way have had heavy post-rock elements, or they've been really slow and quite emotive, or just something that just wasn't really us, and at some point we found a sound that suited. We've even gone back and reworked songs to fit our sound now because we knew that even in our older stuff there was always at least one section or riff that we've liked and wanted to keep. We're all agreed that we didn't want to go the conventional song writing route, so you will rarely find a simple verse/chorus/verse,etc kind of structure to any of our songs. I like that we keep listeners on their toes, it keep things interesting! 
R: Lyrically there is the usual crap, like friends, relationships etc., but there are also a bunch of references to the works of Tolkien. I am a huge fan of Lord of the Rings and everything associated with it, some quotes and themes from it are in quite a few of our songs that the nerdier listener may pick up on!    
G: As for my lyrical content, mine are often observations from a third party view, not necessarily about myself or anything really that personal, so basically the complete opposite to Richard's. I like the contrast. We often don't know each other's lyrics, and quite often I don't know what I'm singing myself! I've actually been improvising a lot of our new songs lately and it felt good so I've kinda kept at it. In the end it all adds to the fun when on stage!               

Not long ago you released your first EP, ‘Wolf Town’. Would you say that living in Wolverhampton played a part in shaping the songs on that record?

R: There are definitely some songs about growing up in a town that has very little prospects and the difficulty of escaping it. The last song on the EP, ‘Nick's Got a New Blackberry’, is about how your friends grow up, move away and start taking life more seriously and the conflicting feelings that come along with accepting their choices. We also have a lot of fun here though, and as shitty and run down as Wolverhampton seems a lot of the time, at the end of the day it is home and holds loads of awesome people and memories, I hope this comes across in some of the more positive songs we write!     
G: It was always going to be about ol' Wolf Town. We recorded the EP in the heart of the city so it's all over the record really in spirit. Lyrically I know Richard's stuff relates, but for me the music just has that honesty about making the most of what you've got. I've never lived anywhere else and I still kinda love my hometown despite all the negativity surrounding the place.

‘Wolf Town’ came out on a limited cassette through Man the Rampart, how did that relationship come about? 

A: I just heard some guy with the sweetest beard I’ve ever seen liked our demo and wanted to help us out by putting it out for us on his new label!            
G: Rory Butterworth is an old school friend of mine and he came to see us play and he was just buzzing with energy afterwards. He told me he was starting a bit of a label/distro thing and wanted us to be his first release. He was so enthusiastic and we were up for anything really so we went for it. We recorded a bunch of tracks with Matt Pinfield (of Grandflat Productions and The Young Runaways) before Christmas and we just kick-started the New Year working together on the release. We decided early on we wanted to put out a cassette and from there Rory had these great ideas for the aesthetics and as you know it turned out pretty ace! We made a limited run of 50 individual tapes and we've almost sold out now, so we're pretty stoked how well received it all was. We can't wait to work with Rory again.     
R: Rory truly is a pleasure to work with. He does a lot for us and really understands where we are coming from and what we want to do as a band, so we really appreciate everything he does for us.  
G: And yes, he does have the sweetest beard I've ever seen, it's true.

You’ve got a very DIY aesthetic to everything you do, was that a conscious decision you made as a band, or just a happy accident?

A: I think we all feel the same about this; I’ve always had respect for bands who take the DIY approach.   
R: For me, it is definitely a conscious decision. I think doing everything as DIY as possible is crucial if you want to maintain integrity and honesty as a band. We want to make the music we love without any compromise and to do it within a community of like-minded people who not only appreciate your music but also your intentions and ideals that surround that music is really important to us.
G: Yeah definitely a conscious decision. Like Richard said, we're an honest band, and whilst we want to have fun making and playing music, we don't want to compromise our music, or get fucked about, and I'm grateful that we have found ourselves in a great little community at present where everyone understands and is really supportive of each other. As punk rock as it may sound, being a dick gets you nowhere, a solid bit of old fashioned kindness is way cooler!


What are your feelings about the current music scene in Wolverhampton and the Midlands? Are there any bands you would recommend Distorted Tapes readers checking out?         

A: The music scene in Wolves has seen better days! We grew up going to shows when we were young it’s just a shame that people don’t seem to do the same now. I think it’s on the up though as more sweet shows are going down in Wolves.
R: It is certainly getting better compared to what it used to be like, but it has a long way to go if it wants to resemble some of the more successful scenes like Leeds or Manchester and so on. In Wolverhampton especially, there is a real feeling of apathy when it comes to convincing people to come to a gig. We try to organise something ourselves once a month or so but it really is just a start. Fortunately, at the moment there are some great people around such as Distorted Tapes (aw shucks, guys!), Man the Ramparts and Let Your Fingers Do the Walking! who are trying to make something of the local scene.       

I feel what Wolverhampton itself is really lacking is an independent venue that is willing to put on gigs at a reasonable price. At the moment, everything in the city is a pub or chain bar that doesn’t want to hear from you unless you can pay a massive fee or guarantee hundreds of people to turn up. Unfortunately, this is largely to do with the council who seem very reluctant to grant a music licence to anyone due to their fear of losing the monopoly they hold on live music. It really sucks. 
G: I haven't felt that there's been much of a local music scene for many years now but since we played our first show last November it's become more and more apparent that, despite the lack of venues in Wolverhampton especially, there is something of a scene after all what with the likes of DT and LYFDTW working hard to put shows on. It's kinda reassuring and gives a lot of promise for the future. I agree with Rich on the need for a new independent venue for sure.    
R: As far as local bands are concerned, there is of course God Damn who seem to be doing all the right things at the moment!
G: Those guys are seriously the best thing I've heard in a long, long time from this area. They're also neighbours of mine! I hear them through the walls at the lock up where my other band rehearses. Their new stuff blows my mind! Talking of my other band, (self-plug alert), we're called Women, we supported God Damn recently and if any DT readers like doom, sludge or stoner metal we're right up your street.
R: We are good friends with the pop-punk band Maycomb, and I for one am really looking forward to their album coming out. The recently deceased Cannons and Tanks were a really great band, so I am looking forward to seeing what they will do next. Human Hands are probably my favourite Midlands band though, anyone who likes early 90s screamo will love them. One of the members also runs the fantastic Eat a Book records, which is definitely worth your time and cash!         
G: I'm also liking Birmingham band Them Wolves right now, excited to hear more from them, I think they have a record coming soon. In stark contrast in sound, there's Young Runaways who are excellent too. They're kinda folky indie, complete with trombone, trumpet and violin, and the frontman Matt Pinfield recorded the tracks for our tape so they're pretty ace in my book! There's plenty more I'm sure, there are just so many good bands in the Midlands right now it's really exciting.


What have Wrestling got planned for the rest of the year?         

A: Hopefully play some more sweet shows!
G: We aim to play as many shows as possible so if anyone out there wants to put us on just hit us up on Facebook, send Richard an email. Just ask; we'll play anywhere we can!            
R: I have organised a really awesome show in July at Scruffy Murphy's in Birmingham featuring some really awesome British Mid-Westy bands, like Nai Harvest and Zola, so I am really looking forward to that.
G: We're also working in collaboration with Rory at MTRR on a t-shirt design so we can work up some more funds and very soon we are recording new tracks with Matt Pinfield for what will hopefully be a 7” vinyl release this summer on MTRR again. We're hoping it might be a split so that will be really fun if we can pull it off! 

facebook.com/wrestlingtheband