Sunday, June 2, 2013

Episode #16 is up NOW!

Welcome back everyone. After taking a week off to enjoy the awesomeness that was Phoenix Comic Con, the Fro Show is back this week with episode #16. You can listen to the episode on both the iTunes and Stitcher Radio feeds.

This episode features 4 rock/indie tracks from the following artists:

Great White Buffalo - Likely Story
"It has often felt as if sincerity and personal conviction were run out of rock n’ roll in exchange for a tepid and demure approach to song writing, analogous to the music industry’s apprehension of change.

Great White Buffalo, however, appear and sound determined to reintroduce and inject that emotional intelligence back into the veins of rock music, starting with an indie sensibility. The band has been garnering attention and for good reason. Their recent self-titled debut release, which they recorded with Grammy award-winning producer Philip Allen (Adele, Aerosmith) this past year, kicks up reminders of big sounds, challenging metaphors, and hooks that will make you & yours randy.

With comparisons abounding, this L.A. quartet is set to make a splash onto the airwaves. Check out this track “Thanks for Nothing” and do yourself a solid by grabbing their record. It’s surely a wondrous way to welcome spring back into your life."


-John Matthew Simon
Indie Shuffle

Brothers - We Are Pushing On
Brothers is a band comprised of people who have been in other bands for a long time.

Stream/Download We Are Pushing On and Is This The End on our Soundcloud. www.soundcloud.com/brothersbandtogether

Flat People - Oh, Conspiracy

We’re on an expedition. We just want to start digging and see what we find; start walking and see where we end up… Our purpose being to do just that.

After fronting bands in Austin, then going solo in Los Angeles, singer-songwriter and native Dallasite Bob Guittard made his journey back to Big D in 2002 to launch Flat People. His new band went through a variety of line-up changes, all while recording and polishing new songs at his home studio. One day late last year, though, Guittard finally decided to share his songs with Dallas producer Salim Nourallah. The band now has a somewhat steady line-up, and several familiar North Texas artists are featured on Guittard's new, eponymous album, including Nourallah, Warren Barry, Daniel Hopkins, Ward Williams, Chris Holt, James Driscoll, John Dufilho, Rip Rowan, Rick Nelson, Rich Williams, and Graham Cathey.

The result is a highly infectious, varied collection of honey-dripped quiet rock with a slight veneer of country and folk, sounding at times like Pink Floyd morphing to Beck, a not-so-drug-addled Camper Van Beethoven, and perhaps a little Wilco, if John Lennon had shared songwriting duties.

As sweet and sing-able as Flat People's melodies are, they have a dark streak, which alone merits hitting the replay button again and again, to allow the potential of each track to unfold and be fully absorbed.

One prime example of FP's beautiful, underlying darkness can be found in "Oh, Conspiracy," which includes some lovely XTC-tinged harmonies atop upbeat electric strumming. While the opening strains immediately conjure up snapshots of Buddy Holly glasses and notions of a simpler time, the lyrics immediately contradict such innocent imagery: "Shapeshifter leader, a lizardry breed / They're part of the machine / No, nothing's as it seems" and also "Socially dead, isolated, and serene / Lights out, water off / Black copters cleaning house / Yeah, I think we're all done for." But the sonic dichotomies, in Flat People's hands, never sound forced or contrived.

Some of the lyrics are not as sinister as those of "Oh, Conspiracy" but are simply quaint variations on well-worn motifs, like unrequited love. In the delightfully twee vignette "My Heart is Beating Warm," Guittard begs, "Won't you come with me? / I won't do you no harm / Why can't you show me anything? / My heart is beating warm ... You touch me like a rose / I cut you like the thorns." They're simple lyrics, sure, but they're given weight by the tone, tension, and subtle atmospherics.

There's actually a connection between the black 'copters and broken hearts. The lead track, "Sensitive Clumsy Astronaut," in addition to being one of Flat People's more overtly rocking numbers, introduces the album's overarching theme of alienation and may perhaps remind some listeners of Harry Nilsson's "Spaceman" or David Bowie's "Space Oddity" in vibe.

You don't have to think too much to enjoy Flat People — the melodies will tease a smile out of even the grumpiest Beatle fan — but there's a wealth of sly depth for listeners who aren't afraid to read between the lines.

Floppy Dee - Swept Clean
Floppy Dee is a solo artist from Emden, Germany


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