NewProf

GOTHIC TROPIC joins New Professor

Awesome Problems” Vinyl EP Coming June 12 – Preorder Now
Record release show June 8, live dates including Silverlake Jubilee and Sled Island

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LOS ANGELES – New Professor Music is proud to welcome to the family Gothic Tropic, one of L.A.’s most promising indie bands, and to announce a vinyl run of their EP “Awesome Problems,” the distillation of their humid and hip-moving hybrid of krautrock, Afro-pop and proto-punk.

An ultra-limited run of 100 white vinyl 12”s is available to order now at awesomeproblems.info. Record release party is June 8 at The Smell in downtown Los Angeles. Records will be in select stores June 12. Stream the EP here.

It’s “Tropical Pop that’s as refreshingly original as it’s pure fun” (The 405). The EP “finds inspiration in world beats and exuberant guitars” (Buzzbands.LA) and the group has become “one of Los Angeles’ more exciting new acts in just a matter of months” (BMI). Gothic Tropic is guitarist/vocalist Cecilia Della Peruti (ex-Rumspringa), bassist Daniel Denton (early Metric) and drummer Liv Marsico (Cold War Kids & Stones Throw artists). The band started in May 2011.
Order the vinyl at awesomeproblems.info. Ships on or around June 1.

Live:
May 27: Silverlake Jubilee festival – Los Angeles
May 31: RVCA store – Los Angeles
June 5: Check Yo’ Ponytail w/ Crystal Fighters – Echoplex Los Angeles
June 8: “Awesome Problems” Release Party – The Smell Los Angeles
June 20-23: Sled Island festival – Calgary, AB

Gothic Tropic “Kill Lloyd Opus” video (track from “Awesome Problems”)

Luv,


Do you care what bank your pizza shop borrowed money from to start that business? Probably not, right? Never occurred to you. The potential pizza shop owner found a bank he felt comfortable with, who offered him terms he could live with, and he went with them. Now you eat the product that initial loan helped finance, but the bank does not impact the taste of the pizza.

Labels are banks. For some of us, they are also friends. And for others they are part of an overall aesthetic. But at the end of the day they are a financial partner you borrow money from. A bank.

I want to make this clear because there seems to be a lot of confusion over why bands pick labels. On my band’s website, http://selfdefensemusic.com , we get questioned about every label we choose to work with. “Why do you associate yourself with LABEL XY, they put out records for INSERT DISMISSIVE COMMENT ABOUT LABEL LISTENERSHIP. Get a clue!”

In the view of some people, we’re too indie a band for our label home, Deathwish Inc. And, in the view of other people, we’re too gritty for labels we’ve partnered with on one-off releases (RFC, for example). Some people believe us to be “cool” and wonder why we would choose to work with UNCOOL LABEL YX.

Here’s the thing: Whatever adjectives the listener uses to define us, that’s his/her interpretation and not how we view ourselves. We view ourselves as musicians. And we rely on labels to fund our recording and distribution. We rely on banks.

And when the bank manager shakes my hand and tells me he believes in my pizza parlor and he wants it to succeed not just so I can pay him back, but because he thinks the world needs more pizza parlors, I DON’T FUCKING TURN HIS MONEY DOWN BECAUSE HIS BANK DOESN’T USE A COOL FONT FOR IT’S LETTERHEAD. I DON’T TELL HIM TO FUCK HIMSELF BECAUSE HIS BANK HAS AN UNCOOL NAME. AND I DON’T LET THE OPINIONS OF PEOPLE OUTSIDE THE DEAL POISON MY VIEW OF THE BANK.

I take that dude’s money and I make pizza.

Some people want to define themselves by the label they’re affiliated with. Maybe they believe it will help them get ass or maintain a cooler-than-thou status among their peers. I don’t exactly know their motivations. But I do know those motivations, whatever they are, have nothing to do with music.

The labels we’ve gotten on best with have been our friends. We like what they stand for (almost uniformly the thing they stand for is “doing whatever they want”). But just like all my friends, I don’t feel the need to see eye-to-eye with them on every topic. I don’t go through my friend’s iPods and choose not to interact with them based on what I find. I don’t do that with label rosters either. Come at me like a peer, show me respect, offer me the resources to make art- I’ma find a way to work with you.

To bands: Work with labels who treat you like you want to be treated. Define yourself, don’t rely on a label.

To fans: Fuck off. Smart musicians work with people who give them the ability to make music. They don’t choose partners based on the fickle preferences of listeners who need a label to complete their fragile sense of self.

To labels we’ve worked with: We appreciate the shit out of you for giving us resources to do the thing that makes us happy. May you all grow horns and put out uncool shit I would never listen to. I don’t give a shit because you’ve done right by me and that’s all I ever asked of you.

Patrick Kindlon (Self Defense Family)

Right on.

(Source: cognitivexdissonance)


Rawktumblr: A music fan's pledge →

rawkblog:

Been thinking about this for a while. Let’s make it official.

1) I will buy two albums a month. Not singles. Albums. With money.

2) When possible, I will buy direct from the artist or the artist’s label.

3) While I may not be able to afford every song or album I listen to — or even most of…

Add to that, “Songs I love are worth more than $.99 to me, and I’ll find a way to make up the difference to the artist.” You don’t know how satisfying it is to send a band $40 through Bandcamp until you’ve tried it.


What should I say during a job interview?

I’ve been asked this a few times lately, and having been on the other side of the hiring table many times myself, here’s what I like to hear candidates talk about:

1) Why this job? Not why do you want a job – we all have to pay the rent and the cable bill. What is it about this particular job that makes you want to work with this particular company?

2) What makes you better than other applicants? What special skills and experiences put you ahead of the 100 other resumes I got? The more specific to the position the better: even though it’s amazing if doctors never thought you’d walk again and you just set the world pole vault record, if you’re applying for a music job I’d rather hear about how you were the music director of the college radio station. (Just saying.)

3) How does this fit into your career? Where are you going to be in 10 years? Is this a job that can get you there? I want to know that you want to do great here because you believe that doing great here will get you to wherever you’re going.

Bonus advice:

1) A lot of employers ask the bullshit question, “Why are manhole covers round?” The answer they want is, “So they don’t fall in.” I don’t think that’s actually the reason manhole covers are round. It’s a bullshit question anyway. Just pretend you had to think about the answer for a second.

2) When you leave the interview, you want the hiring manager to be thinking, “That’s a person I wouldn’t mind seeing everyday.” So you need to demonstrate that you’re sincere, smart, normal, conscientious, and not a cat hoarder.

3) Then once you get the job, be ruthless and make the company money or you’ll be back in the breadlines in three months.