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SPF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Janet Adamana
ASSOCIATE EDITOR Ally Sigurdson
SEPT/OCT 2016
Chasing Patterns Across A Personal Map Note from the Editor Flying Solo Folk artist, J. Alan Schneider and his debut EP, Lo & Behold
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PROMOTIONS DIRECTOR Steff Shields
We’re All Ears 10 Our artist picks for Sept/Oct
SOUND, PHRASE & FURY is a Canadian music magazine out to help promote musicians not usually covered in mainstream media. All music, photos and articles used are for the sole purpose of spreading the knowledge of these artists and their music. We always encourage readers to support every act through purchasing releases, merchandise and attending live shows.
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SOUND-PHRASE-FURY.COM info@sound-phrase-fury.com @soundphrasefury facebook.com/soundphrasefury
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EDITOR’S NOTE
CHASING PATTERNS ACROSS A PERSONAL MAP This is issue 4.4 - that means we are coming up to our fifth year of publishing! It sounds absolutely insane to be able to say that - 5 whole years! For us at SOUND, PHRASE & FURY, these past five years have been a whirlwind! From our humble beginnings as a one-woman run blog site, to a full-fledged bimonthly magazine, SPF has grown and grown, and we couldn’t be more grateful to see it blossom. As we come up to our fifth year, we want to extend the utmost thanks to every reader, every writer and every musician that ever gave us a glance and a chance. As many of you know, chasing your dreams is never an easy feat. It is heart wrenching and exhausting 90 percent of the time, and the temptation of throwing the towel in arises more often than not. However, through it all there remained that fire – fuelled by each set of eyes that fell across our pages, each contributor that poured their talents into every word, and each artist that breathed their passions into every new song we heard. We have been so lucky to have this opportunity to keep chasing our dreams for the past five years. As we move into the next five (or more) we want to give our readers something more. The 5-year mark will spark a completely fresh start and brand new SPF. The 5-year mark will see us reaching for bigger and better things! The 5-year mark will see us growing into the magazine I believe we were always meant to be. We have what feels like a million new things in the works and we’re excited to be able to share it all with you. It will be a crazy time of transition, but with a support system like our readers, we’re damn well ready for anything.
No one is as lucky as us. Janet Adamana Editor-In-Chief
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Facebook.com/AestheticHeartPromotions SEPT/OCT 2016 • SOUND, PHRASE, & FURY 5
Flying solo Inspired by his childhood love for writing pop-punk songs, New York’s newest indie-folk artist, J. Alan Schneider, began exploring the likes of Bob Dylan and other folk, Americana greats and fell in love. The 27-year-old singer/songwriter takes us through his debut EP, Lo & Behold, life as a solo artist and the inspiration behind his new stripped down sound. SPF: How did you get your start in music? JAS: I started playing piano when I was five and that was sort of my entry to that. As I got older I started with band instruments. I was a huge band nerd, and then in middle school I also started playing in pop-punk bands. That was when I got my first taste of song writing. I then went to college in Boston and studied music technology, which is sort of a production degree and a composition degree.
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At the same time I was also playing in a pop-rock band. I played in that band for a while as one of the main songwriters. I moved to New York about three years ago and when I moved I was sort of moving away from the band. Then I realized a lot of the songs that I was writing were now a lot more personal and more of just me in my living room with a guitar. So it just felt natural to launch a solo folk project.
Q&A
words by Janet Adamana SPF: How did you go from the pop-punk genre to folk music? Was that something you had always been interested in? JAS: Not really. My house wasn’t particularly a musical house growing up. I didn’t really have that same forced listening that a lot of kids from musical houses have. That’s how I think a lot of people get introduced to things like Dylan and the Beatles. At my school to be cool you didn’t have to be a jock, that wasn’t what the cool kids were. They were either skaters or in a band, so everyone was listening to Green Day and Blink-182. I guess the first time that I really got into something you’d consider folk music was when I listened to an Anaïs Mitchell record. She’s this really great folk artist out of Vermont. She has this cool granola folk feel to her and when I heard that it was like ‘oh wow.’ It actually has a lot of similar tendencies to writing a pop-punk song, because it’s really about the simplicity of sticking to a theme throughout the whole tune and that’s what I think pop-punk is. When I heard that, I realized you could do a song that I really liked that didn’t have to have blaring power chords behind it. From there I started exploring Dylan records and Garfunkel records. I also really like a lot of contemporary folk artists like The Tallest Man on Earth. He’s one of my favourites. That’s kind of what came to inspire me.
SPF: So as an indie folk singer from New York, what’s it like being an artist in such an entertainment rich city? JAS: It’s interesting. I played in a band in Boston for years and Boston is a pretty big market in its own right, but like you said, New York is almost everything. I don’t live in Manhattan. I don’t live in the thick of it. I live in a place called Astoria. It’s sort of this young neighbourhood and so that in itself is its own market. There are Astorian musicians. There are Astoria festivals that go on and there’s that camaraderie. I guess you sort of section off into neighbourhoods when you’re in a band. If you’re in Brooklyn, you have that scene. For me, I think New York just represents a ton of opportunities. There’s a lot of noise you have to sort through obviously because there are thousands and thousands of artists here but I think there are also thousands and thousands of opportunities. Playing some of these famous clubs and really awesome venues is something that I’ve been lucky enough to do and I don’t think you get that same access if you are an artist in Spokane, Washington or something.
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there are thousands and thousands of artists here but there are also thousands and thousands of opportunities. SPF: Tell me about your debut EP Lo & Behold. What was the whole recording process like? You had self-recorded it? JAS: When I started realizing that I was writing songs that were naturally just me, I decided I wanted to make an effort to do the whole thing myself. I thought it would make a more honest sound if I sat in the living room and just chipped away at the whole thing. I mixed and mastered it as I did have a bit of background in it. I studied it in college and so I had the equipment to suffice making a folk record. I also thought something that was too polished and too clean might hurt the sentiment of it a little bit. There are a couple of tracks that I intentionally left some room noise and some cars honking outside. I think that was the aesthetic goal.
SPF: You mentioned that when you were in a band, you could hide behind the name and the other guys you were on stage with, and now it’s just you. Did you find it hard at the beginning to start playing those songs as a solo artist knowing that this is you and these are your words – like you’re exposing yourself a bit? JAS: Yeah. This is a pretty new project for me, just a couple of months, so I’m still feeling that a little bit. I actually had my first formal solo show a couple of weeks ago at this cool venue called Rockwood Music Hall. I played in the downstairs area where they set up a lot of tables and chairs like a comedy club. It’s a really quiet room and people are there to listen to acoustic music. That was the most extreme version of what you described – it was just me and 50 other people who are there to hear my songs. It’s SPF: Well it definitely sounds like you’re just sort of nerve-wracking in that regard but I’ve also sitting there with a friend playing for you. So been a performer for a while and once I get into the what was the inspiration behind it? groove and get out of my head a little bit it’s easier JAS: I think of this album as a debut of just me. to perform by myself. Playing in a band you sort of hide behind the name. It’s not just yourself out there but you’re also with five guys on stage that you’re really good friends Like J. Alan Schneider at with. You can move in and out of the spotlight with them. A big part of this record – and even the name Facebook.com/JAlanSchneider. Lo & Behold - became me saying, ‘this is what I’m Follow him at doing now.’ I think from a song-to-song perspec- Twitter.com/JaySchneider. tive, they are specifically about situations I’ve had in my life and people who have entered and exited Grab a copy of Lo & Behold on iTunes my life. A couple of the tracks are as old as a few or Spotify. years ago and a couple I wrote while I was recording. It really is a nice breadth of stories from my life.
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we're All
ears From catchy 80’s pop throwbacks to honest, pain-fuelled emo, these artists have snagged our attention and now our playlists are forever changed. 10 SOUND, PHRASE, & FURY • SEPT/OCT 2016
compiled by Janet Adamana
RECOMMENDS
SYKES Alt-Pop
London, ENGLAND
SYKES first landed on our radar in 2012 as they transitioned from acoustic darlings to playful indie-rock. The London-based group has grown over the years and has continued to produce addicting pop tunes. Their newest EP, Younger Mind, boasts a new energetic alternative pop sound. Featuring elements of mainstream dance-pop and electro mixed with 80s synth and good old 90s power rock, the new SYKES sound will make you get up and dance.
facebook.com/sykesmusic -sykes.bandcamp.com
lord franklin
indie-POp Muncie, Indiana
Lord Franklin’s debut EP, Passion In Revolt, is an alluring musical time capsule full of 80’s pop-rock. Oozing elements reminiscent of Phil Collins, U2 and Bryan Adams, Lord Franklin melds these retro-pop components with a current indie-rock/alternative sound – creating a catchy, unique throwback to the best days of your life.
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RECOMMENDS
Boston Manor
photo: Leigh-Ann Kilner
emo/punk
Blackpool, North West
One listen to Boston Manor and you’ll be hooked. The emo/punk quintet formed in 2013 and has since been gracing the scene with their meld of intro-& spective, pumped up punk. With pain-tinged vocals and intimate musings against a backdrop that oozes energy and angst; these emotionally-charged tunes plunk at your heartstrings while grabbing your attention and never letting go. Grab their debut album “Be Nothing” when it comes out September 30. Available on iTunes and Spotify.
facebook.com/bostonmanoruk - bostonmanor.merchnow.com
plans
emo/punk
Indianapolis, Indiana photo: nick brock
Sometimes good things fall a part so better things can fall together - Indianapolis’ Plans stands as proof of this. After the dissemination of their previous bands, musicians Sebastian Richey, John Dewitte, AJ Patiag and Cody Almond felt a void. One day feeling compelled to jam together, the boys found exactly what they were looking for and so began Plans. Their appropriately titled debut EP, ending//starting, exudes honesty and melancholy atop of a nostalgic emo/punk sound sure to capture the hearts of any old school pop-punk fan.
facebook.com/weareplansIN - weareplans.bandcamp.com
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