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Guest blog on 'Under the Radar Indie Labels' for Virgin.com/music...
As another week of the X Factor bites the soporific dust, in its wake 21st century music aficionados could be forgiven for feeling a little left out.
Simon Cowell owns the airwaves; High Fidelity-esque niche independent record stores continue to close at an alarming rate. Oh, and Phil Collins is back in the top five of the charts. These are dark days, are they not?
Well, actually no. The charts may seem like a watered down recreation of a Friday night playlist at a cheap club, but that hasn’t stopped independent record labels springing up left, right and centre to get great underground music out into the public domain.
Some of our best loved bands of the past decade – from British Sea Power to Best Coast – have been housed by efficiently run and artistically fertile ‘indies’. Beyond these, however, there exist scores of tiny labels who put out records purely as a labour of love. Here are a few of the best under-the-radar UK independent labels you might never have heard of...
Read the rest of this blog at Virgin.com/music
Showing posts with label new indie music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new indie music. Show all posts
Tuesday, 12 October 2010
Tuesday, 6 July 2010
Listen Up! No. 24: We Are Scientists - Nice Guys
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We Are Scientists doing their sorta-earnest, sorta-subversive, always catchy thing; Andy Burrows (yup, that one) doing his drumming thing (doesn't miss a beat); and a goofy video inwhich weedy indie-rockers do their thing on scooters (i.e. fall off). It's as good as they'll ever be (or ever were), which constitutes a compliment, but not an endorsement.
Sunday, 31 January 2010
Introducing... MIXTAPES AND CELLMATES
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More highly recommended new and underground music from The Popscener.
Today's hotshots: Mixtapes and Cellmates
Actually formed back in 2005, this Swedish quintet are now starting to make a bit of a splash. Their unfathomable name might make them sound like a bedroom-emo band, but fear not - they actually mix a driving alt-rock sound with equal parts noisey guitar squeaking and pop hooks. One Little Indian have picked them up, so based on the law of record label averages they must be at least OK.
Try: Soon
Try: Soon