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White Fence: Tim Presley speaks

Interview by Nick Hutchings
Photos: Ruth Swanson, Madeline Allard

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I first became aware of Tim Presley’s band White Fence via his sublime split album with San Franciscan garage rock king Ty Segall. I was instantly infatuated with Hair, and upon further inspection, I learned that Tim had been just as prolific as Ty in his musical career, as well as other patrons of garage. Thee Oh Sees’ John Dwyer, happens to have worked with White Fence on his own record label, Castle Face, releasing 2013’s Cyclops Reap.

Under the guise of White Fence, Tim Presley has recorded 6 albums between now and 2010, all in his own lo-fi bedroom studio set-up. His seventh record, For The Recently Found Innocent, sees him leaving the bedroom behind for a full analogue studio with Segall at the control desk.

Naturally, the record is a pure psych pop pleasure. If you too dig the sounds of The Byrds, The Lyres, 13th Floor Elevators and Syd Barrett then For The Recently Found Innocent should be found post haste and played like yesterday. Third track ‘Like That’ has been plaguing my waking dreams for a while now, but tracks like ‘Sandra (When The Earth Dies)’ and ‘The Light’ prove themselves instant classics. I got in touch with Mr. Presley for a little more conversation about the new album. Turns out he doesn’t just like The Chocolate Watchband, he also digs Sleaford Mods.

Last time you worked with Ty Segall on Hair it was on an equal footing. This time he was the boss. How did that work out?

Well, it worked more like – I was the boss of the song, and Ty was the boss of the recordings. These were the roles, and that’s how it played out. Though there were moments where we blurred those lines a little.

For The Recently Found Innocent features a ‘full’ studio set up rather than a bedroom recording situation. Why did you make the change?

I just needed a change. I needed to switch up the method. Ty had been wanting to do some recordings anyways, so the timing ended up perfect. The set up was a small garage, an 8-track, amps, and a drum kit. We only needed 8 for the basics, then we drove the tapes up to San Francisco, and dumped them into Eric Bauer’s 2” machine and 24 track board.

Did you find the change constrictive or liberating?

Both. Liberating because I could let go of the recording and mixing to concentrate on the song and playing, but constricting because we tightened up all the instrumentation and kept it simple.
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Hair was one of my favourite Ty Segall albums – how did the collaboration come about, and what was the best thing about it for you?

Ty came up to me at a show in San Francisco. White Fence had just played, I think. He asked if I’d wanna do a split record. I assumed we’d just split sides. Ty on the A, me on side B. Long story short, we ended up at Bauers’ studio (SF) and he showed me a song he’d been working on. I said hey, I got a song, and I showed him ‘I’m Not A Game’. He learned it in 2 minutes and we recorded it. From there we started writing tunes together. The whole record just fell into place. The best part was how harmonious and easy the whole thing came together. I’ve never in my life made a record that easily. It was like we shared a brain.

For The Recently Found Innocent is easily Hair’s equal, I admire your knack for writing great songs. Where do your ideas come from initially?

I don’t know, maybe because early on, I sold my soul for rock and roll. I don’t have to keep many notes because I’m always at home writing and recording. Idea pops up, I fucking record it. I’m only prolific because I force myself to be. I don’t lolly-gag around bars and waste my time getting pats on the back from social circles. I’m at home making shit.

What’s your secret weapon to get a hostile audience on your side?

Play faster.

What does between song banter consist of?

I’m horrible at that.

Your music appears to be influenced by the likes of Nuggets and the 13th Floor Elevators, yet sounds timeless. Do you dig any modern music too, or are you quite insular?

Recently I’ve been into Cate Le Bon’s new LP Mug Museum, Jack Name’s Light Show and a punk, hardcore band called Hoax. I like that last Sleaford Mods album too. As far as “popular” groups, fuck no. There are some good rappers like Pusha T that I like though.

Above all, which new album are you most excited about?

My new one.
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Good answer. What about Ty Segall, what’s your favourite album of his?

Goodbye Bread.

What was it like to enjoy John Dwyer’s patronage when working with Castleface? How important is he to contemporary garage and psychedelic music?

He’s the king.

What were you found innocent of?

I’m not innocent…that’s the point.

What are you secretly guilty of?

I can’t say.

Do you have any musical guilty pleasures?

I have no shame in anything I listen to. I’ll have my reasons.

For The Recently Found Innocent is out now on Drag City Records.

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Music News

Teardrop Factory reveal new music video

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Teardrop Factory have shared a home-made music video for new track ‘Now We Shatter’. Despite adopting a sound that’s as lo-fi as it gets, this duo keep it cranked way past ten in their new music video. Proving that a dark and introspective vocal combined with fuzz fuelled chords and rippling ride cymbals is all you need to build a sizeable wall of sound.

Teardrop Factory’s debut album Thrash In The Heart is due september 15th via Faux Discx. Stream ‘Now We Shatter’ below.

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Music News

Fucked Up share new music video

Fucked_Up image courtesey of

What better way to mark your Brazilian debut than playing alongside Dinosaur Jr? Fucked Up do you one better in their brand new music video for Glass Boys album track ‘The Art of Patrons’.

Following frontman and lyricist Damian Abraham on his journey home from the Sao Paulo show to meet his family in Toronto, the video stays true to the albums theme of dividing teenage dreams of rock ‘n’ roll with the realities of adult life as a family man. Stream this four minute heart warmer below, and if the new video isn’t enough to feed your Fucked Up appetite, stream two tracks that didn’t make the album here.

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Features Music

Crossfire Buzzbombs: Featured tracks for September

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Death From Above 1979 – ‘Government Trash’ – Last Gang Records

THAT BASS SOUND IS BACK. You know the fucker. It’s an absolute beast and it’s coming at you like a train in this newly released track by the monstrous DFA 1979. Most unoriginal sounding bands fail with double the amount of members, but DFA’s new tunes smack you in the ear like a rush of crack. Welcome back. – Zac

Half Japanese – In Its Pull – Joyful Noise

It may have taken 13 years for some new music from Half Japanese but it was worth it. Many have tried the lo-fi punk thing and made it sound crap but this is an example of how you do it in style. Look out for the new album Overjoyed on Joyful Noise. It’s a treat. – Zac

Twin Peaks – ‘I Found A New Way’ – Grand Jury Records

Chicago’s Twin Peaks deliver infectious, guitar driven anthems that will make you want to run around like a turbo charged Bruce Springsteen. This is a pop song crafted the right way: short in length, jammed with infectious hooks and a message that inspires. Let ‘I Found A New Way’ set the standards. – Dave Palmer

Sheer Mag – 7”

Channelling a classic rock vibe via psychedelia, indie and 70s punk, the debut EP from Philadelphia’s Sheer Mag is four tracks of fuzzed out joy. Odd time signatures, lo fi recording and a vocal as drenched in distortion as the guitar licks make this the perfect soundtrack to a BBQ with some cold ones. Woozy highlights come in the form of ‘Point Breeze’. – Jono Coote

Foxygen – ‘Cosmic Vibrations’ – Jagjaguar

Californian psych rockers Foxygen’s new single ‘Cosmic Vibrations’ opens with a brain-frying burst of noise before the band lurch into a pure Neil Young drawl and drag that bubbles with acid-fried country psychedelia. Their new album …And Star Power arrives in a month and if this sample track is anything to go by, it’s going to mulch your minds. – James Sherry

Nai Harvest – ‘Buttercups’ – Dog Knights Productions

Fans of odd vinyl shapes rejoice. The new Dog Knights Productions’ Flower Split continues the sound Nai Harvest honed on the brilliant Hold Open My Head EP earlier in the year. Despite new efforts from Playlounge, and both bands covering eachothers material, Nai’s ‘Buttercups’ is the clear highlight here. A mix of shoegaze, twiddly emo and 90s alt rock, it shouldn’t work but somehow it does, get into it. – Tim Lewis

Dads – Chewing Ghosts – 6131 Records

Self-effacing punk rock is hardly a brand new concept, but it’s so easy to get wrong. Thankfully, ‘Chewing Ghosts’ by New Jersey two-piece Dads get it just right with their Replacements meets Cap’n’Jazz power-pop. – Joe Parry

Paws – ‘Needle In The Hay’ – Cath Records

Documenting their first trip to LA by recording an entire live set to tape, Glasgow’s Paws dropped the resulting album earlier this month. It’s an intense and ferocious 13 songs, showing a terrifyingly good live band then – fuck knows how great they are now. At the top of the pile, just eclipsing the Mark Hoppus-approved ‘Jellyfish’, is a reborn ‘Needle in the Hay’, curing Elliott Smith’s morose lament by making it as vicious and urgent as it should be. – Chris Bunt

Hookworms – The Impasse – Weird World Records

The first cut to be taken from the Leeds psyche-weirdos Hookworms’ new album The Hum, ‘The Impasse’ jumps straight in with an MC-5-esque smack in the face, capturing the spirit of their ferocious live shows. – Joe Parry

Cymbals Eat Guitars – ‘Warning’ – Tough Love Records

Taken from Cymbals’ third album, Lose, ‘Warning’ steams in with sincere sentiment and attitude. However, pop sensibility looms in the form of spiraling guitar melodies and soaring choral harmonies. If you’re after a new indie rock guitar anthem,’Warning’ is the hit you need. – Dave Palmer

Heat – ‘Susisfine’

Adopting an irresistably catchy chord progression and a spiraling vocal hook, Montreals Heat churn out ‘Bohemian Like You’-style grooves that you simply can’t refuse. If you’re a sucker for a neat guitar riff then ‘Susisfine’ will have you in a spin for sure. – Dave Palmer

Pine Hill Haints – Ms Pacman

A laid back toe tapper of a track characterised by a piercing musical saw, this appreciation of traditional instruments not only makes for a unique live show, but adds an unexpected element to already beautiful and exciting musical arrangements. This is the sound of a group of people bringing together a variety of traditional elements and managing to create something completely unique. If you don’t know them, check their back catalogue out; then go out and see singer Jamie on tour with Serious Sam Barrett this September. – Jono Coote

Code Orange – ‘Dreams In Inertia’ – Deathwish

Deathwish Records’ Code Orange Kids have gone through a whole lot of changes for their upcoming LP, I Am King. Most noticeably, things have all gone a bit creepy. Now known as Code Orange, flags proclaiming “Thinners of the Herd” are showing up during live shows, the video for previous single, ‘I Am King’ featuring messages being carved into bodies and now this. ‘Dreams In Inertia’ is their slowest song yet but is certainly no less intense. Nooses tied and bodies sinking into bath tubs, this new video is both surreal and eerie, complimenting the monotonous trawling drums and chiming guitars perfectly. – Tim Lewis

Citizen Blast Kane – ‘Sandwich Time’ – Riffbuhl Records

Hailing from Hackensack, New Jersey Citizen Blast Kane play ultra raw and snotty garage punk rock and they’re PISSED OFF at having to wait in the queue for their sandwiches when they wanna eat. Just watch the video and sneer. – James Sherry

Citizen Blast Kane – Sandwich Time from Johnny Celentano on Vimeo.

Wilson – ‘Passing On The Left’ – New Damage Records

If you like the idea of a hardcore rock ‘n’ roll party soundtrack played by five sweaty Detroit dudes, then Wilson’s Full Blast Fuckery debut is for you. ‘Passing On The Left’ encapsulates pretty much everything that’s great about these guys, packing thunderous riff action, some serious shredding and THAT ‘woah-oh-oh’ chorus into less than 3 minutes. It’d probably sound even better blasting out onto a raging, booze-drenched pit, but for now, just crank this one up LOUD. – Alex Gosman

Cardiac Arrest – In the Mouth of Madness (three song taste)

This three song taster from St. Louis hardcore band Cardiac Arrest promises a very good record indeed. Reminiscent of early Boston hardcore or even Negative Approach, in that it throws a healthy dollop of street punk into the mix. You know immediately what you are getting with this, loud, fast and angry, but clinging onto a sense of melody like a pitbull, this is hardcore at its finest. – Jono Coote

No Form – Goddess of Fire/Barrier

Absolute wacko hardcore from up North, ‘Goddess of Fire/Barrier’ was recorded as the opener for Reagent Records’ new compilation and it’s the perfect way to set things off. Always avant garde, frantic violins start the song but this is no Floorpunch rip off, walls of feedback and vocals caked in reverb may follow the trends you’ve seen in bands such as Gag and Perspex Flesh, but No Form find a way to put their own twisted twist upon it. – Tim Lewis

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Music News

Aphex Twin shares new track

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With the recent PR stunts and clues, a rare vinyl emergence and a dispute with Kanye West, it didn’t take long for fans to cotton on to the fact Aphex Twin was about to storm back into our lives after his 13 year silence. Following last months album announcement, Mr R.D. James has shared the opening track to the record online for your listening pleasure.

Unpredictably accessible for Aphex, this new track veers more towards the soft pad sounds of 1993 single ‘On’, rather than the foreboding grind of 1999’s ‘Come to Daddy’. Stream ‘minipops 67 [120.2][source field mix] [aka the manchester track]’ below.

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Music News

Iceage announce new album

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If ‘The Lords Favourite‘ didn’t give away the new territories that Iceage‘s new album will be exploring, ‘Forever’ certainly will. Who would’ve thought Iceage would be incorporating horns and strings into their music?

The Copenhagen fourpiece’s third album to date, Plowing into the Field of Love, is also said to feature elements of piano, mandolin and organ in place of their usual ear shredding guitars and crushing rhythm section. Stream ‘Forever’ below.

Plowing into the Field of Love is due October 6th via Matador Records.

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Music News

Honeyblood announce Autumn tour dates

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In the wake of their exceptional self titled debut album, Glaswegian two-piece Honeyblood are set to embark upon a full UK tour this month, followed by a string of co-headline dates on the NME tour with Superfood.

Check out the tour dates below and head here to watch them get covered in an array of exploding deserts in the music video for ‘Super Rat’.

September
11th – Stirling, Tolbooth
13th – Glasgow, CCA
16th – Newcastle, The Cluny
17th – Sheffield, Old Fire Station
18th – Leeds, Brudenell Social Club
19th – Manchester, Soup Kitchen
20th – Southsea Fest, The Wine Vaults, Portsmouth
22nd – Bristol, The Louisiana
23rd – London, Sebright Arms
24th – Cambridge, Portland Arms
25th – Leicester Uni, The Scholar Bar
26th – Birmingham, Hare & Hounds
27th – Brighton, The Hope
October
31st – Birmingham, The Oobleck
November
1st – Glasgow, King Tuts
3rd – Leeds, Brudenell
4th – Norwich, Epic Studios
5th – Oxford, O2 Academy
6th – Manchester, Deaf Institute
10th – Bristol, Louisiana
11th – London, Dingwalls
12th – Brighton, Haunt

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Music News

Gnarwolves announce UK headline tour

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It’s been a rather good year for these three excitable Brightonites, a summer of gigs across the continent, and a spot on the main stage at reading and Leeds has set Gnarwolves up for their biggest headline tour to date. This December, the band kick off a 12 date tour at the Camden Underworld, closing at their own stomping ground, The Haunt.

Check out the tour dates below and stream their new music video here.

November
30th – Clwb ifor Bach, Cardiff

December
1st – Cavern, Exeter
2nd – Fleece, Bristol
3rd – Talk, Birmingham
4th – Kingston College, Kingston
5th – Underworld, London
6th – Crauford Arms, Milton Keynes
7th – Rescue Rooms, Nottingham
8th – Audio, Glasgow
9th – Brudenell Social Club, Leeds
10th – Sound Control, Manchester
11th – Epic Studios, Norwich
12th – The Haunt, Brighton

Gnarwolves’ self titled debut album will be available from September 15th through Big Scary Monsters / Tangled Talk.

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Buzz Chart

Shiny Darkly

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Shiny Darkly
‘Soft Skin’
Crunchy Frog Records

While Shiny Darkly take clear influence from the 1980s in both their production approach and musicianship, be assured that this copenhagen trio do their musical forefathers great justice. Let their new single ‘Soft Skin’ set the standards.

Despite it’s delicate title, ‘Soft Skin’ greets you with a sinister collection of dark, deep and dungeonesque sounds. A scythe-like synthesiser glistens, piercing through a relentless wall of bass before sharp, ice-pick guitar tones decend upon your ears. An introspective and brooding wall of sound is built, yet there’s a beam of sunlight flickering through as the chorus hits, with a triuphant vocal hook soaring high above Shiny Darkly’s gloomy asthetic.

This trio use a melting pot of post punk influence to drive their music to fresh territories. A Mark Burgess-esque howl and primitive rhythms akin to those of The Jesus and Mary Chain make for a retrospective sound, yet when placed next to their Copenhagen contemporaries, such as Lower and Iceage, what Shiny Darkly are doing here is completely refreshing.

Look out for Shiny Darkly’s debut album Little Earth, due for release in early 2015.

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Music News

Stream Code Orange’s new album I Am King

i_am_kingPittsburgh punks Code Orange have shared their upcoming album ahead of it’s September 2nd Deathwish release, courtesey of Consequence of Sound.

The album was produced by Converge guitarist Kurt Ballou, so naturally, this album is as heavy as they come. Head to Consequence of Sound to stream I Am King in all it’s ear shredding grindcore glory.