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The Meltaways – S/T 7″

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4 track ep from New York trio The Meltaways, released through What’s For Breakfast? Records.  I thought I’d written about the band’s last ep which came out in June, but looks like I didn’t, which is a shame because they’re good.  Available on limited edition vinyl or download, and if you happen to be in Brooklyn on November 5th, the band (Allie – drums,
Beck – bass/vox and Maddy – guitar/vox) are playing at Goldsounds.

BUY THE DOWNLOAD HERE – BANDCAMP
BUY THE RECORD HERE – WFBR
GET SOCIAL – FACEBOOK

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Molars – Hypnic Jerk

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Unashamed tilt at the Christmas Number 1 slot*, 9 track album from Leeds Noise Pop band Molars.  Released December 2nd on digital, cassette (via Grip Chimps – best new label name winners 2016**) and CD, available for pre-order now

STREAM A COUPLE OF TRACKS AND PRE-ORDER HERE – BANDCAMP
GET SOCIAL HERE – FACEBOOK

*Probably not, but seeing the word December made me feel festive
**Made up award – for now.

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MiSC – S/T

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I don’t know anything about MiSC I’m afraid, other than the fact they’ve released 2 NYP tracks on Bandcamp.  That’s all.


Virginia Sook – Mandarin Song

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Virginia Sook are from Brisbane, Australia.  In case you didn’t know where Brisbane is.  This is a 3 track ep available on cassette (only 1 left, so you’ll have to be quick!) and download.  Released by the wonderful Ruined Smile Records, it’s kind of folky and acoustic and kind of beautiful.

BUY IT HERE – BANDCAMP

GET SOCIAL HERE – FACEBOOK

WATCH AND LISTEN HERE


Cornelius looks to deliver "ROSES" with new single

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corneliuspng.pngNew York bred artist Cornelius is a voice we will hopefully be hearing more from in the near future. After making a serious splash with his debut single "Oxygen", he has returned with a new J-Louis produced cut entitled "Roses". "Roses" comes in with a sultry sax, smooth jazz-esque introduction. It soon picks up with percussion and […]

The post Cornelius looks to deliver "ROSES" with new single appeared first on EARMILK.

Melbourne, Australia – Kick off your Monday with Lower...

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Melbourne, Australia – Kick off your Monday with Lower Plenty’s track “Bondi’s Dead”. This lo-fi bedroom pop track will ease you into your day and all the responsibilities lying ahead. The mellow melodies and lax vocals will carry you on like a little daydream. Lower Plenty keeps it chill and non-confrontational, even though there might just be a hint of wave of anxiety coming over. Or maybe it’s just emotional numbness.

“Bondi’s Dead” is taken off of their upcoming album Sister Sister out November 18 via Bedroom Suck Records.

It’s finally fall! To get your autumn started, take a listen to...

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It’s finally fall! To get your autumn started, take a listen to Sol Flamingo’s track “Pintura”. Since this song is in Spanish, it kind of reminds of me of Little Joy, even though that band sings in Portuguese. Something about the gentle indie folk rock sound with just the bit of lo-fi graininess gets me. Sol Flamingo is like a Spanish version of Kings of Convenience actually. So if you’re into that, definitely give this track a go.

[PREMIERE] MAHALO - BE MY LOVE FT. CAT LEWIS

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Yeee this is some super exciting stuff right here from our boy Mahalo! We've been big supporters of this Hawaiian bred dance floor maestro, and today he's heating things up again with a sweet new single out on the up-and-coming dance label No Definition - a part of the legendary Swiss label Enormous Tunes home to some of our absolute faves like Nora En Pure, Croatia Squad, EDX and more. Teaming up again with the incredibly talented topline genius Cat Lewis, the two have struck gold in "Be My Love." Mahalo's nu-disco instrumental is full of energetic piano and synthwork with some super spicy bass expertly layered behind Cat's vibrant pop vocals. I asked Mahalo to tell me a bit about how the song came about: 

"We started a track "Be My Love" last year around December - it was originally a Nu Disco track that, for me, was never really panning out into something that I really liked in terms of the instrumental. However, I'd always be sending Cat some new WIP stuff and he'd continue to bring up "Be My Love." We eventually found a common ground with this track "gimme your love" which sort of turned into a happy balance of the two and thus this popped out. We weren't super sure what to do with it at first as it's a lot different than the departure I've taken in the last 6 months, but I showed it to My Digital Enemy when I was hanging with them one time and they were certain I had something here. We showed it to EDX and the rest was history!"

Big moves are being made in the Mahalo camp. A track of this caliber is certainly a sign that word is getting out about this up-and-coming producer. We're absolutely pumped to be able to premiere this record, and so happy to see the quick progression of this artist from relative ambiguity to upstart fame. We know there's much more to come, but for now enjoy this amazing record. You can purchase from No Definition on Beatport here.    

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SOFI TUKKER (feat. Betta Lemme) - Awoo

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Easily one of the most hotly-tipped acts of 2016, New York City-based indie dance duo SOFI TUKKER, comprised of Sophie Hawley-Weld and Tucker Halpern, have already racked up over 20 million streams on Spotify with tracks like "Drinkee," "Matadora," "Déjà Vu Affair" and "Hey Lion", quickly lighting up the blogophere and igniting the pop charts internationally. Now following their debut EP, Soft Animals, released earlier this summer, SOFI TUKKER return today to share the visuals for their single "Awoo" (featuring Betta Lemme), a vividly colorful clip that's a cross between Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette and Cruel Intentions.

Watch the video for "Awoo" below.




Purchase a copy of SOFI TUKKER's Soft Animals EP on iTunes.

Premiere via Billboard.

https://www.facebook.com/sofitukker

Pola Rise - Behind

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Polish artist Pola Rise has just recently unveiled her brand new single called "Behind", which also serves as the first piece of original music she has shared since her debut EP, The Power of Coincidence, was released in early 2015. Opening up with jangly piano keys and a mesmeric Björk-esque vocal, "Behind" is an instantly warm and joyful song rich in bombastic horns, layered synths and mementos of motivation.

On stage Pola Rise accompanies MANOID, a producer who transfers sounds of nature into synthetic sounds and changes emotions into sine waves. Pola introduced her sensitivity and unique sensibility to the sound, her soft voice perfectly matching the style of MANOID and takes the listeners into a fascinating journey with every note. Together, they create a sophisticated combination of two opposite elements and despite the difference of characters, these two are bound by mutual inspirations.

Listen to "Behind" below.



"Behind" is available now on iTunes.

https://www.facebook.com/PolaRiseMusic

VA - Ministry of Sound: I Love RnB (320kbps) (S:3/L:2)

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Categorie: Musique
Taille de l'upload: 179.75 MB
Status: 3 seeders et 2 leechers
Ajouté le: 2016-10-17 13:32:43

Title Fight announce tour with GIVE and Westpoint, including Knockdown Center

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Title Fight have been quiet for a while, but just announced a 2017 tour with DC hardcore band GIVE and their Kingston, PA neighbors Westpoint...

Continue reading…

DJ Shadow played two sold-out nights at Music Hall of Williamsburg with Noer the Boy (pics from night 1)

Deerhunter opening Kings of Leon tour

MM Shorts 884: The Du-Rell Family

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Via a recommendation from the Italian Job comes The Du-Rell Family taking their gothic-tinged cues from the tales of the deep south: roadside joints, dirt roads, feral dogs, snake oil salesman, swamp dwellers, trailer parks, murder, love and alcohol.

With a heady mix of biting harmonies, honky tonk steel and country blues there is much to admire here.

Check out new single Corre below.

 

Follow @madmackerel

The Devil's Right Hand

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<p><b>This story appeared in the </b><a href="http://www.vice.com/magazine/23/7"><b>October Music issue of VICE magazine</b></a><b>, a collaboration with THUMP and NOISEY. Click </b><a href="https://checkout.subscriptiongenius.com/vice.com/" target="_blank"><b>HERE</b></a><b> to subscribe.</b><span>​</span></p><p>In front of the Moscow Art Theater, a severed pig's head sat in silent protest, the words "To Tabakov" scrawled in black ink across its clammy forehead. Around the shrine, on April 1, 2015, Dmitry Enteo and the members of God's Will, his Russian Orthodox activist group, shouted anti-blasphemy slogans and theatrically crossed themselves. It's unclear whether the target of their ire, artistic director Oleg Tabakov, was present that day, but nonetheless, the group certainly achieved its goal of expressing disgust at the man's decision to stage Oscar Wilde's play <i>An Ideal Husband</i>. As the spokesperson for God's Will, Enteo—a slight man with a high forehead, a perennial self-satisfied smirk, and large, expressive eyes ripped straight out of a Pushkin verse—is no stranger to fomenting public chaos. </p><p>The Orthodox religious views he and the others share have led them to denounce any art that smacks of Satanism, homosexuality, or cultural deviance. His actions are typically showy and over-the-top; in addition to throwing pig heads and interrupting theater performances, some of his more colorful transgressions include tossing eggs at members of Marilyn Manson's band before a 2014 performance in Moscow, allegedly vandalizing an art show for showing "pornographic" images of Jesus Christ, staging a "missionary flashmob" in the capital's Darwin museum, and reportedly assaulting LGBTQ activists and Pussy Riot supporters.</p><p>Born Dmitry Tsorionov, Enteo participates in a burgeoning new wave of activism headed by young Orthodox religious fanatics: With a moral worldview of the 19th century, they attempt to spread their message using the technology of the 21st century. Their movement first gained notoriety in 2012, when Russian feminist punk collective Pussy Riot ignited a media firestorm after police arrested three of its members for performing the song "Punk Prayer" on the steps of Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior. In 2013, following Pussy Riot's protest action, Orthodox activists pressured lawmakers to set an example and strengthen the official penalty for sacrilege. As a result, legislators amended the Russian criminal code to add Article 148, which classifies "public actions, expressing clear disrespect for society and committed in order to insult the religious feelings of believers," as a federal crime; in other words, it outlaws blasphemy. </p><p>Today, Article 148 proved useful to Orthodox activists like Enteo, who is in large part responsible for shifting the hard right's focus away from operas and art shows to more populist art forms, like the perceived blasphemers in Western heavy-metal and hard-rock bands. With the law on their side, these young religious fanatics have made a habit of intimidating promoters, showing up to protest concerts, phoning in bomb threats, and threatening to call the Federal Migration Service to tamper with musicians' visas, all in service of their goal to rid Russia of these "satanic" elements.</p><p>On August 26, 2016, Orthodox activists sent a statement to the Russian police urging them to permanently ban American death-metal icons Incantation, Austrian black/death metallers Belphegor, and American dark-folk act King Dude, insisting that the bands promote Satanism and blasphemy. While Incantation seemed to have little trouble at its Russia dates, protesters appeared outside its Moscow show, and band members complained of being prohibited from saying their "blasphemous" song titles onstage, a provision that King Dude also encountered on a more recent run. "I am clearly not a Satanist," says King Dude's TJ Cowgill. But "I am a Luciferian, as I've said for many years now. I am in no way anti-Christian, and in that same regard, I am definitely not anti-Satanist."</p><picture class="article__image"><source media="(max-width: 25em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=400:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=600:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 40.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=650:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=975:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 53.125em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=850:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1275:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><source media="(min-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><img src="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png" alt=""></picture>​<p>Enteo denied our request for an interview, but that's not to say he doesn't relish attention. "Thank God!" he tweeted after an anonymous bomb threat canceled a Marilyn Manson concert in 2014. After another Manson show, in Novosibirsk, Russia's third-largest city, was also canceled, Enteo told NBC News, "We cannot allow for something like that [a Manson performance] to happen again." Twitter appears to be Enteo's favorite social medium; in his bio, he aligns himself with the "God's Will movement, orthodox christian, right-wing, conservative, pro-life, pro-family, pro-gun, creationism, anti-communism, fusionism" and broadcasts his views on religion and politics, his admiration for failed presidential candidate Ted Cruz, and his own exploits to more than 50,000 followers. With his social-media acumen, millennial flair for spectacle, and almost pathological craving for attention, he's like an ultra pious Russian equivalent of Milo Yiannopoulos.</p><p>In 2014, Enteo also targeted American death-metal legends Cannibal Corpse, which had eight shows booked across Russia for an October tour. Enteo told Ria.ru that "we send mass requests to the prosecutor, the description of what is happening at the concerts of the group, the texts of their songs, which describe in detail the rape and murder of children." He went on to note, "At first, we will try to resolve this issue with the help of law enforcement agencies. If it does not work, [there] may be rallies, prayer meetings—mass protest in different forms."</p><p>Ultimately, three shows were canceled. Cannibal Corpse explained its understanding of the circumstances in a statement, writing, "In Ufa the power was turned off shortly before the show (we were told because the venue was late on rent), and in Moscow and St. Petersburg we were told that we did not have the correct visas and that if we attempted to perform the concert would be stopped by police and we would be detained and deported (prior to the tour we had been told that we did have the correct visas and that all of our paperwork was in order). Our show in Nizhny Novgorod also had problems. In that city we performed half of our set before being stopped by police. We were told the police needed to search the venue for drugs and that the show had to be terminated."</p><picture class="article__image"><source media="(max-width: 25em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=400:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=600:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 40.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=650:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=975:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 53.125em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=850:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1275:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><source media="(min-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><img src="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png" alt=""></picture>​<p>These Cannibal Corpse cancelations came on the heels of a similar incident concerning Polish death metallers Behemoth. Religious protesters in Moscow sent the city mayor, Sergey Sobyanin, a letter condemning the group's concert program, writing that it "insulted the feelings of believers," and officials detained and then expelled the band from the country. On May 21, once Behemoth arrived at a club in Yekaterinburg, the police took the band members to the migration office, where they learned they did not have the proper visa for a live performance. Ultimately, Behemoth was fined 2,000 rubles (about $30) and deported after playing only four of 13 scheduled concerts in the country.</p><p>More recently, another extremist mouthpiece, Anatoly Artyukh, has jumped into the fray, using a more confrontational and even violent approach. Both he and Erteo are notoriously attention-hungry and have made very public appearances to spread their rhetoric and gloat about their successes in repressing Western metal bands. Our requests for interviews with Artyukh were not returned, but we know that the 55-year-old musician and former businessman heads up the St. Petersburg branch of Narodny Sobor (the "people's council"), a nationalist group closely allied with the Russian Orthodox Church, and has made his bones by stirring up hate against the LGBTQ community; he's lobbied to classify homosexuality and transgenderism as psychological disorders, distributed anti-gay literature to schoolchildren, and even created a ballet that condemns gays, abortion, and women without children.</p><p>Artyukh made headlines this past April when he spat in the face of an Austrian heavy-metal musician, Belphegor vocalist Helmuth Lehner, as the band arrived at the St. Petersburg airport to kick off its planned Russian tour. A video capturing the incident clearly shows Artyukh, a big man with a dark parka and hardened features, explaining his motivation—calling the band "perverts," "gays," and "Satanists" and promising "to do everything [he] can" to prevent "this freak show"—while citing Article 282 of the Russian criminal code, which prohibits "incitement to hatred or hostility, and humiliation of human dignity." After interrogating a hapless fan who'd been waiting at the gates to meet Belphegor, Artyukh strode up to the band members themselves and spat in Lehner's face; Lehner spat back and called for security. Artyukh continued to verbally harass him and his companions, including the American death-metal band Nile, and he threatened to have Belphegor's concert canceled. Artyukh and his henchmen closely followed the bands out of the airport, clearly begging for a fight; tensions came to a head after Artyukh struck Nile frontman Karl Sanders's arm. </p><div data-keep=""><div style="left: 0px; width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.2493%;" class="article__embed article__embed--youtube"><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/METmVJhy-Is?wmode=transparent&rel=0&autohide=1&showinfo=0&enablejsapi=1" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen style="top: 0px; left: 0px; width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div></div><p>Video of the incident, which was posted on YouTube, is uncomfortable to watch, and the result was even messier— Belphegor's St. Petersburg concert was canceled hours before stage time, and its Moscow concert devolved into farce, as the band was ordered to remove its backdrop and stage props, and Lehner was ordered not to sing on the track "Lucifer Incestus"; the sound engineer ended up muting the vocals for the rest of the show due to the band's lyrical content, and once the guys got offstage, they learned that their next two shows, in Ekaterinburg and Krasnodar, had been canceled too.</p><div data-keep=""></div><p>"Of course Belphegor will return to Russia," Lehner claims<b>, </b>though it remains unclear whether criminal charges will be brought against the band and succeed in barring it and similar acts from the country.</p><p>"The thing is," Lehner says, "I don't see Belphegor nor me as the victim. We did something right to piss those kinds of people off."</p><p>While it appears that Enteo, Artyukh, and their ilk primarily concern themselves with big-name artists—the better to draw attention to their cause—another recent incident shows how they've taken a passing interest in the local underground-metal scene. In April, Polish band Batuskha was forced to cancel two shows, stating in an email, "We had all the approvals and 'green light' from the Russian Police, immigration control and responsible officials. Unfortunately we received threats from extremists affiliated with the Russian Orthodox Church stating that they will beat up and even kill people attending both shows. Since it's beyond our control and we are not able to assure that the concerts will be 100% safe for both the audience and us we are forced to cancel both of them immediately."</p><p>Local promoters have also been targeted.An American metal band (that spoke under the condition of anonymity to ensure the safety of the Russian promoter who put on its Moscow and St. Petersburg dates) arrived to play its first show, only to find that the promoter had been asked to sign a document declaring that the band wouldn't be endorsing anything blasphemous. It was also rumored that Orthodox-affiliated plainclothes policemen—"out of place older guys in white button-up shirts"—were seen lurking around the band's Moscow gig, but fortunately, none of them ran into any further trouble. The band seemed unruffled by the experience, though, commenting, "[We've] played Russia a few times already, and, yes, the first time [we] went there I was very aware of bands having some trouble there. It didn't make [us] not want to go to Russia; in fact, [we] would say that it had the complete opposite effect."</p><p>Perhaps that's the best way to approach a group of shadowy extremists who operate under a Russified version of the Westboro Baptist Church model—taking their wailing and gnashing of teeth in stride, and refusing to back down. For all the activists' bluster and the foreign bands' headaches, it's homegrown Russian metalheads who ultimately suffer, and while these Orthodox extremists have yet to fully focus their hatred on local scenes as they have with Western bands, Andrei P. of Novosibirsk-based funeral-doom band Station Dysthymia told us that people are still nervous about the possibility. </p><p>"The really uneasy part [is] that whenever you play or plan to attend a gig," says Andrei, "you're now always worried that someone's gonna show up to shit on your parade."</p><p>"I am Russian, I love my people and my country," he continues, "and that's why I think we need to fight against shit like this, be it related to music or anything else. I am not against religious people, but I think that just as I have no business telling them how to live their life, they also have no business imposing their beliefs on other people."<br><br></p><p><i>Photos by Anthony Tafuro<br><br>Kim Kelly is an editor at Noisey; follow her on <a href="http://twitter.com/grimkim" target="_blank">Twitter</a>​.</i></p>

The Devil's Right Hand

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<p><b>This story appeared in the </b><a href="http://www.vice.com/magazine/23/7"><b>October Music issue of VICE magazine</b></a><b>, a collaboration with THUMP and NOISEY. Click </b><a href="https://checkout.subscriptiongenius.com/vice.com/" target="_blank"><b>HERE</b></a><b> to subscribe.</b><span>​</span></p><p>In front of the Moscow Art Theater, a severed pig's head sat in silent protest, the words "To Tabakov" scrawled in black ink across its clammy forehead. Around the shrine, on April 1, 2015, Dmitry Enteo and the members of God's Will, his Russian Orthodox activist group, shouted anti-blasphemy slogans and theatrically crossed themselves. It's unclear whether the target of their ire, artistic director Oleg Tabakov, was present that day, but nonetheless, the group certainly achieved its goal of expressing disgust at the man's decision to stage Oscar Wilde's play <i>An Ideal Husband</i>. As the spokesperson for God's Will, Enteo—a slight man with a high forehead, a perennial self-satisfied smirk, and large, expressive eyes ripped straight out of a Pushkin verse—is no stranger to fomenting public chaos. </p><p>The Orthodox religious views he and the others share have led them to denounce any art that smacks of Satanism, homosexuality, or cultural deviance. His actions are typically showy and over-the-top; in addition to throwing pig heads and interrupting theater performances, some of his more colorful transgressions include tossing eggs at members of Marilyn Manson's band before a 2014 performance in Moscow, allegedly vandalizing an art show for showing "pornographic" images of Jesus Christ, staging a "missionary flashmob" in the capital's Darwin museum, and reportedly assaulting LGBTQ activists and Pussy Riot supporters.</p><p>Born Dmitry Tsorionov, Enteo participates in a burgeoning new wave of activism headed by young Orthodox religious fanatics: With a moral worldview of the 19th century, they attempt to spread their message using the technology of the 21st century. Their movement first gained notoriety in 2012, when Russian feminist punk collective Pussy Riot ignited a media firestorm after police arrested three of its members for performing the song "Punk Prayer" on the steps of Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior. In 2013, following Pussy Riot's protest action, Orthodox activists pressured lawmakers to set an example and strengthen the official penalty for sacrilege. As a result, legislators amended the Russian criminal code to add Article 148, which classifies "public actions, expressing clear disrespect for society and committed in order to insult the religious feelings of believers," as a federal crime; in other words, it outlaws blasphemy. </p><p>Today, Article 148 proved useful to Orthodox activists like Enteo, who is in large part responsible for shifting the hard right's focus away from operas and art shows to more populist art forms, like the perceived blasphemers in Western heavy-metal and hard-rock bands. With the law on their side, these young religious fanatics have made a habit of intimidating promoters, showing up to protest concerts, phoning in bomb threats, and threatening to call the Federal Migration Service to tamper with musicians' visas, all in service of their goal to rid Russia of these "satanic" elements.</p><p>On August 26, 2016, Orthodox activists sent a statement to the Russian police urging them to permanently ban American death-metal icons Incantation, Austrian black/death metallers Belphegor, and American dark-folk act King Dude, insisting that the bands promote Satanism and blasphemy. While Incantation seemed to have little trouble at its Russia dates, protesters appeared outside its Moscow show, and band members complained of being prohibited from saying their "blasphemous" song titles onstage, a provision that King Dude also encountered on a more recent run. "I am clearly not a Satanist," says King Dude's TJ Cowgill. But "I am a Luciferian, as I've said for many years now. I am in no way anti-Christian, and in that same regard, I am definitely not anti-Satanist."</p><picture class="article__image"><source media="(max-width: 25em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=400:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=600:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 40.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=650:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=975:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 53.125em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=850:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1275:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><source media="(min-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><img src="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722213860-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123626-PM.png" alt=""></picture>​<p>Enteo denied our request for an interview, but that's not to say he doesn't relish attention. "Thank God!" he tweeted after an anonymous bomb threat canceled a Marilyn Manson concert in 2014. After another Manson show, in Novosibirsk, Russia's third-largest city, was also canceled, Enteo told NBC News, "We cannot allow for something like that [a Manson performance] to happen again." Twitter appears to be Enteo's favorite social medium; in his bio, he aligns himself with the "God's Will movement, orthodox christian, right-wing, conservative, pro-life, pro-family, pro-gun, creationism, anti-communism, fusionism" and broadcasts his views on religion and politics, his admiration for failed presidential candidate Ted Cruz, and his own exploits to more than 50,000 followers. With his social-media acumen, millennial flair for spectacle, and almost pathological craving for attention, he's like an ultra pious Russian equivalent of Milo Yiannopoulos.</p><p>In 2014, Enteo also targeted American death-metal legends Cannibal Corpse, which had eight shows booked across Russia for an October tour. Enteo told Ria.ru that "we send mass requests to the prosecutor, the description of what is happening at the concerts of the group, the texts of their songs, which describe in detail the rape and murder of children." He went on to note, "At first, we will try to resolve this issue with the help of law enforcement agencies. If it does not work, [there] may be rallies, prayer meetings—mass protest in different forms."</p><p>Ultimately, three shows were canceled. Cannibal Corpse explained its understanding of the circumstances in a statement, writing, "In Ufa the power was turned off shortly before the show (we were told because the venue was late on rent), and in Moscow and St. Petersburg we were told that we did not have the correct visas and that if we attempted to perform the concert would be stopped by police and we would be detained and deported (prior to the tour we had been told that we did have the correct visas and that all of our paperwork was in order). Our show in Nizhny Novgorod also had problems. In that city we performed half of our set before being stopped by police. We were told the police needed to search the venue for drugs and that the show had to be terminated."</p><picture class="article__image"><source media="(max-width: 25em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=400:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=600:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 40.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=650:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=975:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 53.125em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=850:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1275:* 2x"><source media="(max-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><source media="(min-width: 65.625em)" srcset="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1050:*, https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png?resize=1575:* 2x"><img src="https://video-images.vice.com/uploads/1476722264395-Screen-Shot-2016-10-17-at-123717-PM.png" alt=""></picture>​<p>These Cannibal Corpse cancelations came on the heels of a similar incident concerning Polish death metallers Behemoth. Religious protesters in Moscow sent the city mayor, Sergey Sobyanin, a letter condemning the group's concert program, writing that it "insulted the feelings of believers," and officials detained and then expelled the band from the country. On May 21, once Behemoth arrived at a club in Yekaterinburg, the police took the band members to the migration office, where they learned they did not have the proper visa for a live performance. Ultimately, Behemoth was fined 2,000 rubles (about $30) and deported after playing only four of 13 scheduled concerts in the country.</p><p>More recently, another extremist mouthpiece, Anatoly Artyukh, has jumped into the fray, using a more confrontational and even violent approach. Both he and Erteo are notoriously attention-hungry and have made very public appearances to spread their rhetoric and gloat about their successes in repressing Western metal bands. Our requests for interviews with Artyukh were not returned, but we know that the 55-year-old musician and former businessman heads up the St. Petersburg branch of Narodny Sobor (the "people's council"), a nationalist group closely allied with the Russian Orthodox Church, and has made his bones by stirring up hate against the LGBTQ community; he's lobbied to classify homosexuality and transgenderism as psychological disorders, distributed anti-gay literature to schoolchildren, and even created a ballet that condemns gays, abortion, and women without children.</p><p>Artyukh made headlines this past April when he spat in the face of an Austrian heavy-metal musician, Belphegor vocalist Helmuth Lehner, as the band arrived at the St. Petersburg airport to kick off its planned Russian tour. A video capturing the incident clearly shows Artyukh, a big man with a dark parka and hardened features, explaining his motivation—calling the band "perverts," "gays," and "Satanists" and promising "to do everything [he] can" to prevent "this freak show"—while citing Article 282 of the Russian criminal code, which prohibits "incitement to hatred or hostility, and humiliation of human dignity." After interrogating a hapless fan who'd been waiting at the gates to meet Belphegor, Artyukh strode up to the band members themselves and spat in Lehner's face; Lehner spat back and called for security. Artyukh continued to verbally harass him and his companions, including the American death-metal band Nile, and he threatened to have Belphegor's concert canceled. Artyukh and his henchmen closely followed the bands out of the airport, clearly begging for a fight; tensions came to a head after Artyukh struck Nile frontman Karl Sanders's arm. </p><div data-keep=""><div style="left: 0px; width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.2493%;" class="article__embed article__embed--youtube"><iframe src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/METmVJhy-Is?wmode=transparent&rel=0&autohide=1&showinfo=0&enablejsapi=1" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen style="top: 0px; left: 0px; width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div></div><p>Video of the incident, which was posted on YouTube, is uncomfortable to watch, and the result was even messier— Belphegor's St. Petersburg concert was canceled hours before stage time, and its Moscow concert devolved into farce, as the band was ordered to remove its backdrop and stage props, and Lehner was ordered not to sing on the track "Lucifer Incestus"; the sound engineer ended up muting the vocals for the rest of the show due to the band's lyrical content, and once the guys got offstage, they learned that their next two shows, in Ekaterinburg and Krasnodar, had been canceled too.</p><div data-keep=""></div><p>"Of course Belphegor will return to Russia," Lehner claims<b>, </b>though it remains unclear whether criminal charges will be brought against the band and succeed in barring it and similar acts from the country.</p><p>"The thing is," Lehner says, "I don't see Belphegor nor me as the victim. We did something right to piss those kinds of people off."</p><p>While it appears that Enteo, Artyukh, and their ilk primarily concern themselves with big-name artists—the better to draw attention to their cause—another recent incident shows how they've taken a passing interest in the local underground-metal scene. In April, Polish band Batuskha was forced to cancel two shows, stating in an email, "We had all the approvals and 'green light' from the Russian Police, immigration control and responsible officials. Unfortunately we received threats from extremists affiliated with the Russian Orthodox Church stating that they will beat up and even kill people attending both shows. Since it's beyond our control and we are not able to assure that the concerts will be 100% safe for both the audience and us we are forced to cancel both of them immediately."</p><p>Local promoters have also been targeted.An American metal band (that spoke under the condition of anonymity to ensure the safety of the Russian promoter who put on its Moscow and St. Petersburg dates) arrived to play its first show, only to find that the promoter had been asked to sign a document declaring that the band wouldn't be endorsing anything blasphemous. It was also rumored that Orthodox-affiliated plainclothes policemen—"out of place older guys in white button-up shirts"—were seen lurking around the band's Moscow gig, but fortunately, none of them ran into any further trouble. The band seemed unruffled by the experience, though, commenting, "[We've] played Russia a few times already, and, yes, the first time [we] went there I was very aware of bands having some trouble there. It didn't make [us] not want to go to Russia; in fact, [we] would say that it had the complete opposite effect."</p><p>Perhaps that's the best way to approach a group of shadowy extremists who operate under a Russified version of the Westboro Baptist Church model—taking their wailing and gnashing of teeth in stride, and refusing to back down. For all the activists' bluster and the foreign bands' headaches, it's homegrown Russian metalheads who ultimately suffer, and while these Orthodox extremists have yet to fully focus their hatred on local scenes as they have with Western bands, Andrei P. of Novosibirsk-based funeral-doom band Station Dysthymia told us that people are still nervous about the possibility. </p><p>"The really uneasy part [is] that whenever you play or plan to attend a gig," says Andrei, "you're now always worried that someone's gonna show up to shit on your parade."</p><p>"I am Russian, I love my people and my country," he continues, "and that's why I think we need to fight against shit like this, be it related to music or anything else. I am not against religious people, but I think that just as I have no business telling them how to live their life, they also have no business imposing their beliefs on other people."<br><br></p><p><i>Photos by Anthony Tafuro<br><br>Kim Kelly is an editor at Noisey; follow her on <a href="http://twitter.com/grimkim" target="_blank">Twitter</a>​.</i></p>

Stream Malcolm London’s New Album Opia Feat. Vic Mensa, Jamila Woods, Donnie Trumpet, How To Dress Well

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Malcolm London - OpiaMalcolm London is a quadruple threat poet/activist/educator/musician from Chicago. Many people pad their resume with titles, but very few come with an endorsement from fellow multi-slash philosopher, author, and professor Cornel West as "the Gil Scott Heron of his generation." He also has bona fides in Chicago's fight against gun violence and hosts the More »

Inspired & The Sleep, “Getting Through”

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Oceanside, California’s psychedelic indie pop duo Inspired & The Sleep – comprised of Max Greenhalgh and Bryce Outcault – is releasing some work following up the success of last year’s critically acclaimed Eyelid Kid EP. Their latest single is titled “Getting Through” – a follow up to this summer’s “Sweet Company” – and we have the exclusive premiere for you.

Light, airy dance music starts the track off, synth entering to make it feel slightly 80’s, but 100% fun. “There’s nothing to be sad” is the first line, so now we’re all on the same page. The song goes on to elaborate “scars that are healing” and an intricate narrative plays out over the course of the upbeat song, making us all feel as though we’re connected through the tough times.

“‘Getting Through’ is a tune that takes a third party view of the walls we put up against the ones we hold (or have held) the closest,” elaborates Inspired & The Sleep. “It seems so obtuse to shut out the ones we, at one point, held so dearly. You can’t help but ask yourself why?”

Keep up with the guys here.

The post Inspired & The Sleep, “Getting Through” appeared first on Impose Magazine.

Everything is Green, “Totally Sober”

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California-based artist, songwriter and producer Everything is Green – Nick Pappageorgas – has been hard at work in the wake of his music project’s debut album release this summer. Sweet Teeth is an enchanting escape from modern society into the talented mind of a Pappageorgas. We’ve got the exclusive premiere of the official lyric video for his track “Totally Sober” right here.

And the video starts with a vibrant grid, and we assume it’s about to get geometric up in here. But then quirky palm trees pop up, and neon illustrations appear, allowing a full 80’s island vibe to come forward as the synth hits fun notes. It wouldn’t be an Everything is Green video without some marijuana leaves in the video, and as dorky as the emojis are, we find that it more makes us feel like we may have been a part of this video…

The song is a fun, hip-swaying track, giving us major Beach Boys-meets-The Drifters vibes.

Sweet Teeth is out now on SpaceGang Records.

The post Everything is Green, “Totally Sober” appeared first on Impose Magazine.

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