Alicia Clara Drops Dream-Dizzy New Video For “Stones Like Eyes”

alicia clara stones like eyes

Released back in February – which in 2021 time feels like a solid three years ago – Alicia Clara’s Outsider/Unusual has been one of the standout indie dream pop releases of the year. The Montreal-based singer-songwriter’s EP is an introspective examination on self-fulfillment, disappointment, isolation. 

Today, she’s back to make waves with her video for “Stones Like Eyes,” one of the singles from the EP. The track seems to be an exploration on the end of a relationship that seemed quite dreamy and romantic in its initial stages, but lacked whatever it takes to carry on and become something truly lasting. “It’s nobody’s fault / we were not meant to dance after dark / the moonlit pavement threw us off.” *Snaps*

alicia clara

Photo by Tess Roby

The video – directed by Roxane Loumède – begins with an intimate shot of Alicia lying in bed, opening her eyes as though we as viewers have been invited to this incredibly personal space, a dream realm of the singer’s own making. As we quickly see, her mattress is actually floating on a body of water, so these visuals may not be fully tethered to the tangible world. Her hazy “oohs” melodicize ethereally before the drums and bass kick into gear, lending a funky groove to the singer’s vocals. As the video goes on, the image of Alicia in bed fades into a starry night sky; she tries on various wigs over backdrops of flowers and foliage; sits wide-eyed on a commuter train (looking very babushka-esque). Ultimately, we are transported to an open field, watching the singer dance around while singing about “jump[ing] back to the start.” It’s like all this transition and travel we’ve seen in the video has brought us back to this simple, rustic locale, a return to the basics. It looks a little similar to the Teletubbies landscape, actually, complete with some very sci-fi looking dome structures. 

To wrap up the visuals, we see Alicia Clara sit before a feast-laden table: lobster, pigs-in-blankets, cake, kiwis adorn. Oddly, instead of eating this sumptuous spread, she opts to for mutilation: recklessly squeezing the juice out of oranges and sticking an entire hand in a perfectly good cake. All this before hopping on the back of a motorcycle with an unidentified driver, riding off into the distance, and crashing in a fiery explosion. If we’re going to continue to venture down the route of dream interpretation, maybe we can offer this: though she sits at tat feast alone, it is still bountiful, enough to sustain her. By rejecting that and saddling up with the first person who comes along, she’s only traveling down a path to her own destruction. 

Shit. 

Watch the video for “Stones Like Eyes” below and stream/purchase Outsider/Unusual on Bandcamp or your streaming service of choice. 

The Puddcast Episode 8: Krystal Karting

puddcast

Artwork by Cat Elia


In this age of instant gratification of digital streaming, where just about any album from any era is available within seconds and we consume media in wanton binges, it’s easy to forget how much time and effort it takes for creatives to craft their content (we touched upon this a bit in the last episode of the Puddcast featuring Oompa, which you should totally check out if you haven’t already). It can take weeks, months, sometimes even years for an artist to perfect their material and feel happy enough with it to release. 

krystal karting

Photo Courtesy of Krystal Karting

With that in mind, what’s it like when an artist knows they have a limited time in which to write, record, mix, master, and release a project, especially when that artist hasn’t released music before? That’s the situation Atlanta’s Krystal Karting put himself in earlier this year when he set out to record his debut The Best We Can With The Teeth We’ve Got. To record it, he signed up for a 90 day free trial of Ableton (for those that don’t know, Ableton is a versatile audio software; it’s also what I use to edit episodes of this podcast). In those 90 days, Krystal wrote and recorded the album’s eight tracks, playing every instrument. 

It’s a bold move to put out music at all, but to try to do it with a technology that you don’t have much experience with and need to learn on the fly, it could seem like an insurmountable feat to some. But Krystal took this self-assigned homework in stride and completed the task.

After taking a quick first listen to the album, I was undeniably impressed. If I hadn’t known ahead of time about the 90 day free trial, I never would have guessed this was Krystal’s first foray into self-recording and -releasing. So I wanted to talk to him to get a sense of what this learning process was like and what his plans are moving forward as an artist. 

Check out the episode below, or wherever you stream podcasts. Plus, you can check out the accompanying Spotify playlist, featuring Krystal Karting’s music, plus a slew of the artists we mentioned during the course of the episode. And, of course, check out The Best We Can With The Teeth We’ve Got when you’ve got a chance. 

 

The Puddcast Episode 7: Oompa

puddcast

Artwork by Cat Elia


If you live in Boston and don’t know who Oompa is… what can I tell you? How can I reach you? Where the hell have you been, champ? 

oompaOver the past few years, Oompa has firmly established herself as one of the city’s best rappers (and if you have any idea how I feel about the current state of Massachusetts hip-hop, that makes her one of the best rappers in the whole dame world… yeah I said it). Riding the wave of prior releases November 3rd and Cleo, she’s been building a steady following and reputation around Boston and beyond. Over this past summer, she’s dropped a slew of singles and videos – notably “GO” and “LEBRON.” 

For the latest episode of the Puddcast, Oompa joined us to discuss her recent singles, her previous albums, and how to set some boundaries in regards to how much of your personal life you reveal to the world. 

Listen to the latest episode wherever podcasts are available, and be sure to check out the companion playlist on Spotify

Fuzzstival 2021 Excites Allston Audience

 

A picture of some fuzz making devices from the fest

In ancient times, festivals were meant to mark the passage of time. The end of a season, the beginning of a season (i.e. harvest) by noting the momentous occasion with a party. In this spirit, what does Fuzzstival represent? I would categorize it as one of the first major indie Boston music festivals since lockdown ended and a collective rejoicing that we’re able to see live local music again. The party vibe was evident: friendly priced tickets, drinks, as well as free ear plugs at the door. All this, plus squeaky clean bathrooms courtesy of the fine facilities at the Charles River Speedway. I could get used to this.

In an effort to minimize TLDR I only wrote about a few personal favorites, so read on for a summarized review of the concert.

Night 1

 

 

​​Beeef

Although slightly out-of-place following a couple of abrasive acts, Allston Pudding co-founder Daniel Schiffer’s band Beeef balanced the bill nicely with major key melodies. The 4-piece had a well-calibrated set of tight songwriting, guitar jangle, and fuzzy bass. As the band played on, they sounded increasingly twee compared to the previous aggressive and heady acts, which all culminated in a moment where Schiffer prefaced a slow tempo tune with encouragement of hugs. Posi-vibes abounded as the crowd routinely chanted “BEEEEEEEF!” and clapped along. Warm and fuzzy feelings to all.

 

Editrix

A mercifully quick changeover and we’re back up and running on the right-side stage with Editrix. Singer/guitarist Wendy Eisenberg led the band with a quiet confidence that belied their ability. They switched it up with their tempos, time signatures, vocal effects, and dynamic range as Eisenberg played both lead and rhythm guitar while singing. They casually tossed in some guitar hero moments, busting out sweeps during a brief interlude. As the last kick drum slammed and my shirt stopped vibrating, I had concluded that Editrix must be one of the deadliest power trios around.

 

Landowner

Landowner swept onto the stage several minutes past 11 pm for a set that took hold of the audience with immediacy and intensity, and they didn’t need to resort to bowling us over with raw sonic power to do so. Sure, there was plenty of volume containing barbed guitar lines and drum beats that were sent caroling through the cool late summer evening, which surely heightened the auditory senses, but the visual performance is what made a stirring impression on this writer. The X-factor was the front man, Dan Shaw, who was dressed in Ian Curtis office attire and stiffly mugging in ways that recalled both Mark Mothersbaugh and Jim Carey. Interestingly there was an emphasis on repetition – not rock-by-numbers riffs but rather idiosyncratic and dissonant instrumental passages that would be reiterated along with the evocative lyrics. It was deranged and beautiful.

 

Night 2

Nova One

Performing as a duo tonight, Providence’s Nova One delivered a dreamy vocal performance over mellow, washed-out guitars. There were ambient drone-y sounds that seem to have been generated from the guitars themselves with the aid of pedals. The guitar driven atmosphere surrounded the powerful and ethereal voice of singer-songwriter Roz Raskin. The effect was gentle and breezy.

 

Cliff Notez

Another Allston Pudding alumnus, Cliff Notez, took to the stage late Saturday evening. He took a break from an intensive rural artist’s residency at Mass MOCA where he is working on new music to play tonight’s show. He captivated the audience with a refreshing mix of rapping and singing. Also, right from the jump, he was bringing an element that has been lacking for much of the fest: banter. He charmed the audience, speaking to us directly throughout his set and making us laugh. Notez encouraged call-and-response with intriguing phrases from his songs such as “We some masochists” and “Fuck the system, motherfuck the system.” He debuted a number of high energy songs that got the crowd dancing (he even gave us some abstract dancing instructions). Decked out in gold fingernails and a “This is Fine” meme t-shirt, Cliff Notez (and all of us) were indeed (temporarily) doing just fine. At the end, he said it was time for him to head back out to Mass MOCA in the woods of Western Mass, where he said he hopes to not get eaten by a bear.

Pictured during their first song, “Falling Forward.”

Sweeping Promises

Festival headliners Sweeping Promises played their first show ever just a week before lock down, 18 months later, their second in-person show was tonight. In the interim, their first and only album “Hunger for a Way Out” blew many of us away, and it was time to see what they could do live. 

But fate would strike again. During the peak of the festival, right after the first song, a stunning rendition of “Falling Forward” — something happened — something caused a man who was pushing people in the front to start a mosh pit to actually fall backward and he was suddenly on the ground unconscious, and the police were called. I eventually saw the same man standing and vibing in the room, while authorities were dealing with the aftermath of the crisis. It was all very anticlimactic and I don’t even want to write about this but I kinda have to since the show was unfortunately put on hiatus for pretty much the rest of what would have been Sweeping Promises’ set. The band finally regrouped for 4-5 songs total but the mood had palpably changed. It was a less powerful performance than how it started, but better than nothing. Singer Lira Mondal’s massive voice and throbbing bass shook the walls, Caufield Schnug’s flanger drenched guitar toggled between funk chords and tasty leads, while Spenser Gralla’s beats summoned the crowd to move, racing to squeeze in a few songs before the clock struck midnight. Definitely catch them on tour if you can.

Follow the concert organizer “Illegally Blind” for info on the next “Fuzzstival” and other like-minded community shows @illegallyblindpresents on IG

Arman Wali Leaves It “All On Your Time”

Arman Wali

The ethereal stylings of Arman Wali (pictured left) are back with a new single “All On Your Time”. The singer songwriter continues to toe the line between indie rock and dream pop on his latest track. Revisiting familiar themes from last year’s EP The Pace of Nature, the song opens with a sparse piano melody and Wali’s soft vocals carrying you through. Eventually the song builds and becomes something more theatrical and grand, culminating with the piercing sound of an electric guitar. 

“[This track] is about feeling like someone’s not putting in as much effort as you are. They may do something for you but you don’t feel like it’s genuine,” explains Wali. Based on a combination of personal experience and creative freedom, the track marks a moment of growth for Wali. As an artist, his sound is more confident now with more complex production and stronger choices. What was once minimal is now growing into something more. His direction is clear with the ability to continue onward as Wali may have had all the right parts before, but now they’re fitting together just right. 

Since releasing The Pace of Nature, Wali released another single this past fall, “Radio Underground”, and continues working with the members of indie rock outfit Strawberry Machine. Promising a more “cinematic feel” to his new music, Wali plans to release at least a couple more singles before compiling another EP. Future solo plans include a foray into a more folk sound with live instruments instead of virtual, which have been mainly used in these recent tracks. However, Wali does still choose to feature more eclectic and left field choices for instruments including using a Tabla, a Pakistani drum, on “Radio Underground”. 

Arman Wali

Wali with collaborators Jason Kimball, Julia Davidovitz & Donna Vatnick

With the dawn of vaccines and the, albeit blind, push into a post-pandemic-while-still-a-pandemic world, Wali has found himself performing live again. Whether gigging for private events or rocking out with Strawberry Machine, including a stop at the recent Jet Lag Festival up in Downsville, NY. The band also plans on releasing a supersized album of approx. 17 songs. Recorded partially over last year and at Watch City Studios with Jack Younger

On top of releasing more solo work, finishing the album with Strawberry Machine and possibly releasing a video for “All On Your Time”, Wali and friends plan to continue meetings of their Communist Book Club. Looking ahead to the future, Wali was able to hold on to something positive from the past year: “2020 made me less risk-averse… [I have] more of a “YOLO” mentality now… if I don’t do this stuff now, then I’m just gonna die & never have done it.” 

Listen to the new song “All On Your Time” below! Make sure to follow Arman on Instagram and Strawberry Machine on Bandcamp

 

Mercet Checks The Vibe with a New Video

 
A still from Mercet's new video

Still courtesy of Austin Abbott

Last we heard from Boston producer Mercet, he was preparing to self-release his debut full-length VIMS. Out this past spring, VIMS’ eight tracks of pristine ambient, electronica, IDM, and experimental pop take the listener through a journey of personal discovery and growth. Inspired in part by the isolating effects of the pandemic and the artist’s struggles with self-worth, VIMS was a frank depiction of mental health. It also served as a reintroduction to the music scene at large for its principal artist, Sai Boddupalli. While known primarily as a rocker, Boddupalli has long harbored a love of electronic music, stressing the importance of releasing solo music that reflected the full berth of his influences during our chat on the Allston Pudding Discord in March.

By our estimation, the record’s centerpiece is “Bennetts”, a brief-but-tense snapshot of gurgling synths that builds tension before releasing into a scattering drum break, recalling Boards of Canada at their funkiest. It appears that Mercet agrees, as we are pleased to be premiering the song’s music video today on Allston Pudding. Director Austin Abbott and lighting tech Nick Surette treat “Bennetts” to a simple, but moving series of vignettes depicting its sole character weathering some sort of turmoil as he shuffles through the streets of Allston. It’s a perfectly enigmatic visual accompaniment to VIMS‘ tumultuous backstory. Plus, the idea of working something out on a solo jaunt down Harvard Ave is an act of which AP readers can surely relate.

Abbot had this to say about the video:

“I wanted to express what it’s like to look at yourself while life is still happening. We shot at a seedy motel with folks lurking outside the window wondering what we were doing, in the basement of a hair salon and on some streets. Our actor Eric DuRant was amazing at being open to ambiguous directing that was more about finding an emotion rather than specific actions. I think the video came together wonderfully and really feels like it matches [well] with Sai’s beautiful music.”


Mercet’s debut album VIMS is out now. You can catch him opening for Kelly Lee Owens at The Sinclair on Monday September 13th, tickets on sale right here.

Proof is in the Pudding Ep. 7: Liz Bills

 
 
Vegan Bolognese
 
A quick weeknight meal packed with veggies, vegan sausage, sauce and “cheese” – in this case it’s Nutritional Yeast. Really anything could be thrown into this dish. Any spice, vegetable, meat/plant meat. No matter what additions you make, be sure to brown the vegetables/meat in the pan before adding your sauce! Seasoning generously along the way!
 
Jar of sauce – I used “Sockarooni” by Newman’s Own – or better yet – make your own!
 
Brown rice pasta (if you can find it; any kind will work)
 
Beyond meat sausage/Any plant based sausage
 
Spinach 
 
Black sliced olives (pre-sliced in a jar; drained)
 
Baby tomatoes (chopped)
 
Nutritional Yeast (“Parmesan Cheese”)
 
Oil for cooking
 
Salt/Pepper
 
Optional additional vegetables/herbs/spices as desired
 
  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Season generously with salt.
  2. Slice your veggies and sausage, unless you prefer to leave the sausage whole.
  3. Heat some oil in a medium sauté pan over medium-high heat. Brown the “meat” and vegetables for a few minutes. Season with salt/pepper.
  4. Add your sauce and season again with salt/pepper. Reduce heat to medium/medium-low. Stirring occasionally to make sure nothing is sticking. 
  5. Boil your pasta. Stirring occasionally to make sure it doesn’t stick. 
  6. Drain your pasta and combine with the sauce/veggies/meat.
  7. Sprinkle on some Nutritional Yeast flakes. Serve immediately. 

Stay tuned for more episodes of Proof is in the Pudding and make sure to follow Liz on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter! Check out the new album by Liz Bills & the Change below!

 

 

My Fictions Make A Ferocious Return With “Time Immemorial” EP

Hardcore music needs a purpose, it needs a reason to justify the abrasive guitars and the pained vocals. It only makes sense that in this time of political, climate and health unrest that My Fictions would rise again from the ashes. The Boston-based hardcore band is back with their first new material in seven years, an EP aptly titled Time Immemorial. It marks their first release since their sole full-length album Stranger Songs in 2014. It came about nearly on a whim, when a simple request for a band practice went out from guitarist Tyler Bradley. He, singer/bassist Bryan Carifio, and drummer Seamus Menihane soon found themselves in a studio in Philadelphia with producer Wyatt Oberholzer, who does some excellent work in bringing these six sonically bombastic, lyrically resigned songs to life.

The EP is thrillingly fun, mixing the cynicism and intensity with more than enough licks and unpredictable turns. “Psychic Readings” kicks the EP off with a deceptive status of normalcy, despite the onslaught of noise and riffs that kicks the song off. The song has a structure similar to that of a template rock song, a verse-chorus-verse affair with some strong melodic hints. This isn’t the only time the band flirts with conventionality – the title track has a guitar rhythm that’s a little easier on the ears than expected and has a sound that feels ‘bigger’ than any of the other tracks. The EP’s other songs, however, point much more towards a classic hardcore sound. “Fallacy” and “Endless” are both shorter bruisers, focused mostly on blunt force trauma. The former pummels for a little over two minutes, while the latter slows down and taps out before the two minute mark. “Oblivion,” situated between them, is also a face-buster, though it channels more of a raw punk energy before giving way to the only big breakdown on the EP. The closer, “Sin Eater,” is maybe the most grounded song on the release, which should be taken with a grain of salt. The song has a great central rhythm and sends the listener off with a pure concussion of a finale.

The lyrics of these songs are as fatalistic as the music is, if not more so. The EP is born of the idea of a failed prophecy, and all six songs tell tales of regret and miserable soul-searching. “Why must I burn the way I do / Engulf others in what I go through / The distance grows, the distance proves / I can’t sustain I can’t break through,” Carifio sings on the title track. Elsewhere on “Endless,” he pines, “Don’t give a fuck what’s ahead of me / Again I sink into apathy / This consciousness is a burden.” “I know I have to live with myself / But I can’t put that on someone else / What good would it do to continue this,” he sings on “Oblivion,” a song inspired by the gut-punch movie First Reformed. These songs sound tortured beyond their years, with six narrators ripping up journals and seeking out a reason to either live or die – though mostly the latter. The ferocity of the music is matched with a bitter, morbid sense of a mortality too far off.

Each of these six songs has something unique to offer, and each manages to totally separate from the others while maintaining a complementary feel. Relying too heavily on one structure can be a pratfall for hardcore bands, but My Fictions follow in the same footprints as bands like Converge and American Nightmare that have come from the relentlessly creative Boston hardcore scene. The EP is officially on streaming services today, and the band is playing a release show on October 2nd as part of the Illuminate My Heart Festival in Providence, Rhode Island.

Naomi Westwater Delivers Poignant & Pointed Songwriting On New EP

naomi westwater

Photos by Blahnik & Westwater

With as powerful a voice as Naomi Westwater’s, you’d want to firmly establish your presence on a new body of work. What better way than to deliver a haunting acapella vocal section to kick off your new EP? That’s the strategy Westwater operates with on “Home,” the opening track of her latest release Feelings. It’s a hauntingly beautiful delivery: her vocal control is excellent, her emotiveness hits deep, but her words – ”my body is not my home” – resonate as an intense expression of frustration, in this case with a self-perceived betrayal of one’s own body. Westwater, who has endometriosis, was in a great deal of pain when writing the song. “Home”’s juxtaposition of bodies and souls finds a way to grapple with that pain by identifying very firmly with her own soul as being a greater force than her body. What makes the track even more irresistible is when the band joins in for a stomping, blues-rock anthem that feels like a gleeful howl at times, rejecting the limitations of the physical and embracing a more ethereal existence. 

Over the course of the tracks, Westwater finds little moments to add some dynamic variation to her vocal delivery, even a flair for the dramatic. She often yips, yelps, or sings in a exalted whisper, adding character and surprise to her vocalizations. She’s got the vocal chops to get away with more mundane and basic melodies, but Westwater very rarely takes the simple path, allowing her vocal melodies to meander in soulful, jazzy runs. Much of this release feels like Westwater giving us a taste of the American songbook filtered through her own experience. She’s equally adept at blues, soul, jazz, and even a little country-fried balladry with “Strange Weather,” a not-so-subtle missive on the climate crisis. 

naomi westwater

Feelings Cover Art

While plenty of what Westwater does is understated, she doesn’t leave time for subtlety in the topics she addresses. She doesn’t back down from singing about personal struggles and how they find their shape among the web of social concerns in the U.S. Pain stemming from medical issues flows into spiritual questioning surrounding the existence of a higher power which flows into ecological concern before she closes off the EP exploring mixed-race identity. To close the release, Westwater opted to include her cover of “Strange Fruit,” which has become an American standard, especially at times of crisis and duress when it comes to this country’s sordid relationship with race. For a track that has been covered by the likes of legendary vocalists like Billie Holiday and Nina Simone, Westwater doesn’t shy away from the challenge of putting her own stamp on it. The loose, sometimes chaotic instrumentation compliments her haunting high notes. 

Vocals aside, the EP also finds a great deal of power in the skillful instrumentation provided by Westwater’s band, the mixing of Daniel Babai (Dephrase), and Westwater’s crisp production. The band for the album- made up of Alex Chacon on guitar, Dana Roth on bass, and Francis Pena on drums (plus a few others here and there) – sound comfortable matching Naomi’s energy track by track, genre by genre. While listening, there’s a residual feeling that this is a collection of songs that are itching to get live renditions; luckily, Westwater will perform at an EP release show at Club Passim on Tuesday, September 7th. 

Listen to Naomi Westwater’s Feelings EP below via Spotify. 

The Collect Pond Charts a Path from Inspiration to Activation on “Man of Mystique”

By Ben Bonadies

Photo by Benjamin Daley

Disclaimer: Dan Moffat is a staff writer for Allston Pudding. 

Brian Eno once said that all 30,000 people who bought the first Velvet Underground album started bands themselves. The quote has dogged the Velvets ever since and become emblematic of the way their influence has dwarfed their commercial popularity. But I think what that quote really gets at is the flash of inspiration their music elicits, an “I can do that, too” feeling that made audiences in 1967 rush to their guitars and start playing. 

Danny Moffat, a singer-songwriter known as The Collect Pond, charts a similar path from inspiration to activation on latest single “Man of Mystique.” The song details a moment of self actualization at a concert. “He picked me, a nervous teen,” the refrain begins over staccato guitar strums, “A nod to know I’m seen / And I began to dream.” 

It’s this moment that begins Moffat’s narrator down a path toward songwriting, and, inevitably one imagines, to “Man of Mystique” itself. The noted “guitar screams” that sparked artistic ideation in the first place are here, too, in the form of a descending synth melody and ambient distortion underneath the taut groove. It’s a song that carries within it the secrets of its origins. 

But it’s not just the dreams of an artist that manifest in Moffat at this moment, it’s this whole other thing. That feeling when you’re young of wanting so badly to be somebody else. “Man of Mystique” engages with this most teenage of rituals: remaking yourself in the image of your idols. You get the sense that this isn’t the first time Moffat’s narrator has done this. “Yeah that’s the life for me / Every day of the week / I’ll be the man of mystique” doesn’t sound like the rigorous thought process of someone who thinks things through, or even that this is his first attempt at a complete personality overhaul. Nowhere is there mention of what makes this man so mysterious, or how to become him. The will to change is decided in simple terms, then and there. 

“Growing up is hard to explain” Moffat sings in the bridge. Growing up is hard to explain. That’s why people write songs about it. The 30,000 kids in who started bands after wearing out their copies of Velvet Underground & Nico had something of their own to say about coming of age. The explanation “Man of Mystique” offers is one of transformation, however improbable it might seem. 

Stream “Man of Mystique” below and the find rest of the singles from the forthcoming album Long Range on Bandcamp. Long Range is due out 9/24.