JADE HAIRPINS SPARK DANCE MOVES AND CONVERSATION FAILURES ON “(DON’T BREAK MY) DEVOTION” 

WATCH AND SHARE “(DON’T BREAK MY) DEVOTION” HERE

DEBUT LP, HARMONY AVENUE, OUT MAY 29 VIA ARTS & CRAFTS

PRE-ORDER HARMONY AVENUE HERE

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Photo Credit : Alisha Dar // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Arriving on all shores today is “(Don’t Break My) Devotion”, the new single from Jade Hairpins’ forthcoming album Harmony Avenue, out May 29 via Arts & Crafts. As bandleader Jonah Falco will tell you, it’s a technicolor burst through the plastic age, outlying the exhaustion of bad decisions and failures to communicate, all wrapped up in a cornucopia of bubblegum, new wave, disco, and post-punk.

Directed by the band’s Mike Haliechuk, the accompanying music video showcases the London group’s full line-up for the first time (rounded out by Tamsin M Leach and Jack Goldstein) in an absurdly comedic conversation of instructions where meaning and physical language get mismatched and reinterpreted like a body remix of obliterative proportions. 

WATCH AND SHARE “(DON’T BREAK MY) DEVOTION” HERE

Up and down Harmony Avenue, you’ll hear pop foraging with analog acoustics and electronic landscaping. It’s a collection of songs written and recorded in real time by Falco and Haliechuk, members of Fucked Up and the masterminds behind their recent record Dose Your Dreams. In fact, Harmony Avenue was originally conceived as a potential addendum to that album’s universe, but the end result was more exciting than Falco and Haliechuk anticipated and deserved its own spotlight.

“(Don’t Break My) Devotion” is the appropriately large follow-up to the melody flood of Harmony Avenue’s lead single “J Terrapin”

WATCH AND SHARE “J TERRAPIN” HERE

PRE-ORDER HARMONY AVENUE HERE

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HARMONY AVENUE TRACKLIST
01 J Terrapin
02 (Don’t Break My) Devotion
03 Father Coin
04 Yesterdang
05 Post No Bill
06 Broadstairs Beach
07 Dolly Dream
08 Mary Magazine
09 Truth Like A Mirage
10 Motherman

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JORDAN KLASSEN ANNOUNCES NEW LP, SHARES NEW VIDEO FOR LP SINGLE

NEW LP, TELL ME WHAT TO DO, OUT MAY 22, 2020

WATCH AND SHARE “I WANT TO MOVE IN TO YOUR HOUSE” HERE

PRE-ORDER TELL ME WHAT TO DO HERE

PREVIOUS VIDEO “VIRTUOUS CIRCLE” INCLUDED 2020 PRISM PRIZE TOP 20

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Photo Credit : Rachel Pick // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

When it comes to forming our own personal identities, the wide-open expanse of possibilities for each of us is supposed to be empowering. There’s dizzying potential for defining oneself, especially for marginalized individuals, and in comparison to previous generations. But what is a person to do if the infinitely-expanding universe makes them feel not free and bold, but rather powerless, afraid, and small? To stand in the face of such choice may be difficult, but with his latest release, Tell Me What To Do, Jordan Klassen shows us that doing nothing isn't an option. A perfect companion to his last record, Big Intruder, which was about growing up, Tell Me What to Do is about finding a home and an identity when many aspects of existence feel tenuous. 

Following recent single “Identivacation”, Klassen is today sharing another track from the album. In “I Want To Move In To Your House”, Klassen seems to assume the persona of a classical musician from a previous century, with a lullaby-like melody that evokes memories and emotions, and seems to celebrate a golden age of the past. 

WATCH AND SHARE “I WANT TO MOVE IN TO YOUR HOUSE” HERE

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“I Want To Move Into Your House” Single Artwork // DOWNLOAD HIGH-RES

Ironically, with Klassen’s new release, Tell Me What To Do, no one told him what to do. This results in an album conceived and written independently, without artifice or pretension. Although recorded in the midst of potentially crippling professional challenges, with this album Klassen embraced his inner muse. He took full creative control, leading to musical stories that are true, unadulterated expressions of his own search for identity in a transient world. 

“I spent a lot of my youth asserting myself, drawing a circle around who I was and daring people to enter,” says Klassen. “Maybe that's a necessary part of life, to go through a phase of marking the territory of your own identity. Maybe it's the sign of our times, I'm not sure. Over the last few years I've found that my orientation has changed significantly, though. I'm less and less interested in self-discovery and more and more interested in the world around me, systems and relationships and history and where I've landed in those ever-shifting sands. While I was writing this record I was feeling that groan a lot; 'Tell Me What To Do'. It was emphasized by my circumstances. Many of the towers that I'd built a refuge of identity in were burning to the ground. Many of the relationships that made me feel safe had begun to feel unsafe. For the first time since 2011 I made a record 100% independently, and I did it trying to remember why I started writing songs in the first place. I didn't want to look over my shoulder anymore. Tell Me What To Do is a bit of a paradox because on the one hand I'm begging for something outside of me to inform my identity. On the other hand I forged a path that feels more like me than any I have before.”

On Tell Me What To Do, Klassen doesn’t just want to make unsettling, thought-provoking music. Each of his songs also contain a deep wish to connect authentically with others; he wants to make music to help people feel less alone. These are songs that accompany you as you jump out into the terrifying, unknowable void. This is definitely the case with the record’s lead single “Virtuous Circle”. As Klassen says, “the song is a plea of hope that what feels like a vicious circle could invert into a virtuous one”. 

The stunning video for “Virtuous Circle” was recently included in the Prism Prize Top 20 and nominated for a UKMVA for Best Alternative Video - International. Directed by Farhad Ghaderi and produced by Shelby Manton of Boldly, explores the joys and pains of brotherhood through the volatile relationship between a young boy (Ben Andrusco-Daon) and his self-destructive older brother (Antoine Olivier Pilon) in the pursuit of winning a famous regional long-distance race.

WATCH AND SHARE “VIRTUOUS CIRCLE” HERE

Tell Me What To Do is a wonderfully diverse album, gliding seamlessly between tracks from one of Klassen’s distinctive musical styles to another. “Identivacation” transitions from solemn, determined vocals, layered around playful electronic bleeps and bloops. On “A Letter to Jesse Boy”, we are treated to Klassen’s single-sourced trembling voice. In “Surprised / Not Surprised”, Klassen imagines a dialogue with an unforgiving superego figure, who is critical and exacting. This figure does not comfort or coddle. Instead, on bad days, its voice is the one you hear as you gaze into your own fault-finding reflection in a mirror, and the one that prevents you from drifting into a peaceful sleep at night. “Ministry of Doubt”, with its orchestral beginning, is a hymn reminiscent of Simon and Garfunkel’s “Sounds of Silence”. A song that reminds us that loneliness is an inescapable element of the human experience seems especially relevant in this time of self-isolation and social distancing... prophetic even. 

The haunting “Golden Ladder” has waves of sound that ebb and flow, surrounding and comforting the listener, until we are invited to shake off our melancholy and join the dance, before we are swept to a post-modern, techno version of a baroque piece. All this together in one record is nothing short of musical brilliance.

 WATCH AND SHARE “SURPRISED / NOT SURPRISED” HERE

Klassen is an internationally acclaimed singer/songwriter from Vancouver. He has toured extensively worldwide during his 9 year career throughout Europe, Korea, Australia, Canada and the US. Known for his well-crafted arrangements and nuanced songwriting, his sound is often compared to the likes of Sufjan Stevens, The Shins, and Nick Drake

From there he has steadily built his fanbase by opening for well-established artists such as Rhye, Lindi Ortega, Husky, Silversun Pickups, Whitney, Pickwick, and Ethan Johns and by garnering a significant radioplay and licensing history. His career has shifted seamlessly into the streaming world with almost 12 million streams worldwide to date. 

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TELL ME WHAT TO DO TRACKLIST
01 Loss For Words
02 Ministry Of Doubt
03 Arrive With You
04 Virtuous Circle
05 Surprised / Not Surprised
06 I Want To Move In To Your House
07 Tell Me What To Do
08 None Of My Answers
09 Indentivacation
10 A Letter To Jesse Boy
11 St. Cecilia
12 Golden Ladder

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LIZA ANNE SHARES TIMELY NEW SINGLE, “BAD VACATION”

LISTEN AND SHARE “BAD VACATION” HERE

"Pushes her sound even further....sunny, loosely woven" - The Fader

"A breath of fresh air." - Consequence of Sound

"Irresistible hooks and layers of tasteful guitar work....ya'll really should be listening to Liza Anne." - Stereogum

"Shimmery guitars" - Refinery 29

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Liza Anne invites you to her “Bad Vacation” with her newest single. Co-produced by Kyle Ryan (Kacey Musgraves, Natalie Prass), Micah Tawlks (Louis Prince, COIN) and Liza herself, “Bad Vacation” is a bold and frenetic synth-driven track about the manic pain and joy of freeing yourself from an unhealthy relationship. Calling to mind artists like the Talking Heads and St. Vincent, “Bad Vacation” sees Liza operating from a place of newfound emotional strength, a creative stance that PAPER Magazine calls “a dark humored, catchy song with a killer bassline.”

LISTEN AND SHARE “BAD VACATION” HERE

To accompany the release of “Bad Vacation”, Liza Anne has written a personal essay for PAPER Magazine detailing her tips for mental wellness during this time of social distancing. Read Liza’s essay HERE.

“It feels like a strange time to release music but an even stranger time not to,” says Liza. “Writing this song was a mental playground for me - turning pain into satire and imaging a hope-filled world with no ceilings - I wanted to bottle up that electricity that happens when you’re free of something taxing.”

While Liza’s breakthrough 2018 album Fine But Dying reconciled with her panic disorder and spoke candidly about her struggles with depression and anxiety, this new collection of songs reveals a stronger, wiser, more confident Liza, one who understands her own limitations and has the tools to confront them. 

WATCH AND SHARE “DESIRE” HERE

BUY / STREAM “DESIRE” HERE

“Bad Vacation” is the latest in a series of singles that Liza has released in 2020. Her most recent track “Desire” earned praise from The Fader, who said it “pushes her sound even further.” Refinery29 hailed the song’s “shimmery guitars,” Consequence of Sound called it a “breath of fresh air,” and Stereogum loved its “irresistible hooks and layers of tasteful guitar work,” adding, “y’all should really be listening to Liza Anne.”

Liza is hard at work on the follow-up to Fine But Dying, which NPR Music called “bold in both sound and subject.” Stay tuned for more news from Liza Anne.

WATCH LIZA ANNE PERFORM “PARANOIA” ON CONAN HERE

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