seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from India

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Australia

seen from Germany
seen from France
seen from China
seen from Austria
seen from Lithuania

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Germany
MELJOANN - PERSONAL ASSISTANT [6.56] Via Katherine, an Irish artist...
Katherine St Asaph: Irish artist Meljoann's 2010 album Squick is an underrated gem: think PC Music before PC Music's time and without PC Music's smarm, and absolutely the kind of thing that'd go over great in 2017. "Personal Assistant" takes that album and adds a lot of polish, a lot of Janet Jackson vocals and a lot of (implied) Alexa: careening fast and ever-so-slightly wonky like a self-driving car. Headphones required. [9]
Alfred Soto: The permafrost layer of synths and Meljoann's high end create unceasing tension, and not once does the veneer crack. [7]
Ian Mathers: The sound, like Janet Jackson struggling to fight her way out of a Leverage Models production, is fantastic. There just doesn't seem to be that much of an actual song to go along with it. [6]
Tim de Reuse: There is a functional groove here, buried under clouds of overlapping, hissing voices, a sea of arrythmic cluster chords, and a structure that includes a tonally adventurous, discombobulating interlude for a second verse. None of these things are deal-breakers in their own right, but all at once they're an unresolvable mess; there is so much tense, unforgiving detail that it tangles up attention into knots. [4]
Nortey Dowuona: Stop-and-start bass and trembling synths that tumble and split underneath Melijoan's searing melisma draw a line through the spikes of crackling, jutting drums. [7]
William John: A quasi-Simlish take on Janet Jackson's aesthetic from twenty or so years ago is an intriguing enough premise, though I can't imagine many people gathering under a disco ball to dance to this, aside perhaps from the cast of Jenny Slate's Catherine. [5]
Claire Biddles: "Personal Assistant" miraculously manages to retain a consistent groove and sexiness while also being unpredictable and oblique enough to reward repeat listens. Even better if each listen is framed with the hints of submission and transgression suggested by the song title. [8]
Iain Mew: It feels exactly like the uncomfortable twitchy loop brought on by having too many things to do at once while sat at a machine that should help me to do all of them but instead using it to flick between inboxes. A light "email that dream" poking through the clutter is so perfect it seems wrong it doesn't end there. [6]
Brad Shoup: For a few months about a decade ago, I was a personal assistant at a small healthcare company. There were about 10 employees, so it wasn't too bad: schedule calls, purchase flights. Still, I thought there was something else for me, and I bailed, only to spend years working at factories and banks. (There were a few fumbles toward grad school in there.) Meljoann wrote this while working at a call center, the type of place at which I couldn't seem to get an interview. Her styling for the song and video match: arch takes on a 30-year-old aesthetic. Her cadences are brittle and stacked neatly, the kind of efficiency you'd expect from the job in question. There's playfulness, but alongside the relentless hi-hat it comes across as emotional labor: the smile you display when a last-minute request drops by your cubicle. And the synth squiggles are as fleeting as daydreams, maybe the promise of a weekend free from demands. After I got hired by my current employer, I used to go into work on Saturdays all the time to chip away at my queue of trouble tickets. Sometimes I'd see an exec, but never an assistant. [7]
[Read, comment and vote on The Singles Jukebox ]
Progress Bar Mix 03 – Meljoann & Scout Hardcastle by Progress Bar http://soundcloud.com/progressbar/progress-bar-mix-03-meljoann-scout-hardcastle
Scout Hardcastle Album Cover, 2014
Scout Hardcastle's Masterkinder: Rainbows of My Mind
www.lisacrowne.com
Fetishes - Scout's first single gets a disgusting video
Boy Scout Audio are pleased to get Scout Hardcastle's first release well and truly out of the way. The first single from Scout's offensive debut album, 'Masterkinder: Rainbows of my Mind', is called 'Fetishes'. The track features label head Meljoann on vocal, songwriting, instrumental and production duties.1 Our video2 was all shot in one freezing-cold December night, on the rooftop of a Dublin art space called Satellite Studios. It was directed by Ceara Martyn, and its no-budget aesthetic was inspired by the fact that we had no budget. We made our costumes out of bin bags, dug out some Christmas lights from the attic, and went for it. The choreography was chaotic and collaborative, utilising crotch-thrusts and fist-pumps to thematically unsubtle effect. Our two camera-people brought their own DSLRs. We obtained a glide track, some lights, and one of those little black-and-white clacky things. The performers and crew worked for nothing but pop vibes, to our eternal shame.3 Nevertheless, we made a big vat of veggie stew to warm everyone up, and continue to contribute whatever skills we have to each others' projects -- this is the barter system that necessarily fuels the Underground. With alter-egos and creepy creatures wandering around in the middle of the night, it was all a bit dreamy. We hope our terrifying little creation invades your dreams, and sucks out your soul through your genitals.4
Check out www.meljoann.com for more info
Video directed by the wonderful Ceara Martyn from Satellite Studios!!
Squick Poster
From the Meljoann Album Squick
http://lisacrowne.com/images/illustrations/
Electronic jazz is everything you can imagine. Daniel Jacobson has really gone it with ZoiD and what flies forth on this EP trips hard as musical snooker balls. Lyphyz Drumpdrops is released on 25 January on Meljoann's label Boy Scout Audio with a launch tomorrow night at King 7 on Capel Street. Support from Eomac, LionFX and Exit Introvert. A video's due soon too. I hope it's the same style as the artwork above.
Boy Scout Audio artist Meljoann and multidisciplinary arts crew A4 Sounds earned a Teamwork Merit Badge each for this 'So Academic' music video. The visuals feature hand-made neon puppets and cardboard sets, while the music funks hard and promotes the value of book-learning. This cost-effective, ecological and studious approach shows responsible citizenship as promoted by the Scout Law, and we applaud them for it.
(Director: Lisa Crowne. Producer: Conor Hinfey. Editor: Maeve Brosnan. Set Design and Puppets: Lisa Crowne, Donal Holland, Conor Hinfey. Camera/puppeteer/lighting/stop animation/DIY special effects: Maeve O'Neill, Lua Flannery, Padraig Mupead, Ciara Kennedy, Emer Mooney, Andy A-Force, Darragh Wilkins, Pauliina Jokinen, Dee Ambrose, Paul Bluefood)