Archive for December, 2009

The Hush Now - Wishing You a Happy Christmas

Thursday, December 10th, 2009
In the spirit of giving, The Hush Now have mustered up all their holiday cheer to bring you Wishing You a Happy Christmas. Grab the free download right HERE. Check out what the UK Music Review had to say:

<a href="http://www.sixstarpromotion.net/dump/WishingYouAHappyChristmas.mp3">Wishing You A Happy Christmas by The Hush Now</a>


IT’S CHRIIIIIIISSSSSSTMAAAASSSSS. The time for festive cheer, good will all round and an abundance of cheese, cheese and more cheese on the radio/music channels/shopping centre play list. The appearance of these festive tunes will be greeted by some with open arms and a sloppy kiss. However, there will be some amongst you who may fly into an internal rage at the sound of Cliff, Wham and Shakin’ Stevens and think to yourself “why oh why can’t someone bring out a Christmas single that doesn’t make me want to batter myself over the head with a Sainsbury’s own Christmas Pudding?!”

If the latter sounds even vaguely familiar, you may want to have a listen to the new Christmas single from Boston based five piece The Hush Now. The band release this holiday single while working on their upcoming second album, due to be released in 2010. Wishing You A Happy Christmas has just enough ‘Fa La La’s’ and jingle bells to have you reaching for the mince pies, but still manages to inject a healthy dose of mellow indie-cool.

The track starts of subdued and even has a slight tone of sadness in the opening notes. However, it soon escalates into a pleasant verse and an up-beat and suitably sunny-sounding chorus. This is pure indie pop with an air of sophistication, you can imagine yourself sipping mulled wine in a romantic chalet with this in the background…or maybe that’s just me. While the single is unlikely to have a fighting chance against X Factor finalists and novelty songs for the number one slot it would be a welcome addition to any Yuletide playlist. A cool Christmas song? You bet your baubles it is.


To download the entire self-titled debut from The Hush Now, click HERE.

Pete Kilpatrick: ‘Shapes and Sounds’ EP Review

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009
The Pete Kilpatrick Band will be releasing their EP ‘Shapes and Sounds’ on Tuesday, December 15th. Check back soon for information on obtaining the album. In the meantime, check out this review from The Portland Phoenix.

Pete Kilpatrick Band - Shapes and Sounds


The first song on the Pete Kilpatrick Band’s new Shapes and Sounds EP might be called “Dear July,” but the five-song work is clearly an ode to winter, to its delicious melancholy and the joys of finding cozy corners in overheated bars or naked bodies under six or seven blankets. Paired with Jonathan Wyman’s warm production, equally kind to throaty electric guitar solos and crystalline piano breaks, Kilpatrick’s inclinations produce a soporific effect, like getting boozy in a wool sweater next to a raging fire.

Kilpatrick has largely held his band together since last year’s Hope in Our Hearts, losing only lead guitarist Zack Jones in the meantime (he was at one point replaced with Nick Goodale, and he’s here stop-gapped by Ryan McCalmon and Wyman), and the sound of the Band continues to sound more organic and lush. “Feel It,” whence comes the title lyric, sprawls out to 5:25, but never feels close to long. Kilpatrick has an increasingly relaxed delivery and the band matches him, letting the song pour forth like so much smoke from the top of a chimney, with a particularly nice organ break from Steve Morell. “The weatherman in New England is never right,” Kilpatrick sings with a world-weariness, “he’ll say it’s snow, but here’s the sun again.”

Morell also shines on “July,” where his piano is achingly sweet, with Matt Cosby thumping along a lyrical bass accompaniment.

There’s a new wrinkle for this disc, too, in the person of Marie Moreshead, with whom Kilpatrick trades verses on the winsome “City’s Beating Heart,” where two lovers meet at a rock show. “I met her after midnight,” Kilpatrick breathes, “as the band was plugging in/My winter hat matched the color of her eyes.”

“He was looking at me across a crowded room,” Moreshead returns, “and it was dark but I swear I saw his light shining through.”

Okay, it’s a tad corny, but it’s just the kind of change-up Kilpatrick needs to make the release stand out, and it’s a decidedly different sound for Moreshead: less dainty, more throaty, coming down in the register to match Kilpatrick’s key and delivery. And, anyway, she’s just returning the favor Kilpatrick extended by guesting on her “Hello There,” from the Birdwatchers EP.

She also adds some backing work on the excellently moody “Rock and Roll Never Changes,” where Matt Lydon opens with deep-seated drums, heavy on the kick and the toms, and “we dance by the light of the moon till morning comes/But I don’t know how to feel, our wires are all crossed.” It’s a story of love unrequited, or maybe left untried: “Call you back and say, ‘rock and roll never changes’/But I left your number on the floor/In the back of a beat up cab wishing I had the guts to face my fears/When did all the good time girls go home?”

You might ask, too, where the good-time, sunshiney Pete Kilpatrick went after the first run through Shapes and Sounds, but I can assure you he’s just in brief hibernation.

Check back soon and visit PeteKilpatrickBand.com for more information about ‘Shapes and Sounds’.

Featured Artist:

To The Masquerade

We are To The Masquerade. Five dudes that grew up to share the common genuine love of rock music, showmanship, women, and cheap pizza... read more
band management services north america

Six Star Artists:

The Hush Now

The Pete Kilpatrick Band

To The Masquerade