Rolling Stone Australia September 2017

(Ann) #1

THE FUTURE IS NOW


SOUNDS LIKE:Art Ensemble of
Chicago jamming at an art-punk
loft
FOR FANS OF:Don Cherry, Chi-
cago post-rock
WHY YOU SHOULD PAY ATTEN-
TION:Chicago-reared, NYC-based
trumpeter Jaimie Branch has
played with the likes of Spoon, TV
on the Radio and Belle Orchestre.
After 10 years of being down
to jam with jazz, post-rock and
doom metal groups, Branch steps
out with her assured debut album,
Fly or Die, fronting a band featur-
ing noted Chicago percussionist
Chad Taylor and cellist-composer
Tomeka Reid. The album expertly
veers from sweet hooks, spacy
interludes and free-jazz explora-
tion, Branch’s trumpet sparring
with Reid’s sawed cello, Taylor’s
crackling rhythms and even bits
of acoustic guitar. Her horn veers
everywhere from Cootie Williams-
style growls to space-echo
ambience.

SHE SAYS:“Both my broth-
ers and my dad was a trumpet
player, but I didn’t really know
that when I picked it up,” Branch
said of carrying on in the family
tradition. Growing up in Chicago,
she cut her teeth as part of
what she deemed “a 10-piece
traditional suburban punk ska
band” as a teenager and later on
became entranced by Chicago’s
legendary, still-vital jazz scene.
“Chicago jazz has a homegrown
attitude about it that’s really DIY.
They put on high-level concerts
but at its roots, it’s almost a
punk aesthetic. The musicians
put on the shows for other
musicians. That’s why it keeps
perpetuating. It’s at such a high
level of energy.”
But for her album, she took
inspiration not from classic jazz,
but from an unlikely pop source:
“I wanted it to be the length of
Weezer’sPinkerton,” she says,
“where you can easily listen to it
again and again.”
HEAR FOR YOURSELF:“Theme
001” has a peppy and bright
bounce that serves as a good
introduction to Branch.ANDY BETA

Jaimie


Branch


SOUNDS LIKE: Progressive country with
an indie fl air, like Jenny Lewis’ twangier
cousin
FOR FANS OF: Nikki Lane, Kacey Mus-
graves, Aubrie Sellers
WHY YOU SHOULD PAY ATTENTION:
Ruby Force, AKA Erin McLaughlin, lives
up to her vivid stage name. On her debut
album Evolutionary War, she paints co-
lourful tales using a broad sonic palette,
drawing from country, Americana, rock
and indie pop for a sound that lands
somewhere between Rilo Kiley and Nikki
Lane. While some tracks – the single
“Cowboy” – dabble in retro infl uences,
Force’s music is a glimpse at the promis-
ing direction in which left-of-centre
country music is headed.
SHE SAYS: “Evolutionary War is sort of a
collection, like a box of photos you fi nd
from a certain period of life. It strings to-
gether like a narrative essentially, about
how I love,” McLaughlin says. “If these
songs can fi nd their way into people’s
hearts, not to mention playlists, I would
feel like I’ve accomplished something of
eternal value.”
HEAR FOR YOURSELF:“Ode to Vic
Chesnutt” pays homage to the beloved
late Athens songwriter and to “life spin-
ning like a wheel” with sweet harmonies
and an optimistic, driving beat.
BRITTNEY MCKENNA
Ruby Force


38 | Rolling Stone | RollingStoneAus.com September, 2017

CASEY CURRY; PETER GANNUSHKIN
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