Doylestown PA's Balance and Composure have returned and released Too Quick to Forgive, an EP that features two new songs - their first since 2017. The EP marks the band's first release for Memory Music and accompanies the announcement of four bi-coastal shows this summer.
You can watch the music video for leadoff track "Savior Mode," directed by band members Jon Simmons and Erik Petersen along with Britain Weyant (Bartees Strange, Webbed Wing).
You can pre-order vinyl and new Balance and Composure merch at the Memory Music Webstore now. This limited physical release features vinyl-only remixes of the two songs that make up this new EP, with Wicca Phase Springs Eternal remixing "Savior Mode" and Darcy Baylis remixing "Last to Know."
With a renewed sense of purpose, Balance and Composure will return to the stage for a series of Too Quick To Forgive release shows in some of the biggest rooms they've ever played. Support on the shows will include Webbed Wing, Seahaven, Toledo, Choir Boy, and more.
June 16 Philadelphia, PA - Union Transfer w/ Webbed Wing, Fleshwater, Grist Mil
June 23 Los Angeles, CA - The Novo w/ Seahaven, Death Bells
June 24 Pomona, CA - The Glasshouse w/ Seahaven & Death Bells
July 8 New York, NY - Knockdown Center w/ Choir Boy & Toledo
J.R. SLAYER's new five song EP "NOT ROTTEN" is out today on Memory Music! NOT ROTTEN is a five-track indie rock EP that tracks the experience of falling into earth-shattering love—the sort that safeguards its participants from the cruelty and cold of the world around them—and the simultaneous elation and fear that come from inhabiting such bliss. It’s about the possibilities that are unlocked when we care about and show up for others and ourselves in equal measure.
Stream the EP now and check out music videos for the title track "NOT ROTTEN" and "THE FADE OUT" below.
Fantasy Camp is the project of Jonah Kramer––known for his role as DJ for Wicca Phase Springs Eternal, the young multi-hyphenate grew up in the Wilkes-Barre, PA scene over the last decade and watched as bands like Title Fight and Tigers Jaw took on the world. He's been making music as Fantasy Camp since he was 16 but has never released a proper full-length project until now.
Casual Intimacy, the debut LP from Fantasy Camp, will be out on October 28 from Grammy-nominated producer Will Yip's label, Memory Music. Written, recorded, and produced entirely in Kramer's bedroom in late 2021 (and later mixed & mastered by Yip), the album's seven tracks punch far above their weight with rich, ethereal soundscapes, springboarding listeners from the bedroom into entire sonic worlds.
First single "Blood Moon" is out today with an accompanying video by Bob Sweeney. The song opens Casual Intimacy with a dark, pillowy sway, interpolating steely shoegaze, gauzy dream-pop, and lo-fi chamber pop for an intoxicating introduction.
Vinyl pre-orders are available now - grab casual intimacy on limited edition red vinyl limited to 500 copies along with a new hoodie and shirt.
You can now listen to Kayleigh Goldsworthy's electric new album Learning to be Happy in full! A project years in the making, "Learning to be Happy" shows all sides of Goldsworthy's expert songwriting, from the huge choruses of album opener "Losing My Mind" or "Overambitious" to the more intimate and folky "Better." Check out the record in full now and pre-order your copy of the vinyl, scheduled to ship next month.
Kayleigh will be donating all net proceeds from release day Bandcamp sales to Planned Parenthood to support their mission of protecting women's reproductive rights.
You can see Kayleigh Goldsworthy on tour with Kevin Devine and Kississippi right now - dates here.
By early 2020, Kayleigh Goldsworthy had finally figured out who she was. The long-time hired-gun musician from Syracuse and based in south Philadelphia, who had spent a decade backing up the likes of Dave Hause, Bayside, Frank Iero, and others, was ready to commit fully to a solo career of her own work. The day after New Year's Day 2020, Goldsworthy started recording her second solo LP, seven years after her debut Burrower, with Will Yip at Studio 4 outside Philly.
Then everything changed. The job and life Goldsworthy had pursued since her teen years was ripped away: tours, shows, studio time, even band practices and writing sessions, all gone. Along with those went away a hard-won sense of self. All those things that had given Goldsworthy the confidence and push to believe in herself and her work disappeared.
“I had figured out who I was,” says Goldsworthy, “then this whole thing happened, and I had to figure out who I was again.”
These are the conditions that created Learning To Be Happy, a story of undoing and becoming that begins at what Goldsworthy thought was the end: that assuredness and strength of January 2020. This story unspools over a thrilling, winding saga of scrappy, arena-ready pop rock, charged pop punk, and acoustics-and-piano balladry. The LP’s 10 tracks are often heavy and sometimes dark, but always relentlessly confident and hopeful, threaded through with the sort of bruised optimism that rewards all those who do the difficult work of wrestling with what it means to be happy.
“Learning to be happy is a process of learning how to be yourself,” says Goldsworthy.
At the end of the day, this is immensely personal work. That’s why the cover of Learning To Be Happy is a shot of Goldsworthy, alone in the frame, her face adorned with rhinestones and glitter, backgrounded by a dark, vivid, shifting fuschia. The photo, like the record’s songs, are designed to feel like one has stepped into “a room full of light:” “It’s your little zen den,” laughs Goldsworthy. “I want you to feel happy.”
The songs’ aesthetics reflect this ethic, too: anthemic earworm melodies, carried like a triumphant banner on Goldsworthy’s crystal-clear voice, ride atop bombastic drums and guitars, recalling the best parts of mid-’90s to early-Aughts radio rock and pop. The approach is the product of a realization: “What’s the point of dedicating your life to this craft if it’s not fun?”
“Life is too hard to take yourself and your art too seriously,” says Goldsworthy. “We all need to find joy and a bit of laughter in the things that make life weird.”
The initial January 2020 sessions for Learning To Be Happy yielded three tracks, including lead single “Overambitious” alongside “Better” and “Happy Again.” Goldsworthy called in Joe Godino (The Menzingers) for drums and high school bandmate Aaron Garritillo on bass on these three, then she and Yip completed the remaining seven tracks, finishing tracking in November 2021. Goldsworthy handled vocals, guitars, synths, and keys, while Yip took on bass, drums, percussion, and backing vocals, forming what Goldsworthy describes as “the most badass, efficient two-person band ever.”
“Losing My Mind” opens the record with crunchy, wide-open, coast-roadtrip chording before Yip’s drums thunder in behind: “Day after day I think I’m losing my mind/Day after day remind myself I’m alright!” soars Goldsworthy’s chorus vocal. The somber acoustics of “Better” lead into the keys-led, defiant, boundaries-setting electro-pop of “Keep The Light On:” “I won’t keep beating myself up/‘cause you never called during the end of the world,” reckons Goldsworthy quietly.
“Overambitious” follows, the track that Goldsworthy says is the thematic cornerstone that gave her the self-confidence to build this LP. “I never raised my voice, I’m still learning how to use it/And then there’s boys like you, whose voices echo all the rooms,” sings Goldsworthy on the verse over guitar crunch. The chorus floors the pedal with a firework melody: “You didn’t want to believe what I always liked about me/I’m just a little overambitious!”
The quiet, finger-picked reflection of “Call Your Mother” follows with a plea for low-key internal work rather than loud declarations of intent. It unfurls behind Goldsworthy’s soft opening gambit: “Can we all stay quiet once?” Later, the mid-tempo churn of “Boomerang” soundtracks the painful process of letting someone back into your life, time and again, expecting them to have changed and the outcome to be different, only to be wounded anew. “You’re Good” comes next, a bittersweet, cheeky pop rock assessment of someone who becomes better only after they leave your life and find someone new. “I’m so happy that you’re good/Yeah I’m happy that you’re good, to her.”
“Little Ghost” closes the LP just with grand piano and Goldsworthy’s voice, a final post-mortem on the record’s adventures. Ghosts are all we have left of the people we leave and are left by; they haunt us at familiar restaurants, subway stations, venues, corners of our bedrooms. To someone else, we are those ghosts.
As both a record and a philosophical concept, Learning To Be Happy is, as Goldsworthy puts it, a never-ending waxing and waning: it is tumultuous and messy, not clean and final. The process is the point, and the next step is to share these songs live. At her shows, Goldsworthy wants everybody to be friends, for the experience to be casual and awkward and funny, just like the trials and errors of learning to be happy. She’s not any different than the people listening to her songs, trying to figure out how to feel better.
“I’m just your realistic friend that has a lot of feelings,” she says.
Welcome Queen of Jeans to the Memory Music Family! Hiding In Place is the first new music from Philly's Queen of Jeans in nearly three years, and the EP finds vocalist Miriam Devora doing just that—hiding in place. Time both stood still and flew by when her longstanding job at a community-run movie theatre ground to an obvious halt in 2020.
Limited color vinyl versions of the new EP are available in the Memory webstore now. The pressing features the 4 song EP in full as well as three bonus vinyl-only songs from the band's 2021 Covers EP.
1. Hiding in Place 2. Why Hide 3. Was I Ever 4. The Wait is Over 5. Teenage Dirtbag (Vinyl Only) 6. I'm The Only One (Vinyl Only) 7. Actor Out of Work (Vinyl Only)