Showing posts with label Lawrence and Leigh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lawrence and Leigh. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Lawrence & Leigh Announce National Tour Including SXSW Date

Bringing their haunting, intimate live show on the road to include an Austin showcase at SXSW is Lawrence & Leigh. The New York duo’s dream-colored dazzling indie-folk is sure to wow audiences at the new Revolution Bar on March 17 during Everything Independent’s SXSW Day Party. The Revolution Bar show will be open to the public, all ages, and entrance will cost a donation of a canned good.

Lawrence & Leigh put as much energy into their live shows as they do their meticulously crafted recorded music. Though the vibe tends to be simpler and more intimate, with Lawrence & Leigh’s Andrew Kalleen and Kristin Stokes being the only ones on stage, they put their power into creating a personal experience for the audience. “The goal is to give an experience, not an exact replica of the album - this is the live interpretation,” they say. Click Here to Read More..

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

The Other Side with Filmmaker Justin Lange

Brooklyn native Justin Lange declares he is something of a cultural immigrant. Although he is a filmmaker now, Lange didn’t grow up watching movies or television like his peers. In fact, a lock was placed on the family TV set that only came off for the Olympics. He explains, “My dad literally wrote a song which includes the line, ‘Why go down to the video store, bring all those monsters and werewolves through your door?’” Since he was not exposed to Hollywood culture as a child and spent “half of [his] waking life daydreaming in the woods,” Lange never had the desire to emulate the content the silver screen produced. As an adult, Lange realized that the technology of filmmaking was a way to project the dreams he saw in his head into the world. Lange’s latest dreamscape was set to the music of Lawrence & Leigh, in which the budding filmmaker created an adaptation of the Cretan Labyrinth for the band’s “Chelsea Nights” video, featured most recently in MAGNET Magazine’s Film at 11.

Lawrence & Leigh - Chelsea Nights from Justin Lange on Vimeo.

We were able to pull Justin Lange away from his camera long enough to tell us what it’s like to be on The Other Side:

Green Light Go: What are some of the prerequisites to becoming a music video director and what initially sparked your interest in this field?

Justin Lange: The medium of music videos is simultaneously home to some of the most inventive, as well the most derivative film work right now. There are assembly lines of stock music videos and totally inventive, wildly creative new work. The most important thing an aspiring music video director can do is find inspiration outside of the music video landscape. If inspiration is the product of ideas having sex, then watching music videos and trying to create something new is just going to result in creative inbreeding. I’m really inspired by interactive art and participatory arts culture, like Burning Man, FIGMENT, and all of the underground stuff that is happening in Brooklyn right now. Music videos offer a container to explore a lot of the different technologies and ideas that I’m interested in. If I weren't making music videos, I would probably give up on film and simply create installation art.

GLG: You recently shot a music video for Lawrence & Leigh. What was the inspiration for such an eerily beautiful video?


JL: My friend Jeff Stark does incredibly innovative site-specific theatre. He staged a post-apocalyptic play called the The Sweet Cheat, based on The Albertine Notes by Rick Moody, which was set in the warehouse that is featured in the Lawrence & Leigh video. The play begins on the Metro North train going up the Hudson River to the space and by the time you arrive, it’s imagined that New York has been destroyed in a Nuclear Holocaust, so the only New York that exists in the present is the one we, the theatre-goers, remember. I was really inspired by how much the location spoke about nostalgia and memory.


The action of the video pulls pretty squarely from the myth of the Cretan Labyrinth (where Theseus marks his passage into the labyrinth with string). I think that journey works well as a template for the way we all move through the complexities of intimacy while holding on to the hope that we can exit, heart intact, if things go sour.


GLG: When you set out to film a music video, how do you determine a location and how to set up the shoot?


JL: The song fertilizes that process. I might want to shoot in greenscreen against a world we created with miniatures, or a frozen swamp in the middle of winter, but I won’t know until I understand the story the song wants to tell. I’m really interested in the ways that spaces tell stories.


For example, I’m interested in a Christmas tree farm that was abandoned in the 1960s, where there are all of these wild, overgrown pines that are all planted in rows. It’s really cool. I’m waiting on the song that needs that kind of adventure...and a sacred lama, all decked out glowing jewels. [The scene will become] some kind of magical journey.


GLG: What bands are you working with now, or who would you like to work with in the future?


JL: I’m doing a lot of documentary work right now, but I’m particularly hungry for a music video project with a song that has some electronic elements; something ethereal. I’m open to intense songs of any genre.


GLG: What are some of your favorite music videos?


JL: I love Michael Gondry and I thought the feature film Dancer in the Dark was incredible.


GLG: What is the best piece of advice you could give a band that wants to hire a director to shoot a music video?


JL: Know what your song is about and be prepared to explain every mystery and metaphor without getting attached to any particular visual aesthetic.


GLG: What are the most rewarding and challenging things about being a music video director?


JL: Getting to live in a different world for a day or two. Making music videos is like interdimensional space travel, with a return ticket. It works best if everyone is willing to take risks and play in the world we’re creating.


GLG: What does the future hold in terms of your own filmmaking aspirations?

JL: I’m really interested in playing with different technologies. I have a pretty sophisticated understanding of projection mapping, generative graphics, LEDs, DMX and midi control…and I am [thankful] to have friends who know more than I do. The nexus of art and technology is exciting to me. I want to project on to stone and onto time lapses of growing things. High ISO photography can make moonlight dance. Projected lyrics can sing in time with artists on moving shapes and spaces. Anybody can copy existing processes. What I’m interested in is how I can really play with technology.

The Other Side highlights the talented folks behind the scenes of the music we listen to. The Other Side features producers, engineers, booking agents, photographers, radio DJs, management teams, and label representatives.

This week’s The Other Side is brought to you by: Lauren Roberts

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Friday, December 24, 2010

High Five! from Lawrence & Leigh


Straight from Brooklyn, this week's High Five! is brought to you by Lawrence & Leigh:










Enter the Void is an AWESOME movie! Unfortunately, I can't tell you anything about it, because you'll just have to experience it for yourself. The film is visually stunning, very intense, long, and it says something about our time on earth. Tokyo, psychedelics, and the Tibetan Book of the End are major inspirations for this movie, to give you a hint.













This is a 1967 jazzy, spoken word album about colors. Each poem is about a minute or two long and it intricately describes one of Nordine's 34 favorite colors, from orange to ecru. Ken Nordine is the master of spoken word—and a hit at any party.













Who wouldn't want to wear a cozy, fleece/flannel body suit that has rubber dots on the bottom of the feet around this time of year?! The onesie is waaaay more functional than the Snuggie and it is so warm and comfy, it gives a whole new meaning to the words "leisure suit." Toddlers know what's up!










New York might be the "world's capital," but that city doesn't know shit about burritos. We flew back to our native land of California just for the mexican food (oh yeah...and to be with family for the holiday...). Since we arrived, we've literally eaten burritos every other day, in order to reach our maximum burrito potential. Listen, a person's got to do what a person's got to do! What is the best way to eat a deliciously made S.F. burrito, you ask? Curled up in a onesie.














What happens when you take an ordinary, thirty-something-year-old Japanese man and place him in extraordinary, fantastical circumstances? The clear fascination of the wildly imaginative author, Huruki Murakami. Murakami uses a basic template in various ways, in various novels, blending the line of reality and fantasy, human and otherworldly, and singular consciousness and universal interconnectedness to such an extent that readers often lose sight of what is real. Our recommendations include: Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World (a quick and consuming read) and The Wind-up Bird Chronicle (a beautiful novel that will have you savoring all 607 pages).


To celebrate the end of the nine to five, a Green Light Go staff member or artist will leave you with their short list of favorite things, better known as the High Five!

This week's High Five! is brought to you by: Lawrence & Leigh
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Friday, December 10, 2010

GLG Fresh Mp3 Friday

Hear it here first at GLG: Lawrence & Leigh and The Handsome Family.
We promise you, these are three tracks you do not want to miss out on!

Lawrence & Leigh are two artists on a mission: to create work that’s beautiful and bold, with refreshing originality and an infectious sense of style.

The Handsome Family, “Brett and Rennie Sparks continue to put a brilliantly surreal twist on everyday subjects, using nature imagery to evoke the weird intensity of all-consuming passions.” --Jon Young, Spin

Lawrence & Leigh from Hills and Masts
Release Date: March 7, 2011
“Chelsea Nights”
Genre: Folk/Experimental/Indie Rock
For fans of: Joanna Newsom, Dirty Projectors, Fleet Foxes
Bio/hi-res photos

Lawrence&Leigh Chelsea Nights by greenlightgo


The Handsome Family from Honey Money
“Just Like Tom Thumb Blues" (Bob Dylan Cover)
"Drinking Beer on the Roof" (bonus track)
Genre: Folk/Americana
For fans of: You should already be their fan!
Bio/hi-res photos

The Handsome Family Drinking Beer On The Roof by greenlightgo

The Handsome Family Just Like Tom Thumbs Blues by greenlightgo

Listen and download more MP3s here:
GLG Clients by greenlightgo

To our fans, please feel free to post any of the approved songs on your blog or tweet to your friends. Check out our list of clients and available mp3s here: greenlightgopublicity.com. If you're not on our email list to receive these directly and want to be, please send an email over to info@glgpub.com.
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Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Lawrence & Leigh Release Odyssey Volume III: Hills and Masts on March 7th

Lawrence & Leigh are not the sort of artists who wait for inspiration to come before producing great work. The duo spend their time, thought and energy creating and perfecting their music. The result of this hard work is beautiful and bold, with a refreshing originality and an infectious sense of style. The duo’s first major undertaking, entitled Odyssey, is a set of three EPs, each with its own distinct sound and character. The first release, which has been a year in the making, is in fact the final chapter, Volume III: Hills and Masts. The EP will be released on March 7th, 2011.

Download "Chelsea Nights"

Like some kind of wondrous blend of Dirty Projectors and the haunting richness of Fleet Foxes, the female/male band of Andrew Kalleen and Kristin Stokes fill their music with dazzling styles of pop-- colored with a dream-like nostalgia, and realized to their fullest potential in the studio. With dense harmonies and elaborate song structures, the time spent meticulously fleshing out every detail has paid off. Lawrence and Leigh have created an album that fluidly progresses from each passing sound with impressive dynamics and energy. All the songs are absolutely individuals, with their own form, color, and intention. Yet the album remains cohesive through a melancholy yet optimistic, tone, and a sense that each song takes you on a ride somewhere you had never anticipated arriving.

Take for instance, the varying moods of the song “Glow.” What starts out as an explorative soliloquy over harmonically lush vocal overlays, soon takes a turn to a base heavy pop anthem, which then again evolves into a driving jazz piano with brushed drums, setting the scene for a 1960’s noir-like chase. You feel immediately transported through each section, becoming more engulfed with each turn of phrase.

Whether the music takes shape from Kalleen’s openhearted words or the duo’s skill at crafting gripping stories from the remains of variously dissimilar sounds, strong songwriting is always at the core. The band states, “We want everything that we put out into the world to have a point of view and style. Time, thought, and energy go into everything we do.” The invigorating experience their music embodies is surely enough to dazzle even the tamest listener. In the end, it’s clear the fresh and creatively intuitive duo, Lawrence & Leigh are ready to turn heads with their latest release.
Click Here to Read More..