Advertisement
 Email

 First Name

 Last Name

 Company

 Country
CAPTCHA code
Captcha: (type the characters above)

HITS LIST BLASTS OFF
Space is the place for Tay. (4/26a)
SONG STREAMS: SWIFT SETS STREAMING RECORD
What did you expect? (4/26a)
SPRING BREAKOUTS: THESE HEATERS ARE STILL HOT
Who's Boomin who. (4/26a)
SONG REVENUE: “SWEET” SMELLS OF SUCCESS
Life after "Church" (4/26a)
STAGECOACH: SETS TO SEE AND PLACES TO BE
Saddle up, cowboys and cowgirls. (4/26a)
THE NEW UMG
Gosh, we hope there are more press releases.
TIKTOK BANNED!
Unless the Senate manages to make this whole thing go away, that is.
THE NEW HUGE COUNTRY ACT
No, not that one.
TRUMP'S CAMPAIGN PLAYLIST
Now 100% unlicensed!
THE B-SIDE
WEEKLY OBSESSION: HALF MOON RUN
1/28/16

I’ve spent the last few months fervently searching for a new act whose music I could consume as intensely as I did with bands like Nirvana and The Shins during my most formative years. I feared that perhaps working in the music biz left me so jaded that I’d never find another artist who would impact me as deeply.

Thankfully, I was wrong. My pursuit ended when I discovered Half Moon Run’s newest album, Sun Leads Me On. The Glassnote group teamed up with producer Jim Abiss (Adele, Arctic Monkeys) to create a reflective album chronicling their quest for truth, something people from of all walks of life can relate to. Unlike most contemporary bands, the Canadian band live-tracked their album and enforced an important rule: they wouldn't include anything on the record that couldn't be reasonably reproduced for the live show. Abiss' ability to take note of a magic take perfectly captured their chemistry, breathing life into each song.

I was lucky enough to catch them live at The Troubadour, where I entered full fan-girl mode. I shamelessly sang along loudly to my favorite songs, "Trust" and "Devil May Care." The latter earned me some fun glances for jumping along to a mid-tempo, folky duet. Yes, I was that excited.

The sold-out room went wild for "I Can't Figure Out What's Going On," in which they substituted a gorgeous guitar riff for what was originally a string section. Peep the video below to check out the original.

Now that I've reignited my passion for new music, you can catch my rants about my budding obsessions each week here on The B-Side. Shoot me a message with your current favorite artist/track at [email protected], and if your taste isn't totally terrible, I might just share some love.

L'chaim,
Naomi Robin