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(Some Of) Our Favorite Albums Of The Year So Far

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We’re only halfway through 2016, but already this year is proving to be one of the best for new music in a long time. From rock and pop, to hip-hop, country, and even spoken word, 2016 has been chock full incredible surprises and expected delights. Our jobs give us to hundreds of records every month, so trying to decide just 10 or 15 that won our hearts proved to be fairly difficult. Instead of betraying our loves (and potentially starting an interoffice war that would no doubt resemble something out of Braveheart in execution) we decided to select a few of our absolute favorites that we’ve listed below in hopes you will take it upon yourself to discover everything they have to offer. It’s not a complete list by any means, and it’s being shared with no attention paid to the order in which albums appear, but if you ever find yourselves in our offices in Minneapolis in the near future you can rest assured on of the records will be playing through our stereo.

Hotel Books – Run Wild, Stay Alive (InVogue Records)

Spoken word artists like Cam Smith never receive the credit they deserve, but one listen to the newest record from Smith’s band Hotel Books proves that poetry can be just as exciting as the best punk records. Run Wild, Stay Alive has been on shelves for less than a month when this post goes live, but already we’ve logged over a dozen plays. This is an album that will break your heart and piece it back together again.

The Summer Set – Stories For Monday (Fearless Records)

Trying to deny our love for The Summer Set is like trying to deny our constant craving for hot pizza and cold (unsweetened) ice tea. We had a feeling Stories For Monday would be a perfect soundtrack for adventures when we first heard “Figure Me Out” in February, but when the record finally arrived in April that belief was proved completely true. Every track on this record is constructed in such a way as to make any moment experienced while they play a bit more memorable. There is fun, heart, and soul to spare on this release, and the band deserves heaps of respect for finding a way to create such an immediately infectious record. 

Slingshot Dakota – Break (Topshelf Records)

Sometimes a band with a rich history in the alternative scene delivers a new record that makes everything they’ve done in the past look like child’s play despite the fact those previous records are beloved by throngs of people worldwide. Such is the case with Slingshot Dakota, perhaps the most perfectly paired married couple in music, and their latest record released through Topshelf Records back in March. Break captures the sensations of growing up and making commitments to bettering yourself through catchy indie-rock tunes that make you want to dance almost as much as they make you want to share the record with anyone experiencing hard times around you. We’ve put Break on to lift our spirits, celebrate good times, and keep us company when times got hard. If the music of Slingshot Dakota were a religion we’d be the first in line at the chapel doors every Sunday, and after hearing Break we imagine you too will want to convert.

Empty Houses – Daydream (Sargent House)

There is no other band in alternative music today that has found a better way to combine the sensibilities of Motown songwriting with modern indie-pop aesthetics than Empty Houses. Their debut album, Daydream, is just what the title proclaims it to be, an escape from the world around you that is so pleasant to experience that you never want it to end. If you don’t already own this album, finish this article, share it with all your friends, and then rush out and buy a copy as soon as possible. We recommend the vinyl version, but even a download will suffice.

ROAM – Backbone (Hopeless Records)

Perhaps the first great album to be released in 2016, Backbone remains a staple of the Haulix staff playlist to this day. There is always room in our hearts for a young band who has found a way to convey boundless energy and positivity through original music, and that is exactly what you get when you listen to ROAM’s debut release on Hopeless Records. If you can make it through “Deadweight” (featured above) without feeling the urge to conquer whatever obstacles stand between you and your goals you may want to visit a doctor and double check that your heart is still beating. Yes, this band is so good that only the undead could possibly be hear their music and feel nothing. The best part of all? All signs point to ROAM only getting better with age, and that means they have several more anthemic records left to create. 

I See Stars – Treehouse (Sumerian Records)

Michigan’s Electronic Hardcore ringleaders I See Stars have spent the better part of the last decade refining a sound entirely their own, and along the way they inadvertently spawned an entire underground movement. Treehouse seems to be the culmination of these efforts, as the record finds the band simultaneously delivering their most cohesive and most experimental record to date. There is a vicious heaviness to certain songs, but also a lighter side to proceedings that offer the pop-laden hooks that helped establish the band early on. There’s even some hip-hop influence, which is perhaps most evident on the show-stopping track “All In,” adding to the creative output of the group. To say this is one of the year’s best party records would be an understatement, and we expect many more genre-defying releases from the band in the future.

Whitechapel – Mark Of The Blade (Metal Blade Records)

Not many bands are able to say they’ve stayed together for a decade, and far less make it a point to celebrate this fact by releasing an album intended to reflect on all that has transpired while also looking towards the future. Whitechapel have never been your average band however, so the fact a record like Mark Of The Blade exists will likely come as no surprise to diehard fans of the long-running metal juggernauts. Everything about this record slays, and the creativity shown from the band tells us they have another decade of ideas and themes waiting to be explored. 

Tiny Moving Parts – Celebrate (Triple Crown Records)

Minnesota natives Tiny Moving Parts have been carving their own path in the world of alternative music since formation, but the group seems poised for a crossover into the mainstream of music with the release of Celebrate. Both elaborately designed and undeniably infectious, the record speaks to pains of growing up and the double-edged sword that is chasing your dreams. Though still young in age, the members of TMP seems to recognize that every positive action often has a negative consequence and vice versa, which gives them a lyrical sense of wisdom well beyond their years. More importantly, they have found a way to convey a wealth of emotion through their music without jeopardizing the inherent sense of fun that has always existed within their songs. We don’t mean to cast judgment on anyone, but those who have yet to hear Celebrate in full should not be allowed to claim they lived their 2016 to the fullest because they’re missing out on a truly exciting, not to mention wholly original, release.

Avion Roe – In Separation (Epitaph Records)

It is very possible that Avion Roe will be the biggest rock band in alternative music by 2017, and if so In Separation will be seen as proof it is a title they fully deserve. This Texas rock band has been grinding away in the underground music scene for several years now, but their decision to join Epitaph Records last year thrust them into the spotlight like never before. Their label debut, which just hit stores on June 17, is chock full of anthems that feel made for arenas, and we have no doubt they will be able to play them in rooms that size in a few years time. The band is currently on Van’s Warped Tour, and those attending should consider this summer their last opportunity to hop on the group’s hype bandwagon before its overflowing with fans.

Modern Baseball – Holy Ghost (Run For Cover Records)

What could we possibly write about Modern Baseball that hasn’t already been said on blogs or in the pages of The New York Times (yes, the band was in the NYT earlier this year)? Holy Ghost is an album ripe with soul-searching sincerity that is as catchy as it is absolutely heartbreaking. We don’t recommend your first experience with this record to take place in a crowded room unless you’re absolutely okay with your friends seeing you cry because we wept as if our relatives had just passed during our initial spin(s). If you get the chance to see the band live, do it.

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Inside Music Podcast #73: Dylan Mattheisen (Tiny Moving Parts)

On this episode of INSIDE MUSIC, host James Shotwell chats with Dylan Mattheisen of Tiny Moving Parts about his band’s new album. Dylan tells James about his creative process, as well as the way bands in the midwest build their careers from basements to nationwide headlining tours. We’ve already talked about several phenomenal records hitting stores this month, but Tiny Moving Parts’ Celebrate may be the absolute best. Click here and support the band by ordering a copy of the record today, or grab a copy in stores starting May 20.

The music you hear in this episode is from the song “Common Cold,” which appears on Celebrate.

You may already know this, but Inside Music is available on iTunes. Click here to subscribe so you never miss an episode!

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Monday Motivation: Tiny Moving Parts

If you’re anything like me, you probably started the day by recognizing that the start of a new work week had indeed arrived and then immediately began shaking your fists at the sky in anger. Monday is rarely anyone’s favorite day, and from what I have seen firsthand it feels safe to say it’s the one day of the week some people outright hate. I guess to them the arrival of the work week symbolizes the end of their quote/unquote freedom, and as a result they head into the office/factory/restaurant/store with a negative outlook already on their mind. This leads to bad attitudes, which only makes the experience of being at work worse, and for some reason it also seems to make time slow to a crawl. We’re not about that life, and we hope this post can do the same you that the song contained within it did for us.

Bands comes in all shapes and sizes, cropping up wherever there happens to be a group of like-minded people with a passion for creativity, but I have always felt a sense of kindred spirits with people from places no one knows. Well, not actually no one, as almost anyone from anywhere knows someone who knows they exist, but people from tiny towns and villages that only register as legitimate places to people who grew up in the same geographic region. That was always the case with my hometown, a tiny village in the Southwest corner of Michigan known as Constantine, and as I’ve grown older I’ve unfortunately witnessed the town sinking further and further into obscurity as state plans to change the paths of major roads have made the once thriving community a place where many residents are fighting to maintain their way of life. It’s heartbreaking, but not all that unusual in the so-called rust belt of the midwest, and whenever I meet another young adult from a similar town we seem to share a mutual understanding that the place we could quite possibly outlive the place we call home. We hate that fact. Every single one of us hates this fact. That doesn’t change anything though, so instead we push forward, striving to create something that speaks to the inspiration and experience we gained from our lives in our hometowns, and in doing so at least a part of us feels like we may keep our community alive — at least in spirit.

Tiny Moving Parts hail from a place in rural Minnesota they themselves will tell you no one knows. It’s a tiny community lacking any tangible music scene, yet it gave the members of Tiny Moving Parts everything they needed to find a unique take on the crossroads between punk and indie-rock that has now become the group’s trademark sound. Listening to their latest release, Celebrate, brings to mind a lifetime of memories spent contemplating the unpredictability of the human experience from the security of your childhood home. It tells of growing up and finding one’s true identity, as well as all the hardships and unforeseen consequences that you must face in the search of truth about practically anything. In roughly thirty minutes, Tiny Moving Parts encapsulate a moment in life when you finally realize just how unique and inexplicably beautiful your own existence is, and through doing so they challenge you, the listener, to ask what you’re doing to make the most of your time.

What is it about Tiny Moving Parts’ hometown that made it possible for the young men in this group to be who they are? I could not tell you. Even if you could tell me, I am not sure I care to know the answer. When Tiny Moving Parts share their art with the world they are consciously sharing every pivotal moment and emotional exchange they have experienced through a riveting and lively take on rock that is unlike anything their industry peers are even attempting to produce. It’s a style of music that the group has more or less been sharing since day one, but in the roughly five years since they became the talk of the alternative underground no true competitors or knock-offs have made themselves known. The reasons for this are probably as varied as the reasons why certain people prefer sneakers to sandals, but I like to believe it’s because we as an alternative community recognize they are something special unto themselves. Tiny Moving Parts are part of this world, but they exist on an island unto themselves, and each new release shares a little more insight into how they see the world around them. Celebrate is the best example of this yet, and I cannot wait to see what they do next.


James Shotwell is the Digital Marketing Manager for Haulix and host of the Inside Music Podcast. He is also the Film Editor for Substream Magazine. When not working, James can be found in Minneapolis with his two fat cats, Paws Von Trier and Chub E. Chubs, watching old police procedurals and eating copious amounts of popcorn. You should follow him on Twitter.

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