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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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Industry Spotlight: Fred Feldman (Triple Crown Records)

Hello, everyone. Whether this is your first or one hundredth visit to our site we are beyond excited to have you joining us for this afternoon’s feature. We were asked way back in the fall of 2013 to begin speaking with more label owners, and it did not take us long to realize those professionals are some of the hardest in the entire music industry to track down for an interview. To date only a few names have graced our page, and today we add another as Triple Crown Records’ founder Fred Feldman finally shares his store. If you have any questions about developing as a writer/blogger in music, please do not hesitate email james@haulix.com and share your thoughts. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

For more than a decade Triple Crown Records has been a tastemaker for alternative rock and beyond. By forgoing the typical label approach of finding one sound to push, founder Fred Feldman and crew have made it a point to work with any artist they found interesting, regardless of genre. The result of these conscious efforts is one of the most diverse and beloved indie labels in existence, and today the story of how it all came together is being shared by the man who first brought the company to life.

I don’t remember where I was the first time I heard an album from Triple Crown Records, but if I had to take a stab in the dark it would probably be somewhere between 2003 and 2004. It was during this time that the label, which was only a few years old, began releasing albums by Brand New that would quickly become staples within the alternative music scene. Those albums hooked me, as well as thousands of others, to the label’s work for life even though many of their artists did not sound like a Jesse Lacey fever dream. I now own well over a dozen Triple Crown releases, and based on their current roster I am confident I will add many more titles in the years to come.

If you want to learn more about Fred and his efforts at Triple Crown, please take a few moments and follow the label on Twitter. Additional questions and comments can be left at the end of this post.

H: Please introduce yourself to our readers:

F: My name is Fred Feldman and I own Triple Crown Records

H: Thank you for joining us, Fred. We’re very excited about this.

F: No Problem, happy to help.

H: Before the music industry ever came along, what are some of your earliest memories of music?

F: Just being a fan, really.  From an early age I was a big fan of music. In high school I played in bands. Nothing good, of course, but I still love playing and being around music. I’m a little older than my audience, so when I was coming up I would take photos for actual fan zines and magazines, not websites. That was back when print was something special [laughs], but yea – decided I would like to have a career in it even though I couldn’t play and took an interest in the business side.

H: What was your first concert experience?

F: It won’t go over well even now probably, but my first concert ever was going to see Boston with Sammy Hagar at the Nassau Coliseum.

H: That’s amazing.

F: Oh, you have no idea. I always smile whenever I see something on Sammy Hagar because that was the first real arena rock moment for me. He stepped out on stage and it was just unreal. I think I was eleven or twelve at the time.

H: A lot of people seem to witness those key ‘influential’ concerts in their early teens.

F: Yea. When I grew up it was all arena rock. My first punk show was in high school with Heart Attack. It was also the first time I saw a pit, which was pretty life changing as well.

H: You mentioned that you started off taking photos for zines. Can you recall your earliest project in music?

F: Well I always very interested in music. This was before you could just email someone for a photo pass. I shot for friends’ fan zines, shooting punk rock stuff in New York that was pretty easy, but a lot of the other stuff would involve attempting to sneak your camera into gigs, getting close and grabbing shots. Then you would write to people, send them your pictures, and hope to get your stuff published. It was always rewarding to see the final product, to open a fan zine or magazine and see your work.

I didn’t really get serious about the business end of things until college. At that point I started booking shows and working at a radio station. That’s when I realized “Oh, this could really be something.“

H: I read online that you attended Syracuse University. Did you study Business?

F: Sorta. I got a liberal arts degree, but I think the thing that was a great opportunity for me at Syracuse was being on a big campus and being able to book concerts for the Concert Board. You weren’t booking a DIY venue, you were booking shows that dealt with real agents, real venues, big production, and generally speaking a lot more tasks than DIY venues would be less likely to handle.

H: Is it through booking at Syracuse that you found your first job in the industry?

F: No, I got out of school and had no idea what I wanted to do. I couldn’t find a job because I never took an internship. I think internships are great and they can certainly be very beneficial, but I did not take the internship route because I had a job and needed to make money. So I literally contacted a bunch of companies and told them I would work for free. Through someone, a friend of a friend of a friend, I landed a job in the mail room at Profile Records. From there I worked my way up from a part time job to a full time role at the company.

H: Wow. That’s similar to those classic industry tales you read about where someone starts in the lowest position and works their way to running the company.

F: I did end up running the company. I got pretty lucky there because there came a point where the two owners of the company split, and I was going to leave the company, but one of the owners told me that if I stayed I could start what he called ‘my little rock thing.’ I loved hip-hop, and I loved working with it at Profile, but I grew up interested in punk rock and initially went to profile because of their rock releases. I ended up doing every job there, and then started another company called Another Planet while running Profile Records. 

H: One more question about life at Profile – Did you get to work with Run DMC?

F: Yes, I did. It was a wild time, and I can only say my entire experience there, aside from being very education, put me in a lot of places and allowed me to do a lot of things I never imagined. I worked with them (Run DMC) on their comeback album and it was crazy. To see them perform and work their way back to the top was just amazing. Run is that character people see on TV, he’s both very humble and kind.

H: You mentioned Another Planet. Is that what eventually became Triple Crown?

F: No, that was a label that we started there. Profile also owned Rock Hotel Records, which had put out some of the most important New York hardcore records. The catalog was kind of dormant, so I suggested we reissue those records and sign new things. I’m not delusional, it was kind of hit and miss, but when the label was purchased by Arista they kept that roster and catalog. 

H: I was building up to that. When the company sold were you cut, or did you choose to leave and do your own thing?

F: No, they kept me on during the transition. We had a few successful artists at the time, and I was the person who knew those artists, so they allowed me to stay on for a while and make sure everything went smoothly. It was a good position for me because it allowed me to start my own company [Triple Crown] while still having something to fall back on. I think when you decide to do something like start a business you have to dive in, but for a while there I had a safety net.

H: Who was the first artist you signed to Triple Crown?

F: Oddly enough, I was about to make a deal with 25 To Life when I started to think that Profile was going to be sold, so I sat down with the owner to discuss the possibility of taking 25 To Life. I spoke with Rick from the band and told him that I was leaving to start my own thing, but still wanted to do their record if he was interested. He was and we did it. We we also had a Stubborn All-Stars record that was completed for Another Planet, so I licensed that and those became our first two releases.

H: You started Triple Crown in 1997, but then in 2001 you have a small roll at Fat Beats Records. What is the story there?

F: When you’re starting a business and you’re throwing everything you have at it, you just have to hustle. I was looking for distribution and my friend with Fat Beats told me they could help me out if I worked with them to start an in-house label. A year and a half later we signed Atmosphere, so again my hip-hop history started to come through in my work. It was a crazy time, but also an awesome time.

H: How many people are on staff right now at Triple Crown?

F: It depends, really. I think we have three people right now. We assemble a team around each artist/project and move forward from there. Every artist and every audience is different. There may be some crossover, but at the end of the day the best option we have found is to start fresh and build a plan from the ground up.

H: I read in another interview that one of the first things you do with every new band is to get them on the road, playing at least five or six times a week. Is that true?

F: In our industry, touring is one of the most important things. I also think it’s the best way to connect with music fans. As long as the band we have signed recently have a little touring under their belt, we work to give them that extra push that allows them to tour more frequently.

H: Where do you turn when looking to discover new music?

F: Everywhere, really. I try to keep an open mind. Honestly, sometimes I find bands online, or through recommendations. Sometimes I read a story somewhere and start connecting the dots. Maybe I catch an opening slot on a tour we have artists on. The guys in Hit The Lights were the first to tell me about Fireworks. Brand New turned me on to Manchester Orchestra, and even though we did not end up signing them it started a strong relationship with Andy that has lasted several years.

H: Let’s focus on one of your recent signings. What is the story behind the discovery of Tiny Moving Parts?

F: The first time I ever heard about the band was seeing something on PropertyOfZack. It was a video or something, and I was very into what they were doing. The manager reached out a short time later, and from there I caught them live the next time they were in our area. That sealed it for me.

H: What advice would you offer those looking to enter the professional side of the music industry?

F: I always say hard work. Let your work speak for you. Find a way to get an opportunity in the music industry and make the most of it. This is why I think internships are so great. They give you some of the worst or busiest work and allow you to show them how much dedication you have to the job. I’ve been in the business for a long time, and there will always be people who enter with a sense of entitlement, but I think a willingness to do the work is really important. I read an interview not long ago where someone suggested “Don’t be a dick” and really, that’s accurate. Be honest and work hard. Don’t be a dick.

H: Triple Crown has been using Haulix for a long time now. What keeps you around?

F: It’s great. It simplifies everything, and the support is amazing. This used to be so hard and now it’s quick and easy. Also, publicists love it and it saves us a bundle on physical watermarking. I had an issue not long ago that required help tracking down the person behind a leak, and I think Matt (Haulix CEO) replied to me within 12 hours with all the information I needed to move forward. 

H: You’ve accomplished a lot with your career, especially during your time working on Triple Crown, so what are your current goals in life?

F: I just want to keep putting out interesting music. If there is one thing that has been a blessing and a curse for us is that we don’t have an identifiable sound. Kids don’t buy a record just because it is a Triple Crown release. I think there are some common threads throughout the music, but there are also some big leaps. I’m really excited about what we have on the horizon. Tiny Moving Parts is really great, which I know we already talked about, but so are the releases we have planned a little further down the road.

H: How many times a month do people ask you to repress Brand New’s Deja Entendu on vinyl?

F: Haha, that’s my favorite question! It’s one of those things where I have to remind myself not to be a dick. (laughs) I have a very close relationship with the band, and they always want to put music out a certain way, both aesthetically and sonically. That’s why I don’t want to just press it and put it out there. When we reissued Your Favorite Weapon they went back and remastered the whole thing. They always want to do things a little bit differently. It’s going to come, that’s all I am going to say, and hopefully there will be a few surprises included as well. The band was very important to me and the label, so I don’t want to just press it and put it out there because it’s not what they would want.

I like when people ask me about this from an innocent angle. Kids will suggest pressing it again to me as if it’s something we have never heard before. I get it. It bums us and the band out when we go online and see how much some people are willing to pay on eBay for copies.

H: We have finally reached the end! Before I let you go, do you have any final thoughts or observations to share?

F: I think we covered a bunch of great stuff. We have a couple more vinyl things planned for the year, so please keep an eye out for that.

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