[Stars on C-30] Plustapes and Treetop Sorbet

Tape labels are abundant these days, as are new cassette releases, and Stars on C-30 includes reviews of some of these releases, the occasional band or label profile, and a look at the culture surrounding cassettes.

In any musical genre there are quiet leaders, bands who help define a sound but never become the ā€œitā€ band. These bands are definitely known, but when you name a few quick names the genre couldnā€™t do without, theyā€™re often left off the list. The same principle applies to record labels. With the cassette renaissance in full swing, labels are popping up all over the place, but there are a few that continue to release quality tapes and really donā€™t get the attention they deserve. You could make a list of them with little effort, but if such a list exists, Chicagoā€™s Plustapes better be on it.

With four cassettes already released in 2011, including a live Disappears album, and a new offering from Ryley Walker on the way, itā€™s shaping up to be a pretty stellar year for Plustapes. While the new releases look great, Iā€™d like to take a look at the labelā€™s last release of 2010, Coinsā€™ Recital Pressure. Armed with guitar, keyboards, and honey-sweet harmonies, Ellen Bunch and Angela Mullenhour pick up the mantle ā€˜90s indie favorites Retsin and offer up an albumā€™s worth of solid indie-folk. The ten tracks on Recital Pressure sound like they have been pushed through an old squeezebox, or slowly leaked from a dream. At times, Coins sounds like a refined, less creepy version of CocoRosie that adopted Retsinā€™s sound. Coinsā€™ music is both innocent and sinister and is worth every penny, so run on over to Plustapes and get a copy. Also, Plustapes is one of the only tape labels Iā€™ve come across that include download codes with their releases; all the more reason to check them out.

When it comes to new tape labels, one of the best Iā€™ve run across recently is Philadelphia label, Treetop Sorbet. Two releases are available, Science Fiction Fantasyā€™s Best of Luck, Never Change, and Old Smileā€™s Hawkings Bridge.

Science Fiction Fantasy is a project of Philadelphian Kerry Gilbert, and an exciting project it is. The two songs on this cassette clock in at over 8 minutes each. I know what youā€™re thinking, two songs, so what. Do yourself a favor and get all over this. Science Fiction Fantasy is everything that is great about Fleet Foxes, Panda Bear, and Andorra-era Caribou rolled into one. This is really fantastic stuff, so please donā€™t miss it.

Old Smile is what Tom Herman of Philly faves Arches does in his spare time. Herman puts together five songs that remind me of a less hippy incarnation of Vetiver. These songs are driven by acoustic guitar and coupled with echoed vocals the mesh really perfectly with the music. ā€œSwept Up With The Tideā€ is a particularly solid track, but really all five songs are really well done. Hawkings Bridge is a winner but it really just makes me want a full record from Old Smile. Iā€™ll just be patient I guess.

Both Treetop Sorbet releases are available from the label and the bands’ Bandcamp pages.

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