boy why are you so silly. kiss me

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boy why are you so silly. kiss me

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Steve Sobs - Some Nights Last A Lifetime by Waaga Records "Some Nights Last A Lifetime" appears on Steve Sobs new album 'Heavy Heart' out 5/13. Pre-order here : http://ift.tt/1gw1W9q Following last year’s bedroom pop gem “Pretty”, Steve Sobs (aka Brooklyn’s Eric Littmann) plunges into an uncharted forest and emerges with ”Heavy Heart”, a string of ten effortless and quietly inviting new tracks.”You’re in your hometown checking your old hangs, your old ideas” Littmann sings on one such tune. This is nostalgia but a breed that always reaches upward. These are your hardwood floors , the portraits on your mantle. “Heavy Heart” finds a corner in your home and stays there. “Heavy Heart” was inspired by a difficult breakup that fragmented a network of close friends and the resulting aimless suburban free fall. Most of the album was recorded in Eric’s New York City studio apartment last May. It was mastered by Orchid Tapes founder Warren Hildebrand (Foxes In Fiction). http://ift.tt/2j0vGFu
Neon Noir EP Waaga Records June 3, 2014 We are the living sum of our experiences. Sacramento’s DLRN boldly adorns their collected existence like a mod boutique print woven from the portraits of Kehinde Wiley and the sage words of Kurt Vonnegut and Hunter Thompson; the fabric stressed by the sub-sonic producer’s lounge of Low End Theory. Comprised of Sean LaMarr on vocals and Jon Reyes behind the boards, DLRN could be an acronym for Dumb Luck Right Now - for now. Every passing day is an opportunity to improve upon an inventor's luck. Much like Wiley made a Renaissance from urban life, DLRN are contemporary visionaries balancing cinematic production with the existential crisis of fulfilling a hero’s quest. Soul seekers on the outside of anomic scenes, DLRN envision more for hip hop and strive to guide contemporaries towards a new breaking day.
Teen Daze - A Silent Planet by The Album Artwork Archive on Flickr.

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Artist: Fishing Song: Choy Lin Album: Waaga Sydney production, Fishing, are back at it after a two-year break with their new single Choy Lin. This instrumental number is built upon slow beats and grooving vibes paired with warped vocals to add another layer of texture. So just chill back and let these tones take over you.
Our good friends over at Portals Music were kind enough to host a stream of the Monster Rally & RUMTUM EP, out Tuesday March 13.
Review|||Monster Rally & RUMTUM MR&RT
Selection: "Tribes"
On last year’s Coral II: The Remixes, a digital bonus to Monster Rally’s debut, we first heard RUMTUM, aka John Hastings, blanket fellow Columbus, OH producer Ted Feighan’s “Splash Talk” with a variegated vail of gossamer trance. For their first collaborative effort, MR&RT, Feighan and Hastings flex their personal strengths into a funky effervescent timbre neither of the two are capable of manufacturing on their own.
Since 2010, Monster Rally has garnered a decent amount of attention for sampling thrift-store bargain records--leaning heavy on the exotica variety--into ephemeral spells of crackle and hook. RUMTUM's 2010 digital offering Lunar Lanterns spanned the down-tempo and up-beat sides of the lounge giving us a dubby glimpse into the sounds permeating his John Malkovich room. Feighan’s not known for peaking the two-minute mark, but with a co-pilot like Hastings augmenting his samples into an expanse of lush dub-trance it seems only fitting that listeners are treated to more than just a taste.
While MR&RT was recently released on both digital and cassette formats--the latter coming with the additional tracks “Andes” and “Forest”--for the past couple of months the calculated release of cuts “Raindrops” and “Tribes” have given Tumblr and Wordpress bloggers enough to circulate more hype than either of the two have received for their previous solo efforts. The only unfortunate aspect to the trickle leak of these two particular tracks is that they’re arguably the best representation of the duo’s sound. Not only that, but the tracks are placed successively and early on in the 7-song EP.
The opener, “Jungle,” introduces the fluid and hypnotic repetition of half-beat samples that act as the vertebrae of each track comprising MR&RT. By track two, listeners are rushed into the climactic up-tempo funk of “Raindrops.” The entrancing stretch of the sampled lyrics coupled with thick bass and a jazzy outro cannot help but to grab your head and shoulders and force them into a cyclical bob leaving your hippocampus desperate to process more Monster Rally & RUMTUM into the long term memory bank. The head-fuck tranquility of “Tribes” slows down the pace, lulling the imagination onto the floor of a white-sand ocean bed fit with the wash of crystal-clear waves crashing overhead. The mind can do little but watch the air bubbles float up from the mouth and into the curl of the waves overhead.
While these two tracks compliment each other in their succession, it leaves little room for the remaining tracks to make as much of an impression as they could with a reworked track list. The following three tracks “Sultan,” “Birds,” and “Tundra” play heavy on Feighan’s interest in the production stylings of Pete Rock and J. Dilla. The layering and transitions are slick and complex, but lack the repeat power of the preceding tracks which adds a minor lull to the progression of the EP. We all can’t be winners.
The finale “Free Store” shows true promise in its warm, palpitating ambience, but gets knocked up by a heavy-handed layer of acoustic guitar and tambourine. While arpeggiated samples of acoustic have worked in the past for RUMTUM, the addition seems superfluous for this number which, at its core, would be just fine as a closer.
Feighan's and Hastings' work on MR&RT is a prime example of why it’s so important to explore new territories and angles as a young artist. So, it will be exciting to see what the two conjure up individually following an insightful experience such as this.
(via Impose)