This mix represents some of the best moments of February in terms of new releases and live shows we attended but keeps an eye on the springtime that’s just ahead of us. \u00a0You won’t find many bombastic summer jams, but hopefully that delicious first blush of warmer weather permeates these tracks. \u00a0Enjoy!<\/em><\/p>\n [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][8tracks url=”http:\/\/8tracks.com\/tiny_owl\/nomorewinter-notquitespring”]<\/p>\n Mi & L’au \u2013 Limouzine: I once sawthis band play in a treehouse. Technically I guess it was a roomsituated around a huge tree, with a bar situated around that. Still,there was a tree! And their songs sounded like the kind of music youmight hear in a treehouse (treehousewave?). If Beauty Is A Crime<\/em>is the first new album they’ve put out in a while and at moments itretains an isolated-in-the-woods vibe, here Mi & L’au arebranching out into lots of new territories. This track, with itspulsing, sparkling synths is a great example of those explorations.<\/p>\n Chairlift \u2013 I Belong In Your Arms:Caroline Polachek must be taking cues from those she’s collaboratedwith (Washed Out, Guards) in the interim between releasing Something<\/em>and 2008’s Does You Inspire You?<\/em> Or perhaps it’s just thedifference between putting some thought into making a record insteadof slapping one together because one of your tracks has been featuredin an iPod commercial and you need to capitalize on it instantly. Either way, Chairlift’s new record is a gem filled with soaring newwave declarations, but far less na\u00efve and hokey than its predecessor.<\/p>\n Lapalux \u2013 Moments: On this cracklingbeat collage, female vocals (provided by Py) coo \u201cI keep thinkingof you\u201d; likewise, this track is just the kind of earworm thatsticks with you all day. Cascading drum machines, dissonant bells,spacey synths, and tweaked, slowed effects blend seamlessly. Itmight not get a party going, but acts as a perfect anthem for thosestill coming down after the majority of the crowd has shuffled off.<\/p>\n James Blake \u2013 The Wilhelm Scream:After seeing a live rendition of this at Carnegie Hall last month<\/a>,I’ve been listening to this track incessantly. Its slow gorgeousbuild behind Blake’s velvety crooning is almost too much to handle. It seems so sparse on first listen, but every time it slips into therotation, I hear something new come out of it, proving its densityand depth.<\/p>\n School of Seven Bells \u2013 Scavenger:We’ll always wonder if this scathing track is about the departure ofhalf of SVIIB’s singing twin duo, but it could just as easily beabout an ex-lover, or an animal that feeds on carrion, I guess. They’re doing just fine without any or all of the above, as new album\u00a0Ghostory<\/em> and the live shows<\/a> they’ve played to promote itprove.<\/p>\n Xiu Xiu \u2013 Smear The Queen: I amecstatic that this band is still putting out amazing albums aftertwelve years of making records. The first single from Always,entitled \u201cHi\u201d is as bold a flirting anthem as they come, andalmost made it onto this mix \u2013 until I heard \u201cSmear The Queen\u201dand was blown away by the dual vocals, haywire beats<\/p>\n Hanne Hukkelberg \u2013 My Devils: Ifyou’re still confusing Hanne with her Scandinavian counterpart LykkeLi based on the extraordinary prevalence of the letter K in theirnames, please take a moment to realize that this is where thecomparison ends. Featherbrain is far more experimental, representingHukkelberg more as an artist than provocateur. Listening to thistrack is like opening a creepy haunted music-box, her vocals ayearning Pandora struggling to be free of her demons.<\/p>\n Frankie Rose \u2013 The Fall: I seriouslycan’t stop listening to or talking about this song. The other day Iwas walking through the park at dusk with this on my headphones,trying to decipher the ethereal layers of lyrics. Every time Ipinned down a line, the next popped up in its place, a mirageshimmering on the aural horizon, superimposed by the nexthallucination.<\/p>\n Grimes \u2013 Vowels = space and time:Visions<\/em> is an amalgamation of everything that is awesome aboutClaire Boucher \u2013 bizzaro bedroom pop with Chippettes-esque vocals,long-lost Goth Olsen twin look, deep philosophical musings disguisedby a half-baked twitter feed, a not-so-secret obsession with divas ofthe early 90’s R&B scene. Check out my video below of Grimesperforming \u201cGenesis\u201d last July in an opening set for Washed Out.<\/p>\n