Month: January 2017

  • After-Death Plan’s Literature officially outside the echo chamber

    After-Death Plan’s Literature officially outside the echo chamber.

    After-Death Plan  Literature  We released our album Literature earlier this month. I’d sent preview copies to the usual Mal VU suspects and tried it out on a few new people I’ve come across in the industry. Got a lot of positive feedback especially from collectors who’ve lived through a wide range of music and a lot of the displaced 4AD veterans who like a bit of brain massage with their sound. I kept hearing “It’s on repeat in my car.” Even people from the old noise, garage, and punk scenes were finding appeal which is all very tender for a bunch of tough guys.

    We’d planned to hire some PR help with the album but the tail end of 2016 sucked so hard that it was amazing we were able to inch forward at all outside of life and work. So we’re just now storyboarding videos and sending Literature out for review. We have an interview and a podcast coming up but were pleasantly surprised to see our first review outside of the echo chamber and it’s an impressive one. Such a relief because this is a stylistically complicated album.

    The review comes from Fred Mills, the editor of the highly-respected Blurt music magazine.

    REVIEW:

    “Chicago duo After-Death Plan off-handedly describe their genre as “American Gothic Nous Rock,” which is befitting of an album titled Literature additionally accompanied by a user’s guide* to its literary influences. Fair enough—although I feel compelled add that ADP is so free-ranging and broad-reaching in its musical palette that adjective-adjective-adjective-noun categorization borders on the useless (if not outright hapless). Because this has to be one the most sonically adventurous and lyrically challenging releases to grace the still-young new year, the type of record destined to be mentioned by critics when they start chronicling their best-of-2017 picks at the end of the annum.

    It’s the brainchild of vocalist Lesley Ann Fogle, classically-trained and studio-schooled, and multiinstrumentalist Constantine Hondroulis, most recently heard with innovative Columbus combo Earwig (whose 2016 LP Pause for the Jets was reviewed right here at BLURT recently). Together, the pair conjure images both stark and expansive, foregrounding Fogle’s sultry purr ‘n’ coo—a cross between PJ Harvey and Sharon Van Etten, but one which can’t help to conjure analog ghosts of experimental muses of long ago—against an array of melodically riveting, rhythmically edgy, arrangements.

    There’s opening track “The Master & Margarita,” for example, a brooding slice of ‘50s-ish, Nick Cave-styled pop noir, which is quickly followed by the considerably strummier, yet no less dark, Americana that is “Devil Takes A Hand.” Two songs in, and we’re already thinking murder ballad territory. Ah, but we’d be thinking wrong. Soon enough there’s the luminous “Raygun,” with its gorgeous strings and neo-gospel choir of harmony vox; a thrumming post-punk-meets-power-pop rocker called “Memory Remains” that cements the aforementioned Harvey comparison; and, skipping all the way to the end of the album, “In The Sun,” a slice of neo-operatic provocation that crescendos towards a violent, Sonic Youthian climax that’s anything but ballad-like…READ MORE

  • Hear No Evil January 2017

    Hear No Evil January 2017

    Hear No Evil January 2017

    The biggest news is that we just released After-Death Plan’s album Literature which is a concept album about classic books and writers. Visit the site for a more info.

    After-Death Plan  Literature

    In audiobook news, 2017 begins with Rom Com, supernatural snark, YA espionage, and literary study.

    I just finished my second Witch In Time audiobook for Amanda M. Lee’s popular, snarky Witchy Tales series. It is proofed and will go for second review this week. A Witch In Time by Amanda M. LeeJust got T. A. MacLagan’s sleeper cell series They Call Me Alexandra Gastone back from proofing for minor revisions and that will go out this week as well. They Call Me Alexandra GastoneNext in line is my second audiobook Royally Wed in Pamela DuMond’s very funny Part-time Princess series. Her characters are stuck in my head and I look forward to hanging out with them again. Royally Wed

    Then on to my fourth audiobook for Kimberly Krey (details soon after we announce).


    Peppered in between the fiction reads, I’ll be keeping my voice relaxed but strong with the nonfiction narration of Carl Rollyson’s biography Understanding Susan Sontag through The University of South Carolina Press. In the simplest of terms, I am a big fan of Sontag’s work.

    Understanding Susan Sontag

    And that’s it for January and February audiobook mornings. I won’t get into commercial voice, field audio, or audio post work. Just retail projects that can be obtained.


    We have most of the songs for After-Death Plan’s next album sketched out. I’ll be working on that quite a bit in my free time as well as a series of guided meditations. Yoga_HearNoEvilI teach regular yoga classes and my people are hooked on the guided meditations. As some classes came to term, I was asked to make a recording of the meditation rituals. I agreed and of course decided to do it right. Having recorded the vocal guides, I was just starting on the music when I lost my father in the fall. My energy was all over the place and not right for creating meditation music. So I decided to commission the very talented Lisa Bella Donna to write the music instead. She is a frighteningly prolific composer who embodies good energy. Those downloads will be available soon and I hope they bring peace and wonder to many.

    Lesley Ann Fogle