Friday, October 29, 2010

Oh yea

Carol talked a little about her album on a fantastic DC radio show called 'Dissonance' on Radio CPR. She also played DJ! Download the podcast here:

http://dissonance.libsyn.com/10-19-10-carol-bui

New Carol Bui single and album!

'Mira: You're Free With Me', the first single from the forthcoming album 'Red Ship' will be available for download November 16, 2010! The actual record will be available March 8, 2011, in various formats including digital download. Stay tuned for details.

Carol and her band will be playing a show in Washington, DC on December 8th at the Black Cat with Lucia, Lucia and Kristeen Young. Her band will also join her for the album release tour in March and April with DC's own Tereu Tereu.

We're counting down the days!

Visit her on the interwebs:
http://www.carolbui.com
http://www.facebook.com/carolbuimusic
http://www.twitter.com/carolbui
http://www.myspace.com/carolbui

Read all about it:
In the three years since Carol Bui released her second record Everyone Wore White, the
Tacoma, Washington resident developed two very intense hobbies: drums and Middle
Eastern dance. Both of these new pursuits play a role on Bui’s upcoming third record Red
Ship available 3/8/11 on Bui’s own Ex Oh Records. Led by the single “Mira: You’re
Free With Me” to be released on November 16th, the material on Red Ship is a festive,
fiery blend of celebratory Middle Eastern and North African percussion coupled with
progressive pop melodic tendencies.

The single brims with the musicality that caused Pitchfork to call Bui’s previous
album “...a punk-bred record where the guitar is loud but the tunes prevail” and My Old
Kentucky Blog to proclaim it the completion of the rock trifecta that also includes Liz
Phair’s Exile In Guyille and PJ Harvey’s Rid of Me. Bui sings, plays drums, guitar, an
out-of-tune doumbek, and cabasa on the track. Her longtime collaborator, TJ Lipple of
Aloha plays bass and Jason Merriman claps his hands zealously.

Where Lipple played most of the drums previously (in addition to his production
contributions), Bui exercises her new habit on the singe and album, laying down the
exotic back beat herself and conjuring a festive and joyful noise, written for movement
and very much inspired by the seemingly disparate elements of Middle Eastern dance and
post hardcore and punk rock.

The provocative content, lush production (once again by Lipple at Inner Ear Studios
in Arlington, VA), and unique arrangements demonstrate what Bui chooses to term “the
primitive means of expressing joy.” She explains by asking, “What did people do to
make music and express happiness back when there weren’t sophisticated instruments
around? They hit things! And sang! And danced! This record is to invoke that spirit.”

Carol Bui has shared stages with Aloha, Joan As Policewoman, St. Vincent, The
Rosebuds, Headlights, Monotonix, Maserati, Pattern Is Movement and many others.
It is yet unknown what hobbies Bui might take up to influence her next album, but one
thing is certain: no matter what, her listeners will reap the benefits of her muse.

Press Quotes:
“...soaring melodic hard rock with engrossing sincerity -- as Bob Mould has proven, you
can’t B.S. a cello.” – Chris Dahlen, Pitchfork (Rating: 7.8)

“...culturally unique and universal, beautiful and harrowing, frequently within a single
song... Thank you for taking the time to craft an entire album, one in which I find
something new to like each time I play.” – Luftmensch, My Old Kentucky Blog

“...the sort of album one takes in slowly, over the course of a few close listens, rather than
absorbing all at once. Those willing to take the time will be amply rewarded.” – Stewart
Mason, All Music Guide

“...heavy, charging rock numbers, delivering track after track with hurricane-like force.”
– Copper Press

“...an impressive torrent of crunchy guitar distortion...” – Pop Matters

“...visceral, blues-driven and post-punk-inflected rock music, anchored by a
schizophrenic voice that’s sweetly seraphic at one moment and all righteous fury the
next...” – Delusions of Adequacy

“Washington’s Carol Bui plays guitar like a girl -- a pithy, no-B.S., hard-rocking girl...”
– Baltimore City Paper