Looks like we’ve got a runaway bride (sorry…spoiler).
Check out this exclusive premiere of India Ramey‘s video for “Easy Come Easy Go” below!
Looks like we’ve got a runaway bride (sorry…spoiler).
Check out this exclusive premiere of India Ramey‘s video for “Easy Come Easy Go” below!
Vinyl Mag’s Founder/Editor/Creative Director/Woman of Mystery Emily McBride recently did an interview with our affiliate friends over at Kill the Music to talk about how she got started, the most difficult parts about the industry and advice for people trying to break in. Check it out here!

Emily interviewing Charli XCX at SXSW 2014:
Check out the below video for our Aloud‘s “It’s Got To Be Now.” We just love these guys.
Sean Lennon borrows the mid-sixties’ tribe-y feel from his father and blends it with dynamic instrumental and electronic elements on The GOASTT’s new album, Midnight Sun, released April 29th via Chimera Music.
The GOASTT, or The Ghost of a Sabre Tooth Tiger as it is called in long form, is the creative love child of Sean Lennon and Charlotte Kemp Muhl. The band has been around since 2008 but has been making waves recently with their new album and live performances at South By Southwest.
Midnight Sun is a sultry, psychedelic journey, modernizing the experimental sound of the hippie-era while making social commentary on society, religion, love and other modern diseases of the mind and soul. The album is filled with unexpected melodies and strange chord progressions, taking the listener on a trip through time and space, led along by the crooning vocals of Lennon and Muhl.
Lennon’s voice is complimented by Muhl’s on such tracks as “Great Expectations” while songs like “Johannesburg” and “Devil You Know” rely more heavily on the ethereal sound of Muhl’s voice, lending the tracks a more dreamy quality.
Tracks like “Last Call,” “Devil You Know,” and “Golden Earring” move along with astonishing audio variety, alternating from slow, dreamy effects to epic crescendos and heavy guitar riffs. “Midnight Sun” has an almost White Stripes vibe, with a heavy bassline and upbeat drum tempo underneath Muhl and Lennon’s harmonies.
Like his father, Lennon is very much a story teller. “Poor Paul Getty” playfully tells of a young boy on the edge of adolescence who encounters a strange kidnapping. The story of a famous ancient Greek musician and poet is recounted in “Don’t Look Back Orpheus.” On “Xanadu,” we hear the tale of a headstrong young lady. We begin to wonder it’s connection to Lennon’s own life with such ironic lyrics as “she doesn’t want to lay in bed all day with you,” evoking memories of his parents lying in bed for weeks protesting for peace.
“Animals” and its accompanying video are the epitome of a wild trip. “Everywhere you go, you’re in the microscope” croons Lennon amid kaleidoscope visuals of Muhl and himself frolicking among a tribe of dancing hippies. “Animals have escaped the zoo, coming down fifth avenue,” Lennon warns, in what looks like a cult ritual, complete with naked women in rabbit masks, Egyptian and cult symbolism, and plenty (and I mean PLENTY) of psychedelics. The All-Seeing Eye is abounding, as are insanely trippy visuals that could take on a variety of interpretations. You really can’t watch it just once.
Rather than fight the Beatles vibe he has had hanging over his head the entirety of his musical career, Sean Lennon embraces it and takes the sound into the future. By blending classic psychedelic sounds from the Sgt. Pepper’s era with modern electronic effects and his own very unique guitar style, Lennon and his band, The GOASTT, create a roadmap for an adventure certainly worth taking with them.
There’s a reason I’ve always felt weird about putting on makeup in front of boyfriends. It’s as if the curtain has risen, and behind it I’m a little less perfect and a lot more vain – and I blame it on the frivolous associations that people have with makeup. But I’m putting my foot down. Makeup is art, and the wielders of the brushes are true artists, using their powders and creams like any painter would pigments. My proof? The spectacular makeup artists below.
Best All-Around: Pat McGrath
Damn, does this Brit have a killer lineup: she’s done makeup for Vogue, W and Harper’s Bazaar covers, and fashion shows from Prada and Dolce & Gabbana to Miu Miu. If that wasn’t enough, this year she was named a Member of the Order of the British Empire for her services to the beauty and fashion industries. It’s no surprise why: she can do it all, from tame, glowing skin at Dolce to unbelievably abstract, colorful eyes at Dior.



The Mod Man: Tom Pecheux
As an avid lover of the 60s, the looks Tom Pecheux creates nearly strike me dead. They’re bold and graphic and look great on the pages of a magazine, no doubt the reason photographers like Patrick Demarchelier and Mario Testino are head over heels for his work. He’s also a fashion house favorite, from mod white eyes at Moschino to sassy pink liner at Derek Lam.



The All-American: Gucci Westman
Some of America’s favorite girls next door have been made up by the legendary Gucci Westman: Drew Barrymore, Natalie Portman, and Cameron Diaz, to name a few. Her looks are stunningly gorgeous, yes, but also made to flatter the everywoman. A few key moments: sparkling bronze eyes at J. Mendel and a fresh take on the cat eye at Rag & Bone. Don’t worry, though, she’s not always tame – see her look for Dior below for proof.



The Sexy Swede: Linda Hallberg
Yes, she’s Swedish, and yes, she’s sexy, but the key here is that this talented blogger creates looks that inspire other women to look their sexiest, too. She’s a master of color, but the amazing thing to me is that she never, ever looks overdone. I’m obsessed with her sunset eyes and flawless lip color application. You’ve likely seen her creations splashed all over Pinterest without even realizing it! Check out her YouTube – she’s behind BangerBeauty – for some of the best tutorials you’ll see.



The Scary Swede: Sandra Holmbom
Sorry for the Swedish obsession, but I couldn’t resist including Sandra Holbom, one of the most incredible artists out there. Take one look at her blog, Psycho Sandra, and watch as she transforms the human face into her canvas. She’s recreated scenes from Alice in Wonderland and made artful use of abstract patterns on her eyelids, and even regularly morphs herself into various animals. Plus, she’s a master of special effects makeup, the motive for the “scary” label. For your awe and amazement, see the collage of some of her best eye looks below.




Thank you for stumbling onto Vinyl and reading this article. Seriously, I’m in the midst of finals hell and writing this has given me SUCH an excuse to procrastinate just a little bit longer. Aside from all the studying, though, I’ve got one other worry on my mind: managing to stay fashionable and comfortable at the same time. I mean, who wants to squeeze into skinny jeans and stress over cleavage when you’re sitting in the library for hours on end? But if, like me, you refuse to go all-out frump, there’s no need to fret – just find inspiration from these cool-yet-cozy options below.
The Cool Crop Combo
Let the world know how you really feel about studying with this comfy crop top. Add easy cutoffs and fresh white sneaks for walking from final to final. Slip on a bright beanie to cover that bedhead – it’s cool, none of us had time to shower.

(Topshop shorts, Forever 21 top and beanie, and Converse sneakers)
The Bad Gal Combo
I’m constantly building fashionable outfits I can still relax in around my leather leggings. SO comfortable, and they look flawless with oversize tees. Add a printed flat for flair – I like cheetah – and a gold necklace, and you’re set.

(Helmut Lang leggings, True Decadence top, Isaac Mizrahi shoes, and First People necklace)
The Nature Girl Combo
May sound crazy to wear a dress to finals, but hey, I can’t argue with no wedgies. White cotton is so loose and breathable, and with a few key accessories, can look totally chic. Mix a few bright colors – I love the blue and orange mix here – and cinch your waist with a belt if you feel so inclined.

(Acne dress, H&M belt, Steve Madden shoes, and ABS by Allen Schwartz bangles)
We ran into our friends from Black Taxi at South by Southwest this year – in total honesty, I heard their music playing while I was outside conducting another interview, and once I wrapped that one up, I quickly ran to follow the sound and catch BT’s show at The Blind Pig.
After their show, we caught up with the guys and decided to do a quick impromptu interview to get the scoop on their new album (“guitar everywhere!”) , their new drummer and to find out if they actually went to that abandoned asylum we talked about after our last interview. Enjoy!
We caught up with Two Cow Garage at South by Southwest this year to talk about their album The Death of the Self-Preservation Society, their Indiegogo Campaign, their thoughts on audio formats, and their revolutionary new use for feral cats. These guys are the bomb.

We snuck into the upstairs at the Driskill Hotel in downtown Austin at South by Southwest for our interview Rebecca & Fiona, two kick-ass DJs all the way in from Stockholm, Sweden.
Check out the Vinyl Video below where I nod too much, and we talk about Rebecca & Fiona’s music, their problem with being called “female DJs” and their plans after South by. BTW, they made their jackets. Made them. These ladies are so cool.
Also, be sure to catch Rebecca & Fiona’s newest album, Beauty is Pain, out now!!
May 01 Bassmnt w/ Nause San Diego, CA
May 02 Tenw/ Nause Calgary, Canada
May 03 The Midw/ Nause Chicago, IL
May 08 SUTRAw/ Nause Costa Mesa, CA
May 09 Marqueew/ Nause Las Vegas, NV
May 10 New City Gasw/ Nause Montreal, Canada
May 30 Brännbollsyran Umea, Sweden
Jun 13 Summerburst Stockholm, Sweden
Jul 13 EDC UK Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
Aug 23 Creamfields Liverpool, United Kingdom
LA-based Misun met with us at South by Southwest to talk about their music (self-described as “spaghetti soul-dance”), their South by Southwest experience, leprosy from armadillos and Jon’s caffeine addiction. Check out our interview below, and then be sure to catch these guys on tour — they are truly, uniquely, awesome.
Vinyl Mag: So how have you guys been liking Austin besides the traffic issues? You’ve been here before, haven’t you?
Misun Wojcik [vocals/lyrics/keys]: I have not.
Jon Jester [drums]: Two of us have.
VM: Well welcome to the little blue dot in a big red state!
MW: It’s cool. We like it so far.
VM: It’s a unique place! I just moved here, so I’m getting my bearings on it all as well. Well, to start out, could you maybe tell me a little about yourselves and what roles you play within the group and what you bring to Misun?
William Devon [bass/keys]: I play bass, and that’s my role. I dance onstage [laughing], and style icon.
MW: “Diva” is a word we like to use.
Andrew Wallace [aka Nacey, guitar/production]: I play guitar, and I produce our tracks.
MW: I do vocals, lyrics, keys…
VM: And really cool hairstyles – I wish I could create that. Except the wind outside will destroy it in one second.
MW: Yeah! You should have seen it before! If you think this is nice…
JJ: I play the drums. And that’s what I do. I make sure we get from A to B. I’m addicted to caffeine, but not coffee.
MW: But not coffee.
VM: But you like the Crystal Light type of caffeine?
JJ: Yeah, the weird caffeine. I’m into these caffeine packs now that are essentially what you would have in a sugar-free Monster, but it comes in this little packet, and it’s really cheap.
MW: He makes it really yummy-looking, and it is, but it’s fat.
JJ: It’s poison, really. It is.
WD: Everyday, he picks us up with the same big cupful of his [laughing].
MW: Is this too much, Jon? [Laughing]
Will: All of our interviews are going to be like this [laughing]. Jon is the caffeine crack head.
MW: Jon has a problem.
VM: But he likes his caffeine artificially created, like chemically…
JJ: Exactly. The stronger, the better.
VM: Okay, so your music is super upbeat, but chill. I almost feel like it has a reggae vibe to it. When you’re creating music, creating a track, what is your focus? When you’re approaching it, what is your goal for how the music will turn out? Do you go in with an end goal in mind? Or do you just have it organically develop?
WD: I think it’s pretty organic every time. We don’t even really know what our sound is yet in some ways. We just know that…sometimes, it’s just based off of what we’ve been listening to, influenced by something a little bit, and we’ll just kind of roll with it in that direction.
VM: I read something about how you guys were influenced by Quentin Tarantino? So, how has Tarantino – also, what other art forms like music, film, writing – come into your work and influenced what you create?
MW: Some of the dance-heavy stuff is….what would you say the influence is?
AW: We’ve been DJs for a long time, so we’ve been into dance music for a long time. But it’s not… I feel like every single one of us pretty much like everything, so if we’re listening to rock music, we might start writing rock music.
JJ: Yeah, it’s cool not having…. like if you’re in a rock band, or if you’re in a hip hop band, you kind of stay within those lines. And I don’t think we have those lines. Those lines for us are…
MW: Ever-expanding. We would be bored if we couldn’t do different music all the time.
VM: If you could summarize your genre, what would you say? Sum up what you are in a couple of words.
MW: Well pop’s in there, for sure. Rock, for sure. Rock, pop, soul-dance.
VM: I like that! Soul-dance.
MW: Spaghetti soul-dance [laughing].
JJ: And that’s where the Tarantino can probably be heard. A lot of his guitar lines. Kind of twangy, western-y guitar vibe. Like Pulp Fiction and all of those. And what was the other? Did Kill Bill have a lot of that with the trill-y?
VM: So you secretly want to be in a Western? A Tarantino Western?
MW: Yeah, he is a cowboy, for sure.
VM: That’s awesome. Do you like any of the psychedelic Westerns? Like Dead Man with Johnny Depp? Austin’s a great place if you’re into Westerns, then!
MW: Exactly, what we want to get out of this city – but we won’t have the chance – we want to see Texas Texas. Like, ‘tumbleweed Texas.’ And I bet you there’s a lot of them, based on the wind outside.
VM: I’m pretty sure I saw a tumbleweed when I was driving over here, which kind of freaked me out.
JJ: Have you seen an armadillo yet?
VM: No, I haven’t.
JJ: It just looks like a little armored rat. On the side of the road.
MW: Are they dangerous?
VM: I think they carry leprosy…
All: What?!?
VM: Like if you touch it, you can catch leprosy!
MW: You’re joking.
JJ: Is there a cure for leprosy now?
VM: Yeah, antibiotics or something. I just would prefer not to catch leprosy!!
JJ: Yeah, and that’s how Misun ended up in in a leper colony.
MW: Someone needs to write a song about that [laughing]. Could you imagine if someone got leprosy out here? Like, ‘how was South By?’ ‘It was fun; we all caught leprosy.’
VM: What are your plans for after South By and moving forward throughout the year? Any projects you’re super pumped about working on?
MW: We’ve got a few shows lined up on the West Coast, and –
JJ: It’s really our first tour, too. We’re going to the Pacific Northwest. Middle of May, we’re going to… what is it – Everett, Washington? Something called Fisherman’s Village Music Festival there.
MW: We’re also playing in Oregon.
JJ: Yeah, a couple in Portland, a couple North West states. It’s all between the 12th and 17th of May, sometime in there. And then we’re playing the Echoplex March 22 – that’s an official after-South-by show. I don’t know if you’ve ever been to the Echoplex, but it’s a great venue, I’m super pumped on that.
AW: We’re playing Hard Rock City again, going down to San Diego for that show.
MW: I think the hope is that we make more music this year and keep touring. Build awareness, and have fun. We love writing so much; we want to be able to do that as much as possible…we’re based out of LA, and we all moved from DC.
AW: We made that move about four months ago.
VM: How are you liking LA?
MW: Loooooooove.
JJ: On a day like today, it’s like, ‘wow, I miss LA, nice sunny weather.’
MW: Yeah, I miss LA. But seriously, the vegetables – the prices on fresh produce is just unbelievable. DC will rob you, you know, for a cucumber.
JJ: Although if you buy a 30-pack of beer, you’re paying $1.50 for the CRV tax in California, because they charge you about five cents a can.
MW: But, see, the wine is less, so I win.
VM: How did you guys get together to collaborate and become a group?
WD: We’ve kind of always done music, and we kind of all just started working together, and it just kind of naturally happened. I don’t think we originally had intentions of creating a band, and music just started coming and we thought, ‘let’s go for it.’ And then we met Jon.
MW: Yeah, it was definitely weird. There was a point where we were like, ‘are we a band?’ because before that, we were just kind of playing around.
JJ: Misun opened for a band that I was playing with at the time. It was in DC; I’d been in LA off and on for a while, living there, and when I saw them play, it was just the three of them without a drummer, and it was legit. I mean, I was really floored. I mean, I had heard of the band, but I had never seen them or really listened to them, and you know, saw her, and I grabbed Andrew after the show, and was just like, ‘look man, even if it’s not me, I think you guys really need a drummer, and I’ll throw my hat in the ring.’
VM: So you just went out there and were like, ‘I want to join’?
JJ: I mean, I’ve been doing this for awhile, and maybe a month or so later, Misun reached out to me and was like, ‘how’s this all feeling? In terms of friends, and do you want to do this?’ and I had already decided to move to LA, and we started playing together in March of last year, so it’s been about a year…
MW: And he’s incredible. We had like little tryouts for other drummers, and boy was it tough, but this was just like [clap] bam!
AW: And the band he was playing with was like electronic, so he has this whole system, and he triggers samples with his drum set, and for us, we do so much electronic stuff, he just educated us on how that works.
JJ: And I fought it. I was forced into that world, because I used to have long hair, and I wanted to just rock. I just wanted to hit things as hard as I could and then all of a sudden, then this other band was like giving me these electronics, and I was like, ‘this isn’t what I want to do.’
VM: It becomes scientific, almost.
JJ: It used to be you just show up, and you’ve got your sticks and your wood, and then all of a sudden I’ve got all these wires and things, and I fought it. Now I look back, and I’m like, ‘thank God those guys made me do that switch.’ Because when I met Misun, I was like, ‘I already know how to do this, here it is,’ and it just worked.
MW: Yeah, we didn’t even know something like that existed at all.
JJ: Sometimes, you know, you fight against what you think is not what you want to do, and then all of a sudden it turns out to be the perfect situation. I’ve been reflecting on that a lot over the past year. On how that all just…
VM: How that perfectly worked out!
JJ: Yeah. Like, maybe we’re onto something in this band.
MW: It’s like eating your vegetables. You don’t want to do it, but it’s good for you. But I do like my vegetables.
JJ: We’re very healthy!
VM: Yeah! You have your green juice – I was going to get y’all a drink, but Odwalla is probably a better strategy…
JJ: We’ll come back and meet you after our show and take you up on that.