Friday, July 29, 2016

The College Crowd, Captured: Indie Musicians Rejoice as Partnership between Music Marketing Experts IndieU and Koral Young Group Promises Full Campus Exposure

Connecting musicians to college students, IndieU strikes deal with KYG to provide discount on services

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Independent musicians looking for exposure to the highly sought after college crowd have reason to celebrate. Music marketing experts IndieU, an online music platform that connects musicians to college students, and Koral Young Group, a full service artist development agency that specializes in online marketing and public relations, have joined forces to help musicians further their careers. As part of the deal, IndieU artists can choose from more than ten services offered by Koral Young Group and can receive an exclusive 50% discount on the first month of services for digital PR, community seeding, and social media management help.

IndieU founder Natalie Edell explains that “IndieU allows users to follow the music tastes of their friends, create playlists, and stream and download thousands of songs for free.” With over fifty student representatives in twenty schools across the nation, IndieU helps artists grow a “strong localized college fan base while providing students with everything they need to know about their local music scene.”

With hundreds of articles to browse and a recently launched interactive digital magazine, the discovery of new music is endless. IndieU will soon launch their event creation tool in which students can create their own events, book local artists to perform, and share in the revenues generated by ticket sales. IndieU's new artist services page also features music distribution service TuneCore, online radio station Earbits, and several direct to student perks.

According to Koral Young Group CMO and founder Erik Koral, the goal of the Los Angeles and Aspen-based company is to “work closely with our clients to create strategic tailor-made campaigns.” Whether an unsigned artist, a newly launched brand, or a band with previous campaign history, Koral Young Group pride themselves on “meeting the individual needs of our clients.”

Koral Young Group evolved out of the work of Nadine Gelineau and The MuseBox. Brought in to partner with Gelineau, Koral and Andrea Young created Koral Young to continue The MuseBox’s legacy of serving musicians via publicity, promotion, and marketing services. Koral Young has added to their services social media strategy, SEO, radio promotion, touring, synch licensing services, community seeding, brand consulting, and street team management.


For more information on IndieU, visit their social media: FACEBOOK | TWITTER | INSTAGRAM

For more information on Koral Young Group, visit their social media: FACEBOOK | TWITTER | INSTAGRAM
 
For press inquiries, please contact Erik@KoralYoung.com

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

More Amour, Please: In Response to Global Turmoil, Award-Winning Country Pop Star Eileen CareyPens Ode to Paris-Style Love with Uplifting “In the Air” Single

“California vocalist Eileen Carey deftly mixes pop and country influences on her new CD, inserting in her leads a clarity and edge that’s both refreshing and insightful.” (Nashville City Paper)

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Proving that love is more inspiring than hate, award-winning country star Eileen Carey has countered recent terrorist attacks, racial violence, and global turmoil with “In the Air,” her feel-good ode to the City of Love, Paris, France. Credited by music blog Country Music, ATK with “blending pop, country, and rock in a way that feels uniquely hers,” Carey was recently named the 2016 National Radio Hits Favorite Female Country Artist of the Year and New Music Weekly’s Country Breakthrough Artist of the Year. “In the Air” features champagne, limousines, movie stars, and, of course, love. "In the Air" is the first single from Carey’s fifth studio album, produced by Travis Allen Childress and set for release later this fall.

According to Carey, “In the Air” is a heartfelt tribute to Paris, the city she visited two weeks before terrorists killed 130 people there in November of 2015:

“Paris is such a whirlwind of love, romance, and excitement that the terrorist attacks there felt personal to me. I had just visited the City of Love two weeks before. It inspired me to write a love song for two people set in the gaiety that is still Paris, a kind of victory for the spirit of love."


Having recently made her third consecutive appearance at the CMA Music Festival in Nashville, Carey’s “Bottle Your Crazy Up” reached #1 nationally in 2015, where it competed with major-label country performers. Carey’s three released singles are from Let It Go, her most successful album to date. Carey won The Academia Music Awards Best Country/Rock Song of the Year for “Bottle Your Crazy Up.” Akadamia.com called Carey’s composition and performance “a clever country jam with dulcet vocals and superb instrumentation, illustrating one of the most stringent performance standards we've encountered.”

Carey's last three music videos, “Bottle Your Crazy Up,”  the feel-good summer release “Party at the Beach,” and “Faith” have accumulated more than 105,000 Youtube views. Her single “Faith” reached the  very top of all the NMW country radio charts (Main, Indie, Internet), and also reached the very top spot in all the NMW AC charts and Top 40 charts as well.“Faith” also made an appearance on Music Row's Country Breakout chart. Eileen’s current single, from the Let It Go album, “Bring on the big” is currently holding on to the #1 spot on the NMW Country charts for weeks, and appeared at #1 on the NMW Adult Contemporary Hot AC chart as well.

Carey has also started posting in her new blog, The Music Mom. The Music Mom reveals Carey's desire to positively impact others via the sharing of her experiences and wisdom: “The world is filled with ups and downs, so if I can help people see things in a new and more positive light, perhaps they can find a better place in life.”

More information on Eileen Carey is available on her official website.



For more information on Eileen Carey, visit her social media: FACEBOOK | TWITTER | YOUTUBE  
For press inquiries, please contact Samuel@KoralYoung.com

Thursday, July 21, 2016

ALBUM REVIEW: Notes to Self by A New State



Are you a fan of grungy rock/punk-rock music? Do you dig the idea of artists who shred on every instrument and do so simply out of the passion for the music itself? If you answered yes to either of those questions, A New State's "Notes to Self" is most definitely for you. 

Hailing all the way from Franklin County here in Missouri, A New State is a hot new rock band that has some serious potential with something incredible to contribute to the industry of modern music. They just released "Notes to Self," their first EP, on Tuesday, June 28th. To tell you the truth, I can not stop listening to it. 


The record begins with "Nothing Like You," a song that, to me, is about a relationship between a man and his woman. The first verse portrays the doubt that any relationship can have, talking about being brave and making different decisions. Much like a lot of unsuccessful relationships, the lyrics describe each and every decision made by the man in the relationship. Going through every decision he made in the past throughout the track, he realizes that every moment spent with this other person was a waste of time. The breakdown beautifully displays the doubt in any relationship. The question repeats itself; "What if I'm right? I never needed you." The fallout of the relationship is spent by the man looking back on the relationship and reflecting, finally coming to terms with the fact that he never truly needed that other person to rise to his full potential. 

"It's Never Easy" is the second track on the EP. This number is something that couldn't ring truer to me as an artist. The title alone explains how difficult life can be at times, and the song delves into a deeper issue than simply life itself. Right before the first chorus, vocalist Nick Wachter utters the lyrics, "I'm not miserable enough to feel like this." This would resonate with any number of listeners who have gone through something troublesome, only to realize that whatever issue they had at the time wasn't enough to make them feel the way they did. Realizing that nothing will ever be easy is quite possible one of the hardest things in life to grasp, but once we can finally accept that, we can "wipe the dust away," and uncover our eyes and minds. 

The third track on the album is something that any and all fans of this genre of music will recognize. "Fiction" contributes classic punk rock guitar riffs and bass slaps, as well as a drum track that sounds like it belongs on a single off of blink-182's "Take Off Your Pants and Jacket." Mike Wachter starts the song heavy and fast with a solid drum pattern that would make Travis Barker proud. Immediately after putting that blink-182-style track in the listener's head, Nick follows suit with a strong guitar riff that sounds like the band featured Tom DeLonge on the record. The lyric "I'm a story without an end, a king without a crown" embodies the whole personality of the song on its own. "Fiction" describes the way we feel after a breakup; the song follows the first track of the EP quite well. The trust, the tenderness, the truth; it's all gone, and this track helps us realize that life can prove to be more difficult when things aren't the way they used to be. 

"93 Trees" is the fourth track on the EP, and probably the one with the strongest punk theme. The vocal introduction is a great start for the song, and it only continues to get better from there. The music itself reminds the listener of an early Sum 41 album with the fast-paced guitar riffs played in a major key. I personally love the lyric "they say I'm a blast to be around," because everything leading up to this would lead the listener to believe the polar opposite, and the sarcasm goes right along with the atmosphere this song produces. The breakdown in the last minute of the song sounds like something right off of an old blink-182 record; it's truly impressive when a band can reproduce something a handful of extremely talented musicians took years to perfect, but yet they are still able to put their own spin on it. For me, the best part about this song was the wave of nostalgia that came crashing down when the music started up. I felt like I was watching the introductory montage to a college party movie like American Pie, or something straight out of National Lampoon's vault of collegiate humor. When A New State made an appearance at a frat party at Culver-Stockton College, this song was the crowd's favorite. The reminiscing the lyrics bring on is something that music fans fall in love with almost universally. 

The final track on the EP, the song that brings A New State's first official release to a close in both story and set, is called "Safe and Sorry." From start to finish, this song had me entranced. The low and slow beginning with the smooth vocals is a refreshing change of pace from the grunge/punk/rock theme the other four songs create. The lyrics create a great ending to the story the other four songs told. Lyrics like, "if you're digging shallow graves, you might as well dig too," and the chorus belting, "you take an inch, I'll take a mile, because that's just the way I've always been," help the listener realize that the singer is finally coming to terms with all of the negativity in his life, and is finding out that he may not have made the best decision every chance he was given. He is once again safe, and sorry for anything or anyone he ended up hurting along the way. We learn that the singer doesn't want to live the way he used to any longer. On a more musical note (yeah; pun intended), I appreciate the backing vocals that repeat the chorus done by "Double Wooded Junk Whacker" Mike Wachter that echo Nick's lead clean vocals. The screaming done by Mike show the passion that not only this song has within it, but the entire EP. The slow outro to restate the smooth intro is done with almost no error, and brings the record to a clean, crisp close. 

A New State is doing everything they do for the music. I know what you're thinking, and I'll tell you right now - NO. Not every artist is in it for the music and nothing else. The band recorded this live. Each song, and produced an incredible quality in doing so. They drove to my job just to deliver the hard copy of "Notes To Self" directly to my hand. These three dudes bring something to the music world that I haven't seen from any band in a long time. I can't wait to see what they will do next. I know it will blow their EP out of the water. I strongly suggest giving "Notes To Self" a listen as soon as you can. I'll leave a link below. Until next time. 

Andrew