Thank you Pop Dose for recognizing The Ocean Blue’s latest Ultramarine in the top 13 album picks for 2013! Very proud of this Korda Release, being hailed as one of The Ocean Blue’s finest.
Korda 2 Komp Out Now!
Be Earth Friendly, Bring Your Own Pint Glass to Korda 2 Showcase!
The Cedar has a stellar selection of local brew: Surly, Summit, Flat Earth, Indeed, Rush River, etc; and they will be happy to fill a pint glass or 16 0z keg cup you bring from home to cut down on the use of disposables. If you bring your own cup, we’ll enter you in a raffle to win the Korda Release of your choice. Everyone wins when the earth wins, and some lucky someone will win a little something extra!
*When you leave the venue, please be sure your glass is empty and rinsed. We don’t want open container violations. To keep the size consistent, only pint glasses or 16 oz keg cups are suitable. And fyi: the Cedar serves wine in re-usable cups.
Get tickets for Korda 2 Showcase right here. Pre-sales end at 5PM on 11/30.
KORDA 2 SHOWCASE Nov 30 in MPLS!
The Ocean Blue, The Starfolk, Jim Ruiz Four, and The Owls will play their hearts out for you in honor of Korda’s first year. Jake Rudh will be spinning. Our brilliant new Korda 2 Komp CD will be at the merch table. Make Thanksgiving weekend extra special with new music and live music from Korda Records!
Buy Korda 2 Showcase Tickets here.
Pre-order Korda 2 Komp here.
Interview with David Schelzel of The Ocean Blue
David Schelzel discusses the importance of Minneapolis to his music, accolades from Butch Vig on his new album, and the frenetic first year of Korda Records. Interview by Allison LaBonne over Surly beer and hummus plate at Café Maude in Loring Park.
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Q: You’ve had a wild ride in the music industry; signing a multi-record deal with Sire while still in high school, recording in London with John Porter (The Smiths, Billy Bragg, Roxy Music), and experiencing all the major label trappings like extensive touring, radio hits, and a string of music videos; one of them filmed in Iceland. After leaving the majors, you moved to Minneapolis to attend U of M law school. You stayed to practice law and settle down to quiet life, while never leaving music behind. How has Minneapolis shaped this chapter of your life in music?
DS: I don’t think The Ocean Blue would have continued if I hadn’t moved here. If I had stayed in Pennsylvania I don’t think I would’ve kept making music. The day I got here in the summer of 1999, I drove into town and I went straight to the birthday party of city council member Nyland. Jim Ruiz, who I knew, was playing his party. It was in south Minneapolis, and that’s when I met Peter Anderson. He was drumming for Jim. We had an immediate connection, he was super positive and a great drummer, excited about making music. He’s been a major factor in keeping me moving forward.
The second thing is the community of artists here was inspiring to me. Meeting you and Brian, we were immediately best friends and soul mates, but also I just loved the music you were doing. There are a lot of people here making great music, and it’s a part of their lives. In places like New York and L.A. it seems kind of manufactured to me. Here we have normal people making music, and it’s in the fabric of their lives, and I love that. And Korda Records is a formalization of that thing. It just took me a long time to get to that point where the band I was a part of was ready to do a full on record and tour again.
Where I was living in Pennsylvania I was very isolated. And here I feel like part of this big little town, or small city of, Minneapolis, and there’s just a lot going on to inspire you. Art, culture, food, buildings, wintertime, lakes, parks. A lot of resources for the musician too. I can duck in to a big studio…the guy who mastered our record is just on the other side of the sculpture garden. I can walk there and get my record mastered. That wouldn’t happen in Pennsylvania.
Q: You and the band recorded Ultramarine on your own, in home studios; and when Butch Vig comes to one of your shows and gives his accolades on your production, I think it’s safe to say you’ve been very successful at DIY recording.
DS: That Butch Vig story is doubly funny because the record he’s most famous for is Nirvana’s Nevermind, which probably single handedly destroyed the format of radio that we were so successful at in the early nineties. So here’s the guy who’s kind of responsible for destroying my major label career complementing me on my record!
But yeah, I really benefitted from all the years of making records in big studios with amazing producers and engineers, and learned the science of it, and the art of it. When the technology became available to do it in your home, I kind of understood the architecture of it all, but I still had to learn how to use it. Universal Audio plug ins helped, because those plug ins are emulations of the hardware that we always used.
Now if they could just make a digital version of John Porter we’d be set! Technology can do really amazing things, but you still need people who know how to use it and wield all those tools in an artful way. Just like you did when people were using the hardware technology. I have more respect for the people I used to work with than I ever have.
Q: Do you feel like you’ve learned anything about the new music industry since starting Korda Records?
DS: Oh yeah. I think this year has been a huge learning experience. In some ways this year was an experiment, to test hypotheses, to see what works and what doesn’t in a real laboratory of the unknown, because nobody really knows what’s going on in the music business. It’s still in such a state of flux. It’s like the music business used to take place on Earth and now we’re on Jupiter, and so all the laws are different. We have to figure out how to do the same thing in a completely different environment. It’s been good to work with indie promoters and indie distributors who are down in the trenches trying to figure it out too, and work with a bunch of other Korda artists who are trying to figure it out at the same time. We all went about making our records in slightly different ways, and releasing them in slightly different ways, and I think we’ve all learned a lot.
Q: What has been the highlight of releasing Ultramarine?
DS: For me it has been connecting with old friends and fans. Jay at the iTunes store, an old fan, was a huge ally, so iTunes support and features were really consequential to people finding out about the record. Our publicist, is an old fan. Even our distributor is a long time fan. So people who already knew about us proved to be really helpful in getting the word out to our old fans and in reaching new fans.
But then also figuring out the new networks, particularly social media, has been interesting. Social media played a huge part in our release. We had some old traditional press, there was an article in USA Today, and something in Associated Press that ran in a lot of different U.S. papers, but frankly I only saw the electronic versions of that. It was all what was being served up on the feeds, the blogs, the Stereogums and Paste Magazines of the world online and all that stuff. So figuring out that piece was really huge too.❖
See The Ocean Blue live Sat Nov 30 @ The Cedar, as part of Korda 2 Showcase with The Starfolk, Jim Ruiz Four and The Owls. Ticket available here.
Pre-order Korda 2 Komp
Korda Records celebrates its fabulous first year with Korda 2 Komp: smashing new tracks from Typsy Panthre, Jim Ruiz Four, The Owls, The Starfolk, The Hang Ups, and “No Money In That” by The Ocean Blue which premiered today in Brooklyn Vegan!
Pre-order Korda 2 Komp on CD here.
$7.99 plus shipping
Release date: 11/30/13
Korda Records Happy Hour
Korda Records Happy Hour
3pm-5pm Sunday Nov 10
The Blue Door Pub Longfellow
3448 42nd Avenue South , Minneapolis, Minnesota 55406
Welcome, The Owls!
New tracks coming Nov 30 on Korda 2 Komp, their first gig in two years at Korda 2 Showcase, and a new album out 2014 on Korda Records! We are beaming with delight to pull The Owls under our Korda umbrella, and can’t wait for you to hear their enchanting voices on Korda 2 Komp.
The Owls (Maria May, Allison LaBonne, and Brian Tighe) are three songwriters who make harmony rich, melodic, acoustic indie pop. They released Our Hopes and Dreams in 2004, and Daughters and Suns in 2007 to wide acclaim.
The Owls are a rare band gifted with three very talented songwriters who are also three wonderful singers, each perfectly suited for the kind of melancholy, intimate setting they songs create. When they blend together in different formations, it can raise goose bumps and warm hearts. –All Music Guide
The Owls formed in 2000 and hail from Minneapolis, MN. Other members over the years include drummers Stephen Ittner and John Jerry.
Read Peter Scholtes’ cover story on The Owls for City Pages here.
Korda 2 Komp + Korda 2 Showcase Nov 30
Pre-order Korda 2 Komp here.
Buy Korda 2 Showcase Tickets here.
The biggest day of the Korda year is coming Nov 30, when we mark our one year anniversary with the release of Korda 2 Komp! Featuring new material by The Ocean Blue, Jim Ruiz Set, Typsy Panthre, The Starfolk; as well as the latest additions to our Korda family: The Hang Ups and The Owls–this is the perfect gift for the music connoisseur on your holiday list!
We kick off the release with a fantastic night of live music in Minneapolis: Korda 2 Showcase featuring The Ocean Blue, The Starfolk, Jim Ruiz Set, The Owls, and DJ Jake Rudh. Get tickets right here.
So come bask in the afterglow of Thanksgiving with new music and live music from Korda Records!
The Starfolk “Into the Clouds” video premiere
The Starfolk teams up with renowned director Philip Harder to make a neo pop art masterpiece!
The “Into the Clouds” video premiered with interview in Impose Magazine, and “Into the Clouds” was also selected as song of the day on GIGsoup, with a glowing review.
The album really is one of the best from 2013 and we at GIGsoup certainly recommend you take a listen. It’s a beautifully written and well produced selection of 12 tracks that simply don’t seem to tire.