9/15/2022

Dutch post-punk crew Mauskovic Dance Band announce new LP 'Bukaroo Bank,' share title track

MAUSKOVIC DANCE BAND ANNOUNCES NEW LP BUKAROO BANK


SHARES TITLE TRACK, “BUKAROO BANK” – LISTEN


AMSTERDAM-BASED POST-PUNK QUARTET ADDS PSYCHEDELIC DUB

TO THEIR ALREADY-EXPANSIVE SONIC REPERTOIRE

Photo credit: Julia van der Veen


Amsterdam-based psychedelic dub post-punk quartet Mauskovic Dance Band have announced their new album Bukaroo Bank, due October 28, 2022 via Swiss label Bongo Joe Records. To ring in the announcement, the band has shared the title track, available now at all DSPs and streaming services. 


This Dutch powerhouse has already earned fans the world over for their unique take on post-punk, but on Bukaroo Bank their appeal grows even wider, having added a healthy dose of funk and psychedelic dub à la one of their main inspirations, the legendary Lee “Scratch” Perry. Via this inspired new sonic expansion and their agile studio workouts, Bukaroo Bank is sure to earn its place atop any discerning record collection. Catch this utterly singular display on tour this month, including a coveted slot at psych-rock haven Desert Daze on October 1. Find the full list of tour dates below.

 

LISTEN TO “BUKAROO BANK”

PRE-ORDER BUKAROO BANK


Download hi-res single artwork

The family that plays together stays together, as the old saying goes, and the Mauskovic Dance Band play like they’re in each other’s pockets 24/7. If you’re encountering Nicola Mauskovic, Donnie Mauskovic, Marnix Mauskovic and Mano Mauskovic for the first time, well, to be clear they’re not a literal family – it’s showbiz, darling. On the flipside, this Amsterdam-based group can claim a collectively cosmopolitan background that informs their suave, agile post-punk funk workouts. Bukaroo Bank, their second album for Swiss label Bongo Joe, finds the Mauskovic Dance Band reinventing both their approach and their sound, while maintaining the rhythm-forward euphoria heard on their debut album and surrounding singles.


Bukaroo Bank is one of those albums that sounds brashly live, like you’re in the room while the jams are being kicked out, but in fact uses the studio very shrewdly. Recorded in 2020, during one of the Netherlands’ intermittent lockdown bouts, for this one the four MDB members (plus second drummer Juan Hundred, aka Chris Bruining) wanted to step up from their previous homebase, Garage Noord – an ad hoc Amsterdam space for recording, practise and after-hours parties. They chose Electric Monkey, operated by engineer Kasper Frenkel. His stacks of what Nicola calls “very strange equipment”, and ability to sprinkle magic dub dust over everything, suited the vibe perfectly. The results glow and shiver with assembled synth sounds, rhythms spliced and echoed in a way that hails late Jamaican dub great Lee Perry – maybe the band’s biggest influence.


Frenkel’s role in the creative process was just one way in which Bukaroo Bank saw MDB function as a fully-fledged band for the first time. Previously, songwriting was more or less handled by founder member Nicola and brought to the other Mauskovics (keyboardist and electronics man Donnie, synth player and guitarist Marnix, and bassist Mano) to be recorded. This time they began life in the studio, unstructured jams firmed up by discipline and edited down to the 12-song result. One facet of the songcraft which has remained in place, though, is the tendency to build everything from the drums up.


There’s an equitable division of labour in the current version of MDB, and it shows – this is music without ego and with space for everyone’s talent to be heard. If the four core members are distinguished by standout personality traits (Donnie is the romantic of the band, says Nicola, who describes himself as firey and brisk; Marnix a calm anchor; Mano cheerful yet disciplined), these all gel once the amps start to warm up.


The group cite a bond going back to school age, having all grown up in the Amsterdam metropolitan area: Nicola, for example, is half-Dutch half-Sicilian, and was mainly raised in Haarlem, near the Netherlands’ capital. Embryonic teenage chops were later fleshed out by playing weekday jam sessions in Amsterdam bars among “1960s rockers and Latin groovers”. That funk and swing still persists to this day; still, there’s been a rhythmic shift away from the sound MDB minted on their self-titled debut album in 2019, where the influence of South American dance genres like cumbia made it a snug fit for UK label Soundway.


Although Nicola acknowledges he and his bandmates are on a different tip now, that LP still casts a stylistic shadow over Bukaroo Bank, as do subsequent 12" EPs on high-ranking Amsterdam club label Dekmantel. This linkup opened doors for MDB to play on rave-oriented bills, which is very much their bag: small clubs with big bass-heavy systems, to be more specific. 


Some sections might remind you of Afro-disco or slightly older highlife, others industrial prototypes like early Cabaret Voltaire, or 1980s On-U Sound mainstays like African Head Charge, or NYC groovers such as Liquid Liquid… there are outbreaks of saxophone, congas, echo units, wah-wah disco guitars, beats that sound programmed but aren’t (a nod to MDB’s industrial side). Bukaroo Bank, the song – which opens the album and is its first single – throws so many of these Easter eggs into the blender and yet always stays coolly minimalist. An ominous bassline, snares cracking hard enough you think they might break in two, sax wail getting its frequent-flyer points between 70s Ethiopia and 80s Bristol… If that sounds fun to you, be assured that Bukaroo Bank is an irrepressibly fun album – but one that contains multitudes.


This, undoubtedly, is ecstatic music for the body, and can be escapist if you wish it to. Yet Mauskovic Dance Band have a dark underbelly, too. Take FaceBukaroo Bank’s next single, with its chiming highlife-adjacent guitar and conga shakedown. The stuff of parties – but there’s an icy unease in the vocal chants and refrains, a strange melancholy in the early electro-styled synth melody. Nicola feels this side of the album reflects the ambiguous, often taxing period in which it was made, and that his lyrics – often subject to heavy mixing desk treatment by Frenkel – stem from fomenting anger at the “sneaky, liberal” Dutch government and Amsterdam’s corporate class. The dub reggae greats were especially adept at packaging similar messages in joyous packages, he further notes. 


All of which is to say that if you want to hold up the Mauskovic Dance Band as an entity who make ‘music for our times’, or similar, they are equal to the task; but it’s equally true that Bukaroo Bank works with a timeless sound, or several of them, and delivers results to match.


About Mauskovic Dance Band:

Amsterdam based Mauskovic Dance Band make madcap music intent on expanding musical universes. Powered by elastic rhythms and some potent dub wizardry, the five-piece are synonymous with flipping global music traditions and creating new, sound-system stylised, synth powered, dance-floor experiments.


Whilst their 2019 debut album on Soundway Records offered a frenetic mix, imbued by the Colombian champeta, Ghanaian highlife and spaced-out disco, their new forthcoming album Buckaroo Bank, set for release on Swiss label Bongo Joe Records, feeds off the industrial sounds of New York City, post punk and early electronic explorers. At the very center of the project is the dub, the Mauskovic echo chamber, guided by their universal hero Lee “Scratch” Perry and made possible by their studio friend Kasper Frenkel who provided the tools for this new Mauskovic riddim philosophy.


A proper family band (4 of them are related), and fronted by Nico Mauskovic who is also part of Zamrock touring band W.I.T.C.H., the group have released various singles since their debut album including on Berlin label Dekmantel and most recently, on experimental Swiss label Bongo Joe, their perfect home for brand new album Bukaroo Bank.

MAUSKOVIC DANCE BAND

LIVE 2022


Sept 15 - Sultan Room - Brooklyn, NY

Sept 16 - No Fun - Troy, NY

Sept 17 - The Drake - Amherst, MA

Sept 18 - Monkey House - Winooski, VT

Sept 20 - Beachland Tavern - Cleveland, OH

Sept 21 - The Empty Bottle - Chicago, IL

Sept 22 - Cactus Club - Milwaukee, WI

Sept 24 - FORMAT FESTIVAL - Bentonville, AR

Sept 25 - Rubber Gloves - Denton, TX

Sept 26 - Sahara Lounge - Austin, TX

Sept 28 - Valley Bar - Phoenix, AZ

Sept 29 - The Echo - Los Angeles, CA

Oct 1 - Desert Daze - Lake Perris, CA

MAUSKOVIC DANCE BAND

BUKAROO BANK

(BONGO JOE RECORDS)

Release date: October 28, 2022


1. Bukaroo Bank

2. Face

3. Wie Niet Weg Is Is Gezien

4. Parata Est

5. Zwaar

6. Bebi

7. People In The Hall

8. Dr Rhythm Space

9. Telefoon Dub

10. Samen

11. Bukaroo Bank - Slow Version

12. Slow Crack

CONNECT WITH MAUSKOVIC DANCE BAND:

BANDCAMP | FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER


No comments:

Phantogram Share New Single from 'Memory Of A Day' -- New Album Out Oct 18 via Neon Gold

PHANTOGRAM  SHARE NEW SINGLE “ IT WASN’T MEANT TO BE ”  MEMORY OF A DAY   NEW ALBUM OUT OCTOBER 18 VIA NEON GOLD RECORDS ON TOUR NOW WITH KI...