- 1,2,3
- AB & The Sea
- Allah Las
- Amanda Palmer & the Grand Theft Orchestra
- ANR
- Antibalas
- Assemble Head in Sunburst Sound
- Au Revoir Simone
- Bass Drum of Death
- Bear Hands
- Bear in Heaven
- Bellemare
- Beth Thornley
- Bikini
- Binky Griptite
- Bloc Party
- Blonde Summer
- Bob and Gene
- Bonjay
- Caitlin Park
- Charles Bradley
- CHEEK MOUNTAIN THIEF
- Classixx
- Common Prayer
- Como Mamas
- Crocodiles
- Dan Mangan
- Daptone Records
- David Thomas Jones
- Devin
- Diagrams
- DOM
- Donora
- Dusted
- Eisley
- El Rego
- Erika Spring
- Escort
- Eux Autres
- Fake Problems
- Feeding People
- Figurines
- Frankie Rose
- Freddie Gibbs
- Freelance Whales
- Frenchkiss Records
- Gold & Youth
- Hanni El Khatib
- Heavy Blanket
- Hockey
- Hollerado
- Honor Roll Music
- Hooded Fang
- Humans
- James Pants
- Jason Collett
- Jeff Hershey & The Heartbeats
- John Grant
- King Tuff
- Kishi Bashi
- Les Savy Fav
- Lindsey Ray
- Little & Ashley
- Malcolm Middleton
- Menahan Street Band
- Miniature Tigers
- Naomi Shelton & The Gospel Queens
- Neighbors
- Neon Indian
- Neon Neon
- Nick Waterhouse
- Night Panther
- Nosaj Thing
- Nouela
- Odd Us
- Omega Male
- Onili
- Opossom
- Pax Nicholas
- Pinkunoizu
- Plains
- PONY BOY
- Priestess
- Princeton
- Queen Sea Big Shark
- Races
- Rosie Thomas
- Scorpion Child
- Seams
- Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings
- Slam Donahue
- So Many Wizards
- Solid Gold
- Stars
- Stones Throw
- Suckers
- Superhumanoids
- Tee Pee Records
- The Antlers
- The Big Sleep
- The Budos Band
- The Chain Gang of 1974
- The Dig
- The Elwins
- The Leisure Society
- The Magnetic North
- The Mighty Imperials
- The Rassle
- The So So Glos
- The Sugarman Three
- Thieving Irons
- Tijuana Panthers
- Tunng
- Via Audio
- Victory
- Young Man
- Zeus
Escort
ESCORT is big. Literally. Enjoying accolades ranging from the New York Times
to Pitchfork, the seventeen-member “disco orchestra” features an incredible
cast of musicians including founders/producers Eugene Cho and Dan Balis, and
fronted by lead singer Adeline Michèle.
Escort burst on to the scene in 2006 with a string of critically acclaimed 12"s
that included future classics "Starlight" and "All Through The Night", a pair of
DJ staples that get still get plenty of play on dance-floors. As DJs nursed their
electro-clash hangover with a seemingly never ending stream of disco edits,
Escort stood out, in part, by creating dance music the old fashioned way: with
impeccable production, musicianship, and songwriting.
The following several years saw them bring the same uncompromising approach
to their live show. In an era where dance music is dominated by samples and
computers, Escort took a sprawling ensemble to the stage and developed a
reputation as one of New York’s most compelling live acts, capable of performing
their elaborate recordings note for note. Their extravagant New York City shows
prompted a cover story in the Village Voice declaring them "poised to become
Gotham's premier live dance act" and reviews of their shows in Time Out New
York and the New York Post auspiciously labeled them the "city's best live band."
Escort's debut LP has finally arrived, the culmination of years of painstaking
work in the studio. And the wildly enthusiastic critical reception suggests it was
more than worth the wait. Pitchfork raved, "Escort isn't just the pinnacle of 21st-
century of disco fetishism. It's a great pop album." Spin called it the "Best Disco
Album of 2011… disco at it's urbane, hedonistic best." and Rolling Stone called
it "a wickedly catchy, note-perfect return to the heyday of disco."
The entire album is steeped in the venerable tradition of clubland’s holy trinity
— New York, Chicago, and Detroit — but it seems particularly reminiscent of
mutant-pop luminaries such as Kid Creole and the Coconuts and Ian Dury, who
somehow managed to translate their sardonic sensibilities to the dance-floor.
And by embracing the legacy of these forward-thinking but classic acts, they
have yet managed to create something strikingly new.
The LP’s opener “Chameleon” is a perfect example: a three-act play about the
French serial impostor Frederic Bourdin, set to a beat that’s equal parts Thriller
and the Tom Tom Club. The tracks, “Make Me Over” and “Why oh Why” seem to
explore the lost possibilities of another era, rather than simply trying to re-create
it. The 1937 standard “A Sailboat in the Moonlight” is twisted into a lost August
Darnell classic. The album also includes the definitive versions of their 12” DJ
releases — which have been remixed, remastered, rearranged, and re-recorded
specially for the LP — to complete an album with absolutely no filler.
