Whales and Cops: Great Bouncing Icebergs
- ¡Futuro Futuro!
- [download#2#nohits] [download#2#image]
- Fifty Black Marines
- Suave Homeless Asshole
- Bent Cop
All Songs by Whales and Cops
Also recorded by Bill Moriarty & Mark Scott at American Diamond, but mostly by Mr. Cops at the Bubbletape Lounge — Philadelphia’s worst recording facility. The experience is not unlike sawing off your own nuts with a child’s drawing of a knife. No actually that would not have taken as long.
Mr. Nathaniel Cops: Keys, Bees, Bells, Percussion, VX, FX.
Finger Julius Mountain: Drums, Marimba, Keys, Percussion, VX, Rx.
Otzi Bogman: Trumpet, Bass, Flugelhorn, Keys, Percussion, VX, Xx.
Long-snouted Crocodilian Helpmeets:
Stephanie Berliner — flute, keys; Andrew Dick — guitar, keys; Jesse Moynihan — violin; Jeff Hobo Carter — clarinet; Jaram Kim — violin; Dan Scholnik — tabla; . Alex Cordaro — whistleskull; Annie Fredrickson — cello; Scott Churchman — upright bass; Luke Fischbeck — bleeps; Billy Blaise Dufala — baritone sax, flute, clarinet; Ashley Deekus — marimba; Jeanette Berry — xox vox.
XXX VX Steven Dufala, Therese Gustafsson, Michael Wellenreiter, Adam Carrigan, Sochi Lynne Weiner, Jady Dyer, Gilmington Knoxworthy, Caroline Schmidt.
Thanks: Amy E. Henderson, Nicole DelCollo, Keville Clan, Brian Dwyer, Brown Gang, Sarah, Dan Piotrowski, Ben.
Creatures by James Ulmer [jamesulmer.com]
Logo & Fingers by Steven Dufala [dufalabrothers.com]
Layout by Stewart Dean Ebersole [stewart.dean.ebersole@gmail.com]
Mastered by Carl Saff.
All songs written by Whales and Cops, ©2008 Suite Krukity Music [ASCAP]
Two veterans of West Philadelphia’s late, lamented “Softbatch” scene (Squi!, Son Bees, King of Prussia, Oskama Bin Skaden), half-brothers Mr. Nathaniel Cops (keys) and Finger Julius Mountain (drums) were first united by a desire to get the fuck out of Man Man after simultaneously discovering (to their great horror) that they’d been playing with them for years. Whales & Cops began rehearsals at once, cleaving to a vigorous, manly regimen of certain foods and exercises and, significantly, a staunch refusal to hide the light of their Modern music under a bushel of implausible pseudonyms and fake, stupid band names. With the addition of fancy, German-looking multi-instrumentalist Otzi Bogman and usually one other human, Whales and Cops stand poised at the very brink of the Culture itself, beckoning to you.
The Great Bouncing Icebergs EP was recorded at dawn in an abandoned municipal storage facility through special, special microphones; each musician placed at or near the locus of a very red triangle. The songs recount the brother’s entanglement in a sugary web of digital dismemberment, expert panhandling, beard sex and berserk destruction. Legendary grunge producer Butch Vig was never contacted or mentioned once.
Reviews
Philadelphia Weekly
{Doug Wallen, August 2008}
“Pop doesn’t get much more puzzling than on Great Bouncing Icebergs, the long-awaited album by the madcap Philly troupe Whales and Cops. It’s packed with intimate shivers and hulking revelations and everything in between, beeping and blurring while virtuosic players with fake names wrangle vivid new life from their instruments. Maybe that sounds like hyperbole, but this band’s sonic extremes are enough to shock even listeners weaned on years of Man Man”
Fan of Friends: From the Desk of…
- Alaskas
- Give Yourself a Coffee Break
- With Fear and Amazement
- Directions
- Drunkards
- Brake Light Eyes
- Everything
- Ticks
- [download#24#nohits] [download#24#image]
- Countertop Landscapes

Fan of Friends is a quartet that plays folk music with a great deal of respect for the old and new traditions of the genre. Featuring banjo, guitar, violin, and cello, Fan of Friends create dark, somber songs that fuse that the gritty urban landscape of the band’s Philadelphia home with Appalachian folk and string-quartet classical music. With three of its members alternating between lead vocal duties, the Fan of Friends’ songs a wide diversity while maintaining a sharp consistency.
The group ‘s primary vocalist is Joshua Marcus, whose has released two tremendous solo albums and was a member of the Philadelphia band Like Moving Insects. He is joined by sisters Harmony and Chelsea Thompson on strings and Josh Newman (of Adam Arcuragi’s band) on guitar and bass.
What distinguishes the quartet from Marcus’s solo work is Harmony’s gripping, chilling singing and the cryptic songs from Newman. The band excels both in its simplicity and their uncanny ability to weave their voices in and out in harmony. It’s modern folk music that has much in common with R.E.M. and Fleet Foxes.
Originally started as a quintet that featured Adam Granduciel, currently the frontman of Philadelphia’s War on Drugs, the band coalesced as a quartet. After almost three years of playing shows (mostly at alternative spaces in Philadelphia) and appearance at the Popped! Philadelphia festival, Fan of Friends’ first release was a 7″ vinyl single released by High Two in 2007.
Fron the Desk of… marks the second collaboration between High Two and Contraphonic. In April 2008, the two labels co-released Joshua Marcus’s second solo album, Reverse the Charges. The album features Marcus’s songs exclusively, but relies on support from the members of Fan of Friends, plus 30 additional musicians for incredible folk orchestrations. Promotional copies of Reverse the Charges are available upon request.
SELECTED PRESS:
“Reverse The Charges reminds us that though songs of love and loss have been with us since we lived in trees, those are topics that never lose their power; we all struggle with the same juju. Sounding like a jaded Neil Young, or an even more exhausted Will Oldham, Marcus creates deeply effective songs that are melodic but with a sense of weariness.” — Foxy Digitalis
” I’ve been a big fan of Joshua Marcus since I first heard his yearning, plaintive vocals, his resonating banjo and his updated Appalachian mountain music.” — Songs:Illinois
” West Philly is the land of potlucks, porch gatherings and living room concerts. I first fell under the raw and open-hearted spell of the band Fan of Friends at one of these shows two years ago. Marcus sings, but then, they all sing. I get a chill when Harmony’s voice reaches up cresting unevenly over the evocative refrain “Who do you think you are?” in the song “Larks Are Card Keys.” It’s a spell song, one of the most right there and real in young American folk. Marcus earnestly beckons listeners with his stripped-down banjo playing and warm, dark vocal strains. Look for FOF’s new 7-inch from High Two. Fan I am of these friends. — Philadelphia City Paper
Live footage from Make A Rising
Local videographer Rich Wexler posted some great footage of last week’s Make A Rising show at Johnny Brenda’s.
Joshua Marcus: Reverse the Charges

Joshua Marcus - Reverse the Charges
- Part In It
- [download#25#nohits] [download#25#image]
- Oh Metal Bird
- A Whale Wash Out
- Business As Usual
- To Keep
- River (To Hold)
- What We Find is Gone
- For You Two, To Us All
- Lay Me Down
- Breathe Easy
- The Tiny Wonder Song
- All One or None
All Songs by Joshua Marcus
Amy Pickard – vocals – part in it, for you two, to us all
Jacob Mitas – viola – part in it, breathe easy
Tom Bendel – percussion – part in it
Caleb Mulkerin – recording, mixing, vocals, saw, harmonium, all percussion – so low so love so long
Colleen Kinsella – vocals – so low so love so long
Harmony Thompson – vocals – oh metal bird
Josh Newman- guitar – oh metal bird
Jack Ohly – upright bass – oh metal bird, to keep, breathe easy – exterior painting – text
Kells Bells – vocals – a whale wash out
Matt Rock – accordion and vocals – a whale wash out, to keep
Megan Williams – violin- a whale wash out, for you two, to us all
Tyler Gibbons – upright bass, vocal, tambourine, banjo – business as usual, the tiny wonder song)
Robin MacArthur – vocals – business as usual
Noam Levy – slide guitar – to keep
Tanya Nagahawatte – vocals – to keep – text
Nikolai Fox – fiddle – river (to hold)
Kate Cox – vocals – river (to hold)
Katie Dobbins – vocals – river (to hold)
Jason Dengler– guitar – river (to hold)
Greg Thomas – percussion – what we find is gone, cd layout
Mark Jenka – guitar, vocals – what we find is gone
Tim Joyce – hammer dulcimer, vocals – what we find is gone
Susan Sakash – trombone – what we find is gone
Beth Nixon – vocals – lay me down – exterior magical land – text
Natalie Joy –vocals – breathe easy
Chip Malloy – whistling – breathe easy
Matt Savage – vocals – the tiny wonder song
Matt Dodge – percussion – the tiny wonder song
Dan Madri – guitar – the tiny wonder song
Jon Francis – bowed banjo, viola, vocals – the tiny wonder song
Thomasin Parnes – title design, – text – scanning assistance
J.J. Tiziou – photography
Sam Stansbery – recording and mixing – business as usual
Bill Moriarty – all mixing and mastering except so low so love so long, business as usual
Katy Yeaw – interior collage
Album info
Philadelphia’s Joshua Marcus has been quietly emerging, banjo in tow, as one of today’s most intriguing songwriters. As a solo artist and with his group Fan of Friends, Marcus’ astonishingly honest and powerful songwriting is steeped in Appalachian tradition and pre-AAA folk innovation. At the heart of his songs is the simple beauty and subtlety of a great melody. The strengths of Marcus’ songs and live performance have led to increasing appreciation and critical acclaim (namely for his 2007 solo debut make/believe), a growing audience to play to, and most importantly, Marcus’ own desire to engage and interact with his crowds.
On his latest full-length Reverse the Charges, a co-release from Chicago’s Contraphonic and High Two, Joshua Marcus elevates all of the high points of his solo debut make/believe and confidently enlarges the scope and range of his songbook. On make/believe, Marcus collaborated with a dozen Philadelphia musicians within his community; for Reverse the Charges, Marcus broadened that community by setting out to record in various locales in various States, employing the services of just the right artists for just the right song. Marcus traveled the East Coast and Mid-West, working with over four-dozen musical friends and family, including artists such as Jack Ohly (bass), Amy Pickard (vocals), Megan Williams (violin) and members of The Lesser Birds of Paradise, Joy, and Red Heart the Ticker.
Marcus’ traveling recording process informed many of the songs themselves. The end result is a beautiful enhancing of his musical palette and reach, while still retaining the musical elements that make him unique — the lilting banjo, heartbreaking harmonies, sly lyrical phrasing. Reverse the Charges is Joshua Marcus’ most musically moving and lyrically powerful recording to date. It marks him as one of the most engaging folk songwriters today, and a statement from an artist that has figured out what he wants to say and just how to fit it to tune.
Sounding like a jaded Neil Young, or an even more exhausted Will Oldham, Marcus creates deeply effective songs that are melodic but with a sense of weariness. “Reverse The Charges” reminds us that though songs of love and loss have been with us since we lived in trees, those are topics that never lose their power; we all struggle with the same juju. Sounding like a jaded Neil Young, or an even more exhausted Will Oldham, Marcus creates deeply effective songs that are melodic but with a sense of weariness. “Reverse The Charges” reminds us that though songs of love and loss have been with us since we lived in trees, those are topics that never lose their power; we all struggle with the same juju. 7/10- Foxy Digitalis
If Joshua Marcus grew his beard longer, I could believe Sam Beam had moved north, settled in colder climes. Banjo in hand, Marcus is twangier than the Iron & Wine icon, a little less accessible, but the bones are the same. Both Marcus and Beam are technically folk singers, only because there’s nothing else to call them. They’re hardly traditionalists. Marcus’ harmonies are fascinatingly innovative, nothing like Woody Guthrie or early Dylan. he songs are dusty and unchartable, eerie but still lovely, impossible to classify. A smattering of eclectic instruments drops in every few tracks—sometimes viola or tambourine, sometimes a haunting female voice, once an accordion.- New Haven Advocate
Adam Arcuragi: Soldiers for Feet

Adam Arcuragi - Soldiers for Feet
- Sin is Just an Old Archery Term
- The Old Sears and Roebuck Catalogue
- Go With Them
- The Belgian
- Almost Always
Adam Arcuragi: vocals, guitar, vocals
David Hartley: guitar, vocal, trumpet, vocals
Todd Starlin: trumpet, vocals
Brian Christinzio: organ, vocal
Maryanne Doman: dobro
Tom Bendel: percussion
Gretchen Lohse: violin, viola
Joshua Newman: electric guitar
Robbie Bennett: mandolele
Janka Perniss: violin
Nathan Lohse: cello
Engineered and produced by David Hartley
After the release and of his self-titled solo album and the ensuing tour, Adam Arcuragi began the arduous task of sorting through all the songs, sketches of songs, and half-songs that he wrote in the time since his debut was recorded in late 2005. The quality and quantity was quite astounding. Knowing that the path to realizing his second record in the grand manner it has been imagined, Arcuragi knew it would be a long path.
The five songs that make up the Soldiers for Feet were recorded during a
break from working on Arcuragi’s yet-untitled, soon-to-be-finished second proper album. Originally conceived as a home-recorded documentation of his new material, the sessions flourished into into a portrait of the artist in his most intimate situation — at home, playing and singing his songs, with his friends in tow. When you have friends in such great bands as BC Camplight, National Eye and War On Drugs, success was guaranteed. Arcuragi opens himself up with graceful charm; his new songs are bound to impress and recruit fans.
Video: “Woodsong Part One” by Make A Rising
Stop Motion film for the for the great Toby Stretch.
From the new album called Infinite Ellipse And Head With Open Fontanel.Watch hi-res version on tobystretch.com