Watch: The Arcs' Unveil "Outta My Mind" Video

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The Arcs have unveiled the video for "Outta My Mind," off Yours, Dreamily, their recently released debut album. The video premiered on The Huffington Post, which says: "A dreamy gift of garage blues wrapped in fuzzy, soulful guitar, the album is a refreshing shift from [Dan] Auerbach that you'll want to keep on repeat all weekend long." Watch the video here. Yours, Dreamily, is WFUV's New Dig and Album of the Week from The Current, which says "this album is chock full of memorable, hooky jams ... [Auerbach] can't help but write songs that get stuck in your brain."

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The Arcs, whose debut album, Yours, Dreamily, was released last week on Nonesuch Records, have unveiled the video for the album's first single, "Outta My Mind." The video, directed by Nick Walker, premiered on The Huffington Post, which says of the album: "A dreamy gift of garage blues wrapped in fuzzy, soulful guitar, the album is a refreshing shift from Auerbach that you'll want to keep on repeat all weekend long." You can watch the video below:

The Arcs announced a European tour yesterday, and make their live concert debut performing as part of NPR Music’s First Listen Live series at New York’s Housing Works Bookstore Café tonight. The band will also perform at Bowery Ballroom in New York on September 26; tickets are on sale this Friday. For details, visit nonesuch.com/on-tour.

Yours, Dreamily, is New York NPR member station WFUV's New Dig of the week.

"Since the paths of these musicians have crossed many times over the years, they have a natural rapport," WFUV's Darren DeVivo writes of the band: Dan Auerbach, Leon Michels, Richard Swift, Homer Steinweiss, and Nick Movshon. "Synthetic, electronic grooves, augmented by a smattering of loops and samples, weave in and out of the album. Auerbach’s elastic vocals are at the core while his wiry guitar buzzes and twirls around funky retro-‘70s melodies ... [I]t’s pretty clear that the guitarist, singer and songwriter relishes the chance to show an entirely different side of his rock ‘n’ roll temperament."

Read more at wfuv.org.

Yours, Dreamily, is also Album of the Week at Minnesota Public Radio's The Current.

"With The Arcs, we get a familiar mix of soulful, bluesy, psychedelic rock similar to the last few Black Keys' albums from the crew that Auerbach has assembled to help him produce records for artists like Dr. John, Ray LaMontagne, and Lana Del Rey," writes The Current's Jim McGuinn, and yet "there are deeper forays into both Otis Redding and Curtis Mayfield-influenced soul and Latin pop, with vintage synths and sax vying with overdriven guitars in the forefront of the mix ... Auerbach may have felt more liberated to indulge his musical fantasies than ever, but as with the Keys, this album is chock full of memorable, hooky jams. It's in the backbeat, in the choruses, in the horn stabs—we get the sense that even when Auerbach is freed to do anything he wants, he can't help but write songs that get stuck in your brain ..."

McGuinn concludes: "Yours, Dreamily, is a little weirder and experimental in places, but it never forgets Auerbach's strengths in The Black Keys as a guitarist, vocalist and songwriter who has created some of the most memorable rock 'n' roll of the 21st century, and that's a good thing."

Read more at thecurrent.org.

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The Arcs: "Outta My Mind" [video]
  • Wednesday, September 9, 2015
    Watch: The Arcs' Unveil "Outta My Mind" Video

    The Arcs, whose debut album, Yours, Dreamily, was released last week on Nonesuch Records, have unveiled the video for the album's first single, "Outta My Mind." The video, directed by Nick Walker, premiered on The Huffington Post, which says of the album: "A dreamy gift of garage blues wrapped in fuzzy, soulful guitar, the album is a refreshing shift from Auerbach that you'll want to keep on repeat all weekend long." You can watch the video below:

    The Arcs announced a European tour yesterday, and make their live concert debut performing as part of NPR Music’s First Listen Live series at New York’s Housing Works Bookstore Café tonight. The band will also perform at Bowery Ballroom in New York on September 26; tickets are on sale this Friday. For details, visit nonesuch.com/on-tour.

    Yours, Dreamily, is New York NPR member station WFUV's New Dig of the week.

    "Since the paths of these musicians have crossed many times over the years, they have a natural rapport," WFUV's Darren DeVivo writes of the band: Dan Auerbach, Leon Michels, Richard Swift, Homer Steinweiss, and Nick Movshon. "Synthetic, electronic grooves, augmented by a smattering of loops and samples, weave in and out of the album. Auerbach’s elastic vocals are at the core while his wiry guitar buzzes and twirls around funky retro-‘70s melodies ... [I]t’s pretty clear that the guitarist, singer and songwriter relishes the chance to show an entirely different side of his rock ‘n’ roll temperament."

    Read more at wfuv.org.

    Yours, Dreamily, is also Album of the Week at Minnesota Public Radio's The Current.

    "With The Arcs, we get a familiar mix of soulful, bluesy, psychedelic rock similar to the last few Black Keys' albums from the crew that Auerbach has assembled to help him produce records for artists like Dr. John, Ray LaMontagne, and Lana Del Rey," writes The Current's Jim McGuinn, and yet "there are deeper forays into both Otis Redding and Curtis Mayfield-influenced soul and Latin pop, with vintage synths and sax vying with overdriven guitars in the forefront of the mix ... Auerbach may have felt more liberated to indulge his musical fantasies than ever, but as with the Keys, this album is chock full of memorable, hooky jams. It's in the backbeat, in the choruses, in the horn stabs—we get the sense that even when Auerbach is freed to do anything he wants, he can't help but write songs that get stuck in your brain ..."

    McGuinn concludes: "Yours, Dreamily, is a little weirder and experimental in places, but it never forgets Auerbach's strengths in The Black Keys as a guitarist, vocalist and songwriter who has created some of the most memorable rock 'n' roll of the 21st century, and that's a good thing."

    Read more at thecurrent.org.

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