Artist's albums
Made In Rio
2020 · EP
Wab Wave (Remix)
2020 · single
I deserve it
2020 · single
F U
2020 · single
Iggy Storm
2020 · single
The Law
2020 · single
Scary trip
2020 · single
Sparkling Eyes
2020 · single
Hold On Ep
2020 · EP
Arguments
2019 · single
Simple Twist
2018 · album
Addicted
2018 · single
Shoulder to Shoulder
2018 · EP
Breaking News
2018 · single
Where Will You Be This Christmas?
2017 · single
Drunk and Snusing
2017 · single
Fare from me
2017 · single
Killjoy
2017 · single
Last Year
2017 · single
flare+1
2016 · album
True Believers
2016 · single
The Outsiders
2016 · single
Party Popper
2016 · single
Neptune
2016 · single
Ghostrider
2015 · single
Similar artists
ST!llness
Artist
Vjestice
Artist
Majke
Artist
Laufer
Artist
Daleka Obala
Artist
Natali Dizdar
Artist
Takkyu Ishino
Artist
Urban & 4
Artist
Vatra
Artist
Detour
Artist
Elemental
Artist
Denki Groove
Artist
Darko Rundek
Artist
Let 3
Artist
Hladno Pivo
Artist
Co-Fusion
Artist
Psihomodo Pop
Artist
Kawasaki 3P
Artist
Biography
Deceptive, bittersweet love songs pervade the Flare sound -- a mixture of L.D. Beghtol's classically trained voice, his ukulele, and a collection of musical toys, as well as a small army of musicians including Jon DeRosa of Dead Leaves Rising and Aarktica, Mother West studio's owner Charles Newman, and Mark Gunderman on violin. The group is constantly in rotation with members of Iida, Magnetic Fields, and various others lending their musical eccentricities to the project. Flare was started by painter Damian Costilla and Beghtol in 1996 as an outlet for their refined tastes in both art and music. They played intimate clubs across New York City where they attracted the attention of Magnetic Fields' Stephin Merritt and Claudia Gonson. In 1997, the group had grown with Ernest Adzentoivich (Plexus) on contrabass, Vin Scialla (Sunflower) on drums, and Holly Mcworter on violin. These five released Bottom in 1998. Here the band still concentrated on Beghtol's voice and Costilla's scattered guitar with background lilts of piano, strings, and machine noise. After Beghtol appeared as guest vocalist on the Fields' 69 Love Songs, Merritt remixed "Celebrate the Misery," a track from Bottom, for a single with a B-side cover of Everything But the Girl's "Another Bridge." Costilla left the band in 1998 and there was a succession of instrumentalists until DeRosa joined on guitar, banjo, and vocals in 2000. The band, with a new lineup and direction, recorded Circa later that year. This mini-album draws on influences as diverse as the Incredible String Band and the Carter Family, and concentrates on subtle orchestration and clever, often dark lyrics. Live, the band presents a finicky yet intimate show with occasional crescendos of emotion that betray their distanced-observer stance as that of a supremely enraged ex-lover, friend, or still-burning foe. ~ Daphne Carr, Rovi