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The Evolution Of AURA
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"The Evolution Of AURA"
Veronica Barriga
It’s a record release party. The album? Burnin..."The Evolution Of AURA"
Veronica Barriga
It’s a record release party. The album? Burning Hearts and Bleeding Stars. Aura’s powerful voice drives the celebration. Her prom dress attire makes a statement out on the infamous Roxy stage, as people wave glowing toy wands in support of their edgy rock princess, while her free flowing blonde locks shine bright under the colorful house lights. Its official, Aura is back on stage doing what feels most natural to her: performing music. “Sometimes it’s easier to write and perform songs than it is to talk to people,” she shares. In 2001 singer/song writer Maura Murphy created Aura. Since then you may have caught her tunes on shows like The Young and the Restless, Jennifer Love Hewitt’s, The Client List, and a slew of reality shows. Her impressive rendition of Amazing Grace was featured in the box office smash, Chronicle.
Aura’s past work has been recognized with awards from Music Connection Magazine, LA Music Awards, and All Access Magazine. However, she’ll tell you that her 3rd album release, Burning Hearts and Bleeding Stars is her most personal and biggest accomplishment to date. “This one is my favorite, it was the first time I didn’t feel like I was trying to be someone else.” With a combination of inspirational anthems like Chosen, and haunting tales of despair in Escape, the album has definite range but, most importantly, it displays a journey of truth.
Check it:
Veronica Barriga: When do you first recall discovering music, falling in love with it?
AURA: I was really young, I was the middle child and my brothers were very successful, very good looking. I felt like the odd one- the middle child, so I would just sing, and really got known for singing at a young ag. Then I started taking voice lessons. I did musical theater till about 9th grade and, when my grandmother passed away, I took all my money and bought my electric guitar that I still play now, and my first acoustic guitar. I felt good writing stuff down. That was how I got through High School.
VB: During that time you joined a punk rock band, how did that experience influence you?
AURA: Completely. I did everything to get in that band and they said, “No girls- No girls,” then they said “You have to learn an instrument.” So that pushed me to get better at guitar, and then I came back to them and they say, “Well you can’t be in the band unless your brother is the lead singer.” So he joined the band, I became his background singer. I helped him write all the songs. They he went off to college and I became the lead singer. We called ourselves The Under-Age and we played D.A.R.E gigs, school functions, and sometimes even clubs because we had fake I.D’s.
VB: What’s the biggest difference for you between the first album release and this current one?
AURA: I’ve never been so proud. It was so much work and now I feel like I did my job. In the past I always did too much management, all these “things”, and now I just focus on the music. I just got darker and more honest, admitted that I wasn’t the greatest singer in the world, but that I could relate to other people. I really wanted the sound to be more spacey and have effects. Hal Cantrell… he really deserves a lot. He added all the elements of the sound effects. We actually moved in together as friends. I made the recording studio in my house, built the soundproof walls and everything, because I hated being on the clock. So we worked on the album non-stop till 4 or 5 in the morning. I would recommend it to anyone, it’s much more organic that way… But the stuff doesn’t come off your walls. I had to pay for that when I moved out. Just a note to everyone out there… (She laughs).
VB: Who is your dream collaboration?
AURA: My favorite singer in the entire world is Jimmy Gnecco, lead singer in a band named Ours. He had Rick Rubin record an album, and the guy literally did not want fame. But if you go see their shows at places like Hotel Café or The Roxy… Anyw
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In The Studio with AURA
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In the Studio with AURA
BY JOSHUA BOTTOMLEY
ALBUM DETAILS:
AURA
Burning Hearts & Bleeding Stars
...In the Studio with AURA
BY JOSHUA BOTTOMLEY
ALBUM DETAILS:
AURA
Burning Hearts & Bleeding Stars
Produced by AURA // Engineered by Hall Cantrell and Joey Ayoub (Sound Salon Studio) // Assistant Engineers: Kristen Smith and Mike Eckes
Singer/songwriter Maura Murphy has been performing under the AURA moniker for ten years. Her musical aspirations took her from her NYC home to Boston’s Berklee College of Music, to her new haunts in Los Angeles. 2002’s Running Yourself Against Nothing and 2006’s Between Reality and a Dream showcased her strong vocals and knack for writing hook-laced rock anthems about love, innocence and finding oneself. Now a little older and a lot wiser, she and her bandmates have taken AURA to a new plateau with their latest effort, Burning Hearts & Bleeding Stars, an album that Maura says, “Sounds like Nine Inch Nails, Evanescence and Radiohead with my voice!”
How did you arrive at your current lineup for this record?
MAURA: I’ve been performing under the name AURA since I recorded my first album in 2001. The producer, David Giangarra (CHEECH/Dank Records), put Warren Johnson, my current drummer, in my band and we recorded the first CD, Running Yourself Against Nothing. Jon Chi (guitar), Hall Cantrell (programming), and Marcelo Feldman (bass) also went to the Berklee, but we didn’t meet until I moved Los Angeles. I have seen musicians from my band tour the world with famous artists. I have to work around that schedule sometimes, too. I also have James Emley playing piano on the CD, who has been on stage with AURA before. A couple years ago I met an amazing songwriter, Brian Blake and we wrote four of the songs on this album together. This CD is a collaboration of a lot of amazing talent! I’m really proud of it.
LISTEN NOW: “We Are The Chosen”
What’s the story behind the album?
MAURA: Burning Hearts & Bleeding Stars comes from the stories I’ve lived for the last four years. I write songs like these when something happens in my life that makes me absolutely have to make it into a song. Some of the stories are very sad and some are really powerful and uplifting. It’s the struggle and the absolute devotion to never, ever give up on yourself or your dreams!
How did the material for the album come to fruition?
MAURA: We started recording this CD in the summer of 2010. The songs are about living in Los Angeles, the friends, the crazy and sometimes unbelievable things that happen here, and the people I’ve known, some who are becoming very well known, some who have almost not lived through the experience. I wrote many songs and chose the best ones for this CD.
Did you learn any lessons from the last album that you wanted to change with this session?
MAURA: Every time I listen back to [2006’s Between Reality and a Dream] I wished we had waited, added things and spent more time in the small, yet important details like we have with this album. I always wanted more atmospheric sounds and beats added. Hall and Jon have really added that part to the music.
How did you choose the studio?
MAURA: I sang on a CD called Dream Vampires that was recorded at Sound Salon, owned by Joey Ayoub, who was also the engineer and a great producer/drummer himself. Joey has his studio set up perfectly for drum recording, so I knew it would be the perfect atmosphere for the AURA album. It’s right in the heart of Hollywood.
What kind of sound were you looking for and how did you achieve it?
HALL CANTRELL: Maura’s voice is so powerful and unique I wanted to use sounds that no one had heard before to compliment that. I did a lot of field recording in unusual places, like close mic’ing a heat vent, tapping stacks of quarters…Using these sounds as a source for processing yielded some interesting results.
Can you describe the guitar work on the album?
JON CHI: My main goal with the guitar parts was to create an emotional backdrop for the stories in Maura’s songs. I was constantly seeking a balance between melody and atmosphere. I love adding subtle textures to songs and a lot of the flavors that I love are a perfect compliment to Maura’s vocals and songs. I used everything from Lap Steel (a 1950s Fender), to an EBow, to an Angel Hair (high-strung) guitar. For more atmosphere, I often employ a volume pedal for swells.
For most of the melodic and solo guitar parts, I played a Paul Reed Smith hollow body through a Budda Twinmaster Ten, and sometimes simultaneously through 1970s Princeton Reverb. My favorite delay pedal is the Maxon Analog Delay, and I used that quite often, typically dialing it in by ear to be a dotted eighth note delay time. The dotted eighth delay works to create interesting harmonies between the direct signal and the delayed signal. I also typically had both a close mic on the amp and a room mic to capture ambience that we could blend into the mix. I’m a firm believer that capturing ambience is a huge part of making a record, and I think we were able to achieve that and create an emotional backdrop for her stories.
What did you try to accomplish in the studio that you’re not able to do live?
MAURA: The best part of the studio experience is the layering of guitars and vocals. We sometimes use three guitars on stage, but never 5-7 and that’s how many intricate parts are played on most of the songs. Live, we also don’t have a back up singer and I sing anywhere from 2-10 vocal harmonies on the CD. Hall told me Trent Reznor does this and I love it!
http://aurasings.com
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"Audible Aura rocks the Roxy with style"
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DAILY SUNDIAL "Audible Aura rocks the Roxy with style"
BY, Jillian Ballard
Imagine being a...DAILY SUNDIAL "Audible Aura rocks the Roxy with style"
BY, Jillian Ballard
Imagine being a teenager going to New York City for the first time, and the only thing you can remember is seeing a girl overdosing, possibly on heroin, at the counter of a store called "Funhouse." Fast-forward 10 years, and Maura Murphy stands on stage at the Roxy singing about her experience at the "Funhouse" with lyrics like, "Walk into a gothic store that now reminds me a little of what they said Hell would look like. It claims it has quality rock 'n' roll gear. Does that include the girl overdosing by the counter?"
It's 9:30 p.m. on a Friday night and the Roxy is packed. Although most people in Los Angeles don't go out to clubs until later, fans came out early to hear the band perform. The Roxy crowd of more than 100 is mostly young people between the ages of 18 and 35. With drinks in hand, the Roxy audience was ready to rock-out to the sounds of Aura.
When the lights dimmed and the black curtains went up, the crowd screamed with excitement and rushed to the stage as the lead singer emerged from the darkness with a guitar in hand. As the music began, the people in the front started jumping up and down. As the music began to play, Murphy stood with her hands up and legs out making the shape of a star.
After the intro "Free From your Mind," Aura goes right in to "Funhouse." The song's lyrics are real, because it's something that happened to her. The music goes from being very fast with punchy guitar cords to a slow serene sound with Murphy singing, "It took her mind. It took her time," emphasizing the feeling of a drug overdose.
On stage, Murphy slows her dancing to move along with the music. When you think the song is over, it speeds up again and the crowd screams with excitement. Aside from the singing and guitars, what makes "Funhouse" such a great song is the ever-changing drum patterns. Warren Johnson, the band's drummer, uses technical drumbeat patterns with different fills and rolls. His playing sets him apart from an average drummer in an alternative rock band, by him using the entire drumkit.
Aura formed in 2001 before Murphy finished school at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, where she earned a bachelor's degree in voice and music business. Murphy and her bandmates, Nick Johnson (lead guitar) and Warren Johnson (drummer), all moved from New York. Although they didn't move here together as a band, they brought their New York roots, and along with Marcelo Feldman (bass guitar), uniting in California as Aura.
The band's sound can be described as a mix of Indie, rock and alternative, which sounds like a mix between Evanescence and No Doubt. Aura is not as dark as Evanescence and has an upbeat rhythm that sounds more like No Doubt from the 90s. Murphy's voice is similar to that of Amy Lee, the singer for Evanescence, especially when she holds her note at the end of "Love is a Drug."
"Love is a drug. It's never enough. It's never enough and I can't give it up. Even when I get what I want, I need more. I crave more. My heart's banging on your door," Murphy sings.
The crowd sings along, and by the end of the song "Would You Die for Love," Murphy is on her knees completely into the song like a little girl alone in her room singing along to her favorite music.
Murphy makes connections with the audience by locking eyes with them and acting as if she is only singing to that one person. Nick, the comedian on the stage, makes faces during his solos in "Lead Me On." He uses several different effects on the guitar to make it sound like it's crying. His solo makes the crowd scream with more excitement as Murphy dances around the stage. Nick is a great guitarist and the solo performance in that song proves he has the chops.
For an acoustic performance of "Escape," Murphy played guitar and demonstrated her vocal range and talents singing a ballad, which gave a soothing end to the rock 'n' roll night.
Aura
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Aura "Top 25 Demos of The Year!"
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Music Connection gives 8.2 to AURA's "Between Reality and a Dream" CD!!
Music Connection Maga...Music Connection gives 8.2 to AURA's "Between Reality and a Dream" CD!!
Music Connection Magazine just reviewed our latest cd, "Between Reality and a Dream" and gave it an amazing 8.2!!! The highest score they gave out in 2006 was an 8.2 and to only 3 bands, one of them being our friend BOMB CHILD!! Check out the small write up below!! Thanks!!
See u Thursday, March 29th @ BB KINGS in the Universal City Walk!! 11pm
L.A.-based Aura's CD is a clinic on how to mount a female-fronted pop-rock project that will appeal to the mainstream. The songs are well crafted, the production is expert, and the performances are exceptional. That's especially true of singer Maura Murphy, who really puts it all together on "Lead Me On," the best song of the bunch. "Love Is A Drug" shows she can deliver a lyric with sensitivity. All in all, this band generates a consistently appealing brand of pop-rock.
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Aura Live Performance Hollywood, CA REVIEW
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Music Connection Magazine Review AURA The Gig, Hollywood Contact: Altered State Entertain-ment; mau...Music Connection Magazine Review AURA The Gig, Hollywood Contact: Altered State Entertain-ment; maura@aurasings.com Web:www.AuraSings.com
The Players:
Maura Murphy, lead vocals; Nick Johnson, lead guitar; Sean Stamps, bass; Dan Engelberg, rhythm guitar; Scott Borakove, drums.
Material:
Combining themes of social consciousness with memorable musical hooks in a hard-rocking format might seem like a formidable challenge, but Aura pull it off with flair. The song Fun House is KROQ quality and should be getting airplay. The songs have positive, hopeful lyrics dealing with everyday struggles and are well written and crafted into music that appeals to a wide audience.
Musicianship:
Each of the five members is a graduate of Berklee College of Music in Boston, and the training and talent are evident. Especially noteworthy is the effects work of bassist Stamps, as well as Murphys pipes, which are crystal clear despite the loudness of the music. The harmonies between Murphy and Stamps are similarly praiseworthy, as is the overall chemistry of the band. Performance:
Aura put on a spectacular show and watched the crowd double in size and intensity during the groups short set. Drawing comparisons with No Doubt and Gwen Stefani, Aura were not afraid to tackle deep issues. Amid the constant flashing of cameras and the cheers of their fans, Murphy showed a great deal of confidence and poise, way beyond her years. At one point, she leaped off the stage and took the music to the crowd, literally getting in their faces much to the delight of the bands ecstatic fans.
Summary:
Building upon this groups training at one of the better music schools in the U.S., the expertise and determination of Aura are palpable. This group has chemistry, great chops, memorable lyrics and a look that should take them far all in all, the total package for success.
Bob Leggett Music Connection Magazine