Tag Archives: Alternative

The New Loud – Scaring Children and Elderly People

I have to admit I was not excited about the record at first. Their single, “Don’t Dance” did not hit me right away. It sounds at first like any other noisy electronic alt-pop track out now, a la Killers, or a pissed-off Electronic. Upon a few more listens, and seeing the live Chicago performance on their MySpace page, I saw the error of my ways. Yes, it is bouncy and dancey, the lyrics are a bit abstract, but the energy I missed the first time hit me like a sack of doorknobs. With how much I appreciate frenetic music, I should have picked up on this right away.

Anyway,  their new EP, Can’t Stop Not Knowing,” is a fine little gem. Frantic and powerful, the tracks are packed good hooks and harmonies. Radish does well to mix the dance beats with rock beats; they blend rather well.

The New Loud features Jessi on keyboards, Shane on the guitar, Radish Beet (nice name!) on drums, and they all contribute to vocals. Check out their great live performance at the Chicago Dark Room on their MySpace page. Jessi’s screech comes out of nowhere and almost made me pee a little. The folks of The New Loud took time out of their busy schedule of scaring children and elderly people to answer a few questions for us, for which we are obviously grateful.

Link: http://www.myspace.com/thenewloud and http://the-new-loud.blogspot.com/

Your album Can’t Stop Not Knowing was mixed by Mark Trombino(producer of a few Jimmy Eat World and Blink 182 releases, and former member of Drive Like Jehu). What was it like working with someone with those credentials?

Working with Mark is great. He was our was our first choice for mix engineers. After we got his contact info, we sent him some demos of the tracks and he was really into them. The EP mixes sound amazing and we just finished up the LP mixes right now. We love the way everything has turned out. From the outset we intended for both releases to sound different from one another as we didn’t want to make it seem like we recorded 15 songs total and put 5 over here and 10 over here. We wanted each release to have its own sound and atmosphere. Mark definitely delivered on that front. The LP sounds very different from the EP. Both equally good, but very different from one another.

As Mark is in CA, it would’ve been nice to fly out for the mixes, but being a totally independent, self-released band, we just didn’t have any budget for it, so all correspondence has been through e-mail.  We have a pretty strong vision of how things should sound in terms of relative levels and Mark is totally cool when we send him revisions. As we finished up the last of the LP revisions, Jessi jokingly mentioned that we shouldn’t tell Mark the disc is done and keep sending him fake revisions for the LP, even after it is pressed so we can still keep in contact with him – LOL!

According to your blogspot site, you’ve been on a number of tours, including a bad night in NYC. I’ll let readers visit your site to read up on what transpired, but has anything changed in your touring  strategy in light of the events from that night?

Since our last West Coast tour in 2007, our tour strategy has been to slow down a bit and focus on the back-to-back release of our upcoming EP/LP. You hear so many people talk about how touring and playing live is where bands are making their living as music sales decline, but the reality is that the market is completely over-saturated when it comes to lesser known touring bands. Trying to get a foothold when you’re an unknown consumes tons of resources, both in terms of time and money. Over the years we’ve tried to adapt the philosophy of ‘working smarter not harder’. We love playing live and we are definitely up for touring, especially as we consider the intensity of our live performance to be one of the band’s biggest strengths. At the same time, we are less inclined to play shows for the sake of playing shows, hoping that the press around the releases creates an environment where touring makes more sense.

Milwaukee, Wisconsin isn’t really known for it’s powerful music, especially the kind you deliver. What local influences do you cite, if any?

Between 1999-2003 I worked doing sound at a small, 100 person capacity venue called The Cactus Club in Milwaukee. One of the best and, at the time, one of the only places where more underground bands were coming to Milwaukee besides basements. Over those years I saw/ran-sound-for a bunch of different great live bands including The White Stripes, Bright Eyes, The Faint, Cursive, Zen Guerilla, Lonesome Organist, Bad Wizard, Wanda Jackson, etc. Seeing those bands play their sets in the same venue that we play our shows was totally inspiring.

What would be your ideal venue to play- hall size, bands to play with, event to play, etc?

After playing however many shows we’ve played over the years, I can say, positively, that the venue size/shape/capacity/bill doesn’t matter to us at all. The only thing that matters is if there are people there who are getting into the music. Without an interested crowd, its like playing into a vacuum in deep space. A lot of times I go to shows, especially smaller shows and the crowd is just standing there. Even if they’re into the band, they just stand still. I’m not sure what happened over the years, but audiences both larger and smaller seem to be losing their energy. I think a lot of people don’t understand that when you go and see a band play live, despite the band being on stage and the crowd being on the floor, there is a definite interaction that happens. It begins with the band, but the energy should bounce back and forth between the stage and floor. When the crowd is interested, but unresponsive, energy levels drop significantly. Its like trying to play tennis without another person on the other side of the net to volley the ball back. Sure you can hit the ball as hard as possible, but if its not being hit back, most, if not all of the purpose is lost. I think as people use computers for more and more of their entertainment, we are all losing our sensitivity to pick up on this exchange of energy.

How much planning was put into covering the Radiohead song ’2+2=5′?  Did it just come out one day in practice, or was there a specific idea you had before hand?

The song was originally released on a Radiohead tribute compilation in which we did the mix for it. When it was set that Mark Trombino was going to mix our releases, we decided to include our interpretation on the EP.

For the tribute, we were given a list of possible songs to use. Jessi initially was shooting for the song ‘Lucky’, as it is one of her favorites, but when I heard it under the pretense of covering it, my mind was blank. We listened to a few more tracks and upon listening to ’2 + 2 = 5′ I immediately had ideas for how to re-work the song into something that I thought was both different and representative of The New Loud. Sometimes people are more receptive to cover songs from newer band’s than originals, so int he event that was going to be the case, I wanted this to not just be a cover of ’2 + 2 = 5′, but I also wanted this to be The New Loud, as a band, in a 2.5 minute microcosm, showcasing as many of our strengths as possible. We wanted incorporate my vocals and Jessi’s vocals, both as their own entities and in harmony. We wanted to have singing vocals, softer floatier parts, as well as gang shouts. We wanted to incorporate Radish Beat’s use of both electro drums and live drums and have the rhythm parts range from something groove oriented with deep dub-ey bass to something super aggressive with thrash drums and saw tooth bass. We wanted to add melodic keyboard parts as well as filter noise keyboard parts. We made sure to not do anything we wouldn’t incorporate into one of our own songs which is why we decided to skip the arpeggiated guitar part in the beginning, instead substituting a more random keyboard sequence and almost progressive bass line.

All in all I think we did exactly what we set out to do. Mark’s mix on the EP really gave the whole track focus and consistency which was missing from the tribute CD version.

On your press release you mention that some songs on  Can’t Stop Not Knowing had 60-80 tracks that were used in the songs. When playing these tracks out, do you bring all the tracks with you, do you set them up on site, or do you do without?

We travel with an Alesis Masterlink, a hard disc recorder with just a L/R output. We have all the sequences mixed to the left channel and a click track in the right channel. We’ve mixed all our bass and some keyboard and vocal effects into the sequence channel. We’re trying to get as close as possible to the CD, but we still want to bring as much live playing to the audience as possible. Except for a couple parts none of the drums or percussion sounds are sequenced, Radish just plays all of that live between acoustic drums and electronic drum pads. I play all the guitar live and Jessi plays as much keyboard as possible. We haven’t started sequencing any vocal parts except for effects, yet, but in the future we may try and layer some of the bkg. parts so they’re more full sounding. Live we’re relying more on the intensity of performance, plus at the stage we’re at you don’t want to make anything too complicated for whoever is running the sound, as in smaller venues the sound engineers can be pretty spotty at best.

How has media attention affected your playing, your reception at shows? 8. How, if at all, has professional representation changed the band?

Getting the band’s name out there definitely helps. Its opened some new doors for us, for instance we played CMJ this past year which is positive, despite the forced brevity of our performance – LOL! Fingers crossed we get into SXSW, but you never know. Everything is all about what kind of connections you can build and having press and professional representation of some kind definitely helps with that. Aside from having legal and PR representation the band continues to be totally self funded/released/managed. We are looking to retain as much control as possible, so, we have not even pursued any labels at this point and probably won’t. Management is something that may interest us in the future, in order to let go of some of the day-to-day which would leave us more time to focusing on the most important part of the band which is creating new, interesting music.

Based on the number of releases you’ve put out, the band is relatively young. How long has the band been together, and what influences drew you each to one another?

Individually The New Loud is influenced by a huge variety of different bands and styles – everything from new wave/post punk to dub/reggae to hip hop/R&B to punk/hardcore to 90′s indie to African and more. The New Loud as a band is trying to blend all the elements we love about all the disparate genres and create something that sounds like a cohesive group. Radish and I formed The New Loud in 2001 as a power pop band working on writing good, catchy songs. When Radish added the electronic pads and kick drum to his acoustic drum set, and we added Jessi on keyboards in 2004, it was to open up our options. We didn’t want to relegate ourselves to just playing ‘guitar rock’. In 2007, we adopted the sequences to further branch out. We don’t want to sound like a new wave band or a punk band or a R&B band, but we want to use some of the elements that identify those archetypes. After all I don’t really think the world needs another caricature of a ‘hardcore’ or ‘reggae’ band – what we need is something we haven’t heard yet. Something new is out there and we can’t stop not knowing what it is.

Beaten Awake Thunder$troke (Music Review)

Beaten Awake
Thunder$troke

Fat Possum Records
Rating: 4 out of 5

Links:

Beaten Awake on MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/beatenawake
Fat Possum Records Site: http://www.fatpossum.com/

Very retro early 90s alternative music. Very reminiscent of early British shoegaze alt-rock. Think New Order/Electronic but during their more rock phase, think Lemonheads but mopier, think The Church with a different singer. If this existed when 120 Minutes was still on, Beaten Awake would be in heavy rotation. For our readers under 30, 120 Minutes used to be an alternative rock video show on MTV in the early 90s featuring great alternative bands like Lightning Seeds, Mighty Lemon Drops, Smiths, Beastie Boys, Ned’s Atomic Dustbin, etc. For our readers under 25, MTV used to play music videos. For our readers under 20, MTV used to suck a lot less than it does now. For our readers in 3rd world nations, we have this thing called TV.  But I digress.

Beaten Awake, by their name alone, sounds very much like a hardcore punk band, a la late 80s/early 90s when hardcore got huge in the US. Even the album title Thunder$troke has a great punk-sounding parody name. This group, however, is neither punk rock nor hardcore. Smooth, heavy bass alternative rock with proto-shoegaze influence by the bucketful. Makes me warm and nostalgic inside. Great music to put to a movie soundtrack or to leave on while making out with a bunch of friends in the same room, lights low, hoping your parents stay upstairs just . 10 . more . minutes.

Being composed of members of Harriet the Spy, Party of Helicopters, Man I Fell in Love With and New Terror Class, Ohio’s Beaten Awake have an outstanding musical genome. Artsy, airy alternative rock, this 11-track LP is very listenable. Notable songs to pay attention to would be “Halo V” and “I’m Not Asking for the Moon.”

Thunder$troke is a fine record, deserving to be listened to more than a few times in a row.

Hurricane Bells-Tonight is the Ghost (Music Review)

Hurricane Bells
Tonight is the Ghost
Vagrant Records
Rating 2.5 out of 5

Links:
Hurricane Bells on MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/hurricanebells
Vagrant Records: http://vagrant.com/public_area

HurricaneBellsGhost

Hurricane Bells is the late-arriving calm American answer to the Strokes and Kings of Leon. The association to Kings of Leon would, in any other circumstance,  be enough for me to throw up a little in my mouth, but this side project from Longwave’s Steve Schlitz seems to come out as a somewhat likeable record.

Tonight is the Ghost is a jangly alt-pop record full of bright slide guitars and broom-powered drums, although the chord progressions are somewhat limited. Echoing sweet vocals repeat on almost all tracks, as do the low-impact drums and melodies. This is certainly an easy album to listen to with little exception.

The track “Crocodile,” a one-minute-and-change instrumental track, sounds to me like it was supposed to be something more, but may have been stripped down just for the sake of having it recorded. Tracks to check out would be “Tenterhooks,” “The Winters in New York,” and “Tonight I’m Going to be Like a Shooting Star.” The instrumental “Tenterhooks” is a punchier track than the others, with good starts and stops adding emphasis and drama to the record. “The Winters in New York” is rather well written lyrically, and the chorus hook pairs up with a sneaky guitar solo that comes in around two minutes on. “Tonight I’m going to be Like  Shooting Star” is a bit heart-wrenching to hear with its spare vocals and distorted guitar trilling about.

Nothing terribly fascinating, but I can’t fault the band much; this is one of the genres that really has to jump out and grab me to impress me. With what Vagrant Records has put out in the past, it caught me off guard that this was released on this label, but I am reminded that Alexisonfire’s  Dallas Green has released his City and Color side project here as well; like Tonight is the Ghost is a much less aggressive release from Vagrant Records is known.

Recommended for fans of City and Color, Strokes, the Church, Appleseed Cast, etc.

BTW, for our teen vampire readers, Hurricane Bells provided the song “Monsters” for the virtually unknown Twilight movie series installment “New Moon.” Swoon. Swoon, I say.

Ex Libras – Destroying the Fabric of Space Time

Using organic sounds, sample loops, guitar effects, and well-crafted keys complete with a production fit for electronic music, the Ex-Libras bring a strong, moving piece of work to the ears with their new LP Suite(s). Being the group’s first release (after a marathon 16 shows as of this writing), it has already crashed open the gates of the electronic alternative scene to breath new life into this oft-overplayed genre.

The three piece band from London shows obvious influences from alternative, electronic, and ambient music. The sounds on Suite(s) seem at first familiar, though with more in-depth study they yield a great deal more complexity. Ross Kenning’s organic drums are tight and warm, and present a sound that is at once central but not the only focus. The keyboards, tickled by Keiran Nagi, are bright and strong.  Ambient plinking on the more atmospheric tracks nicely accent the drums and provide an excellent, delicate melody. Amit Sharma’s guitars incorporate sound effects and distortion with perfect placement and beautiful intensity. His heart-wrenching vocals are thin, breathy, urgent, and impatient.

The sound of Suite(s), to reference other bands, can be placed vocally with the fervor of Radiohead and the range of (old) U2. Musically, the melodies bring to mind a touch of Idlewild and even Portishead (!). At its most forceful, the album’s overall drive  invokes …and You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead.

A perfect example of this description is the 8+ minute “Phat Knickers.” Starting ambient and a bit bouncy, it conjures the sounds of Portishead’s LP Dummy. Twisty guitar noises and trills, ethereal keyboards, and drums with a definite boom – it stirs the senses quickly. The sound gradually grows and speeds up, building in tension and clipping in the production by the close of the track.

The boys in the band took time to answer a few questions.

Link:

Official Site: http://www.exlibras.co.uk/home.html
See their live performance video: http://vimeo.com/6858031
Check the Radar single out: http://www.exlibras.co.uk/player.html
Limited edition album purchase here: http://exlibras.bigcartel.com/ or digitally here: http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/suite-s/id331425768

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Your sound is new, fresh, and urgent. You combine ambient keys and loops with guitar effects, well-placed vocals and solid drumming – where did this come from? What inspired you three musically to get to the point of releasing your new LP Suite(s)?

Hello Zaptown – thanks for the kind words. We started out by converting a disused shed into our own permanent rehearsal and recording space. It’s cramped but we like it. This is where we wrote and recorded ‘Suite(s)’. When we wrote the songs, we didn’t know how things would turn out – would they lead to a couple of EPs or an LP or simply rough demo’s to see if the insane idea that we could do it ourselves would actually work. So everything was an experiment, an opportunity to do things our own way on our own creative terms and whim. The reason for doing the recordings was initially a way for us to see were we were, as a band at that time. It just so happened that we made the right mistakes and came out with something we felt confident (sorta’) about showing to other people.

The Sound on Suite(s) is big while not becoming out of control. How long did it take to record and how did it wind up at the final sound? How was the recording and production process?

The recordings took place in 2 sessions, each lasting a little over a week. As we had to fit it around/into our working schedule, this meant evenings after work. We did it all live, because that meant we could mix it right away. The vocals were done a little after at Ross’ house, along with what little overdubs we felt would help make the recordings sound better. We tried going for big overdubs using lots of different instruments – for shits and giggles – but we rejected that idea fairly early on. For this record, the excitement came from knowing that this was really a record of us trying to capture that ‘energy’ of a live performance and translate that through the recorded medium. Perhaps its ‘sound’ comes from that combination of the raw nature of live recording, and the very systematic, clock in clock out, attitude we were forced to approach it in?

As an artist, you want to be as successful as possible, to create works and never have to go back to a shit job if possible. That said, have you three established any limits to this project? Do you see this as a long-term project? Do any of you have side projects aside from Ex-Libras?

Funnily enough, we set a silent time frame on the band. We would do this for ‘x’ amount of time, and if we felt it wasn’t progressing in the way that we wanted by ‘x’, we would simply call it day then and there. I’d love to tell you what ‘x’ amount of time is, and whether we’re about to reach it or have passed it, but then that would ruin it wouldn’t it?

Side-projects. We all do music in some capacity, individually. Most of it (all band members numerous projects) can be found on myspace. We can’t help but write music, so if we’re not doing Ex Libras, we’re working on other things of a musical nature. But we’re investing emotionally, into Ex Libras now and that’s sort of a scary prospect, I guess. I think that means we do see Ex Libras as a long-term project. There isn’t a shortage of ideas just yet.

What are your musical references? When you come up with music to play and practice and write, where do you draw from? Do you rely on what/who you’ve heard before and play off that, or does it all just come to you?

All of our songs come from jams. There isn’t a piece that has come pre-prepared. We like to go in, loosen up, and have fun with noise. I’m sure we’re influenced by everything: from our favourite records, to the last ‘sound’ we heard before we closed the door to our rehearsal room, plugged in and turned the volume up. We’re in a constant state of reaction, to each other, so what we play starts out as improv.

We try to explore the different grooves in different genres. I don’t think we’ll ever stick to a ‘style’ just yet. There is just so much music out there that we enjoy and feel passionate about. We might suggest a starting point and then create our own interpretation of it. As a rule, we try not to reference things we’ve heard done before. But I’m sure we can be proven guilty for doing just that. But it’s never our intention. We are very much of the school of thought – innovate, don’t imitate. But that’s a hard school to get into.

How much pre-planning is required for your live shows – how much time is taken to record loops or programming effects?

We spend a lot of time changing and rehearsing our sets. What we try to do, when we play live, is no silence, just continuous sounds. We take the time to figure out how to ‘blend’ the songs in our set together so it feels like one continuous piece of music, and that’s aided by the loops we make. All our loops are live and improvised then and there on the night. We don’t pre-program them. They are very much the product of the evening and as a result, the loops are always different each night and we really like that aspect of it.

Depending on distance traveled, stage show, and merchandise, etc., some bands need larger or smaller crews to make everything run smooth- what is the size of the crew you play out with or do you do it all yourselves?

We do it all ourselves. No matter where go.

Many bands that play out, especially when they first start up, play shows as often as possible, and then later are able to afford a more “selective” approach to venues. Where are do the Ex-Libras currently stand in this context? How has having artist representation changed things for the band?

Even before the record was made, we were very selective about where we’d play and how often. We still stick to that model because it’s what makes sense for us. We didn’t want to play and play and play because the only gigs we’d get were in London and you can totally ‘overplay’ London. Since we all came together after being in various other bands, we were familiar with the circuit and decided very early on that we would keep ourselves to ourselves. Thanks to the release, we’ve had a chance to organise a little tour and we had a handful of dates in other cities in the UK. And this is all really a conscious choice to move away from playing in London. I know it sounds bizarre, because we love where we’re from and there’s no place quite like it. If the right gig comes up in London, we’ll play it but we’ve got horizons we want to explore first, new people to meet, other music to experience.

We made the record ourselves, we manage the band ourselves, we did the video ourselves, we’ve (literally) built this band from the ground up, but it was only until A Badge Of Friendship came along and started working our PR that things have stepped-up a notch. They’ve really helped us with the single, the LP, gigs, and even getting us wider radio. They’ve been really supportive of what we’re doing and we can talk through anything with them. Coming from such a private DIY place, it was a little hard to let someone else in, but with ABoF it’s been really easy. They’ve opened-up our world a little bit more and this means that we can play more often in new places – which is what we wanted to do with this band.

How often do you play out, and what venues do you prefer in terms of atmosphere, other bands to play with, and hall size? What would be your individual preferred band to share a stage with at this point and why?

So far we’ve played 16 shows. EVER! That’s not a lot. And most of them have been out of our hometown. We talk about the differences in venues between ourselves a bit too. Small venues give you that sense of intimacy and urgency. There is the sweat, the chaos, that ‘something’ that makes the improvised moments all the more spontaneous and special – like we’ve all stumbled into secret gathering. Then, there are the large venues and they are a whole different beast. There’s space to move around on-stage, and when its silent, its pin-drop silent. In these spaces we can allow ourselves to enjoy the more expansive, cinematic elements of our songs.

We all agree we’d love to do festivals. The space that festivals command is amazing. There are intense moments, but we do have these grand subtle moments that are crying to be played into the open air.

But only 16 gigs… This is something we’ve already started to rectify. In early 2010, we’ve got a short stint in Europe with ‘Gin Panic’ – they make BIG sounds and long devastating grooves. That’s followed by a series of dates back up to the North of the UK. We’re looking forward to possibly lining up some festival dates for 2010. Maybe by the end of next year, we’ll have a better sense of the type of venue we’d fit into, but right now, we’re try them all – big, small, wide, tall, room, hall, square, ball…?

Now that Suite(s) has been released, do you already have plans for the next release? How does the new material sound at this point? Is it a continuation from Suite(s) or is it a departure?

There are new tracks being written that already sound like steps forward from where we are now. Even though they were written off the back of finishing the LP, so they have that lucid connection with ‘Suite(s)’, we’re learning new techniques which are taking the songs into new territories. We want to tackle it differently too. Change how we record it, the method, the engineering, the production. I think it’s important for us to improve on our sound on record, continue to experiment and have even more fun than we did last time. We’re immensely proud of ‘Suite(s)’ and there isn’t any expectation placed on what the new release should be, so it could be anything.

On a lighter note, you are likely aware that an international upheaval has erupted over the title of the last track on your Suite(s) called “19:04.” The title of the track implies a 19-minute song, when in fact it only lasts just over 8 minutes. In order to quiet the unrest, how do you explain the discrepancy? How do you plan on addressing the damage you may have done to the international community? Is there a conspiracy we should know about?

Hands down, best question we’ve been asked about ‘Suite(s)’!

First and foremost, we, Ex Libras, would like to apologize for any discomfort caused. We have decided that the best course of action is to make ourselves available for any counseling. In order to help the more tragically afflicted by this discrepancy we are in the process of launching the ‘19:04 PDCTAC’ (Paranoia Displacement Clinic & Tactical Action Charity) which will provide care for those who are unable to put trust back into bands and artists, and also help lead charges against instances of this kind elsewhere.

I guess an explanation is also in order:

It is something that will make better sense with the physical copies of the CD. We’ve put a lot of time and effort into the tech research for our CD. The materials we sourced for the CD have special properties. These properties are sensitive to certain frequency washes, and will only come into play when the materials are also in motion. These very frequencies have been hidden under the track ‘19:04’. As the track plays, the frequency wash emitted causes the inner structural particles of the CD to rapidly vibrate. These micro-vibrations start to resonate at a very specific interval within the upper register of infra sound. This, when coupled with the frequency wash, start to cause tiny tears into the very fabric of space and time.

Over multiple controlled tests, the most common reaction was a sort of ‘time-stretch’ and this stretch was a decrease in relative time by 128.992%. So the result is that when you listen to that track, even though the track lasts for 8minutes and 14seconds, due to this ‘time-stretch’, 19minutes and 4seconds would have actually passed.

Wheat – White Ink, Black Ink (Music Review)

Wheat
White Ink, Black Ink
Rebel Group
Rating: 2 out of 5

Wheat_WhiteBlackInk

Described on their site as “sugar free melodic indie alt-country rock from Boston,” Wheat’s White Ink, Black Ink would more accurately be described as “tasting somewhat bland because of its lack of sugar.”  On this record, they offer stripped-down, melodic indie rock reminiscent of the Killers doing more organic music, or even …and You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead on good sedatives.

The production is warm and somewhat bright throughout the album, not varying much between tracks. Good harmonies and inventive drums on the occasional track certainly help (check out “I Want Less”), fairly original lyrics also help, but the songs never quite make it out of the predictable parameters of the genre.

That being said, there are a few tracks that bear mention. “Two Mountains” is interesting. Off-beat drums in the background, almost too quiet, keep the track from hiding in the amber waves of grain of this album. On this track, singer Scott Levesque calls to mind Colin Oberst’s,  of Bright Eyes, fame. The other track of note is “Baby in My Way.” Starting with building, plinking piano and ending with warm strings, the short 2:07 song fades in and out dramatically without becoming cliché.

White Ink, Black Ink pushes through its 11 tracks in slow indie rock style; all of its tracks seem destined for background music in a movie or television program. If you imagine all of your favorite alternative bands’ albums that had that one slow, oddly introspective song and put them all on one album, voila! you have White Ink Black Ink.

I don’t want to be overly negative, as obviously these guys are successful enough to have shows and release material and potentially make some money from their craft; this is more than I’ve ever done with music, so kudos to Wheat for that. It’s just my least favored ingredients of music all in one release.

Links:

Wheat on MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/wheatmusic
Wheat’s home page: http://www.wheatmusic.com/
The Rebel Group: http://www.therebelgroup.com/rebel_group/about.html

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