Posts Tagged ‘Avers’

With four songwriters, four singers, and 11 tracks of guitar-saturated rock & roll, Avers‘ second album, Omega/Whatever, is proof that there’s strength in numbers. The record shines new light on a band that made its first splash with 2014’s Empty Light. Avers supported that debut release by leaving their hometown of Richmond, VA, and crisscrossing the country on tour, opening for bands like Foo Fighters and J. Roddy Walston along the way. They made a national splash during the 2015 SXSW Festival, too, with everyone from Esquire Magazine to The Daily Beast listing them as one of the week’s breakout bands.

Two years after Empty Light’s release, Omega/Whatever finds them returning to their unofficial headquarters — Montrose Recording, a modern studio located on a historic Richmond plantation and operated by bandmate Adrian Olsen — and creating another self-produced album of rumbling rock, shot through with pop hooks, layers of percussion, and coed melodies from four different vocalists. It’s a mix of old and new, much like the studio that birthed it. It’s an album about balance, too, centered around the struggles of living in the modern world.

From the new album, ‘Omega / Whatever,’ by Avers – Out July 29th, 2016

Richmond, Virginia, psychedelic pop-rock band Avers stopped by WAMU in D.C. to record “Girls With Headaches,” a standout from its 2014 album “Empty Light.” psychedelic in nature with roots in indie rock. It was exciting to say the least. Layer upon layer of these magnificent sounds and instruments melding together to form something original and creative. Well thought out lyrics and vocals that didn’t let them down. Reeling from what my ears had just experienced I sat around a warm bonfire to talk to the innovators of this new sound.

The band name is Avers and it is a mix of some talent you have probably already been impressed by in the local music scene. Alexandra Spalding and Adrian Olsen of HyperColor, Tyler Williams of The Head and The Heart, JL Hodges of Farm Vegas, James Mason of Mason Brothers, and Charlie Glenn of The Trillions.