Posts Tagged ‘Buffalo Tom’

Interesting that this record was among my list of most-anticipated releases last year. Happily, Quiet and Peace shows that the Buffalo Tom formula works as well as it did 20 years ago, when their music made up a big chunk of the soundtrack . Through incredible cohesiveness as a power-indie-pop trio, thoughtful and emotional lyrics, and rock-solid musicianship, the album’s 11 tracks ooze the energy, catchiness, and timelessness the band’s music is known for—not to mention frontman Bill Janovitz’s unique style and mastery of an SG pushing a Marshall. From the anthemic spirit of the first track, “All Be Gone,” to the band’s beautiful take on Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Only Living Boy in New York” closing it out, Quiet and Peace exceeded my quite high expectations.

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Quiet and Peace is a compelling 11-song set that finds the trio—singer-guitarist Bill Janovitz, bassist-vocalist Chris Colbourn and drummer Tom Maginnis—simultaneously mining their best-known sonic elements while breaking new ground on emotionally resonant new tunes such as “All Be Gone,” “Roman Cars,” “Freckles” and “CatVMouse.” Buffalo Tom’s first collection since 2011’s Skins, Quiet and Peace was mixed by John Agnello (Kurt Vile, Sonic Youth, The Hold Steady) and marks the band’s first collaboration with producer and fellow Boston alt-rock legend David Minehan, renowned ex-leader of the Neighborhoods.

Singer-guitarist Bill Janovitz explains more about the video: “The idea came from the song lyric. Rachel wanted to depict a real woman at various points in her life, from childhood into motherhood. She had some of her own Super 8 footage of her mom Susan. When Rachel loaded it with the music, it just seemed to synch up perfectly. There was this footage of her mom from childhood to motherhood, all Super 8, which has to be a fairly rare case for someone of that generation. So it is all real vintage footage of one person’s pivot points, from young childhood to young adulthood.

The video was directed by Rachel Lichtman from Network77.com (an absurdist music-and-comedy sketch web series). It was edited by drummer Tom Maginnis’ daughter Marlena.

Buffalo Tom performing “All Be Gone” live in the KEXP studio. Recorded March 1st, 2018.

Boston-bred alt-rockers Buffalo Tom are to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their third album release “Let Me Come Over” with a new reissue next month that pairs the original release with the band’s first-live live release: a 17-song set recorded in London in 1992.

The reissue isdue 19th May on Beggars Arkive on CD, digital and vinyl. The double-vinyl edition features “Let Me Come Over”, minus CD bonus track “Crutch,” on one LP, and a 10-song excerpt of the live album on the second LP, plus a download code for the full live set Live from London ULU 1992.

Formed in 1984 at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Buffalo Tom — Bill Janovitz, Chris Colbourn and Tom Maginnis — is still active, and is expecting to release a new album later this year. The trio’s also playing a handful of shows in the U.S. and Europe in May and June this year.