Posts Tagged ‘Northern California’

May be an image of text that says 'COLD MOON'

Cold Moon the jangly indie rock band with members of pop punk bands The Story So Far and Set Your Goals — have shared another song off their upcoming Jack Shirley-recorded debut LP “What’s The Rush?” (due 5/7 via Pure Noise). It’s closer to Real Estate or Turnover than to the members’ more famous bands, and they do this kind of thing very well.

By mid-2018, the Northern California-based quartet—vocalist/guitarist Jack Sullivan, bassist Will Levy, guitarist Kevin Ambrose and drummer Mike Ambrose—were deep into the writing of their debut EP, “Rising”: a collection of instrumental indie-rock songs that culled influences from legendary emo acts including American Football and icons like Wilco, as well as more analytical post-rock impulses.

Musically, the songs Cold Moon wrote were miles removed from where the band came from (Levy plays guitar in pop-punk stalwarts The Story So Far, while Mike Ambrose was a long time member of the hardcore-tinged Set Your Goals), but they still carried the same intrinsic urgency and emotional resonance that coloured their other projects.

After demoing Rising and preparing to hit the studio to track the final versions, the childhood friends soon stumbled upon the power of Sullivan’s voice, as well as the influence singing could have on their song writing. It immediately changed everything for the band, who began using vocal parts not to define their music, but rather drive it—adding yet more melodic textures to their songs

“I don’t know if it was the right approach to song writing,” Sullivan says with a laugh, “but it felt good. It was like a nice coat of finish on a completed piece of art.”

As such, Rising (released May 10th via Pure Noise Records) is the sound of band painstakingly placing every instrument and note, both played and sung, alongside one another to build intricate, at-times dense and mathy soundscapes. This attention to detail gives Rising’s six songs—from the hypnotic, ominous riffs of “Stevie” to the acoustic-based pitter-patter of “Green Eyes” and cascading guitar movements on the set-closing “Lessons” a cinematic quality, while the tracked-to-tape nature of the EP imbues the songs with breaths of authenticity and humanity a digital process would have sorely lacked.

Throughout its songs, Rising tackles themes of change and vulnerability, looking out into the vast expanse of the unknown and mustering up the courage to face it head-on. In many ways, it mirrors the approach the band took while writing it: Life’s big moments—and, perhaps more often, the small ones, too—disrupt our comfortable state of equilibrium and force us to examine who we are and what we really want

Ultimately, it’s only by fearlessly following them that we’re able to arrive at our final form. Chasing that inspiration is what brought Cold Moon together, and it’s what changed the band’s direction forever during the making of Rising. It’s steeled them both personally and professionally, and they’ll carry this forward-thinking mindset with them throughout the course of their career.

“We didn’t know what was going to happen when we got in a room together, but it was a real safe, comfortable space,” Sullivan says. “It was a positive atmosphere for all of us, where we weren’t worried about making mistakes. We just let the music happen.” 

Sjowgren is a musical project by three friends hailing from Northern California’s Bay Area. Yes, the still enigmatic Bay Area group took time to hone their sound, but the follow ups have come with both increasing consistency and regularity. Their latest offering is the third in a sudden, and wholly welcome, string of quick releases, It feels like they’re properly up and running, and with “I Don’t Know”, Sjowgren are showcasing their most potent pop work to date. Its pacey, hypnotic, rock ‘n’ roll guitar riff drives the track along, while hand claps and a foot-stomping rhythm lead us to what is quickly becoming their thing; a beautifully elegant-yet-empowering earworm chorus that begs to be returned to.

Perhaps soon we’ll know more about this lot, but for now we’re more than happy to let the music do the talking; stubborn forces of indie pop nature indeed.

Long Time Friend Discount Released on: 2020-10-02

Male Gaze LP

In-the-moment abandon and knowing craftsmanship, an explosive sound, a refusal of tidy resolution, drowned in reverb, more more More. This is the trick that Northern California garage-rockers Male Gaze pulls off on “The Shining Path.”. Especially prominent on this excellent track is the voice of guitarist Matt Jones, who croons through the racket with a baritone reminiscent of The Idiot-era Iggy Pop or (this must be said) Joy Division’s Ian Curtis. Male Gaze suggest the unexpected accommodation of Joy Division’s existential chill with the of Warsaw, their punk-era incarnation. (This is not a bad thing.) Fortunately, Male Gaze never sounds burdened by the baggage of musical history. Their forthcoming album Gale Maze taps into the infinite for 3½ minutes at a time, committed only to just getting on with it.

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These “Blow-out enthusiasts, make ready to scarf this down with strong vocals a la Modern English, back-beat complete and foamy bass bleached onto 1/2” tape specially for Castleface Records.  I’ve loved Matt Jones’ vocal stylings (ex-blasted canyons), rich with tenor muscle flexes. Over the top in its endeavors and reaching, always reaching, its a primal gas-guzzler drumming center speaker from Adam sets the ear up for a beating and hell, its got the old (and i mean old) bass player, Mark, from Mayyors…solid state aggression at its mid-low knuckle-dragging finest.