Showing posts with label 100m Records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 100m Records. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Soccer Mom self titled LP on 100m Records


As you get older you begin to realize how easy it is to take a band you really love for granted. It’s not because you appreciate the music more as it ages or that with experience the more discriminating you becomes. It’s instead about respect for a group of individuals that can work together creatively to produce great songs year after year with all the practical concerns of staying together. It starts to feel like a miracle if a band is together longer than one record. The music you love is only a fraction of the experience for the people involved. I don’t presume to know anything about the internal relationships of Soccer Mom, only that since this record was released like many great bands before them they’ve called it quits. They are all extremely talented and will continue on in their own new and solo projects but an important chapter for everyone involved has just ended. Soccer Mom has been distilling their wall of sound, growing closer to an experimental style and working with the overlooked and uglier sides of melody, bending it into a tight pop structure. On this self titled record, they dissolve at their peak of creation.

"It's Probably Not Your Fault" begins with a slow fade into a sonic wall already in progress. It's a subtle introduction to the four piece that’s uncharacteristic for the rest of the album. Dan has a strong sense of melody in his vocal that shifts between a drawn out slightly echo’d lyric and his more conversational, restrained sounding delivery. Like Lee Ranaldo he’s deliberately holding back or not competing with the complex swirl right behind him. Soccer Mom also has a secret weapon in Danielle Deveau on bass who brings that floating higher atmospheric vocal to Dan’s lead. Justin Kehoe on drums is fantastic on this record, taking every opportunity to expand any given phrase and push the percussion density in order to further fill in the empty spaces, not that there’s room left in this solid spray of guitars. The record is a thick, ever shifting sound directly related to this high functioning collaboration especially in the guitars of Dan Parlin and William Scales which is the core of their sound. Their collective layers of distortions and rhythms work towards a nebulous whole that seemingly doesn't ever have an obvious point of entry. It’s a raw indie energy that reminds me of Sebadoh's Harmacy, in places. The bubbling layers and phasing swirls have harsh treble in their reductive guitar rock and English shoegaze, never missing an opportunity to work heavily with a wide range of dynamics.
“Orejas” is one of their glorious piles of sound with a simple back and forth kick and snare intro in deceptively complex stomp beat. Dan and Will then launch this into an incredible epic high that they’re always poised to release; a heavy mix of ungodly countless layers that burst into a full sprint only fall back into the crunchy static of twisted cables. The channel separation on tracks like “Open Heart Surgery” is decisive with completely different guitar parts on either side that you’re asked to unconsciously add up into a whole. An echo from every direction adds up to a huge sense of distance which they need to allow for the maximum number of guitar layers which they labor over every crunchy strum. The brief moments of each particular effect have been carefully chosen and executed. There's a My Bloody Valentine influence in the way the melodies appear unexpectedly out of the fog while remaining a memorable but as much as they may have been influenced by the dense English ‘90s, they keep a tight hold on changes with a post punk focus.

They don’t always have to crush in like a tidal wave and on "No One Left" Dan's vocal is in the next room in an almost whisper,
"Don’t tell anyone..."
Their guitars both excel in melodies that would be impossible to compose except in indecipherable bars and scribbles in that notebook. The guitar tones are a rubbery see saw that’s almost always in danger of toppling over with the clanging of notes beyond the fret board of grabbing that string and pulling, often physically overpowering the instrument. Their long distortions are sustained into eternity, bending and closing back in on the feedback. It's an intuitive process that you can't force and is what makes the loss of this band that much greater.

On Kam Kama’s Shift you overhear phrases and catch pieces of understanding as this drifts by never wanting any more than that. Just like with Soccer mom they ask you to give up a little control and let things unravel on their own, being content in the mystery of instrumentation and interpretation. There's a kind of melancholy to their energy and sound, especially in Danielle’s supporting vocal off in the distance, her piece of that wall left undercovered somewhere in this impenetrable pile. It’s a fuzzy opaque sound, the texture of being buried in an expected direction. They aren’t afraid of interrupting the direction they were headed with the anticlimax of slowing things down only adds to the tension so when they finally rise to those heights again, its earned.
Without dwelling on the sad fact this isn’t going to be witnessed live, which I can assure you they absolutely can recreate every measured pause and oversize layers in perverted volumes, this is a perfect definitive document of Soccer Mom in past tense. A precise, complex complete album that won’t reveal everything in first listen and the satisfaction is in continuing to try.

Soccer Mom can be picked up from 100m Records.


Friday, June 29, 2012

Relations EP release party at Matchless


Got a chance to catch up with Pete at 100m records at the Relations release party last night. The first time I put their EP on, it seemed to hit that balance of electronics and live performed organic elements that I loved in things like !!! or I Love You But I've Chosen Darkness. It sounded nostalgic with big chorusy New Order guitars with better than Bernard vocals.... completely diving into great synth sounds, making them the focus of any given piece, but still heavily guitar based. Not exactly glitchy or super electronic dance, just straight catchy heavily listenable tunes.


Live they manage to pull off this combination without much trouble. It's got to be a little hectic, pounding out brief measures of melody, kicking on a fill rhythm pad at the right time and stepping back to strum out a solo....they're smarter than me that's for sure. We also got a chance to hear some new things they're working on outside the EP, one of which was entirely created out of barely held down harmonic notes on Michael's guitar...the entire melody for the length of the song...those shrill synth sounding tones...which Terrance then double on his Nord3. Completely nuts...I love that almost experimental guitar stuff used in service of super pop. I talked about some of this a little more in the review I did for QRO.



Great show, and I'm hearing rumours from the source of a possible vinyl full length being recorded in the very near future. Just thinking about the full range of these sine waves committed to vinyl...get a kickstarter going.

Check out some samples from the EP below:



Monday, October 3, 2011

Soccer Mom - You are not going to heaven - EP on 100m Records and Sweaters and Pearls Records


Got another release today from my own Sweaters & Pearls label.
If you would have told me I would be a part of 3 releases in the same year I would have...well the S&P accountants would have said "No way", but there's just been so much great stuff that I've really wanted to support and they just all came together pretty much at the same time. In the best way...this was by far the most ambitious project to date. Soccer Mom signed recently with 100m Records and said they were putting out this 6 song EP, they've always been huge vinyl fans and it made sense to see if we could put together a vinyl version of the release. When I saw the sleeve design Will had come up with, money was no object! I had always wanted to check out letterpressing a cover sometime, but the way it's pressed, the Soccer Mom and the album title are covered by a wraparound vertical graphic, such a cool idea. It was beyond anything I'd ever come across and couldn't wait to have it in hand.

Soccer Mom has been evolving a lot since that first single. There's still a lot of '90s classic fuzz throughout this whole EP, taking all kinds of unconscious influences and coming up with their really unique take the classic sound. There's times when I'll catch a dead on Dinosaur Jr. style melody in "(A) Natural history" one minute and then Dan's vocal will have Lee Ranaldo natural detachment the next.
It's got all the looseness of those catchier Sonic Youth tracks, when they veer towards melody, finding that line that just makes sense, Soccer Mom is playing around with a similar experimental guitar approach, the unnatural sounds and combinations of rhythm and melody. They're distilled down into melody you can't over think. It's the track that works no matter how many times you perform it. The first song to warm up in the rehearsal space, because it's just fun.
"American shirt (Eagle Flag 911)" most closely resembles that Loveless style haze, the layers of guitar are working in a dense chorus and distanced slide echo. I wouldn't be surprised if this was days in a studio, but I've seen them play live and all of these odd sounds are incredibly coming from Will and Dan, and at incredible volume. Like The Big Sleep it's overwhelming to see live, the structures are all there, it starts to sound like it's coming from somewhere else, it takes up the space like nothing else. Or "Unwanted Sounds" which has layers of distorted huge guitars, both an intricate picked melody and massive MBV style dense walls done in a bouncy optimistic indie feel. When Dan comes in with an epic far off chorus vocal it adds up to a pop vision of Broken Water.
In "Celebrity Unrest", they find a hard distorted groove that starts out at that massive height and continues on that plateau the whole track, building another melody on top of melody, and like "High on Dad" just when you think it might be instrumental, Dan comes in vocally unable to hold back anymore. I love that economy...when there's something to say, come in. If the great mathy guitar back and forth on "Salty Wyoming" works somehow like two completely separate loops then that's it.

So glad I could have a tiny part in spreading the word and I just want to say to everyone who's picked up anything from the label, thanks a lot.

Go get this one from Sweaters and Pearls Records...or 100m records...(the price including shipping is the same).

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Glass Rifle on 100m Records


Just posted a review over in the forums about a CD single I got from the guys at Glass Rifle. Amazing letter pressed riveted package that contained some classic post hardcore.
They're playing live tomorrow night at Arlene's Grocery.