This week's installment...
Jan 1 (Congress’ New Album)
Congress had these songs ready about two years ago, but only
recently got into the studio to lay ‘em down. That gave them plenty of time,
through rehearsals, rewrites and live recitals at sporadic concerts, to give
the tunes space to breathe, nurtured with sweat droplets and galvanized by
cranked amps. More than that, the quartet (Jim Cherewick Eric Gallippo Ed Golembiewski Aaron Quillen) have also had time for their
chemistry as bandmates to congeal.
“We wanted to try some things that
filled the songs out this time,” said Gallippo. “…more textures and subtle
sounds in the mix, like on the early R.E.M. records. Nothing you would miss if
it wasn’t there live, but parts that mix things more richly or just sound more
exiting, if just for a few measures even: acoustic guitars, different amps,
piano, organ, hand claps, extra percussion.”
You’re always more limber 20 minutes into a jog. You can
always do your fourth and fifth cartwheels better than those first two tumbles.
Congress, accordingly, is tighter, tougher; more air in its lungs and stepping
with a surer footing. The grooves are synced snugly and slick, the guitars seem
more at home inside their occasionally monstrous growls, the riffs sleek, taut,
the vocals feel like a caustic kite cut loose into the gale, applying just the
right amount of alien-fuzz-fx to Cherewick’s already otherworldly trilled yowl.
Congress is sounds unanimous.
“I think this one had maybe less bravado?” Gallippo says,
thinking about it out-loud. “Or, fewer ‘bluesy’ riffs, maybe. A few more
twists, turns, and false starts/stops; probably because we got more comfortable
together as a band.” That’ll happen after 3+ years. If you aren’t listening
yet, welcome to the party.
When they broke out of the gate, I anticipated Congress to
be inheriting a bit of Wire’s post-punk and some of Fugazi’s post-hardcore. But
the great news contained in Ugly Eye is
that they’re not really either of those derivatives and, instead, winningly,
becoming their own curious concoction of propulsive percussive rock and
funk-flaired surf/punk. These songs, produced with Ian Saylor, are more
toe-tappers than head-bangers, more driving, coasting, soaring type jams rather
than moshed-bombast. These songs sound like they have wings. They can do barrel
rolls. And, to reiterate the chemistry, it sounds like they’re all securely
harnessed, so why not try a loop-de-loop. Take off.
Seek Ugly Eye out. Halfway through the record, we get "Pond Fight," which I'm declaring a new classic of modern American rock.
Congress is performing on January 1st,
day 4 of Mittenfest X at Bona Sera in Ypsilanti
Congress: https://congressmusic.bandcamp.com/
Congress: https://congressmusic.bandcamp.com/
Next Friday (Jan 8)
While I know everyone is either
planning for New Year’s Eve or trying to recover from an extended hangover, I
hope you’ll take this column’s advice to opportunely update your cultural
calendars and consider a trip toward Ferndale on Jan 8 & Jan 9.
Jason Stollsteimer (of PONYSHOW)
has curated a two-day festival that sort of shines a beacon out from the Detroit
region out toward SE-Canada and across the rustbelt, calling several
on-the-cusp bands who have devoted their lives (or at least every free hour
from their day jobs) to fostering their groups as their own DIY managers.
Secret Friends Fest is
an opportunity not only for hard-working up-and-coming (and nearly-breakout)
indie bands to come together under an umbrella of mutual support (and
inevitable future-touring networking opportunity) but also for local fans to
hear a handful of exceptional bands who may not otherwise have gotten around to
touring through their town if not for these circumstances. This is the 3rd
annual Secret Friends Fest and it seems to only be getting bigger, both in terms
of lineup and reception.
Lineup features: Tart, Prude
Boys, Junk Food Junkies, Rogue Satellites, Deadbeat Beat, The Deadly Vipers and
more… From outside of Michigan, you can hear Mild High Club, Heaters, Sam
Coffey & The Iron Lungs and much more. More info
Secret Friends Fest – Jan 8 & Jan 9
The Loving Touch, Ferndale
(22634 Woodward, Ave)
2 nights / 18 bands / $10 (per day) Or $16 for the Weekend if you order in advance
Info
The Loving Touch, Ferndale
(22634 Woodward, Ave)
2 nights / 18 bands / $10 (per day) Or $16 for the Weekend if you order in advance
Info
No comments:
Post a Comment