Posts Tagged ‘EP’

Spiritualized // Amazing Grace EP 1

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

I’m always amazed at the crazy releases record stores somehow are able to procure, and every now and then I find myself purchasing them just because of the rareness factor. Now this has proved disastrous on occasion (apparently Best Coast was also the name of a late 90s punk group), but this time when I caught a glipse of a limited edition EP from Spiritualized, one of my favorites British bands, I knew I had a winner.

Information about the recording is scant at best, with most of the stuff I was able to find coming from the Spiritualized website (even the label they recorded it for has been absorbed by Universal since the 2003 release, with their website evaporating into thin air). Basically, a month before they released their 2003 full-length Amazing Grace the group decided to split up the tracks on the LP into three highly limited EPs. The one I found was the first installment in the threesome, uncreatively titled Amazing Grace EP (1 of 3), featuring none other than frontman J. Spaceman on the cover.

If you are an avid Spiritualized fan, then the music on the EP isn’t anything new. Although not in the exact order you would find on the LP, the featured tracks “Cheapster”, “Hold On”, “Never Goin’ Back”, and “The Powers and the Glory” are identical to what’s on the full-length. The only interesting thing to think about is why these songs were chosen to be lumped together.

Even though they were five years away from completing their trompe d’oeil with A&E, there are a surprising amount of similarities between Amazing Grace EP 1 and their future work — especially concerning the structure of the album. One thing I noted in my description of A&E on my Top Albums of 2008 list (#2) was how it was essentially a triptych with the three parts being instrumental / alt. country / rock & roll. Even though there are only four songs on the EP, it follows in the same pattern. The first track on both the A & B sides (“Cheapster” and “Never Goin’ Back”) are classic rock anthems that are certainly stadium-ready. After the noisy one-minute intro, “Hold On” slips into country/folk acoustic ballad territory while “The Power and the Glory” is an instrumental jamfest — and voilà the tri-force is complete.

So, yeah, kind of cool stuff, especially if you are Spiritualized fan like myself. In an effort to convert the non-fans, check out two tracks off of Amazing Grace below:

Spiritualized // Hold On

Spiritualized // Cheapster

The Numerators // Summer 2009 Tour CD/R

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

If you live outside the state Texas, the likelihood that you would know about the city of Lubbock is very slim. Hell, even if you have heard about it you probably would think only of tumbleweeds, cowboy hats, and maybe Bobby Knight. Surprisingly in this dust-bowl relic of a town, which gave birth to rock & roll legend Buddy Holly, lies a pretty damn good music scene — even one judged by modern standards.

As one would expect there are a handful of great singer/songwriter and country acts that call Lubbock home, but there is also a budding garage/noise rock uprising taking place, championed most by the acid-rockers The Numerators. Looking solely at the descriptions they give on their facebook page, it’s tough to pinpoint their exact sound to an unexposed listener:

  • Local dirty living room-noise pop.
  • Drunkenly played stoner noise .
  • Bathroom rock (?!).
  • And my personal favorite: Neon Nursery Rhymes

This musical mystery is part of what’s great about the group: you never know exactly what one of their shows will entail. Now I’ve witnessed my fair share of Numerators sets in the past (after all, I went to college at Texas Tech), and I have to say that they are one of the most wildly unpredictable and hyper-energetic bands out there. Whether it be Michael Jackson covers, homemade hip-hop tracks, or just thrashing out their patented fuzzed out psych rock, they put on a damn good show.

Although their live endeavors are becoming more-or-less well known, not much has been said about their music (well, unless you count a badass Fader review). I got my hands on a couple of tracks from their highly limited self-released Summer Tour 2009 CD/R, and I have to say that it is on par with other noise bands that have been making the rounds on some more established sites.

The two particular tracks that I enjoy most from the EP are “City of Gold” and “Strawberry Dreams”. The former begins with a repetitive hazy guitar line muddling your mind just enough before the foggy vocals, courtesy of singer Sammi Rana, push you over the auditory intoxicated legal limit. “Strawberry Dreams” on the other hand sobers you up a bit with its driving floor-tom beat, only to lead you down a path of chaotic destruction midway through before bringing you back to quasi-order by the finish. It’s an exhilarating roller coast ride to say the least.

Right now, The Numerators seem to be staying put in Lubbock for a while — with only a highlighted December 9th gig with much talked about Florida indie-rockers Surfer Blood on the schedule. However, if you do get a chance to see them live, DO IT! Trust me, you won’t regret it. If you need some tunes now, contact Burgers Records. As for a sample, here is a blast-from-the-past youtube video along with a “Strawberry Dreams” mp3:

The Numerators // Strawberry Dreams