Review by B. Holtzapple for Carnavas Rating:
… and see them live any chance you get!
You know you’re getting old when: 1) you have to rely on MTV2 to hear new music, ’cause your old college radio buddies grew up long ago, got married and have kids; 2)the sound that defined your college years are now a “revival.”
But rather than be bummed out by this, I’ve gone the other way. Lured in by the stunningly simple video for “Lazy Eye” I went ahead and bought the whole Carnavas album. I have to admit that on first listen I didn’t think it was special. But the more I listened, the more layers washed over me, and before long I was a solid fan, pushing the album on all my friends.
Sure, I too thought of “Gish”-era Smashing Pumpkins. And not that SSPU doesn’t have some Billy-C influence in the mix; but you could just as easily argue the presence of other underground icons of the early 90s: Sonic Youth, Lush, Slowdive, My Bloody Valentine, Sunny Day Real Estate, to name just a few. I have to laugh a little at just how 90s the band even looks, right down to having a chick on bass (we all pay homage to the original alt-rock goddesses, Kims Gordon & Deal).
So maybe it is something of a fomula at work in the Pickups and in “Carnavas,” but boy can they pull it off. Despite all the references to the “wall-of-sound” age (or perhaps because of the mix), they still manage to sound fresh and contemporary. Maybe they are “rough around the edges,” but why should that be considered a bad thing (bands are at their best and purest when they’re young and raw). Besides, listen to Pikul, and then Carnavas… they’re growing fast!
I admit that it’s hard to remember (or even discern) the lyrics or even song titles on this album. But I promise you, the melodies and riffs will stay with you for days. You can’t help but feel the emotion in their compositions and in their performances. Of course “Lazy Eye” is epic, but “..Twinkles,” “Future Foe Scenarios,” and just about every other track hits the right spot between shoe-gazing trance and boot-stompin’ ferocity.
Much to my excitement, I found SSPU were playing a gig in a nearby suburb of Baltimore! Last night I went to the show. Simply stunning. I saw first-hand that these songs were meant to be performed live. Brian’s wail rides atop his crunching guitar like another layer on his effects pedals. Christopher’s drumming is fierce and rock-solid, a wonderful mess of flailing arms and hair from the riser behind. Joe sits at his keys stage right of Brian. Leaning over the console, cigarette hanging from his lip, he could’ve been mistaken for the PA, but his contibutions to the glorious noise are seemless and nearly invisible. And Nikki does the cliche proud, grounding the soundscapes with a rolling rumble of bass.
For over 1.5 hours, SSPU ripped through most of the Carnavas album and an encore of Pikul tracks. The crowd, completely enthralled, fed off the energy of the performance; and the band was noticably affected by the response. I haven’t seen so much genuine heart and hunger in a band in a very long time. And though Silversun couldn’t make me 19 again, I’m still riding on the high of the experience. Support this band anyway you can… they deserve it.
Review by Luke Rounda for Carnavas Rating:
Silversun Pickups get a lot of Corganishishness thrown their way for the sake of vocal inflection, but on their new record “Carnavas,” they’ve pinned down that elusive “love in neutral” tone that only bands like My Bloody Valentine have managed in the past, and spitshined it with a melodic Guided by Voices sheen, yielding white noise-pop that sparkles from the glint of all the fuzzy edges.
Something like “Well Thought Out Twinkles” could only be called soda pop, recalling everything from the La’s to “Adore”-era Pumpkins (with human drum machine Chris Guanlao filling in for the less-earthy computer), caffeinated and shaken up in a mixer until it resembles gender neutral shoegaze. Perfect sunshine pop lies buried under a truncheon of fuzz–you can hear it if you listen–but it’s been beaten and whipped like a birthday cake into something excited but not sure of what emotion it’s feeling.
Their influences are as varied and distinct as a fruit smoothie: “Dream at Tempo 119″ sounds like the best-produced early Robert Pollard track you’ve never heard sung an octave higher, and stuff like “Rusted Wheel” broods with the best of them before sprouting wings to fly off the axle into territory occupied by like-minded contemporaries Lovedrug and Amusement Parks on Fire.
“Carnavas” is like the best of the past wrapped up as a gift to the future. If reviving seductively aggressive ’90s noise is next in line behind rainy day ’80s new wave in the future of pop music, take comfort in knowing that once you pick the Silversuns up, you’re only going to want to listen to them over and over and over and…
Review by Scott Bresinger for Carnavas Rating:
This heavily-hyped band from the epicenter of heavy-hyping, Los Angeles, is likely to draw a lot of lazy comparisons to Smashing Pumpkins. Over-amped, distorted guitars, melodic songs with soaring choruses and plaintive vocals are all in evidence. On “Carnavas,” their debut, they’re at least closer to the Pumpkin’s early albums, eschewing the grandiosity that made Corgan’s later work such a chore. Actually, they seem to have more in common with another young L.A. band, Autolux. Both are clearly indebted to the noisy soundscapes of My Bloody Valentine and the more melodic moments of Sonic Youth. Listen to “Carnavas” back-to-back with SY’s recent “Rather Ripped” and you’d think the two bands could be cousins. Mind you, SY’s songs are stronger and their guitars more gloriously f***ed up, but Silversun Pickups have plenty to offer as well. Like Autolux, the Pickups manage to fold their more experimental tendencies into their songs, and when they stretch things out, like on album closer “Common Reactor,” they drone instead of jam. Sometimes they’re even genuinely hypnotic, but even as Brian Aubert’s guitars soar into the stratosphere, they keep their feet on the ground (actually, they kinda have to; otherwise, they couldn’t reach their effects pedals). Another nice touch are the keyboards of Joe Lester, which curiously makes the sound warmer (as opposed to the chilliness of say, Radiohead). Lyrically, the band traffic in the vague, elliptical imagery that have been a staple of indie rock for more than twenty years. At the very least they’re modest, not self important. The propulsive “Future Foe Scenarios” begins “The things we laid do not amount to much/made of abandoned wood and stones and such.” All things considered, while Silversun Pickups are anything but original, they survive comparisons to their inspirations fairly well. While it’s not something that you probably “need,” you could do a hell of a lot worse.
Review by T. Plummer for Carnavas Rating:
I can’t quite put my finger on what they sound like. Yeah, some emo/shoegazer in there. Maybe a splash of Pumpkins but I don’t see the overwhelming Corgan references. It’s really a unique CD. As soon as I heard a 30 second clip I felt I was home. Simply the best CD I’ve bought in a long time. Probably since Radiohead’s Hail to the Thief. That’s it. It’s like Radiohead if they were a rock band and with more coherent vocals.
Review by E. A Solinas for Carnavas Rating:
The Silversun Pickups are definitely classic-grunge revivalists — much of the time, they sound like gauze-wrapped version of a very solid grunge band. With those nice grimy, twisty riffs, “Carnavas” is a nice, rockin’ little debut album with some pleasant creative moments.
It opens with the buzzing basslines and choral voices of “Melatonin,” buzzing and murmuring through a moderately epic melody. “She ran into the wall/so sweet and unknown/a worn comatose,” Brian Aubert croons in a high, mellow voice that sounds pleasantly Billy Corganish.
But things get harder with the sizzling smash-it-down quality of “Well Thought Out Twinkies,” blasting thunderbass over a bed of solid drums. From there, they dabble in other grungey styles — grimy slow-burners, elusively shimmery rockers, and even a catchy, relatively mellow guitar-pop song or two.
It’s easy to compare the Silversun Pickups to the Smashing Pumpkins, but they don’t really sound too much like them (especially since there’s no “wall of bass” sound here). Their music has a solidarity of its own, and there are moments that hint at future expansion — epic riffs, the interplay of the instruments, and the haunted air of the whole thing.
Musically, it has some good tight rock rhythms — sprawling, gauzy, dirty riffs and roiling basslines, paired with smashing drums and a sublte interplay of keyboard and riffs. But some songs dispense with the bass for the time being, and use ethereal, fragile-sounding synth waves instead.
Aubert has a nice, smooth voice that is has a pleasantly androgynous sound, and he never gets buried in the solid rock sound here. The lyrics do need work, though — they tend to be rather simplistic (“and it feels just like the ground/and trapped in another way/just still in the ground”), and could use a more refinement.
The Silversun Pickups are still rough in “Carnavas,” but they show some good musical skills and plenty of promise. Solid full-length debut.
Review by B. Holtzapple for Carnavas
Rating:
… and see them live any chance you get!
You know you’re getting old when: 1) you have to rely on MTV2 to hear new music, ’cause your old college radio buddies grew up long ago, got married and have kids; 2)the sound that defined your college years are now a “revival.”
But rather than be bummed out by this, I’ve gone the other way. Lured in by the stunningly simple video for “Lazy Eye” I went ahead and bought the whole Carnavas album. I have to admit that on first listen I didn’t think it was special. But the more I listened, the more layers washed over me, and before long I was a solid fan, pushing the album on all my friends.
Sure, I too thought of “Gish”-era Smashing Pumpkins. And not that SSPU doesn’t have some Billy-C influence in the mix; but you could just as easily argue the presence of other underground icons of the early 90s: Sonic Youth, Lush, Slowdive, My Bloody Valentine, Sunny Day Real Estate, to name just a few. I have to laugh a little at just how 90s the band even looks, right down to having a chick on bass (we all pay homage to the original alt-rock goddesses, Kims Gordon & Deal).
So maybe it is something of a fomula at work in the Pickups and in “Carnavas,” but boy can they pull it off. Despite all the references to the “wall-of-sound” age (or perhaps because of the mix), they still manage to sound fresh and contemporary. Maybe they are “rough around the edges,” but why should that be considered a bad thing (bands are at their best and purest when they’re young and raw). Besides, listen to Pikul, and then Carnavas… they’re growing fast!
I admit that it’s hard to remember (or even discern) the lyrics or even song titles on this album. But I promise you, the melodies and riffs will stay with you for days. You can’t help but feel the emotion in their compositions and in their performances. Of course “Lazy Eye” is epic, but “..Twinkles,” “Future Foe Scenarios,” and just about every other track hits the right spot between shoe-gazing trance and boot-stompin’ ferocity.
Much to my excitement, I found SSPU were playing a gig in a nearby suburb of Baltimore! Last night I went to the show. Simply stunning. I saw first-hand that these songs were meant to be performed live. Brian’s wail rides atop his crunching guitar like another layer on his effects pedals. Christopher’s drumming is fierce and rock-solid, a wonderful mess of flailing arms and hair from the riser behind. Joe sits at his keys stage right of Brian. Leaning over the console, cigarette hanging from his lip, he could’ve been mistaken for the PA, but his contibutions to the glorious noise are seemless and nearly invisible. And Nikki does the cliche proud, grounding the soundscapes with a rolling rumble of bass.
For over 1.5 hours, SSPU ripped through most of the Carnavas album and an encore of Pikul tracks. The crowd, completely enthralled, fed off the energy of the performance; and the band was noticably affected by the response. I haven’t seen so much genuine heart and hunger in a band in a very long time. And though Silversun couldn’t make me 19 again, I’m still riding on the high of the experience. Support this band anyway you can… they deserve it.
Review by Luke Rounda for Carnavas
Rating:
Silversun Pickups get a lot of Corganishishness thrown their way for the sake of vocal inflection, but on their new record “Carnavas,” they’ve pinned down that elusive “love in neutral” tone that only bands like My Bloody Valentine have managed in the past, and spitshined it with a melodic Guided by Voices sheen, yielding white noise-pop that sparkles from the glint of all the fuzzy edges.
Something like “Well Thought Out Twinkles” could only be called soda pop, recalling everything from the La’s to “Adore”-era Pumpkins (with human drum machine Chris Guanlao filling in for the less-earthy computer), caffeinated and shaken up in a mixer until it resembles gender neutral shoegaze. Perfect sunshine pop lies buried under a truncheon of fuzz–you can hear it if you listen–but it’s been beaten and whipped like a birthday cake into something excited but not sure of what emotion it’s feeling.
Their influences are as varied and distinct as a fruit smoothie: “Dream at Tempo 119″ sounds like the best-produced early Robert Pollard track you’ve never heard sung an octave higher, and stuff like “Rusted Wheel” broods with the best of them before sprouting wings to fly off the axle into territory occupied by like-minded contemporaries Lovedrug and Amusement Parks on Fire.
“Carnavas” is like the best of the past wrapped up as a gift to the future. If reviving seductively aggressive ’90s noise is next in line behind rainy day ’80s new wave in the future of pop music, take comfort in knowing that once you pick the Silversuns up, you’re only going to want to listen to them over and over and over and…
Review by Scott Bresinger for Carnavas
Rating:
This heavily-hyped band from the epicenter of heavy-hyping, Los Angeles, is likely to draw a lot of lazy comparisons to Smashing Pumpkins. Over-amped, distorted guitars, melodic songs with soaring choruses and plaintive vocals are all in evidence. On “Carnavas,” their debut, they’re at least closer to the Pumpkin’s early albums, eschewing the grandiosity that made Corgan’s later work such a chore. Actually, they seem to have more in common with another young L.A. band, Autolux. Both are clearly indebted to the noisy soundscapes of My Bloody Valentine and the more melodic moments of Sonic Youth. Listen to “Carnavas” back-to-back with SY’s recent “Rather Ripped” and you’d think the two bands could be cousins. Mind you, SY’s songs are stronger and their guitars more gloriously f***ed up, but Silversun Pickups have plenty to offer as well. Like Autolux, the Pickups manage to fold their more experimental tendencies into their songs, and when they stretch things out, like on album closer “Common Reactor,” they drone instead of jam. Sometimes they’re even genuinely hypnotic, but even as Brian Aubert’s guitars soar into the stratosphere, they keep their feet on the ground (actually, they kinda have to; otherwise, they couldn’t reach their effects pedals). Another nice touch are the keyboards of Joe Lester, which curiously makes the sound warmer (as opposed to the chilliness of say, Radiohead). Lyrically, the band traffic in the vague, elliptical imagery that have been a staple of indie rock for more than twenty years. At the very least they’re modest, not self important. The propulsive “Future Foe Scenarios” begins “The things we laid do not amount to much/made of abandoned wood and stones and such.” All things considered, while Silversun Pickups are anything but original, they survive comparisons to their inspirations fairly well. While it’s not something that you probably “need,” you could do a hell of a lot worse.
Review by T. Plummer for Carnavas
Rating:
I can’t quite put my finger on what they sound like. Yeah, some emo/shoegazer in there. Maybe a splash of Pumpkins but I don’t see the overwhelming Corgan references. It’s really a unique CD. As soon as I heard a 30 second clip I felt I was home. Simply the best CD I’ve bought in a long time. Probably since Radiohead’s Hail to the Thief. That’s it. It’s like Radiohead if they were a rock band and with more coherent vocals.
Review by E. A Solinas for Carnavas
Rating:
The Silversun Pickups are definitely classic-grunge revivalists — much of the time, they sound like gauze-wrapped version of a very solid grunge band. With those nice grimy, twisty riffs, “Carnavas” is a nice, rockin’ little debut album with some pleasant creative moments.
It opens with the buzzing basslines and choral voices of “Melatonin,” buzzing and murmuring through a moderately epic melody. “She ran into the wall/so sweet and unknown/a worn comatose,” Brian Aubert croons in a high, mellow voice that sounds pleasantly Billy Corganish.
But things get harder with the sizzling smash-it-down quality of “Well Thought Out Twinkies,” blasting thunderbass over a bed of solid drums. From there, they dabble in other grungey styles — grimy slow-burners, elusively shimmery rockers, and even a catchy, relatively mellow guitar-pop song or two.
It’s easy to compare the Silversun Pickups to the Smashing Pumpkins, but they don’t really sound too much like them (especially since there’s no “wall of bass” sound here). Their music has a solidarity of its own, and there are moments that hint at future expansion — epic riffs, the interplay of the instruments, and the haunted air of the whole thing.
Musically, it has some good tight rock rhythms — sprawling, gauzy, dirty riffs and roiling basslines, paired with smashing drums and a sublte interplay of keyboard and riffs. But some songs dispense with the bass for the time being, and use ethereal, fragile-sounding synth waves instead.
Aubert has a nice, smooth voice that is has a pleasantly androgynous sound, and he never gets buried in the solid rock sound here. The lyrics do need work, though — they tend to be rather simplistic (“and it feels just like the ground/and trapped in another way/just still in the ground”), and could use a more refinement.
The Silversun Pickups are still rough in “Carnavas,” but they show some good musical skills and plenty of promise. Solid full-length debut.