Local CD Revue | Music | Salt Lake City Weekly

Local CD Revue 

Pin It
Favorite
art6617widea.jpg
him.n n n n n n
Kid Theodore, Hello Rainey
Bands with more than five members always run the risk of sounding bloated and self-indulgent, adding extraneous instruments just because they can. So it’s refreshing when a sextet like Kid Theodore creates one of the most cohesive and organic local albums in recent memory. Whether adding cabaret-style piano and Latin percussion to some ’50s-era, jazz-inspired pop, or giving a hellishly-fun choir to the song “Fashion-Able,” Hello Rainey never lets us forget that all six musicians are crucial and important to its sound. Seedy undertones on tracks like “Tomorrows Guide to Healthy Living,” and “Greetings from the Grave” are so sly that they make the use of any glockenspiel forgivable. (KidTheodore.com)
music.cdreviews_ihearsirens.jpg
I Hear Sirens, I Hear Sirens
Self-described ambient rockers, I Hear Sirens sound as if they weren’t paying attention in Ambient 101—that is, they make exciting music. Rather than filling time with single notes or white noise (what I connect with most ambient music), each of the five tracks on their self-titled EP is an epic that radiates with intensity and delicacy that simultaneously can tear you up or break your heart. Hopefully this EP is indication of more material from a mature and technically gifted band, even if song titles like “September isn’t too far and I’m not sure when I’ll return,” are a bit too Holden Caulfield to be taken seriously. (MySpace.com/IHearSirens)
music.cdreviews_neokhan.jpg
The Sons In-Law of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, Neokhan
TSI-LotDotUP (that’s how the kids are acronym-ing it on the street) are one of those bands that are whacked out in a way that only living in Utah can take credit for. Vocalist Ghengis Khen uses bedtime, lullaby-style to sing about topics as diverse as Lewis and Clark to the carpool lane (that’s right) to good-natured, topical George W. Bush burns that already feel dated. While there are some truly clever lyrics and (whether-you-like-it-or-no) catchiness, even a guest appearance from local news superstar Rod Decker can’t save Neokhan from feeling like a novelty album. (CDBaby.com/UtahPioneers2)
  The Happies, Flowers Are Dying, By the Way
Reviewing local artists is a tad exhausting, if only for the higher expectations of who you want to represent your scene. Finding a well-produced, original and entertaining Utah band can send any jaded music critic into hysterics, while mediocrity that’s tolerated on a national level will earn negative brownie points. That said, The Happies’ new eight-song EP is the perfect shoegazer’s soundtrack, music that could be applied to arty montages of driving in an empty city at night, but dreamy music shouldn’t always mean music that puts you to sleep. Despite the surprisingly alert “Cello My Pitchfork,” Flowers remains pleasant enough, but when we, your audience, rallies for your greatness (we really do, every band), pleasant just doesn’t cut it. (TheHappies.net)






Pin It
Favorite

Tags:

About The Author

Ryan Bradford

More by Ryan Bradford

  • Guilty Treasures

    Gather up a decade of the best/worst music in one convenient track list.
    • Nov 18, 2009
  • CD Review: Dark Was the Night

    The album's other acts include The Books [fronted by Jose Gonzalez], Bon Iver, Grizzly Bear, My Brightest Diamond, Kronos Quartet, The Decemberists, Iron and Wine, Grizzly Bear, Spoon, Arcade Fire, Beirut, My Morning Jacket, Dave Sitek, Buck 65, The New Pornographers, Yo La Tengo, and others.
    • Feb 26, 2009
  • Music | Grade A: The Meat Puppets stay relevant.

    "I want to come off as pathetic, grasping yet gratified on every level. That’s the kind person I want to come across as.” nFor all intents and purposes, bassist Cris Kirkwood’s parting words over a telephone conversation should be taken with a heavy heart, seeing how his band The Meat Puppets are the reason shows like Behind the Music exist. Back in the ’80s, the semin...
    • Jan 21, 2009
  • More »

Latest in Music

  • Record Store Day 2024

    Talking to local proprietors about why physical-media music still matters.
    • Apr 17, 2024
  • Local Music Spotlight April 2024

    Blood Star, Standards and Substandards, Raspberry Protocol, LOAFA and Mars Highway
    • Apr 10, 2024
  • Music Mailbag April 2024

    New music by Jay Ssandri, Pepper Rose, Tomper, bellagrace, The Draught, Columbia Jones
    • Apr 3, 2024
  • More »

Readers also liked…

  • The Alpines Head North

    Local band's debut concept album finds musical bliss in the apocalypse.
    • Feb 7, 2024

© 2024 Salt Lake City Weekly

Website powered by Foundation