Post by Audiozoo on Aug 11, 2017 17:47:11 GMT
wow, uptempo indie rock, has a sound a bit like R.E.M & Broken Bells - The High Road, even Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit in my opinion.
The vocals are shared between a higher octave & lower octave singer (could be one singer or two)
Pep is drums/vox - so it's one guy.
From the start - the chord progression is a bit like Linkin Park - Numb, but the song is faster and in a different key.
The style of mixing is completely different, closer to R.E.M - Losing My Religion.
At the start of the song the lead singer is holding a long note, saying "ooh" or "woo".
It gives the timbre a haunting ambient feel as a supreme backdrop to the guitars.
The bass guitar is mixed up front so it is one of the loudest instruments, with the vocals just above that, followed by the main lead guitar's melodic picking.
An electric guitar fills in the mid-range frequencies with strummed chords.
The band has a very unique style. The drums are somewhat soft, but the mix is well filled & balanced.
The bass & the lead guitar play in unison for some part of the chorus, along with the high & low vocal lines.
1:22, the lead guitar plays the main melodic riff in a lower octave but the sense of repetition creates a strong sense of melodic establishment.
Around 1:45 the main chorus comes back in.
The section heard at 2:16 is where they most sound like Foo Fighters in my opinion.
2:42 has an alternative section with some long sung notes just like the "woo/ooh" at the start.
This section is musically intriguing as it cuts the typical bar structure short; apparently alternating between 6/4 & 8/4 time signatures.
2nd listen
1 3b 4 is the repeated bassline.
I believe the chord is a suspended 2nd, and this creates a true beauty when juxtaposed with the lead guitar's notation (1 7b 6natural).
This seems similar to the Dorian mode which can also be heard in some Indian music.
This was used in Michael Jackson - Earth Song.
If you want to connect with nature, it seems this is the way to go!
This song gets a 10/10, because any band that can remind us of Nirvana definitely has a bright future, and heaps of potential.
Excellent songwriting & song structuring.
The vocals are shared between a higher octave & lower octave singer (could be one singer or two)
Pep is drums/vox - so it's one guy.
From the start - the chord progression is a bit like Linkin Park - Numb, but the song is faster and in a different key.
The style of mixing is completely different, closer to R.E.M - Losing My Religion.
At the start of the song the lead singer is holding a long note, saying "ooh" or "woo".
It gives the timbre a haunting ambient feel as a supreme backdrop to the guitars.
The bass guitar is mixed up front so it is one of the loudest instruments, with the vocals just above that, followed by the main lead guitar's melodic picking.
An electric guitar fills in the mid-range frequencies with strummed chords.
The band has a very unique style. The drums are somewhat soft, but the mix is well filled & balanced.
The bass & the lead guitar play in unison for some part of the chorus, along with the high & low vocal lines.
1:22, the lead guitar plays the main melodic riff in a lower octave but the sense of repetition creates a strong sense of melodic establishment.
Around 1:45 the main chorus comes back in.
The section heard at 2:16 is where they most sound like Foo Fighters in my opinion.
2:42 has an alternative section with some long sung notes just like the "woo/ooh" at the start.
This section is musically intriguing as it cuts the typical bar structure short; apparently alternating between 6/4 & 8/4 time signatures.
2nd listen
1 3b 4 is the repeated bassline.
I believe the chord is a suspended 2nd, and this creates a true beauty when juxtaposed with the lead guitar's notation (1 7b 6natural).
This seems similar to the Dorian mode which can also be heard in some Indian music.
This was used in Michael Jackson - Earth Song.
If you want to connect with nature, it seems this is the way to go!
This song gets a 10/10, because any band that can remind us of Nirvana definitely has a bright future, and heaps of potential.
Excellent songwriting & song structuring.