The Raymond Brake - Phillistine - 1995from the Simple Machines cd "Piles Of Dirty Winters"
from the Simple Machines web site:
Patti Smith once wrote, "The perfect noise exists between everything and nothing".
Some bands are everything: the naked object, they rock in capital letters according to the most recent, successful examples in their field. They are all flash pots, angst and compression. At the other extreme bands exist as nothing: living science projects that embrace calculation over result, they remain forever all math and no magic.
The Raymond Brake existed precariously in between these two extremes. They did not state facts or obscure them with detail, they inferred. At their best they implied or divined and you, as listener, did the work to meet them in the middle at the perfect noise.
Hailing from Greensboro, NC, the Raymond Brake was in a unique position at a remarkable time. With access to the "young rock" that was pouring out of nearby Chapel Hill from Superchunk, Polvo and Archers of Loaf, you might think that they'd just have become another indie rock band. But they didn't fall into such an easy trap. Greensboro is a small town, and the Raymond Brake boys wrote incredibly complicated songs that showed their influences but mimicked none. They didn't have the luxury of being caught up and brought down as the poster children of any useless hypothetical movement. They didn't sound like another local older band that kicked ass...because there wasn't one.
Their other undeniable asset: they weren't afraid of melody. Hey, don't worry. These boys grew up on the best of American math rock...Grifters, Polvo, Sonic Youth, even the "P"-word. If there's a strange tuning or rythym in the world they tried it, but that doesn't mean you should get out your calculators. Melody is the glue in a Raymond Brake song and just because "sing" has become a four letter word in most of the rest of the indie-world, but that doesn't mean you won't find it here. The extremes of both musical innovation and simple melody co-exist with genuine depth but in a surprisingly catchy way. This is the very essence of great songwriting. The perfect mixture of freshness and familiarity.
When the Raymond Brake recorded these releases, they were all barely old enough to get in the venues they were playing. Touring was fun, recording was fun, playing was fun, and it shows all over their music. It's not cuddle-core mind you... there's nothing naive or twee about The Raymond Brake. But just the same, they're not punching the rock-n-roll clock. These boys wrote great music and they enjoyed playing it.
Band Members:
Andy Cabic: guitar, vocals
Ryan Stewart: guitar, vocals
Peder Hollinghurst: bass
Joel Darden: drums
1 comment:
They played in my backyard around 1993.
Andy Cabic is huge now--part of that SF scene with Devendra Barnhart, Joanna Newsome, et al.
Although the point was well intended--they were original--I take issue that they didn't have older bands in Greensboro that kicked ass. Or, at least, that they admired or respected, loved even.
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