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In the brutally cold world of Big Rock Biz, there’s
something very comforting about just knowing that a band like
L.A.’s Silversun Pickups exists. That feeling derives
from the group’s searingly sumptuous music, sure, but
it has a lot to do with knowing their rather humble origins
and super-admirable raison d’etre.
Silversun Pickups, you see, rather than being just another
fiercely determined young band willing to claw and scrap their
way to the top of the rock heap, genuinely appear to be far
more like a gang of real, true friends who happened, quite
fortuitously, to meet as a result of their mutual love of
— shock horror! — music, and who seem to enjoy
each other’s company as much as they like playing their
own brand of ravishing rock noise.
And in fact, guitarist-singer Brian Aubert, bass player Nikki
Monninger, drummer Christopher Guanlao and keyboardist Joe
Lester are bona fide pals who’d played together or in
mutual friends’ bands when they finally settled on a
Silversun lineup and began playing shows at local clubs, which
further broadened their innately formidable playing chops
and established loving loyalties among a growing crop of seekers
and sinners.
The band lived to play, and play they did, at numerous dates
at many of the most important L.A. clubs. Aubert’s guitar
was a rapidly developing feral beast of tight chipchop splendor
and near-Hendrixian fuzzy howl in songs that seemed to reference
the spare, driving cool of Neu while injecting a barely constrained
glee – something like youthful romance, in the more
tormented My Bloody Valentine way – into great walls
of shredding white noise and a big throbbing rhythm section.
The interplay of Aubert’s guitar with Lester’s
spidery/splintery keyboards on songs like “Three Seed”
made their combined effect resemble an enormous shiny machine
being launched into the farthest reaches of the solar system.
Yet Silversun’s secret weapons are the achingly potent
melodies of their songs, which poke their lovely, shy heads
out and ultimately proclaim their power in rare shades of
melancholic ardor. While so many bands oft-claim supreme melody
as the underpinning of their noise, with the Pickups it can
claim moral superiority: Silversun radiates palpably great
melodies that – the real test – simply won’t
leave you alone no matter how you try to shoo them away.
That melodic/toughness no doubt encouraged Dangerbird Records
to sign Silversun Pickups for an EP, called Pikul (pronounced
pie-kul), a six-song set crammed with polished versions of
many live favorites such as the growlingly ethereal “Kissing
Families” and “…All the Go Inbetweens.”
These songs sealed in the love among Silversun Pickups’
L.A. fans and critics, and their subsequent mounting acclaim
led the band to undertake an increasingly heavy touring schedule,
which found them playing alongside Brendan Benson, Black Rebel
Motorcycle Club, Dead Meadow and Two Gallants, and they returned
home to record, Carnavas, their full-length debut for Dangerbird
(July 25, 2006).
Produced by Dave Cooley (J Dilla, Rolling Blackouts), engineered
by Tom Biller (Sean Lennon, Jon Brion) and mixed by Tony Hoffer
(Beck, The Kooks, Belle and Sebastian), the album reveals
the Pickups in a full flowering of their considerable melodic,
textural and rhythmic gifts, with 11 dark/light songs about
"Melatonin,” “Little Lover’s So Polite,”
“Future Foe Scenarios” and “Well Thought
Out Twinkles,” among other provocatively ambiguous themes.
The album rages with a kind of mixed emotion well matched
to those themes, a vibrating compound of feral cries amid
tender harmony, resonating powerfully with heavily filtered
guitar squawk, hovering keyboard clouds, and bass & drums
that often seem to lurch their way into divinely propulsive
beats.
For the new disc, Silversun Pickups got to play in the studio,
which they’d never done before, and, at producer Cooley’s
insistence, they got to take their time.
Says Aubert, “We wanted the EP and the record to be
two different sort of things, and we knew that we didn’t
want the same songs. Basically our live sound was so loud
and big, and before we just sort of documented it -- Pikul
didn’t sound like us live; even though we essentially
recorded it live.”
“We think of records and live shows being two different
sorts of worlds,” he continues. “Ironically, in
the studio, getting really specific about sounds -- how they
cut through -- made us sound as big as it is onstage.”
The proof’s in the pudding, and now all you need to
do is listen. And all Silversun Pickups need to do is figure
out how to transfer the album’s splendorous riot of
beauty onto the concert stage — and deal with the acclaim
that’ll inevitably follow. But that shouldn’t
prove difficult for these dedicated friends, who’re
happy to have found each other and make, almost like frosting
on the cake, magnificent music together.
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