Thursday 10 May 2012

"The Best Band You've Never Heard Of..."

Nice little bit of press here from the current US tour:

http://www.portlandmercury.com/portland/leave-the-scene-behind/Content?oid=6064864

Leave the Scene Behind 

The Wave Pictures' Perfectly Imperfect Precision


THE WAVE PICTURES They’re from Wymeswold! Party time! Excellent!
THE WAVE PICTURES are the best band you've never heard of.
I know, I know—music writers love to say shit like this, so you're no doubt skeptical. Or maybe you have heard of the Wave Pictures, and are already enamored with the countless pleasures of their spindly, sprawling discography. Or perhaps you're a fan of Portland songwriter Jack Lewis and are aware that the Wave Pictures covered his "Polar Bear." Still, with an "indifferent" following in their home country of England (according to guitarist/singer David Tattersall) and only a smattering of US shows thus far under their belts—most of them in New York—it's more than likely that the Wave Pictures have escaped your notice.
It's time for that to change. Their sound is a willful marriage of brawny classic rock (like the Stones and CCR) with shambling American indie folk-rock (à la Silver Jews, Violent Femmes, and Jonathan Richman)—with Tattersall's swooning voice and off-kilter lyrics making romantic melodrama out of it all. The number of the Wave Pictures full-length albums now tips into the double digits, surrounded by a flurry of singles and EPs and compilation tracks. Their catalog is excellent across the board, bearing crisp and concise consistency and addictively imperfect precision.
"We've always been pretty focused on the same thing," Tattersall says. "Trying to write songs with interesting words and then play them in a natural way, or what we think of as a natural way, and try to improvise a little bit. And to sound like what we would hope a rock 'n' roll band would sound like, I suppose. Not too pristine."
Tattersall and bassist Franic Rozycki were childhood friends in Wymeswold, a village in England's Midlands, and started playing music together in their teens in the late '90s. Drummer Jonny Helm joined a few years after. "We've been a band for a very long time," says Tattersall of the band's stability, "but I don't know if it's because we've never had a tremendous amount of pressure or outside influence on what we do or anything. Generally we've just enjoyed ourselves more of the time than not, and mainly done what we wanted."
Their latest, Long Black Cars, continues their string of lean, taut rock with oddball lyrics—which Tattersall maintains are written purely for self-amusement. "I may sound confessional, but I'm never in an emotional state when I write these songs," he says. The new record is both sprightlier and nastier than previous efforts, cutting the music down to its raw elements (although not without a few virtuosic guitar solos from Tattersall).
"I think Long Black Cars does sound leaner and more direct, and better than previous albums. We produced that one ourselves a bit more, and spent a lot more time on the sound ourselves—mixing it on our own without anyone else around, mic'ing everything the way we wanted to. We mic'ed the drums with just one microphone. We mixed everything in mono, and we didn't put in reverb on anything, didn't compress anything. We didn't EQ anything unless we absolutely had to. It really sounds much more direct and much more like we wanted it to sound," Tattersall says. "But the live shows are less lean and less direct than they used to be. They're more, probably, more loose and, um, what's the word..."
Jammy?
"Maybe a little more jammy, yeah!" he laughs. "But we're not like Phish or anything. We don't want to sound tight and perfect."
They certainly don't—and thank goodness for that.

Meanwhile, word on the street is the two-fer vinyl of BITB and LBC actually exists and is out there. First person to comment they have their hands on it wins!

13 comments:

  1. i just ordered the double lp from http://darla.com/
    it's a very exciting thing -scott

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  2. Thanks for the tip, Scott. It's actually in stock at Darla so I cancelled my Amazon order.

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  3. alright! i'm glad i could help out a fellow wave pictures fan.

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  4. got mine from darla too!

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  5. Good work, y'all. I'm UK based (bound?) so I'm torn between ordering direct from Acuarela in spain or waiting for the copies to start showing up in the usual places. Let me know when you've got it in your hands!

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  6. LP seems to have touched down in the UK. Ordered and patiently waiting!

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  7. hey!

    i saw them last night. was talking to david and he said he's writing for his next solo album. :) it's going to be called 'little martha'.

    so excited!

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  8. I think Little Martha may be the name of the upcoming solo instrumntal LP, due on WIAIWYA this summer. He should do a Big Martha LP of lyrical songs too!

    By the way, i win my own challenge - BITB/LBC vinyl in my hands! Looks lovely, nice pics and lyrics. Looking forward to spinning them....

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  9. lol Good for you! \o/

    He should do everything. haha He was so lovely to talk to. They all were. And the gig was fantastic! Still floating around on my happy cloud. :)

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  10. mine came today!! so very excited to have it.

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  11. Did anyone get an MP3 code with their copy?

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  12. I really hope they can find someone else to release the vinyl edition next time - on time with an MP3 code.

    Still, looks and sounds great. My 10 month old son has heard the Pictures more in his life than any other band. I don't know if this means he will grow up to love them or hate them but he likes to just stand leaning over the turntable and watch it spin.

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