Search

Happy Holidays
 
 

Indie-Rock-In-A-Box

Vinyl Club

Staff Picks

Gift Guide

Gift Cards

Free Shipping

 
 

New Releases

Top Sellers

Pre-Orders

Downloads

Vinyl

TShirts

Posters

Gifts

Lists

Insound 20

Bargain Bin

Help

Shopping Cart

 

Items

0

Total

$0.00
 

View Cart
Check Out
 
 

A Rainbow of Earbuds!

A Rainbow of Earbuds!

Syndicate Us

Read About RSS
 

The Great Communicators, The Interpreters, The Nonbelievers (CD)

Aloha

[Cover]

Label:
Released: 1999 List Price: 6.98
Price: $6.63  
 
 
add to cart

Aloha display their dazzlingly accessible post-rock grafting of jazz, prog-rock, spacy electronics, and pop on this superb five-song, 20-minute EP. The record has something of a live feel, giving the listener a quick snatch of what the actual Aloha experience is all about: by turns laconic, loose, taut, and electric; one moment diving into electronic expanses, the next offering up a sweet, lazy pop song, and then imploding into a phased, agitated jazz jam. In fact, the album was captured in two days (with an additional few days of overdubs and mixing), so the off-the-cuff energy is not simply a lucky by-product, but a true representation of the band. As could be expected, the instrumentation is ridiculously eclectic. On the basic instrumentation side, Tony Cavallario's rhythm guitar playing is infinitely textured and interesting, while Matthew Gengler's bass sounds bottomless and shows an unparalleled grasp of spatial depth; beneath their interplay, Cale Parks scatters atmospheric snare and cymbal beats in every direction, as if John Densmore were backing Captain Beefheart's Magic Band. Eric Koltnow is the linchpin of the band's complex mixture. He plays everything from piano and synthesizer to glockenspiel, but it's his vibe playing that's directly at the center of the Aloha sound. Vibes take over songs such as "Roanoke Born" and "Gary's Narrator," sending them into ethereal jazz territory. Equally important in all this, though, are Cavallario's lovely vocals. His voice sketches out what are, for all intents and purposes, relaxed pop melodies. To call Aloha a pop band, however, is misleading and too constrictive for their beautiful music. They end The Great Communicators with an electronically ominous instrumental, and it is that tension between their pretty (albeit idiosyncratic) pop inclinations and their complex, percussive instrumental attack that makes Aloha's music so immaculately evocative. ~ Stanton Swihart, All Music Guide

Tracklisting
Disk  | 1 
1Sound Between
2Roanoke Born
3Gary's Narrator
4I Never Use the Shoreway
5Ayahuasca at Dawn

 

User Reviews

   eric - Brooklyn, NY, USA
sorry, leroy, but you're wrong. This album is absolutely wonderful. I saw Aloha the other night and they DEFINITELY can play their instruments!!! These guys have talent and they are incredibly nice...you can't beat that.


   fanboy - Bowling Green, OH, USA
I have seen this band perform the songs from this record many times. Not only do they rock, they roll. The last song is samples of the other songs or something, not really something that could be performed live, right? "You should have seen Aloha truncate last night." Uh huh.


   leroy - toledo, OH, USA
here is why I DO NOT LIKE this album: they CANNOT play this stuff live. they are most certainly a live band, and therefore this cd is very misleading. the overdubs and drum crap at the end make this cd very disapointing to someone who actually likes these guys live. aloha is a good band, dont get me wrong. they just cant play their instruments all that well. (and they let their chicago influences come through a bit tooo much)


Do you already own this product and want to submit a review? Click here to submit your own review!

Weekly Newsletter

Sign Up
 

Radio Player

 
The Postmarks
"11:59"
11/25 Asobi Seksu
Citrus (vinyl version)
11/25 Bjork
Medulla DVD
11/25 Brian Jonestown Massacre
The Spacegirl (vinyl reissue)
11/25 David Byrne & Brian Eno
Everything That Happens Will Happen Today
11/25 Fennesz
Black Sea