2011, Wao Wao Records
VINYL FORMAT. What does Country Mice front-man Jason Rueger have in common with less than 300 people in the US? Growing up in Beattie, that's ruralest of rural Kansas. On a farm of course, that was passed down through three generations of his family and old enough to be on the Pony Express route. At an early age, Rueger sets his sights for something different than the surrounding dirt and milo that stung his eyes and cut his hands. Breaking away from the close-knit ties of friends and family, Rueger moves east, not to Nashville, where you might expect a country boy to venture, but to Brooklyn. It doesn't take long to hook up with fellow Midwest transplants Ben Bullington (guitar) and Kurt Kuehn (drums) as they all quickly band together, finding comfort in their shared sense of displacement. Eventually, as the trio becomes more assimilated to their new surroundings, they recruit upstate New Yorker Mike Feldman (bass).
As Country Mice, they rally together to craft apocalyptic ballads through home-made amplifier hazes that thicken into funnel clouds, drums that stomp-clap sedately before the storm peaks, and bass tones that thicken the bloodstream. Rueger draws on his small town rearing with sophistication beyond the ordinarily romantic and reductive Americana troubadour, and his songwriting is anything but dime a dozen. Strong traces of Neil Young and Wilco are mixed into modern experimental guitar sounds that any fan of mid-90's Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. will love.
Their debut, Twister is a record that sonically chisels through the calloused shell of glossy rock & roll to find the dissonant live wire beneath and play it for all its worth. It tells a tale of strained memory: the hardships, joys, and love of growing up in a small town in the Midwest, with the hopes and dreams of traveling the world – a record for every kid seeing the big world from his small bedroom window.
As Country Mice, they rally together to craft apocalyptic ballads through home-made amplifier hazes that thicken into funnel clouds, drums that stomp-clap sedately before the storm peaks, and bass tones that thicken the bloodstream. Rueger draws on his small town rearing with sophistication beyond the ordinarily romantic and reductive Americana troubadour, and his songwriting is anything but dime a dozen. Strong traces of Neil Young and Wilco are mixed into modern experimental guitar sounds that any fan of mid-90's Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. will love.
Their debut, Twister is a record that sonically chisels through the calloused shell of glossy rock & roll to find the dissonant live wire beneath and play it for all its worth. It tells a tale of strained memory: the hardships, joys, and love of growing up in a small town in the Midwest, with the hopes and dreams of traveling the world – a record for every kid seeing the big world from his small bedroom window.
Tracklisting
Disc 1
| 1 | Ghost |
| 2 | Festival |
| 3 | Morning Son |
| 4 | Rabbit on a Leash |
| 5 | Close Behind |
| 6 | Clover |
| 7 | Worn Hearts |
| 8 | Bullet of a Gun |
| 9 | Shasta |
Customer Reviews





