Now Hear This (The Split Squad album)

Last updated
Now Hear This...
SS-NHT-CDB.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 21, 2014 (2014-01-21)
Recorded2012-2013
Studio
Genre Rock, Blues rock, Power pop, pop music, underground music
Length41:56
Label Red Chuck Records, Closer Records
Producer Scott McCaughey

Now Hear This... is the debut album by American rock band The Split Squad. Featuring the lineup of Clem Burke, Michael Giblin, Josh Kantor, Eddie Munoz, and Keith Streng, it was released on January 21, 2014 on Red Chuck records and features contributions from Scott McCaughey and Peter Buck of R.E.M. and The Baseball Project, Hugo Burnham of Gang of Four and Mike Gent of The Figgs.

Contents

Background

According to bandleader and bassist Giblin, the band's "...sound might be best described as a trip through our record collections. A little punk, a little soul, a little glam, a lot of attitude!" [1] About half of the songs were written by Giblin. According to him, some of the songs had been in his notebook at one stage or another, ""e.g."", the title song began to take form about 4 years before it was finished for the album. Not all songs took so long, "I Can't Remember" was created "...in about 40 minutes in a hotel room in India". The first collaboratively-written song was "Touch & Go". On that song, guitarist Streng wrote almost all the music, and Giblin wrote the lyrics and melody. Giblin and McCaughey collaborated on "Superman Says", with Giblin having the verses and the melody, but no chorus. He emailed the song to McCaughey, and about 20 minutes later received an email with an mp3 containing the lyrics. The album set of 10 original songs is rounded out with four covers. Steng takes over on vocals for a cover of '60's and '70's British musician Terry Reid "Tinker Taylor" - misspelled "Tinker Tailor" on the CD and back cover. The band covers "Put It Down", by Pennsylvania power pop/garage rock band The Jellybricks. The third cover is of The Small Faces "Sorry She's Mine". In the album acknowledgements, they list The Small Faces, adding "[especially The Small Faces]" The final cover is "You'll Never Change" first performed by Bettye LaVette, [2] and covered by others.

Recording

In an interview with Giblin, the band had been performing many of the songs on the album for nearly a year, but it took 4 months to coordinate everyone's schedules to book, in May 2013, a week of "summer camp", as producer Don Dixon calls it, in David Minehan's Woolly Mammoth Studios in Boston. [3] A photogallery of that week is available on the group's web site. During that week, about 85% of 14 tracks were recorded. All the basic instrument tracks as well as all lead vocals were recorded then. During that week's recording session, drummer Hugo Burnham, who lives in the Boston area, was invited by the band to sit in and perform with them. He played congas on "Messin' Around" while during "I've Got A Feeling"'s breakdown, he overdubbed, on a separate drum kit, a second drum part. The individual kits were flanged and panned far left and right, with Burke on the left. Later, Streng's vocal and some lead guitar overdubs in "Tinker Tailor" were done in Andy Shernoff's studio in Brooklyn. At Woolly Mammoth Studios, the signal path was analog, through a Neotech Elite console, until digitized with a Pro Tools HD-2 digital audio workstation. [4] Giblin subsequently went to Portland to Scott McCaughey's Dungeon of Horror studios to do most of what remained.

Reception

Reviews of the album have been uniformly positive. Blurt reviewed the album, giving it 5 out of 5 stars. [5] Writing for Carolina Orange, Richard Rossi wrote that with this collaboration"...there is more collective genius in the making of this disc than any that’s come along in a very long time." [6] After receiving the album from Closer Records, Joe Whyte opened his review with "Powerpop/garage nobility with quite possibly the who-the-hell-are- they-and why didn’t I know-about-them album re-release of the year!" giving the album a 9 of 10 rating. [7]

Track listing

  1. Now Hear This  – 3:44
  2. Touch & Go – 3:17
  3. She Is Everything – 3:16
  4. Sorry She's Mine  – 2:43
  5. I've Got A Feeling – 3:28
  6. I Can't Remember – 3:30
  7. Feel The Same About You – 3:04
  8. Superman Says – 2:25
  9. Put It Down – 2:19
  10. Tinker Tailor – 3:16
  11. Hey Hey Baby – 2:02
  12. You'll Never Change – 4:15
  13. Messin' Around – 4:31

Personnel

Band members

Additional musicians

Additional personnel

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The Split Squad

The Split Squad is a Rock and Roll band composed of Clem Burke (drums), Michael Giblin (bass/vocals), Josh Kantor (keyboards), Eddie Munoz, and Keith Streng (guitar/vocals). Each member came to the public's attention as a member of another band, e.g., Burke is in Blondie, Giblin founded the Parallax Project, Kantor is in The Baseball Project, Munoz is in The Plimsouls, and Streng is in The Fleshtones. Since many of the members of the band follow baseball, this led Annie Laurent Streng, Keith Streng's former wife, to propose the band's name. The term refers to the practice, during Major League Baseball's Spring training, of teams often playing "split-squad games". This occurs when a team splits into two sub-teams, or squads, and each squad plays a game against another team on the same day. In addition to touring on both coasts, Canada, and Europe, the band's debut album, Now Hear This... was available for sale at shows in late 2013, and officially released through the usual online vendors in CD format on January 21, 2014. The album was released on vinyl in time for Record Store Day - April 19, 2014.

<i>Open Your Eyes You Can Fly</i> 1976 album by Flora Purim

Open Your Eyes You Can Fly is the fifth solo studio album by Brazilian jazz singer Flora Purim. It was released in 1976 via Milestone Records. Recording sessions for the album took place at Paramount Recording Studios in Los Angeles, California. The album features contributions from Airto Moreira on percussion and vocals, David Amaro and Egberto Gismonti on guitars, George Duke on keyboards, Hermeto Pascoal on electric piano and flute, Alphonso Johnson and Ron Carter on bass, Robertinho Silva and Leon "Ndugu" Chancler on drums, and Laudir de Oliveira on congas.

References

  1. Knsrex, Scott (January 15, 2014). "Friends Making A Big Righteous Racket, Meet The Split Squad". 53rd and 3rd Magazine. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  2. "Soulful Detroit". April 26, 2007. Retrieved November 2, 2014.
  3. Coates, Corey Ryan (December 2, 2013). "5 Gallon Podcast Episode 185 - Michael Giblin of The Split Squad". Five Gallon Sound. Archived from the original on November 2, 2014. Retrieved September 22, 2014.
  4. "Woolly Mammoth Sound Studios". December 2, 2013. Retrieved November 2, 2014.
  5. Mills, Fred (April 29, 2014). "THE SPLIT SQUAD – Now Hear This…". Blurt Magazine. Retrieved February 7, 2016.
  6. Rossi, Richard (April 1, 2014). "CD Review: The Split Squad – Now Hear This". Power Pop News. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
  7. Whyte, Joe (February 7, 2016). "CD Review: The Split Squad: Now Hear This(Closer)". Louder Than War. Retrieved February 7, 2016.