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Note
To Readers: This Isn’t Your Ordinary
Rock & Roll Band
- Seymour Glass Ready To Change
The Face Of Rock With August 24
Release Of
‘Note To Self’ On 456 Entertainment.
August
5, 2004 - If
you live anywhere outside New
York
City, you’re
probably not familiar with local favorites, Seymour
Glass,
whose dramatic live performance and visual effects have already
earned them a strong local following. But
don’t worry: you soon will be.The
band - Artie Kitchen (vocals), Steve
Pepe
(guitars),
James Federico (bass, piano), and Sal
Guanti (drums)
is
getting ready to bring their eclectic blend of
rock urgency,
haunting vocals and elegance of
textured piano to the masses
with release of their
NOTE TO SELF debut album on Carson
Daly’s 456 Entertainment label on August 24.
With
acclaimed producer Howie Beno (Ministry,
Red Hot Chili Peppers) behind the boards, Seymour Glass delivers
the melodies to rock the radio dial and the poetic words to
stir the soul, but it's the band's innovative marriage of grit
and grace that smashes open the doors of inspiration.As
a whole, NOTE TO
SELF shapes an emotional arc that begins with the
drum-driven aggression of "Hypervent" and closes with the lush
serenity of "Everytime," while the 11 songs in-between offer
their own mix of beauty and brawn.
For
example, "A Drive By" pushes hard on the keys and chords, yet
it isn't afraid to add finer piano accents during the stop-and-start
moments, while "Car Crash" focuses on vocal intensity with
a solid rhythmic backing by Federico and drummer Sal
Guanti. Likewise,
the buzzworthy "Chemicals" puts forth
intimate piano-packed verses that play off the heavier band
moments, while "CPR" employs an eerie mellowness that provides
atmosphere for Kitchen's tortured tale of neighborhood politics. "Abrasion
Uncommon," with its slick tempo twists, belts out unexpected
changes ranging from ethereal background vocals and bitter
lyrics to crashing guitars and a near piano solo. Summing
up the album's duality, "Thorazine" lightens
the tone with acoustic guitars and earthy vocals, yet the music
is betrayed by earnest lyrics about love's endless disappointments. Such
dark themes are prevalent on NOTE TO SELF as they reflect
the singer's notion that expecting the worse leaves no place
to go but up.
"I'm
definitely not a glass half full kind of person," admits Kitchen. "I
go into the studio with the worst attitude in the world and
come out feeling like I was shelled into someone else's body. Writing
music is like a one-sided conversation with people looking
in. For once in
your life, you get to say what you want to say, and no one
can tell you you're wrong."Prior
to Seymour Glass, Kitchen, Pepe and Guanti performed in a hardcore
band, while Federico played drums in an emo group.
Meeting
through friends in the Staten
Island, NY
hardcore scene, the foursome came together in the late ‘90s
with Federico switching to bass and eventually adding piano. After
exploring various influences and ideas, the group set itself
upon its current path around 2000. Sharing
a love for author J.D. Salinger, the group took on the name
Seymour Glass, an allusion to a popular Salinger character
that returns from war a tragic figure. This
literary influence pops up in several of the album tracks and
in the artwork.
Seymour Glass actually became the first signing to
456 Entertainment. For
their debut, the group spent nearly 10 months working with
Howie Beno and traveled to different studios to use specific
pianos for a wider range of sounds. With dedicated focus, the
band diligently worked to fashion their signature style and
tap into a deep emotional vibe.The group’s
13-song entry into the indie rock
world demonstrates the artistic opportunities still available
to those bold enough to seek them. Immediately accessible yet
infinitely deep, NOTE TO SELF is a tastemaker's
classic with potential as limitless as its creative vision.
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