Tuesday, October 02, 2007

The 1900s - Cold and Kind


Download: The 1900s - "Georgia"

The 1900s
Cold and Kind (Parasol, 2007)
Grade: A

Love may be a many splendored thing, and expressing the complications that can arise from being in love can be even more splendored. But that doesn't mean that expressing those emotions is an easy task to accomplish. So judging by the first notes of mournful piano that announce "No Delay" and the opening line "Too afraid to be alone/too afraid to leave my home", one can assume that there's a deep well of melancholia at the source of Cold And Kind, the debut album of The 1900s. But, as with all dark moments, the moments of light eventually appear at the end of the tunnel.

Cold And Kind is filled with songs that capture that dynamic expertly. Though there is a mournful quality that permeates the album, the music is as pure and as bright as a sunrise in 1970s California. Cold and Kind bristles with the kind of pop music that should satisfy fans of Belle and Sebastian and Fleetwood Mac. So songs like “Acutiplantar Dude,” which addresses, in part, what happens when death hits close to home, features cowbell, beautifully sad multi-part harmonies and a buoyant refrain.

Other songs, like "Cold and Kind" and "The Medium Way" shimmer and shine with an carefree, yet staunchy disciplined, sense of melodiousness. The 60s garage-rock foundation laid down by the Chicago septet's first EP, Plume Delivery, has been expanded and elaborated upon. But by sharpening their melodic prowess on tracks like "Georgia" and "Two Ways", The 1900s prove that you can fulfill your melodic potential and satisfy your ambitions without getting pretentious or indulgent. Cold and Kind is exactly 40 minutes of pop perfection and I haven't been able to stop listening to it since I bought it at Lollapolooza. This is one of the best albums of the year.

(Jonathan Graef)

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

The 1900s: Cool, Confident and in Control


Download: The 1900s - "Two Ways" (Via Stereogum)
Download: The 1900s - "When I Say Go"

During the recording of their debut LP Cold and Kind, the 1900s endured some serious mishaps. These included, but were not limited to, lost sessions, multiple recordings and re-recordings, and illness. But right now, the 1900s are nothing if not cool, confident and in control of their musical destiny.

"I really wasn’t sure if (the album) was good or not,” singer-guitarist Edward Anderson tells me as he leans forward in his chair in the VIP lounge for the Hideout Block Party. “But it seems to be getting a positive response. We’re taking a sigh of relief right now, like 'Alright, it wasn’t a disaster.'"

Drama has followed the 1900s everywhere they go, even before they went anywhere. The band’s brief history goes like this: high school friends Anderson, Tim Minnick (drums), and Mike Jasinski (keyboardist/guitarist) reunited in Chicago after college to form a band. They recruited bassist Charlie Ransford and violinist Andra Kulans. More importantly, singers Jeanine O’Toole and Caroline Donavon (who’d been singing together since high school) were also recruited.

A few weeks later, Donavon started dating Anderson and O’Toole starting dating Ransford. The latter couple broke up. Despite high tensions, the groups recorded an EP, Plume Delivery, before a live show was even played. At the first show the group played together, Parasol Records owner Geoff Merritt offered them a record deal. The band began touring and built a strong fanbase.

Which brings us back to Cold and Kind. It's a veritable melting pot of classic musical genres that range from Roy Harper-influenced folk-rock, to Belle and Sebastian-style chamber pop to the orchestral psychedelia of the ‘60s and ‘70s. What’s great about both band and album is that the music is done so in a way that is neither derivative nor ironic. It’s contemporary and retro, without the negative connotations of either. The music on Cold and Kind is accessible, but also ambitious in its orchestrations, and experimental in its lyrical content. For example, Cold and Kind’s atmospheric “Supernatural” and album opener “No Delay” comprise a fictional love story about the way that love can humanize us after traumatic events.

The group is also quite adept at combining Velvet Underground-style white noise in the context of a 3 minute pop song, as they do on first single “When I Say Go”.

“If we can bring those things together into a song and combine them, I think then that the song is better for it.” Minnick explains. “I think we want to experiment and flesh things out like that.”

"We all wanted to do a really vintage kind of record” Jasinski explains. “A lot of that inspiration really meshed well with our producer’s [Grame Gibson] style. In his downtime, he had Staples Singers playing and all of this old-school Motown stuff. We just knew that it was the right choice."

However, this being the 1900s, life-changing drama was inevitable, no matter how well-matched producer and group were. While the band was recording the album, a close friend of the band's died. Though Cold and Kind has a mournful feeling which permeates it, the album is not an eulogy.

"I wouldn’t say that (the friend's death) influenced the whole record or anything like that" Anderson states. "We make our music and I write songs that might be influenced by something that happens, but I just do it anyway."

Doing it, though, is a long, ambitious process. Before bringing a song to the band to arrange, Anderson will record one demo on his cell phone, then a second and third one using software such as Garage Band and Pro-Tools. Once the band has played and arranged the song, they’ll do a group demo of it. And then the recording starts.

Sometimes, though, the process is much more spontaneous, with jamming and rehearsals being the catalyst for songs. One might think that having so many people in a band where the songwriting process is elaborate would result in there being too many cooks in the kitchen. Not so, says Jasinski.

"I think a big part of having so many people involved is that you’ve got to give space to everyone…it takes a lot of stepping back and a lot of scaling any sort of your own ambitions to make a harmonious effort out of it."

Most of the harmonic joy in the 1900s music comes out when the band plays live. This may be due to an unsuspecting influence on the band’s sound: musical theater.

“That’s where I started singing” Donavon says. “I think that when we do shows, Jeanine and I get into it. We feel like we perform and that we just don’t stand on stage and deliver a song. We try to put on a show so that it’s something interesting to look at."

And the 1900s do put on a terrific show, filled with a vivacious energy that gives the recorded material even more punch. The band has fun, which they should be doing. Fun, it seems, is the glue that holds the 1900s together. When asked about what advice they’d give a band who is going through the Fleetwood Mac-style romantic hurdles that they did, Kulans replies, “You might fight a lot, but every time you get on stage it’s a lot of fun.”

Anderson elaborates: “You realize that you play music that’s supposed be fun and when it stops being fun…there’s complications and you have to work it out.” He pauses and then laughs: “Git-R-Done, man.”

Based on the rapturous response that Cold and Kind is getting from press and blogs alike, I’d say that they already have.

The 1900s open for Oakley Hall on Friday, Sept. 28th, at the 7th Street Entry. Show is 21+ and doors open at 8. Buy tickets here

MySpace Page

(Jonathan Graef)

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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

The 1900s Stream Another Cold And Kind Track, Announce Record Release Show



Download: The 1900s - "Georgia"

Do yourselves a favor and head over to The 1900s website and stream another harmonious, fantastically poppy, track from the septet's upcoming LP Cold And Kind. The track is called "Acutiplantar Dude" and you can listen to it here. There's no dictionary entry for Acutiplantar but the word Plantar, by itself, means "of, or pertaining to, the small of the foot" (e.g., a plantar wart) and acuti has to be similar to acute so...small wart, dude? Perhaps 1900s band member Nurse Murph can shed some lyrical light here?

ANYWAY, you can try to figure out what the song means by clicking on the media player at the band's website. That is, if you're not too busy submersing yourself in jingle-jangle bliss.

In other band news, the group announced a record release party at Chicago's Empty Bottle on Oct. 12th. The show starts at9:00 p.m. Buy tickets for that event here.

MySpace Page

(Jonathan Graef)

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Drink City Water With The 1900s



- Taken Down At The Request Of Management

Until the release of their excellent Cold and Kind on Oct. 2nd, The 1900s are adding one new track a week from the album on their website for you to stream. Last week, it was the transcendent title track. This week, it's the AM Country radio ballad (as written by The Velvet Underground) "City Water." The track (along with four others) is for streaming at the band's website or you can take a listen for yourself at the top of this post.

You Minneapolis folk will be able to catch The 1900s for yourselves on Sept. 28th, when the band comes to the 7th Street Entry. The show starts at 9:00 p.m.

Buy Cold And Kind here

MySpace Page

(Jonathan Graef)

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

An Insight Into The Murderous Minds of The 1900s



(The 1900s)

Download: Taken Down At The Request Of Management

As you may know, Chicago-based chamber pop group The 1900s is releasing their first full-length album, an LP titled Cold And Kind on Parasol Records. Every week until the album's October 2nd release, the band is posting a track on the group's website. This week, the band has posted the title track, which is by far the best track on the record. The harmonies during the chorus are pitch-perfect and the rest of the song is a perfect nugget of AM radio pop, which contrasts nicely against the morbid nature of some of the lyrics.

Stream the track here and at the top of this post.

MySpace Page

Buy Cold And Kind here

Update! The band just made it on Sterogum's "Band To Watch." Read more here.

(Jonathan Graef)

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

The 1900s Revel Themselves To Be "Cold And Kind"



Download: The 1900s - "Bring The Good Boys Home"
Download: The 1900s - "When I Say Go"

Chicago-based psychedelic-pop band The 1900s (who just played Lollapalooza this past Sunday) will release their first full-length album on October 2nd. The set, which is titled Cold and Kind, will be distributed on Parasol Records. It's the band's first release since their debut EP Plume Delivery.

Each week until Cold And Kind's release, the septet will debut a new track via their redesigned website. The first track to be debuted on the site is titled "No Delay" which is streaming beside the previously released Kind track "When I Say Go."

Live, the band doesn't have too many dates forthcoming, save for the Hideout Block Party on Sept. 7th and a University of Wisconsin-Madson date on the next day. But expect more dates soon - if Cold and Kind has one song even half as good as "Bring The Good Boys Home" on it, then expect strong demand for the band.

Stream "No Delay" here.

Update: The band just added a new mp3 stream to their website, for a track called "Georgia."

(Jonathan Graef)

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