Chiodos
w/ Emery, Scary Kids Scaring Kids, The
Devil Wears Prada
When:
11/4/2007 6:00 PM
Where:
Marquee Theatre
Went with Lane
Sometimes driving directions look overwhelming,
and then you get in your car to use them, and the drive is
smooth through until the end. Just as a song by Chiodos takes
you in many directions, but when its done you never
question how you got there.
The band Chiodos formed in high school,
just outside of Flint, MI. Then known as The Chiodos Bros,
they played the local scene and began writing original music.
In June 2002, they recorded a demo called, The Best Way To
Ruin Your Life, which gave the group a healthy local following.
Choidos (now with a shortened moniker)
has covered plenty of ground since then. Lead singer Craig
Owens bout with pneumonia in 2004 stalled the bands
progress for a brief period of time, but soon after, the band
was ready to join the Equal Vision Records family to release
their new album, Alls Well That Ends Well.
After spending a month recording this
past winter, Alls Well That Ends Well blasts menacingly
at times, and sighs thoughtfully at others. But the various
styles found in Chiodos past songs have become more
defined on the new album. "Everyone [in the band] really
wanted this album to be somewhat more categorized," says
Owens. Chiodos maturity is evident in the dueling guitar
riffs of Theres No Penguins in Alaska; and
the defiant lyrics, take these misunderstandings/and
send them back where they came from/its hard enough
to live life from All Nereids Beware.
Despite the complex range and genre-shifting
within songs on the album, when asked how the album will transcend
live, Owens sums it up by saying, We take pride in sounding
better live [than on the album]. Considering he and
keyboardist Brad Bell grew up together, Owens boasts their
sincere vocal harmonizing doesnt falter under the bright
lights: We dont want to let the kids down.
Chiodos style and layered complexity
have strengthened over time, yet theyve always been
in control of their music. Shortly after their demo release
in 2002, the band used guitarist Pat McManamans bedroom
to self-record, engineer, produce, and master their first
full-length album, The Heartless Control Everything, which
was soon after released on Search and Rescue Records. Although
the album was a raw effort, it did not go unnoticed
fans from hometown state of Michigan and beyond buzzed about
the album, along with praise of the bands live performances.
Once The Heartless... was finished,
the band hit the road for 7 full U.S. tours (including performances
with Yellowcard and Coheed & Cambria), in which time sold
thousands of CDs and gained countless enthusiastic fans and
friends. Alls Well That Ends Well is sure to impress
these die-hards as well as new listeners, with a tighter,
quicker punch than previous efforts.
The bands style only definable
as a melting pot band influences include Saves The
Day, Queen, and At The Drive In a song could begin
with electronic beats behind piano, ease into metal guitar
riffs, then speed into a poppy melodic vocal line that leaves
you humming. Lead singer Craig Owens says, We dont
want to feel pressured into a single genre
we have a
rule to stay away from verse-chorus-verse songwriting.
From a band who named itself after
an obscure term used in 80s horror movies, Chiodos
Alls Well That Ends Well, is more tangible than their
previous releases, which will ignite interest from metalheads,
pop-punkers, and curious music fans in general. Chiodos has
created an album that defies generic song structure
yet continues along on its signatory song-map, where no one
gets lost and everyone ends up in the right place.
Band description courtesy of Luckymanonline.com
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