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Information - Guide to Oxford
The
Animalhouse E.P.
If
this CD was a holiday, it would be Thanksgiving. While the Americans
honour the founders of their great country, we, by purchasing
this, are honouring the men who brought Oxford into the limelight
as one of the most important cities in rock, thanks to the success
of their respective bands and their excellence in the field
of production.
Mark
Gardener and Loz Colbert were in Ride, one of the first Oxford
bands to break into the charts, and certainly the band most
influential in building Oxford up into what it has become today,
paving the way for bands like Supergrass and Radiohead to follow
in their footsteps. Signed to Creation in the early nineties,
the group also included Andy Bell, who recently joined Oasis.
Now Gardener and Colbert have now teamed up with ex-Mystics
vocalist and Supergrass producer Sam Williams along with bassist
Hari T to form The Animalhouse. This, their debut E.P., has
been recorded over the last year and comes at a time when many
feel that the music scene in Oxford is waning and that there
simply aren't any really great bands left. It certainly goes
a long way to silencing such comments.
Opening
track "Animal" snarls and grinds its way along, drum
and bass style beats interspersed with atmospheric keyboard
lines and chunky guitars adding to an intense feeling of menace.
Mark and Sam's growling vocals give it an undeniable urgency.
Imagine Supergrass covering Marilyn Manson and you're not far
off. At just over five and a half minutes, however, it seems
to go round in circles a little and never quite reaches its
destination, but it is easy to imagine a live version being
absolutely blistering.
Second
track "Sodium Glow" is something of a disappointment:
all trip hop drums, scratchy piano and clichˇ chemical-induced
lyrics, it arrives and departs without making any sort of impact.
Closing track "Essence", however, is superb. Beginning
as a quiet, melancholy ballad it gradually builds into one of
the most epic tracks you're ever likely to hear, adding strings
to the already full instrumentation and sending the song skywards.
Although longer than "Animal", it never feels like
it and before you know it, the song's over and you're left gasping
for breath, knowing how much this band is going to do for the
Oxford music scene. Again.
The
Animalhouse play the Zodiac on February 12th.
J.
Swarbrick
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