The Airborne Toxic Event! THE AIRBORNE TOXIC EVENT: 2009’s Best album is here!!! First full-length album from Californian five-piece Airborne Toxic Event. This self-titled effort contains powerful, well-crafted guitar music that is reinforced by surging strings and emotive, thought provoking lyrics. Single ‘Sometime Around Midnight’ is as triumphant as it is an outcry from a band demanding to be heard. An outstanding debut record. This UK version contains three exclusive UK tracks. I don’t buy albums, I get them sent to me for nothing, but I recently heard a track playing in my local record store, so I asked the chap behind the counter who it was, he said ‘The Airborne Toxic Event’ he said the rest of the album was just as good, he left it play while I browsed the racks, by the end of the CD I just said ‘How Much?’ I gave the cash, he bagged the record, once I got back home I played it three times back to back, it’s become my favourite record of the year so far, with lead track ‘Sometime Around Midnight’ being played at my club dj sets and on my radio shows, Similar thing happened last year with Band Of Horses, and Nothing removed it from my ‘Album Of The Year’ position, I feel that may be the same at the end of 2009 with The Airborne Toxic Event. Three Words: Just buy it… 5/5 Jj: Shakenstir. www.myspace.com/theairbornetoxicevent The Silver Lake-based five-piece was formed in 2006 by singer Mikel Jollett and drummer Daren Taylor, who were soon joined by bassist Noah Harmon, keyboardist and classically trained violinist Anna Bulbrook, and guitarist Steven Chen. Fan interest in the band reached a new level when Los Angeles rock stations KROQ and Indie 103.1 both added the song “Sometime Around Midnight” to their rotation after catching Airborne’s dynamic live show. “Sometime Around Midnight” rose to the top spot on national tastemaker KROQ’s most requested list, and remained in the top 10 most requested for nearly three months. Airborne’s decision to sign with Majordomo came out of a desire to take a new and innovative path, as bands such as Radiohead have done. Having come so far on their own as an unsigned band, and with a finished self-made record already in hand, they decided to forego a traditional major-label or indie-label deal – despite being courted by countless major labels – and chose instead to work in a collaborative fashion with a team of indie and major-label refugees that could take them to the next level. The band made an informed decision to team up with Majordomo in order to take advantage of the label’s unique combination of an indie’s dedication and perseverance with a major label’s resources, including distribution via Sony BMG. A buzz band in the truest sense, Airborne have become the darlings of local radio and press and fixtures on the Silver Lake music scene, garnering comparisons to everyone from Modest Mouse and The Arcade Fire, to the Clash and U2. With songs that feature unforgettable hooks, and what the Los Angeles Times referred to as “poetry you can dance to,” their now legendary five-week residency at Silver Lake’s Club Spaceland culminated with a sold-out show in which nearly a thousand people showed up to the tiny club. When the Airborne Toxic Event took the stage at Spaceland in Silver Lake on January 31st of this year, the 400-capacity venue was a madhouse. In the entryway, patrons squeezed in and pled their cases to the door girl. Another 400 people queued impatiently along the sidewalk outside, forming a massive line that snaked down Silver Lake Boulevard, surrounding the venue on all sides It was the final night of the band’s five-week residency at the legendary Eastside venue, and all that month, when they weren’t rehearsing or performing, they were busy self-recording their first full-length album in a studio in Eagle Rock. A week earlier, one of the songs on that album, the heartbreaking “Sometime Around Midnight,” was unexpectedly added into regular rotation by KROQ, the biggest rock radio station in the world. The highly respected Indie 103.1 would follow suit the next day. The band had no label, no manager, no publicist, and no radio promoter. In fact, both stations were spinning an unmastered mp3 of the track, barely three weeks after it left the studio. How did this happen? How did an unsigned band, scarcely one year after its formation, with no representation, no marketing and no press, become the object of such an enormous popular outcry? Two years earlier, Mikel Jollett was a writer feverishly working on his first novel when he experienced the worst week of his life. In a span of seven days, his mother was diagnosed with cancer, he in turn was diagnosed with a genetic autoimmune disease, he and his long-term girlfriend broke up, and after camping out in the hospital for several days for his mother’s surgery, he came down with pneumonia “Something in me snapped,” Jollett says. “Like, I literally just lost my mind and didn’t care about anything. Except music.” Emerging from a month-long haze (in which he also went through nicotine withdrawal, quitting cold-turkey a two-pack-a-day habit the morning his mother was diagnosed), the former journalist-turned-fiction writer suddenly found himself with a madcap desire to do nothing but write music. Which is what he did, alone in his apartment, every day for the next year. Though he continued to write prose (a section of his novel is excerpted as a story in the June 2008 McSweeney’s), at some point he realized that he was writing a record instead of a book, so he set out to recruit a band. Daren Taylor had recently moved back to Los Angeles from Fresno and was looking for something to do. The 26-year-old former punk rock drummer met Jollett through a friend, and after briefly quizzing one another on rock trivia and playing some songs together, the two promptly decided to start a band. They locked themselves in a small room in a warehouse in downtown L.A. for the next four months, working out beats and breaks, screaming into microphones, stomping and drinking. Months went by, during which the two flirted with the idea of becoming a two-piece. Then they met Noah Harmon. Also a former punk rock acolyte, Harmon had recently earned a degree in jazz double bass from the prestigious California Institute of the Arts. He taught music to kids in East L.A. and was the rare melding of punk, jazz and baroque—somewhere between Brahms, Charlie Parker, and the Misfits. Jollett asked him one day if he could play electric bass. He could, in fact. Anna Bulbrook was next. A classically trained violinist from Boston, she met Jollett at a taco stand at two in the morning one night. He asked her if she could play a few viola parts for his band. An extremely versatile musician who had spent 10 of her 23 years playing in symphonies, it was discovered on a whim one night, that she could also sing and play piano. Finally, Steven Chen, who knew Jollett from halcyon days in San Francisco, was asked to come by the warehouse one afternoon and play something on the keyboard. He insisted instead on guitar. After escaping to Tokyo for a few weeks, he returned to Los Angeles to join the band fulltime. Influenced by the postmodern writer Don DeLillo’s novel White Noise, the band took its name from a section of that book in which the main character is exposed to an enormous chemical explosion—dubbed “the Airborne Toxic Event” and is forced to confront his fear of death. Some bands grind it out for years before they find a following and then some bands are seemingly big from the start. When the Airborne Toxic Event arrived at the Echo in Echo Park to play their first show, they were greeted by a crowd of more than 200 people. They had sent scratch recordings to the local blogs before their first show and the local blog press took to it immediately, lauding the band for its odd mix of intense, literary songwriting, angular guitar riffs and powerhouse rhythm section. What followed was a year of steady ascent: bigger and bigger shows, trips up and down the West Coat to Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, San Diego, two trips to New York, a trip to the UK. The national blog press began to take notice of their debut self-released EP, Rolling Stone named them one of the top 25 bands on MySpace, The Los Angeles Times, in its year end wrap-up, called them the band to watch in 2008 (an honor which, in its previous two years, had gone to Cold War Kids and the Silversun Pickups) Page: 1 2 |
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