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Chris Parker · 24 Sep 2009, 3:20 PM
Joe Taylor (left) and Adam Brinson are Blag'ard
Blag’ard has delayed the release of its second LP, tentatively titled Mach II, to the beginning of next year. Guitarist Joe Taylor now plans to accompany its release by unshelving the long lost Capsize 7 album he recorded with the old alt-rock act in the mid ‘90s before they were dropped from Caroline Records. Fusing the jagged angular spirit of Polvo with Achers of Loaf’s hooks, Capsize 7 was one of the Triangle’s most underappreciated coulda-beens. He brings a similar bristling sound to his new outfit, fueled by drummer Adam Brinson’s sizzling kit work. We spoke to Taylor about the forthcoming releases.
INDEPENDENT WEEKLY: So what’s up with the new Blag’ard recording?
JOE TAYLOR: The Blag’ard record was pushed back to an unforeseen medical situation in my family, which basically meant I had to derail my life for about a half a year. I got back on track with getting my shit together. We are going to record the record starting in October. We’re going to record with Nick Peterson and start tracking on the 6th—coincidently, the day after my birthday. So it’s a nice birthday present for me, and then we’re doing it on one-inch reel-to-reel. I hadn’t recorded with audio tape in a long time, so I’m psyched to be working with Nick and going down on reel-to-reel. We’re going to do 10 songs, and because of the fact that Fall crept around and we hadn’t recorded the record in September or August, we said, “Putting a record out in November doesn’t make any sense, so let’s just wait.” So it’s going to come out in January.
How old will you be?
38.
Where are you recording?
Nick’s tape machine is currently not operating, so we’re subcontracting through a buddy of his, and we’re going to record out of this guy’s place in Raleigh on his tape machine. Nick’s going to engineer it.
What’s the reason for putting it to tape?
I recorded with my old band, Capsize 7, in the ’90 on audio tape, and I like the way it sounds. It’s more performance-oriented from the musician’s standpoint. You have to do better when you’re tracking because it’s not as easy to edit with audiotape. With digital, you can pinpoint a micro-section down. Also, because with the loud amplifier, the way that goes down onto the tape it adds a nice a nice effect the way a loud sound will bounce onto audio tape and hit it hard and cause a little bit of distortion. It gives it a different feel.
We recorded with Nick for our last record, and that was all Pro-Tools. I’m happy with that record, but I wanted to try something different and see what would work the best to give it a different flavor. I was concerned because if we were using the same engineer and basically all the same equipment, we’d get a very similar sounding record. And there’s not a problem with that, it’s just that I wanted to put out something new and different.
When were the songs written?
We have been playing them out live for the past 7 to 8 months. Basically, we’ve just been writing the record and playing it live since February. There are one or two songs that predate Bobcat. They’re just reworked by me and Adam to have our take on it, versus what they were originally. The one difference between this record and the last record is me and Adam have matured as a songwriting team. An idea gets more analysis and evolves more during the writing process than it used to. An old idea run through that machine sounds different. So putting a couple old songs out, I’m cool with that.
Tell me about the Capsize 7 lost album.
Capsize 7 was together from 1991 to 1997, basically. We broke up like October ’96. We were on Caroline Records and released one full-length record with them, and they picked up the option to release our second album and give us the money for it. So we went out to California and recorded that album with Mark Trombino, who went on to record Blink-182. He was the drummer for Drive Like Jehu. We recorded that album on 2-inch audio tape in a great studio, and we had the record done. After the record was finished, Caroline dropped us. But they gave us the rights to the record when they dropped us.
That was awfully cool of them.
I don’t know how it worked out that way, but [Local 506 owner] Glenn Boothe, who was our A&R guy, he somehow finagled that. So we had the rights, but because the band broke up and because of the fact that I basically lost my shit, I couldn’t get it together enough to find new members to do the band. It just sat in the can for like 13-14 years, and then it just seemed like now is the time to do it. I called the guy up and had him ship me the tapes, and they were just bounced down to Pro-Tools. Nick is going to help me mix down the songs that weren’t mixed down, and we’re going to finish it up and put it out. It’s a 13 song album, and I’m putting it out on a limited number of CDs because I don’t know what that format is good for besides press and radio. And it’s going to be available as a download from my music site, pigzenspace.com.
I’m not trying to recreate or jumpstart Capsize 7. I just wanted to get this record out because I think it’s a good record, it would be silly not to put it out and, selfishly, I want it to shine on my new project. The Capsize 7 album is going to be called Horsefly and the Blag’ard album is going to be called Mach II.
Blag’ard plays Nightlight tonight Thursday, Sept. 24. The $5 show starts at 9:30 p.m.
Accident prone
1 OCT 2008
• by Brian Howe


Gone fishin': Blag'ard is
Joe Taylor (left) and Adam Brinson
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Blag'ard's
injuries have been numerous and fancifully acquired. The Chapel Hill
duo of singer/ guitarist Joe Taylor, 36, and drummer Adam Brinson, 26,
seems destined for near-misses and closeness-to-catastrophe. Lucky for
us, that spirit of physical abandon translates to the band's tightly
wound, super-energetic rock music. As it's been said, play what you
know.
Brinson, for instance, got hit by car in July. "A friend
of mine
was on one side of the street and I was on the other side," he
remembers. "He was crossing over to my side, and just to mess with him,
I started crossing over to his side. I was watching him instead of
traffic, and I got hit by an F-150. It threw me 20 feet through the
air. I didn't hit my head or anything, but my knee swelled up real
big." The same knee already sports a gnarly bite scar, courtesy one of
Brinson's four dogs.
"It was like a Hitchcock movie," Taylor says. "I was at
home washing
dishes, and I dropped a plate. Just as it broke in half, the phone
rang. It was Adam, telling me he'd just been hit by a car."
Brinson and Taylor make a striking pair: Sitting on a
bench outside
of the Chelsea movie theater, Brinson bears a beatific Californian
look, with long blonde hair and a beard, although he's lived in North
Carolina his entire life. Taylor is tall and imposing, with piercing
eyes hidden under prominent brows and a distinctive grunge-era
haircut—long on top, shaved almost bald around the sides and back.
Today, he has some fresh-looking stitches on his left
forefinger. A
sledgehammer accident, of course: "I could see the tendon in there,"
says Taylor, "which allows the finger to extend. If I'd nailed that
tendon my guitar playing days would've been done." The scar on his
finger will become part of Taylor's physical record of crashes and
scrapes, just like the older one under his chin. He explains that one
best.
"A bar where I was working was having a private party.
This guy got
mad at me because his girlfriend was being argumentative, and I told
them to get out. I was a little rude, not professional. So he came
around the bar at me, swinging wildly like Captain Caveman. I'd taken
like half a year of jujitsu, so I spun him around and pinned him on the
ground. But I didn't pin down his head with my forearm like I should
have. I just had his arms pinned down to his sides and was looking down
into his face, and I said, 'How do you like me now?' That's when he bit
me on the chin."
Chaotic mischief, close
calls and
good stories drawn from weird mundanity: This is what Blag'ard is all
about. The shenanigans are apparent on Bobcat, the band's jumpy
yet highly melodic debut LP, which profits from Brinson's kinetic
drumming and Taylor's highly recognizable guitar style, at once lyrical
and neurotic. His melodic lines skitter into queasy string-bends; for a
vocal equivalent, imagine someone singing a sprightly melody but
vomiting at the end of each line.
"If you know Joe and have a feeling for his personality,
his guitar
playing makes sense," says Brinson. "You get the sense listening to it
that this isn't your ordinary person. I mean, look at his haircut."
Brinson's post-punky rolls and weird fills are a sure
fit for that anxious guitar style. On Blag'ard's debut EP, Blank
Faced Clocks, drummer Bill Buckley provided a steady, classic
rock-influenced backbeat. This pairing works better.
Taylor came to Brinson because of a common problem for
musicians in
their 30s: "When I moved back to N.C.," Taylor says, "I was playing
with a three-piece, and the guys I was playing with each got their
significant others pregnant, and quit." When Taylor recruited Brinson,
he told him, "You're going to get your girlfriend pregnant."
And that's exactly what happened. Brinson, now married,
is the proud
father of three-month-old Buck. But it's another near-miss, as Taylor's
sticking with the band. They simply practice during the day, agreeing
that one reason for keeping Blag'ard a two-piece is not having too many
schedules to coordinate.
Taylor knows a thing or two about another sort of
near-miss, too:
During the Chapel Hill indie rock boom of the early-to-mid-90s, which
vaulted bands such as Superchunk and Archers of Loaf to semi-fame,
Taylor fronted Capsize 7, which was signed (and subsequently dropped)
by major label Caroline. Taylor became understandably disillusioned
with the record industry.
"We had our share of brushes with big labels back in the
Capsize
days," he explains, "and when I was playing with Lystra in L.A., I got
a few phone calls like, 'You guys are great; you're going to be the
next whatever.' They make you feel great for a couple weeks, and then
you feel like crap because they've raised your expectations and nothing
comes of it."
So Taylor started Pig Zen Space, a burgeoning label
through which he
has self-released both Blag'ard recordings and some Capsize 7
seven-inches, and where he eventually hopes to release the "lost"
Capsize album, which they recorded after being dropped from Caroline.
The label's online component (www.pigzenspace.com)
will offer high-quality downloads of that music for a reasonable price:
"I am no longer waiting for [Mr.] Mxyzptlk [a D.C. Comics trickster
character] to pop out of thin air and sign me."
Blag'ard's
unusual name comes from the phrase "Black Guard," which Taylor
discovered while reading a series of books on the British Navy's role
in the Napoleonic Wars. "One thing they would say as an insult,"
explains Taylor, "is, 'That was really blag'ardly.'" Such obscure
details, drawn from life, inform Taylor's lyrics as well. While many of
the songs on Bobcat focus on the usual stuff—emotional states,
romance and so on—a few stand out for their curious subject matter and
their strong sense of the local. "30 Flavors" laments Chapel Hill's
changing socioeconomic environment. "R.E.M. Song" deals with a secret
(and ultimately nonexistent) R.E.M. show that was rumored to be
happening at the Cat's Cradle back when it was still on Franklin
Street. It's an outsized metaphor for thwarted expectations and a
pseudo-mythical Chapel Hill indie rock past.
Appropriately, Bobcat's cover ties these aspects
of Blag'ard
together—physical pain, failed expectations, humor and a little
craziness. As Taylor and Brinson practice, a skinny woman in a bobcat
suit crouches in front of the drums, staring at the camera. Taylor came
back to Chapel Hill from Los Angeles to celebrate the birth of his
niece, Olwen, four years ago. He was planning on returning to L.A., but
an area front porch was having none of it.
"I got really drunk one night, and I was lying on a
porch railing. I
dared myself to roll off the railing, which was about eight feet up in
the air. ... I rolled off and broke my ankle, which facilitated me
moving back from L.A. because I couldn't work. So thank you, Olwen, for
giving me that gift," he remembers. "Then, she learned the words
'vomit' and 'bobcat' in the same week, and would get them switched
around. So she would talk about the dog vomiting by saying, 'Freddy got
bobcat all over Maevy's shoes,' or 'Maevy slipped in the bobcat.' I
just thought that was funny, and that's where the title of the album
came from."
Here you have to pause and be thankful that Taylor
didn't choose Olwen's other
new word as his record's motif. One can only imagine what the model for
that photo shoot would've had to endure. Well, it'd make for one
helluva Blag'ard story, at least.
Blag'ard plays Local 506 Thursday, Oct. 2, with
Detroit's Child Bite. The 9:30 p.m. show is free.
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Reviews:
Bla'gard - Bobcat
Some
people hailed The Loon by Tapes N Tapes as a
near masterpiece because it put some balls back into indie music. The
genre is
home to plenty of groups who seem afraid of their amplifiers, such as
Death Cab
for Cutie and Bright Eyes, and that's exactly why groups like Blag'ard
need to
exist. Heavily influenced by Polvo's Today's Active Lifestyles
(Bias
alert! – That's one of the best CD's of the 90's!), Blag'ard blend
elements of
noise and whammy freakouts with straight forward, punkish indie rock.
If
nothing else, the best way to sum up Bobcat is with the word
'fascinating'.
"Bachelor Party" is a pretty
good example of a Blag'ard song: the
chorus chords could totally have been swiped from The Toadies, and the
verse is
entirely based around natural harmonics. There's one guitar and a
drumset, but
the sound never comes off hollow because of the noisy execution. The
song goes out
on a noisy 30 seconds of cymbal-filled crescendo—peak, and then the
next song's
bizarre guitar lines begin. Each song functions on its weirdness as
much as its
groove, and because of that each song pretty much rules.
My main complaint about
Blag'ard is that their vocals always seem kind of
just tossed on last minute, and that's because the two band members
sing
themselves. I understand the logic of not wanting to hire a third
member since
you already did everything yourselves, but the group would really have
benefited from an enthusiastic frontman. As it is, songs are weighed
down by
what sounds like a really really bored version of Green Day's Billy Joe
Armstrong. However, with each listen the vocals became less and less
important
to me since the drums and guitar are like nothing else out there right
now. You
just have to get used to the fact that the singing isn't meant to be
the focal
point of the music and then it's all good.
There's something really
exciting about the two man approach, though.
There's no hassle or anything, two guys just walk into a room and
record some
jams. There should be minimal artistic differences and not too much
battling
for the spotlight, and (I have a point, I swear) the music should sound
just
really direct because of all that. The White Stripes totally sounded
like
exactly what must be going on in Jack White's head, and Death From
Above 1979
are something incredible in terms of precision. Right along those lines
of
logic stand Blag'ard, and the public eye doesn't turn on these guys
right away
then I've lost all faith in the concept of 'buzz'.
For Fans
Of: Polvo, Sonic Youth
Don't Believe Me?
http://www.blagard.com
~by Eric
Loranger, antiMusic
www.antimusic.com
Bla'gard - Bobcat
We at Morkleson have had
the pleasure of
receiving numerous albums via mail in the past week or so. I may be
chastised
for stating as much, but I have not interacted with music in any non
digital
form with much frequency in…years? Blag’ard’s Bobcat
alum was the first one I received and, well, owe it to the novelty of a
small
physical representation of their music or some tactile fascination I
experienced handling the small piece of plastic, but I quite enjoy the
album.
Admittedly, my bias was skewed in a negative direction after reading
the first
few lines of their “bio,” mentioning their “hollywood” handsomeness,
but the
music itself was enough to swing me back the other way. Blag’ard
is a two-piece from Chapel Hill, NC that plays honest, hooky, raw indie-rock
songs. Their
crunchy, lo-fi production style and winding song structure takes me
back to the
indie rock golden days when bands like the Treepeople were still out
there
killing it- relying more on emotion, grit, and strong song writing to
propel
the listener rather than heavily layered songs, walls of sound, or
playfully
quirky keys and xylophones. (Not that I’ve got beef with any of those).
It’s
refreshing to hear something erring on the side of the under-cooked,
which is
the same quality that draws me to bands like The Contra and Jay
Reatard. Enjoy a few tracks
from Blag’ard. If you
crave more, you can head to their myspace page or to
www.pigzenspace.com, where
you can download the entire album.
~Morkleson
http://morkleson.net/
Bla'gard - Bobcat
Top marks
for bravado go to North Carolina
duo Blag’ard who are described as “Hollywood
handsome” and drummer Adam even has a great personality, to boot. Their
music
is a far more brutal beast, however, made up of crunchy lo-fi riffs and
punk
vocals. Nevertheless I found their first EP ‘Blank Faced Clocks’
endearing
thanks to the no-nonsense focus on hook-laden songs. Can ‘Bobcat’ their
first
long player continue that trend?
In short,
Adam and Joe can continue the trend. There’s no subtlety
here just a set of short, incisive songs kicking off with an ode to Yul
Brynner. There’s clever melodic twists abound; ‘Shame’ managing to work
a chorus
around the word “surgery” whilst ‘Dogskin’ and anthemic
centrepiece ’Bachelor Party’ successfully bridge the gap between
Placebo
and old-school grunge. However, by the end of the record I did begin to
tire of
the formula; as the duo struggle to replicate their EP form
consistently over
the course of a full album. Having said that, penultimate song ‘Kick
Out Queen’
features some excellent, urgent riffage.
Certainly
the simplicity of the music means there’s no time for
introspection, solos or even space to breath but Adam and Joe work
the
best out of an apparently limited setup of vocals, guitar and drums. So
for
those who like their music raw and uncomplicated, ‘Bobcat’ comes highly
recommended.
~The Weblog of
Leonards Lair
http://leonardslair.wordpress.com/
Bla'gard - Bobcat
Both Taylor and Brinson sing here but neither are particularly good at it.
Up the Downstair
By Palmer
Bla'gard - Bobcat
...the girl in the cat-ish costume on the front and back gave me the heebie-jeebies...
By Nate Williams Friday March 13, 2009
Independent Clauses
Blag'ard
- Blank Faced Clocks EP
It's hard to make a rock band with
just two band
members but Joe Taylor and Adam Brinson make
quite a racket with this solid EP of brittle indie rock.
'Monk' occupies the territory between Pavement's
guitars and Queens Of The Stone Age's moody
vocals and on 'Peaches And Cream', Brinson
squeals like Placebo's Brian Molko yet the
music backdrop is deliberately lo-fi and brittle.
'Losty' is the duo at their best as a catchy
chorus dominates whilst the riff is perfectly
suited to alternative radio play. By comparison,
'Friends Like You' is a decent song slightly
tarnished by some over-reaching vocals and
finally the distinctly slower 'Jenny G' is all
sinister slow-building dynamics; consequently
revealing more depth to their oeuvre. Granted,
Blag'ard's rough-hewn approach won't endear
them to everyone but their visceral, dynamic
music can be surprisingly infectious.
~Leonard's Lair
www.leonardslair.co.uk
Bla'gard - Black faced clocks
Ex-Capsize 7 member Joe Taylor is making his own
music now. Although he receives some assistance
from drummer Bill Buckley on the EP, Taylor is the
heart and brains responsible for Blag’ard. Under this
premise, the one man band’s "Blank Faced Clocks" EP
is a heavy guitar-driven recording that remains edgy
and raw by way of its lack of polish and spontaneity.
Taylor puts an unconventional spin on the EP that
works, creating catchy and unpredictable songs with
lively riffs.
Sounds Like: Loose, raw guitar
rock
Key Tracks: "Monk"
~PlugInMusic.com
Bla'gard - Black faced clocks
This is octave heavy, mid-nineties rock and the
artwork couldn't be more fitting. Straight out of
Chapel Hill, Bla'gard don't play wistful alt-country
or generic college rock, which the town became
a hot bed for thanks to Merge records and Superchunk.
Somewhere between Helmet, Bluetip and Weezer,
these boys appear to be having a lot of fun with
the two man band, guitar and drums set up.
Sat at my desk at work today 'Black Faced Clocks'
sounds awfully refreshing, when 10 years or so ago
it wouldn't have. This says more about the safe
fumblings of every modern rock band with an eye
on the prize since the Strokes, than about the
band’s concept. British band Distopia are probably
doing a lot more for this (presently rather ropey)
genre of Pavement fans with loud Gibson Guitars
and psycho grins. On the other hand, 'Losty' is
perhaps the most ostentatious lo-fi indie rock
song since Urusei Yatsura called it a day.
~“Survivors”, Orlando
Goodall
Blag’ard – “Blank Faced Clocks’ (Pigs Zen Pace)
Blag’ard
are raconteurs of reductionist rock, although
employing just a single guitar and drums, Guitarist
Joe Taylor and drummer Adam Brinson, project a
fuller sound than many of the skinny legged, mop
headed indie kid bands to whose audiences they
will undoubtedly appeal.
I am a supporter of ‘less is more’; I’d have a band
with just drummers if left to my own devices, so I am
attracted to this minimal set up.
This five song EP peaks at track three ‘Peaches In Cream’,
with one of the most inventive guitar riffs I’ve heard for
a while, strings like slack elastic bands distort and stagger
the tempo
while the drums syncopate stutteringly behind
a oddly asexual vocal.
There are similarities between Joe Taylor’s voice and
Brian Molko of Placebo, but less whiney and with only
half the mascara.
This band seem to have concentrated their activities close to
their Chapel Hill, NC, USA home but should they come this
way they would find a ready audience for their brand
of guitar based lo-fi rock. I’d check them out if they ever
come near to my country retreat.
-Dee
Generate celebrity reviewer for Trakmarx
www.trakmarx.com
BLAG'ARD "Blank
Faced Clocks"
CD Unusually when I get stuff
out of the blue like this, it's bad... but this time (at least)
it's pretty impressive. Impressive and catchy. Impressive, catchy
indie rock. Great sounding guitars and good vocals with some
strong, desperate, but also driving lyrics. Sounds good and I am
curious because there is talk that this guy is a one man thing...
I cant imagine that being as good as on CD, but I would give
it a shot...I imagine if some sorts of virus struck musicians,
and only musicians,BLAG'ARD would be one of the survivors
and replace something that has a hold on everyone now with
their own brand of sonic awareness.
-Shawn
Abnoxious
www.myspace.com/Blagardband
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There's something weird about this duo, because while I
was listening to it originally it was UK indie names that
were going through my mind, from The Three Johns to
Diatribe, to Wedding Present and Disco Students. Not
what you expect from an American duo, but then maybe
Joe Taylor and Bill Buckley are unusual men. In fact it's
really singing guitarist Joe, as drummer Bill was called in
to help with the EP.
'Monk' finds Joe yelping strongly about being the
loneliest man ever, over surging backing vocals in a very
simple song; so simple it's absurdly catchy. 'Losty' is
friskier, with friction between the guitar chiming fast and
drums being politely supportive. 'Peaches In Cream' is
like apocalyptic lo-fi glam, if you can imagine crossing
Placebo with Jon Spencer Blues having a breakdown?
Quite the little stormer.
'Friends Like You' has, “with friends lie you who need
strangers?� which is a good line, over more concise,
linear guitar guile, then 'Jenny G' is calmer, with
stamping drums and cutely gracious guitar, over which
angst-ridden melodic vocals spill out. The song staggers
boldly along and starts shuddering with verve towards
an audacious end, although it does get unnecessarily
weird and ugly too.
An unexpected thing, and quite intriguing.
~THE MICK 30,
December 2006
We have become so inundated
with digital recording,
it is very difficult to remember what music was
like before quality recording became cheap,
effectively moving musicians out of the raw,
dungy garage. Blag'ard is a throwback. Maybe
Blank Faced Clocks was recorded digitally, but
Joe Taylor and Bill Buckley definitely bring the
dirty, plodding, idle rock that I remember seeing
with ten other androgynous individuals in Buddy Holly
specs ages ago. The beer-soaked sound system weighs
about 700 pounds, but only cost $75, the sound board
badly needs its pots cleaned, but no one will ever
care enough to clean them, and the basement floor is
damp enough to shock Joe and Bill if they accidentally
touch their lips to the mic. This is Blank Faced Clocks;
an album designed for those who seek the hidden.
"Monk" is the perfect beginning to such a departure.
The tempo is so retarded, and the distortion so past
its proper peak, the music sounds like early metal,
or early Polvo. The chorus, which asks, "Would you
like to get to know the loneliest man ever", should
be a mantra for this band. The loneliest band ever.
The vocals sound a bit overdramatic, like Ween, but
if this can be overcome, "Monk" is solid. The vocals
temper a bit during "Losty", while the tempo jumps,
which results in a rocking romp. This masterpiece is
also where the "Blank Faced Clocks" reference is found;
emblematic of where this track fits in importance to
the 5-song EP.
In "Peaches In Cream", there is a guitar line, full of
bending strings, during the verse similar to Built to Spill.
The sexuality of the lyrics, wrought with frustrating
images and guilt, put this in line with Sebadoh's
"Homemade". Musically, throughout the EP Blank
Faced Clocksis pretty consistent. The guitars keep a
solid beat, while the guitar is distorted in such a way
that chords are thick to a muddy degree, though
individual strings are piercing (reverb).
Lyrically, the EP is a bit more dynamic, at points
masked in imagery, while other moments bring simple
brutality. One of the latter moments arrives on "Friends
Like You", where the witty "What's not the opposite
is true", is followed by the stark, "With friends like
you, who needs strangers."
Blag'ard is straightforward indie rock (although my RealPlayer
is telling me it's Art Rock), but the stork who was sent
out with this baby got sidetracked for more than a decade.
Regardless of the time trap, Blag'ard is beauty in all
its ugliness.
~Patrick Muldowney, ANTImusic
Blag'ard - Blank Faced
Clocks EP
2006 Pig Zen's Pace
Blag'ard makes its home in
the sludgy backwaters
of indie rock, combining restrained powerchord
progressions and layered vocals that foster a
faint echo of glammy androgyny (at times
reminiscent of Placebo's Brian Molko when
Blag'ard frontman Joe Taylor rips into his
upper register).
The EP opens with the cascading existential
refrains of "Monk," where Taylor laments his position
as "the loneliest man ever" by confiding dark secrets
with the listener, explaining, "My libido's the only
one who cares." "Losty" picks up the pace with
Taylor's ever-evolving hall-of-mirrors lyrical fumes
spinning into a catchy explosion chorus, resulting
in Blag'ard's most carefree and enjoyable track.
The frantic string-bending merry-go-round of
"Peaches In Cream" and the whimpering muted
chords of "Jenny G" keep Blank Faced Clocks from
ever sounding like its following in its own footsteps
exactly, but the album could have benefited from
some studio tinkering, or at least a little variation
in guitar tone. While inspirations are sometimes
mimicked (Meat Puppets, Wipers, Melvins, etc.),
Blag'ard has delivered an interesting starting point
that will hopefully fill out with more time and some
tactfully developed creative experimentation.
Best track: "Losty"
~ by Christopher J. Ewing
www.onlinerock.com
Joe Taylor is the mastermind
behind Blag'ard,
which is essentially a one-piece band. However,
on Blank Faced Clocks he is assisted by the
drumming skills and backing vocals of Bill Buckley.
The album was recorded in North Carolina and put
out by Joe's own label, Pig Zen's Pace.
The rawness is ever-present throughout the 5-song EP,
yet it doesn't hamper the quality or the opinion of the
album. In fact, it may even be asset, setting
Blag'ard apart from the pack of singer/songwriters.
The beginning track 'Monk' , a well spliced, spacey
piece which gives ample time to reflect on the
ambient sounds. The second track 'Losty'
more straight-forward rock song, showing that he
can cut to the chase and just rock out. The middle
piece is a great number entitled "Peaches in Cream"
showing a stranger, more off-key side to the tunes,
driving hard to the point that variation is a key
factor on this album. "Friends Like You" is a great
song, likely my favorite on the album. It showcases
some nice guitar work with what is my favorite vocal
line on the album when he begs the question,
'With friends like you/ who needs strangers?'
The final song, 'Jenny G,' is a nice closing to
the album, though pegging love-lost stereo-types.
All in all, I was pleased with this album but not
blown away. The potential of Joe Taylor is undeniable:
the combination of his skillful guitar playing, song
writing and unique vocal work are all strong assets.
Hopefully Blank Faced Clocks will have enough
momentum to fuel his musical passion into the horizon.
~Josh Hogan
josh@orchidscurse.com
Blank Faced Clocks
EP (Pig Zen's Pace)
Joe Taylor and Bill Buckley
pull a little Flat
Duo Jets duty--as in two-man guitar drum outfit,
not psycho retro renovators. The songs are
generally bright pop tunes, played with often
frightening abandon. I love the sleek sound.
Just rings with happiness.
~ Aiding and Abetting
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