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Warehouse is a five piece band from Atlanta, GA. The band formed while many of its members were attending school for
various useless degrees. Taking inspiration from the 1980's Athens, GA scene (Pylon, R.E.M., The B-52's) and having a
mutual taste for bands like Stereolab and Abstract Expressionist visual art, they quickly took on a post-punk style
characterized by the spidery and interlocking guitar riffs of Alex Bailey and Ben Jackson, filled by the effortless drums of Doug
Bleichner and the agile racing bass riffs of Josh Hughes. The full and textural sound provides a unique body fo ...read more
Warehouse is a five piece band from Atlanta, GA. The band formed while many of its members were attending school for
various useless degrees. Taking inspiration from the 1980's Athens, GA scene (Pylon, R.E.M., The B-52's) and having a
mutual taste for bands like Stereolab and Abstract Expressionist visual art, they quickly took on a post-punk style
characterized by the spidery and interlocking guitar riffs of Alex Bailey and Ben Jackson, filled by the effortless drums of Doug
Bleichner and the agile racing bass riffs of Josh Hughes. The full and textural sound provides a unique body for vocals, added
by Elaine Edenfield, whose lyrics can be described as sidewinding and oblique, oscillating quickly between melodicism and
contrary roughness, using vocals as more of a physical tool of expression than as a glossy harmony to the sound. Warehouse
can be described as breathlessly fast-paced, conveying a deep sense of desired intensity and emotionality. Warehouse's first
album Tesseract was self-released in 2014 and later re-released under Bayonet Records. Their new album super low is more
concise continuation of Tesseract, while still carrying the prior album's organic and wildly sprawling nature. Largely written in
a notorious punk house that was torn down to build a parking garage, the album was finished in a new environment: across
from a food mart called super low. The title connotes stark change, but it also hints at the additional psychological undertones
of the album's meaning, to move down into more darkly subconscious and deeply endogenous areas of yourself in order to
work through them and out. Also contrastingly literal, it denotes Warehouse's self-evident, uncontrived and rough-around-
the-edges nature.
Courtesy of Discogs.com « hide |
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