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MEMBERS:
Mike Tuley
Kurt Lane
Julie Lane
Brooke Hunt
Scott Edwards
Ad Astra Per Aspera is a band of our generation, sounding
out 2006 with their long-awaited full-length Catapult Calypso.
After college degrees, jobs, marriage and a diaspora of their cohort, these
twenty-somethings find themselves still housed in their homegrown Midwest
scene, poised for an ever greater realization of their music and potential.
Formed in 2002, the Lawrence, Kansas five-piece has endured much in endeavoring
to be a band — a distinct, resonant and exciting project as their
two EPs (2003’s An Introduction To and 2004’s Cubic Zirconia) and hundreds of performances
would argue — over the past four years. Primarily, however, Ad
Astra Per Aspera has taken the care and time of experience to grow
into their new record, with Calypso as inspirational
evidence that their creative resources have not been sapped, nor their candid
musical adventurism disenchanted in the process. Instead, AAPA asserts with Calypso that this is how it feels to be animated
by noise, rhythm, melody and lyrical impressions. The evolving band stands
with conviction as they present to the world of tours, contracts and "making
it big". A record of the journey, Calypso is a sprawling, earnest testament to where they are actively going.
For better or for worse, Ad Astra Per Aspera is not afraid of their own
sound. They are not afraid of the groove, to sound alternately mature and
thoughtful, uncertain, or galvanized by angst. And Calypso reminds me of what making music should be like: engaging and intriguing
from the outset, with successfully ambitious song structures that feel like
new experience, yet melodic enough to linger once the amps and stereos have
been turned off. The album’s epic closer, "Flannery’s
Coming Home," asks, "Ok? Ok! We improvise or we replicate"
and the artistic dilemma infuses the ten songs on Calypso with a palpable urgency; electric and pulsating, there is an immediate energy
and necessary authenticity in each song that will seize your sympathies,
positing that there is no better way to answer that question than to rock
it.
The AAPA sound likewise demands respect, both for its incestuous genre hopping
and assimilation of any influence that feels right for a given song. It
is a sound where each song has at once an aural reckoning and its own organic
feel: moody hip-hop loops end up as hooks for a spy film’s chase scene
in "The Romantic One"; atonal guitar riffing
crescendos in a profoundly simple piano scale by the resolution of "Scatter
Baby Spiders"; and powerful nuance prevails as the undercurrent
for Calypso, with claps, chants, treble-filled
feedback, directing percussion, and vocal bursts or hushes stepping into
the foreground as the music directs. These songs are combustible: their
pleasure is in the tension of restraint and release and Calypso is a volatile offering of intensity-riddled and revelatory jams masquerading
as experimental rock songs.
Catapult Calypso is the natural outgrowth of Ad
Astra Per Aspera’s bountiful store of impressions from the last four
years’ discoveries. Here audacity and response form the discourse
for a kind of sonic storytelling, the band approximating a working understanding
of just what world it is that they are inheriting through song and expression.
Their ambition is not to proselytize a potential audience: just see them
live to hear their faith in what 2006 sounds like to them. Any group founded
out of DIY sensibilities like Ad Astra Per Aspera would be too pragmatic
to expect rapture in response, but what else would realizing the sound of
reaching the stars through difficulty be like? They have put the effort
into taking something familiar further, and Calypso only makes me want to grow up with the band again and again.
– Jay Wells, New York City, summer of 2006 |
Ad astra per aspera
catapult calypso
SUNCD112 (CD)
Sonic Unyon
october 3 2006 |
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"This band
projects a Radiohead-like complexity. Vocals compete
with patches of crunchy guitars and range from calming to screaming.
Within their wall of sound, there is the clarity of a piano psychedelically
communicating some code. An omen of good things to come." –PUNK PLANET "the payoff for a few open-eared listens is nothing short of
astronomical musical joy. Whether intentional or not, art/noise rock
does't get much catchier than this." –AVERSION.COM "Ad Astra Per Aspera answers the intriguing
but unasked question: 'What would happen if a pianist had joined Dirty-era Sonic Youth?'" –THE PITCH
KANSAS CITY |
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Ad astra per aspera
catapult calypso
SUNCD112 (CD)
Sonic Unyon
october 3 2006 |
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Find more photos HERE. |
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