$8.99

Sold by music on Tradebit
The world's largest download marketplace
3,247,664 satisfied buyers
Shopper Award

MP3 The Upright Animals - Scams

It is dynamic rock with a purpose.

12 MP3 Songs
ROCK: Modern Rock, POP: Power Pop



Details:
Original rock still lives, but where? You can''t find it on MTV, you never hear it on the radio, so where is it?!? It''s in St. Louis, MO and it goes by the name of THE UPRIGHT ANIMALS. The group was formed in 2005 as a songwriting project, but quickly became a BAND. You''ve got brothers Jim and Ben Peters on guitars, step-brother Jaime Irwin on vocals, Bill Newmann on the bass, and Moises Padilla on the skins. The band put out a 3-song EP in October of 2005, followed by the release of "SCAMS"- the full-length debut album- in September of 2006. "SCAMS" was recorded and mixed in St. Louis, but mastered in Phoenix, AZ by Roger Seibel ( Modest Mouse}Death Cab, Interpol, Tortoise, Liz Phair, etc...). The band plays regularly at venues such as Mississippi Nights, The Pagaent, and Blueberry Hill, both as headliners and opening for acts such as Chuck Berry (yes, THAT Chuck Berry)and Ozomatli. THE UPRIGHT ANIMALS have been slowly spreading the word around the Midwest, playing cities like Columbia MO, Springfield IL, Belleville IL, and hopefully YOUR town soon. The music has been spreading like wildfire on MYSPACE, where THE UPRIGHT ANIMALS have quickly become one of Missouri''s top acts. The band''s sound combines ROCK, POP, and ETC..... to create something new, something that MUSIC lovers crave. If you are sick of the same-old-same-old, sick of cookie-cutter bands- check out THE UPRIGHT ANIMALS,a St. Louis'' original .......


PlaybackSTL "Scams" cd review written by Dave Jasmon
As far as unsigned bands that have only existed for about two years go, the Upright Animals have been fairly successful. Having won Cicero''s 2005 battle of the bands, as well as having opened for Chuck Berry (on more than one occasion, woo!), the quintet should be pretty optimistic heading into 2007 with their first full-length release, Scams. Recorded in St. Louis yet mastered in Phoenix by Roger Seibel (who has associated himself with Death Cab for Cutie and Interpol, among others), the spacious debut features brothers Jim and Ben Peters on wail duty, Bill Newmann''s thumping bass, Moises Padilla''s heavy skins, and the omnipresent, smooth howls of James Irwin. Touting their divergence from cut-and-paste radio rock, the Upright Animals form echoing, deeply cosmic ballads, anchored by Irwin''s suspended vocals and peppered with the subtly expansive merging of concise, space-rock guitar.

Scams is passive-aggressive in nature, rarely in your face, but never light-hearted, drenched in aching vocals and cathartic riffs. From the embattled cries of "Taking the Sun from Our Days" to the erstwhile, emo pluckings of the aptly titled "Drunk Dial," the Upright Animals strain without pulling anything, opting for pop arrangements to build tidy walls around progressive instincts. The biggest coup in their initial effort, though, has to be the firm establishment of a definitive tone, a voice, as it were. Clearly influenced by the likes of the Mars Volta and Smashing Pumpkins, the St. Louisans seek continuity among their drifting grasps, focusing on minor keys, the disparity between quiet and heroic bursts, and reverberating fills with counter-balancing melodies.

Second-track standout, "Taking the Sun From our Days," begins with an eerily familiar, Yoshimi-esque blare, segueing into a furious, scale-climbing lead before Irwin evokes memories of the Juliana Theory''s better days, the kind that make you want to finish that drink and get another. The song climaxes with intertwining leads reintroducing an anthemic chorus, devolving into the fractured disturbances of "Hand Grenade" as Scams'' catchy torso gives way. For about a four-song stretch, the Upright Animals let loose, and this is what they do best: jamming, ranting, building up and breaking down.

As a structured unit, the group can be its own worst enemy, forgetting to distinguish itself at times. However, as pure musicians, these guys are plenty proficient. Scams is a solid introduction to a band that really hasn''t seen a whole lot of daylight. With a little perspective, seasoning, and exposure, the Upright Animals could keep their quick ascent steady. For the time being, St. Louisans can sit back (or stand up) and enjoy watching them grow. B | Dave Jasmon

File Data

This file is sold by music, an independent seller on Tradebit.

Our Reviews
© Tradebit 2004-2024
All files are property of their respective owners
Questions about this file? Contact music
DMCA/Copyright or marketplace issues? Contact Tradebit