genre skipping
author: Paul Bergen
If I had to use a band to describe the sound of The Beige, I would say that that they were a slightly sweeter version of The National. But as these other reviews point out these guys show influences from all over. I wouldn't call them country but without country this music would not exist. And then there is that beautiful jazzy string bass behind it all. Let's just say that The Beige and this cd are utterly unique, but without having to sacrifice heart-aching melodic runs.
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beige crush
author: juju
01 is a subtle masterpiece, a ticket to places you've always wanted to go to. adventurous yet authentic, the beige have carved a category of their own. beige music? beigism? whatever it is, we need more of it. the songs unravel effortlessly down to the grande finale, the outworldly 'nobody nowhere', the closest thing to this century's theme song.
never underestimate the power of the neutral. the beige will make you believe.
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this is a record of rare beauty
author: Americana UK
Colour me impressed:
The closest thing I can liken this to is the beautifully austere musicscapes of the Boxhead Ensemble. Everything is contained within gentle vessels of sound, the music splashing against the sides or shimmering, rippling, curling in on itself. Pulsing, dividing, percussion, electronics, guitars, banjo all part of the same contained sea of noise. The effect is often a quiet venture into the avant garde like some free jazz / glitch hybrid spliced onto more traditional song-based forms, recognizable tunes and melodies pass like vessels running without lights.
The alt-country roots are most noticeable on 'Mirror' a song that embraces the form for half its length before the instruments rebel against their generic straightjackets, cymbals patter and splash, trumpets call, guitars forget about chords, vocals reappear to assert form and pedal steel plays shepherd to get everything to the chorus. The tension between the vocal melodies and the urge to experiment makes this a rewarding listen, the basic songs are good enough, and the cul de sacs that are explored make them more interesting. Keyboards have their own party on 'Lord I Wish I Was' until banjo gatecrashes, they all waltz together on 'One for Me'. The peak is reached on 'Nobody Nowhere' where swathes of cello contrast with elliptical guitar figures, bells and cymbals, as the cello deepens its song the other elements continue to recycle creating a kind of bleak but beautiful glimpse of winter.
A record that fuses popular and experimental forms into a coherent whole is a rare thing, and this is a record of rare beauty.
Date review added: Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Reviewer: David Cowling
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The Beige really makes you pay attention
author: Vancouver Sun
Thursday, July 20
The Beige really makes you pay attention
The Beige is a new musical force in Vancouver, and although the band has five members who each make their imprint on the group sound, the central force is Rick Maddocks. The guitarist wrote all eight tunes on the band’s self-released debut CD, 01, sings lead on the non-instrumental tracks, and creates lyrics that make you really pay attention.
For example, his song Lord I Wish I Was appears at first to be a song about the vulnerability, where Maddocks wishes he could be stronger, more sensitive, a better person. But in the song’s second half, those desires are turned completely around, with Maddocks wanting to be weaker, meaner, less a good person. The countrified Hammer in a Bell is also something of a lament, Maddocks singing about the growing out of things once important in life. Nobody Nowhere reflects on a world changing, not always for the better.
The band (Maddocks on guitar and vocals, Andrew Arida on keyboards and accordion, Jon Wood on guitar and lap steel, Mark Haney on bass, Geoff Gilliard on drums) mixes an organic sound with electronics, using loops effectively. 01 also enjoys several guest players, the most prominent being Christy Staudhammer, whose cello underscores the lyricism of certain songs.
The Beige play a CD-release concert Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at HR MacMillan Space Centre’s Star Theatre.
- Marke Andrews
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