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Bright Men of Learning : Bright Men of Learning
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A hybrid of classic rock chops and beloved mid-90s indie heroes like Pavement, Yo La Tengo, and Uncle Tupelo. Dark, sad-bastard character studies, framed within memorable, shiny pop hooks, woo-hoo choruses, and lots and lots of guitar solos.
Genre: Rock: 90's Rock
Release Date: 2006
Bright Men of Learning
Bright Men of Learning
Record Label: Bright Men of Learning
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Preview Song Name Time Buy
1. Right On! 4:10 + MP3 $0.99
2. Cross 3:53 + MP3 $0.99
3. For Real 4:13 + MP3 $0.99
4. Girls in Love 3:14 + MP3 $0.99
5. A Step Behind 3:59 + MP3 $0.99
6. Kindness from Strangers 4:36 + MP3 $0.99
7. Double Strength 4:46 + MP3 $0.99
8. Blow Them Away 2:15 + MP3 $0.99
9. Geronimo 3:38 + MP3 $0.99
10. Marching on Water 3:35 + MP3 $0.99
11. The Peace 4:50 + MP3 $0.99
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Album Notes

Marshall Preddy and drummer Jeff Senske have been in the same Houston, Texas band for almost 10 years now, but they keep changing the name: Wholesome Rollers, Telluride, Chasmatic, and now they’re called Bright Men of Learning. Through more than a dozen lineup changes, Preddy’s novice guitar skills and Senske’s understated, professional drumming have been the center of an evolving, but impressively consistent, attempt to play rock music in front of people. In 2002, Chasmatic finally released a full-length CD, Chasmatic’s country-ish Kicker Wisdom in 2002. Soon after, the band added former de Schmog bass player, Johnathan Sage, and guitar savant Chris Kahlich. The makeover necessitated one last name change and the quartet became Bright Men of Learning.

The makeover worked. Their new, self-titled record is a muscular hybrid of classic rock and beloved mid-90s indie heroes like Pavement, Yo La Tengo, and Uncle Tupelo. In particular, Kahlich’s versatile lead playing has drawn a lot of comparisons to Pavement, perhaps because he switches easily between stately C & W melody, air-guitar solos, and noisy freak-outs. With Kahlich, Sage, and the recent arrival of multi-instrumentalist Ben Murphy, the Bright Men finally have a steady cast of players, and a name that doesn’t need changing.

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REVIEWS

A great blend of Rolling Stones, Big Star, The Replacements & Pavement
author: Houston Calling
                            
This is an album the Rolling Stones wish they could still make. While the Stones' output over the last decade or more has been mostly flaccid attempts at recapturing the fire of their long-ago youth, Bright Men of Learning take a few pointers from the elder statesmen of rock'n'roll and use their influences and own experiences to create one of the strongest, most cohesive albums of the year. Made up of Houston rock vets -- singer/guitarist Marshall Preddy, drummer Jeff Senske, bassist Johnathan Sage, and guitarist Chris Kahlich, along with newest addition, multi-instrumentalist Ben Murphy -- Bright Men of Learning inject a heavy dose of nineties indie rock into a blend of old-style pop and early alternative. At times, the music brings to mind Pavement and The Replacements, seventies-era Stones, and Big Star, but it also showcases the group's more modern appeal. "Right On!" and "Girls In Love" best reflect this aesthetic, while the very Stones-y "Geronimo" (which is almost too close to "Shattered" for its own good), "A Step Behind," and "For Real" show that the band members remain in touch with their musical roots. Throughout the album, Preddy's Johnny Thunders-meets-Mick Jagger throaty vocals are addictive, and the music -- solidly played, guitar-based indie pop the band calls a "sonic mid-life crisis" -- makes it impossible not to like this album. Besides, there's not a weak song in the bunch. Mick would be proud. --David A. Cobb, Houston Calling
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