Lights Out
© Copyright-The Hard Tomorrows
(783707401577)
Record Label: The Hard Tomorrows
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From Exitfare:
At the tail end of the winter, I randomly came across a young band whose debut demo just blew me away. After listening to five songs of indie rock bliss, it was easy to declare The Hard Tomorrows as the best thing to come out of the DC music scene in years.
After months of writing and recording, the band released their self titled debut just a couple of weeks ago. Though it hasn't yet been reviewed by Pitchfork, I believe that this is one of the best albums of the year and just a terrific debut. The opening strains of "Take Down" really set the tone for the rest of the album with the pounding drumbeat mixing with aggressive guitar and punchy basslines. The song is like a train with no brakes--it keeps speeding up and the tension keeps building until the violent explosion at the end. That's not to say that The Hard Tomorrows are even remotely related to hardrock or hardcore or anything hard sounding, they're not. Their music is total indie rock, featuring hard downbeats, brillliant hooks, and gorgeous harmonies--elements that almost belie the intense undercurrent of the songs themselves ("Stop and Shoot," "Glossy Eyed Sweetheart," "Fences Around Lawns").
The second half of the album finds The Hard Tomorrows moving into new sonic territories, creating textures reminiscent of sunny Americana, jazz, and even the circus. "Counterfeit" is a rowdy, foot stomper that seems to be the young relative of southern honkytonk. It makes me want to drink whiskey and rub up against someone, if you know what I mean. In contrast, the jazzy "Wrecking Ball" feels like a night of drinking red wine--it starts on a quiet and sophisticated note, but as it goes on things get disorientating and aggressive until the regret starts to sink in. The song is gorgeous and heartbreaking simultaneously.
--Beth
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On Tap Magazine:
I cannot find enough good things to say about this album. In a musical climate where music seems to be either catchy or challenging, it is refreshing to find a band that can do both. And oh yeah, the album artwork is incredible.
Though the Hard Tomorrows proudly call Washington DC home, we may soon be forced to share them with the rest of the world. This DC quintet has made one of the best local records of the year with Lights Out, and undoubtedly, it deserves audiences far beyond our fair District. From relentless guitar driven rock (“Take Down,†“Glossy Eyed Sweetheartâ€) to moody atmospherics (“Stop and Shootâ€) to pop gems (“Patterns,†“Counterfeitâ€), Lights Out is diverse, captivating and damn good album with some fantastic melodies. Criminally, they’re still unsigned, so somebody please take the hint: give ‘em a contract and get these guys out on the road. They’re too good not to be out representing DC fulltime.
- Chris Connelly
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THE HARD TOMORROWS: Lights Out
author: Jan Jorgensen
Just picked up the cd after I heard the samples on the website - great cd, I already wrote the band and told them and got a nice reply back. Right here in DK it is 5:16 in the morning and I listen to it right now!!
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