FACT NOT FICTION: A Corporate Calling

Fact Not Fiction

A Corporate Calling

© 2007 Sayer BMI (634479568282)

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Hints of Early-day Beatle tunes, mixed with the shimmer of late 60's "Hippie-pop" with even a little taste of Iron and Wine in parts. I see you reading this, you know you want to check this cd out :) www.factnotfictiononline.com

notes

Fact Not Fiction has never been satisfied with life exactly as it appears. Coming from a small town in Georgia known better for its UFO sightings than for its music scene, it's natural for their songs to exude an escapist quality. Zeke Sayer’s light vocals lift away from simple acoustic strums with an eerie haze, bringing to mind the likes of Elliott Smith or Iron & Wine. Poppier tracks cleverly build catchy melodies in the vein of The Beatles and Snow Patrol. Their latest release displays new experimentation that shows, despite its retro sound, that this is the kind of band that can only move forward.

The band began after vocalist/guitarist Zeke Sayer left his high school. “I did a lot of things that made me wide up in trouble, and one of those situations caused me to leave school,” he admits. ”But I believe that everything happens for a reason, and while I was in school, I had no direction in life. It took losing something for me to have a wake up call and realize I'd better do something with my life. So I started the band.” Sayer found his passion not only in playing the music, but in production. After finding the right line-up, he produced the band’s debut "Conversations With Eyes Closed" album in a renovated mobile home. Some of the music from this album has even appeared on the soundtrack for indie film The Philosopher.

In 2007, Fact Not Fiction began recording their second album, A Corporate Calling, with Jon Bryant on guitar,
Justin Vickery on bass, and Adam Grant on drums. Unfortunately, time constraints led Vickery to leave the band before the album was finished, and Tyler Glenn took over for the rest of recording. The album leaves behind
the more somber and somnambulant mood of their first, with the rockabilly-esque “Powder Bag” to saccharine love tale “The Ballad of Jack and Amy.” Before the album’s official release, “Electric City,” was already chosen
to be the official city song of Anderson, SC.

In addition to playing shows from rural Hartwell, GA to indie oasis Athens, GA to a festival in front of hundreds
in Anderson, SC, Fact Not Fiction has assembled a solid online fan base. Critical acclaim and fans have
all spoken: Fact Not Fiction is a must-listen band for this year and the next.




--Pauline Diaz, 2007

reviews

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  • September Review
    author: Get Underground!

    GetUnderground.com's quote on the band's new record. "Harrowingly sad and gluttonously uplifting depression makes for damn good art." - Getunderground.com

  • Moving backward is a forward push for the band.
    author: The Overcast

    The Overcast reviews FNF’s new record: "A Corporate Calling" Fact Not Fiction has never been satisfied with life exactly as it appears. Coming from a small town in Georgia known better for its UFO sightings than for its music scene, it's natural for their songs to exude an escapist quality. But rather than the somnambulant sound of their debut album, FNF's sophomore release chooses time travel as its hideaway of choice. A Corporate Calling sneaks their airy, eerie sound into retro territory with a few new risks, founded on the strengths of their last album. Moving backward is a forward push for the band. It fits their rough (although technically improved) production quality and their basic sound. Which is to say, although Fact Not Fiction doesn't ever do anything revolutionary or complex, they are the masters of pop atmosphere. The band knows well what sounds fit together and what kind of moods they convey without trying to be too many things at once. For instance, the standout "Tree Carvings" is written about the death of a local teen. Though structurally very simplistic, the song wraps you up in its eerie ambiance, Sayer's voice weaving in and out of Grant's kinetic drum loop at a near-whisper, guitar and bass simmering over just slightly. Of course, not far down the disc are more lighthearted, almost goofy songs like "Electric City," which wins points for its head-bobbing piano line and use of the phrase "picture show." Sure, the Death Cab influence is clear once again, but FNF stretches well beyond it. The band reaches rockabilly in "Powder Bag" and blasts what frontman Zeke Sayer calls "the craziest experimenting we've ever done" in "Here At Hartmin," a track that will suck you into the guitar trance like words never existed. Actually, lyrics are much more sparse--and perhaps less inspired--throughout the album, but they act as another piece in that holistic effect. Overall, A Corporate Calling is five leaps ahead of where this band left us in their last album. There isn't a dividing line between strong songs and weaker tracks, somber and fantastical, acoustic and electric. Rather, Fact Not Fiction tries a few different things in each song, and tries a few different styles of songs in one diverse album. Dabbing that all under an old pop tint, this album assures that taking a few steps back will push this band far forward. www.theovercast.net

  • Awesomeness=]
    author: Taylor Ppole =)

    ok so how about I listen to this cd like allllllllll the time. Its like the best ever. Conversations With Eyes Closed Was good but this one was soooo much better. Not sayin that it wasnt good b/c it was but this one was just like whoa so yeah. Good Job Guys! Ily!

  • FNF Just keep getting better and better
    author: Adam Davis (Wacko Mazoe)

    If you liked "Conversations With Eyes Closed" you will absolutely LOVE "A Corporate Calling." I been friends and a FAN of this band for a long time now and they just keep on surprising me. The sounds on this album is, to quote a friend "phenomenal." Everything good about Conversations... is improved upon here. The mellow songs; prettier, the upbeat songs more textural and rockin', the general sound more layered and deep, and the melodies will still stay in your head for days... buy this album; you won't be disappointed.

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