Search - Earlimart :: Treble & Tremble

Treble & Tremble
Earlimart
Treble & Tremble
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (13) - Disc #1

Earlimart's second full-length for Chris Blackwell's Palm Pictures, titled "Treble & Tremble," is filled with the warm vocals and expansive, orchestral rock arrangements that earned the band's 2003 releases "The Avenue...  more »

     
   
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CD Details

All Artists: Earlimart
Title: Treble & Tremble
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 1
Label: Palm Pictures (Audio
Release Date: 9/28/2004
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Indie & Lo-Fi
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 660200213527

Synopsis

Album Description
Earlimart's second full-length for Chris Blackwell's Palm Pictures, titled "Treble & Tremble," is filled with the warm vocals and expansive, orchestral rock arrangements that earned the band's 2003 releases "The Avenues" E.P. and "Everyone Down Here" critical praise from journalists and peers alike.

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CD Reviews

Tremble!
E. A Solinas | MD USA | 10/09/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"After two albums of mediocre Pixies-esque rock, Earlimart changed their sound so completely that you couldn't even tell it was the same band -- creating "Everyone Down Here," a slice of mellow, Grandaddy-esque pop. And their fourth album "Treble and Tremble" continues that trend, but refines their sound as a bittersweet, lush ode to Elliott Smith.



The sound: Gentle acoustic pop-rock with a few haunting sonic sweeps, and vocals that sound like they're singing a perpetual lullaby. "Valley People" is forty seconds of undulating experimentation, and songs like "A Bell and a Whistle" linger on as gentle, pensive spacey folk songs that sound a bit like Grandaddy B-sides.



Some songs like the gritty "Sounds" take a rock-ier edge, with a blurred bass running behind the fast guitar riffs. But then at the chorus it becomes softer, and about two thirds through it slows down into a meandering melody. The roiling "Unintentional Tape Manipulation" sounds like an album recorded in a haunted house.



A melancholy thread runs through "Treble and Tremble." Their last album didn't really have much of a unifying theme, but now Earlimart's focus seems to be on loneliness and lack of communication. It's a sign of a more mature band if their music is not only evolving, but their songwriting is as well.



Heavy stuff, and apparently was inspired by late, much-lamented musician Elliott Smith, who was a neighbor of Earlimart's Aaron Espinoza, and whom the album is dedicated to. This textured, poignant album seems even more so when you think of Smith: "I said goodbye/to my whole family/I hope they'll miss me/as much as you." Espinoza seems to be almost asking Smith -- too late -- to hang on because he cares.



And after the radical change in sound, they seem more settled and polished in this outing, possibly due to Grandaddy's Jim Fairchild. Yes, they sound like Grandaddy in their softer tracks. But they also forge their own new paths in psychedelica, such as the distorted, fuzzy, lurching rock of "Unintentional Tape Manipulation." It shows that they aren't just imitating the robot-rock sound.



Most of the softer, poppier tracks are slow, careful mixtures of piano, watery synths and acoustic guitar, occasionally with what sounds like violins and some merely okay percussion. What it has going for it is that this time is that the arrangements are more complex and layered, rather than just being guitar with a few synths sprinkled on top.



Espinoza's distant vocals sound strangely intimate, and the songs are even more complex than they were before. Okay, they're still really simple, but it's a simplicity that speaks of sad honesty rather than a lack of songwriting talent. "You found yourself/some mental health/but don't forget to write/and stay home at night..."



Earlimart hasn't sounded this good since... well, ever. "Treble and Tremble" is a moving, beautiful experience, and -- once you know about Smith and Espinoza's friendship -- a bittersweet one. For anyone who has loved, and lost, and thought back on both."
Pastoral indie pop at its finest
thucydides | san lorenzo, ca usa | 10/08/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"First off I loved Everyone Down Here (Earlimarts last record). It is far more experimental than their latest offering, Treble and Tremble. On this one Earlimart are playing it safe and delving more into texture rather than loading tracks down with Grandaddyesque whirs and clicks. The record eventually settles down into one beautiful sigh. I read some reviews from other magazines and they trashed it for lack of originality..Really? t Earlimart are stylistically similar to Dios, Grandaddy, Pinback, and The Shins. They are not the Flaming Lips, Mercury Rev, or The Beach Boys..I did read a few of the reviews and laughed. Frthermore with Aaron Espinoza's vocals coming out as a subtle whisper he does share some similarities with Elliot Smith..Is that a bad thing? It could be worse his vocals could mimic Justin Timberlake or Dee Snyder..Bottom line: The music is FRIGGING Beautiful..Standout tracks: First Instant Last Report, The Hidden Track, All They Ever Do Is Talk, A Bell and a Whistle, and Heaven Adores You. The lone exception is the dated Lynard Skynard mating with Neal Young on Broke the Furniture. I think I've heard that guitar hook somewhere before. Like in a gazillion other classic rock tracks. One bad song, hmmm just buy it."
Amazing
Meg Wallace | Los Angeles, CA United States | 10/03/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This album is, as the other review says, truly haunting and beautiful. Most of the time, I have to play a new album for awhile to really love it. From the first play, Treble and Tremble grabbed me and I've not taken it out of my cd player since. If you're a fan of Elliott Smith and the like, I highly recommend picking this up!"