Search - Martin Grech :: Open Heart Zoo

Open Heart Zoo
Martin Grech
Open Heart Zoo
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

At 19, Martin Grech Doesn't Immediately Seem Like Someone who Has Access to the Intense and Forward-looking Music of the Day. He Appears with his Guitar Slung Low and Fingers Flashing Double-jointed Over the Frets. His Ast...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Martin Grech
Title: Open Heart Zoo
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Universal Import
Release Date: 9/25/2006
Album Type: Extra tracks, Import
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 606949340926, 4260113853313

Synopsis

Album Details
At 19, Martin Grech Doesn't Immediately Seem Like Someone who Has Access to the Intense and Forward-looking Music of the Day. He Appears with his Guitar Slung Low and Fingers Flashing Double-jointed Over the Frets. His Astounding Rock Diva Vocals Ride the Deconstructed Metal Drama of his Live Incarnation, and It's Apparent that One of the Frontier Talents of the Next Guitar Band Generation Has Arrived. The Opening Trio of 'here it Comes', 'open Heart Zoo' and 'dali' Cover More Ground Than Many Bands Manage in a Lifetime, Moving from Dark Future Rock, Into Blasted, Cybernetic, Teethgrinder Metal. He Then Shifts Into a More Ethereal Mode, with the Lilting Cradlesong 'tonight', Golden-voiced Self-doubt of 'push' and Sweetly Chiming 'only One Listening'. Through all the Rest, Grech Transcends his Rock Influences. This Edition Includes an Exclusive Demo Version of "Ill".
 

CD Reviews

What on earth?
Michael Bulger | Rochester, NY, USA | 12/07/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)

"It's relatively easy to figure out where Martin Grech is coming from; the Radiohead influence is as clear as day, and "Open Heart Zoo" sounds like one direction that oft-cited band could have taken after "OK Computer." Once you get used to Grech's voice, which in most registers isn't the prettiest of sounds, you might be able to appreciate the gymnastic, hell-bent way he uses it. This is also an album that was clearly the product of countless studio hours; every track has obviously been fussed over, multitracked and stitched together, with the end result in every case sounding more like a collage than a coherent song.So, to summarize: Radiohead clone, weird but wild voice, crazy-quilt song arrangements. So why do I listen to it so much (to the distraction of my wife, who is immune to its charms)? Is it the last 60 seconds of "Here It Comes," where Grech sounds like a demented qawalli singer, emoting every last ounce of anguish and despair? Is it the earnest self-deprecation and the gorgeous acoustic break of "Push"? Is it the fact that underneath all of the production, all of the mannered vocal weirdness, Grech writes nifty little pop ditties that I find catchy? I don't really know. I do know that if you have any affinity for Bends/OK Computer-era Radiohead, or for Jeff Buckley, you need to at least give this disc a listen. Some more informed or more jaded rock critic somewhere will try to tell me why Grech is lame, why his singing is just a case of someone going way, way overboard, but I won't really hear him, because I'll still have the last echoes of the impossibly high notes Grech hits in "Dali" ringing in my ears..."
Mindblowing
baatou | PA | 04/14/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"martin grech will blow your minds, period. True, the radiohead influence may be too out there, but just give it a listen and you won't even care. Oh and the fact that he is 19 years old makes it just plain intimidating. If you dig Martin Grech you should definitely check out MUSE, highly recommended."