SAINT MOTEL

Some genres suffer from a lot of cliches. OK, so all genres do to some extent, but some suffer that bit more, like they have a black hole of cliches sucking infinitely upon them. It doesn’t stop credible music or new ideas being written within that genre, but it makes it an absolute minefield in which to tread. One of the obvious genres to suffer this affliction is rock, which is possibly down to the over-ambitious bands of the 70s and 80s that eventually led to the likes of Spinal Tap and Bad News finding a rich orchard in which to mock. Elsewhere is the genre of indie pop, which the Americans have been known to do rather well, but once again it’s strewn with spiky cliche mines. Today’s recommendation are pitching their music within indie pop, describing themselves as “wildly fun“, which is all well and good, but you can already imagine the Niagara-sized pitfalls. This band somehow show off a world of inventiveness within the over-cooked genre, but to balance things up they also lose the odd limb when they tread upon a lack of imagination. With one hand they give, but with the other, well, they lose the hand entirely.

Saint Motel are a quartet from Los Angeles. They aim to deliver song structures that often follow a verse/chorus/verse/chorus pattern, you know, like actual proper songs and that. Their digital PR recently got in touch to push the new song, 1997, to us as a UK exclusive, but one search in our Gmail inbox uncovered unread emails that had come directly from the band, no doubt prior to them having PR on board. This is a common occurrence, suffering, like any music blogger does, from an impossibly busy inbox, meaning it indirectly becomes a search engine for new music on occasion. Who needs to surf SoundCloud or Bandcamp, when you can type band names into the Gmail search bar? Perhaps we should set up access to our inbox as a new mp3 search engine website in itself? It’s a rather ridiculous situation of course, when you search your own inbox when researching a band, but alas this is the modern world we live in.

That initial email approach from the band held within it their first punt, the song Honest Feedback, which kicks off at a jolly pace. They explained how the lyrics were almost designed by accident as the singer simply filled the song with randomly selected words as he tried to write the vocal melodies, but decided to stick with the first words that came to mind. If it ain’t broke, eh. It’s a song that has their “fun” dials turned up to eleven, reeling around our headphones like there’s a circus inside them. The engine may be motoring, but you feel like it’s a journey you have perhaps been on before. It suffers from a relatively singular pace throughout, but it also has an undeniable attraction. This is a repeated trip, flying by in the same weird way the return leg on a lengthy car journey always seems to go by faster than it did on the way out there. However, the sun is shining throughout and the view is always pretty, so it’s hard to let your mood drop. You can clearly hear what the vocals are saying and you know exactly where the next eight bars are going, which gives it an instant familiarity, but you find your mind drifting onto your shopping list or something.

Thankfully new gears are found on other tunes, with a particularly enjoyable restraint that keeps things tight with the tune, Puzzle Pieces, with some of the most confident vocals around, especially in the crescendos. The instrumentation is strong the whole way through as each element is introduced. Again the pace is driven with thick soles pressed upon the accelerator pedal, but the engines not all that, so you’re never fearfully gripping the passenger seat. This is light guitar pop, with lots of enjoyable style and tinkering flare, which on this tune hits delightful, shouty crescendos at the three minute mark, demanding more attention for the first time. However, it’s when they reign in their racing frivolity that they are found to produce their most interesting music. At Least I Have Nothing brings us a welcome melancholy not seen with other songs. It drops the predictable structures and Americanised cliches and delivers indie pop for grown ups. There’s a freedom swirling within the song, as AJ sings “I got no more family in this town” leaving him “nothing to tie me down“.

They’re at their best when they stretch to more quirky corners, with the occasional break to clap hands or wind it up to attractive peaks, as opposed to simply stepping in music’s equivalent of dogshit, by being, well, “fun“. If you compare them to the bands, Space or The Flaming Lips, you can begin to understand how quirks can be masterfully achieved, but where those two bands have a millions psychedelic ideas woven into the songs, Saint Motel play it much straighter. They’re more reminiscent of the excellent Boston trio, Leisure, who produce a kind of alt-lounge sound, although Saint Motel don’t select to croon quite as much, but they’ll share fans and both are perfectly designed for the UK market. This is indie pop without any hint of a misuse of drugs and it perhaps lacks a little something for it. It’s not going to expand your minds, but it is full of solid ideas. This is indie pop that may well contain cliches that your Mum won’t notice, but the sharper ears will hear them. Either way, what is clear to everyone is their pin-sharp intelligence that’s delicately sewn into every song.

Their debut album, Voyeur, is out on July 10th on their own On The Records label. It follows a 2009 EP of the same name, rather strangely, so we imagine the new album is simply a refined, beefed up version of that EP. We assume the album contains the new tune, 1997, which turns out to be the boldest of them all. Confident piano keys dance behind a cinematic swirl of guitars, before the whole song puffs out with brass and another upbeat pace. Rewardingly it’s more three-dimensional, changing gears smoothly, driving well clear of any cliche obstacles, particularly with the new vocals that join up with AJ. The same pomp and ceremony which has become their trademark is again within view, as the song marches past you. It’s fun like Pulp were fun, not so much in the masterful way Jarvis Cocker scribed his acerbic lyrics, but in the same carefree stylish manner that always earns repeated listens. Saint Motel tread through the cliche minefield with confident, heavy strides, somehow never ending in disaster, but something tells us they’re enjoying it too much to worry about the odd missing limb. (MB)

SAINT MOTEL – 1997

SAINT MOTEL – AT LEAST I HAVE NOTHING

SAINT MOTEL – PUZZLE PIECES

ALPINE

Right at the close of the year we come across one of the tidiest finds of 2011. We have fallen completely head over heels in love with this new band and predict that once you too have hit play on the below buttons, you will also be devoting a little piece of your hearts to them. It’s been another good year for discovering new music, with a multitude of interesting finds, so topping it off with this new group seems like the perfect way to draw down the curtain on these last twelve months. Our Best Tracks Of 2011 post will be up on the blog over the holiday period so you can clearly see all it’s highlights. Right at the last minute this new band will easily rush straight into that post too.

If there’s been one theme running through this year’s discoveries it’s the appalling choice of band names. It’s not necessarily the actual titles that are the issue, more the massive lack of understanding search engine optimization. We guess music is what their best at, which is fair enough, but surely the A&R’s and labels should advise them better? We’ve had bands such as Friends, who arrived in an SEO-abandoned WTF moment. Citizens! foolishly thought some punctuation might help matters. Typing Escort into Google is highly unlikely to uncover the excellent New York disco band. Although a little fun can be found with Leisure, Theme Park and Amusement, who all might prove a little safer on search engines, but no more helpful when it comes to locating their music. More recently we had Neon Gold’s Foxes arrive, having adopted a moniker that clearly ignores not one but two UK bands of the same name, (albeit one had added a not-very-different-at-all exclamation mark to their title in a hopeless attempt to be distinguished). Even the Slough shit-piece Brother had to shift their title to Viva Brother following a legal challenge from an Australian band of the same name this summer, when perhaps a change of musical direction would have been preferable.

And so we come to today’s recommendation, Alpine. Not only will their SEO take you to numerous businesses offering anything to do with European mountain ranges, but there’s also the Arizona rock band of precisely the same name. That doesn’t even give mention to the UK duo that are high on hype, Alpines, although the addition of an ‘s’ at the end might just stave off the major label who they signed to earlier this year. Names aside though, this new band’s tunes are perhaps the best of the bunch, which goes to prove that it’s the output that ultimately matters most. Here is a six-piece from Melbourne making the kind of extra-special music that will have people stretching that bit further to reach them. They’re gearing up for their début album, which is to be released early in 2012, and considering their releases to date it’s already looking like one of the most exciting releases of the year.

Absolutely everything we’ve heard to date from the Melbourne-based band has been of an exceptional standard. Having formed in 2009 they quickly gained some useful early coverage on Australia’s Triple J radio station, which ultimately led to them signing with Sydney’s Ivy League Records by the summer of 2010. Their debut single, Heartlove, came out late last year introducing us to their female-fronted indie pop, with an emphasis on the drafty, left-field end of that genre’s spectrum, perhaps best associated with Scandinavian bands. Consider Le Corps Mince De Francoise covering Lykke Li songs and you get a sense of the excellent pop that they’re trying to design here. That single was found at the centre of their debut, five-track EP, Zurich, which arrived in November of 2010 and which proved to be one of the most consistent EPs we’ve heard in recent times. The highlight amongst the five highlights is their second single, Villages, which combines their signature moves of layered vocals and sweeping guitars in a knock-out potion.

Their tunes cause an instant lift for the listener, but nothing prepared us for the rise delivered by the first single to officially arrive from the expected debut album. Hands arrived in the second half of 2011 in preparation for next year’s hype and it’s an absolute winner. It initially creeps in the room without fuss, but quickly turns on the style, especially with the peaked vocals and waves of riffs that wash up and down in volume. It’s as deadly as a classically beautiful woman chewing bubblegum, delivered in distinctly classy sections, yet all of it coated in an instant pop appeal. If you thought their video for the Villages single was worthy of your attention then you should check the new one for Hands. It’s yet another stylish and beautifully created short film, directed by Luci Schroder and involving more seductive women in their underwear than any others this year. Or perhaps any year? All this sets everything up fantastically leaving us in a tantalisingly poised position for the full debut album next year. Beyond any names or titles, both the videos, and more importantly the music, is well worth clicking to page six of Google’s search results for. (MB)

ALPINE – VILLAGES

ALPINE – HEARTLOVE