Friday, October 11, 2024

SPANAWAY - Songs of Yesteryear


SPANAWAY: post-hardcore crew (member of Fuming Mouth) delivers new alt-rock masterpiece "Songs of Yesteryear"; first single streaming now


From Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, Spanaway announces the December 6th release of its debut album, Songs of Yesteryear.

Stream the first single, "Terrible," here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1V5lO9d-6M

Pre-order the album (on cassette) via Burial Whisper Records, here: https://burialwhisper.bigcartel.com/

Recorded and engineered by Zach Weeks at God City and mastered by Cult of Luna's Magnus Lindberg, Songs of Yesteryear is a perfect album: a series of ten unforgettable tracks, each one transmitting the real, authentic pain of its makers. Songs of Yesteryear's lush, heartbroken songs are likely to hook fans of Failure, Hum, DIIV, and Nothing, but the appeal is broader than any one niche. The yearning vocals of frontman Zack Van Why meld with swirling layers of shoegazing guitars and the rock solid pounding of drummer Keith Goldoni (also a member of death metal/hardcore favorites Fuming Mouth), resulting in timeless laments wherein substance trumps style.

Quite literally a "post-hardcore" band, Spanaway's roots lie in the Pennsylvania and New Jersey hardcore scenes. Guitarist Robby Vena discusses how, for him and his bandmates, Spanaway's gorgeous, haunted sound is the next step after the explosiveness of hardcore: "We all found each other through hardcore and that is certainly our cornerstone sonically. Hardcore manifests as this erratic, dangerous, and transient explosion. But once the dust settles, there's an emotional fallout. Surviving the blast and braving that mental dystopia is where our biggest influences lie. I think Converge succeeded on 'Jane Doe,' American Nightmare on 'We’re Down ’Til We’re Underground,' and Texas Is The Reason on 'Do You Know Who You Are?.'"

Initially banding together under the name Blush, the quartet of Van Why, Goldoni, Vena, and bassist Thomas Geschardt made the decision to move forward under the new name of Spanaway last year, "merely for practical purposes, to avoid confusion and conflict with a myriad of other projects bearing the same name." In its former life, the band received this review from hardcore authority No Echo in 2019: "A totally immersive listening experience... While the crushing guitar atmospherics are certainly hard to ignore, there is always a powerful sense of melodicism at the heart of what Blush is doing." A 2019 article from Revolver Magazine stated: "Much like Cloakroom's recent output and bands like Hum before them, Blush specialize in contrasting the brutal with the beautiful — crushing guitar riffs juxtapose against sadly sweet melody to create the ultimate yin and yang." Five years down the road now, starting its new chapter as Spanaway, the band has delivered a stunning debut album that lives up to all the praise put forth in those reviews.

On Songs of Yesteryear's first single, "Terrible," Van Why purrs: "Hands around my throat / Rings around a rose / I love the lows and lows / All caught up in your memory / Softly whispering me to sleep." Offering a glimpse at the story behind the song, he states: "'Terrible' is about the ending of a significant relationship. Icing over the pain by romanticizing even the worst moments. Growing to accept that those injuries were disproportionate to the fleeting good times."

At its worst, sad music is nothing more than self-pity and self-indulgence. Spanaway's work is the opposite: sad music that exists to connect and uplift humankind. "If nothing else, " states Vena, "we hope these songs can be a comfort to others who are struggling, to know their suffering is not in vain."

Tracklist:
1) Chatterbox
2) Keni's Song
3) Twenty Seven
4) Terrible
5) Bemoaning
6) Poppyseeds
7) Twin Faced Angel
8) Born to Lose
9) Spaceman
10) Walks Through Yetter

Lineup:
Zack Van Why - vocals, guitar
Robby Vena - guitar
Thomas Geschardt - bass
Keith Goldoni - drums

Guests on "Twenty Seven":
Brie Emsee - vocals
Tyler Lyons - piano
Matt Hull - trumpet, trombone

RIYL: Failure, Hum, Smashing Pumpkins, Radiohead, Elliott Smith, DIIV, Nothing

Photos by Coffin Blossom

Artwork by Dylan Garrett Smith

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