Showing posts with label nathan oliver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nathan oliver. Show all posts

Friday, October 2, 2009

Friday Five: 5 questions with Nathan White of Nathan Oliver




Nathan Oliver is the larger cumulative project of North Carolina's Nathan White, whose new album released this year, Cloud Animals, has been a pleasant surprise. White agreed to answer a few questions about his album and the scene in the Triangle area.

Nathan Oliver: "Icicles For Fingers"

Nathan Oliver: "French Press"
Nathan Oliver: "State LInes, Pt. 3"


1) What's your perception of what's going on with all the different bands in the Triangle area?
Nathan White: I completely agree--there is such a vibrant music scene in Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill today. Honestly, there are so many new bands and side projects popping up, it's hard to keep track of everyone. You can go out almost any night to venues like Local 506, The Cave, or Pinhook and catch local talent. A lot is happening and people (especially area students) are really receptive. There's a great community feeling--from showgoers and musicians alike.

I am not from the Triangle area originally. I'm grew up in Greenville, NC which is an hour and a half east of the Triangle. There's a very different (absent) music scene there. My favorite record store and venue were shut down long ago. I moved to Chapel Hill in 2000 to attend UNC, and I have only recently left. I drive back to Chapel Hill almost every weekend. I have a feeling I'll move back soon enough.

2) I know on Cloud Animals you use a lot of different musicans from various bands and projects. Do you have a steady "band" now that you practice with or develop songs with? Or do you still pretty much do it on your own, then throw the band together before shows?

My songwriting still mimics a solo artist perspective (probably why I kept the Nathan Oliver moniker, instead of changing it to a band name). I tend to write the bulk of each song before bringing it to anyone else. I do ask different musicians to write bass parts or drum parts and bring them to what I already have--which is what I did with Cloud Animals. I think it made for a pretty diverse and unpredictable record. So from the sense of developing new songs, I don't have a full band that I write with.




3)My favorite song off Cloud Animals is probably "Red Panda." It just seems kind of a departure from the rest of the folk-ish songs on the album, that it took me off guard at first, but then it was the one song I kept coming back too.

That and "Alone in a Fog" and I guess the two are related by their more electronic & distorted elements. Any thoughts on those songs? Were they a conscious choice to experiment or did they just pop out? Or do you think those songs are pretty much a continuation of the rest of the album and I'm just out of my head?


Haha, those are the rock songs of the record, and better reflect me as a guitarist and what we try to do as a live band. We are definitely heavier and noisier live, so that's where these songs came from. "Red Panda" was supposed to be this quirky, demented rock song with surf guitar in it. It also has this random tirade during the second breakdown that Mark Lebetkin (our viola player) came up with on the spot. It got a little deconstructed but I was really happy with the way it turned out. "Alone In A Fog" was the last song that I wrote and recorded for the album. It's about leaving someone to their own self-loathing devices. I was really happy with the way the ending of that song turned out.

The songs are heavier than most of the album, but I still think they fit us pretty well. We had some heavier moments on our first album too ("Greys & Blacks").

4) I really like the tone and feel of "Icicles for Fingers." It has this crazy carnie feel to it that I think appeals the sadistic type. What was the inspiration and direction for that one?

"Icicles for Fingers" is kind of this demented rollicking Johnny Cash song to me. I always hear a Pixies influence in this song. The bassline and trumpet kind of give it a carnival feel. The song is about a friend of mine who moved cross-country by himself and tried to reach out to new people who eventually turned cold toward him. It's about knowing where home is and who you can trust.


5) Lastly, here's kind of a stupid generic question--but what's the one album that you couldn't go without?

Right now probably something by Radiohead. They're huge and still phenomenal. Today let's say
In Rainbows. Tomorrow it'll be completely different. The Microphones? Unwound? Nirvana?

More after the jump...

Monday, August 17, 2009

review: Nathan Oliver--Cloud Animals



Nathan Oliver
Cloud Animals
Pox World Empire, 2009

Nathan Oliver: "French Press"


Cloud Animals is a mix of folk, modern rock, and synth goodness to make a diverse palette of selections. There are some uneven parts here, many of the songs don't really resemble the one that came before it. But they make a whole. A great whole.

The opener carnivalesque "Icicles for Fingers" has this fanciful plucky swing vibe, the bass line keeps its strong and the vocals from Nathan White maintain an edge of playfulness and sarcastic danger. Really, it's an interesting track to include in the context of the rest of the album--it's crazy device is never repeated nor really even hinted at. And, well, it's chilling. But the rest of the album has thrills, spills and melancholia to settle everyone down.


Because the second track
"Under Lock and Key" launches into driving modern rock before ceding to more typical lighthearted folk in "French Press" complete with a high-strung chorus and high-key guitar chords. Nathan Oliver tries on different skins with these songs, moving around a bit to find the best fit. Maybe part of it is that the band lineup changes and essentially revolves around Nathan White. He's got varied tastes and is trying them all out.

Further dalliances include my two favorite tracks: "Playground Lies" and "Red Panda." Deeper grooves with some electric flourishes dashed over them. "Playground Lies" has this wide open bridge and chorus, grandiose in its scale and scope with this heartland naivete, before moving into brooders in "A Dark History" and "Alone in a Fog," taking their own garage rock/shoegaze acoustic plunge. But with all these, there does seems to be some folk-sian narrative, nothing here is churned out completely as a single of the week.

All of that is almost thrown out the window, with "Red Panda" though. It's got this fluid danceable breakdown, that if the song were in isolation, would make indie-rock crushes like The Pains of Being Pure at Heart and Vivian Girls blush. But really, it's only one song, the most frustrating, the most appealing, the most out of left-field that just proves that Cloud Animals really is a carnival.

I have no doubt that Nathan Oliver could throw a bunch of those dance hits together, stack up the indie accolades and then take a bow. But it's only one skin, and Nathan Oliver is still moving through them, like a confused chameleon who happens to look good at whatever is tried on.

But it's okay, Nathan Oliver. We're all willing to wait and grow and laugh and find out with you. Keep doing your thing. We've got all of Cloud Animals to keep us company.

For more Nathan Oliver, check out our list of 5 More North Carolina Bands You Should Hear Now.

More after the jump...

Friday, August 7, 2009

mp3's: Nathan Oliver, The Happy Hollows, Sunset Rubdown, Old Wives' Tale



Nathan Oliver: "Icicles For Fingers"
Nathan Oliver: "State Lines Pt. 3"

I've been sitting on Nathan Oliver's new release Cloud Animals for almost two months now. I've thought about it, I've wanted to listen to it, and I just really haven't. Sometimes these things take some time to percolate. But the Raleigh-based band draws on some of the most positive influences from the Triangle, including members of North Elementary and The Rosebuds. A/nd plus it's out on local label Pox World Empire. Everything is doubly excellent. With Nathan Oliver, you get somewhere between experimental folk and indie pop. The PR people liken it to Elliott Smith and The Pixies. And they're mostly right.

Happy Hollows: "Monster Room"

Old Wives' Tale: "15Amphetamine"

Old Wives' Tale: "Royal Flesh"




Sunset Rubdown: "Idiot Heart"


Latin For Truth: "88"

More after the jump...
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