Everest at Mill City Nights on June 18
For Immediate Release
EVEREST
June 18 in The Nether Bar at Mill City Nights
Presented by AEG Live
Formed by Russell Pollard (who formerly played with Sebadoh, The Folk Implosion, and Earlimart) in 2007, Everest caught national attention with the release of 2010 sophomore album, On Approach. While the record helped propel them onto bigger stages and put them in front of bigger audiences, most of the band felt the record only scratched the surface of what they could do. Thus the story of Ownerless begins in early 2011 when the four members of Everest found themselves at creative loose ends. Having been recently freed from a deal with Warner Bros and still slightly road-weary from touring relentlessly behind On Approach, the band set up shop with longtime friend and musical compatriot Richard Swift at his National Freedom studios in Cottage Grove, Oregon. After several weeks of recording, the band eventually returned to LA and enlisted another old friend, Rob Schnapf (known for working on Becks Mellow Gold & Odelay, Elliott Smiths XO & Figure 8, as well as Foo Fighters eponymous debut) to produce additional recording sessions for the record. It was the kind of creative kick in the pants that the band needed. Hes a no-bullshit kind of guy, says front man Russell Pollard, If something isnt working or something isnt right, hell totally bench you. No bullshit, no drama. We didnt have to rush this time either. Doing things at our own pace, we were able to put our egos aside and just concentrate on making the best record possible.
Building on the strengths of the bands previous two records, Ownerless finds them stretching out in new and previously unexplored directions. Whether it be the slack-jaw stoner riffing of opening track Rapture, the ghostly, late-night harmonics of Letter, or the krautrock shuffle of Hungry Ghost, Ownerless sounds like a band functioning like an eight-armed groove machinea vibe cultivated by the bands newfound sense of not giving a fuck (in the best way possible). I think we were all very selfless this time around, says guitarist Joel Graves. Weve learned how to support each others ideas. We all took turns playing different instruments, singing, playing percussion. Its the most collaborative thing weve ever done together.
Like the best art, the songs on Ownerless come from a place of un-self-consciousness. Its the sound of rock music made by musicians working on their own time (and, mostly, their own dime) without the pressures of industry A&R dudes or marketing folks muddying up the creative waters. People would say that they didnt really know how to describe us, says guitarist Jason Soda, They couldnt figure out exactly how to categorize our music or figure out what Pandora station we should belong toas if that was a somehow a bad thing. I think we finally embraced the fact that we shouldnt sound like anybody. We should sound like us. Not worrying about stuff like that is actually incredibly liberating.
As the so-called collapse of the music industry (whether it be real or imagined) continues to baffle and confound record label execs, bands like Everestgroups that have opted to take the reigns over their own destinies, both creative and commercialoften have the most to gain. With no owner, you are truly free. And any working musician will tell you, enduring the slings and arrows of the music biz often makes you reconsider why you make music and who, exactly, you are making it for. According to bassist Elijah Thomson, it was this kind of creative/commercial soul searching that ultimately lead to a watershed moment for the band. Weve been through the ringer a little bit, he says, but its really part of the story of this record. All of that was really metamorphic for us. Thats the story of so many great bands and so many great recordswhen it feels right ultimately it will be right, and we really feel right about this record in ways that we never did in the past. Making a good record is relatively easy, but making a great record is much harderand all we can do is try and do that.
Its hard to not to listen to Ownerless and feel that the band has done just that. Three records deep into their career they havent just made a good record, theyve made a great, effortless-sounding rock record. Only a band that has come to terms with their own bullshitand, for lack of a better term, taken total ownership over their own creative processwould come up with a track as classically rocking as Games or as off-the-cuff heartbreaking as Raking Me Over the Coals or Far Off, Away. Such honest musical sentiments are not so easy to come by.
http://www.facebook.com/everestband
https://twitter.com/EverestBand
http://www.myspace.com/everestlads
http://vimeo.com/everestchannel
Event Details: Everest
Venue: Mill City Nights
Show Date/Time: June 18 at 9pm. Doors open at 8pm. Ages 18+
GA Tickets: $12 ($15 DOS)
Tickets ON SALE NOW at the Mill City Nights box office, online at AXS.com, or by calling 1-888-9-AXS-TIX. For more information, please visit www.millcitynights.com.
Anna Barberio
Marketing - AEG Live
Mill City Nights
612.333.3422 ext 15
abarberio@aeglive.com