Holiday Gunfire
Holiday Gunfire
Cornelius Chapel Records
Though Birmingham, Alabama isnβt the most likely birthplace for a perfect amalgam of 1990s sounds, that is exactly what these veterans of Verbena, Twinside, Great Lakes, and Nowhere deliver. From the opener βNuevanβ on, Holiday Gunfire is a collection of paeans to the emperors of the decade in which grunge and alternative broke out of basements and into college dorms everywhere.
Naturally, the electric guitar is first and foremost; even in exploring sounds from the past, though, the band maintains relevance to modern music. There is no reinvention needed, as Lester Nuby and Jason Hamricβs guitars evoke a whoβs who of the era. The first single, βImaginary Friendβ, sounds like Matthew Sweet on 100% Fun, after he abandoned the self-imposed limitations of his reverb-less masterpiece, Girlfriend, and the entire album is sprinkled with sounds borrowed from Bob Mouldβs post-HΓΌsker DΓΌ band, Sugar. Effective guitar solos abound. βFake Itβ sounds like the shoegazing of The Jesus and Mary Chain or My Bloody Valentine, but fueled by amphetamines. On the most bass-heavy song, βSheβs Got a Machineβ, Craig Ceravolo plays with a pleasant and precise tone.
In summary, Holiday Gunfire is a reminder that well-executed guitar music can be peerlessly inspirational.
ArtistΒ Links
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HOLIDAY GUNFIRE – HOLIDAY GUNFIRE
Wayne Judkins