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Branches

Antlerand

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Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download songs from Antlerand

  Name Artist Time Price  
1 Rows of Unbending Lines Antlerand 5:32 $0.99 View In iTunes
2 Now It's a Year Antlerand 3:30 $0.99 View In iTunes
3 Brighter Rays Antlerand 5:11 $0.99 View In iTunes
4 Maybe We're Still Running Antlerand 4:00 $0.99 View In iTunes
5 We Know Better Antlerand 2:19 $0.99 View In iTunes
6 Not the Next Anything Antlerand 5:41 $0.99 View In iTunes
7 On Their Screen Antlerand 5:48 $0.99 View In iTunes
8 I Love You Like Forgetting Antlerand 1:44 $0.99 View In iTunes
9 Make Nothing Happen Antlerand 4:54 $0.99 View In iTunes
10 Far Too Clean Antlerand 3:15 $0.99 View In iTunes
11 Three Antlerand 13:20 Album Only View In iTunes

Album Review

Branches, the first full-length album by Portland, OR's Antlerand (formerly known as Invisible), is certainly a musically ambitious project. Besides the three main bandmembers, each of whom plays an assortment of instruments, they also add a variety of guest artists — including a violinist, a trumpet player, and a female singer — to their blend of indie pop/rock. Antlerand approach their songs almost with the mindset of a jam band, or even a jazz combo, using introductions that lead into nearly unrelated verses and choruses and back into introductions, adding or taking away layers the entire time, meandering about with a kind of improvisational structure. The problem is, it almost becomes too much. They have neither the intensity of a jam band nor the musicianship of a jazz combo to completely pull it off, and Branches tends to drag on because of it. Their chord changes, the movement from the A section to the B to the A, even the endings — all become predictable. Every song has so many layers and tries to do so many things that it can border on ridiculous. There's so much going on that it makes the music almost seem forced. Luckily, the one thing that pulls the album together and keeps it from spiraling into some uncharted indie-improv territory is the work of drummer Delaney Kelly. Even when the rest of the band gets stuck in a simple riff, Kelly pushes them forward, challenging them to do more, to think bigger (play sixteenth notes for God's sake!), but to stay controlled and composed at the same time. It's impressive work, and because of him, Antlerand are occasionally able to find that point where their musical desires mesh with feasibility, and sound good. "Maybe We're Still Running" brings marimbas, synths, and a quick jungle beat, among many other things, into one coherent, interesting song, and in "Make Nothing Happen," which finds singer Chris Larson — who sounds vaguely like Stephen Malkmus — playing the introspective indie rocker ("Oh Atlantic, won't you carry me?/Just wash me to your shore, with your westerlies"), everything comes together really well. Antlerand have a lot of good ideas, but their execution is just a little off. If they worry less about doing so much while still keeping their groove and style, their next record might just make it where Branches couldn't.

Recent Customer Reviews

Don't quite agree with the above-said
     
by Wild Turkey 101

Yes, the music sounds a bit redundant, however predictable, I dont quite think so. The drummer is a quite good one indeed, but the introduction of a miscillany of instruments constantly catches you off-guard, which makes the music quite fun and enjoyable, kind of like "In a Nutshell". I feel that the above-said review does not do the band any justice whatsoever, listen the judge for yourself.

Biography

Formed: 2002

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

Antlerand formed in 2003 when Chris Larson (vocals, guitar, programming) flew from Portland, OR to Tempe, AZ to visit friend Zach Okun (guitar, bass, vibraphone, piano) and recorded an EP under the name Invisible. Soon after, Okun moved back up to the Northwest, Invisible added drummer Delaney Kelly...
Full Bio
Branches, Antlerand
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