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Steel Train
TRAMPOLINE
Jack Antonoff - lead vocals, guitar
Evan Winiker - bass, vocals
Scott Irby-Ranniar - keyboards, vocals
Daniel Silbert - guitar, vocals
Jon Shiffman - drums, vocals
“Before we started making this record, I was at the worst
point in my life," states Steel Train's lead vocalist and
songwriter, Jack Antonoff. "I was developing a terrible panic
disorder. I felt awful all the time and it got to the point where
I didn’t want to do anything. Then I started writing songs
again, and instead of falling apart, I tried to find a way to turn
it all into something that mattered.”
To understand where Antonoff was coming from, it’s important
to know what he went through. In a short period of time, his sister
died, his cousin was killed in Iraq and he broke up with his girlfriend
of many years. The confluence of tragedy left him feeling frustrated
and alone.
Through songwriting, he was able to reconnect with one of his
greatest passions and lift himself out of his depression. Gradually,
his spirits improved and his personal and professional life began
to take off, inspiring him to create the life-affirming sounds
of TRAMPOLINE, the ambitious sophomore effort from New
Jersey quintet, Steel Train - a majestic, buoyant album that conjures
the sounds and spirit of some of the band’s favorite music
styles, including British and American classic rock, folk-rock,
psychedelia, pop and alternative.
Filled with huge hooks and quirky instrumentation, TRAMPOLINE takes
the band to a new level of songwriting and musicianship. But while
the songs sound consistently joyous, the lyrics are hyper-realistic
addressing the events that can shatter our world and break our
hearts as well as focusing on the forces that lift us up and offer
a second chance. Throughout the album, urgent guitars, euphoric
melody laden keyboards, and yearning vocals cut through on tracks
like "Alone on the Sea", "Kill Monsters in the Rain",
and "Black Eye". However, the band agrees that the track
which embodies the album is “I Feel Weird,” an energized
pop number full of piano, and xylophones, in which Antonoff lays
his heart in his palm: “When I was 18 everything was alive/
Then the planes hit the towers, then she died, then he died/ A
part of me disappeared, six feet in the ground, a million miles
in the sky/ a fire burns, a fire burns, a fire burns and it’s
mine.”
“The whole song recaps the last five years of my life leading
up to right now,” Antonoff explains. “The music is
almost like Bruce Springsteen pop. It’s so to the point,
but on the other side, the lyrics are really morbid, and sentimental,
and uplifting, and the message in the end is that everything will
be alright. And that’s really how I feel now.”
The band which features original members (bassist Evan Winiker
and keyboardist Scott Irby) as well as two new arrivals (guitarist
Daniel Silbert and drummer Jon Shiffman) had the chance to develop
the new material naturally on the road before heading into the
studio, giving them the opportunity to see what songs stood up
live that a studio may or may not bring to life. As well, Antonoff
recorded demo after demo in his New Jersey home to make sure that
the new songs were ready for the studio.
In late May of ’07, the group entered the studio in Eagle
Rock, California with producer Mark Trombino (Jimmy Eat World,
Rilo Kiley) who helped fine-tune their arrangements, bringing out
the band’s strengths and musicianship. Two months after they
began, the record was completely tracked.
The end result is a rare, wonderfully layered and versatile album
that reveals the uplifting, self-medicating message of an emerging
songwriter as well as the solidarity of a focused rock unit – a
record that introduces fans to a fuller sound and rich complexity
only hinted at in the band's earlier work. TRAMPOLINE is
a bold departure from the band’s past excursions, and showcases
a new Steel Train, musically and philosophically.
For more information, please contact Steven Trachtenbroit at Big
Hassle Media
or 212 619 1360
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