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The
Forms
(THREESPHERES)
" Making this album was a pretty painful process," admits Forms
frontman Alex Tween when asked about the band's follow-up to 2004's
incredibly well-received, Pitchfork-approved debut Icarus—and,
to be honest, his comment is a bit of an understatement. Recorded
consecutively over a 50-day period in Illinois with Steve Albini
(Nirvana, the Pixies) at Electrical Audio and assisted by Greg
Norman (Built To Spill, Pelican) at Great Western Record Recorders,
the process tested the New York act's limits of the band's sonics and sanity
in ways that most of us couldn't even begin to imagine. "We couldn't
afford to take one day off because we'd already paid for the studio
time; all for 30 minutes of music, which works out to 35 seconds
a day," frontman Alex Tween explains, "but we're really proud of
how it came out."
Indeed, despite (and listening to the lyrics, maybe partially
because of) all the physical and financial struggles the band—which
also features guitarist Brendan Kenny, bassist Jackson Kenny and
drummer Matt Walsh—endured during the recording, the disc
takes the band's unique brand of post-hardcore to indescribable
new levels. Fading in and out of each other like a series of dream
sequences, The Forms evokes the classic Dischord roster
such as Shudder To Think and Fugazi as much as it does underappreciated
'90s acts like Slowdive and the Dismemberment Plan, but puts things
in a more accessible pop context that will appeal to record store
nerds and NPR listeners alike. "We've always felt like we've never
fit in anywhere, especially in New York," Tween explains. "But
things seems to be changing; people seem to be open to something
a little more challenging and different," he continues, adding
the band feel a kinship with peers such as Battles, Deerhoof and
Dirty Projectors.
Above all The Forms are perfectionists (Albini himself admitted
he'd never worked with a band that had gone over the same piece
of tape 58 times, as The Forms did on their debut) and if anything,
that attention to detail is amplified on the band's latest disc. >From
the hypnotic opener "Knowledge In Hand" to the alternately driving
and droning (in a good way) "Red Gun", all of the songs on The
Forms are distinctively different without compromising the
band's unique vision. In fact, if the album's ethereal closer "Getting
It Back" doesn't completely captivate you, well, we don't know
what to tell you. "With this new album we really didn't want to
take the easy way out and instead tried to make our ideas work
as songs by having parts work with each other organically and actually
make sense," Tween explains. "We still tried to mess with the idea
of what a song is every chance we could get, but I think the end
result is a lot more cohesive and refined than the first record."
To date, The Forms have sold over 4,000 copies of their debut
disc (released on their own label), and shared the stage with seemingly
disparate acts such as The National, The Hold Steady, Minus The
Bear, Death From Above 1979 and OK Go and turned on countless listeners
to their dreamy brand of post-rock—and with the release of The
Forms there's no limit to what the band could achieve, all
without compromising their integrity. "It's good not having a boss
coercing us to do appearances at T.G.I.F.," Tween explains when
asked why the band decided to finance and self-release the album
on their own. "With this album we wanted to create this sense that
you're visiting a place that exists after you leave."
Trust us, listen to The Forms on headphones and you'll
never want that visit to end—and the best part is that it
doesn't have to.
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