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Birds of Avalon

Birds of Avalon

These Are All-American Eagles With Arm's-Length Knives And Flying Vs In Their Beaks

Apr 23, 2008

Words by Sean Moeller
Illustration by Johnnie Cluney
Sound Engineering by Patrick Stolley

  1.  
    Welcome to Daytrotter
  2.  
    Measure Of The Same original version appears on The Outer Upper Inner The first song on our new EP, The Outer Upper Inner which just came out a few weeks ago. We've been opening our sets with it on this tour it's fun to play with lots of vocal harmonies. Our take on a sixties pop song with a Motown-y feel with a little nod to The Move in there somewhere. It started out as a demo that our bass player, David did…
  3.  
    Shakey Tiger original version appears on The Outer Upper Inner We harvested parts of one of Birds of Avalon's first songs for this one and recorded it for the EP in January. A song about a desperate voyeur with a phased out breakdown and outro. The studio version features a little marimba in the chorus, but we couldn't fit that in the van!
  4.  
    Superpower Where's My Blood unreleased We left off the intro for the session (and lately at our shows)... nice guitar line pulls this song together. Jabs at imperialism in a poppy chorus. Merged into our instrumental breakdown "Where's My Blood" to tie it all up.
  5.  
    Turn Gold original version appears on Bazaar Bazaar From Bazaar Bazaar probably the only "blues-based" song we have- deals with the inevitable end of life and the possible freedom thereafter- we were feeling optimistic when we wrote it. The Daytrotter engineer asked about our "smoking" habits after we got through it!

Sidelining an overgrown grassy patch of land that serves as a very occasional parking lot - good enough for two cars - is a neighboring, covered garage that is often seen with a dinged up van or a stock car sitting next to it. The man of the house, with whom I've never had a conversation - though it's likely that his bed is no more than six or seven feet from my own through two walls - often has the garage down open into the night when the weather cooperates and he tinkers, fixes, all the while doing so to a soundtrack that bleeds 80s metal and classic rock.

The imagination pegs him as a guy who would take the old lady to the Surf Ballroom in Clear Lake, Iowa, where Buddy Holly and Ritchie Valens played their last show, to see Tesla play during the summer of 2007 for $30 even when common sense tells everyone that those tickets were worth no more than $5. The would have shoehorned into the tightest rock and roll jeans they could find, put on those old concert tee-shirts that they still try and find reason to wear every other week anyway and tailgate in the parking lot for two hours prior to the show, just to make it feel like old times. He would get lockjaw if he ever had the opportunity to share a beer with Billy Gibbons or Dee Snider, just to shoot the shit with them. Obviously enough, that's about all we might ever dream to have in common - this possible derivation of enjoyment that could come of a chance meeting with ZZ Top, though crossing a line before Twisted Sister might be in order. This neighbor, who I don't know or know anything about other than his grease monkey/transistor radio and barbeque grilling tendencies, doesn't know it yet, but we'd be able to bond over Birds of Avalon.

This North Carolina group of acid washed rockers would be an appealing alternative to having to discuss Earnhardt or the Nextel Cup Series with the man man. You could almost picture the guy showing off for the band by popping bottle tops off with his teeth and chugging until he puked. He would be shocked to know that a guy like Jack White exists and that the Birds of Avalon (touring now with The Raconteurs) could in a perfect world introduce him to the Stripe. It would be a lively party smelling of charcoal and pot smoke and sounding like amber waves of barley pop and feeling like lamps covered in orange or cream-colored cloths for lighting that feels like the kind of endangered light that dinner meets every day. The guitar flourishes and flights that the Birds of Avalon peck out are mountainous and dexterous, smacking of all of the glories that the instrument can produce with a suitable dance partner and the very things that make players contort their faces into orgasmic scramblings in front of complete strangers like my neighbor here. Lead singer Craig Tilley writes on The Outer Upper Inner and last year's Bazaar Bazaar in such ways that would please those who head bang to Bad Company and Cheap Trick, who feel a closeness to the way Robert Schneider of Apples in Stereo or Dave Grohl think about melodies. He gives off a sensation that he's writing songs about eagles with knives in their beaks, flying over the most spectral pieces of American land there are. It feels all-American and it feels wholesomely universal. Birds of Avalon give a reminder that huge guitars can never go out of style and that Thin Lizzy and Tom Petty used to be as big as it got. Going back to that wouldn't be such a bad thing. On our way, we'll have drinks and medium rare steaks with the surviving members of Queen just for the hell of it, for the entire 360.

Click here to visit Birds of Avalon's myspace page.
Birds of Avalon Official Site
Volcom Entertainment

Session Comments

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  1. This reminds me of the drunk, gray-haired rock veteran that stopped me on the street the other night and asked, “You ever heard of Birds of Avalon? I fucking love Birds of Avalon! Favorite band right now.” Jay Thursday, April 24, 2008 2:41 pm
  2. Juke-joint propulsions and a spinning double-axe attack assist this straight-up presentation. A song like this could use a sharper/stinging vocal delivery - little less high pure voice. The third track has a real hopeful -optimistic lead melodic line. The final tune's presentation is pretty keen - kinda NY meets Waters's singing - nothing stopped it from being jammed on harder & longer. jboyaquar Tuesday, October 21, 2008 11:53 pm
 
 
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