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'''The Shondes''' are a rock band from [[Brooklyn, NY]], best known for their combination of <nowiki>[[feminist]] [[punk]], [[rock]], [[pop]]</nowiki>, and [[Jewish]] influences, and ties to progressive political activism.
'''The Shondes''' are a rock band from [[Brooklyn, NY]], best known for their combination of [[feminist]] [[punk]], [[rock]], [[pop]], and [[Jewish]] influences, and ties to progressive political activism.
==History==
==History==



Revision as of 18:37, 10 September 2013

The Shondes are a rock band from Brooklyn, NY, best known for their combination of feminist punk, rock, pop, and Jewish influences, and ties to progressive political activism.

History

The Shondes formed in 2006 and have since released two demos and four full-length studio albums; toured extensively around the United States and Europe; shared stages with Uh Huh Her, Electrelane, Rasputina, MEN, Caithlin De Marrais (Rainer Maria) Franz Nicolay (The Hold Steady), Mary Timony (Helium, Wild Flag), Erase Errata, Amy Ray (The Indigo Girls), Joe Lally (Fugazi), Mecca Normal, Bonfire Madigan, Party Line, Lesbians on Ecstasy, Kaia Wilson (Team Dresch) and more; and performed at festivals including CMJ Music Festival in New York City, South By Southwest in Austin, TX, North By Northeast in Toronto, ON.

The band was started by violinist Elijah Oberman and bassist Louisa Rachel Solomon after their former band, [[The Syndicate]], broke up. They recruited guitarist Ian Brannigan, a friend they had made through student activism at The New School in Greenwich Village, and drummer Temim Fruchter, whom the three got to know through protesting the Republican National Convention in 2004.

After national tours in Summer 2006, Spring 2007, and late 2007, The Shondes self-released their debut LP, The Red Sea, on January 8, 2008, and celebrated with a record release party at [[Brooklyn]]'s [[Luna Lounge]]. The album was recorded at Studio G in [[Brooklyn]] and produced by Tony Maimone of Pere Ubu and They Might Be Giants,[1] and features Brian Dewan on keyboards.[2] Critics noted the improbability of successfully combining the band's influences and political intentions, and praised their success.[3] In the [[Chicago Tribune]] [[Jessica Hopper]] said: "'The Red Sea,' is a visceral work...their moody songs are redolent of a time in the early '80s when punk fractured into something more tuneful and complex...a political band whose music is as strong as its message is a rare treat.' [[Venus Zine]] said: "On paper, this band sounds like a train wreck, but in real life they are completely arresting....Old-world romance elegantly intertwined with riot grrrl piss and vinegar onstage...A lot of valid arguments have been made against overtly mixing politics and music — it takes the focus off important things like rhythm or, worse, excuses a band’s lack of talent or imagination. But those arguments don’t apply to bands whose politics become inseparable from the emotive quality of their sound."[4] Another national tour in Fall 2008 in support of The Red Sea marked a turning point in the band's press coverage, as their emotional, energetic live set began to be a focus.

Following that tour, guitarist Ian Brannigan (who was also Solomon's boyfriend at the time) left the band and was replaced by Fureigh. The new lineup made its debut at JDub Records' annual "Jewltide" Christmas Eve party at Southpaw in Brooklyn,[5] (a venue the band considered their home base until its closure in 2011). In May 2010, the Shondes released their second album My Dear One on Fanatic Records, which has been referred to as their "break-up album," in the aftermath of Brannigan's departure. It was recorded and produced at [[Fanatic Records]]' in-house studio, [[Art Farm]]. They toured nationally to support it that year, beginning at South By Southwest in March, though the end of June, receiving favorable critical response along the way, again particularly for the emotive quality of their live performance, sometimes noted in contrast to the album's production which received criticism.

In Fall 2010, The Shondes announced that their violinist, Elijah Oberman, had been diagnosed with cancer and was undergoing treatment. This resulted in the cancellation of a 7-week European tour. In early 2011, the band announced plans to move forward with performances at SXSW 2011, record a new album (Searchlights, to be released in Fall 2011), and touring, following the release. In August 2011, The Shondes announced that they had parted ways with [[Fanatic Records]] and would be releasing Searchlights on Exotic Fever Records on September 20, 2011 with Producer [[Tony Maimone]] stepping in to mix the record. One review said: "One instantly notable improvement from the previous two albums is production value. Whereas The Red Sea occasionally felt thin and My Dear One was muted and muffled, Searchlights feels bright and raw, a sound much more befitting bouncy, energetic rock music."[6] They toured nationally throughout the fall of that year, ending with a CMJ showcase, then again in 2012, beginning with a packed week of shows at SXSW in March through the end of May. They began testing new material on tour in Europe throughout the Fall of 2012.

After their European tour (sponsored by [[Missy Magazine]], the band shared that they were working on a new album featuring the material they had played in Europe. In April 2013 they announced the departure of founding drummer, [[Temim Fruchter]], and the entrance of Allison Miller for the band's fourth record, The Garden, to be released September 17, 2013 on Exotic Fever Records, and again produced by Tony Maimone at Brooklyn's Studio G. Advance critical response included [[Bruce Springesteen]] biographer [[Peter Ames Carlin]] dubbing the album "incendiary."

The band has organized and performed at benefit events for progressive organizations like Birthright Unplugged, Jews Against the Occupation, and The Sylvia Rivera Law Project.

Influence of Judaism

The Red Sea features the song "[[I Watched the Temple Fall]]," one of their most well-known and explicitly political songs. The band has said they wrote it collaboratively very early on, and that it arose from conversations about the meaning of the Jewish holiday Tisha B'Av.[1] Members of the band worked with the New York City group Jews Against the Occupation,[7] an organization "advocating peace through justice for Palestine and Israel." [8] Since its inception,[9] the band has stirred controversy for the members' outspoken radical politics, particularly those centered around the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.[1]

Of My Dear One, The Jewish Forward said: "They are a Jewish band, and they’re playing klezmer modalities and time signatures, but you could not know any of that and still think the song you’re listening to is the best song you’ve heard in years."[10] Heeb Magazine said that The Shondes' mix of confrontational political punk and Jewish music created "a powerful new sound" and included Fruchter as one of "the Heeb 100" in 2007,[11] while the magazine's blog asserted that in the contemporary Jewish music scene "it is quite possible that the Shondes are making the only music that truly matters" and called The Red Sea "the most anticipated Jewish record of the year." [12] In June 2010, The Shondes were included in The Big Jewcy.[13]

Critical response

In their "Singles Swap" column, Entertainment Weekly compared the band to The Go-Go's and described their "Giddy garage melodics with Sleater-Kinney twist." -Entertainment Weekly

A touch of Bruce Springsteen, a touch of Nashville, and plenty of gritty ’90s pop punk imparting the feel of an instant classic. -MTV Iggy

Radical politics, power-pop melodies, traditional Jewish music, and punk vitriol. -Pitchfork

The Shondes make bold, brassy lonely-heart rock with the snarl and swoon of classic '90s Northwestern indie—all riot grrl bluster, K Records sentimentality, and a keening, wailing violin that's more Nirvana Unplugged than Raincoats unhinged....Separating themselves from Sleater-come-latelys, the Shondes have a little bit of steampunky clatter underneath their crunching riffs and a keen ear towards the Jewish music that raised each of its four members. -The Village Voice[14]

“Miami,” which starts off with Solomon angrily demanding, “Did you leave me on Venice Beach?” over rumbling drums, is about a very specific breakup, but — like all great songs — it could be about anyone being abandoned, anywhere. They are a Jewish band, and they’re playing klezmer modalities and time signatures, but you could not know any of that and still think the song you’re listening to is the best song you’ve heard in years. -The Forward [10]

Complex song structures intertwined with direct, inquisitive lyrics...It's haunting and it's eerie, yet it's rousing. The Shondes are a twisted carnival film noir come true. —CMJ

Riot grrrl radicalism wed to classically structured songs, distortion pedals, clashing vocals, and powerful lyrics. -The Village Voice

Ready for an indie break out....radical politics, inspired riffs, textured harmonies and pure sex appeal. -Curve Magazine

This is a band that rocks as if they just don't give a fuck but has crafted their art in a manner that shows they clearly do. -Earfarm

Much critical response has focused on the unique performance style of each member. Louisa Rachel Solomon had been called "a front-woman to fear and fall in love with."[15] A reviewer at The Shondes' Atlanta stop on their 2008 Fall tour commented that Solomon "charged at the mic as if to push the song forward with her body."[4] The same reviewer said that Elijah Oberman "played...violin with such physicality that he sometimes crumpled almost to the ground around his instrument." [16] Another reviewer commented that "Elijah Oberman has that rare mastery of post-punk violin playing that only seems to come along once in a generation." [17]

Speculation about My Dear One

Culture Snob says: "...this break-up record sounds like no other. For one thing, there’s the artful but direct anger of many of the lyrics, delivered by bassist Louisa Solomon with a lethal woundedness. 'Lines & Hooks' offers a command that also reads as a warning: 'And if you ever want me again, I suggest you run.' My favorite song of the year so far, 'Miami' is a bitter and bruised document of abandonment, almost certainly a kiss-off to guitarist Ian Brannigan, who left the band mid-tour in 2008."[18]

Stomp and Stammer says: "The members of The Shondes (Shonde is Yiddish for a disgrace) are refreshingly uncoy about the fact that these tearful and fiercely accusatory songs are about Brannigan's abrupt departure."[19]

Three Imaginary Girls says: "My favorite song is 'You Ought To Be Ashamed,' a stomping number full of incredibly precise little details about a user-loser, who ruins simple things like 'a pre-show shot of Jameson,' and whose behavior strikes the narrator as a dull parody of stories by 'Bukowski, Updike, Kerouac.' The subject frantically, boldly cut down in this psychodrama, it makes John Cale's song 'Chicken Shit' about his tour-stopping guitarist who quit the band sound like a gnarled belch. For vindictiveness, its impossibly catchy melody and shuddering, multi-vocal climax can't be beat, even by fathers of the form." [20]

Discography

Demo 1 -- July 2006
Demo 2 -- March 2007
The Red Sea—self-released—January 10, 2008
My Dear One—Fanatic Records—May 8, 2010
Searchlights— Exotic Fever Records— September 20, 2011

The Garden— Exotic Fever Records— September 17, 2013

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c [1][dead link]
  2. ^ The Shondes. The Red Sea, 2008. Liner notes
  3. ^ Kiser, Matt. Review: The Red Sea CMJ
  4. ^ a b The Shondes Pack Heat and Politics in Atlanta
  5. ^ "The Shondes | Gratis muziek, tourneedata, foto's, video's". Myspace.com. Retrieved 2012-02-23.
  6. ^ http://www.aaronmbrown.net/blog/2011/09/
  7. ^ Giovagnoli, Gavin Paul. www.spin.com/features/band_of_the_day/2008/01/080114_the_shondes/index.html Artist of the Day: The Shondes
  8. ^ "Our Mission" Jews Against the Occupation NYC
  9. ^ Torreri, Marisa. "Shame on You" The Village Voice June 9, 2006
  10. ^ a b "The Shondes' New Album Complete With Violin". The Forward. Retrieved 2012-02-23.
  11. ^ Heeb 100[dead link]
  12. ^ Heeb HQ.[dead link]
  13. ^ Korol, Margarita (2010-06-08). "The Big Jewcy". Jewcy.com. Retrieved 2012-02-23.
  14. ^ Weingarten, Christopher (2010-02-16). "The Newest Lonely Hearts Epic from The Shondes". Blogs.villagevoice.com. Retrieved 2012-02-23.
  15. ^ [2][dead link]
  16. ^ [3][dead link]
  17. ^ "2008 January « Hebrew School". Hebrewschoolsounds.com. Retrieved 2012-02-23.
  18. ^ http://www.culturesnob.net/2010/07/reclamation-project/
  19. ^ http://www.stompandstammer.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2742&Itemid=1
  20. ^ http://www.threeimaginarygirls.com/contentcdreview/2010apr/my-dear-one