Matt Pelham - Vocals, Guitar
Roger Dabbs - Bass
Parrish Yaw - Keyboards
Rollum Haas - Drums
The sweetest treasures are always the most unexpected. And
so it is with this latest, precious surprise, crawling up
from a sleepy, old-fashioned
pocket of the American South, staring out at unfamiliar faces
inunfamiliar locations as far apart as New York, LA and London
(and dozens more anonymous burgs in between) who grasp at
their buzzing,
razor-sharp bites of pop with a fever close to obsession.
It's an unlikely story, all the better for being wholly true.
It begins in Tennessee, a state with music in its soul, in
its very earth. Nashville is, of course, internationally known
as the home of
Country & Western music, a seething and bustling hub of
the music industry; other locations, like Knoxville and Chattanooga,
have been immortalized in songs that will live on as long
as music itself.
Sparta, a dry, dull little city tucked in beneath a range
of mountains, isn't one of these places. In fact, it's hard
to think of a place teenagers would less like to grow up,
with the nearest legal liquor a mountain-trek away, and the
highlight of the year's social calendar being the annual High
School talent contest. You make your own fun in Sparta, and
that's exactly what the nascent members of The Features did;
aged 13 and bored out of their minds, looking for something
to do, sweet
and edgy singer/songwriter/guitarist Matt Pelham, softly-spoken
and thoughtful bassist Roger Dabbs, and grandly charismatic
organist Parrish Yaw - who brilliantly, as his name suggests,
looks as if he's just strolled out of some 18th century Western
ghost town - grabbed themselves some instruments and decided
to form a band.
They started out playing covers, in the time-honoured tradition
of kids lusting after 'The Rock' but unwilling to enrol in
music lessons. Exploring the sacred riffs of The Beatles and
Zeppelin, the core texts of the High School rock fan, the
boys slowly mastered the language and customs of rock'n'roll
in local barnyards and garages. Obviously, Sparta
boasted no bars where they could play their covers and the
new songs they were beginning to write, so the band took to
playing parties and the local Talent Show (history doesn't
record if the more New Wave-flavoured sound of the early Features
ever won gongs at this contest).
Slowly, surely, their career began to progress. They moved
to
Murfreesboro to study, got connected with a live scene there
and
promptly quit college to concentrate on their music. They
played a couple of shows in Nashville, and in the further
outreaches of
Tennessee. They recorded an eponymous EP, capturing the more
80s-themed contortions of their early incarnation. They lost
a drummer, swiftly hiring young Rollum Haas, a wiry jumble
of enthusiasm with an accent just this side of Keanu Reeves
who was a long-time fan, had Matt's
phone number, and called them for an audition the second he
heard the drumstool was vacant.
There's no magical twist in this chapter of The Features'
story; the boys had never really banked on a career in music
but, as had been the case since they first picked up their
instruments, they loved playing, and the idea of doing this
for a living certainly appealed. "Being in a rock'n'roll
band, playing music, its all great, great fun," offers
Parrish, with brilliant simplicity. "The travelling,
getting to go places you've never been, that's my favourite
part: playing for people that you've never played for before,
seeing what their reaction is. Playing your hometown is cool,
but you kinda already expect something, you know? When you
go to a different place, its like starting all over again,
and that's really neat."
No, no spectral fairy descended from the heavens, waving
her wand and granting the foursome their dream. They grafted,
crafted, worked on their material and their live show, sent
demo tapes and played gigs, and soon signed to UK label Fierce
Panda to release a clutch of acclaimed 7"s, including
2003's 'The Beginning' EP - a statement of intent from a band
who had already been together for a decade, albeit as a hobby
for
many of those years - which was later re-released in the States
by Universal, to whom the band had just signed. Their debut
album, 'Exhibit A', is released on Universal imprint Temptation.
Listening to its bristling, casual genius, it's no surprise
The
Features were signed so swiftly. Ask the band for their inspirations,
their aspirations, and they'll humbly talk of a broad field
of influence, ofwanting to play music that's fresh and new
and doesn't feel like you've heard it before. And so it is
with 'Exhibit A', a speeding jumble of sharp-edged guitar
pop with a lush melodic core and a great lyrical sensibility.
Songs buzz past in a blur, hormonal bolts of confusion echoing
the Buzzcocks' desperate pop, the Undertones' sweetened bile,
the Cars' riotous farfisa-drenched audacity, the Attractions'
acidic organ stabs, Sparks' gift for vaudevillian theatricality.
The sheer giddy energy of the album drags you through its
33 minutes in a flash, Matt's slashing guitar and howling
holler, sometimes like a preacher in full-on bug-eyed yelling
mode (the gonzo glam-punk of 'That's The Way It's Meant To
Be', the hilarious gothic-pastiche of 'Exorcising Demons'),
sometimes something much sweeter ('The Idea Of Growing Old',
one of a number of songs inspired by his children) always
the focus, but this band would be much the poorer without
Parrish's
frantic keyboards, and Rollum and Roger's rumbling, tumbling
circus-act rhythm section.
"I don't think I ever planned on doing this," reels
Matt at his
burgeoning role as rock'n'roll star, "But it seems like,
from the very beginning, I've just loved to do this. And that
we could play music and make records and live off doing that
is just a wonderful surprise."Humble but insanely-gifted,
these are The Features. Your latest wonderful surprise, and
your new favourite band.
|