
(05.20.07) Almost a year ago, Benbecula came out with
sampler of their first rock
release. For a label that was predominantly, and doing well with,
electronic, it seems like quite a shift in gear. Yet, the label was right in
its choice with Genaro. Now the band, a word not heard to much in the
electronic circuit, have added to that year old taster with their first
eponymous LP,
Genaro. The sampler was excellent; inventive and instantly
liked by most that heard it. Did the highland lads hold onto anything to
keep the quality of the album up to the same standard as the sampler?
Genaro have are an interesting cocktail of sound, or maybe ale to keep the
Scottish theme. They are a rock group, there is no denying this; but they
have something more to offer than others. Their lyrics have a power to them,
their rifts are timed and choice and their usage of other instruments is
inspired. Genaro opens with “Anyone Home,” a track of bleak, rainy
Northern melodies and vocals with warm beats and flashes of distortion. The
opener sets the tone for the album. “Garp 52,” one of the sampler
triumvirate, is a ghost town rock number. The lyrics are exhausted,
amplifying small town loneliness, as melancholic rifts mingle with playful
strings. Immediately some might think that this is another teen angst album,
for black hair and whitewashed walls, but this isn’t the case. “Walking in
the Sun,” despite not have the vigour of its forerunners, is more upbeat
with its hazy lyrics and drowsy strings. “Breakout” brings air and optimism
to the record, with acoustics and a lighter tone.
Yet, the sunshine doesn’t last long as the clouds and rains of exasperation
arrive with the political “Dark Corners of the Mind.” The track suffers from
most social commentary numbers, with the theme bogging down the music.
“Friends to the End” is a sombre track of departures and bitter
inevitabilities with a deep arrangement and poignant lyrics. The final
member of the original sampler “The Feeling’s Gone” is the centerpiece of
the record. The track comes to life with gorgeous rifts, with beats
sprinkled, before heady lyrics are introduced. It’s a piece brimming over
with passion and emotion, and is as memorable as it is memory evoking. Utter
brilliance. Genaro have the ability to take moody themes and create very
catchy pieces from them; the soulful and energetic “Forward Motion” is
emblematic of this. The album ends with “Throw it Around.” Strong guitars
are at the basis of this slow, measured track which gives a sorrowful and
ambient climax to the debut LP.
Genaro have achieved a rich, full album. Their sound is moody, but neither
depressing nor elating; it is a thoughtful and conscious sound. Guitars are
not intrusive but utilized beautifully. The album has a lonely solitude to
it, a chill breeze and an intensity. The group have produced something that
is universally tangible, an album of lonely tones but not in a gloomy way.
The album is clever, it is deep, and it is different. Genaro may have some
sounds that are similar to other rock groups, but they have used these
sounds so well that they have created something completely new; something
indistinguishable but unmistakable. Genaro are a new breed of rock band,
embracing influences but not regurgitating them, using familiar sounds but
adapting them to their message, creating something unique out of well known
elements.
Genaro will be released June 18th, 2007 on Benbecula.
Benbecula
Genaro / Myspace