Seabird
Written by Dec 4, 2009, 4:14 am
View Comments • Related Topics: christian life, ministry, reviews
Seabird is a band from the Cincinnati Ohio (northern Kentucky) area. One of my best friends, Brandon Weaver, is the bassist for the group. I am sharing this with you because I have heard them live and listened to much of their music. They are raw, singing and playing from their hearts, bringing refreshing realism to overproduced music, even in Christian corridors. Their new album Rocks Into Rivers is set to be released on Dec. 15th. This is the follow up to their 1st release, Til We See the Shore. Also, there is a collection of Christmas songs entitled The Silent Night EP. Their music has been featured on several TV shows and is frequently heard on Grey’s Anatomy.
Below is an excerpt from the band’s website, describing their music.
Seabird’s 2008 debut ‘Til We See the Shore turned the piano pop rockers into a national name with the hit single “Rescue,” prominent TV placements and several major coast-to-coast tours. Fans got to hear the band on a PureVolume Session and Paste Magazine sampler, and Amazon.com made the album a “Deal of the Day.” It was such a banner year that they even earned their hometown’s highest music honor, “Artist of the Year,” at the Cincinnati Entertainment Awards. Most bands would either take a break or keep working the same album, but not Seabird. Just over a year after releasing their breakthrough debut, the piano-pounding rockers march on with their sophomore album Rocks Into Rivers.
The new album features all that Seabird does best – rich melodies, immediate vocal hooks and picturesque narratives – but Rocks Into Rivers propels the band forward with bigger sounds, darker twists and masterfully woven instrumentation. Produced by Paul Moak (Mat Kearney, Sixpence None the Richer) and Aqualung’s Matt Hales at Ocean Studios and The Smoakstack, the album walks the line between earthy and urban, blue collar and big city, with emotionally bare lyrics about running into walls, finding new paths and questioning yourself in the process. It’s an energized blend of sexy Brit-style sonics and the working man’s ethos of ’70s American rock.
“We felt like we were capturing a live performance, which is where we have the most confidence,” says Aaron Morgan, who handles the band’s vocals, keys and songwriting duties. “That’s where we felt we were really landing punches.”
Lead track and single “Don’t You Know You’re Beautiful” sets the tone with clap-happy beats, soaring melodies and scatty vocal flourishes that build toward an unforgettable chorus. The songs travels through peaks and valleys that musically reflect the emotional state of its subject, a girl trying to stand up as her family falls down around her.
“The song is about a girl who carries the weight of her parents’ divorce on her shoulders,” explains Morgan. “She starts to believe lies about herself, like it’s her fault. ‘Don’t You Know You’re Beautiful’ is about wanting her to know the truth and letting her know she has the ability to live beyond this.”
Morgan switches the spotlight to himself with “Believe Me,” an impassioned promise to be the husband and father he knows he should be, set to fast-paced verses, a bold chorus and a touching piano and vocal breakdown. Family is also the focus on “The Good King,” a mid-tempo lullaby about seeing life through his daughter’s eyes, while “Baby I’m in Love” recalls seeing his pregnant wife become an incredible mother even before their daughter was born.
“This album is a lot about becoming a father and a husband,” says the singer. “I was thrown into so many roles and struggled with determining what is a gift and what is burden. It’s about recognizing my own shortcomings and dealing with them.”
The album closes with the title track, “Rocks Into Rivers,” that tells a well-known story veiled in dark, poetic lyrics. The song gets inside the head of a historic figure at his moment of personal failure with colorfully rich lines like “I’ll make you shiver when I turn rocks into rivers.” (Used by permission)
Here are some links for you listen to their music and, if you like, purchase their albums and materials.
To listen click here.
For the Store click here.
YouTube page click here.
Additional Links:
http://www.myspace.com/seabird
http://www.purevolume.com/seabird
http://www.seabird.storenvy.com
http://www.itunes.com/seabird
http://seabird.credentialrecordings.com/
http://www.tangle.com/seabird
http://www.imeem.com/seabirdmusic
Tags: article, Brandon Weaver, music, Seabird
































