Photo Credit: Lindsey Byrnes (L-R Brandon Curtis, Josh Garza) |
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LISTEN & SHARE: Secret Machines - "Everything Starts" Stream
LISTEN & SHARE: Secret Machines - "Talos' Corpse" Stream |
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"It’s been far too long since we’ve heard from Secret Machines." - A.V. Club
"A classic rock front to launch a full-out musical assault." - Pitchfork
"Driving blend of alt-rock, shoegaze, and space rock." - Consequence of Sound
"One of the best trios of the aughts.” - NY Times
"A sound rooted somewhere between Led Zeppelin and psychedelic rock." - NPR
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Secret Machines share new track "Everything Starts," the second single from their upcoming LP, Awake in the Brain Chamber, the band’s first new album in over a decade. The record will be available globally, on all streaming platforms, beginning Friday, August 21. Limited-edition vinyl will be available this Fall (pre-order here).
Featuring guitar by founding Secret Machines member Benjamin Curtis, who left the band in 2007 and passed away from T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma in late 2013, “Everything Starts” originated from a demo Brandon Curtis recorded nearly a decade ago, and later revisited with drummer Josh Garza. Part love song, part memory-soaked dreamscape, the song is a tribute that reunites Secret Machines on a sonic plane eerily reminiscent of their earliest music.
“Some place in the back of my mind I guess I was hoping I could write a Fleetwood Mac song. But It kept coming out all weird. I read a quote from Wayne Coyne, something like ‘If you are writing a song and you immediately like it, it’s probably no good. But when it sounds weird or if you just don’t know about it, that ’s the good stuff.’ Well, for some insane reason that has stuck with me. So I called my brother to see if he could play something that Lindsey Buckingham would play and he came back with what we have here. Sort of saved it from my own worst inclinations, or at least that’s my opinion,” says Brandon.
“Awake in the Brain Chamber is as much about new beginnings as it is about honoring and appreciating the past. When I close my eyes and listen to "Everything Starts" I see three guys in a room playing music. I see Ben, Brandon and me... we're all playing our instruments, we're all smiling and it's probably a bit too loud,” adds Garza. “For a brief and infinite five minutes, I'm taken to a sonic landscape that is special and unique, with a sound that only Benjamin can deliver. I'm glad we've been given this chance to honor his legacy in this way, and to fold this final collaboration into a new chapter for Secret Machines.”
Featuring the experimental, space rock sounds that are revered and beloved by fans and critics alike, Awake in the Brain Chamber is an album that has been through many versions and incarnations. It has become a symbol of rebirth, presenting a new narrative and territory for the stories left unsaid.
“I began writing these songs at a time I remember feeling alone and lost, and I think the songs have that in their DNA,” says Brandon. “I started sharing early versions with Benjamin who gave me notes as well as encouragement. I am sure that without his influence this album would never have seen the light of day.”
Brandon continued to produce and develop the tracks, ultimately recording several demos throughout 2011 and 2012. In 2013, Benjamin was diagnosed with cancer. “While reworking the tracks, Josh and I were careful to retain whatever influence Benjamin had as a sort of living tribute to him. I know that Josh and I both feel very fortunate to have had this opportunity to work with him again, albeit posthumously. I know we are both very proud to present this as the first Secret Machines music in over a decade."
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Artwork Credit: Playtime Studio
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AWAKE IN THE BRAIN CHAMBER - TRACKLISTING 01. 3,4,5, Let’s Stay Alive 02. Dreaming is Alright 03. Talos’ Corpse 04. Everything’s Under 05. Everything Starts 06. Angel Come 07. A New Disaster 08. So Far Down |
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Awake in the Brain Chamber is performed by Secret Machines’ Brandon Curtis and Josh Garza, featuring musicians Benjamin Curtis, Chris Kyle, Brian Bisordi and Sarah Pedinotti. Songs were mixed by Claudius Mittendorfer and mastered by Joe Lambert. Original album artwork by Philistine Dsgn. |
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BIO
Endgame: 2020. In a world turned upside down, the Secret Machines are back, and looking for light in the chaos. Awake in the Brain Chamber, the band’s fourth LP and first recorded output in more than 10 years, is the sound of things falling apart, with the hope of dawn touching the horizon. If there is a crack in everything, Curtis and Garza are more interested in the light coming in. Curtis’ darkly prophetic lyrics speak of isolation and fear, while Garza’s frenetic, pounding drum beats sound of the four horsemen. But just when things look their worst, the Machines’ beautifully ethereal space-rock takes us away to a different, safe destination: A place with angels, where dreaming is alright, and life blooms from a new disaster.
While the album eerily mirrors our modern age, these tracks have been through many versions and incarnations, dating back to 2010. The sonic DNA of Benjamin Curtis, who tragically passed in 2013, is all over the record. He helped produce and mix with Brandon, and also plays guitar on “Everything Starts,” the second single. “Ten years ago, I was very depressed, sad, and lonely,” says Brandon. “I still relate to the songs I wrote in 2010, but I don’t feel that sense of hopelessness anymore. After losing my best friend, brother, and collaborator, I was able to say, ‘This is what true loss feels like.’”
One of the most acclaimed rock bands of the 2000s, the Secret Machines helped define the sound of the era, alongside contemporaries Interpol, Spiritualized, and TV on the Radio. Laden with sprawling arrangements occasionally pushing the nine-minute mark, the sound of the band has always been grandiose and in their 2008 review of the band’s third self-titled album, Pitchfork made comparisons to Machines influences Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin. Alternately labeled as prog, Curtis and Garza have always been most comfortable with the term “space rock.” “Brandon’s songs and my drumming meld into the sonic landscape that is Secret Machines,” says Garza from his home in Los Angeles. “I think people will be able to hear that immediately.”
Secret Machines were born out of Dallas, with the first formation consisting of Brandon Curtis on vocals, bass and keys, Benjamin Curtis on guitar and Josh Garza on drums. The band signed to Reprise and dropped their first full-length, Now Here Is Nowhere, in 2004, which began their legacy as critical darlings. The year 2006 brought what many consider their masterpiece, Ten Silver Drops, which won them further critical love and the attention of David Bowie, who became a serious fan and mentor. In 2007, Benjamin left the band to work full time with School of Seven Bells, but Curtis and Garza charged ahead with their self-titled 2008 LP, with Phil Karnats on guitar. And then…there were crickets on the Secret Machines front, and as time marched on, with no official breakup announcement, fans were left wondering if they’d ever hear from the band again.
“After the self-titled album, Josh moved to LA, and I got hired to be Interpol’s keyboardist,” recalls Brandon, from his Vermont home. “I started touring, and Secret Machines just got further on the back-burner. Without ever really talking about it, we both just went our separate ways. It feels totally natural and organic that Josh and I are working together again.”
Their fateful reunion wouldn’t happen until years later in 2016. Garza went to see Cosmicide, a project Brandon originally formed with Benjamin, from which many of the songs on Awake in the Brain Chamber were first conceived.
“Brandon invited me on stage to do a Secret Machines song, and that was the moment that we broke the ice, after drifting from each other for years. We’ve always remained friends, but we needed that moment to spark everything again,” says Garza.
Which brings us full circle to rebirth, and two friends who have nothing left to prove. Despite a loyal following, pop culture has a short memory. If nothing else, Awake in the Brain Chamber is the sound of now, and a tribute to brothers and family. “Since we made this record ourselves, and are releasing it ourselves, there’s a certain feeling that we’re just doing our thing,” muses Garza. “It’d be nice if the fans give it a chance. We’re not trying to convince people with this record. Like I said, we’re just doing our thing.” |
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