Music > Local Music
High 'Standards'
After seven years the Offbeats finally found a producer they're happy with - themselves
Published: 8/6/2008
For a full-length
debut, self-recorded and produced, the Offbeats’
Standards sounds impressively professional and mature.
That’s not so surprising when you consider that, in some
ways, this local act
has spent the past seven years completing it. As the title might imply,
the
album is a collection of previously released material, a sort of
greatest-hits
compilation, though reworked and rerecorded. The Offbeats have released
several
EPs over the years, recorded and produced by friends and professionals,
but
lead singer and second guitarist Bryan Foster says the band continually
left
the studio disappointed in the final product.
“We always came out
feeling like it never sounded like us,” Foster said.
“It was never what we felt
like it was when we had that live vibe. We’d never get that
feeling.”
The problem, Foster
said, was the limited amount of studio time the band could afford and
the fact
that many of the past producers were just working on the album as a
favor and
unable to devote enough energy and resources to bring the project up to
the
band’s own expectations.
“They don’t
have the
most time to spend on it,” Foster said.
“It’s not really their priority.”
Perhaps as a
consequence, the end results were never as polished as the band would
have
liked.
“The albums always
seemed flat,” Foster said, “[there were] no
dynamics.”
Recording the album
themselves in their own rehearsal space, lead guitarist and backup
vocalist
Eric Romasanta said, gave the band an unlimited amount of time to spend
on the
album. Time to rework arrangements, or even scrap and rerecord track
takes they
weren’t happy with.
“We were able to get
the parts arranged the way we wanted and tweak some of the
songs,” Romasanta
said. “[Recording ourselves] allowed us more freedom to sort
of eff around.”
All that effing
around pays off. While the band’s production work tends more
toward Steve
Albini’s straight recording than Brian Wilson’s OCD
symphonies, the album is
sharp and clean, perfect for the Offbeats’ sound —
a combination of snarling
post-punk attacks and poppy accessibility — think the
Libertines with more
control, or Boris with more restraint — and small touches
(Foster’s
multi-channel solo duet on “Bohemian Slang,” to the
few feedback-entropy
endnotes) give Standards a greater depth and variety. The Offbeats
obviously
picked up a few tricks in their studio visits.
“Over the last two
years,” Foster said, “we’ve become more
focused on the technical aspect of
things, spending more time on the songs, trying to keep them from all
sounding
the same.”
Keeping things fresh
can be a difficult task when you’re recording an album full
of songs you’ve
played countless times over several years. Part of the purpose for
recording a
definitive version of these songs , Foster said, was to “kind
of get past those
and move on.”
Despite his
familiarity with the material here, Foster seems bored in only two
instances:
Describing with nonchalance what seems to be some pretty freaky sexual
situations on the Wire-y “How Come Everybody
…?” (exactly the burnt-out tone
the song calls for; Foster’s snotty yelping has a limited
range but he
characterizes tracks with vocal tics like a champ) before apparently
switching
teams, and (probably unintentionally) on “Smoking
Gun,” the album’s oldest
track, which ends Standards on a relatively weak note.
Foster’s greatly
improved as a songwriter between then and now.
Foster and Romasanta
started the band seven years ago when they were still in high school.
The
line-up has changed over the years, settling on the current
incarnation, with
Colin and Sean Foster,
The keys are a new
addition to the Offbeats sound, a potential threat to the
band’s aggressive
tendencies. The smattering of light-mixed keys on Standards never
really kills
the guitar buzz — Romasanta and Foster’s guitars
often sound like they’re
picked with rusty razor blades. And, though the organ work and
complementary
accoustic strumming give “Carolina, Caroline” a
catchy appeal and genuine hit
potential, the barking vocals and “dollar whore”
jab save the track from
emo-balladry. The sound on many songs is too full and hooky for the DIY
straight-edge, but the poppiest augmentations are more subtle than
multi-layered “Piano Man”-ing — hand
claps, rattles, and a musical playfulness
closer to late-’70s sarcasm than hardcore earnesty. (Check
out the “
Though they work to
keep an “edge” to their compositions, the Offbeats
aren’t constantly trying to
be abrasive or confrontational.
“We don’t
strive for
that,” Foster said, “You don’t always
gotta be pouting with your fists
clenched.”
While the album does
indeed contain plenty of fist-clenching and pouty-facing, the fuller
production
perfectly complements the band’s sound, too deep and complex
to be faithfully
pigeon-holed in the punk genre, for one of the year’s better
releases, local or
otherwise. Not surprisingly, the band agrees.
“It’s the
best we’ve
ever done,” Romasanta said. “It’s what we
sound like, or what we hope to sound
like. I’m really happy.”
The Offbeats say
they’ve
achieved their main goal in recording the album — to make a
record that sounds
like their live show, a faithful recreation for longtime listeners and
a fair
represenation for Offbeats new comers.
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