Geanies - Can’t See The Sun EP (2023) Hi-Res
BAND/ARTIST: Geanies
- Title: Can’t See The Sun
- Year Of Release: 2023
- Label: Mule Kick Records
- Genre: Blues, Indie Rock, Psychedelic Rock
- Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
- Total Time: 20:20
- Total Size: 47 / 142 / 245 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Bury Me (3:24)
02. Can't See the Sun (4:21)
03. Nowadays (5:28)
04. I'd Like to Buy the World (3:28)
05. Here She Comes (3:39)
01. Bury Me (3:24)
02. Can't See the Sun (4:21)
03. Nowadays (5:28)
04. I'd Like to Buy the World (3:28)
05. Here She Comes (3:39)
Geanies are an electrifying, alt-rock power trio fronted by lead guitarist, singer/composer Sean Michael Howe, Howe has the colossal sound and technical delivery of a player well beyond his 19 years. The Venice, California band’s forthcoming release, Can’t See The Sun, genuflects to the great guitar players of post-modern music, from Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughn to Stone Temple Pilots and the Foo Fighters. “Bury Me”, the first single has the angst one would expect of a SoCal-bred, Gen Z innovator measuring the uncertainty of the world around him as he prepares to become a part of it.
Howe stated, “Bury Me is just about being frustrated all the time and feeling unprepared for new opportunities or situations. And you tend to embarrass yourself because of this. How those insignificant moments in real time can make you feel like a bag of dirt, but once you have the chance to look back in retrospect, you just laugh.”
The Venice, California band is fronted by lead singer/composer Sean Michael Howe. Howe has the colossal sound and technical delivery of a player well beyond his 19 years. Howe is joined on the record by Eliot Lorango on bass and Ethan Maxwell on drums, making this a power trio to contend with. The recording was produced by KP Hawthorn of Mule Kick Records and Steve Berns at Berns’ Fitting Room Studio in LA.
Can’t See the Sun genuflects to the great guitar players of post-modern music, such as Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and B.B. King, while at the same time paying homage to the best of 90s alt-rockers such as Alice in Chains, Soundgarden, and Foo Fighters.
Howe found music at age seven while innocently listening to a band in an after-school program. He started noodling with his father’s guitars and quickly mastered the basics. The elder Howe was the guitar tone aficionado in the household, while Sean’s mother shared her love for chordal harmonies with him. Having gathered rudimentary musical knowledge at a young age and forming different versions of rock bands as a pre-teen, Howe readied himself for a life of rock ‘n roll. When asked about performing on-stage, Sean effused, “I love being part of a massive sound that connects you and everyone around who may be listening. There is no better feeling when everyone is with you and into it.”
Other tracks on this dynamic compact offering are the anthemic title track “Can’t See the Sun” along with the grungy “Here She Comes” that finds Howe comfortable with his Nirvana influence. “I’d Like to Buy the World” comes in powerfully, recalling the early Foo Fighters and utilizing a viciously tasty wah wah pedal in the bridge. It’s “Nowadays” that hits differently, as it deals with coming into adulthood and looking back at life decisions. “Gonna wait till ‘til your old, and wonder what we could have made, how we’re livin’ nowadays.”
Howe stated, “Bury Me is just about being frustrated all the time and feeling unprepared for new opportunities or situations. And you tend to embarrass yourself because of this. How those insignificant moments in real time can make you feel like a bag of dirt, but once you have the chance to look back in retrospect, you just laugh.”
The Venice, California band is fronted by lead singer/composer Sean Michael Howe. Howe has the colossal sound and technical delivery of a player well beyond his 19 years. Howe is joined on the record by Eliot Lorango on bass and Ethan Maxwell on drums, making this a power trio to contend with. The recording was produced by KP Hawthorn of Mule Kick Records and Steve Berns at Berns’ Fitting Room Studio in LA.
Can’t See the Sun genuflects to the great guitar players of post-modern music, such as Jimi Hendrix, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and B.B. King, while at the same time paying homage to the best of 90s alt-rockers such as Alice in Chains, Soundgarden, and Foo Fighters.
Howe found music at age seven while innocently listening to a band in an after-school program. He started noodling with his father’s guitars and quickly mastered the basics. The elder Howe was the guitar tone aficionado in the household, while Sean’s mother shared her love for chordal harmonies with him. Having gathered rudimentary musical knowledge at a young age and forming different versions of rock bands as a pre-teen, Howe readied himself for a life of rock ‘n roll. When asked about performing on-stage, Sean effused, “I love being part of a massive sound that connects you and everyone around who may be listening. There is no better feeling when everyone is with you and into it.”
Other tracks on this dynamic compact offering are the anthemic title track “Can’t See the Sun” along with the grungy “Here She Comes” that finds Howe comfortable with his Nirvana influence. “I’d Like to Buy the World” comes in powerfully, recalling the early Foo Fighters and utilizing a viciously tasty wah wah pedal in the bridge. It’s “Nowadays” that hits differently, as it deals with coming into adulthood and looking back at life decisions. “Gonna wait till ‘til your old, and wonder what we could have made, how we’re livin’ nowadays.”
Year 2023 | Blues | Rock | Alternative | Indie | FLAC / APE | Mp3 | HD & Vinyl
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