Artist: Unit Theory
Links:
https://www.facebook.com/unittheory2012
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2vlzp5nWzQ
http://www.reverbnation.com/UnitTheory2011/songs
We're all born with a unique mix of
gifts. That is, the mix is unique, but not necessarily the gifts. And
what to do when someone beats you to the punch? Becomes famous for
something you'll do so well years down the road? Such it is with
Bryan Cooper of Epic Failure and now Unit Theory. It wasn't his fault
Kurt Cobain got famous before he did. Fire up Bryan Cooper's vocal on
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2vlzp5nWzQ and tell me you wouldn't
have thought Cooper was the next rock god. But now, post-Kurt, we
naturally hesitate before crowning Cooper king. Because that raw
sneer is just too similar (though fucking amazing).
And at times, in Cooper's Epic Failure,
we hear echoes of other bands who also began their 15 minutes after
the sands of Nirvana's hourglass started falling. In Epic Failure's
“Amount to Nothing,” we hear the distorted chug of Local H's
“High-Fiving MF” (at :26 of the above-linked YouTube) and the
vocal fills of Stone Temple Pilots' “Down” (1:30 of YT vid); in
“Kyphophobia,” there's the pacing/progression of the Presidents
of the United States of America' “Peaches” (4:39 of YT vid); in
“Occupied,” the backing howl of Our Lady Peace (12:51 of YT vid);
with “What's Wrong,” the singsong dynamics of Hole's “Violet”
(16:14 of YT vid); on “Someday,” the lead guitar effects of
Soundgarden's “Black Hole Sun” (22:52 of YT vid); in “Advantage,”
the progression of 7 Year Bitch's “Knot” (24:53 of YT vid); and
with “Pictured,” the prominent acoustic pacing of Soul Asylum's
“Runaway Train” (28:19 of YT vid).
But Mr. Dream it is not. By way of
background, Mr. Dream was a band comprised primarily of Pitchfork
music reviewers. With their track “Holy Name,” they bit all over
Nirvana's catalog. Cooper never fell into that trap, abandoning the
valuable-but-trademarked vocal to become a post-grunge savior much
the same way Dave Grohl did. We hear it all over Unit Theory's Reverb
Nation page (http://www.reverbnation.com/UnitTheory2011/songs), which
presents these newer tracks in various stages of completeness
(rehearsal, studio, album, and live). Behold Unit Theory's jangly bit
o' brightness, “Warped View,” which is closer to Foo Fighters'
“Big Me” than anything Grohl ever performed with Nirvana. Cooper
even rescues “Pictured” from his Epic Failure days, since it only
evoked Cobain insofar as Kurt covered the alt-rocker Vaselines for
Unplugged (“Pictured” at 1:32). It should be clear: Unit Theory
is decidedly post-grunge.
Which is for the best. Because like Mr.
Dream, who were memorably original with non-Nirvana entries like
“Crime” and to a lesser extent “Croquet,” for Cooper &
Co. it's these Unit Theory songs that we keep going back to. Whether
it's the triumphant guitar tone of “Dream” (at :20), the subtle
hook of ascending “yeahs” on “My Life” (at 1:36), the
compelling guitar riff/bridge of “Safe Haven” (at 2:07), or the
textured rhythm section of Jesse Rucco and Ryan Mackner (e.g. “Dream”
at 1:09), Unit Theory finally reveals the silver linings that lurked
beneath Epic Failure's dark clouds.
And it just goes to show. Bryan Cooper
possesses the one gift Kurt may have lacked: not just the capacity,
but the willingness to change.
*** The author of this review, Randy
Powell, plays the kanjira for the following band:
http://youtu.be/tMS73-1kCr8
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