Artist: White Radio
Link:
https://www.facebook.com/WhiteRadioBand
White Radio was formerly known as
Ockam's Razor (review taken from the archives):
"Occam's/Ockham's razor" is
the principle dictating that, among competing hypotheses, you select
the one that makes the fewest assumptions. Sounds sensible, right?
Ockam's Razor on the other hand (no "h"), is the 30-finger
rock behemoth -- and it helps if you don't make assumptions.
If you did, let's say you assumed
Ockam's Razor couldn't slaughter you with just three instruments,
you'd be dead wrong. When in fact, Ockam's Razor devastates with
expert drumming (e.g. 2:07 of "Better Luck Tomorrow"),
compelling bass rumbling from gut to groin (e.g. 2:31 of
"Unprepared"), and hard rock riffage that slices like a
razor (a steel razor, not a "Razor" requiring a PhD in
philosophy).
Album-opener, "Unprepared,"
unfolds like the screamo of post-hardcore band Thursday (e.g.
Thursday's "I Am the Killer"): bass intro; payoff chord;
bass fill; payoff chord; tense riff; payoff chord; calm emo singing
over clean chord jangle, interrupted by the tense riff supporting
intensifying vocals; and then, what else, the payoff chord. It's my
favorite song of the EP, and it includes the memorable turns of
phrase, "We sit in these houses so unprepared," "I'd
save myself / But it's too late," and "Treating others like
animals."
Nick Woodman's vocal
melodies/deliveries are nuanced and tailored to the lyric. On "Better
Luck Tomorrow," he's sensitive one moment, "We plant the
flowers by your graveside," and sneering the next, "Get
back!" He sounds like Richard Patrick (Filter) when exploring
his upper range on "No More," and successfully exploits the
vocal processing/doubling of "Inner Visions" to evoke
Disturbed, Godsmack, and even Ozzy.
Woodman is also riffage incarnate. Just
listen to the beginnings of "Better Luck Tomorrow" and "No
More," and you'll know what you're in for. And consistent with
"Occam's razor," you'll select the hypothesis that makes
exactly one assumption (that the EP is as good as these intros, which
it is). The hypothesis correctly selected? Ockam's Razor is a finely
tuned rock trio firing on all cylinders and doing more with three
than bands twice its size.
*** The author of this review, Carl
Stewart, plays the dap for the following band:
http://youtu.be/tMS73-1kCr8
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