“Radio”
from the album Pitty Sing
2005
[iTunes]
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Ask Pitty Sing frontman Paul Holmes where his songs come from — why they sound like they do — and he’ll admit he’s rather miffed about it. Critics have compared the group’s instantly classic yet fresh and experimental sound to such beloved ’80s acts as Simple Minds and the Smiths, but Holmes and his young band mates — JJ (keyboards, sequences, guitars), Dave Greenwald (drums), and Andrew Puricelli (bass) — did not grow up listening to any of those groups. And, while they’re now familiar with those bands, none directly influenced or inspired his own group’s sound. Believe it or don’t. But take one listen to Pitty Sing’s self-titled debut album and you won’t be able to deny the ingenuity or quality of their music. The songs stick with you in a way that few do today.
Ask Holmes and he’ll tell you: the New York based band is not shooting to emulate a particular sound. What comes out just comes out. Again, believe it or don’t. But the four young guys who make up Pitty Sing have delivered a tour de force debut album that reflects not only surprising depth but also an uncommon maturity and confidence. Songwriter and lead singer Holmes, who was born in Manchester, England but raised in the States, is both baffled by it and in awe of it. Remembering the night after an early rehearsal session, he says, “We had some gig coming up and we were doing these big, epic journeys through pop and electronic, real long and emotional. And I remember we were on the train on the way back home from practicing, and we just went, ‘What did we just do? This is fuckin’ amazing!’ We went back home and listened to the cassette we made during rehearsal, and I was like, ‘There’s no way just anybody could do this. This must be something special.'”
While the music they made that night was sprawling, the songs comprising the band’s debut album, the 13-track Pitty Sing, are much more to the point. With Holmes’ breathy, British vocals recalling everyone from Suede to Morrissey, the tracks are full of beautiful and strikingly complex melodies, delivered with teeth and a tenacity that sets Pitty Sing apart from so many of today’s groups.
The songs are music from a parallel dimension, reminding of a time before Britney, before Blink-182, before grunge. The band, formed in Boston but now residing in New York, has come up with a sound that is vital, but completely unaffected by the pop music of the current day. It is music from an alternate universe that projects a vibe hip enough to help create its own scene and alter the direction of what’s ruling the charts.
For Pitty Sing, part of making good music is testing the limits. “If you looked at how people were pushing the envelope of pop in past decades, it seemed as though it had no end,” Holmes says. “It seemed as though you could just keep pushing it and pushing it, and new things would come and change mainstream pop. But I’ve felt that for quite a while now, we’ve given up or we’ve digressed, or something. And if people try to push it creatively, they end up pushing themselves into another market, into a more experimental thing.”
When Holmes moved from England to his mother’s native Erie, Pennsylvania in the early ’90s, he dove headfirst into the colossal grunge music of the era. But it wasn’t long before he moved on to the bands that were then blowing up in his native country. “I remember putting on Suede’s second album Dog Man Star and thinking, ‘I’ve been so wrong. What have I been doing?’ The ambience of that record is unparalleled. It just has this sort of class, this regal brilliance about it. I remember thinking, ‘I want to do that.'”
It wasn’t long after he moved to Boston that Holmes and the other members of Pitty Sing began making brilliance of their own. Rising independent label Or Music, home to platinum-plus Texas rockers Los Lonely Boys, signed Pitty Sing on the strength of a demo, even though they had only a few shows under their belt. In mid-2003, the band issued a self-titled, three-song demo that received critical acclaim and kick-started a growing local and online buzz.
Pitty Sing’s music has evolved into something that is quite positive and uplifting one minute and dark as night the next. And, to Holmes, that seems totally natural. “Sometimes on the dark songs I feel so dismal and dark and destructive, but it’s like I don’t know anybody who’s ever really ever in one state of mind. I mean, everybody has a day where they’re like, ‘Motherf–ker. I want to kill him.’ And some days, I’ll be like, ‘I love everybody.’ I just feel like there’s just so many different things I feel in a day. It’s like, why shouldn’t that be expressed in the music? It’s a natural thing for me.”
Pitty Sing takes its name from the Flannery O’Connor story, “A Good Man Is Hard To Find,” in which a cat called Pitty Sing drives a group of escaped convicts to murder an innocent family. From the very first time they started writing their own songs, Holmes and his band mates were a bit perplexed by what they came up with: Their music was recalling the best elements of classic ’80s bands, even though the four guys comprising Pitty Sing hadn’t really delved into their albums.
“If it resembles other things, it’s just sort of an accident,” Holmes says. “When we write, it’s more like a channeling of things, it’s more driven by emotion, the creativity comes out of extremes in emotion. It’s almost like the songs themselves are stones in the sand, and all we have to do is brush off the sand. We’re not really trying to do something, or sound like anybody, we don’t even really know that stuff.”
For Holmes, now 21, there’s a goal, it’s to come up with a memorable melody. “For some reason, I just remember from being very, very young that melody from Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark’s ’80s hit ‘Souvenirs.’ I haven’t listened to it since, but it just stuck with me for some reason. And that’s the vibe I want to get in my writing, and where I want to direct the band in the time being. I want a melody like that, a melody that would pierce right through to people and make them feel like their sixth birthday party, back to that innocence.”
After scoring the deal with Or Music, Pitty Sing headed to Dallas to lay down its first official recordings. Working at an unknown jingle studio with a series of increasingly befuddled engineers, the band slowly built up the tracks that would end up as their debut album. The EP Demons, You Are The Stars In Cars ‘Til I Die, featuring the first single “Radio,” was released in October 2004. Pitty Sing, the debut album, arrived in January 2005. ~ Launch.com
Pitty Sing |