Quit +/or Fight
Gainesville, Floridaâs Holopaw (named after a Florida town none of them are from) rises to more textural, delicate artistic heights on Quit and/or Fight, the follow-up to their 2003 self-titled Sub Pop debut. Since the release of Holopaw the band has toured extensively with labelmates Iron and Wine and âFruit Batsâhttp://www.subpop.com/artists/fruit_bats. You might also recall vocalist John Orth from Ugly Casanovaâs Sharpen Your Teeth from a few years back; he co-wrote that with Isaac Brock (Modest Mouse).
Recorded by Mike Pecchio, resident producer at Scandalabra Studios in Brooklyn, NY, and with the aide of The Mercury Programâs Tom Reno and Dave LeBleu (strings and vibes) and Daedelus (winds), each dynamic track on Quit and/or Fight, tells its tale through sweet, understated and complexly orchestrated melody that engages as it soothes. Thick with strings, winds, drunken bossanova percussion (â3 Shy Cubsâ), stomping, handclaps, wine bottles, synths, and thrift store furniture-as-instruments, the album shows a band unafraid of brash creativity and improvisational instrumentation. The albumâs âGhostiesâ showcases the strength of vocalist John Orth, a one-man choir swelling out of nowhere to run with the melody, and later the bandâs deeply organic, thick fuzz-bass unearths the sweet lament of âVelveteen (all is bright).â Just when âLosing Lightâ threatens again and again to burst at the seams, Holopaw pulls back the reigns, quieting the songâs core back into a hush. The end result: an improbable group of individuals all coming together to create an album that is quietly moving, filled with small gestures that speak volumes.
Original: $10.00
-65%$10.00
$3.50
Description
Gainesville, Floridaâs Holopaw (named after a Florida town none of them are from) rises to more textural, delicate artistic heights on Quit and/or Fight, the follow-up to their 2003 self-titled Sub Pop debut. Since the release of Holopaw the band has toured extensively with labelmates Iron and Wine and âFruit Batsâhttp://www.subpop.com/artists/fruit_bats. You might also recall vocalist John Orth from Ugly Casanovaâs Sharpen Your Teeth from a few years back; he co-wrote that with Isaac Brock (Modest Mouse).
Recorded by Mike Pecchio, resident producer at Scandalabra Studios in Brooklyn, NY, and with the aide of The Mercury Programâs Tom Reno and Dave LeBleu (strings and vibes) and Daedelus (winds), each dynamic track on Quit and/or Fight, tells its tale through sweet, understated and complexly orchestrated melody that engages as it soothes. Thick with strings, winds, drunken bossanova percussion (â3 Shy Cubsâ), stomping, handclaps, wine bottles, synths, and thrift store furniture-as-instruments, the album shows a band unafraid of brash creativity and improvisational instrumentation. The albumâs âGhostiesâ showcases the strength of vocalist John Orth, a one-man choir swelling out of nowhere to run with the melody, and later the bandâs deeply organic, thick fuzz-bass unearths the sweet lament of âVelveteen (all is bright).â Just when âLosing Lightâ threatens again and again to burst at the seams, Holopaw pulls back the reigns, quieting the songâs core back into a hush. The end result: an improbable group of individuals all coming together to create an album that is quietly moving, filled with small gestures that speak volumes.













