Dayton Daily News

INDIE ROCKERS SMUG BROTHERS TO PLAY BLIND BOB’S, RELEASE NEW EP

- By Brandon Berry Contributi­ng Writer

Kyle Melton, singer, guitarist and songwriter for Ohio indie rock band Smug Brothers, has an unrepentan­t love for hooks.

That lo-fi pop-rock catchiness Melton digs couldn’t be better represente­d than in Smug Brothers’ latest EP, “Another Bar Behind the Night,” set to release July 12 on Anyway Records (Columbus) and Just Because Records (Cleveland).

Preceding the tight six-song, 10-minute EP will be the band’s Blind Bob’s show on May 24 alongside Houseghost (spooky Dayton punk) and The 1984 Draft (‘90s-tinted Dayton punk-rock), which should prove to be a stellar night of loud music.

Melton initially had two answers when asked where he gets his melodic sensibilit­ies: The Beatles and Robert Pollard, the leader of Dayton’s own Guided By Voices.

While The Beatles seems to be the obvious answer for anyone who’s written a melody, and though Melton’s voice is often affected to sound Liverpudli­an — he said the Fab Four changed his life at 14 — Guided By Voices’ impact on Smug Brothers’ sizeable discograph­y is much easier to glean.

On art direction alone, both bands often implement collages that appear to be informed by old Sears catalogs for their album covers. Even the music, the short and sweet — dare this writer say — earworms that scream, “We know this could be longer but we think it’s perfect,” is also a characteri­stic of GBV and Smug

Brothers.

Those familiar with GBV history are likely also privy to Smug Brothers drummer and longtime Dayton Daily News contributo­r Don Thrasher’s rhythmic contributi­ons to early-90s GBV albums including “Bee Thousand” and “Propeller,” further associatin­g the bands.

After a few days of mulling his initial answer, Melton mentioned in an email that working closely with brilliant Dayton songwriter­s like Andy Smith (Me Time) and Jesse Remnant (Human Cannonball) over the years has allowed him to refine his ideas and “sharpen the hooks.”

And ever since the first Smug Brothers release in 2005, Melton has become exceptiona­lly great at sharpening those hooks.

Smug Brothers’ new EP, a strong follow-up to September’s full-length “In the Book of Bad Ideas,” was self-produced by the band but may prove to be the final release recorded with Melton’s Tascam PortaStudi­o 424 MKIII.

The four-track cassette deck, which recorded most of the drums and guitars throughout the band’s tenure, is, woefully, on its way out.

The grittiness of Thrasher’s drum tracks was especially defined by that analog Tascam, so subsequent releases may have a noticeable tonal shift on the bottom end.

Then again, the band has always overdubbed keys, vocals, bass (courtesy of Kyle Sowash), extra guitars and percussion digitally, even digitally mixing their tracks, yet the final product always sounds like the precise lo-fi end goal — as if the band played as a group and recorded straight to cassette from the start.

“We record the way we record because, quite frankly, it’s hard for us to get together to rehearse the material,” Melton said, explaining that Sowash and other members have mostly produced their tracks in their homes.

“We’re probably never going to catch up to all the songs I’ve written. But if we do what I’d like us to do, this is kind of the way it has to be done,” he said.

The EP’s first track, “Javelina Nowhere,” opens with an arpeggiate­d guitar and an innocent yet commanding mellotron line, setting the stage for a near-perfect album of memorable treasures. The music video for “Javelina Nowhere” (released May 17) features a stoic and committed Thrasher — think a restrained Buster Keaton — on a mission to set flight, taking him through iconic Dayton sights and making deals with the anthropomo­rphic to acquire the necessary supplies to make the flight happen.

From there, the playfulnes­s of the EP continues with “Seamus & the Younger” and remains until the final chord hit in “Shedding Polymer,” the only song on the record that features new Smug Brothers guitarist Ryan

Shaffer.

Lyrically ambiguous, tonally energetic and economic, Smug Brothers has hooked us once again. As Melton admits, the sequencing makes you want to keep spinning it. Or rewind it. Or put it on repeat.

If only — as is the case with many Smug Brothers releases — it wasn’t so short.

But considerin­g the band’s consistenc­y — they’ve put out 20 releases since 2005 — something says we won’t have to wait long until the next one.

“Another Bar Behind the Night” will be released on cassette and digital on July 12.

 ?? ?? Smug Brothers’s new EP, “Another Bar Behind the Night,” will be released July 12. The band will play at Blind Bob’s in Dayton’s Oregon District on May 24.
Smug Brothers’s new EP, “Another Bar Behind the Night,” will be released July 12. The band will play at Blind Bob’s in Dayton’s Oregon District on May 24.

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