Relient K The Birds And The Bee Sides Rarity
– In his profile on Matt Thiessen’s Pack of Wild Blogs*, Relient K’s lead singer/guitarist/pianist talks of leading “an anomalous life.” And the band’s latest EP, The Bird and the Bee Sides, certainly is an anomaly – with a total of 26 songs, it stretches the definition of an extended play record like Silly Putty. Ostensibly a collection of bsides, as the title implies, it also contains a whopping number of new songs – 13, to be precise. Of course, it didn’t start out that way. In between studio albums, Relient K likes to put out EPs. So following the release of Five Score And Seven Years Ago – which debuted at #6 on The Billboard 200 in 2007, becoming the band’s highest charting album to date – the guys decided to make their latest EP something of an alternate career retrospective, comprised of b-sides, demos and other rarities from its 10 year history. Clarity Project Management Download. While they were at it, they thought, why not record a few new tunes, too?
“That materialized into ‘hey, why doesn’t everybody in the band write a song?”’ recalls Thiessen. If you know Relient K, you know to expect the unexpected, and have no doubt surmised that this is where the project veered madly out of control. “All of a sudden, it turned into a 13-song original thing.” That 13-song original thing, which kicks off the disc, is called The Nashville Tennis EP. It’s followed by 13 of the aforementioned b-sides and rarities, dubbed The Bird and the Bee Sides. “We were just trying to think of what our fans would want from a b-sides record,” explains Thiessen. “We’re like, they probably just want everything – so let’s try to give it to them.” Relient K played its first gig in December 1997, back when Thiessen and guitarist Matt Hoopes were still in high school and tooling around in the latter’s Plymouth Reliant K, which inspired the band’s name. The group recorded its first demo the following year with producer Mark Lee Townsend, who has worked on each of the band’s subsequent full-length albums (although Five Score And Seven Years Ago was largely produced by Howard Benson).
In the ensuing decade, Relient K has released five full-length albums (of which three have been certified Gold), five EPs and a Christmas collection, toured incessantly, scored a string of hit singles, a Grammy nomination and two Dove awards, and performed on “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,” “Late Night with Conan O’Brien,” “Jimmy Kimmel Live” and numerous other national TV shows. The Los Angeles Times praised Relient K for “its smart blend of punk pop and power pop, weaving together influences as diverse as the Beach Boys, Blink-182 and Fountains of Wayne” while Spin noted: “Few bands play punk-influenced modern rock as proficiently.” There have been changes along the way, the most recent of which came when drummer Dave Douglas left to focus on his other band, Gypsy Parade, and was replaced by Ethan Luck (The O.C. Supertones, Demon Hunter) earlier this year.
Relient K - The Bird And The Bee Sides. The Bird and the Bee Sides begins with a baker s dozen of. I even found one of those rare personal 'greatest.
But the band’s quirky sense of humor remains intact and there’s a fresh excitement about the future. “It really does feel like a new chapter is opening for us,” says Thiessen, who notes that “The Scene And Herd,” one of the new songs, really sums up where the band is. “The whole hook of the song is that it doesn’t matter what’s going on with the music industry or whatever – as long as we’re getting to make music and do what we love to do, we’re having a good time.” Reuniting with producer Mark Lee Townsend and mixer J.R. McNeely, the team behind the boards for 2004’s mmhmm, the band repaired to a studio in Spring Hill, TN (about 40 minutes south of Nashville) to work on the project. The location gets a nod in the title of the collection of original new songs – The Nashville Tennis EP – and in the alt-country vibe of songs such as “At Least We Made It This Far” and “I Just Want You To Know.” “We really enjoy just kind of being slow and swingy with the guitars,” says Thiessen. Of course, Relient K is better known for getting fast and furious with the guitars. With all five members writing and singing songs, The Nashville Tennis EP has its share of amped-up numbers – from the punk rock reggae of “No Reaction,” written by Luck, to bass player (and ex-Ace Troubleshooter lead singer/songwriter) John Warne’s “The Last, The Lost, The Least,” which is explosive both sonically and in its social commentary.