Filmstrip Live from Bad Racket Recording Studio Cleveland
Live From Bad Racket is a monthly music video series featuring artists performing at the Cleveland based recording studio.
Filmed / Directed by Aaron Freeder
Guest Film Crew: 216 Studios, Michael Carissimi and Richard Walsh
Audio Engineered at Bad Racket Recording Studio
Genre
Band Members
Matt Taha
Nick Riley
Nick Licata
Hometown
Record Label
About
Filmstrip is a three- piece rock band from Cleveland, Ohio. Brothers Dave Taha (guitar, vocals) and Matt Taha (bass, vocals) met Nick Riley (drums) in elementary school. They began playing in bands together in junior high and continued through high school. The group reunited in 2009 under the name filmstrip, and have continued to work together ever since.
Biography
Comprised of brothers Dave Taha (guitar / vocals) and Matt Taha (bass / backing vocals), and childhood friend Nick Riley (drums), Cleveland’s Filmstrip is a band that has grown together both literally and figuratively. Interpersonal intimacy coupled with years of incessant self-booked touring, is the recipe for an album that sounds at once both completely new, but at the same time comfortable and easy: like a favorite record that’s been on your shelf for years.
Though heavily rooted in DIY culture, Filmstrip is a band whose sound has evolved well past their simple punk rock origins. Imagine if the Meat Puppets (another brother band) circa 1985 teamed up with the indie-psych-folk stylings of Pink Mountaintops, and was informed by an upbringing heavily steeped in the Maximumrockn roll ethos. Do this and you can begin to approximate the beautifully fractured take on the American Songbook presented here on Moments of Matter.
Singer Dave Taha’s voice bathes Filmstrip’s sound in a world-weary / seen-many-a-recent-sunrise, aura that compliments the narratives of each song so perfectly. From the heart-broken delivery on “Wild Abandon,” to the sun-drenched, wonderfully off-kilter delivery of “MMS1970s,” the songs always let you know that the experiences were lived first person. At times, the mastery and interplay between slow and loud songs / dynamics can be reminiscent of Control-era Pedro the Lion.
Recorded at Asheville’s storied Echo Mountain Studio (Band of Horses, The War on Drugs, Polvo) Filmstrip’s
Moments of Matter is eleven songs worth of heartbreak, hope, good times, and comfort….your new favorite record.
-PRESS
The press reviews of Filmstrip have been favorable; they’ve garnered high praise and some very flattering comparisons:
Cleveland Plain Dealer: “For fans of Neil Young, Band of Horses. (Moments of Matter) doesn’t disappoint. It’s full of all the best parts of the late-1990s, post-grunge turn toward more melodic pop without letting go of the big-guitar wall of sound.”
Brooklyn Vegan: “Cleveland’s Filmstrip make a similar kind of post-slowcore indie rock to Pedro the Lion, and punkish country rock along the lines of The Men.
Artvoice Magazine: “Filmstrip is the type of band you would expect to see on the front page of Pitchfork. Singer Dave Taha sounds a lot like David Bazan, their songs are as depressing as the National’s, and their guitar tones are as stressed out as the Deerhunter’s. These days there is only one thing that could make a band like this cooler than being featured on Pitchfork though, and that is not being featured at all. The hype machine and the automatic haters have not tainted the three-piece band from Cleveland, Ohio yet. You can still discover this band on your own, and that feeling of discovery is a rare one these days.”
The Ohio Authority: “Filmstrip’s sound recalls Zen Arcade–era Hüsker Dü, with some of the beautiful dirge of Nirvana and some 90s slacker rock thrown in for cool points.”
Scene Magazine: “Filmstrip turn out unassuming garage-rock gems.”
-WE HAVE OPENED FOR THE FOLLOWING (FRIENDS, LEGENDS AND ROAD TALES)
The Fugs, The Lemonheads, Best Coast, Frankie Rose, The Men, Tapes n Tapes, Bass Drum of Death, Oberhofer, Grass Widow, Gross Relations, Royal Bangs, Those Darlins, Martin Bisi, Shark?, A Place To Bury Strangers, Peelander Z, and fellow Clevelanders Cloud Nothings.
Lyrics
I’m feelin’ tacos man
its not Tuesday
we’ve been on the road its been eating a lot of tacos
dave once drank a bottle of bullet burbon
it was a pint
no it was bigger I saved the bottle
I wanna hear that I feel that
[?} Lets go gusto!{?]
[guitar SUNN cabinet style rhythm intro]
They said people get ready.
They ain’t talkin’ about the thought
and if you’re asking the right questions
you’re liable to get shot
down on onnnnnn
either way to slice it its a draw
got me runnin’ so fast well that i had to crawl
down in the break-wall
well i’m asking myself
what am i doin’ in this place
I barely see a friendly face
I know that in the instant everything can change
soon you’ll go home fast you’ll have to crawl
down in the break-wall
they say cross that bridge
have your self a real nice day
it don’t cost much
it’ll have to wait
I have a moment with you
down in the break-wall
[end]