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Put your hands on the remote! browse music »Abstract Confessions by Tagging Satellites
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fave it Modern Rock | with Live-band Production
10 tracks | 36 minutes
Released Jan 2001
on Recovery Records / Mag Wheel Records
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A flashback to the moody, art school-influenced underground of pre-break-through Jane's Addiction LA.- wonderfully detached, on the verge of a breakdown female vocals paired with music that finds the middle ground between the ethereal and the razor's edge
Bio / Background
Like that dark-haired poet you had a crush on in high school, there's something mysterious and slightly dangerous about Tagging Satellites. The band's second album, "Abstract Confessions", is almost a flashback to the moody, art school-influenced underground of pre-break-through Jane's Addiction LA - wonderfully detached, on-the-verge-of-a-breakdown female vocals paired with music that finds the middle ground between the ethereal and the razor's edge. When vocalist Zera Marvel (who turns out not to be dark-haired at all) intones, "I don't know/what it means/to have things/go my way," you'll remember that there was a time when pain was art, not commerce.
Barbara Mitchell - The Stranger, Seattle
From the Bible to Freud to Jung, we've been told that dreams are prophetic, self-revelatory and important.
↓ more ↓Shakespeare's Prospero sought to define art when he declared, "we are such stuff as dreams are made on," and he certainly did so, but those nine simple words seem to suggest more, a very modern more. They seem to hint that "we", the universal "we", are built from the same stuff as our dreams. If this is true, then dreams, the relentless cinemascopes of the night which everyone attends alone, are the genesis, or at least the cradle, of our more visible selves.
The ten songs on "Abstract Confessions" move with the fluidity and freedom of flying dreams. Voices push forward, punctuate a scene or an image with an intriguing non sequitur such as "eerie fog in my eyes; I hear you, I hear you," from "Five Star Memory," and then scatter in the onrush of the tune's next sonic and verbal adventure, leaving the listener grasping at the bygone lyrical snippet and pondering its importance.
In song, Zera Marvel, Tagging Satellites' singer, songwriter, lyricist, guitarist, and bassist, describes the work as "abrupt accidental insanity formed from Northwest energy," and in conversation she describes it as "couples therapy through music," referring to the fact that the other half of Tagging Satellites is her "better half" and boyfriend Graig Markel. Working together in their basement studio the two of them have crafted this record out of the stuff of their lives together. True to the work's title, there is confessional material in the songs--"Why on earth do I deserve anything that doesn't hurt?" she poignantly asks in "Time On My Halo,"-- but the confessions are piercingly brief and truly abstract, detaching themselves from the pulsing sonic mix in segments so minute they come across like conversations overheard from a passing convertible.
The disc's overall sound is a vibrant, rock-based experimentalism with a smidge of post-dotcom irony. Synth and guitar sounds ranging from processed and pretty to blunt and raw are woven together into a tapestry without seams but not without an edge. The production sound of the record itself is a -- for want of a better phrase -- silent partner in the whole artistic mix. The sound of every vocal take, drumbeat, guitar solo and keyboard line is painstakingly worked and fitted until it serves each particular song perfectly. Packed with ten vivid dreamscapes and a mystic, overarching, significance, "Abstract Confessions" has enough color, fire, fear, anger, and acceptance to feed your dreams for years to come.
-Dave Liljengren, Pandomag.com
You have to reach back a bit for the most accurate descriptive amalgam, which would be to imagine Sonic Youth releasing albums on the 4AD label in the late '80s.
-Mathew Fritch, Magnet
Sounds like a throwback to the glory days of SST Records, circa 1987... this Seattle band's latest offering is equal parts Sister-era Sonic Youth, early PJ Harvey and Janis Joplin. It's the contrasting of lovely and lilting vocals over stark minimalist indie rock and angry post punk that sparks the comparison. Especially on spirited gems like "Sun Damage" and "Less Fragile" or the haunting epic "Time on My Halo."
-Stuart Green, Exclaim
The songs take such a hold on you that when the CD's done, you snap out of the trance if only to press play again.
-Shaun Hatton, Chartattack.com
Tagging Satellites truly live up to their name, as if the band were launched into space where they now hang in the sky. The simple melodies, and certain darkness make this an excellent listen.
-Vice
Zera Marvel has a really good record collection. I can tell you just from the first listen of this CD. She tends to take the best moments from PJ Harvey's "Is This Desire", Sonic Youth's "Evol", and Cocteau Twin's "4 Calender Cafe."
-Mike Turner, The Bees Knees
For more information:
https://www.recoverysounds.com/ts
https://www.zeramarvel.com
https://www.graigmarkel.com
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