REVIEW

Music Review: Sneakers - Nonsequitur of Silence

Written by Bill Sherman
Published January 07, 2007

Mention the dB's or Mitch Easter to most power-slash-jangle pop fans, and, most likely, you'll get a loud sigh o' pleasure in response. Much beloved by record shoppe habitués (like yours truly at the time) in the early eighties, the deeBs were the most criminally underappreciated southern pop band of the era (the most criminally overappreciated being, of course, R.E.M.)

Their first two releases, Stands for Decibels and Repercussion, are still cited by true believers as pristine pieces of brainy jangle-pop, while Like This, produced after founding member Chris Stamey left to pursue a solo career, has its equally strong proponents (among 'em, this writer). Easter, in addition to fronting another underrated pop-rock group, Let's Active (perhaps best known for the sparkly "Every Word Means No"), was also producer for R.E.M.'s early releases. There's a lotta musical D.I.Y. history in those two names, in other words — and where the two first came together was in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, with Sneakers.

Founded by future dB's Chris Stamey and Will Rigby, Sneakers released two indie EPs, Sneakers and In the Red, both of which received kudos in rockfan forums like Trouser Press and New York Rocker, but largely went unnoticed beyond the fanzine press. The first six-song EP was the work of a four-man unit -- Stamey, drummer Rigby, guitarist Rob Slater & bassist Robert Keely — while the second was the creation of a band in name only. Stamey and Easter (who'd joined the group for a gig at Max's Kansas City) put together Red as a duo, utilizing a few archival tracks featuring the rest of the players, along with future dB's bassist Gene Holder, but primarily playing most of the instruments themselves. With Easter sharing vocal responsibilities, the six-song set sounds as much like nascent Let's Active as it does pre-formed dB's.

Both EPs, along with nine other tracks initially produced around the same time, are now being re-issued by Collectors' Choice under the collegially pretentious title Nonsequitur of Silence. For fans of the sound, the collection provides a splendorous earful of early D.I.Y. popmaking. (A historically contextual parenthetical should probably be inserted here: when Sneakers was first released in '76, the best-known indie tracks were by the likes of Patti Smith, Television & Pere Ubu. The power pop boom that brought all those skinny tie bands into the public limelight wouldn't flower for at least another year, so this stuff was really ahead of its time.)

Though the first six tracks of Nonsequitur, recorded lo-fi and mostly live by another name-to-be, performer/producer Don Dixon, primarily reveal a young band whose reach exceeds its grasp, Stamey's early compositions show the man's sense of minor key hookery was already keenly developed.

Opener track "Ruby" gives a good idea of what we're in for. While it just barely holds together instrumentally -- though Rigby's solid drumming grounds the track, Stamey and Slater's ramshackle guitar hooks struggle in spots to stay in place -- the song also contains an irrepressibly catchy "talk is cheap" chorus. If some of Sneakers' experimental flourishes (in "Driving," the song's atonal guitar embellishments threaten to overwhelm Stamey's characteristically light vocals) take getting used to, by the fifth track ("Crisis"), the sound coalesces and pure poppery prevails.

page 1 | 2
Bill Sherman is a mostly harmless pop culture nerd who can either be found at the Pop Culture Gadabout blog or in his capacity as Comics & Graphics Novel review editor at this here site. He once wrote a history of underground comix for a Spanish comics encyclopedia - which he can no longer read since he lost the original manscript and can't read Spanish.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Buy from Amazon.com
Nonsequitur of Silence Nonsequitur of Silence
Sneakers
Music,
Stands for Decibels/Repercussion Stands for Decibels/Repercussion
The dB's
Music,
Cypress/Afoot Cypress/Afoot
Let's Active
Music,
Like This Like This
The dB's
Music,

Music Review: Sneakers - Nonsequitur of Silence
Published: January 07, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Music
Filed Under: Music: Adult Alternative, Music: New Wave, Music: Pop, Music: Rock
Writer: Bill Sherman
Bill Sherman's BC Writer page
Bill Sherman's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Bill Sherman
Music: Adult Alternative
Music: New Wave
Music: Pop
Music: Rock
All Music Articles
Bill Sherman's personal weblog
All Review articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — January 7, 2007 @ 03:20AM — Gordon Hauptfleisch [URL]

I'm swooning already--thanks for the reminders. The dB's "Like This" made my top ten of 2006's best reissues.

#2 — January 7, 2007 @ 17:06PM — Bill Sherman [URL]

After getting the above posted, I received the following message from dB's/Sneakers drummer Will Rigby:

"Saturday [January 13] brings the first appearance by Sneakers since 1976. The dB's play Bowery Ballroom in NYC with Mitch Easter opening, and orig Sneakers bassist Robert Keely is coming up and we're going to try to get through a handful of tunes..."

As Will notes, this will be the first public appearance by the original band since the mid-seventies (Stamey & Easter made an appearance at a Winston-Salem record store in the early 90's to promote an earlier reissue of Sneakers material entitled Racket, but the rest of the group wasn't involved). Sounds like it could be fun or a mess or both...

Me, I'm still reeling over the news that the dB's are back playing together...

#3 — January 7, 2007 @ 18:05PM — Gordon Hauptfleisch [URL]

Absolutely--what a great message to get.

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/57884)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments