The Sour Notes

The Sour Notes
The Sour Notes performing at Holy Mountain in Austin, Texas, February 2013
Background information
Origin Austin, Texas, United States
Genres
Years active 2008–present
Website www.thesournotes.com
Members
  • Jared Boulanger
  • Amarah Ulghani
  • Jeremy Harrell
  • Travis Hackett
  • Chris Page

The Sour Notes are an American independent rock band from Austin, Texas, formed in 2008 by multi-instrumentalist Jared Boulanger—who writes and composes all of the band's material.

They are known for their cross-genre, DIY aesthetic, self-releasing over six albums, three 7-inch records, two EPs and a cassette. The Sour Notes have toured nationally over ten times, making appearances at CMJ, SXSW, NXNE, Fun Fun Fun Fest, The UMS, Free Press Summer Fest and have shared stages with such diverse bands as The Dandy Warhols, Of Montreal, Foxygen, Future Islands, We Are Scientists, Marnie Stern and Daniel Johnston.

History

Formation and The Meat of the Fruit EP

The Sour Notes began initially as the moniker for singer-songwriter Jared Boulanger’s home recordings, while living in a garage apartment in the Montrose-area of Houston, Texas. The name of the band stems from his collection of Moleskine journals containing drawings, rhyme schemes and notes on self improvement, which he called his "Sour Notes”. With the help of friend and engineer Steve Christensen, this material was turned into a 6-song EP entitled The Meat of the Fruit,[1] which featured a variety of instruments played by Boulanger, accompanied by female guest vocals.

Received in Bitterness and Touring

Upon finishing The Meat of the Fruit, Boulanger relocated to Austin, Texas and moved-in with friend and keyboardist Chris Page with plans of forming a live band. There, they met drummer Travis Hackett and bassist Brandi Dipietro through mutual friends and began performing live as a four-piece with Boulanger and Page sometimes using up to five synthesizers on stage between them. After only a handful of shows together, the group quickly recorded debut album Received in Bitterness in the laundry room of their French Place home and hit the road on a 13-city winter tour up the East Coast in January 2009.[2] Later that year, the band released 7-inch single Never Mix, Never Worry, which presents a more standard-rock format to The Sour Notes' characteristically evolving sound. Shortly after, bassist Brandi Dipietro left the band, causing The Sour Notes to incorporate live electronics and sequenced bass parts during shows.

It’s Not Gonna Be Pretty

The Sour Notes added keyboardist Elaine Greer to the band during the recording of their synth-heavy second album It's Not Gonna Be Pretty,[3] which was released in January 2010 to much critical acclaim. Following an East Coast tour in support of the album, the band added bassist Amarah Ulghani and The Sour Notes were selected as official showcasing artists at the 2010 SXSW Music Festival, opening for We Are Scientists at the Official SXSWi Closing Party and Daniel Johnston that summer. The Sour Notes spent the remainder of the year touring with numerous additions to the band, playing over 60 shows in and around the U.S. that year, including Free Press Summer Fest in Houston and the CMJ Music Marathon in New York City.

The Sour Notes performing live on air at KVRX 91.7 FM in Austin, Texas

Last Looks

At the turn of 2011, The Sour Notes released 7-inch single Hot Pink Flares ahead of third album Last Looks,[4] featuring orchestral group Mother Falcon, who arranged string sections on the album and backed The Sour Notes at their release show at Mohawk in Austin. The album was recorded almost entirely without synthesizer and contains a dominant use of acoustic instruments and female vocals. The band toured the East Coast in support of the album and were invited to play the 35 Conferette in Denton and the 2011 NXNE Music Festival in Toronto.

In February 2012, the band released a split 7-inch record with fellow Austin band Marmalakes on the No Play Music label. The record featured the single "Two Hands Wait" off their forthcoming album Do What May, which The Sour Notes would spend the next two years recording. Later that year, U.S. television series Shameless featured The Sour Notes songs "Do-ers & Say-ers" and "One Fell Swoop" during its second season premiere on Showtime.

Do What May

Following the momentum of sequential releases and gaining a reputation for their prolific output, The Sour Notes were first-round picks at SXSW 2013 and released a cassette-compilation entitled In The Meanwhile,[5] containing previously released, fan-favorited songs, plus the second single from their upcoming album Do What May and a cover of the Wire song "Mannequin". The Sour Notes spent that summer road-testing[6] new songs and were selected to open for The Dandy Warhols at Stubb’s as a part of the Red Bull Sound Select program in Austin.

Upon wrapping recording on fourth album Do What May in 2014, the band embarked on a 10-city West Coast tour in support of the album, that took them to Seattle and back in just 10 days. The album was released that September at Cheer Up Charlies in Austin to glowing reviews and featured many local guest musicians, including Sabrina Ellis of A Giant Dog, who sang on the title track.[7] A couple of months later, The Sour Notes released a Do What May Remix compilation featuring The Octopus Project[8] and were invited to perform at Fun Fun Fun Fest in Austin, where they played an exclusive after-show with Foxygen at Red 7.

Darkest Sour and Finest Sour

In 2017, The Sour Notes premiered a music video for their song Ride It Out, which shadows the daily life of television actress Danielle Burgess. The video was directed by photographer Travis Emery Hackett and nominated for "Best Cinematography" at the 2017 AMVFest.[9] Later that year, the band released their fifth album Darkest Sour at Hotel Vegas in Austin. In an interview about the album, guitarist Jared Boulanger said "I’ve hit a stride – from recording Darkest Sour – of productivity that I haven’t had since the beginning. I have some stuff in the can, ready to go and it’s kinda like – since I’ve been exploring guitar stuff more, listening to a lot more Dinosaur Jr., Built to Spill – I’ve changed the way I play. I’ve changed the amps I use, the pedals I use. I don’t know if you can tell, but the guitars on this album are much heavier."[10] The album was mixed by Steve Christensen (Steve Earle, Khruangbin), mastered by Joe LaPorta (David Bowie, Parquet Courts) and praised by critics.[11][12][13][14][15] The Sour Notes would later release two new tracks on 7-inch, recorded during those same studio sessions called Finest Sour.[16][17]

This Is Not Our Music

On February 9, 2018 the band announced they had recorded a 10-track cover album entitled This Is Not Our Music.[18] The album features covers of songs by Galaxie 500, Radiohead, The Beatles, Sleater-Kinney, The Ronettes, Patti Smith, Wire, Jawbreaker, Beyoncé, Neil Young and was made available as a free download on SoundCloud.[19]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Received in Bitterness (2009)
  • It’s Not Gonna Be Pretty (2010)
  • Last Looks (2011)
  • Do What May (2014)
  • Darkest Sour (2017)
  • This Is Not Our Music (2018)

Singles and EPs

  • The Meat of the Fruit EP (2008)
  • Never Mix, Never Worry 7-inch (2009)
  • Hot Pink Flares 7-inch (2010)
  • Split 7-inch w/ Marmalakes (2012)
  • In the Meanwhile Cassingle (2013)
  • Do What May Remix EP (2014)
  • Finest Sour 7-inch (2018)

Videography

  • Is It Happening? (Dir. Jared Boulanger, 2008)
  • Psychological Thriller (Dir. Paul Raila, 2009)
  • A Cute Little Ruin (Dir. Eric Morales, 2010)
  • Beyond Recognition (Dir. Jared Boulanger, 2010)
  • Nothing’s More Contagious Than Evil (Dir. Laura Wallgren, 2012)
  • Tour Documentary (Dir. Jared Boulanger, 2012)
  • Last Looks (Dir. VidKidz, 2012)
  • In the Meanwhile (Dir. Paul Avellino, 2013)
  • Two Hands Wait (Dir. Paul Avellino, 2014)
  • Do What May (Dir. Eric Morales, 2014)
  • Don’t Listen (Dir. Jared Boulanger, 2015)
  • Ride It Out (Dir. Travis Hackett, 2017)
  • Clock Strikes Twelve (Dir. Ofer Shouval, 2018)
  • Welcome To The Club (Dir. Andy Ray Lemon, 2018)

References

  1. Gray, Chris. "The Austin group releases The Meat of the Fruit EP". Houston Press. Retrieved 21 May 2008.
  2. Stevens, Darcie. "Review: The Sour Notes - Received in Bitterness". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  3. Powell, Austin. "Album Review: The Sour Notes - It's Not Gonna Be Pretty". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 15 January 2010.
  4. Powell, Austin. "Texas Platters: The Sour Notes – Last Looks". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 15 April 2011.
  5. Stegall, Tim. "New Austin Cassettes: The Sour Notes". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 30 August 2013.
  6. Boulanger, Jared. "The Sour Notes Tour Diary". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 28 June 2013.
  7. Hoffberger, Chase. "Review: The Sour Notes - Do What May". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  8. Edwards, Shane. "The Sour Notes - Do What May Remix Premiere". Red Bull. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  9. Curtin, Kevin. "The Sour Notes Ride It Out: Life's tedium and passion captured in black & white". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  10. Audette, Brian. "Ride It Out: A Conversation with The Sour Notes' Jared Boulanger". OVRLD. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
  11. The Sour Notes Bring Sweetness With Latest LP “Free Press Houston”
  12. Week in Pop: The Sour Notes “Impose Magazine”
  13. On the Record: The Sour Notes “Austin360”
  14. Davis, Morgan. "Exclusive Track Premiere: The Sour Notes - Loose Leaf and Bleak". OVRLD. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  15. Freeman, Doug. "Review: The Sour Notes - Darkest Sour". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  16. Audette, Brian. "Exclusive Track Premiere: The Sour Notes - Kitty Got Your Tongue". OVRLD. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  17. Wallace, Taylor. "Song of the Day - The Sour Notes: Welcome to the Club". KUTX. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  18. Aldridge, Andy. "First listen: The Sour Notes cover Galaxie 500's Fourth of July". A Head Full of Wishes. Retrieved 9 February 2018.
  19. Reddon, Wendy. "The Sour Notes – Cuttooth (single premiere)". The Revue. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
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