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Headlights to tour with David Bazan, new Daytrotter session up!

By January 11, 2010No Comments

DAYTROTTER SESSION

VIDEO: “Love Song for Buddy”

Headlights

Wildlife, Headlights’ poignant third album, stems from particularly troubled beginnings. “It was a very difficult record,” relates guitarist and songwriter Tristan Wraight. While Wraight, fellow songwriter and keyboardist Erin Fein, and drummer Brett Sanderson have been touring and recording since 2004, this year found the band as a five piece for the first time with the addition of bassist Nick Sanborn and, temporarily, guitarist John Owen. Group dynamics are a difficult thing to predict, and the recording process proved tumultuous. After a few months, the band scrapped nearly everything. The fallout from the failed sessions eventually led to Owens’ amicable departure from the band.

“We had been so distracted by the issues that were going on internally, that we stopped thinking about what we were writing, what exactly we were doing, what we were saying, and all the questions you should be asking,” Fein explains.

Fein and Wraight felt a specific urgency in consolidating the band’s characteristically strong songwriting into something more nuanced and confidential. “For the first time this is a significantly personal record for us, and for very real reasons like growing up and people dying that you love,” Wraight says. Wildlife is an album haunted by the absence of those left and leaving and the alienation that comes in the wake of loss.

Fittingly, these emotions find expression in Headlights most arresting music yet. Similar to the band’s sophomore album Some Racing, Some Stopping, Wildlife was recording at home and mixed by Sanderson. It is the result of a streamlined process, one in which the band worked out songs before hand – whether in the next room or on the road – and put them to tape live. “On this record we just sang, that’s the take, that’s the part, there’s the vocals, here’s the mic, sing the song, done,” Wraight says. As a result, Wildlife doesn’t sacrifice immediacy while still retaining the production flourishes that lend allure and a heightened emotional depth to each song.

As if the complexity of what the band worked through can’t be confined to standard verse-chorus structures, Wildlife sees Headlights stretching out instrumentally, letting songs breathe and grow in a manner similar to their accomplished live sets. The band allows leadoff track, “Telephones,” to lift into a soaring, guitar-led coda. “Secrets” tight, claustrophobic verses and cyclic keyboards frame a breathless meditation on grief before erupting into wordless catharsis. The album isn’t without upbeat moments. “I Don’t Mind at All” is a blurred, chugging rocker in the vein of classic shoegaze. On “Get Going” acoustic strumming and a buoyant bassline carry the song to a liquid chorus.

Ultimately though, Wildlife is a work far more elegiac than rousing, where the intimacy and elegance of the songs never fail to remind us of what has been left behind. Rather than collapsing under the duress, Headlights have survived to surface with a collection of exquisite paeans to the transience of our friendships, lives, and aspirations. It is an album defined by moments like “Slow Down Town,” a hushed lament for lost youth, where Fein’s delicate vocals embrace all the vulnerability of adulthood, building into the most heartbreaking piece of Headlights’ career.

WHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING ABOUT WILDLIFE:

“An often gorgeous and heartbreaking record… a worthy seasonal soundtrack for anyone surrounded by falling leaves and fair-weather, er, chums. -The Onion

“When Wildlife starts with layered vocal harmonies draped over prolonged organ chords, it’s one of the most enticing openings to an indie-pop album in the past few years.” -Alternative Press

“…the album is an emotionally powerful, melodically rich work that adds a new dimension to Headlights that is quite welcome.” -All Music Guide

“It’s actually quite easy to listen to Wildlife as a breezily low-key indie pop record if that’s what you’d prefer, though that short-sells the group’s admirable conceptual accomplishments.” – Pitchfork

“Wildlife is, somehow, an even better record than its predecessor. It’s quieter and stranger and sadder, a record about death and divorce and departures, and about the fact that we’re all headed toward the same grim finale whether we like it or not.” -eMusic

“Wildlife thrives on its blend of moods and paces. The record, as a symbol of growth and variety, is definitely
another successful venture for Headlights.” -Beyond Race

HEADLIGHTS

03/04 – Eugene, OR Sam Bond’s Garage #
03/05 – Sacramento, CA Blue Lamp #
03/06 – Visalia, CA Cellar Door #
03/07 – Santa Barbara, CA Soho #
03/08 – Long Beach, CA Alex’s Bar #
03/09 – Las Vegas, NV Beauty Bar #
03/10 – Phoenix, AZ Sail Inn #
03/12 – Norman, OK The Opolis #
03/13 – Springfield, MO Gallery Sounds #
03/14 – St. Louis, MO Old Rock House #
03/15 – Newport, KY Southgate House #
03/17 – Nashville, TN Exit/In #
03/18 – Asheville, NC Grey Eagle #
03/19 – West Columbia, SC New Brookland Tavern #
03/20 – Richmond, VA Alley Katz #
03/21 – Baltimore, MD The Ottobar #
03/22 – Philadelphia, PA First Unitarian Church #
03/23 – Brooklyn, NY Music Hall of Williamsburg #
03/27 – Grantham, PA Messiah College
03/28 – Columbus, OH The Summit #
03/29 – Bloomington, IN The Bishop #
03/30 – Grand Rapids, MI Calvin College #
04/03 – Dekalb, IL House Cafe #
04/04 – Milwaukee, WI Pabst #
04/05 – St. Paul, MN Turf Club #
# = w/ David Bazan

wildlifecover
Headlights
Wildlife
(Polyvinyl)
Street Date: Oct. 6, 2009

1. Telephones
2. Secrets
3. You and Eye
4. Get Going
5. Love Song For Buddy
6. I Don’t Mind At All
7. Dead Ends
8. Wisconsin Beaches
9. We’re All Animals
10. Teenage Wonder
11. Slow Down Town

HEADLIGHTS LINKS:

Band Page: headlightsmusic.com

Myspace: myspace.com/headlights

Twitter: twitter.com/headlightsmusic

Press Materials: polyvinylrecords.com/press