MEWITHOUTYOU - BROTHER SISTER

" mewithoutYou end up feeling a little forgettable, inconsistent and ultimately without identity to totally convince."

review by Mike Bond
reviews
STRANGE ADDICTION RECORDS TRACKLISTING
Messes Of Men The Dryness And The Rain Wolf Am I! (And Shadow) Yellow Spider A Glass Can Only Spill What It Contains Nice And Blue (Pt .Two) The Sun And The Moon Orange Spider C-Minor In A Market Dimly Lit O, Porcupine Brownish Spider In A Sweater Poorly Knit January 1979
On the band's third full length album, BROTHER SISTER, US alt rockers mewithoutYou certainly make for intriguing and serpentine listening at times  A band who shift styles and song structures, seemingly on a song by song basis, BROTHER SISTER is a record that at times feels like the work of various different bands; an effect that whilst at times gives a disjointed and confusing spin on matters, shows a refreshingly healthy concern for variety and change.
If there is a constant theme that runs through BROTHER SISTER though, its a certain proclivity for messy guitar scrawls and fractured vocal performances; opener MESSES OF MEN, a case in point; the song evolving from its fragile alt-country beginnings to a more emo drenched wall of noise, Bonnie Prince Billie by way of Brand New if you like.  THE DRYNESS AND THE RAIN is a more angular, jerky affair, jagged guitar riffs underpinning the barking vocal attacks and militaristic drum snaps.  The fragile YELLOW SPIDER is a song that belongs more to the lo-fi nu-folk scene, echoes of Devandra Banhart and Jeffery Lewis.
Sounding exactly like a more angry and muscular take on Bloc Party, Philadelphia's mewithoutYou are a band blending art rock guitar jerks with barked vocal melodies and frenetic drum patterns on NICE AND BLUE (PT. TWO), the similarities so instantly apparent that it becomes a case of close your eyes and its hard to tell the difference here; down to the baroque backing vocals, complex drum patterns and particularly in the vocal tics and yelps of frontman Aaron Weiss, an absolute dead ringer for Kele Okeroke.  Still, dismiss these obvious comparisons and NICE AND BLUE (PT. TWO) is a storming slice of awkward indie rock that hits all the right highs with glorious precision and aplomb however apparent the similarities may be.
THE SUN AND THE MOON is a prettier, more tender affair; though mewithoutYou for all their shifting stylistic moves, begin to feel at times like a band without a real identity, this time round their Interpol esque doom rock heralding another change in sound and attitude.  It's this constant sidestepping that gives BROTHER SISTER both its charms and its problems, mewithoutYou making it extremely hard to pin down a real identity to their sound, the results unfortunately a little too messy and haphazard to endear you totally to their music.
An ambitious and at times sprawling record, BROTHER SISTER certainly impresses with its scale and scope; its just a bit of a shame that for all their sprawling musical schizeophrenia, mewithoutYou end up feeling a little forgettable, inconsistent and ultimately without identity to totally convince.

BIOGRAPHY
mewithoutYou Brother, Sister “I do not exist,” mewithoutYou frontman Aaron Weiss mutters to open the band's third full-length, Brother, Sister, setting the tone for an album that explores philosophical, spiritual and interpersonal relationships with equal aplomb. However, while Weiss has become known for his stream-of-consciousness lyrics communicated via his half-sung/half-shouted vocals, Brother, Sister is a huge progression for Weiss personally, as well as the rest of the Philadelphia-based band—guitarist Michael Weiss, guitarist Christopher Kleinberg, bassist Greg Jehanian and drummer Rickie Mazzotta. Oh, and it also has the potential to finally break the underground's best-kept secret wide open.
In a musical landscape dominated by genre divisions and marketing campaigns, Brother, Sister is simply an album made by five people who create art without any limitations—and that's what makes it so important. While the album retains the band's instantly recognizable post-hardcore sound, Weiss' vocals and the implementation of atypical instrumentation are the most instantly recognizable shifts from 2004's Catch For Us The Foxes. “A lot of our old stuff is all shouting and that's still there,” explains Weiss. “But I've never really listened to heavy music; with this record, my goal was to make music that I wanted to listen to. Not everyone agreed at first, but I wanted to incorporate different types of melodies and instrument—and those are probably some of my favorite moments on the record.”
While Foxes and the band's Tooth & Nail debut [A -> B Life] were rife with delay-driven guitars, explosive drumming and driving songs like “January 1979,” the beauty of Brother, Sister alternately lies in its subtleties. Opening with a lone Wurlitzer and minimal percussion, “Masses of Men” crams more emotion into three-minutes than screaming ever could; “The Dryness and the Rain” incorporates an middle-eastern orchestra for its chorus; and the quasi-ballad “A Sweater Poorly Knit” is probably the most epic song the band have ever crafted, featuring acoustic guitar, accordion, harp and horns into a musical journey that shifts from beautiful to foreboding and back again seamlessly.
Simply put, Brother, Sister is the sound of a band discovering its identity—but that couldn't have happened without the experiences the band shared traversing the freeways in their vegetable oil-powered Greyhound Bus for the past two years alongside peers like Thursday, The Blood Brothers, and Minus The Bear. “The wild ideas we tried on Catch For Us The Foxes have become very normal on this record,” explains Michael Weiss, fresh off the band's acceptance of an MTV Woodie Award for best new artist. “But after we toured on those songs for two years, we thought we could just take what we liked from the last record and expand on that stuff and throw away the rest.”
But there's only so much you can articulate via adjectives and sound bytes about an album as artistically moving as Brother, Sister. Ultimately, it has to be experienced. “I don't want to say everything's all right and just sing songs about the birds and the clouds,” Aaron explains regarding the revelatory nature of the disc. “I do want to wrestle with the difficult things we all go through; but ultimately I have a faith that the light is more power than the sorrow and the love is stronger than the hatred,” he continues. “Even if it's hard to find, when it's discovered, it's so powerful that everything else is completely insignificant.”
Brothers and Sisters, it's time to rise to that challenge.
This is our soundtrack.

LINKS

Review date: October 2007