Mat
Devine (vocals, guitar)
Dan Wiese (guitars)
Jon Radtke (guitars)
Greg Corner (bass)
"And I'm
not running any more, I'll stand to face it all, I'll fight for every
breath Until there's nothing left of us"
-- "Believer," by Kill Hannah
A title
could not be more apropos. Until There's Nothing Left of Us, the latest
offering from Kill Hannah, defines the blue-collar work ethic of this
unique band, whose American spin on British modern rock reaches its apotheosis
on their sensational new release.
After
touring relentlessly through the two years that followed their 2003 Atlantic
debut, For Never & Ever (which featured the smash single, "Kennedy"),
the band dedicated six months to conceptualizing their sophomore effort
with intense songwriting and constant demoing. After having a lifetime
to write their first album, it was, admittedly, a challenge. But they've
beaten the odds before.
No one
sounded or looked like them when they first broke free from their art
school roots, peddled their independently produced records at shows and
local stores, conquered skeptics and built a loyal fan base. Their sound
had no precedent in their hometown of Chicago, yet its influence would
launch a subculture there and spread far beyond to others that would follow
their musical and visual leads. Back then, they had a ferocious DIY-mentality,
creating their own merchandise, passing out fliers in the snow, maintaining
their heavily trafficked website and more. They still do.
With the
final mixes for Until There's Nothing Left of Us, they knew they had given
all they had to this music.
And you
can hear it - in the passion and poetry, the candor of their lyrics, the
physical impact of their beats ... all the elements that prompted Billy
Corgan to hail them as "the future of Chicago rock" resonate here. Easily
described as the bridge between The Killers, AFI, Fall Out Boy and My
Chemical Romance; this band owns John Hughes movies, worn out mix tapes
and a comprehensive understanding of what came before them. Their sound
is at once familiar and refreshingly original, showing undeniable growth
by taking chances in a world where most art is being played safe.
While
Kill Hannah had cut Forever Never & Ever far from home, in sunny Los Angeles,
Until There's Nothing Left of Us was conceived and created back home in
Chicago during the dead of winter. That, according to Devine, stamps every
second of the album with a distinctive energy.
"Everything
came from the stimulation I get from this place," he insists. "I live
in view of the entire skyline; the trains literally circle me. Its almost
like the city itself envelops me. Like any metropolis, it can be dark
at times, but super-romantic too. From nine to five it's absolute chaos,
and then after six o'clock it's completely desolate. At the lakeshore
it might be totally placid and serene, and in the next minute these crazy
waves crash in and freeze as massive piles of jagged ice. In a way, our
music is like that too. From track to track on this record, and even within
each song, we have moments of triumph and then we have moments of creepy
romance."
As the
countdown for delivering Until There's Nothing Left of Us began, Devine
set off alone, exploring his city and finding magic in places that had
somehow escaped his attention - a tiny Gothic church, for example, amidst
the towers that loom over Michigan Avenue. Each detail stirred ideas -
word paintings, a snippet of melody - that he'd record on his voicemail.
Soon the
band gathered at friend/local drummer Garrett Hammond's home studio and
began taking all of their demos apart. "We'd rehearse and develop and
record every single part," recalls guitarist Dan Wiese. "Every note and
every word got re-evaluated several times before everyone was satisfied."
After
wrapping up their intense pre-production, they hit the studio with Chicago
native Johnny K. With a catalog that includes producing bands like Disturbed
and 3 Doors Down, he seemed like an unusual choice for Kill Hannah. "But
we wanted to experiment," Devine explains. "My personal tastes lean toward
European and 80's influences, and Johnny is known for doing straight-ahead
rock or metal. In Chicago terms, it's like we're North Side and Johnny
is, as he calls himself, a 'South Side knucklehead'." It was, of course,
a perfect match.
They began
by finding common ground, as Johnny seconded their enthusiasm for the
Cure, Peter Gabriel, and The Psychedelic Furs. The plan, then, was to
at once expand and refine their sound without losing the primal instincts
that have driven Kill Hannah from the start.
"We love
our first album and stand by it, but we also know that the most consistent
criticism it received was that it didn't have the raw energy that we have
when we play live," Devine says. "On the new album we've got the harmonized
vocals and electronics and sophistication that are so much a part of what
we are, but Johnny's perspective helped us to also bring that dynamic
side of our show to the table too."
If you're
lucky enough to have seen them live, on tours with The Sounds and H.I.M,
or headlining their now legendary shows at the Metro and across the country
this summer, you'll know immediately what all of this means.
From the
album's triumphant, instrumental opening, "Life in the Arctic," which
defines the context for the epic tracks that follow, through the siren-like
riff that drives "Believer," the drum & bass-inspired beats and delicate
chimes that surge into waves of massive guitars on "The Songs That Saved
My Life," the seductive blend of emotive melody and body-slamming beat
on the anthemic, lead single "Lips Like Morphine," whose chorus fans began
chanting at shows within days of the song's appearance on the band's MySpace
page (myspace.com/killhannah). This is how Kill Hannah sounds onstage
when they play with a strength only achieved by feeding from the energy
of their fans and serving it back with immeasurable intensity.
Mat Devine's
lyrics for "Love You to Death" reflect his familiarity with that place
where tragedy and romance unite, a Shakespearean vision that's conveyed
powerfully in classic pop song format. "Scream" pays tribute to their
hometown, whose grandeur and intensity are critical elements of Kill Hannah's
style. And "Sleep Tight," improbably intimate, provides the perfect coda.
Until
There's Nothing Left of Us is everything that the band and the legions
that follow them could have wished for. But it's only the start of the
next, exciting chapter for Kill Hannah.
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