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Jillianne Hamilton.
The Got To Get Got - Sahalee
By Chris Weaver
(07/01/09)
Now, I think I should admit before I go on: The Got To Get Got are one of my favourite bands at the moment. Not just out of East Coast bands, but all told. And I
absolutely love this album.
Back in 2005, I was in Halifax for the Pop Explosion. Underage, I heard about this All Ages show Ted Leo was doing at the Pavillion, so of course I wanted to check it out.
This was the first and last time I saw North of America. Quasi-defunct at the time, they had just played a few dates with Ted Leo and were closing off the mini-tour, going
back into this state of non-existence. Little did I know that even then, Mark Mullane had the beginnings of The Got To Get Got underway and now, four years later, we
hear their first full-length offering: Sahalee.
I hate to compare these guys to North of America- so I won't. There's not that much to compare, anyway, as The Got to Get Got is a different beast altogether. These
guys were a bi-coastal collective (now based entirely in Halifax) complete with violin, cello, and xylophone and Sahalee is one of the most deliciously rocking records I've
heard in a long while. Before I'd gotten my ears to it, my expectations were- I have to say- mighty high. But Mark & co. did not disappoint.
I've had "Rattle Off" stuck in my head since the first time I heard it, months upon months ago, and it remains one of the best tracks on the album. However! I wouldn't call
it a stand-out track, just because so many more of the tunes are just as high quality. "Rattle Off" uses both Mark and Eleanor's vocals to the greatest extent, with solid,
well-written lyrics and the instrumentation is so beautifully layered, even live, that it makes excellent use of everybody in the band.
"Gettin' Dirty in the Afterlife" reminds me of something that I can't quite put my finger on. It's a bouncing indie rock tune about, well, "rolling around in our graves". You
can't not smile (and, according to some, can't not dance) when you're listening to this track. This one I'd heard a couple of weeks before the album, too. Straight up, an ace
rock song.
And speaking of ace rock songs, "Crosses" is the kind of song that gets a crowd going, no matter if you know the song or not. It has great hooks, driving guitar and violin,
and it just sucks you in and gets you moving. Gorgeous, fist-pumping, fast-dancing, sing-along rock'n'roll music is "Crosses". And, for that matter, most of the second half of
the album. There is not a bad track in the bunch.
"War of Letters" especially is in the same vein as "Crosses"- oh, just listening to this album through makes me hungry for a live show, makes me hungry for a rock'n'roll dance
party. That's what this whole album is, that's the only way I can describe it. A rock'n'roll dance party that'll have you smiling the whole way through. I mean, come on,
there's a xylophone. Who won't smile at a xylophone?
They do slow it down a bit with "Peyton & Perry", but the tone isn't lost at all. Maybe even better use is made of the non-standard rock band instruments, at the expense of
Brad's guitar, until about two-and-a-half minutes in, when one of the most singularly beautiful moments on the album occurs, until the end of the track. Fight on, fight on,
fight on.
It's just struck me, while listening to "Some Loud Thunder Clap..." that TGTGG kind of make me think of what would happen if Mark Mullane had been in The Unicorns.
Especially with "Gettin' Dirty in the Afterlife", there's that same apparently dark subject matter treated with a smile. Not all the way through, of course, but they
maintain the ability to do that. There is no low point to the album. It's just absolutely gold from beginning to end.
You can catch the official Sahalee release show at Gus's Pub in Halifax on July 25th, and pre-order the album from TGTGG.com any time you want!
Related links:
+ TGTGG's Website
+ TGTGG MySpace
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Go back to Reading Material.
* * * * *
Chris Weaver is a devourer of music originally from Saint John but now based in Sackville, NB. He is an on-again off-again blogger and avid concert-goer who may as
well have the salt air of the Bay of Fundy running through his veins (if air in one's veins wouldn't kill a man). He can be heard on
CHMA 106.9FM in Sackville.