6gig.
Mind Over Mind
As
Portland Maines 6gig returned home from touring in support of their moderately
successful debut Tincan Experiment, one fact bubbled to the surface: that theyve
established themselves as one of todays most promising bands. With that
promise, 6gig has created a second album that is a testament to their growth
and determination.
Mind Over Mind, 6gig's long-awaited second album, opens with a sound of a band
coming-of-age: rock-solid, certain, serious and unrepentant. Ive
twisted myself inside out and back again/hated myself when I was my only friend
front man Walter Craven proclaims on the albums first single Free.
Giving thanks on Proud will also have radio execs standing up and
taking a listen. With Space Suit 6gig briefly returns us to the
experience of Tincan Experiment before launching into the heavy, yet melodic,
Whose Side Are You On? The layered guitars, catchy melody and soaring
chorus are all there: Things that you said to me/I heard what you did/crept
under my skin/the things that you do disgust me. The harsh sincerity,
with a bittersweet twist, of Take Me With You (which is perhaps
the best track on the release) alongside the broken trust of Words (Last
Summer) and the hypnotic guitar work on Let Myself Down places
Mind Over Mind on a short list of second albums that fulfill the promise of
successful follow-ups.
6gig has laid it out for all of us to hear and the consequences are magnificent.
To their credit, all the songs on Mind Over Mind sound stylistically heavier.
The recording was produced, engineered and mixed by the legendary Matt Wallace
(Sugarcult, Deftones, Faith No More). Additionally, the world-renowned Bob Ludwigs
Gateway Mastering Studios put the finishing touches on this masterpiece. With
Cravens melodic vocals/lyrics along with the infiltration of heavier guitar
chords, it sets it apart from its predecessor. The bottom line is that this
is the best album I've heard since, well, Tincan Experiment. UltimateGuitar.com
Over
and above
Never Mind the bollocks, here's 6gig
BY SAM PFEIFLE
TEEN ANGST: 6gig prove that it can be done well -- with contemporary tragedies.
Start with the bands name: it should say something about the group, define
them without putting them in an unfortunately small box. The Beatles had a great
name when they were four mop-topped lads from Liverpool, but was The White Album
really recorded by The Beatles ? Rage Against the Machine? Ive always
thought that name put them in a very tight space, indeed. Could that band ever
write a decent ballad and not have it sound silly?
With 6gig, we have a moniker that says precision, calculation, speed, and intelligence
and rings with frontman Walt Cravens self-depreciating story about how
hes a computer geek and just sort of came up with it. (It also gave us
an idea in the office: what if you named a band 6gig, then played only six gigs
and quit?)
But 6gigs meaning provides a more-than-apt description for their music:
tight, written out to the smallest beep and whir, with quick riffs and rhythms
put together in ways that you havent heard before, but reserved and humble
enough to keep them from sounding like Dream Theater or math rock. Plus, theyre
a band whose professionalism in the studio is the stuff of local legend, a band
whose first take is often their last.
But what about Cravens impassioned vocals, alternately sung and screamed?
Okay, so computers and melody may not make for a ready free association, but
there is a lyrical quality to 6gigs two syllables, sibilant and guttural,
the "x" and "g" working together like light and heavy elements
to form a willing compound.
6gig are what a fully realized band looks like. That sounds a bit like a hypothesis,
and it fits them a scientific method for their scientific musical creation.
And, finally, the proof is readily available now that you can say the same about
their sophomore full-length release, Mind over Mind (hows that for emphasizing
the cerebral?). Theres heart there, too, of course beating through
the layers of steel and cable that have been erected to protect it.
And this aesthetic pervades everything the band does. The packaging for the
new album is brilliant, reds and blues mirroring grays and metallics, meshing
Craven's technical (CAD training?) designs with Bob Smyths organic forms,
the schematics just abstract enough to suggest living organisms. Every lyric
is there, and there are notations above and beyond the standard to let the reader
(cover band?) know just which verse repeats when, and which codas are extended
or reprised. Plus, look at the thank yous: theyre all-encompassing, equally
full of family, friends, and industry types who have helped them along the way
but theyre in alphabetical order!
All of this is to say that they couldnt have done better than Matt Wallace
(Faith No More, most famously) as producer, the last cog in any bands
musical machine. He has taken this grand vision of a technical musical masterpiece
and crafted it expertly. The opening track, "Space Suit," more prelude
than introduction, is a whir of pneumatic pumps and gadgets, Craven's voice
a distant jumble of barely comprehensible phrases. This is an album , one where
nothing is tossed off, and everything is wedded to the purpose. Again, this
"Space Suit" theme surprisingly reappears for 14 seconds between tracks
six and seven, the CD player counting solemnly down in the negative like a rocket
bracing for liftoff.
But what is all this technical wizardry masking? Real passion as evidenced
on the bands first single and the first song here, "Whose Side Are
You On?" Wallace here, as on much of the album, gives Craven personality
by keeping his vocals high in the mix, immediate and captivating. The bass line
from Weave is dark and methodical. Climbing guitar lines go up and down stairs
while multi-tracked background vocals arc in and out of the mix. The anger is
palpable: "I heard what you did, it crept under my skin/The things that
you do disgust me."
Its a recurring theme, this anger.
Rock and roll (and its increasingly heavier musical children) has always
been the uplifter/reflection of disaffected youth, of course, and those that
eschew pop eventually come back around to it by embracing that inner societal
revulsion that most intelligent music fans cant help but harbor toward
a world where the Backstreet Boys are rich and famous and classical musicians
are forced to pay orchestras to perform their compositions.
Want to rebel against your folks/school/government by finding an empathetic
voice? Well, why dont you take Chuck Berry, Elvis Presley, the Rolling
Stones, the Sex Pistols, Iron Maiden, Green Day, or Marilyn Manson for a spin?
That usually works pretty good. It's so loud! So shocking! And just look at
them!
Lately, however, bands like Korn and Slipknot have turned this back upon itself,
and made the condition of todays youth their rallying cry and pennant,
taking experiences of broken homes and battered mothers and turning them into
platinum records. This isnt just teen angst, this is a reflection of the
truly tattered edges of a society that often seems to treat its most valuable
resource as disposable income.
Truth be told, however, Ive never bought the sentiment of these bands
for a second. Maybe these emotions were heartfelt once, but the labels so marketed
and embraced the ethic that it soon became nothing more than a way to sell records.
How many videos do I have to watch where a kid in a soiled T-shirt and a bad
haircut watches as his drunken father knocks around his poor, wailing mother?
Isnt that videos appearance on MTV the height of cynicism?
6gig, however, show here that teen angst can still be done well, while embracing
the contemporary tragedies that no other era of rock and roll has ever really
imagined. The grunge kids were troubled, sure, and Nevermind and Ten contained
brutal images, but it all felt so suburban and narrative, the overall question
being asked something along the lines of "Why me?"
With Mind over Mind , however, the question is more like, "What the fuck
is wrong with you people?"
"Proud," for example, asks the question through irony. Both the rocking,
singalong cadence and the content of the chorus are jarring.
Thank you/For lying to my face/For wasting all my time/For being drunk again.
Thank you/For making my mom cry/For screaming in my face/For everything you
did to us.
Im so proud of you.
There is a seriousness here borne out by the irony, a resiliency born of distress
and adversity overcome. The bridge is a quiet rehearsal of prose poetry over
background drums (superb throughout from the late Dave Rankin, though Jason
Stewart is now wholly ensconced with the band) and a strummed guitar. The bass
entry is cool and melodic, up, up, down, like hopes and dreams.
"Deadbeat" is another ode to "ocean-size letdown," but personal
enough to avoid the cliché. Is it clear that a generation of fathers
have abandoned their duty like never before? Yes, by now, quite. But what makes
this ring true are the "after-shave smells," "a telephone call,"
"no more baked-bean fat," "laying out on the grass."
"Can you bear the thought of losing the love of your family?" 6gig
are clearly incredulous that some people all too easily can.
But theres that resiliency again, undeniable. "Start Again"
makes it clear that "I thought about giving in," but "you cannot
make my mind up . . . Ill start again." Ending with a blinding guitar
solo from Steve Marquis (a rare spot of individual-instrument emphasis), the
departure from 6gigs signature guitar sound of a low chunk tied with a
screaming, high punctuation is notice that the band isnt afraid to surprise
you.
They are, in the end, "Free," and "Ill never go back again/And
its the only way that I wanna be." Along with the chorus to "Words,"
which might be the best Craven has ever sounded on record, this is a statement
that should not be regarded lightly. 6gig know exactly what they want to do,
how to do it, and their vision has been realized.
Hook up, plug in, and take notice.
Sam Pfeifle can be reached at spfeifle@phx.com
Issue Date: September 5 - 11, 2003