It is an uncommon thing when a rock
band releases anything original nowadays. It is even more
uncommon when the source of originality happens to be the
debut album from a band which hails from Texarkana. This is
what makes “Water Sphere,” the debut LP from Pilotdrift,
such an enjoyable listen.The quintet, which consists of
Kelly Carr, Jay Budzilowski, Ben Rice, Eric Russell and John
David Blagg, have only been playing together for a few
years, but the band sounds like a cohesive unit that’s been
playing together for much longer than that. Indeed, most of
them have known one another since adolescence.
Pilotdrift got its start with regional success but began
to garner support after co-signing a self-released CD with
Good Records, owned by Tim DeLaughter and Julie Doyle of The
Polyphonic Spree. Pilotdrift began to play for larger and
larger crowds and eventually gained further notoriety while
supporting artists such as The Polyphonic Spree and Eisley.
But what does Pilotdrift sound like, exactly? The band’s
sound is quite ambitious, embracing an experimental art-rock
sound with sweeping orchestrations and atmospheric
electronics. The album operates almost as a grab bag of
styles, moods and feelings, encompassing everything from
horror to romance. Carr’s vocals compliment the music well,
proving that Carr has the range to fit the musical variety
within and bring presence to the equally esoteric lyrics.
Lyrically each song tells a story, but generally in more a
narrative format as opposed to the traditional first person.
The lyrics therefore seem more detached, but at the same
time are elevated to a more epic level.
The album begins with “Caught in My Trap,” a track which
wouldn’t sound out of place in Tim Burton’s “The Nightmare
Before Christmas.” It’s a good opening, one that catches you
off guard with its somewhat nonlinear structure. The next
few tracks draw you in equally as well with the sci-fi/jazz
nightclub sounds of “Bubblecraft” and the interesting, Asian
sound of “Late Night in a Wax Museum.” The “Jekyll & Hyde
Suite” is one of the highlights of the album, a 10-minute
track that sounds like something out of a scary carnival. It
feels as if the music itself is the schizophrenic Jekyll and
Hyde, battling for who will gain dominance.
The second half of the album is equally interesting,
implementing more percussion. This is most notable in “So
Long,” which is an epic of a closing track and one that ends
the album well with excellent drumming by Rice and sweeping
vocals and strings.
Among their influences they list the Beatles, but what
rock band doesn’t list the Beatles as one of their
influences? In truth the band has a hard time drawing
comparisons, but that doesn’t prevent people from trying.
Radiohead is a common one, but in actuality they only sound
like Radiohead insomuch as the fact that they, too, are
undefinable. The band itself is fearful of comparison, as
being viewed as a derivative of something else, but nothing
on the album seems forced or contrived in order to make it
original. The spectrum of sound on the album does indeed go
everywhere, but in a precise — not a frenetic — manner.
The CD will be out Sept. 20. Pilotdrift has proven itself
as going against the common trends towards catchy but
ultimately soulless music, and they’re all the better for
it.