I had always thought that freedom was just another word for
nothing left to lose, but then I read an interview with Venrez (the artist
formerly known as Steven Berez) getting together some information for this
review of Sell the
Lie, the debut album of the band he fronts, also conveniently named
Venrez (Venrez it turns out combines the last syllable of Steven's first name
with the last syllable of his last name).
The interviewer asks him what he meant by the line "freedom's just a
state of mind" in the album's title song.
It means, Venrez answers, "that we control how we think and feel.
No one can make us feel anything. We have the choice to be the cause or the
reaction."
Nice answer, not as
pithy perhaps, but clearly more politic in a song that takes aim at the powers
that be and their attempt to control the message. "Sell the Lie" is the kind of song
that could appeal to both Occupy Wall Street protestors and Tea Party patriots,
depending on whom you think is doing the selling—big corporations or
overreaching government. In the
interview Venrez talks about "corporate monsters," but big government
would do just as well for his message. Especially as many would argue that
there isn't much difference between the two.
Politics aside, "Sell the Lie" is a rocker with roots in the
'70's with an infectious hook that drives home its message.
Infectious hooks are a hallmark of the album's songs in
general, most of which were written by Venrez and Jason Womack (guitar, keys
and backing vocals) some with credit to Tommy "Joho" Johnson and
bassist Mike Bradford. The one cover on
the album is the Steve Winwood classic "Can't Find My Way Home." In
addition to Womack and Bradford, Venrez includes guitarist Alex Kane and Ed
Davis on drums.
They like to take a key phrase, tie it to the hook, and let
it rip. Take the album's opening song,
"Karma," a very personal diatribe about betrayal: "Got no heart
and still [?] no soul/What did you get from what you stole/Some things never go
away." The repetition is
riveting. "Yesterday Has Gone"
and "Melting" which follow do the same thing. "Don't get caught up in the
sorrow/Because yesterday has gone tomorrow," in the first. The chorus that begins "Got to be a
better way to go," in the second.
These are hooks that stay with
you.
Asked for a phrase to describe the band's musical style,
Venrez always, it seems, a good interview, says "big rockalicious,"
probably as good a descriptor as any.
Put together some nice vocal harmonies with some dynamic guitar and if
you want something stronger than rock, why not "rockalicious." There are some softer moments, the beginning
of the Winwood cover for example, and "My Only Light," the song that
closes the album. Venrez explains that
this song was based on a Civil War letter from Joshua Chamberlain. But other than a few changes of pace, this is
a band that rocks. It's debut album that
ought to get them attention.
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