Scrap Iron Sun

Genre: Alternative
Secondary Genre: Rock West Springfield, Massachusetts USA Contact

Formed in 2008 by vocalist/guitarists Scott Cleveland and George Condon and rounded out by bassist Ryan Bell and drummer Dave Condon, Scrap Iron Sun have released two albums (“Getting a Rusty Tan” and their latest, “Recycled”) that both play to the band’s strengths—namely, catchy rock and roll songs with clever lyrics—and stretch the limits of their creativity at the same time.
At their most raucous moments, Scrap Iron Sun conjure up in turn The Who’s fuzzy, power chord-driven bombast, the loose, over-distorted stomp of Neil Young, and even the halting, electronic-tinged lurch of Devo. The band’s more reflective songs combine the melodicism and vocal harmonies of the Moody Blues with walking piano lines and horn arrangements reminiscent of those found in jazz bar music, and even some occasional Celtic influences as well. The quartet’s sense of humor shapes the band’s identity as much as their eclectic sound, as Cleveland offers tongue-in-cheek diatribes on wayward relationships, politics, over-analyzers, and temper-tantrum prone drama queens. The combination of music that sticks in listeners’ heads upon first listen and lyrics that they will want to sing along is what makes Scrap Iron Sun’s music so memorable.

Artist Information

Biography

If the songs on Scrap Iron Sun’s latest effort, “Recycled,” sound as raw and unhinged as if the band has already been playing them live aggressively for years, it’s because many of the songs have been making the rounds as part of the band’s repertoire almost since the 2009 release of their debut album, “Getting a Rusty Tan.” However, this hasn’t stopped the inventive quartet from West Springfield, Massachusetts, from tinkering even with the songs that their fans are most familiar with. Frequent opener “Friday June 28th” gets a boost from an inventive horn section, and rocker “The Missing Link” sounds even more melodic with extra backing vocals from guitarist and main songwriter Scott Cleveland. However, a full appreciation of Scrap Iron Sun’s sound and creative process also requires an overview of the band’s brief but very active history.
In 2008, Cleveland and his longtime collaborator, guitarist, vocalist, and occasional banjoist George Condon, decided to turn their on-again off-again music hobby into a full-time effort and produce an album. The result, the aforementioned “Getting a Rusty Tan,” is an exemplary studio effort, with such tracks as the syrupy, recorder-laced “I’m Still Sane,” the haunting, trance-like “Only the Dead,” and the jazzy, bar-piano groove of “Wallflower’s Lament.” The range of influences and styles that the band displays (including but not limited to the classic rock of the Kinks and the Who, the simplistic catchy garage rock riffing of early Black Keys efforts, the minor-key daydreams and vocal melodies of the Moody Blues, and the jolting punk rock of the Dead Kennedys) keeps the album sounding fresh at every turn. The common threads that keep their debut effort consistent are the creative interplay of George and Scott’s guitars, with each member taking turns at lead throughout the work (and occasionally within the same song, as in “Girl Next Door”) and the detached humor found throughout the lyrics, which keeps songs that often deal with frustration and failed relationships from feeling whiny or self-absorbed.
When the band started playing out to support the album, many of “Rusty Tan’s” straightforward, up-tempo songs became immediate live staples, such as “Big Brother,” “Don’t Lose Your Sleep,” and “Excuses.” However, many of the album’s more subtle, studio-dependent cuts necessarily got left behind. As the foursome, now rounded out by a rhythm section consisting of bassist Ryan Bell and drummer David Condon, shifted their focus to playing more and more frequent shows in New York and Connecticut in addition to their home state, the goal for the next effort became making an album that maintained the same creativity as the first, but with songs that fit more comfortably into the band’s set lists. With “Recycled,” this was accomplished in large part by working many of the songs’ arrangements out live before recording them. The band’s sense of discovery is still intact, but the band has already figured out how these songs will translate live, instead of releasing the material first and playing catch up.
You can download Scrap Iron Sun’s first two albums and you can catch them playing songs from both of their albums, as well as a handful of cover songs pulled from their many influences and favorite artists, as they trek across the area.

Instrumentation

Scott Cleveland - Guitar, keyboards, Lead singer, Song Writer
George Condon - Guitar
Ryan Bell - Bass
David Condon - Drums

Discography

Getting a Rusty Tan - Released: July 2010
Recycled - Released: April 2012

Official Website

http://www.scrapironsun.com

Links

Audio

Lyrics

Photo Gallery

Press

Setlist

Basic Requirements


Calendar

DateTimeVenueCity
Jun 1, 2013 Saturday 8:00 PM Sok's South Hadley, MA, US