Burning Daylight
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Burning Daylight

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Band Rock Americana

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Music

The best kept secret in music

Press


"Burning Daylight- Rochester's Alt-Country/Power Pop Trio"

Burning Daylight's Nick Young was making a right turn on his way to work when it hit him from out of nowhere; a fleeting fragment of melody flickered in his head. Young knew what he had to do: get it down quick, or it'd be gone. When he arrived at work, he made a beeline for the office and made the call. Burning Daylight is slated to release its new record, 'Whiskey and Romances', on April 10th. Some of the tracks were handled in this frenzied fashion; the songs themselves dictating just when and where they were good and ready to be written. "I rarely just sit down with a guitar to write a song," Young says. "If I ever do it just doesn't happen." He usually keeps a little tape recorder handy, or in some cases demos the idea on his
answering machine. "Two or three songs on the new record are voicemail ones," he says. Phoned in or not, the 12 songs included on Whiskey and Romances are simply beautiful. The sound is stripped- down Americana and lush pop. And though Young leans heavy on his love of the alt-country medium, his penchant for melody and hooks takes away some of the requisite melancholy. The trio twangs tight, riffs rural, and swings sweet, with equal doses of straight time and chops, thus adding to the band's overall accessibility and appeal. You'll hear the Earle, but the Costello is in there, too. "I think we're just as much power-pop as we are alt- country," Young says. "I'm hugely impressed by the art of the perfect pop song." This power-pop/alt- country shotgun wedding was captured and produced by The Push Stars' bassist Dan McLoughlin.
McLoughlin played bass, guitar, and organ, and recorded everything except the rhythm tracks at his home
studio in Hoboken, N.J. Young figures, start to finish, the album took six days to make. Burning Daylight --- Young, drummer Jesse Sprinkle, bassist Tim Mroz --- has been burning daylight since 2004. It was Young's dad's Gram Parsons records that got the young man headed in this direction. And The Byrds. "Sweetheart of the Rodeo was a big influence on me," he says. But after seeing and hearing bands like Uncle Tupelo, Son Volt, and especially The Old 97s, that's all she wrote. This was where he needed to be. This would be his sound; pop music hooks with genuine country as a vehicle. And like so many alt- country purveyors and disciples, Young is quick to disassociate with --- and make it abundantly clear his dissatisfaction with --- mainstream country. "I just don't believe it, I suppose," he says. "It just doesn't hit me the same way. It doesn't hit you in the gut. It's formulaic and calculated." But like punk's mid-'70s rise and revolt against corporate rock's bland bloat, alt-country is reactionary and probably wouldn't have been born were it not for
country music getting watered down in the first place. Bands like Burning Daylight and its influences may
never have come to be. So you can actually thank guys like Billy Ray Cyrus for making bands like Burning
Daylight necessary. Bands that are genuine, sincere. "There's conviction in what we do," Young says. "There's sincerity behind it. We mean it. We're not just up there trying to impress our girlfriends."

-Frank DeBlase - Rochester City Newspaper


"Recent Quotes"

"The awesome Americana outfit Burning Daylight...craft contagious songs in the alt-country mode, sounding like a cross between Wilco, the Old 97's and vintage Soul Asylum."

-Michelle Picardo
(Rochester Freetime Magazine)

"Even if I wasn't aware of Burning Daylight's Push Star connection, it would be a comparison I still might make. With bleeding-heart Romeos littering the airwaves, it's nice to hear a band that tries to get into a listener's blood writing and playing truly heartfelt songs. Just wait'll you hear 'em break into "Ruby Don't", a beautiful song that's both bittersweet and catchy with a splash of Americana as fresh as Aqua Velva. Definitely keep an eye out for this trio."

-Frank De Blase (Rochester City Newspaper)


"If you follow the alt-country ladder up from Gram Parsons to Wilco, at the very top you might find Burning Daylight. Nick Young has written a lot of great songs, and the band plays them with a fiery, raw energy that takes the genre further, into a deeper, darker place."

-Chris Trapper (Singer-Songwriter, The Push Stars)


"This music shines out above the rest, refusing to be lumped into the mass of contemporary fad-rock. At times reminiscent of the rural nostalgia of Decibully or the buoyant spirit of Teenage Fanclub, Burning Daylight write songs that revive the nonchalance of the rock movement...and appeal as much to the eccentric indie rockers as to the old school college crowd."

-Ryan Hoffer
(A&R, Shut Eye Records- Atlanta,Ga) - Various Publications


Discography

"Whiskey & Romances" LP- 2007

Photos

Feeling a bit camera shy

Bio

Hailing from Rochester, N.Y., Burning Daylight combine power pop hooks with country-tinged roots rock to form an energetic sound that's both finely crafted and a little rough around the edges at the same time. In late 2006, the band traveled to Hoboken, NJ to record their recently released debut full-length record "Whiskey & Romances" with Dan McLoughlin of The Push Stars. McLoughlin (whose production credits include Dinosaur Jr and Weezer) also offered his talents as a keyboard player & guitarist, augmenting the trio's melody rich power pop/alt-country sound throughout the twelve song collection. The band's instantly accessible songs and powerful live show have given the band an edge in over three years of performances throughout the northeast, opening for a variety of national acts including The Push Stars, Mike Doughty, Tim Easton and Steve Forbert. Often compared to bands like Old 97s and Wilco, Burning Daylight's infectious melodies and bittersweet grit have set the band apart in a world of sub-genres and musical fads, all the while retaining a sound that is familiar yet all its own.