Loretta
Gig Seeker Pro

Loretta

Band Alternative Rock

Calendar

This band has not uploaded any videos
This band has not uploaded any videos

Music

Press


"CMJ Review"

Although the members of Loretta reside in Indiana, the music they make could just as easily have come from the British Isles. With huge hooks and expansive choruses, this is a band that is just begging to be heard rocking out in stadiums. Producers Ken Lewis (David Byrne, Soul Asylum, Public Enemy) and Paul Mahern (Lisa Germano, John Mellancamp) helped to give this record a sound that’s dense, textured and mature, making it sound as if it could be the band’s third album, even though it’s only the first. All you people who stopped listening to Radiohead after OK Computer take note: Loretta’s “Stolypin Neckties” could have come straight off The Bends. But don’t call the band a ’head wannabe — the chaotic guitars on “Sinking Ships,” for one, are obviously more influenced by late-’80s/early-’90s American indie rock.With a very promising debut like this, give these guys a hightech studio and a huge video budget, and who knows what they might accomplish?
- Brad Filicky - CMJ


"Rocknworld.com Review"

From America’s heartland comes an indie rock jewel by the name of Loretta. No, Loretta isn’t a female singer/songwriter; it’s an alternative rock band out of Indianapolis that has it well within their grasp to earn the town a place on the rock n roll roadmap.

To be perfectly honest, most independent label bands are on indies for a reason, they are just not ready for primetime or they don’t really stand out from the pack--Not so with Loretta. In fact, they are rather the ideal that most people like to think of when they want to point to the quintessential indie band vs. major label fluff. A group with tons of integrity, musical ingenuity, a vision that sets them apart from the other bands battling for the public’s attention, and a group that given the opportunity, could really leave their mark on music.

I know it sounds like a lot of hot air and typically, I’m as cynical as the next guy, but let me tell you how I came to see Loretta in this light. My editor handed their CD off to me with a group of others. He’s a pretty good judge of my taste, so I don’t preview the discs before I take on the responsibility of reviewing them. When he gave me Loretta’s CD, I figured they were just another indie rock band and I’d end up doing a quick write up in the “To The Point” series. A few weeks went by and my editor asked me when he could expect a review. I read between the lines with that request and knew that he expected a full-length review. So, I told him to give me a week. Most of the week passed and then this morning at 2:00 am, I remembered that my deadline had come and gone. I figured I could give the disc a listen and crank a review out in no time. But when I pressed play and the first song started playing, I knew that wasn’t gonna happen. I pulled the disc out of my portable player next to my PC and went out on my back patio, grabbed my headphones, put the disc into my stereo and pushed play and took a musical journey courtesy of Loretta.

Under the backdrop of a brilliant springtime sky filled with stars, a pack a smokes at my side and a nice beverage in my hand, I learned with each passing song just how wrong I was when I figured that Loretta was just like any number of indie releases that land on my desk every month. This was something special, and an album I knew that I’d still be listening to a few years down the line.

Now that you have learned more about me than you could possible care about, let’s move on to what we are here to discuss—Loretta!

Song placement can make or break an album and Loretta were genius to start things off with ‘1000 lbs’. The song immediately grabbed my attention and let me know that I was in for something a little different from today’s modern rock mainstream. The song fades in with a lead bass line that gives way to a rich harmony vocal line, then the guitars kick in momentary leading us to the first verse. The song is a new headphone classic because of all the activity going on. The group bio boasts of three guitar tracks and you definitely get to hear all three. Most bands couldn’t pull this off without sounding muddy, but producer Ken Lewis (David Byrne, Soul Asylum, Public Enemy) knew exactly what he was doing. The song structure differs a bit from your standard “verse, chorus, verse” and while this song doesn’t have a definable hook, it still has a captivating quality to it that evokes a feeling of floating. But the real selling point is the dynamics between the multilayered tracks. It’s beautifully done and makes the songs that much richer in the process.

You’re likely to hear a dozen different comparisons to other bands ranging from Radiohead to Sunny Day Real Estate, even elements of the late 80s alternative sound. That is perhaps by design; the band admits that they love the alternative rock of the late 80s and early 90s. I hear other elements as well. Vocally, the band is a cross between Tories / Avion frontman Steve Bertrand and Bono. At the more dynamic points, the vocals sound a bit like Chris Paul Overall, formerly of Wonderlove and a little bit of The Smiths.

Musically, they too sound like The Tories, except with more depth. They also creep into early Collective Soul territory; especially the guitar riffs (listen to the part where the lead guitars kick in before the first verse on “The Fire,” that could have come directly off of “Hints, Allegations and Things Left Unsaid”. Incidentally, like Collective Soul, Loretta's lineup includes brothers.) At other times, they are firmly in the classic alternative rock category. And that’s really where Loretta seem to land musically, a band that bridges late 80s alternative with early 90s power-pop and modern rock, creating a new musical powerhouse for the early 21st century.

Each track on the album gives a unique perspective of the overall Loretta sound, and they definitely do not bore us with repetition. This makes it difficult to select standout tracks, since most stand on their own. - Rocknworld.com


Discography

The Translation 2003 (Benchmark Records)
-Peaked at #67 CMJ top 200 Radio; #1 FMQB Commercial Specialty Radio.

Photos

Bio

Consisting of brothers Jason, Damon, and Jeremy Weidner and their best friend Stan Muller, Loretta is a friendship first and a band second. Originally formed as an excuse to make music they loved with people they loved, one can safely assume the simple goal has been met.

While studying classical music at Indiana State University, Jason met Muller. A year later, Damon and Jeremy also began their studies at Indiana State. The four found an apartment together with the express intent of forming a band. They did and rehearsed every day. While they didn’t play shows in this period, to this day, they credit their years at university as the reason they are the band they are today. Once finished with their schooling, the Weidners and Muller pursued Loretta full-time.

Their debut release, The Translation, was critically acclaimed as a record epic in scope and a precursor of great things to come. In an unprecedented coup, the album, released on tiny independent Benchmark Records, charted #1 on Commercial Specialty Radio with the single “The Fire” climbing to #5. The record spent seven weeks in the CMJ top 100 and was the 7th most added record in the nation upon its release.

Loretta manages to combine the sounds of American indie rock sensibility with Brit rock artistry. Their new material is at once more progressive and more accessible. The band is currently hard at work recording the highly anticipated new material.

Over the past three years, Loretta has been defined by the layered progressions of their songs and by their incendiary live performances. Their shows possess an engaging depth and volatility, leaving an indelible mark on bystanders.

Hailing from Indianapolis, the band’s Midwestern, hard-working ethos has produced three nation-wide tours spanning coast-to-coast and north-to-south. Headlining dates at prestigious clubs across the country, the band believes in making converts one show at a time.