Reddening West
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Reddening West

Austin, Texas, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2016 | SELF

Austin, Texas, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 2016
Band Alternative Folk

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

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"Reddening West – Where We Started"

Armed with the ability to slow your day to the most affecting of lulls, Reddening West are today sharing their beautiful new EP, Where We Started, ahead of its full release this-coming Friday. Having only formed last year – via a chance meeting, as is so often the case – the new EP depicts a remarkably assured band; one of swooning quietude and occasional blustering grandeur.

Like the long, drawn-out days of Texas that so many of us are left only to imagine, there’s a palpable sense of subtle recline that emanates from every considered dash of instrumentation, every gap left between words. The five tracks here all follow a very similar path but there’s more than enough intrigue in their almost antiquated storytelling so that it never feels tired. On a full-length there might well be more twists and turns to manoeuvre along the way, but here the repeated sense of solitude has an overwhelmingly affective impact on the listening, creating an atmosphere that draws you fully in to the world.

Best suited to one full listen, Where We Started is a gorgeous piece of Americana, and a highly promising one and that. Be sure to make some time for it if you can; chances are it’s going to find you anyway. - Gold Flake Paint


"AUSTIN TRIO REDDENING WEST BRING THE PRETTY WITH ‘GOLDEN LIGHT’ [STREAM]"

Been looking for some fresh sounds for you Sunday morning drives? Need more tracks for your ‘Calm Evening’ playlists? Check out this sweet young trio from Austin, Reddening West. Their recently released first EP, Where We Started, features 5 consistently great songs that fit perfectly in that realm. The stand out track, “Golden Light”, though, really shows what the band has to offer. Pretty guitars mingle with tranquil percussion and relaxed vocals, giving the perfect space for calm presence. - The Wild Honeypie


"April Music Reviews - Reddening West"

Reddening West’s debut EP consists of songs as gentle and delicate as the vibrant fading light of a Texas sunset. Lush strings punctuate restrained arrangements of guitar and Matt Evans’ smooth croon. A worthwhile freshman effort of sonic landscapes by a talented trio, it could benefit from some occasional rockier terrain. - Austin Monthly


"Quick Hit: Reddening West article"

Reddening West‘s debut EP Where We Started reminds me of Austin’s Central Presbyterian Church, which is in my mind the far-and-away best venue at SXSW. The towering space allows music to gather majesty during its rise to the rafters and return to my ears, imbuing already gorgeous work with extra grandeur.

The warm, full folk tunes that Reddening West puts together would be perfect for that space, as they have gravitas to spare while still maintaining strong melodicism and soothing arrangements. Fans of the Barr Brothers will be particularly excited to hear the dense arrangements of tunes like “Golden Light,” while those more into country will be charmed by closer “Every Wind.” The thread that runs through each of the tunes is a clear-eyed focus on creating beautiful work; it’s a wonderful present to listen to. I look forward to what Reddening West will put forward in the future. - Independent Clauses


"Is Reddening West All I Need?"

So, uh, remember me? The Ghost? I know, I know, it’s been too long since my last post. I’m not going to lie; “real world” stresses have gotten the best of me lately. The job that pays me financially has been leaving me too tired to attend to the job that pays me emotionally, creatively, and spiritually. It’s sad, and yet it happens. I hope that this will be a return to more regular postings, but I make no promises.

I’ve been receiving lots of emails, and I’m admittedly behind on them. I have, however, had the opportunity to read several. Many of which are acts informing me of upcoming albums/shows/etc. Some have been pretty good. Some have been really good. One, however, is standing out from the rest of the crowd.

That band would be Austin’s Reddening West. I could go all critic on you and discuss how the band’s upcoming EP, Where We Started, is an atmospheric blend of shoegaze and singer-songwriter tendencies. I could discuss singer Matt Evans’ ability to write poetic, emotive lines. And I could easily rave on and on about the instrumentation in the EP’s opening track, “All You Need”.

Yet to do that feels like it’s missing the point of Reddening West. Their music is not an exercise of the head, but of the heart. On the first listen, within the first few seconds of “All You Need”, I was taken aback. There is a power and beauty in the melody that leaves me lacking for words. To be more specific, I find myself at a lack of words that properly convey the way the band’s music hit me in the heart.

As I mentioned earlier, I’ve been away from blogging, but listening to music like this reminds me of why I became involved in the music community in the first place. It’s about the power that the music holds inside of me. I trust that if you’re reading this blog, you feel the same way too. I hope that the power of Reddening West’s music is as inspiring to you as it is to me.

Right now, the band is only sharing the track “All You Need” from their EP, which will be released March 4th. I hope to convince the band to grant me the honor of letting me debut other tracks of theirs in the near future (spoiler alert: all the songs are awesome). In the meantime, see if you need “All You Need” as much as I have. - Ghost of Blind Lemon


"premiere – reddening west"

buried just beneath the bucolic overcoat of reddening west is an honest, heartbreaking thread of immediacy. the austin trio will release their debut effot, a gorgeous collection of lovelorn folk songs entitled where we started, on march 4th; today we’re premiering the ep’s second track, “golden light.”

quaint fingerpicking reflects the song’s initial imagery, but “golden light” gradually becomes more melancholic, refracting its namesake as pianos and percussion slip into the texture. vocalist matt evans doubles down on that tone even after his auxiliary accompaniment fades into the background, delivering a brief, parting lyric that skirts satisfying resolution in favor of a different kind of finality that feels all too familiar. take a listen to “golden light” below. - Dimestore Saints


"Words With: Reddening West"

Despite the undertones of another time and place lingering in their music, Reddening West is a band in the here and now, presently located in Austin, Texas. The people involved and their musical influences hail from places afar, and the possibility of this collaboration almost never happened. Yet like the many persistent mysteries of life, sometimes people and places come together just at the right time to make something beautiful we never knew we needed.

Matt Evans, Niamh Fahy, and Kevin Butler met by chance in 2014. By early 2015, they were writing music together and creating the songs that would become their first release, Where We Started. This debut EP is out shortly on March 4, 2016. A local affair, it was recorded at Fathom Tree Recording Studio, and mixed and mastered at Test Tube Audio, both studios in Austin. Joining them on bass for this EP is a friend of the band, Nick Seaman.

About a year ago, Evans contacted me online about his band Sleepy Holler, whose music I quite enjoyed. (Especially “Call Me Home.”) We got to talking, and I suggested he check out Sofar Sounds down in Austin, to play a private living room show. Then just recently, Evans got back in touch to let me know 1. he’d had the chance to play a Sofar show and 2. his other band, Reddening West, was releasing an EP soon! He explained: “Whereas Sleepy Holler remains mostly a ‘long-distance’ project with my friend Jon who lives in DC, Reddening West is a band I put together here in Austin to capture the value and energy of in-person collaboration.”

And while I liked what Evans was doing with Sleepy Holler, I loved what has been made with Reddening West. Joined by Fahy on violin (plus keys, some guitar, vocals) and Butler on drums/percussion (and guitar, backing vocals), Evans is part of a dream team of musicians. Fahy, an “incredibly accomplished violinist,” as Evans is not shy to admit, is originally from Ireland and spent five years touring internationally, only settling in the US in 2014. Butler is a talented recording engineer by day, and therefore had a heavy hand in engineering, mixing, and mastering Where We Started. It reeks of originality, of genuine craftsmanship, like something that was built and made for a commission: full of purpose, a singular vision in mind, handiwork proudly showing.

“All You Need” is the perfect soundtrack for a road trip out west, staring out the windows as the foliage whips by and the mountains remain ever present. It echoes and rolls, Evans’ vocals calmly layering in-between, asking “is it all that you’ll ever need?” Fahy’s gorgeous violin acts like the lead guitar, improvising in the breaks like that’s how indie music has always been. There’s something unusually tight about this trio’s performance, and for so few instruments, a strong sense of richness - a lush and full sound.

For bordering on folk, there’s nothing “folksy” about these songs, but more so something acoustic and natural. In “Golden Light,” the instrumental elements bounce back and forth effortlessly, likely due to Butler’s skill behind the board. Evans’ lyrics reflect a sense of longing, of reflection, asking many broad questions, such as: “your wild heart, wasn’t it always some place else?”

There is no need, however, to be anyplace with dramatic scenery to enjoy Where We Started. These three paint scenes through their instruments, through their words, that can transport you from a simple living room to anywhere your heart desires. Whether it’s working your way through an emotional hurdle, or enjoying a moment of positive personal reflection, Evans and company have created an album you never knew you needed - and now you won’t want to do without.

To understand more about the band and the EP, I asked Matt to share some insights on Where We Started and where Reddening West has consequently ended up.

​KS: You mention that the three of you met by chance, but with this EP, it feels more like fate. Many people, including musicians, meet only to soon part ways. What led you three to continue with musical collaboration after meeting?

ME: Thank you for saying so. One factor that definitely helps our continued collaboration is that Niamh and Kevin are actually engaged - they’ll be tying the knot this coming summer. So that’s super exciting, and definitely a contributing factor in our cohesion.

But more than that, I think we’ve all been around the block a little bit musically, and we know how rare it is to find a group of people who all share a vision about the sound and path you want your music and band to take. And, personally, I feel super fortunate to have connected with these guys - I think our respective talents complement one another, and I know I’ve become a better musician by having the opportunity to play with both of them. We work really well together.

I also think we all share a mindset about pursuing music. We’re all working full-time jobs - I’m a grant writer for a local nonprofit, Niamh is a music therapist and teacher, and Kevin spends his days as a recording engineer and producer - so the time we do have to create is really sacred.

I also want to mention Nick Seaman, who was an integral part of this EP. He joined up with us this summer to play a few gigs and help us record this EP, and his contributions were invaluable. Sadly for us he’s since moved back to Boston to finish his degree at Berklee, but we were really fortunate to have him join us for this EP.

KS: Where We Started is a release that I would more expect to come from perhaps the Pacific Northwest, with its theme and the feel of the album: an indie folk base with western American influences, and a soothing manner throughout. Then there's almost a jazz section in "Handful of Dust" towards the end, and overall some classical elements. I'm curious what some of the musical influences are for different band members, and what sounds may have influenced this EP specifically?

ME: Wow, you hit the nail on the head. I’m from Tucson, Arizona originally, but after college I moved to Seattle. I lived up there for about five years. Those were incredibly formative years for me (and where Sleepy Holler was formed). A number of these songs were started during the time I was up there, and nature, and most specifically, the environment of the Pacific Northwest, continues to be one my primary sources of inspiration.

I would also say the Austin area and the Hill Country represent a very special landscape to me, too. I didn't realize it during the writing process, but so much of the dry, earthy simplicity of this landscape has also infiltrated these new songs. I think there’s something of Arizona, the Northwest, and Texas in these sounds - all of the places I’ve lived have made their way into this collection somehow.

I would certainly name jazz and classical as inspirations for all of us - from Mingus, Monk, and Parker to Debussy, Satie, and Part. We all love those genres. The part you mention in ‘Handful of Dust’ was actually written in the studio, in that take. So that was a bit improvisational for us - it was built around these two guitar lines, but we decided going in that we would let that part do what it wanted, and we wouldn’t try to control it too much.

Overall, as a group, I think our influences are pretty expansive, from Irish folk to saccharine pop. But I would name artists like Grizzly Bear, Andrew Bird, Feist, Sam Beam, The National, etc., as musical influences for this group’s sound in particular - but that’s just scratching the surface. So much old and so much new finds its way into the “influences” category.

But I think for this EP, we were mostly trying to capture something I don’t think any of us had a name for or an artist to point to - just some vague sound in our heads. I do remember during the time we were in the studio I was listening a lot to Other Lives, Mimicking Birds, and Damien Jurado - I don’t think a ton of that is coming through, but for some reason I remember those being present at the time.

Niamh has spent a lot of time with different Irish folk groups, most notably Riverdance - she toured with them internationally for five years. She also played in a cool orchestral folk sort of group in London called SixToes for a while.
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KS: Matt, you mentioned that: "While I had written the bulk of the songs already, they grew so much more once we started collaborating." Can you elaborate more on how that process evolved, and at what point you went into recording the EP?

ME: I had some of these songs kicking around for a while - as I mentioned above, I started writing a few of them when I was in Seattle, as far back as 2008 or 2009 (‘Golden Light’ comes to mind). By the time I started playing with Niamh and Kevin I had moved them forward, but getting together and making group decisions helped shape these songs and get them finished - from deciding on final arrangements to adding new instruments or elements to provide texture, depth, and dynamics to the songs. I would say we went into the studio thinking the songs were mostly ready to go - we had been playing them at shows, etc. - but inevitably, we made some eleventh-hour changes to some of them, just based on how we were feeling in the moment.

KS: It's hard to ignore the lyrics in this EP. While the sounds themselves may be calm, the words are heavily focused on self-reflection and emotional themes. I wouldn't call it sorrow, but there isn't quite a jovial message being communicated here. Are there recent experiences in your life, or of the other members', that found their way into these lyrics? Or are they greater expressions of the general experience of living?

ME: No, there isn’t much joviality - haha. I don’t know - I have a hard time keeping things light lyrically. I would say the lyrics are a mixture of my own experience and my own observations, with a dusting of commentary and storytelling. The most impactful stories to me - whether film, literature, or visual art - try to shine a light on the darkened corners of our emotions and our experiences. I think exploring the difficult and traumatic things we experience is what resonates with me lyrically - when I strike an emotional nerve within myself, I know I’m onto something I like. Most of the lyrics on the EP are vignettes of people or situations familiar to me. Some are my own stories. Some are my stories mixed into the stories of others. Some are my experiences or observations extrapolated to apply more generally.

KS: So, Reddening West had an opportunity to play a secret living room show as a part of Sofar Sounds (in Austin, I assume?), which I have been a part of in Minneapolis, as a coordinator of the shows. What was that experience like, performing as a band?

ME: Yes, we did get the chance to play for Sofar Sounds Austin, but, at the time, we were booked under the Sleepy Holler name (we hadn’t yet decided on a name at that point and we were operating under that umbrella before I made the final decision to officially split the projects). I don’t think they posted anything on the blog - just social media (some photos here).

The experience was great. Kevin and Niamh had both played Sofar shows previously in London - Kevin with Black Books and Niamh with SixToes. And the best part is that they actually met for the first time at Kevin’s Sofar show. So it was really amazing for them to get to play together here in Austin and bring it full circle.

We loved the gig and the setting. It was almost disconcerting at first being in a room with people very intently listening to us play, but we relished it. It was really special. We had the option to plug in and use mics, but we wanted to do it in true Sofar spirit, so we played entirely unplugged (with the exception of our bass player, Nick). We had the chance to share the bill with a couple of great Austin acts, Reed Turner and Emily Wolfe, who were both incredible. I think that kind of stripped down setting suits us quite well - I hope we have similar opportunities in the future.

KS: You also mentioned you played an unofficial SXSW show last year. Any shows at SXSW again this year? Or what are the exciting elements of 2016 for Reddening West, besides the release of this debut EP?

ME: We are in the process of figuring it all out as we speak! Being residents of Austin, SXSW is hard not to participate in in some capacity, so we anticipate doing something, but we’re not sure yet what that will be. Other than that, we’re in the process of making plans for local and regional shows and we’re writing new material, starting to think about what’s next. So, we’re really looking forward to a great year. - The Aural Premonition


"ATX Premiere: Reddening West"

As I’ve stated many times in the past, it always amazes me to try and comprehend how many talented artists and musicians we have in this town. Seriously, we are spoiled. Today I have yet another new band I’ve just been alerted to called Reddening West. The group is fronted by Matt Evans, formerly of Sleepy Holler, and also features drums from Kevin Butler of Black Books fame. When describing the sounds you’ll discover, Black Books would be a good starting comparison with some elements of singer/songwriters like JBM or even Bon Iver. Below you can find brand new single “All You Need” for your enjoyment and own comparison making. It’s a hushed tune full of beauty fit for a rainy afternoon. - Austin Town Hall


Discography

Where We Started (EP) - 2016

Photos

Bio

Austin, Texas-based Reddening West writes music that is infused with originality and displays genuine craftsmanship, like something that was built and made for a commission. With a singular vision in mind, it is full of purpose, its handiwork proudly showing. They write songs that are the perfect soundtrack for a road trip out west, where you find yourself staring out the windows as the foliage whips by and the mountains remain ever present. The music echoes and rolls. There’s something unusually tight about this group’s performance, and for so few instruments, a strong sense of richness - a lush and full sound.

For bordering on folk, there’s nothing “folksy” about Reddening West. Gold Flake Paint remarks that “like the long, drawn-out days of Texas that so many of us are left only to imagine, there’s a palpable sense of subtle recline that emanates from every considered dash of instrumentation, every gap left between words.” Reddening West’s “honest, heartbreaking” music (Dimestore Saints) embodies the varied origins of its members and influences: the vast Pacific Northwest, the sea-washed shores of Ireland, and the quiet and arid American Southwest, from Arizona to Texas. Their music is rich, textural, and expansive, reflective of the landscapes and geographies that have inspired it. 

There is no need, however, to be anyplace with dramatic scenery to enjoy Reddening West. They paint scenes with their instruments, through their words, that can transport you from a simple living room to anywhere your heart desires. Whether it’s working your way through an emotional hurdle, or enjoying a moment of positive personal reflection, Reddening West is a band you never knew you needed - and now you won’t want to do without.

Reddening West has attracted the attention of Gold Flake Paint, The Wild Honeypie, Independent Clauses, Austin Monthly, and other regional, national, and international press outlets, positioning them as a band to watch in 2017.

2016 found them on multiple year-end lists, including being named Independent Clause's #5 EP of the year, Ghost of Blind Lemon's #5 song of the year for 'All You Need' and more. ‘Where We Started’ is available now for download/streaming on Bandcamp/iTunes/Spotify, etc. Their debut LP will be released in 2018.

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Written by Kelsey Simpkins



Band Members