Two Piece Animator
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Two Piece Animator

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This band has not uploaded any videos

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"Live concert review: Cupcake / Two Piece Animator"

I don’t think any of us really want to belong. We may say we do but that is taking the easy way out. It takes a bold person to be different and not everybody has that inside of them. Deep down we don’t really care about trends and what other people think; we just aren’t brave enough to stand up and say so… well most of us aren’t.

If you are like me, you have an old scrapbook of pictures you haven’t looked at in ages. In that book there is inevitably a picture of a group of people, possibly all dressed up for a graduation or similar event; of the group of people in the photo, all of them are wearing a white shirt and black tie… except one. The one person is wearing something totally different and stands out in the picture. That person never quite blended in with the crowd at any point… that person… was Marc Darnell (not literally of course.)

Marc Darnell is the lead singer/guitarist/brainchild of the band Cupcake. Cupcake is anything but conventional, their style of music makes you feel uneasy in a wonderful way. Bassist Kiley Bodenhamer and hard pounding drummer Jeff Jensen mold the songs into grooves and keep the melody going just long enough for the listener to start to slowly nod their head or tap their foot; then Darnell and fellow guitarist Shardie, tear the rhythm of the song in half as unexpectedly as getting punched in the dark. Just as fast as the Pixies-style guitar changes started the band all at once blasts back into a stellar groove. The key to the band is Bodenhamer and Jensen’s ability to reel back in the songs from time to time.

Cupcake operates in a rubber band mentality musically. They will stretch the rubber band as far as they can with craziness and habits of breaking rhythm then just before the rubber band breaks they snap back, all together, once again reassuring the listener that they knew what they were doing all along. As a frontman, Darnell is very unique, his stage antics are endlessly entertaining, ranging from his squatting while playing guitar to looking up at the ceiling. He will at times look totally uninterested in the task at hand and at other times shamelessly dive head first into what he’s doing and convince you that he simply could not be any more dedicated to the moment you are witnessing. Darnell drives Cupcake to be the wonderfully weird band that they are.

Two Piece Animator had quite an act to follow after Cupcake left singed hair on the audience. They pounded into their set with some of the tightest music that is being played in St. Joseph right now. Still very new to the music they play, it is evident they are still refining their sound and trying to get all the hooks just right. The group of Garner Quillon on drums and vocals, Raye Lynn on guitar and vocals, Aerial on bass and Tyson Bottorff taking guitar leads appear to be dead serious about the new project.

They powered through problems with the sound to put together another fine set. One song would even endure an unexpected and unrehearsed appearance by and unwelcomed 5th member of the band contributing on keyboards; that song would later end with a drumstick flying past his head and a clear message that he was not a welcome addition to Animator. The night would appropriately come to its conclusion with one of the band’s better songs “The End of It” where the band would finish the tune and take a moment to reflect on the weirdness that had just occurred.

The sound for the night would be shaky at best. Most instruments sounded very good and the bands were tight but the vocals were always difficult to hear. The sound would be refined throughout the evening and get better with fresh input from an audience member. The show would be marred by silent vocal performances at times and microphone squeals at others. The bands can hardly be blamed for this though, as both of them seemed to be very good on the evening. Sometimes it is best when a night can be a parade of the weird and sometimes it’s good not to be normal. In the end, we all wish we were brave enough to not to fit in; we just don’t have the balls to do it. - Tuningfork.tv, vocalsontop.com


"Live concert review: Cupcake / Two Piece Animator"

I don’t think any of us really want to belong. We may say we do but that is taking the easy way out. It takes a bold person to be different and not everybody has that inside of them. Deep down we don’t really care about trends and what other people think; we just aren’t brave enough to stand up and say so… well most of us aren’t.

If you are like me, you have an old scrapbook of pictures you haven’t looked at in ages. In that book there is inevitably a picture of a group of people, possibly all dressed up for a graduation or similar event; of the group of people in the photo, all of them are wearing a white shirt and black tie… except one. The one person is wearing something totally different and stands out in the picture. That person never quite blended in with the crowd at any point… that person… was Marc Darnell (not literally of course.)

Marc Darnell is the lead singer/guitarist/brainchild of the band Cupcake. Cupcake is anything but conventional, their style of music makes you feel uneasy in a wonderful way. Bassist Kiley Bodenhamer and hard pounding drummer Jeff Jensen mold the songs into grooves and keep the melody going just long enough for the listener to start to slowly nod their head or tap their foot; then Darnell and fellow guitarist Shardie, tear the rhythm of the song in half as unexpectedly as getting punched in the dark. Just as fast as the Pixies-style guitar changes started the band all at once blasts back into a stellar groove. The key to the band is Bodenhamer and Jensen’s ability to reel back in the songs from time to time.

Cupcake operates in a rubber band mentality musically. They will stretch the rubber band as far as they can with craziness and habits of breaking rhythm then just before the rubber band breaks they snap back, all together, once again reassuring the listener that they knew what they were doing all along. As a frontman, Darnell is very unique, his stage antics are endlessly entertaining, ranging from his squatting while playing guitar to looking up at the ceiling. He will at times look totally uninterested in the task at hand and at other times shamelessly dive head first into what he’s doing and convince you that he simply could not be any more dedicated to the moment you are witnessing. Darnell drives Cupcake to be the wonderfully weird band that they are.

Two Piece Animator had quite an act to follow after Cupcake left singed hair on the audience. They pounded into their set with some of the tightest music that is being played in St. Joseph right now. Still very new to the music they play, it is evident they are still refining their sound and trying to get all the hooks just right. The group of Garner Quillon on drums and vocals, Raye Lynn on guitar and vocals, Aerial on bass and Tyson Bottorff taking guitar leads appear to be dead serious about the new project.

They powered through problems with the sound to put together another fine set. One song would even endure an unexpected and unrehearsed appearance by and unwelcomed 5th member of the band contributing on keyboards; that song would later end with a drumstick flying past his head and a clear message that he was not a welcome addition to Animator. The night would appropriately come to its conclusion with one of the band’s better songs “The End of It” where the band would finish the tune and take a moment to reflect on the weirdness that had just occurred.

The sound for the night would be shaky at best. Most instruments sounded very good and the bands were tight but the vocals were always difficult to hear. The sound would be refined throughout the evening and get better with fresh input from an audience member. The show would be marred by silent vocal performances at times and microphone squeals at others. The bands can hardly be blamed for this though, as both of them seemed to be very good on the evening. Sometimes it is best when a night can be a parade of the weird and sometimes it’s good not to be normal. In the end, we all wish we were brave enough to not to fit in; we just don’t have the balls to do it. - Tuningfork.tv, vocalsontop.com


"Album reviews: Escape Device, One Headlight High, Til Willis, Two Piece Animator"

Two Piece Animator is a St. Joseph four-piece that technically came into existence at the end of 2012, but that’s not really the whole story. The band includes all three members of the quirky local band The Ramey Memo as well as a new bassist named Ariel. Raye Lynn is the singer and guitarist, and she’ll occasionally add the violin to the fray. Tyson Bottorff (guitars, vocals) and Garner Quillon (drums) make up the rest of the band, which spring for a different sound than the spacey, occasionally goofy songs in The Ramey Memo’s wheelhouse.
The band recently released a two-song 45 rpm with “The End of It” and “Headlights” to introduce itself to the music scene.
“The End of It” starts with an echoing guitar riff that recalls “Rope” by the Foo Fighters before springing into a simplistic pop-rock song that shoegazers will surely gobble up. “The End of It” has the fingerprints of Pixies and The Prids all over it, and the fuzzy bass and distorted guitar perfectly complement Raye Lynn’s droning, almost lifeless vocals. On “Headlights,” Quillon steps behind the mic to sing the choruses. Pavement and Sonic Youth fans would totally dig this mid-tempo tune, which offers a refreshing vocal duality set against a wall of sound.
If you like experimental rock from the early ‘90s, this record should be right up your alley.
Seven-inch vinyl copies of “The End of It b/w Headlights” can be purchased at The Lucky Tiger in Downtown St. Joseph or by contacting the band through its Facebook page. - St. Joseph News Press


"Album reviews: Escape Device, One Headlight High, Til Willis, Two Piece Animator"

Two Piece Animator is a St. Joseph four-piece that technically came into existence at the end of 2012, but that’s not really the whole story. The band includes all three members of the quirky local band The Ramey Memo as well as a new bassist named Ariel. Raye Lynn is the singer and guitarist, and she’ll occasionally add the violin to the fray. Tyson Bottorff (guitars, vocals) and Garner Quillon (drums) make up the rest of the band, which spring for a different sound than the spacey, occasionally goofy songs in The Ramey Memo’s wheelhouse.
The band recently released a two-song 45 rpm with “The End of It” and “Headlights” to introduce itself to the music scene.
“The End of It” starts with an echoing guitar riff that recalls “Rope” by the Foo Fighters before springing into a simplistic pop-rock song that shoegazers will surely gobble up. “The End of It” has the fingerprints of Pixies and The Prids all over it, and the fuzzy bass and distorted guitar perfectly complement Raye Lynn’s droning, almost lifeless vocals. On “Headlights,” Quillon steps behind the mic to sing the choruses. Pavement and Sonic Youth fans would totally dig this mid-tempo tune, which offers a refreshing vocal duality set against a wall of sound.
If you like experimental rock from the early ‘90s, this record should be right up your alley.
Seven-inch vinyl copies of “The End of It b/w Headlights” can be purchased at The Lucky Tiger in Downtown St. Joseph or by contacting the band through its Facebook page. - St. Joseph News Press


Discography

End of It b/w Headlights - 7" Vinyl on Descent Stage Records

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