Album Review in Northeast Performer

Northeast Performer - June, 2007

“According to The Gulf’s press materials, the band recorded its full-length debut in a run-down schoolhouse in Boston’s Chinatown district, changing the locks on a former storage room and converting it to a makeshift studio. Listening to the music on Chinatown, the offspring of this nine-month squatting experiment, one can almost picture the six talented band members making the most of the unlimited recording time in their clandestine studio, bouncing ideas off one another and exploring every musical whim.

Band co-founders Adam Garland and Adam Brock have lived in various parts of the country over the years, and they’ve obviously soaked up the local culture during their stays. Channeling tones from the West Texas desert to the Spanish countryside, with stops at Bourbon Street and even Coney Island along the way, The Gulf create soundscapes as vast as their name implies.

Take “Codeine,” for instance: a Morricone-style trumpet solo drifts into druggy verses, painted with a spacey slide guitar and a jazzy beat, followed by a sloppy barroom sing-along chorus. A few minutes later, a trippy break with the lyrics, “Like a kid in a playpen / No conversations / But I’ve made so many friends,” is dramatically underscored with a full-band barrage of carnival music.

Many songs follow a similar structure, subtly shifting direction mid-song, incorporating extensive instrumental breaks, and building up plenty of tension and release. As dizzy as the trip sounds, the impressive songwriting keeps things grounded and firmly on track, even though many tunes play out like five-minute song-suites with multiple movements.

Stealing the spotlight are the more traditional instruments - mainly Brian McGrath’s trumpet, Adam Brock’s piano, and Dave Barbaree’s slide guitar. Perhaps it’s the use of these instruments, or perhaps the complex, yet seamless song arrangements mentioned above - regardless, there’s an inherent sophistication in The Gulf’s songs that gives them a timeless quality rarely found in today’s hipster elite. This element makes the music a hell of a lot more listener-friendly than one would expect given its eclectic genes.

If your Calexico CDs and Meddle-era Floyd vinyl are getting stale, then try an interesting combination of the two with Chinatown. (Ultracold Records)”

-Brett Cromwell, Northeast Performer Magazine, June 2007

One Response to “Album Review in Northeast Performer”

  1. warner Says:

    This is an excellent review. Congrats

Leave a Reply