|
The
Evidence
To most The Evidence is a young band in the throes of
recording a debut record; that band with the singing drummer, bombing between suburban halls and
downtown dives and carving their way through the local sub-pop…
Below the surface is a tale of crashed vans, broken hands, and more glorious notches in the
ethereal indie-cred belt. But before we explore this iceberg analogy any further, allow me a
musical preface.
In an effort to spare you the hyphenation and unconventional word compounding akin to musical
descriptors, it will suffice to call The Evidence an alternative rock band. As individuals they
draw upon influences as diverse as Queen, Rush, Refused, Pedro The Lion, Aphex Twin, and The
Cure.
When all is written and recorded, a listen is recommended to fans of Bad Religion, Brand New,
Coheed and Cambria, Mission of Burma, and even AFI.
Now, back to the iceberg: Guitarists Tyler Pickering and Dean Rudd (highschool chemistry
classmates) banded together with fellow punk rock scenester and drummer Casey Lewis under the
moniker ‘The Failure’ in late 2000. In parallel to a whirlwind of Canadian tours, Canadian Music
Week showcases, and Warped Tour stints, Rudd and Lewis launched local indie imprint Meter Records
and Echo Base Studios as resources for the band and their peers. After wrapping up another tour in
late 2005, the band took a step back – They had a video in rotation on Muchmusic and MTV Canada,
and had sold through the pressings of a self-titled album and the sophomore …of reason, but needed
to recharge and were running into troubles with their name.
“My mom never liked that name,” adds Dean.
Refocusing while writing this year brought bassist Randy Burton into the fold and broadened the
group’s songwriting pool. With the time away from the road, the quartet has reinvented itself while
building on their original vision.
These sub-surface trials and tribulations have been a source of both pride and perspective, and
Rudd is quick to point out that the band’s objective is more modest than it might appear: “We
really just want people to enjoy our music as much as we do. I want our songs to be the ones that
make your day when they come on your iPod, and give you the goosebumps. Yes, there is social and
political perspective there, but our first agenda is to light up the dance floor.”
Evidence’s debut, entitled Polarity, online or in your favorite record store as of summer
2009.
|