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the small cities



Last Updated: 11/16/2009

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Status: Single
City: SAINT PAUL
State: Minnesota
Country: US
Signup Date: 12/2/2006

Who Gives Kudos:


Friday, September 19, 2008 
The fine folks over at howwastheshow.com have posted a very kind review of our show last friday at the Uptown.  You can read the whole thing, including reviews of the other bands that night, here.  Big thanks to Bob Longmore and David de Young from howwastheshow for coming out, and to Krista and Grant from Tinderbox, just for being really cool. 

Here's the bit about us:

"The highlight of the four-band night for me was The Small Cities. With spacey, slow-burning bass; throbbing, resonating guitars and spare drum beats, the band shows great restraint. This discipline pays off in big choruses and dizzying break downs. For four guys on a stage that don't play flashy or loud, they make a great sound.
 
Being a singing drummer is always a daunting thing. It brings to mind bad wedding bands. I shouldn't put Small Cities drummer, David Osborn, in the same vicinity of that thought though. He pulls off the feat with ease and grace, fulfilling the front man duties from the back line. The lead vocals are traded between Osborn and guitarist Leif Bjornson. Each of them has their own singing style, but they are similar enough that it doesn't sound like two different bands. When the two singers are harmonizing with each other, the songs are at their most effective. Evoking the power-pop of The Shins and Sloan, the band has a batch of songs in their live repertoire that carry the promise of their four-song EP that was released earlier this year.
 
From the very first song, a lucid tale of a dark, desperate hospitalization, the band showed their sense of melody and mood. The peppy 4/4 beat of "Fargo" could have easily passed as a b-side for The Shins. Its lush soundscape proved to be just as powerful live as it is on their record. In fact, in contrast to the Van Gobots, The Small Cities seemed to play with graceful, effortless skill, which put the focus on the music, not the musicians.
 
The set ended with "Trust Me, I'm Not a Stalker," which is one of my favorite song titles of all time. The song itself begins with a wandering, robotic bassline, which eventually is augmented by regimented drums and feedback-drenched guitars. The tale of the seriousness of you love lost was a perfect way to end the night. "For a girl like you/ You can tear a teenaged heart right through/ It's like I got you totally wrong/ One more girl for one more song," sings Osborn. The Small Cities have a way of getting into that corner of your heart reserved for swooning. They get in there and pry it open the way a good rock song can—leaving you with goose bumps and chills like a spirit has moved right through."
Summer
Summer Scharringhausen

 
Congrats! Seems like an accurate review to me. It was fun to see you guys last night.
 
Posted by Summer on Sunday, November 02, 2008 - 12:37 AM
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