Yay! Records Night @ The Smell
When I drive through Oxnard, CA I think of many things, but one
thing that would have never crossed my mind is a thriving indie and
twee pop scene. There are quite a few bands just north of us, quietly
making a name for themselves and existing in their own musical bio-dome
where the rules, trends and fashion, that can weigh down many Los
Angeles bands don’t apply.
Tonight a fine Oxnard based label called Yay! Records took over The
Smell, and brought some surprisingly engrossing bands down an hour or
so south of their home. Although, not extremely far away, at least
without factoring travel time in traffic, it’s still a rare treat to
get to see many of these great bands down in L.A.
First up was Maria, sadly they showed up Gun’s ‘N’ Roses-late to the
show. They dutifully still set up all of their equipment, apologized
and played us one song. The song was good, classic twee pop in the
traditional sense, but there was a simplicity to their music that you
usually don’t find in Los Angeles bands who actually attempt to write
songs. I’ve seen many bands take a stab at naïve pop, or just bang on
instruments they don’t know how to play, but it always feels so put on.
I feel like Maria were playing exactly what came out when they pick up
instruments, and sound very similar to the bands they listen to. They
said their thanks and apologized again for only playing one song, and
made way for the next band.
Sea Lions seemed to share at least 90% of Maria’s members, and
presented a set that mixed equal parts indie, twee and garage pop. They
were able to reproduce the 80’s twee sound in a meaningful way, enough
to possibly fool an aficionado with a well placed track on a mix tape.
Although an easy connection to make, their sound is reminiscent of Beat
Happening, vocally and musically, specifically the more upbeat songs.
Their jangle pop is catchy enough to win over the most stubborn music
snob.
Catwalk made a big impression on the Saturday night Smell crowd,
sounding something like a shoegaze influenced New Order. At other times
their driving Jesus & Mary Chain garage pop charm got the crowd
going as they ripped through a high energy set. Although a remarkably
young band, Catwalk lead vocalist Nick Hessler brings a maturity and
excitement that betrays his young face, with songwriting ability well
beyond his years. Catwalk really stole the show, and is a great example
of a new band that keeps pushing their boundaries to write excellent
songs regardless of the style or genre. Keep an eye on Catwalk as they
have the potential to become the band that one day puts Oxnard on the
indie map.
—Michael Cameron