Occupying
both the garage and the temple,
Calla are at once dissonant and pristine,
harmonious and rhythmic. They cling
to the dirty residues of NYC with
an attention always affixed upward
to cosmopolitan refinement. A fact
perhaps explained by the group's roots
in Texas and their emigration to Brooklyn.
Unlike most of their
contemporaries, Aurelio Valle (guitar/vocals),
Wayne Magruder (drums/programming/percussion)
and Sean Donovan (keyboard/bass/programming)
understand the way in which the dirtiness
of rock intersects the world of high
art.
From their 1999 self-titled
debut (Sub Rosa) to 2001's SCAVENGERS
(Young God), Calla drew upon this
understanding. Not wishing to rest
on their existing answers, their third
release and first for the Arena Rock
Recording Co and Ryko, TELEVISE pushes
harshly against complacency with stunning
sophistication. The music allows avant
gestures to collapse into supple pop
while catapulting their dark breathless
aggression into a furious swelling
of feedback. This is the moment when
the curtains are opened and light
floods the room.
Calla's shows are
some of the most anticipated in New
York. It is impossible to watch them
perform without becoming transfixed
on the intensity of its presentation.
Angular guitars bend across thick
bass lines; weightless electronics
become pulled into the harsh simplicity
of minimalist percussion; Aurelio's
fragile voice rises boldly against
the torrents of expressive noise.
It is for this reason that artists
like Nick Cave, godspeed you black
emperor! and Sigur Ros have been eager
to perform with them.
Picked by Alternative
Press as "the number one band
to watch", lauded by the New
York Times, remixed by the brightest
electronic experimentalists on 2002's
CUSTOM: THE REMIX PROJECT, Calla are
unquestionably a band whose work will
be dissected and reevaluated long
after their beautiful static energy
burns away. |