SALT (band)

SALT is a French-American band that was formed in 2016 by producer Ken Stringfellow (guitar), Anton Barbeau (keyboards, lead vocals), and songwriter Stéphane Schück (guitar).

SALT
OriginFrance
GenresPower pop, indie rock, psychedelic music
Years active2016–present
LabelsBeehive
Websitewww.salt-the-band.com
MembersKen Stringfellow
Anton Barbeau
Stéphane Schück
Fred Quentin
Benoit Lautridou

History

Ken Stringfellow, a member of The Posies and Big Star, first came together with SALT's other founding members at Abbey Road Studios in London, during July 2015 recording sessions for Supercalifragile, the final album by Game Theory.[1] Stringfellow was producing the posthumous album after the 2013 death of Scott Miller, who had founded Game Theory in the 1980s and The Loud Family in the 1990s.[1] Miller had been a friend and musical collaborator with all three founding members of SALT, who had never previously met one another.[2] Stéphane Schück, a Paris-based physician specializing in public health and epidemiology, had co-written four of Supercalifragile's songs with Miller, and Miller had produced a demo recording by Schück's onetime band, Swan Plastic Swan.[3][4]

When SALT was formed in 2016, multi-instrumentalist Anton Barbeau took on lead vocals and keyboard duties, alongside guitarists Stringfellow and Schück. Two of Schück's former bandmates, bass player Fred Quentin and drummer Benoit Lautridou, later joined the founding trio.

Barbeau and Stringfellow, both American expatriates, live in Berlin and Paris, respectively,[3] and the group's debut album was rehearsed in both cities.[1] The album, titled The Loneliness of Clouds, was recorded in Paris and in London at Abbey Road Studios.[1] It was released in June 2019 on Beehive Records, Barbeau's label. The lyrics of its ten songs, all written by Schück, were "translated" by lead vocalist Barbeau from "heavily French'd English into a more standardized tongue."[1]

Critical response

In a Power Popaholic review, SALT was called "a power pop supergroup that skipped under the radar".[5] Even prior to the release of SALT's first album, critic Bill Kopp of Musoscribe contemplated the term "supergroup" based on Stringfellow and Barbeau's distinctive musical histories. Kopp suggested:

Imagine the best qualities of Barbeau's wonderfully idiosyncratic approach wedded to the oomph of Posies at their rockingest. Now add a previously unknown quantity: Schück's high quality songwriting. The result is a must-have for fans of the better-known musicians. Somehow quirky and straightforward at once.[6]

The Big Takeover's Michael Toland recommended the group to "aficionados of guitar-based melody and singalong choruses", adding that "songwriters Schück and Barbeau are plainly incapable of penning anything that doesn't have hooks".[7] Toland described SALT's debut album as "a bucket of the kind of catchy, slightly psychedelic power pop you'd expect from these folks... Stringfellow uses his producer's seat to guide the tracks toward maximum melodic glory."[7]

Babysue wrote, "With a lineup like this... you can bet there's no way things couldn't sound rather fantastic."[8] Pointing to XTC, Game Theory, and The Beatles as the group's main influences, the reviewer added:

[P]erhaps most surprising is that many of these songs remind us very much of Split Enz (a band whose music we have always admired). Schuck's songs have smooth hummable melodies and cool subtle hooks. Barbeau's vocals sound fantastic (as always)... The Loneliness of Clouds possesses everything that's good about modern underground pop.[8]

In Stomp and Stammer magazine, Glen Sarvady called The Loneliness of Clouds "a solid set of lite psychedelia well suited for fans of the Paisley Underground or Dukes of Stratosphear. The harmony-rich mid-tempo procession gives equal play to guitars and keys, and when the tunes occasionally veer toward the homogeneous, Barbeau's quirks swoop in to clinch the deal."[3]

gollark: You can actually overload operators easily with metatable hax; potatOS lets you divide and subtract strings.
gollark: Is it now.
gollark: (because people never strip the debug symbols)
gollark: (although that decompiles pretty easily)
gollark: I had to deal with BYTECODE before, you know.

References

  1. Ross, Rob (May 28, 2019). "MUSICTAP EXCLUSIVE VIDEO PREMIERE: Salt, 'Miracle Soul Powder'". MusicTAP. Archived from the original on 2019-06-13.
  2. Cobar, Rene (June 8, 2019). "Reviews: SALT – The Loneliness Of Clouds". Mxdwn.com. Archived from the original on 2019-06-13.
  3. Sarvady, Glen (June 12, 2019). "Salt – The Loneliness of Clouds". Stomp and Stammer. Atlanta. Archived from the original on 2019-06-13.
  4. Trowbridge, Sue (February 14, 2007). "Le rock francais". 125 Records. Archived from the original on 2008-05-15.
  5. "Salt and Richard X. Heyman". Power Popaholic. July 5, 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-07-08.
  6. Kopp, Bill (May 15, 2019). "Even More Hundred-worders for May 2019". Musoscribe. Archived from the original on 2019-06-13.
  7. Toland, Michael (June 18, 2019). "Salt - The Loneliness of Clouds (Beehive)". The Big Takeover. Archived from the original on 2019-06-20.
  8. LMNOP aka dONW7 (May 2019). "Comics, Poetry, and Reviews". Babysue. Archived from the original on 2019-06-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.