Thursday 23 May
 
 

Iron Aidan

Aidan Carroll Quartet
7 p.m. Wednesday, May 29
University of Central Oklahoma Jazz Lab
100 E. Fifth, Edmond
ucojazzlab.com
359-7989
$5-$7
05/22/2013 | Comments 0

Beat street

Lucky Date with Kids at the Bar and Crystal Vision
9 p.m. Wednesday, May 29
Kamps 1310 Lounge
1310 N.W. 25th
kamps1310lounge.com
819-6004
$20
05/22/2013 | Comments 0

Sun rises

Sunny Side Up with The Last Slice and Classy San Diego
8 p.m. Saturday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$8
05/22/2013 | Comments 0

God bless metal

Becoming the Archetype with Bermuda, The Burial, Horror Cosmic and Veil of Suffering
6 p.m. Saturday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$12-$14
05/15/2013 | Comments 0

Here for the party

Gretchen Wilson with Outlaw Son
6 p.m. Thursday
Newcastle Casino
2457 U.S. 62, Newcastle
mynewcastlecasino.com
387-6013
free
05/15/2013 | Comments 0
Home · Articles · CDs · Indie · Foreign Home — How Strange the...
Indie

Foreign Home — How Strange the Night


Joshua Boydston August 15th, 2012  

Arena-ready indie rock sounds like a bit of a contradiction, but with bands like The Black Keys, Muse and Kings of Leon all headlining the biggest venues in town, the weird subspace is here to stay.

From the sounds of it, that’s a place where Tulsa outfit Foreign Home would like to call home. Its debut album, How Strange the Night, is big, layered, engrossing and just enough offbeat to not reside firmly in the mainstream. That can be a death trap for some bands who drown in that wall of sound, with any sense of identity swallowed up by those epic guitar hooks.

Foreign Home always keeps its head, however, thanks to a fun juxtaposition of tropical dance (“Hoax,” “Knife Fight in a Telephone Booth”), post-punk (“Paper Leaves”) and emo rock (“Pink Noise,” “About a Bear”). The result is a band that can mash Brand New, Bloc Party and Foals into a single song that moves like a Death Cab for Cutie track.

Obviously, the players — singer Deric Williams, drummer Daniel Clark, guitarist Tobie Munroe and bassist Chris Davis — are more than adept, masterfully genre-bending each recording. It’s an impressive debut — produced by Costa Stasinopoulos (Dead Sea Choir) and mastered by Mike Marsh (Phoenix, Oasis) — one that should be the first stepping stone to Foreign Home playing both nationally and abroad.

The album hits shelves on Tuesday and will be available for download on iTunes. —Joshua Boydston



 
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