Saturday 18 May
 
 

Various artists — Never Give Up: Celebrating 10 Years of The Postal Service

Few indie bands have had the impact on current music that The Postal Service has. Even fewer have done so with only one album.
05/15/2013 | Comments 0

Big Worm — Bench All-Stars

Fans of the comedy classic Friday may recognize the name Big Worm, but the Big Worm behind Bench All-Stars is rooted not in South Central L.A., but on the streets of Oklahoma City.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0

Code 22 — Going Soft: The Acoustic Album!

The guys of Oklahoma City’s Code 22 seem like a likable group of fellas. Their latest release, Going Soft: The Acoustic Album!, is likable enough as well — so likable that on first listen, I took its clean, acoustic sound and clear, unstressed vocals as an alternative praise-and-worship band.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0

Eureeka — Polysynthetic Fields

It’s always refreshing to hear music that embraces its own eccentricity, yet presents it in an accessible and meek fashion. Eureeka — the Norman-based duo of Jordan Vargas and Devin Wahl — has tapped into this rarified air on its self-released EP, Polysynthetic Fields.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0

Tom Skinner — Tom Skinner

Sincerity is nearly dead in songwriting. The image of the earnest singer with eyes tightly shut and a crack in his voice as he plunges to emotional depths has become a joke.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0
Newsletter
Home · Articles · Music · Music · Youth group
Music

Youth group


Age is only a number, and the acoustic pop of Enid band The Fossil Youth, led by a recent high school grad, is proof-positive.

Joshua Boydston August 15th, 2012  

The Fossil Youth with I Call Fives, ElectroFoam!, The Wake Up Call and Dead End Alaska
6 p.m. Friday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$8-$10

Most people play in their first band sometime in high school. But recent high school graduate Scottie Noonan — chief songwriter, singer and guitarist of Enid acoustic-pop act The Fossil Youth — is already an old pro, with half a decade of experience behind him.

“It’s helped me progress a lot quicker. A lot of people I know in bands started as recently as last year,” he said. “I’ve been playing in bands for about five already.”

Despite hundreds of hours clocked at rehearsals and shows across Central Oklahoma, the one quintessential band experience that had eluded Noonan was a real tour — until this summer. That’s when he hit the road for the first time, playing Michigan, Ohio, Missouri and Arkansas.

“It was everything I dreamed it would be,” Noonan said. “It was also a lot more expensive than I ever imagined.”

He doesn’t mind the lighter wallet too much, however. He’ll just look at it as a graduation present to himself; now, his focus can center on a fledgling music career.

Forming in March of last year, The Fossil Youth has solidified into the cur rent lineup that includes Noonan, drummer Matt Goodman, guitarist Colton Manning and bassist Derek Neef.

The band has a five-song EP under its belt, with an acoustic EP due in the near future. Things are looking promising in terms of more touring, with managers, publicists and booking agents starting to take an interest in the group, whose music strikes a line between The Spill Canvas and The Rocket Summer. Sometime in early 2013, fans should be able to hear the outfit’s proper, full-length debut.

“We’re about to go record, and every song is totally different. One song is acoustic; another is pop-punk; another is this awkward folk thing,” Noonan said. “I’m weird like that. We’re about to just start saying we are rock. It’s too open ended to pin down.”

Some moments come as a departure from what was a mostly squeaky-clean track record.

“The main song, ‘Broken and Bruised,’ is different because I say the F-word in it,” Noonan said, “which, if you’ve listened to us before, is totally unexpected.”

The album finds Noonan and company taking a meta approach, writing an album that is about writing an album, with all the problems and headaches that come with youth and band life.

“This record is so much more personal than anything we’ve done before,” Noonan said. “How we feel about how some of our good friends were getting to tour and we weren’t. Well, until now.”

 
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
 
 

 

 
 
 
Close
Close
Close