Search
“I tried to write hopeful representations of life stories,” explains O’Brother frontman and guitarist Tanner Merritt of Endless Light, the Atlanta-based experimental rock band’s third album for Triple Crown Records.
“I think our last record was the angry,we’re-going-to-do-what-we-want record. That’s where we were: super dark and not for everyone. Endless Light all-around reflects us as people in our time of life we’re in. The record ismore levelheaded. It draws from more planes of emotional existence.”

Since forming in 2008, the band—Merritt, guitarists Johnny Dang and Jordan McGhin,bassist Anton Dang and drummer Michael Martens—have consistently pushed musical boundaries, building a blend of post-rock, grunge, alternative rock, and metal into a swirling blend of sonic destruction on a pair of full-length albums (2011’sGardenWindow and 2013’s Disillusion) as well as a raved-about live show, seen on tour with the likes of Brand New, Alice InChains,Thrice, Chevelle and Manchester Orchestra.

But where the band really succeed on EndlessLight is not how far they’re willing to take their art—it’s more about how skilled they’ve become at knowing when to pull back and explore more minimalistic tendencies to accentuate both the heavy and soft sides of their sound. There’s a thin line between exhilarating and exhausting, and O’Brother toe it effortlessly on the album’s 11 songs.

“When we went into talks about writing this record, we were all obsessed with the utilization of empty space as an instrument, utilizing the space between everything to also create an artistic statement,” Merritt says. “In the past,our three guitar players would try to stack parts on top of each other, but here we’ve just lopped some stuff off and people aren’t always playing. We thought: Is this part absolutely necessary, or can we drop it and get the same thought across? Let’s give every part the space to breathe within the song.”

Theresult is an album that’s in some ways challenges your definition of O’Brother.Known for their sprawling, spacy progressive rock—and proclivity for slow-burning songs that in some cases push 7 or 8 minutes in length—the song son Endless Light are far more concise and precise than anything in the band’s back catalog. (Look no further than tracks like the album-opening “Slow Sin” or riff-heavy “Deconstruct,” both of which would be prime candidates for lengthy, extended instrumental sections inO’Brother’s younger years.) The group took steps toward this direction on Disillusion, but they’ve fully realized the less-is-often-more convention here.

In early 2015, the band—along with producers Brad Fisher and ManchesterOrchestra’s Andy Hull and Robert McDowell—settled in at the now-defunctSouthern Tracks Records studio in Atlanta (where Pearl Jam, Bruce Springsteen and AC/DC have all made albums) for a week of initial tracking before shifting work to Manchester Orchestra’s Favorite Gentlemen Studios in the Atlanta suburbs for overdubs. The time at Southern Tracks marked the first time the band had recorded live in six years—and even though only the bass and drums from these sessions made the album, the process helped lay the foundation for most accurate representation of O’Brother’s live show ever committed to tape.

Martens also notes the band’s newfound focus on economy allows O’Brother, for the first time, the ability to have an album and live show serve two very different—but ultimately interconnected—purposes: “O’Brother to many people is that opus,longer-song thing, but you can still do shorter songs and have the live show be a different experience,” he says.

Thisemphasis on succinctness also permeated the way Merritt approached writinglyrics. In the past, the singer thought about his words as an overarching theme, certainly in line with the conceptual nature of O’Brother’s music. Here,the focus shifted, with Merritt realizing sometimes the best concept is no concept at all—which ultimately freed him up to focus on individual songs instead of worrying how they all fit together to serve an ultimate goal.

These stories are culled from Merritt’s personal life—like “Black Hole,” which touches on the singer’s father’s battle with Alzheimer’s disease, and the title track, written in remembrance of close friend and former crew member Daniel Bressette, who passed away in 2014.

“WhenI was writing the song, I was looking at his artwork,” Merritt explains of the song “Endless Light,” noting that the album’s cover is one of Daniel’s original art pieces and serves as a tribute to their friend. “He has a really unique art style; it’s quirky and intense and also really dramatic. It’s beautiful and it’s fitting and says everything we wanted to. The song is about becoming one with the universe and creating this other world that he was meant to live in.It’s about him finding his place in the universe he always dreamt of.”It’s in a song like this that the true mastery of Endless Light shines through: It’s an album that kicks back at darkness, an album about having the resolve and courage to face life’s big issues head-on without letting them consume you. It’s deeply personal to the five members of O’Brother, but imbued with a sense of relatability that’s destined to impact anyone who listens.
Close

Press esc to close.
Close
Press esc to close.
Close

Connecting to your webcam.

You may be prompted by your browser for permission.