Portland’s The Dimes deliver a solid album, The Silent Generation (sample tracks)

Jan 18th, 2008 | By thestonewailer | Category: Portland, Pop, CDs Just Released

portland-the-dimes-the-silent-generation

Portland, OR, 1/18/08 - Some bands just make you feel happy even if the message is depressing. Akin to the Shins, The Dimes evoke feelings of a jovial nature by way of lush harmonies and jangley guitar riffs. Whether by accident or design, the band possesses a Brit-pop timbre which is Fab Four-comparable.

Formed in 2002, the Portland, Oregon quartet of Johnny Clay (vocals, acoustic guitar), Pierre Kaiser (electric guitar, vocals), Ryan Johnston (bass, vocals) and Jake Rahner (drums, vocals) is quickly becoming the new darlings of the West Coast with their progressive brand of low-fi indie pop, but they have also been spotted as far away as Japan.

After releasing four independent EPs and their first full-length, The Silent Generation, the group caught the attention of local label Pet Marmoset Records who released the record for national distribution last month.

portland-the-dimes-holocene-february_01The record is stunning from beginning to end, with well-crafted melodies, glowing production and introspective lyrics. Almost the entire album is based on a page from a Depression era newspaper found under the floor of Kaiser’s 1908 house. With bouncy and bright rhythms, the group has the ability to transform the dark stories into poppy pop songs with a sunny disposition.

The first single, “Catch Me Jumping”, deviates from the theme of the album as it tells the story of a Navy friend who went crazy and jumped off his ship in the Persian Gulf. Based on a true another story - as much of the record is - “Paul Kern Can’t Sleep” is a factual story about a veteran from World War I who had a bullet lodged in an area of the brain which controls sleep and didn’t sleep for 45 years until his death. The brightly lit gloom continues with “The Jersey Kid” which outlines a murder trial which ended in a death sentence, while “New York 1930″ is about a pro Sacco Vazetti demonstration which ended in a bloody riot. Not to totally depress the listener, “Letters in the Sea” is about a box containing 300 letters which washed up on the Jersey Shore. Clay ponders what the would-be recipient could have gone through not knowing the fate of the author with his airy falsetto voice.

The Dimes have delivered a four star debut and major label bidding seems to be inevitable.

Catch Me Jumping

Paul Kern Can’t Sleep

The Jersey Kid

New York 1930

Letters in the Sea

Get the CD here.

- By Tony Engelhart for The Stonewailer

Tony Engelhart is a music journalist based in Seattle. He has been doing this professionally for seven years and his articles have appeared in Seattle Sound, Seattle’s Blues to Do, Crud in the UK, Glide in Boston, Hybrid in Denver and he is a staff writer for the Tacoma-based arts and entertainment paper, the Weekly Volcano.

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