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Photo credit: Michael Maxxis
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SOCIAL
CODE
ROCK
‘N’ ROLL
Travis Nesbitt — vocals
Logan Jacobs — bass
Morgan Gies — guitar
Ben Shillabeer — drums
Press
Release, December 16, 2009
In this
day and age, you’ve gotta have pretty big balls to call one
of your songs, let alone an entire album, ROCK ‘N’
ROLL. And if you do, well, you damn well better deliver. With
their first full-length U.S. release, veteran Edmonton quartet Social
Code have done just that, dropping 11 tracks inspired by the masters
of rock, dripping with the blood, sweat and tears of almost a decade
in the trenches and driven by one simple mantra. Is it rock ‘n’
roll?
“We would ask everybody,
we would say it in the studio, we still say it now,” says
vocalist Travis Nesbitt, noting that the question was asked about
everything to do with the recording including the album artwork
and photo shoots. “We knew what we wanted to do and we knew
what path we were on and if we felt ourselves straying from that
path then we knew that it wasn’t right for this record. “
Bassist Logan Jacobs agrees. “We knew exactly what we were
doing this time,” he says. “It’s never been more
collective — we knew we were making a rock record, we knew
it was a departure from how people had heard us before and it was
easy to make a lot of decisions.”
Since forming several
years ago, many people have become familiar with the work of Social
Code, be it through their tours with Theory of a Deadman, Buckcherry,
Finger Eleven, Rev Theory and Three Days Grace, or from a pair of
albums — 2004’s A YEAR AT THE MOVIES and the
sophomore self-titled release through Universal Canada two years
later — that spawned major radio airplay for songs such as
“Bomb Hands,” “Everyday (Late November)”
and “He Said, She Said.” That latter song earned Social
Code nominations at the Western Canadian Music Awards for “Songwriter
of the Year” and “Outstanding Rock Recording of the
Year.”
Still, despite that success,
as 2008 was coming to a close, the band found themselves at a crossroads.
Independent once more, and unsure of the future, the quartet took
time out to rethink what it was they were doing and whether or not
they even wanted to continue on. To ask themselves what it was about
music, and making music, that made them a band in the first place.
It was a gut-check that produced some honest answers and a whole
new approach to songwriting and recording.
“We were chasing
trends instead of just stopping,” Logan says, “getting
off the train and saying, ‘OK what are we going to do? What
are we going to do that’s distinctly us?’ We were always
looking at groups that were doing what it is we were doing at the
same time, and we decided that just wasn’t for us. So we went
back to the roots.” And those roots can be heard in all their
ragged glory on ROCK ‘N’ ROLL.
The disc was recorded
quickly, painlessly and live off the floor during the “freezing
cold of an Edmonton winter” with producer John Travis (Kid
Rock, Buckcherry and Sugar Ray). From the gloriously grinding and
noisy first single, “Satisfied” and the catchy “Buy
Buy Baby,” to the heavy, boogie rocker “Fight For Love,”
and the surefire heartbreak, rock anthems “I’m Not OK”
and “Perfect Grave,” the 11 tracks draw on influences
as seminal as Bruce Springsteen, Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones,
Cheap Trick and The Black Crowes while being entirely true to the
band’s own sound.
“They set the path
for all of this,” says Travis of the legends he and the rest
of the band were drawing on for the sparks of the new material.
“So why wouldn’t you go back there, why wouldn’t
you go back to the roots and then try and take that and say ‘How
can we do it? How can we take that vibe and make it ours?’”
Now, with that question
firmly answered, the four friends are ready to begin a new chapter
in the story of Social Code. They’re looking at the path ahead
as a new beginning and a fresh start on the way to something bigger,
better and more exciting than anything they’ve done in the
last decade. They’re ready to hit radio and the road with
songs and an outlook that have infused a whole new passion for making
music into the four-piece. “I was just saying to Logan the
other day, I can just feel an energy about what’s going on
with this band that I haven’t felt before,” Travis says.
“It’s something we’ve been doing for years, and
then something happens, it changes and it now feels new. It’s
the same band, but we’re brand new. It’s an exciting
time to be in Social Code.”
On that note, and with the future looking bright, we’ll let
Social Code have the final say with these prescient words from the
slow-burning title track:
“Now
is not the time for talking
Give me what I want or I’m walkin’
I just wanna hear some rock ‘n’ roll”
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