The Almost
- 252,522 listeners
- 1,584 plays
- 12 requests
- 16 fans
The Almost is the band of Aaron Gillespie, the former drummer/clean vocalist of Underoath from Clearwater, Florida, United States started in 2005. Aaron stated that this band is much more of a traditional rock project than Underoath. A Monster Monster is on the loose. The Almostâs second album for Tooth & Nail/Virgin Records began taking shape just as soon as the band came off the road after touring for their 2007 debut, Southern Weather, including a stint on that summerâs Warped tour. That album, which debuted at 39 on Billboardâs Top 200, earned them a Top 10 single at Alternative radio, and a spot on MTVâs Discover & Download, was essentially the work of a single individualâUnderoath drummer Aaron Gillespie, who wrote all the songs, played all the instruments ... and then recruited a band to play them live, starting with fellow Floridian Jay Vilardi, a veteran of several well-known area bands like Metal Bladeâs Phoenix Mourning and Orlando-based Hand to Hand. âMy job was to teach everyone the songs,â explains Vilardi, who describes himself as the bandâs musical director. The addition of Philadelphia-based guitarist Dusty Redman, himself a veteran of Tooth & Nail bands like Beloved and Dead Poetic and Salt Lake City bassist Alex Aponte rounded out the line-up. The now thoroughly road-tested band was intent to make their latest a completely collaborative effort, melding their talents into a whole that was more than the sum of its individual parts. The process began with Vilardi, Redmon and Aponte e-mailing files back and forth to Gillespie, who was busy penning lyrics and coming up with musical ideas of his own while touring with Underoath, before all four of them got together in the studio to jam and work out the arrangements. It was a system that resulted in a powerfully cohesive album that melds their diverse songwriting skills, from the thudding, Raw Power-like stomp of the title track and âYoung Again,â to the stark acoustic blues and closing psychedelic jam of âMonster,â the techno-rock laced with tribal drums of âBooks & Booksâ and the melodic Coldplay/U2/Kings of Leon arena-rock anthem, âHands.â âIt turned out to be a really good process because we wound up with a tremendous amount of material we can use,â says Vilardi. âWe jammed on these tracks for hours before we actually laid anything down,â nods Gillespie. âThis now feels like a real band. Everyone gave up a piece of his own agenda for the good of the final result. And thatâs how you end up with something special. It was a relief for me because it took a lot of the weight off my shoulders. They supplied the bricks and we built the house together.â The guys also enlisted the help of steel guitarists Chris Scruggs (grandson of bluegrass legend Earl Scruggs) and John Davis (Superdrag vocalist/guitarist) while in the studio. Both Scruggs and Davis helped they guys broaden their musical pallets on a few tracks like âWestâ and âHand Grenade.â âIt was whatever each of us could do for the song,â agrees Redmon. âThere were no ego issues, no one screaming, âIâm Eddie Van Halen!ââ Gillespie says the songs are about the dark side of the human condition, battling your demons to come out the other side, starting with the albumâs title. âIâm giving in to you,â he roars in âLonely Wheel,â though in âno i don’t,â which segues from an acoustic beginning to an anthemic rock chorus, he admits, âIâm learning how to wait.â The hard-hitting âYoung Againâ and the country-flavored âHand Grenadeâ (âOh to be young/It sounds like so much funâ) are both about lost innocence, while âSouls On Ten,â with its piano flourish and urgent intensity, has a Springsteen feel and the grungy garage-rock of âSummer Summerâ offers an elegiac nod to vintage Neil Young with Crazy Horse. âIt didnât start out as a concept album, but by accident, I think it became one,â says Aaron. âItâs about the âmonsterâ that lives inside of all of us, which we have to fight to get rid of. Itâs a battle you live with every day. In the end, when that stops, the question remains, can you now live your life? Can you get all of who you are, can you find a place that makes you happy?â That catharsis comes across loud and clear in the final song on the album, dubbed âMonster,â which starts with Gillespie alone, accompanied by a single dobro. âLearning how to see/In this weird change of space/Iâm learning to believe in this life⦠I feel you helping me.â The song builds until, about two-thirds of the way through, the rest of The Almost come in, embarking on a spontaneous acid-soaked jam, recorded live, that provides the ultimate release. âEverybody needs that,â says Gillespie. âFor some people, itâs drinking, others run, some throw baseballs. I play music. Thatâs what I do. That gets rid of the garbage in my life.â âItâs about how terrible we can be at times,â says Vilardi. âItâs hard to be a person today who stands for something. It doesnât make you better⦠sometimes it even makes you worse.â On âHands,â the band prove they can create an arena- and radio-ready rock anthem, with its martial beat, chiming keyboards and lush â80s new wave fizz. âItâs like an Achtung Baby vibe,â nods Dusty. âThat song came out of nowhere. We demoed it, then got into the studio and started playing it and just got real excited.â âI like working with a song structure,â says Gillespie. âIn Underoath, thatâs not what we do. We create moments, which is important, but The Almost is something different.â âMonster Monsterâ and âYoung Againâ demonstrate Jay and Dustyâs love of classic garage punk, like The Stooges and The Velvet Underground. âWe really want to put the middle finger back in rock,â says Vilardi. âWe love the attitude of bands like Guns N' Roses.â And thatâs strange, because it turns out that rebellion doesnât conflict with being on Tooth & Nail, where the support of community is almost as important as the religious implications. âMusic should reflect who you are,â says Aaron. âI believe thereâs hope in finding who you are. Thatâs my conviction. At the same time, I want anybody, no matter their affiliation, to react to the music in the same way. I donât want people to feel theyâre being judged.â With the addition of drummer Joe Musten (Gillespie played all the drums on the album), The Almost is ready to hit the road and do what they do best, play for their increasing fan base around the country. âWe plan on hitting it as hard as we can,â laughs Vilardi. âWeâd like to leave and not come back for two years.â âWeâre just beginning now to establish our identity,â concludes Dusty. âThere were a lot of people now who are finding out about Underoath through The Almost.â Now thereâs a transformation for you.
Updated Jun 07 2011 1:14 PM
Updated Jun 07 2011 1:14 PM
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Recent Comments
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blueskynoise woooo10 months ago about "Everyone Here Smells Like A Rat" via Absolute Alternative
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midnightshad That was a decent song.
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shaddow4115 Rockin
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SpeedshifterNC don't know why I haven't paid attention to this song before..maybe because its the last one on the cd..but I really like it
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SpeedshifterNC rox