FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 25, 2005
PATTY HURST SHIFTER LOOKS TO NEW YEAR FOR SECOND
ALBUM, TOO CROWDED ON THE LOSING END
Raleigh rockers with a Whiskeytown connection
have a rave-up.
Greg Elkins recorded, Trina Shoemaker mixed.
RALEIGH, N.C. – Patty Hurst Shifter have developed a loyal following
in the Southeast for years. Their forthcoming album, Too Crowded on
the Losing End, set for January 24 release on Fontana/Universal-distributed
Evo Recordings, finds them ready to show the rest of the world what
they’ve been up to.
It’s apparent in every note they play that this young band believes
in the enduring virtues of a heart full of longing, a full tank of
gas and the shake, rattle and roll of an overdriven tube amp. Remarked
Ryan Adams recently, “Really incredible songs. Patty Hurst Shifter
rocks ass,” which is a more direct way of saying the same thing.
The album was tracked by Greg Elkins at his Desolation Row studio
in Raleigh and mixed at Piety Street Studios in New Orleans by the
renowned Trina Shoemaker (Queens of the Stone Age, Sheryl Crow, Whiskeytown).
Faces great Ian McLagan plays the Hammond B3 on the rootsy ballad
“The Sadder Side,” while Tres Chicas principals Caitlin
Cary (drummer Skillet Gilmore’s missus and herself an alumna
of Whiskeytown) and Tonya Lamm provide backing vox.
For a band that loves to fire away, Patty Hurst Shifter displays an
impressive musical and emotional range on Too Crowded, rolling from
jacked-up rockers like “Happy” and “Never Know”
and Exile/Burritos-style shitkickers like “When You Lie”
and “Shine” to the billowy, bittersweet “Break Everything”
and the panoramic, 10-minute epic “Acetylene,” the musical
equivalent of watching the autumn sun go down while barreling toward
the western horizon on Interstate 40. Echoes of bands from the Stones
and Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers to R.E.M. and The Replacements
can be picked up, not surprising considering these musicians cut their
teeth on all of the above. Fittingly, Neil Young’s Buffalo Springfield
classic “Mr. Soul” has become a showstopper in their live
sets.
The band—singer/guitarist/songwriter J. Chris Smith, lead guitarist/vocalist
Marc E. Smith (no relation), bassist/vocalist Jesse Huebner and drummer
Skillet Gilmore—is dedicated to the basics: writing relatable
songs, rocking crowds wherever they play and having a blast, onstage
and off. While these goals may not sound terribly ambitious, they’re
no different from what has driven the Rolling Stones for more than
four decades, and what’s good enough for the Stones is good
enough for PHS.
Patty Hurst Shifter (the name started as a joke but stuck) has evolved
considerably since releasing its 2002 debut, Beestinger Lullabies,
an album distinguished by “hard-hitting, textured anthems with
plenty of space between the notes for the vivid scenes set by Chris
Smith to sink in,” according to No Depression’s Rick Cornell,
who added, “The band can bite hard or burn slowly, bringing
to mind big-beat outfits like the True Believers and late local heroes
the Backsliders.” David Menconi in the Raleigh News Observer
made his own Backsliders reference, taking note of “Marc Smith's
overdrive buzzsaw guitar, balanced off by the high lonesome vocals
of Chris Smith.”
Their surprise will no doubt extend to the current PHS lineup, which
is substantially different from the one that recorded the previous
album. Whiskeytown alumnus Gilmore joined up as drummer after that
LP was completed, whereupon original drummer Johny Williams switched
to bass. Along with the personnel changes came a fundamental shift
in approach from the bandleader. “I think Chris figured out
how to adapt his style to the band as much as the band adapted to
him,” Marc explains. “It all became much more collaborative
and, in many ways, easier.”
“We’re just good at what we do,” Chris says, his
words resonant with hard-earned knowledge. “Sometimes it’s
great, and that’s happening more and more often. We’re
a band that believes in finding your thing and doing it like you mean
it.”
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