Quantcast
A Sunny Day in Glasgow “Ashes Grammar” Review
November 21, 2009 – 1:28 pm | No Comment

A Sunny Day in Glasgow make pop music that is as mysterious as it is beautiful.

Read the full story »
Album Reviews

Unique perspectives and opinions on new and recent releases

Concert Coverage

Photos, videos and reviews from a variety of live events.

Interviews

Engaging discussions with artists from around the world.

Spotlight

Highlighting songs and bands, old and new

Video

Music videos & performance footage

Home » Album Reviews

The Submarines “Declare A New State!” Review

Submitted by Chris DeLine on May 27, 2006 – 10:43 amNo Comment

Longtime Boston natives The Submarines have a history every bit as unique as the duo’s sound. Blake Hazard attended Harvard (oh, and her great-grandfather was F. Scott Fitzgerald) met John Dragonetti through his job at the time, putting albums together for HepCat, A&M and Sugar Free records, and the two began collaborating from there. Now living in Los Angeles the two grew closer while Dragonetti recorded Hazard’s Little Airplane and playing for each others bands. A four year romance which took the duo across the world collapsed however as both Hazard and Dragonetti moved to Los Angeles to further their group. Each spent countless hours writing songs; hate, pain, love, joy, both finding themselves hopelessly attached to something. Coming together again to record what they had written in Dragonetti’s studio, it sparked, and both understood that they were meant for each other. And so goes the myth-like tale of The Submarines.

Declare a New State! wanders through a variety of sounds. “Hope” sounds like much of Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots and “Brighter Disconnect” makes the most of minimalist harmonica and drum machine. “Modern Inventions” leads to a unidentifiable aural sensation through its synthesized strings and encompassing harmonies. “It goes from hopelessness to a certain kind of optimism – an optimism that’s more realistic” says Hazard of the album. This track is a key example of that turnaround in the album’s lyrics, which somehow remind me of a really good Urge Overkill song, toned down and prettied up. It leaves an effect the exact moment it kicks in.

All leading perfectly into “The Good Night” which ultimately questions what there is between the two. Hazard concludes the song by singing “I’d have waited a lifetime for a sign only to fall apart when love arrives, but we’re coming home.” These lyrics encompass the beauty and themes of the album, reconciliation, compromise and love. Nothing lends itself a better fit to the album than these words, which, in all truth, were never meant to be heard. The album was meant as something that the duo were compiling for their friends, as a sort of marker on the relationship. But as Declare a New State! reaches the public, it brings new meaning to the words, new depth to the sounds, and hopefully new avenues for The Submarines, and a story that undoubtedly deserves to be heard.

The Submarines “Brighter Disconnect” (mp3)

Official :: MySpace :: Wikipedia :: Amazon

Leave a comment!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.