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Home: R : Relient
K : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Gotee Records)
The name Relient K has always been synonymous
with some of the most contagious power pop/punk rock, tongue
in cheek songwriting and feel good fun anyone could ever
ask for. But since the band's infancy, there has also been
an upward evolution that includes tighter musicianship, increased
songwriting smarts and a high-octane stage show regarded
by fans at sold out shows from coast to coast. Just trace
the progression from the band's tracksuit wearing days on
2000's self-titled release to the plethora of puns on their
breakthrough sophomore release The Anatomy of the Tongue
and Cheek to the Billboard Top 200 album charting Two Lefts
Don't Make a Right … But
Three Do (#38 street week debut) and it's evident that Relient
K thrive on raising the bar with each release.
Their latest offering MMHMM is no exception
demonstrating yet another building block upon the group's
reliable recipe. "There's
been a natural progression from the first onto the second,
third and now the fourth record," notes drummer Dave
Douglas. "The change has come incrementally with each
disc. I don't feel like we're taking a drastic number of
turns, but the direction keeps shifting for the better."
The reunion with longtime producer
Mark Townsend comes at a time when lines are being blurred
between the post hardcore, post punk and peak emo movements,
making Relient K's original output level especially attention
grabbing. Such sounds are amplified all the more courtesy
of mixers Tom Lord-Alge (U2, The Rolling Stones, Oasis)
on "The One I'm Waiting For," "High
of 75," and "My Girl's Ex-Boyfriend," and
J.R. McNeely (UnderOath, Project 86, Demon Hunter ) on the
rest of the tracks. "I feel like with this record when
we're rocking heavy, we're rocking heavier than we ever have
and when we're letting up with low key moments, it's more
mellow then we've done in the past. We're hitting our peaks
correctly and all the angles are really paying off," says
Thiessen.
As for the messages behind such sparse
pre-production sessions, Thiessen turned to the basic root
of his personality, a combination of satire and seriousness
that runs the gamut between relationships, geography, faith
and the weather. "It's my personality
to be cheesy and tell dumb jokes," he admits. "For
the last four of five years, I've taken all the puns I think
of on a daily basis and plant them in a song. Besides that
tone, this record also has personal ties. There's a lot about
making mistakes, failing, how amazing grace is and picking
yourself back up."
"Who I Am Hates Who I've Been" launches with a
reflective piano arrangement that builds up with intensity
to address life's moments when everything seems to be failing,
while reminding all that God provides second chances. The
potent "This Week, The Trend" speaks of breaking
through daily routine and living each day to its adventurous
fullest, the spunky "Maintain Consciousness" is
a colorful commentary on society's need to be constantly
stimulated by technology and the blasting "Apathetic" calls
all to tone down their obsession over possessions.
There are also plenty of power chords
that fall on the lighter side of the topical fence, from
the brooding vibe of "Life
After Death and Taxes" to the hysterically framed "My
Girl's Ex-Boyfriend" to the thermometer based teasing
of the band's home state (Ohio) on "High of 75." "I
So Hate Consequences" seems to build a bridge between
the two writing styles, comically addressing all the times
we make mistakes and try to run from them, but also coming
to the realization that repentance and forgiveness are necessary
components in the healing process.
"We're not trying to hide anything with the songs on
this record, just to get what we feel out there," Thiessen
summarizes. "We've also found it to be the hardest thing
in the world to say 'Jesus' in a song and not be cheesy,
so we definitely have our own way of singing about spirituality.
But in the end that's who we are and what we believe in.
We hope between that and the music, it connects with someone
out there."
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