Eulcid

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Reaction Impulse Theory 03:30 Tools
Single Server 03:28 Tools
To the Death of Intellectualism 01:29 Tools
To the Death of Irony 01:07 Tools
Forcing Forever Stopping Forever 03:05 Tools
Perfect 01:13 Tools
Persimmons 06:29 Tools
Clip 05:19 Tools
The Ocean vs. The Sand 03:35 Tools
Nickel Red 03:24 Tools
Double Point Double Switch 04:03 Tools
The Peoples Grocery Company 03:15 Tools
Two People Holding Hands 02:22 Tools
The Wind Blew So Hard All the Fires Went Out 03:45 Tools
(I Heard It) On The Radio 03:30 Tools
Word Of Mouth 01:43 Tools
No Vocals #3 03:20 Tools
Checkbook 04:46 Tools
Afterthought 02:40 Tools
Dulling Gage 00:00 Tools
Polite Guest 00:00 Tools
Cost of Profit 07:12 Tools
Cost Of Profit (Untitled) 07:14 Tools
Big Heart (As May Have Been Sung by Woody Gutherie) 03:17 Tools
Postscript About Dancing 00:00 Tools
What To Do With Absent Space 00:00 Tools
Short Instrumental (Cranes) 00:00 Tools
Big Heart (For Woody Guthrie, For Walt Cordell) 03:28 Tools
Haler Fixer (Remix 99) 03:28 Tools
- Clip 03:28 Tools
Euclid / Reaction Impulse Theory 03:24 Tools
Big Heart (for Woody Guthrie, 03:24 Tools
haler fixer 02:29 Tools
  • 10,731
    plays
  • 1,137
    listners
  • 10731
    top track count

I think that the idea for Eulcid came about in 1996 when my friend Travis suggested that we play some music. My band splintered and his band piebald had been playing shows together here and there for several years at that point. It seemed like a good idea, but it took until the summer of 1997 to actually start to happen. We wrote the music to our first song on the evening before about 15 of our circle of friends were about to move to Boston from the Merrimack Valley. It was called "five months, ok" and would later appear on our demo. We were both excited to start, and the first week after the move to Boston began practicing with friend Kurt Ballou on drums. Practices went regularly for the first month or so before scheduling problems began to take effect. Travis was in Piebald who were starting to really come into their own as an amazing band, and Kurt was finishing a class he needed to graduate as well as writing the final touches of his main band Converge's record "when forever comes crashing". Sometime around January Travis was replaced with former Kid Kilowatt drummer Matt Redmond, and Kurt moved to bass. This incarnation really only lasted two practices. I was nearly jumping out of my skin to get some songs out of my head and knowing Kurt would never be able to tour because of his other obligations former Splintered bass player Chris Raiche was recruited to fulfill the bass playing duties. Thus Eulcid really began in April of 1998. The old line up left us with the shell of two songs and one complete one, but we wasted no time finishing these and adding two more to record our first demo with help from my roommate Steve Brodsky less than a month later on borrowed equipment. With four hundred copies of the demo pressed we played our first show back where it all started in the Merrimack Valley with Piebald. Every friend I could think of showed up to lend support. That summer four months after that we hit the road with the short lived and under appreciated "the never never" for ten shows and then six with the ire/cave in tour. It was amazing! The demos went fast and the shows were tremendous fun, I was broke from buying a van, but it was worth it. We all felt good to be in a band that was serious about creating music. A solo winter tour followed in December of 98 and "the crane ep" was released in March 99 on undecided records. Local shows, a jaunt to Canada with cave in, and more touring were to follow in the summer of 1999. This time the entire country rolled under the wheels of our van Mr. Bruno. With our roadie extraordinaire and professional napper Ryan Daniels (he slept through the entire state of Indiana) we played about 25 shows all around the U.S. Throughout this whole time though, one thought planted itself in my mind, that of our next record. When we returned home practicing became intense and sometimes shows were turned down in favor of practice time. Songs were being worked and reworked in my head, worked and reworked in practices, and then evaluated even more over and over again during my daily routine. Every factor was taken in to consideration that I could think of and every word labored over. Finally March 25th 2000 we began recording. It seemed as though anything that could happen to make the process more difficult did. We had a terrible family emergency, the tape machine broke, I was sick, but all those months of preparation paid off, for the album was tracked and completed true to my vision of it! The Wind Blew All the Fires Out is something that was worked on for over a year, and consumed my life to a certain extent. But now when I sit here and think about all the work that went into it, the friendship the three of us have developed and the caring for our music it seems so easy. It seems easy to sit in a van for 15 hours, it seems easy to lose thousands of dollars, it seems easy to do twenty takes of a song in the studio until it is just right, and I guess most of all it seems easy to do it again. Mike Law. April, 2000 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.