National Eye

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Drowned in Bed 00:00 Tools
Ag1 03:04 Tools
Bird & Sword 03:21 Tools
Halo 03:42 Tools
Invisible Raincoat 02:48 Tools
Lights 02:09 Tools
Abwehr 02:38 Tools
Juno3 04:49 Tools
The Switch 02:03 Tools
Theft 02:21 Tools
Silver Agers 05:26 Tools
Ag2 04:25 Tools
Waves of Love 03:09 Tools
Casimir 04:46 Tools
Left Out of Dynamite 03:54 Tools
Drag The Lake 04:06 Tools
Dread Flight of the Crimson Bee 02:27 Tools
Installed in the Dark 02:27 Tools
Like an Elephant 03:42 Tools
Arepolamina 03:40 Tools
Slow Boat to Trinidad 03:40 Tools
I Ran Into Him 03:53 Tools
Eva The Atom-Smasher 05:36 Tools
Effortless Plane 03:23 Tools
Snowing In April 03:23 Tools
Several Beaches 03:07 Tools
The Farthest Shore 05:56 Tools
Pure Film 04:59 Tools
Fields of Fixed Stars 05:34 Tools
Mechanisms of Cell Death 02:59 Tools
Prestidigitation Waltz No. 2 03:16 Tools
Corridor 01:38 Tools
Prestidigitation Waltz, No. 2 01:38 Tools
Radium Glow 05:26 Tools
Copy of a Copy 04:27 Tools
Big Animals 04:25 Tools
At the bottom of the pool 03:04 Tools
Spies 05:06 Tools
Friday Afternoon Theem 02:30 Tools
The Attic 02:30 Tools
New Cinema River Murder Ballad 03:49 Tools
Just a Dream 04:13 Tools
Husk & Kettle 05:49 Tools
The Effortless Plane 00:00 Tools
Dracula's Always With Me 03:06 Tools
Juno 03:13 Tools
Avepolamina 03:13 Tools
NY absentee 03:13 Tools
Millun Years 03:02 Tools
Bird 03:02 Tools
All-Black Bloom 04:03 Tools
Long Ago a Go-Go 03:14 Tools
Ag 1 03:14 Tools
NE: Episode One 03:14 Tools
Snowing in April [ orig. Like Moving Insects ] 03:14 Tools
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In this bio, you will learn some helpful facts about Philadelphia music group NATIONAL EYE. Of course, the only really important thing to know is that it's five guys (Will Baggott, Gianmarco Cilli, Doug Kirby, Rick Flom and Jeff Love) pulling music from out of themselves that seeks to describe and deepen the Mystery Of Life (which is really a murder mystery, since everybody dies). That's the short of it, and here's the long: They met at school in Colorado in the LATE NINETIES where they basically learned to play music with and from one another. Many recordings were made -- hiss-soaked, hobbling mood-bursts that provided the framework for what they would eventually do when National Eye began nebulously taking shape several years later. After college, they packed up for Philadelphia to continue to make music together. It took a few years, but eventually they began to unwittingly forge a method and a style that would take full advantage of the members' disparate tastes and abilities. Five guys met at the center of the Eye -- and recorded a bunch of great songs. The result of these endeavors, The Meter Glows appeared in 2003 -- which is essentially the birth of the band caught on tape, in the sense that before these songs started to coalesce in their headphone universe, there was no "National Eye" (strictly speaking). The album contained 13 tracks of a startling variety, but all with a pathological devotion to sonic texture and emotional impact. New York label Feel Records recognized its power (or its weirdness) (or its vast commercial potential) and released the album, despite the band's utter lack of live experience or reputation. Good move. Now that there was this document (The Meter Glows), the band set out into the world and began attempting to present the album's loping aural alleys on the stages of Philadelphia's lovely rock venues. As they were figuring this out, they met some truly momentous musicians who had very much in common with our National Eye -- despite the fact that none of them sounded anything like National Eye (or each other). But what the band found in those early, heady days was something they'd never really felt before -- a calibrated explosion of bands and artists who saw what the Eye was doing, supported it, and were trying to do something just as great. This is an important part of the National Eye story if only because of the band's spirit of ego-less collaboration (who's the FRONT MAN? they're routinely asked) and they thrive on a sense of constant creative activity among diverse weirdos. The band played and toured and strove and struggled and meanwhile started recording another album, again at home (though mostly in a different home). When they finished tracking, they once again took the album to genius Thom Monahan (Pernice Brothers, Silver Jews, Devendra Barnhart) for mixing. Just as he had done on The Meter Glows, he took the beautiful mess of the raw Eye, broke it down and built it up again to make it a beautiful non-mess. Or a less messy mess. The point is, the guy's contribution is hugely significant. This brings us to National Eye's ambitious second album, Roomful of Lions: a cathedral of color noise & conversation -- fractured human history mixed with fractured human relations. Where Meter was dense, Lions is expansive, providing a grander sonic architecture for the band's songs -- themselves offering a more nuanced and ambiguous moral universe. Subjects range from a mutinous Nazi plot to assassinate Hitler ("Abwehr"), a 15th Century saint ("Casimir"), Marvel comics ("Silver Agers"), and a childhood bully ("Lights"). No matter how far out they go, the songs are of a piece and describe a world not too dissimilar to our own, full of passion and death and birds and thieves and love and "men who casino." Some of Philadelphia's greatest musical persons appear on Roomful of Lions -- Dr. Dog's Scott McMicken plays a fevered guitar solo on "Juno 3"; Eliza Hardy of the gorgeous Buried Beds provides vocals on "Drowned in Bed"; Chicago transplant Janet "Evil Janet" Kim brings oboe to "Juno 3;" and two of the geniuses behind Like Moving Insects, Todd Starlin and Joshua Marcus bring trumpet and vocals respectively to songs like "Lights" and "Silver Agers." Roomful of Lions is being brought to the whole wide world by indie record label Park the Van Records, who have been raiding Philadelphia's rockroll fridge of late, also putting out music by National Eye's friends Dr. Dog and The Teeth. Some of the early works from National Eye were specially adapted for use in the score to the critically acclaimed independent film, "Four Eyed Monsters." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.