Lumerians

Lumerians

Lumerians
Background information
Origin San Francisco, CA, USA
Genres Space rock[1]
Psychedelic rock[2][3]
Experimental rock
Progressive Rock[4]
Drone[2][5][6]
Paisley Underground[5]
Electronic[7]
Years active 2006-present
Labels Knitting Factory Records
Website knittingfactoryrecords.com/artists/lumerians
Members
Tyler Green; guitar, keys, vocals
Marc Melzer; bass, vocals
Jason Miller; keyboard, guitar, vocals
Chris Musgrave; drums, vocals
Luis Vasquez; percussion, synth, vocals[4]

Lumerians is a San Francisco Bay Area based five-member[1] band which has a psychedelic[3][8] "mindbender"[9] space rock[1] sound. The group is notable for performances characterized by "transcendent live video projections" and having "incredible visuals," according to one music critic.[1] One critic described the band as "Oakland's prize pony in the Bay Area gloom-folk horse race".[8] The sound has been compared to the German experimental music known as Krautrock with overtones of 1960s music.[1]

Contents

Beginnings

The band was founded by Tyler Green, Marc Melzer, Jason Miller and Chris Musgrave in 2006.[1] Multi-instrumentalist Luis Vasquez joined in 2008.[10] Early rehearsals and recordings were produced in San Francisco, but the group has since relocated to Oakland.[1] They have their own recording studio in a converted church in Oakland, California.[1] The band's sound was influenced by groups such as Sonic Youth, Krautrock groups such as Can and Neu!, and African and South American Psych music from the 1960s and 1970s.[1] One member, Luis Vasquez, has a solo project going as well called The Soft Moon.[11] The Lumerians have worked with vocalist Rebecca Coseboom.[12] Coseboom and the Lumerians did the track Separate Half on the EP entitled The Answer EP by Unkle.[13] They performed in 2010 in Brooklyn with the Butthole Surfers.[14]

Psychedelic performances

The band received positive critical attention not only for its "psychedelic sound" but for achieving "intense psychedelic projections" using a vast array of synchronized equipment during its public performances.[1] Marc Melzer explained:

Something that we thought about from the beginning was just making the live experience a real happening or event, and trying to, when we go into a space to play, just making that space our own and trying to create a real atmosphere there. -- Marc Melzer, in San Francisco Weekly, 2011[1]

A report in SFGate described the band as "masked and draped in monastic cassocks" with performances that were "hypnotic" using "spirarling psych drones", according to music critic Michelle Broder Van Dyke, who elaborated that their "keyboard-driven rhythms" evoked "lost relics, like the mythic underseas continent its band name references."[4] A music reporter described one performance:

The area around the stage was packed with people swaying back and forth on their feet as if hypnotized by the music. The band had a projector set up that contributed to the tripped out atmosphere by displaying floor to ceiling shots of spinning spirals and moving patterns. Their set was tantamount to listening to the soundtrack from an epic science fiction movie about a jungle on another planet. -- Carla Selvin in SF Weekly, 2010[15]

When asked in an interview how the group chose their name, Miller said:

We tattooed several Fortean concepts on individual snakes, threw them in the hollowed-out chest cavity of a bull carcass and plunged in our hands. The snake that bit us the most times chose our name. -- Jason Miller, 2009[4]

Some music critics have described the music as Space Rock.[16] When asked whether the group was described as a "space-rock" genre, Melzer elaborated that the group loves 1960s psych bands, revivalism music, and Krautrock but that they were not trying to be one of those types of groups; rather, the aim was to create "trancelike music or ecstatic music" that "takes the listener to another place."[1]

Knitting Factory Records

In 2010, the band was discovered by talent scouts for Knitting Factory Records from listening to their music on MySpace.[1][2] Their debut album Transmalinnia was released in 2011 on the Knitting Factory Records label and featured nine tracks.[1][17] According to Marc Melzer, the band took many years to record their first full-length because they wanted to have a coherent album sound.[1] The cover art of the album Transmalinnia was done by the late outside artist Eugene Von Bruenchenhein.[1] The group released the new song Atlanta Brook in 2011.[18]

Reviews

Reviews have been positive for their albums[19] and live performances.[8][17]

Discography

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Ian S. Port (Apr. 22 2011). "Lumerians Talk Video Projections, Recording in a Church, and "Space-Rock"". SF Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2011/04/lumerians_talk_video_projectio.php. Retrieved 2011-05-15. 
  2. ^ a b c "Unpredictable Punks Bring New Songs To Slim's". KTVU.com. April 17, 2011. http://www.ktvu.com/entertainment/27526452/detail.html. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "... with rising local psych-drone favorites Lumerians, who recently issued their debut for Knitting Factory Records 'Transmalinnia.'" 
  3. ^ a b Kimberly Chun (October 8, 2009). "Frisco Freakout: Nascent psychedelic scene?". SFGate.com. http://articles.sfgate.com/2009-10-08/entertainment/17183313_1_magic-lantern-13th-floor-elevators-psychedelic. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "... the show's lineup include Heavy Hills, Lumerians..." 
  4. ^ a b c d Michelle Broder Van Dyke (October 15, 2009). "Lumerians". SFGate.com. http://articles.sfgate.com/2009-10-15/entertainment/17183835_1_keyboard-link-vocals. Retrieved 2011-05-15. 
  5. ^ a b c Ian S. Port (Apr. 4 2011). "Oakland's Lumerians Give Pensive Psych-Rock a Good Name in "Atlanta Brook"". SF Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2011/04/oaklands_lumerians_give_pensiv.php. Retrieved 2011-05-15. 
  6. ^ a b Ian S. Port (Mar. 4 2011). "Bay Music Links: New Young L Mixtape, S.F. Garage-Rockers Invade a Cruise Ship, and More". SF Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2011/03/bay_music_links.php?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "We highly recommend Lumerians' trippy, drone-y Transmalinnia...." 
  7. ^ "Lumerians - Lumerians | Allmusic". Allmusic.com. http://www.allmusic.com/album/lumerians-r1384836. 
  8. ^ a b c d Daniel Levin Becker (Mar. 15 2011). "New Lumerians Video Puts the Psychedelic in Psychedelic Rock". San Francisco Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2011/03/new_lumerians_video_puts_the_p.php. Retrieved 2011-05-15. 
  9. ^ Ian S. Port (Oct. 19 2010). "Best Coast Announced as Surprise Headliner for Aquarius Records' 40th Birthday Party". SF Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2010/10/best_coast_announced_as_surpri.php. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "... electro-pscyh mindbenders Lumerians..." 
  10. ^ Medina, Oscar. "Retro No Retro". East Bay Express. http://www.eastbayexpress.com/eastbay/retro-no-retro/Content?oid=1090265. Retrieved 24 May 2011. 
  11. ^ Johnny Ray Huston (02.15.11). "Noise Pop 2011 short takes - Page 2". San Francisco Bay Guardian. http://www.sfbg.com/2011/02/15/noise-pop-2011-short-takes?page=0,1. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "Luis Vasquez is a busy guy — in addition to his band the Soft Moon, he also plays with the Lumerians, who'll be putting out an album this spring." 
  12. ^ "Rebecca Coseboom, Stripmall Architecture (formerly from Halou as well)". NPR. 2011-05-15. http://www.npr.org/buckets/music/women/artist.php?artistId=392. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "Rebecca will be on the new UNKLE album. She sang a track with them for the Lumerians (yet another great SF band)" 
  13. ^ "The Answer EP Out Now". unkle.com. September 14, 2010. http://unkle.com/2010/09/14/the-answer-ep-out-now/. Retrieved September 15, 2010. 
  14. ^ "Pop and Rock Listings for Dec. 24-30". The New York Times. December 23, 2010. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/24/arts/music/24pop.html. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "The band hasn’t released an album of new material since 2001, but the songs are practically incidental to the spectacle. With Lumerians" 
  15. ^ a b Carla Selvin (Mar. 26 2010). "Last Night: Garotas Suecas, Greg Ashley, & Lumerians at Rickshaw Stop". SF Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2010/03/last_night_garotas_suecas_greg.php. Retrieved 2011-05-15. 
  16. ^ Kimberly Chun (May 12, 2011). "Lots to see at First Thursday at 49 Geary, S.F.". SFGate.com. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/05/11/NS0C1JBTSB.DTL. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "... space jams by Oakland's Lumerians ..." 
  17. ^ a b SF Weekly Staff (Mar 9 2011). "Sizzle & Fizzle: Highs and Lows from the Last Week in S.F. Music". SF Weekly. http://www.sfweekly.com/2011-03-09/music/sizzle-fizzle-highs-and-lows-from-the-last-week-in-s-f-music/. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "Oakland psych-drone outfit Lumerians released new album Transmalinnia last week on Knitting Factory records. After seeing the band's eerie live show a bunch of times — and loving it — we can finally hold our own extended space-jams at home." 
  18. ^ a b Ian S. Port (Jan. 14 2011). "Music Links: Lumerians' Trip, Artists to Watch, Trackademicks' Latest, and Jerry Garcia's Kitchen". SF Weekly. http://blogs.sfweekly.com/shookdown/2011/01/music_links_lumerians_rule_art.php. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "Hear "Atlanta Brook," a new track from stunning Oakland psych-rockers Lumerians. [The Bay Bridged]" 
  19. ^ Guardian Staff Writers (March 10, 2011). "5 Things". San Francisco Bay Guardian. http://www.sfbg.com/pixel_vision/2011/03/10/5-things-march-10-2011. Retrieved 2011-05-15. "5. ... the stellar Kosmische album by Bay Area rockers Lumerians..." 

External links