The Eastern Sea

The Eastern Sea
Origin Austin, Texas
United States
Genres Indie pop
Indie rock
Progressive pop
Years active 2005present
Labels WhitelabBlacklab
Associated acts Alaska is for Players
The Lovely Sparrows
Dax Riggs
Brazos
Mammoth Grinder
Website theeasternsea.com
Members Matthew Hines
Tomas Garcia-olano
Kevin Thomas
Kurt Lammers
Andy Beaudoin
Past members Zach Duran
Jess Graves
Chris Ulsh
Chris D'Annunzio
Charley Siess
John Rawls
Lauryn Gould
Michael Dymowski
Shawn Jones
Christopher Cox
Dan Wells

The Eastern Sea is an Indie rock band from Austin, Texas, which originally started as a bedroom project by singer Matthew Hines and eventually morphed into a band. They have released two original full length albums and a full length Christmas album.

Beginnings

Created in 2005 as the bedroom project of songwriter/vocalist Matthew Hines. From 2007-2009 the band added several new members and recorded what would eventually become The Eastern Sea, a self-released collection of two eponymous EPs. Songs such as “The Snow” and “The Name” attracted the band’s first national press and led to several festival appearances.[1] Originally The Eastern Sea consisted of revolving cast of musicians from Austin who joined the band whenever they had spare time similar to the Broken Social Scene. Eventually the band focused on creating a more consistent lineup but still feature regular guests and contributors.[2] Many members of the band are alumni of Saint Edward's University.

Albums

The Eastern Sea (debut album)

Originally created and released as two separate EPs. (EP I and EP II)[3] but would eventually be packaged together as one album. This album was re-released in late 2011.[4]

Plague

Starting in 2010, The Eastern Sea began work on their first official LP, Plague. Plague was recorded live to tape by Matt Smith (Ola Podrida, Golden Bear) at HOTTRACKS!!! in Austin, Texas. During the recording the long-running East Austin studio, as the complex that housed HOTTRACKS!!! was condemned by the city only a month into production. The Eastern Sea was then forced to finish Plague in between temporary studios and homes across Central Texas battling several other issues including a major fire. The band has often said by naming the record Plague, it was doomed to failure.[5]

Despite the numerous setbacks, the completed Plague (WhiteLabBlackLab), mastered by Jeff Lipton at Peerless Mastering (Bon Iver, Andrew Bird) was released on June 26, 2012.[6] Eventually the album would become highly critically acclaimed and win several end of year honors including; #1 album of the year (OVRLD),[7] and #13 best album of the year (The Wild Honey Pie).[8]

First Christmas

In summer 2012, after the release of Plague the band recorded a full length Christmas album engineered and co-produced by Louie Lino. The album includes 10 covers and 2 original songs "This is Christmas" and "First Christmas". It was released on the band's label WhitelabBlacklab on November 27, 2012.[9]

Festivals

In support of Plague, The Eastern Sea spent 2012 playing several festivals including Austin City Limits Festival,[10] Houston Free Press Summer Festival, Index Festival and SXSW among others. In addition to festival appearances, they performed at several large outdoor concerts including KGSR's annual Blues on the Green in front of over 8,000 people.[11]

Discography

References

  1. MTV
  2. Dan Solomon (2012-06-18). "The Eastern Sea Battle Personal Economies on ‘Plague’". MTV Hive.
  3. Predictably Me
  4. MTV
  5. Kevin Curtin (2012-06-22). "Playback: The Eastern Sea catch the 'Plague,' Eagle Claw goes samurai, John Wesley Coleman III wants to direct, and you can't pee on the Midgetmen". The Austin Chronicle.
  6. Max Blau (2012-06-20). "Album Stream: The Eastern Sea - Plague". Paste.
  7. "Top Austin Albums of 2012: #10-1". OVRLD. 2012-12-22.
  8. "Top 25 Albums of 2012". The Wild Honey Pie. 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-01-13.
  9. Dacey Orr (2012-11-26). "Album Stream: The Eastern Sea - First Christmas". Paste.
  10. "2012 Line Up". Austin City Limits. Archived from the original on 2012-06-21.
  11. "Blues on the Green". KGSR.

External links