• Old GR site
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Friday, February 3, 2023
Grande Rock webzine
  • Home
  • News
  • Album Reviews
  • Best of Month
  • Gems
  • Interviews
  • Gigs
  • Blog
  • Special
    • HALL OF FAME
    • TRIBUTE
    • BEST OF YEAR
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Album Reviews
  • Best of Month
  • Gems
  • Interviews
  • Gigs
  • Blog
  • Special
    • HALL OF FAME
    • TRIBUTE
    • BEST OF YEAR
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Grande Rock webzine
No Result
View All Result

Oceanator to release new studio album “Nothing’s Ever Fine” on April 8th 2022

by newseditor
February 16, 2022
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Oceanator Nothing’s Ever Fine coverBrooklyn artist Oceanator announces her sophomore album “Nothing’s Ever Fine”, co-produced by Bartees Strange, due out on April 8th, 2022, via Big Scary Monsters / Polyvinyl.

Today, she shares new video for the leading single “Bad Brain Daze”, directed by Chris Farren, featuring special appearance by Jeff Rosenstock as “Saxophone Man”. Watch the video below.

Director Chris Farren says about the video:
“When Elise asked me to direct a music video for her, I thought “I don’t know how to do that!”, but I said “Yes! I know how to do that!”, and quietly panicked for the next 3 weeks. Luckily “how make music video” yields tons of YouTube results. The video we came up with is a fantastical little day-in-the-life tale about anxiety, productivity, dread, and being horrifically ripped in half by cartoon animals”.

“The cars break. Everything goes slow motion. There’s disaster and fire”, foretells Elise Okusami, describing her cinematic vision of the end of the world. Apocalypse is a subject she mined in acute detail and to critical acclaim on 2020’s “Things I Never Said”, her debut full-length as Oceanator. But in her most recent cataclysmic telling, she keeps the camera focused on the people who survive and need to keep on living. A couple escapes the wreckage in a classic pickup truck, their dog riding in the back. They find a new home in the woods and consider how to start over. “It could either be hopeful or negativ”, Okusami explains of the tale’s ambiguous ending. “You’re either walking off into a nice sunset or going off into a black hole. For me, it depends on the mood; it can be both ways.

Those speculative vignettes inspired polymathic Okusami to begin writing a short film — one she ultimately scrapped in favour of putting those themes to music. These vividly imagined scenes comprise the sunrise-to-sunset arc of her resplendent new record “Nothing’s Ever Fine”, the first Oceanator has recorded for Big Scary Monsters/ Polyvinyl and the already-shredding project’s heaviest collection yet. This narrative of doom and hope told over the span of a single day is reinforced by a thrice-recurring leitmotif — appearing on the tracks “Morning”, “Post Meridian” and “Evening” — composed on Okusami’s newly beloved Reverend baritone guitar. She used it to write several of the songs’ knottiest riffs, lending a gut-punching low register (perhaps indebted to her past experiences playing in thrash and hardcore bands). But like on previous Oceanator recordings, Okusami’s characteristic ease with bright hooks still shines, and the wide-ranging influences of ‘80s power pop, ‘90s melodic punk, Americana, film scores and Civil Rights-era vocal groups lend textured complexity to the collection. Okusami uses these sounds to explore anxious nightmares, nostalgia for late night adventure, the fog of depression, climate catastrophe and cautious optimism for the future. It’s material ripe for an end-of-days flick, sure; but it’s also the reality of living with the noise in your own brain in America’s 2020s.

Though “Nothing’s Ever Fine”’s earliest song dates back to 2014, and several others were written on or after tours in the intervening years, Okusami reconfigured and demoed these songs alone at home between 2019 and 2020. Thanks to the covers recording, live streaming, and documentary scoring she partook in over the past few years, as well as wisdom gained from running the record label Plastic Miracles, Okusami brought a leveled-up ear for production to this album. She also found herself reinvigorated on the guitar, unafraid to tackle some of Oceanator’s most ambitious and masterful playing yet. On the album itself, in addition to performing guitars, synths, bass, keys, and vocals, she serves as co-producer. That role is shared with her brother and longtime bandmate Mike Okusami, as well as her friend Bartees Strange. Working at Falls Church, VA’s 38 North and at Mike’s space in Maryland, the trio eschewed traditional live tracking in favour of recording parts separately as overdubs. They focused on sonic exploration and world building, dialing in sounds and experimenting with a Wurlitzer, B3, Leslie, and mellotron, among other synths and boutique effects. While the Okusami siblings have decades of collaboration and trust built up between them, which informs Mike’s seamless contributions on bass, drums, and piano, Bartees proved to be a trusted third partner, matching Mike’s excitement on the technical side and working closely with Okusami to find the dream guitar tones she sought — equal parts crystalline and crushing.

Longtime Oceanator collaborator Andrew Whitehurst performed drums on most tracks, bringing extra care and attention to his parts; he sounds especially buoyant powering through the skate-speed fills of “The Last Summer”, a Cherry Coke and french fry-flavoured recollection of Okusami’s DC-area teenagedom. Chords push and pull like the twists and turns of the Saturday night Okusami revisits; “I’m feeling so alive with my heart open wide”, she sings in an in-the-round vocal coda, just after blazing through an eviscerating solo. Things I Never Said engineer and bassist Eva Lawitts played a five-string bass on “From the Van” and on “Stuck”, amplifying the sound of two of the album’s most massive tracks. The latter of those songs swirls around a detuned guitar climb, using layers of fuzz, palm muted riffs and sludgy, grooving drums to blast through the feelings of stagnancy Okusami outlines: “I feel heavier than I used to,” she deadpans, sinking in to the parallel heaviness of the recording”.

On lead single “Bad Brain Daze”, which busts through the hazy pallor of unavoidable anxiety with stop-start guitar rhythms, telephonic synths and juxtapositionally cheerful melodies, Okusami recruited labelmate and recent tourmate Jeff Rosenstock for saxophone. Of their 2021 gigs together, Okusami says: “It felt like going on tour with a bunch of friends. It felt cool to know that even as shows get bigger, we could still have a little community”. To weave an even greater web of support through the track, she threaded in gang vocals from friends and peers in the bands Groupie, Bad Moves, Maneka, Sonder Bombs, Long Neck, Late Bloomer and Alright. “It’s a chorus of friends all going through it”, Okusami explains. “It felt nice to have that connection, even if it was pieced together with emails of files”.

With a lifetime of playing in and alongside so many bands of friends, it makes sense Okusami would seek communal joy on this record, especially from musicians in the Brooklyn scene that has given Oceanator its home and the DC scene from which she got her start. Lonely feelings can skew apocalyptic when compounded with mental health struggles and an ever-frightening planet, but Okusami’s exuberant songwriting and brawny arrangements manage to form a complexly colored and auspiciously bright sunset on the horizon. On “Nothing’s Ever Fine”, the world might end. But it might not. And while we wait to find out, Oceanator delivers a revitalizing smack of sound and energy, helping us to remember that even if things don’t turn out fine, we can make our time here worth it.

Pre-order “Nothing’s Ever Fine” here.

Tracklist:
1. Morning
2. Nightmare Machine
3.The Last Summer
4. Beach Days (Alive Again)
5. Solar Flares
6. Post Meridian
7. Stuck
8. From the Van
9. Bad Brain Daze
10. Summer Rain
11. Evening

Weblinks:
oceanator.surf
twitter.com/oceanator

ShareTweetSendPin
Previous Post

Saffire to release new studio album “Taming the Hurricane” on April 29th 2022

Next Post

Tomberlin to release new studio album “i don’t know who needs to hear this…” on April 29th 2022

Related Posts

Magnus Karlsson’s Free Fall Hunt the Flame cove4

Magnus Karlsson’s Free Fall to release new studio album “Hunt the Flame” on April14th 2023

February 2, 2023
Allegaeon North American Tour 2023 poster

Allegaeon announces May 2023 North American Tour

February 2, 2023
Legion Of Doom band

Legion Of Doom – new Doom Metal Supergroup featuring members of The Skull, Trouble, Saint Vitus, Corrosion Of Conformity, Pentagram and more

February 2, 2023
Stormwarning self-titled cover

Stormwarning to release self-titled debut album on March 17th 2023

February 2, 2023
Kanaan Downpour cover

Kanaan to release new studio album “Downpour” on May 5th 2023

February 2, 2023
Skull Fist European Tour 2023 poster

Skull Fist announces April 2023 European Tour

February 2, 2023
Load More
Next Post
Tomberlin i don’t know who needs to hear this... cover

Tomberlin to release new studio album “i don’t know who needs to hear this...” on April 29th 2022

Anniken Climb Out of Hell cover

Anniken to release debut solo album “Climb Out of Hell” on May 13th 2022

Somali Yacht Club The Space cover

Somali Yacht Club to release new studio album “The Space” on April 22nd 2022

Grande Rock Webradio

Best of 2022

Grande Rock - Best Albums of 2022

Best Albums of 2022

Best of Month

Arrayan Path Thus Always to Tyrants cover

Arrayan Path – Thus Always to Tyrants

Gems

Avatarium Death, Where is Your Sting cover

Avatarium – Death, Where is Your Sting

Latest Gig Review

Lucifer Star Machine tour poster 2022

Lucifer Star Machine live in London 2022

Latest Interview

Lucifer Star Machine band

Lucifer Star Machine

Grande Rock Spotify

Facebook

Twitter

Tweets by granderockcom

Recent News

Magnus Karlsson’s Free Fall Hunt the Flame cove4

Magnus Karlsson’s Free Fall to release new studio album “Hunt the Flame” on April14th 2023

February 2, 2023
Allegaeon North American Tour 2023 poster

Allegaeon announces May 2023 North American Tour

February 2, 2023
Legion Of Doom band

Legion Of Doom – new Doom Metal Supergroup featuring members of The Skull, Trouble, Saint Vitus, Corrosion Of Conformity, Pentagram and more

February 2, 2023
Stormwarning self-titled cover

Stormwarning to release self-titled debut album on March 17th 2023

February 2, 2023
Kanaan Downpour cover

Kanaan to release new studio album “Downpour” on May 5th 2023

February 2, 2023

© 2021 Grande Rock webzine - Rock & Metal online magazine.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Contact
  • Old GR site
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Album Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Gigs
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact

© 2021 Grande Rock webzine - Rock & Metal online magazine.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.