The Eyebrows with E.Z. Shakes

Fri Aug 06 2021 at 10:30 pm to Sat Aug 07 2021 at 12:30 am

The Evening Muse | Charlotte

The-Eyebrows
Publisher/HostThe-Eyebrows
The Eyebrows with E.Z. Shakes
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Garage Rock “Underground Power Pop” meets American Alternative Country Rock
^^^^^The Eyebrows^^^^^
The Eyebrows’ sophomore album FIGHT/FLIGHT combines 70s punk, underground power pop, and a touch of shoegaze atmosphere in a manic concoction that will give you Icarus-like super wings and other, subversive advanced skills to knock down walls, burn bridges… and eventually fall gracefully into the sea. Stemming from experiences with debilitating panic - the songs took shape as a part of a deeply personal, reflective album, but at the same time, is rooted in manic fantasy…
The Eyebrows are a fiercely independent, three-piece band composed of Jay Garrigan who writes the songs, sings, plays guitar & keys; Darrin Gray who plays the bass and sings; and Shawn Lynch who calls himself a “drummist” and sings. Jay and Shawn have played in bands together since 2000, and have known Darrin a bit longer than that, but it wasn’t until 2018 that the rock-laden three piece came together in its current lineup, with their first gig opening up for Power Pop god Matthew Sweet, and started recording soon thereafter. FIGHT/FLIGHT was tracked and mixed by the legendary Mitch Easter at his Fidelitorium recording studio over the past two years, and was mastered by Bill Skibbe at Third Man Mastering. The vinyl version of the record was also pressed at Third Man Pressing.
Regionally in the SouthEast US, the band is known for their manic live shows and eccentric, off-stage personalities. In 2020, The Eyebrows consciously pivoted their focus 100% online during the COVID lockdown where they remained active, learned how to live stream themselves, and tripled their socials without leaving their practice space. Releasing FIGHT/FLIGHT in an “evergreen” style since April, 2021, the band is currently releasing singles to streaming and videos to socials monthly, earning fans one at a time as only an independent band can.
The Eyebrows have a love affair with the live stage, enjoy hanging out with their fans, and are constantly writing & recording new material. Expect all of that (and more) for the rest of 2021!
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E.Z. Shakes
Years before forming E.Z. Shakes, Zach Seibert grew up in small-town Illinois, raised on the sounds of heartland rock & roll, hard-hitting punk, and old-school country/gospel music. His parents were hippie Christians who bounced from church to church, searching for a congregation athat suited their family's countercultural ideals. The experience left a mark on Seibert, who developed an appetite for diversity — in art, life, faith, and beyond — that he'd later put to use as E.Z. Shakes' raspy-voiced, genre-defying, storytelling frontman.
Over the course of two EPs and a pair of full-length albums, E.Z. Shakes have become one of South Carolina's most acclaimed musical exports — a band of amplified roots-rockers whose regional acclaim is steadily turning into a bigger, bolder movement. Their songs are grounded in epic Americana twang and dressed up with layers of shoegazing shimmer, swooning pedal steel, atmospheric guitars, and rolling reverb. It's a sound that's as wide-ranging as the group's own resume, with Seibert (vocals, guitar), Todd T. Hicks (pedal steel), John Furr (electric guitar), Stanford Gardner (percussion), and Jim Taylor (bass guitar) all cutting their teeth in other Carolina-based acts before banding together. ["I'm playing with a bunch of guys who are South Carolina all-stars,"says Seibert, who settled in the Palmetto State after stints in Illinois, New Orleans, Florida, and Virginia… and quickly earned his own share of local esteem by logging time in acts like Due East and Hardtack.] Collectively, they're far greater than the sum of their parts, turning Seibert's folk songs — autobiographical tunes that explore the human condition, written by a man who's unafraid to shine a light on the demons haunting his own closet — into dark, moody anthems that are honest enough for the bar and dynamic enough for the arena.
Produced in-house by Furr, The Spirit marks E.Z. Shakes' dreamiest, darkest, and most driving work to date. What began taking shape as an acoustic duo in 2017 — the year Seibert first teamed up with Hicks, looking to pair his own left-of-center country songwriting with Hick's spacey pedal steel — has since turned into a cinematic band, its sound rooted in the stomp and swagger of five musicians who've all unique marks upon the fertile music community of Columbia, South Carolina. The Spirit nods to those Carolina roots, with the band recruiting local hero Mitch Easter (the producer of seminal albums by R.E.M. and Pavement) to mix the album at his Fidelitorium studio. At its heart, though, The Spirit is an album that creates its own geography, swirling together a musical map of holy-roller Bible Belt storytelling, heartland hooks, big-city bombast, and southern roots music.
"A storm is coming…I suggest you hit your knees, boy, 'cause it ain't no joke — He's coming again," Seibert warns during the album's title track, one of several songs to pair E.Z. Shakes' slow-burning country-rock attack with the imagery and ideals of his spiritual upbringing. Much of The Spirit finds the frontman making sense of his past and present worlds, with songs that deal with the absence of loved ones ("Thirteen," written in honor of his late father), the small towns he's left behind in the rear-view mirror ("Grove Street"), the search for truth during confusing times ("We Want Answers"), the faith that's kept him grounded ("Making Mistakes"), and the vices that once threatened to derail his path ("Killing Time"). His vocals — raw, rough-hewn, and as sincere as his lyrics — provide the songs' earthy bedrock, while his bandmates add their own brand of guitar-heavy grandeur to the mix, turning tracks like "The Rileys" and "The Pretender" into sonic swirls of hooks, harmonies, and fiery fretwork.
You can take the boy out of the midwestern church, but you can't take the midwestern church out of the boy. Decades after attending Sunday morning services with his parents, Seibert is still grappling with the intersection of his faith, the past missteps he's struggling to leave behind, and the new horizons he's hoping to chase down. The Spirit is the story of that journey. It's an album about yearning — about struggling to grasp hold of something intangible, just like the hands that reach skyward on the album's hand-drawn cover. Even those who've never set foot inside a house of worship can understand that human struggle to make sense of it all. The Spirit doesn't provide any easy answers; instead, it offers up a soundtrack to one man's search, shot through with enough electrified soundscapes, psych-country highlights, and atmospheric anthems to lure in any listener.
"My upbringing played a monumental role in my life," says Seibert. "If I'm going to be honest as an artist, it's hard to separate those personal experiences from my art. But I'm not out to proselytize anyone. These are personal stories. Hopefully, people can find some sort of hope in them."
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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

The Evening Muse, 3227 N Davidson St, Charlotte, United States

Tickets

USD 12 to USD 15

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