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Maritime
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Maritime

Hometown: MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin
Tags: indie, indie rock, indie pop

Indie / Pop / Rock

Shadows of past lives can get long, but they neednt darken the present. People know Davey von Bohlen and Dan Didier as half of The Promise Ring, the band that unwittingly resurrected a genre (or at least the name of a genre) and influenced untold numbers of kids to put thinking and feeling and rocking all together in one package. Eric Axelson, meanwhile, made the shimmy shake as the bassist of The Dismemberment Plan. Once again, in case you hadnt heard: Those bands broke up. But before the carcasses were cold, there was Maritime. A logical extension of where these players had been and, simultaneously, a clean break, the new band feels like freedomuninterested in restrictions either self-imposed or publicly expected. Maritime made their first record right away, and Glass Floor (released in early 2004) gently hummed with life and pop and good cheer. In its simplicity, it felt like a gentle kiss-off, a mostly happy stroll that was content to walk a straight line. Bands could make records just like it forever, and the world would be a better place. But what to do for album number two, when the shadow cast by past triumphs is shorter and expectations (both public and private) dont feel as weighty as they once did? Heres what you do: You make We, The Vehiclesa triumphant realization of Maritimes unlabored goal and an occasional turn toward the darker, denser corners of years past. Thats right: We, The Vehicles isnt all sunshine and bubbles. Maritime remains solidly tethered to pop perfection, but has taken space to let that pop cycle through all its permutations. Theyre all here: Parade Of Punk Rock T-Shirts grabs a ska beat and twists it into wistful nostalgiait would sound amazing sung by Gwen Stefani, seriously. Tearing Up The Oxygen, written shortly before it was recorded, mixes ahh-ahhs and keyboard blips into palpable longing. Young Alumni and the shiny We Dont Think, We Know deliver the pop goods, and then German Engineering flips the script with remarkably stoic strangeness. (You didnt know these guys could do that, did you?) The dark No One Will Remember You Tonight even glances back at von Bohlens imagistic, early lyrical style. Then theres album-opener Calm, which is anything but: It declares, We are powerful despite our injuries, and then goes onwith help from We, The Vehicles other terrific songsto prove it. Maritime may have a collective history to both cling to and run from, but with We, The Vehicles, the band steps forcefully into its own. More than a side project or an ex-members of, it proves beyond a doubt that this is something viable and vital on its own. As George Michael so wisely said: Listen without prejudice. Youll be glad you did. Josh Modell, Chicago.

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  • TheOwlMag

    TheOwlMag on Maritime

    4 months ago

    Maritime Human Hearts [Dangerbird Records]

    If the abominable snowman and the Maritime dudes made a love child (we’re assuming the abominable snowman has super-secret feminine wiles and a penchant for making hot, hot soup, among other things) then maybe more videos like “Paraphernalia” would be out there. The first music video off Maritime’s latest album, Human Hearts, was filmed in the middle of a Milwaukee blizzard. Opting for a swirling, frost-bitten backdrop drummer Dan Didier explains, “we tried to shoot in my backyard, but for some reason the storm didn’t seem violent enough. So we went to the lakefront by my house.”

    Human Hearts is crackling with that search for violence, but only if the search was done in ’00s casualness and leaves time to banter and eat late-night pasta. “It’s Casual” opens with fast-paced guitars and the self-conscious question “we were warriors in the moonlight/am I right?/or was I wrong?” The indie-rockers still know how to throw together catchy pop songs, like in “Annihilation Eyes” and “Air Arizona,” and the tongue-in-cheek wordplay on “Apple of My Irony” cinches the album to a close.

    A quick history lesson: Maritime (specifically singer-guitarist von Bohlen and Didier) emerged from the ashes of seminal emo band The Promise Ring (before emo became synonymous with cockatoo hair-dos and raccoon eye liner).  Now signed under Dangerbird Records, Maritime’s newest release stamps out an emotional footprint…yes, even if you forgot the snowshoes.

    MP3 download: “Paraphernalia”

    more at theowlmag.com

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