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Various artists — Never Give Up: Celebrating 10 Years of The Postal Service

Few indie bands have had the impact on current music that The Postal Service has. Even fewer have done so with only one album.
05/15/2013 | Comments 0

Big Worm — Bench All-Stars

Fans of the comedy classic Friday may recognize the name Big Worm, but the Big Worm behind Bench All-Stars is rooted not in South Central L.A., but on the streets of Oklahoma City.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0

Code 22 — Going Soft: The Acoustic Album!

The guys of Oklahoma City’s Code 22 seem like a likable group of fellas. Their latest release, Going Soft: The Acoustic Album!, is likable enough as well — so likable that on first listen, I took its clean, acoustic sound and clear, unstressed vocals as an alternative praise-and-worship band.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0

Eureeka — Polysynthetic Fields

It’s always refreshing to hear music that embraces its own eccentricity, yet presents it in an accessible and meek fashion. Eureeka — the Norman-based duo of Jordan Vargas and Devin Wahl — has tapped into this rarified air on its self-released EP, Polysynthetic Fields.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0

Tom Skinner — Tom Skinner

Sincerity is nearly dead in songwriting. The image of the earnest singer with eyes tightly shut and a crack in his voice as he plunges to emotional depths has become a joke.
05/08/2013 | Comments 0
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Music

Music explosion


True to its name, Diarrhea Planet lets loose with a forceful barrage of pop-influenced punk. Don’t even try to stop it.

Joshua Boydston January 30th, 2013  

Diarrhea Planet with Cosmostanza and The Pizza Thieves
8 p.m. Monday
The Conservatory
8911 N. Western
conservatoryokc.com
607-4805
$6

Most bands never get the chance to meet their musical heroes. The dudes of Diarrhea Planet get to hang out with theirs on a near-daily basis.

“Right when I started school in Nashville, I went out to a club and watched Jeff the Brotherhood play. It blew my mind,” guitarist Emmett Miller said. “I wanted to play in a band like that … and now we get to play on the same stage as them. They’ve really taken us under their wing.”

The six-piece got signed to the Brotherhood’s label and toured with the brotherly duo this fall. With that connection, Diarrhea Planet has carved out a niche for itself in the Nashville rock community.

And that’s been to everyone’s surprise, especially since the band members attended the city’s Belmont University.

“It has a reputation as a commercial music school with a heavy Christian background. There’s a lot of praise music and John Mayer wannabes. You can imagine how difficult getting over that stigma is,” Miller said. “Being a punk band, you weren’t really accepted by the school, and coming from Belmont, the punk scene wasn’t interested in us. We didn’t belong anywhere.”

To remedy the problem, they sought to coin the most disgusting band name they could think of as an act of rebellion. Diarrhea Planet won. The noise-rock act shifted into a pop-punk collective and, ultimately, into the wholly unique group it is today.

“I like to think of us as the reverse of Third Eye Blind,” Miller said. “When you listen to their debut album, it’s very much a pop record, but the closer you listen, the more hard-rock and punk influences. We’re a power-rock band, as we jokingly call it, but the more you listen, the more pop influences you hear.”

Boasting four guitarists, the half-dozen members churn out two-minute tracks that peel out like a dirt bike before crashing into a blast of fireworks, Van Halen riffs, adrenaline needles and cold pizza. The band’s live show — where Roman candles are a staple — plays out accordingly.

“When I was a kid, seeing Jimi Hendrix playing a guitar with his teeth ... you see something like that and want to go further,” Miller said. “We want to be as over-the-top as possible.”

They did just that on their anarchic debut, 2011’s Loose Jewels, but things are less explosive on Diarrhea Planet’s next movement, already in the can and due by summer. Sharing a producer with The Walkmen and Swans, the sophomore effort will showcase a grown-up band, but not one with clinched cheeks.

“We took a step back. It’s prettier,” Miller said. “It’s still got the power, and there are bangers, for sure — something for everybody.”

Hey! Read This:
Cosmostanza interview     
Jeff the Brotherhood interview     
The Walkmen interview    



 
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