KILROY profile picture

KILROY

About Me

Kilroy, originally called...Kilroy, Born in Cordele, Ga. Garage, afterschool. First song i remember playing: Keep the Glove By Dinosaur. Keven On Guitar, Mike on Purple TAMA Drumkit. Dabbled in punkish, grungy, poppy, loud stuff, until songwrighting became more and more effectual. We became older, Cordele became Athens, we did a record last year, ready to do a new one, Just bought a van. Plan to tour soon....

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 21/08/2005
Band Website: www.kilroymusic.com
Band Members: Keven Mike Brent Shannon
Sounds Like: Before jokesters like Toby Keith got ahold of the imagery, there was something to be said about being a uniquely American band. And really, there still is. There’s a subtext and beauty to so much of the best American music and Athens four-piece Kilroy fits in this tradition alongside the likes of Neil Young, the Feelies, the Dream Syndicate, the Scud Mountain Boys and Tom Petty. Hell, the band is named after the distinctive brand of graffiti left by U.S. troops throughout Europe during World War One - it’s hard to get more American than that.“Tenderfoot” follows the pathways of the aforementioned Young with its fuzzy, grand intro and minor-key chord progression. “Blue Star on a Gray Field” slowly drifts along with a guitar melody straight out of the Galaxie 500 songbook, albeit with a thousand times more punch. When a pretty guitar interlude occurs around four minutes in, it serves the actual song rather than merely showcasing a particular performer’s ego, and this is something that Kilroy does very well. The band uses as much studio action as it needs to get the songs across, but the focus is conveying the songs; and as a result, the group shines.Kilroy is lyrically strong as well, with one line in particular resonating throughout the album. On “Old Money,” “Well, oh, well / put me under the jail / Lord knows I was the hammer and the nail” is the lyrical touchstone of an album that deals heavily with loss, regret, soft melancholy and tenderness.The sole misstep on this record is the crawling psychedelia of the intro to “The Mayan.” But there’s just so much to love about this album that to call it perfect would risk having people dismiss it as easily. And that would be a shame because, even though nothing may be perfect, The Violent Jolt of the Capitol comes pretty damn close. Gordon Lamb
Record Label:

My Blog

Your background check could cost you the job

But you didn't need that job anyway.
Posted by on Mon, 07 Jul 2008 17:35:00 GMT

LUCKY POISON BUCKEYE

Dear Reader,You thought things were bad, but really you had no idea. But as you imagine how it would be in some sunny california, things are hitting a perfect slant on glass atsunset. things can be...
Posted by on Mon, 23 Jun 2008 20:49:00 GMT

Highlighted in Flagpole, May 2006

ABC Featured Artist Sometimes a band just sideswipes you. When I first took a look at the album The Violent Jolt of the Capitol, which Kilroy self-released earlier this year, I wasn't expectin...
Posted by on Fri, 27 Oct 2006 13:40:00 GMT

Flagpole's review of our new record

Before jokesters like Toby Keith got ahold of the imagery, there was something to be said about being a uniquely American band. And really, there still is. Theres a subtext and beauty to so much of t...
Posted by on Mon, 30 Jan 2006 20:50:00 GMT

kilroy in flagpole's club notes

I've always admired Kilroy for its logo, which looks like a cross between a dragon and a chicken, and now after seeing the name crop up again and again, I finally get to hear how these lads shape up. ...
Posted by on Sun, 18 Dec 2005 09:19:00 GMT