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Rotary Downs

Rotary Downs

About Me

Check out Rotary Downs on CurrentTV!
"The rebirth of the New Orleans music scene has lifted the spirits of a city that has fallen on hard times. Leading the charge, bands like Rotary Downs have been touring to packed houses in Louisiana and around the country. Their sound is a good mix of soulful NOLA jazz rhythms, modern guitar and inspired lyrics." - CurrentTV
Check out the Rotary Downs music video for "B/W"!
Some recent press clippings about Rotary Downs:
"Taking a page from pre-millennial, post-modern poppers like Beck and Soul Coughing, Rotary Downs reels freely between quizzical and intellectual. Chained to the Chariot, the New Orleans quartet's third full-length, pivots pedal steel, trumpet and organ on top of grandly unpredictable arrangements; the fun is watching which way these songs fall. Singer James Marler sounds like has been taking double shots of thesaurus, unraveling densely packed rhymes in his abstracted lyrics. Too lo-fi to be baroque, too catchy to be experimental, songs like "G-7 Hit!" and "A Feast in Squalor" swerve into woozy grooves but don't stay for long."
- Jonathan Zwickel, Rhapsody.com
"...it was hard to imagine that I’d see a more adventurous and accessible performance than Rotary Downs (and I didn’t). The band’s melodic indie rock was tested with a dissonant guitar at times, energized by changing textures throughout, and defined by song structures that constantly surprised... a far more interesting, more human tension between cool and passion, between clarity and privacy, and between contact and distance. The set suggested New Orleans really ought to be paying a lot more attention to Rotary Downs."
- Alex Rawls, Offbeat Magazine
“Local space-rockers Rotary Downs have been together since 1999, and as one of the driving stalwarts in the under-praised genre of experimental New Orleans indie-pop... After three wildly eclectic self-released offerings, they’ve emerged from their Katrina experience with a new 14-song opus, Chained to the Chariot, that’s pretty much aces... The addition of more drums, more assertive basslines and especially the presence of Matt Aguiluz on keyboards and trumpet, gives their formerly soft fuzz-guitar and pedal-steel-driven sound an extra dose of texture; the rich layers of sound also make it great with the headphones. “g-7 hit!” is a sunny, sloppy, psychedelic march that’s the gold-star track for the album. Marler’s laconic vocals and Smith’s upbeat drumming on “A Feast in Squalor” evoke Brendan Benson’s warm power-pop. The stormy Western ballad “Body of an Outlaw” is a black cosmic gunfight with a dash of creepy circus music. It’s a diverse album that ricochets from roots-tinged psychedelia to edgier synth-pop to excursions along the spaceways, but with a sure hand on the wheel.”
- Alison Fensterstock, Gambit Weekly
"There is a new sound emerging from the rebirth of New Orleans. There's an element of that classic NOLA brass in this new sound, but these ain't no jazzy brass bands... Rotary Downs began with a two hour set that lit the bar on fire... RD played several new songs and just about every track from their incredible 2006 release Chained To The Chariot. If Pavement and Beck had some sort of love baby and raised him in New Orleans after Katrina, this is what it would sound like. There's a massive buzz building behind Rotary Downs, and if their shows Saturday at the Fairgrounds and Saturday night at The Saturn Bar are any indication, the world will soon find out what the new New Orleans sounds like."
- Kayceman, Jambase.com
"Can a rock ‘n roll band save a sunken city? Hurricane Katrina and her aftermath seized many souls from the beloved city of New Orleans... We all know how powerful music can be in its ability to affect social change and expedite healing. The history of New Orleans is so deeply rooted in its music that it only makes sense the rebuilding would start with the artists... But it’s not only the sound of brass and blues that are bubbling back up in this aftermath. An unlikely sound from the Crescent City is emerging to do its part to revitalize the city’s music scene — indie rock. Rotary Downs is a band that is rising to this challenge."
- Superdee, GlideMagazine
Read more reviews here.
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My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 12/3/2004
Band Website: rotarydowns.com
Band Members: James Marler, Chris Colombo, Zack Smith, Jason Rhein, Cory Schultz
Influences: Neil Diamond, Neil Sedaka, Neil Young, Neil Hamburger, Vince Neal
Sounds Like: ROTARY DOWNS NEWS:

We're pleased to announce that we'll be part of this year's Voodoo Fest in New Orleans, sharing the stage with the likes of Rage Against the Machine, Spoon, Wilco and others. Click here to find out this years full Voodoo Fest lineup..it's a wicked killah.

Also, sign up for text updates from Voodoo using this widget:

Thank you all for an amazing May. With your support at Jazz Fest, the Saturn, One Eyed Jacks and our weekend run in New York, we had one of our best months playing new tunes for you and throwing out some even newer nuggets. We have been hitting the practice space this summer working on a crop of new songs for the next album, and hope you can come see us at Voodoo Fest.

Check out Rotary Downs live at Hot Rocks Party at The Delancey in NYC:

Record Label: None
Type of Label: None

My Blog

The juggle

Ask the Juggler: "So, why at times do i find myself at peace in chaos." woodchuck, MNInteresting question woodchuck. I would have to say in times of repeated crisis or hard times, the mind (thusly the...
Posted by Rotary Downs on Wed, 07 Jun 2006 08:31:00 PST

Who's your favorite Peanuts character and why?

I have to go with Charlie Brown, although it's close between him and Snoopy. People think Charlie's bummed out most of the time, but that didn't happen as often in the early years (which are my faves...
Posted by Rotary Downs on Mon, 01 Jan 1900 12:00:00 PST