Posted on: August 9, 2010 Posted by: James McQuiston Comments: 0

Plan an escape, maybe not to South America, but definitely to a Thieves and Villains show when they hit your town!

8/11/2010

Crocodile Rock Cafe

Allentown

PA

8/15/2010

The Warehouse

La Crosse

WI

8/20/2010

Mt. Airy Firehall

Mt. Airy

MD

8/27/2010

Laserdome

Manheim

PA

About the band:

When it came to writing South America, THIEVES & VILLAINS decided to sculpt the album as if they were the only four people on earth to hear it. Looking for a new sense of direction, THIEVES & VILLAINS mentally escaped to a beautiful hiding place that they named South America. The band found that this venture in their collective minds would allow them to be free, which in-turn, helped create music that excited them, and that they would ultimately fall in love with. However, the record was still being created under the same confines as many bands today; a spastic sinking ship of a country that has never been as stressed out, paranoid, or misled as it is right now… an America that is truly going “South.” The result of this is the album title that came to represent the dichotomy of one location being the place you hate and love the most; the place you escape to, yet the place you despise. Produced by Tim Gilles, THIEVES & VILLAINS took an old approach and made it new again. In a world of over-produced and over-auto-tuned songs recorded take after take, the band set out to bring music as a whole, back to its roots. “We record the entire album to analog tape on Mr. Gilles’ vintage tape machines and used all our own gear and live tones. We didn’t do takes of anything to death and approached every section with a real “what you see is what you get” logic. What you’re listening to is not the productive of hours of tweaking…its the product of a few friends having fun and making music the old fashioned way.”

THIEVES & VILLAINS took the same indie-rock vibe as VAMPIRE WEEKEND, combined it with the childlike sense of wonder found in an early DANIEL JOHNSTON song, and added the quirkiness implemented in the Pinkerton-era of WEEZER while crafting their sophomore record THIEVES & VILLAINS ambitiously recorded South America to analog tape on vintage tape machines and used all their own gear and live tones. They didn’t record hundreds of takes on any song, and approached every section with real talent and logic. What you’ll listen to on South America is not the product of hours of tweaking, but rather the product of great friends having fun while making music the old-fashioned way.

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