Before we get into the best music of the year, what better to preface the past year than Surrogate's Love Is For The Rich. My main purpose for posting this is first, that Chris really enjoyed this review, and second, this album felt more real than most and is worth a serious listen. Here's our review from http://musicunderfire.com/:
There’s a part of folk music that drives listeners away. While this style bellows compelling simplistic foundations for some, this underappreciated sense for the non-syndicated music genre is found underlying in many forms of music. Few groups can make this as likeable as it seems odd to fall into, especially for an alternative/indie lover, but in this case Surrogate has done just so.
Dwelling from the West, where pure, good music seems to sit calmly, and appease without appearing too overbearing, Surrogate exposes their passionate lyrics with the percussions of Jordan Mallory and the talents of multi-instrumentalist and lead vocalist, Chris Keene (guitar, bass, piano, keyboard, accordion, banjo, xylophone, percussion and programming). Delicately trimming the fat from minimalist indie-pop styles, Surrogate's approach gently persuades a light, folksy attitude; a style that gravitates outside the folk genre and tidally ebbs onto the alternative plateau. The result: an unfounded musical approach enough to gam your gullet.
There’s a part of folk music that drives listeners away. While this style bellows compelling simplistic foundations for some, this underappreciated sense for the non-syndicated music genre is found underlying in many forms of music. Few groups can make this as likeable as it seems odd to fall into, especially for an alternative/indie lover, but in this case Surrogate has done just so.
Dwelling from the West, where pure, good music seems to sit calmly, and appease without appearing too overbearing, Surrogate exposes their passionate lyrics with the percussions of Jordan Mallory and the talents of multi-instrumentalist and lead vocalist, Chris Keene (guitar, bass, piano, keyboard, accordion, banjo, xylophone, percussion and programming). Delicately trimming the fat from minimalist indie-pop styles, Surrogate's approach gently persuades a light, folksy attitude; a style that gravitates outside the folk genre and tidally ebbs onto the alternative plateau. The result: an unfounded musical approach enough to gam your gullet.
At first glimpse, Surrogate appears flimsy, with

Songs such as “Easy” expose Keene’s vocal abilities as wavering, unsure or tepid in song style, yet controlled on the high notes, and withering on the low ones. This doesn’t affect the album in t

Without any upbeat or off-kilter basics Mallory and Keene would otherwise have failed on this album, which is why the success of album flow plays such an important part in Love Is For The Rich. From the complexity of elements put into “Stay Out Of The Sun” to the perfect reminiscent philosophies primed over “Upside Down Pictures”, the drastic measures shown here germinate the album from a raggedy weed to a symmetrical petal. Simply put, Surrogate has outdone themselves with their first album.
Whether it is the sincerity, or wholeheartedness that Love Is For The Rich captures, the basic theme is that of a gentle bear. With a quiet country town atmosphere to the album, the harmonics are richly constructed and the instrumental variances are well accompanied by the intrinsic complaisance set forth through the lyrics. Love Is For The Rich chalks an outstanding first effort and more first-class efforts should be expected to follow.
Surrogate - Death Penalty (acoustic)
Labels: Album Review, Love Is For The Rich, Surrogate
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