Profile
Name:
Company of Thieves
Channel Views:
26,455
Style:
Indie Rock
Joined:
April 30, 2008
Last Sign In:
5 days ago
Subscribers:
1,470
Website:
Official YouTube Channel of Chicago-based band, Company of Thieves!
About Me:
These exciting if uncertain times are reflected in the eclectic sound of Ordinary Riches, an album that moves effortlessly from the seemingly jaunty, piano-led "In Passing" and the catchy pop tones of "Pressure" to the arena-ready sing-along chorus of "New Letters" and the Jonny Greenwood-ish guitar figures on "Old Letters." They are erudite without being pretentious, hooky without being saccharine, and plainly dedicated to its ideals, Company of Thieves' stunning debut album Ordinary Riches reveals a band very much of its time.
"It's true what they say about new bands, that you wait your whole life to write your first record," says guitarist Marc Walloch. "This is the sound of us piecing together things we wanted to try out, playing different parts to see what happened."
"We're influenced by a lot of different artists," Schatz adds. "Everything from jazz and Motown to Billie Holiday and the Beatles. Seeing how they expressed themselves helped us to figure out another way to express ourselves in music.
"It's like when you read a really good novel," she continues, "and you end up thinking like that character, or in that writer's style."
While the influences are at times detectable a little Fiona Apple angst here, a bit of John Lennon's social activism there the band is far from being mere mockingbirds.
"That's where the band's name comes from," Walloch says. "We've taken what we know and put our own twist on it. It's a kind of 'thievery,' but it's all about paying our respects to what we were inspired by."
The band also strives to hearken back to a time when songs' subject matter went beyond hitting the dance floor and hooking up. Time and again, Ordinary Riches presents a cinematic vision of a relationship gone sour or a world in turmoil that speaks to deeper truths.
"We all go through life processing so many things all the time the weather, the setting, the mood," Schatz says. "Lyrically, we're exploring real-life experiences and how people navigate relationships. Traveling around the Midwest allowed us to see America for what it is and isn't, and helped us get in touch with ourselves."
As such, Company of Thieves songs are often more outward- than inner-looking. "They're not necessarily first person; more from the point of view of a camera," she says. "This is about us presenting our worldview and how we see things today."
That's not to say the album's all about abstract emotion, however. "The Tornado Song" is an intensely personal song for Schatz, based upon a dream of her divorced family trying to reconcile itself and highlighted by a climactic, near-operatic peal of emotion from the gifted singer.
"That's a great example of how we're about not limiting ourselves," Walloch says. "It's not something you hear on every pop/rock album, and it was a challenge for Genevieve but at the same time it showcases her different vocal abilities. We never feel like we 'can't' do something, and we plan to limit ourselves even less in the future."
One constant factor, Schatz says, will be the band's empathy with the world around them and their peers.
"A lot of people come from a place that's very judgmental, which in turn makes them paranoid about what people are thinking of them. That results in their not allowing themselves to truly connect with someone and have a real relationship, or even a genuine conversation.
"A friend of ours recently said that, for all its flaws, Chicago is a forgiving city, and we really do come from a forgiving place" she adds. "It's about wanting to hear somebody's story. Isn't that what life is all about?"
Record Label:
Wind-Up Records
Label Type:
Independent
Band Members:
Genevieve Schatz (vocals)/Marc Walloch (guitar)/Mike Ortiz (drums)
Influences:
The Beatles, Wilco, Billie Holiday, Ryan Adams, Bob Dylan, The Rolling Stones, The Police, Simon and Garfunkel, Fiona Apple, Coldplay, Radiohead, Flaming Lips, Broken Social Scene, Elliott Smith, The Doors, The Zombies... and pretty much anything that our ears and brain are keen to. The list could go on forever!
Country:
United States
Albums:







love that song btw. :)