
         
News Scissors for Lefty are signed to Eenie Meenie Records in US/Canada, Rough Trade Records in every territory outside of North America, and their upcoming LP will be released in the US on June 12, 2007. The band was named the "Best Up and Coming Indie Rock Band" by SF Weekly, the band has been setting off radars in both the U.S. and U.K., inciting NME to boast: "ambitious, sarcastic sophistopop quirky, promising, and quite possibly awesome." They played a whoping 7 shows at this year's SXSW and will be all over the US touring throughout the year.
Sound Melodic Indie-Pop
Info Scissors For Lefty's story involves Malaysian pop songs and intense
Beatles fixations, influential British indie labels and late night hot
tub parties, '80s dance nights and KISS solo records. But mostly it's a
story about friendship. "You find friends you like to hang out with,
you need some glue, you need a reason to hang out and spend time
together, and music is our easy excuse," says singer/guitarist Bryan
Garza, 27.
Of course, most friends who decide to jam for fun never get past the
garage. Scissors For Lefty have opened for the Arctic Monkeys in front
of 10,000 screaming Berliners. "The stadium was so packed that people's
fingers were at the pedals and their chins were on stage. If you
sported a bone, everyone would see," laughs Bryan.
The quintet -- featuring Bryan, his brother Stevie Garza, 25, and uncle
(don't ask) Robby Garza, 29, plus brothers Peter, 29, and James
Krimmel, 27 -- recently scored glowing reviews in NME, Billboard,
Spin.com, SF Weekly, and the LA Times, nabbing gigs with the Arctic
Monkeys, Blonde Redhead, Metric, Paul Weller, the Fratelli's, the Fiery
Furnaces, the Cribs, the Coup, Shiny Toy Guns, Panic! at the Disco, and
Dirty Pretty Things, along with numerous European festivals and
underground Jacuzzi bashes.
Bryan, James, and Peter started Scissors in 2000, while the former duo
was attending college in the Central Valley town of San Luis Obispo,
Calif. Even at the trio's beginnings, they synthesized a wide range of
influences. Both Peter and James studied classical piano for years and
shared their mother's gift for singing (she was a Malaysian pop star in
the mid-'60s and is still played on the radio in Borneo to this day),
while James also nurtured a serious Beatles obsession. "I remember
taping the Beatles A to Z show [off a radio station]," he says. "I had
this box of 14 tapes, and I would sit around in my room, listening to
them all day." Bryan, meanwhile, mixed his childhood hair-metal days
with a love for alt-rock titans like Radiohead and Björk and a growing
appreciation for '80s pop. "Everyone in San Luis Obispo would just
stand around at shows," he says. "I came across this whole new scene of
people that would go out dancing, and I thought, 'This is so
rebellious.'"
Following a move to San Francisco in 2002, the musicians added Robby --
who had been inspired to pick up the guitar after hearing Ace Frehley's
solo album. He gave the band's herky-jerky rhythms and sexed up vocal
harmonies the brawn they needed. One-time triathlete Stevie is the
final piece of the puzzle, having joined the group on bass in October
2006. Scissors' self-recorded, self-released debut, 2005's Bruno,
served as a sort of how-to primer for the band. For its follow up, the
act wanted something more representative of their performances. "We
wanted it to be playful and to sound like it does live," says Bryan.
"We're lighthearted and fun people, and we wanted to let that show."
The group utilized an outside producer: Charles Goodan, who's worked
with the Dust Brothers, Beck, and Carlos Santana. Over several weeks,
Scissors tracked new material in Silverlake's Sonora Studios, as well
as re-recorded two numbers from Bruno ("Ghetto Ways" and "Marsha,"
which would be released as a double A-Side single by influential UK
label Rough Trade). The disc was eventually mixed by Mark Needham,
who's worked with everyone from the Killers to Fleetwood Mac to Chris
Isaak.
The resulting Underhanded Romance due in the U.S. on L.A.'s Eeenie
Meenie Records, June 12 (and overseas on Rough Trade later this year)
feels both wildly fresh and instantly recognizable. There are
touchstones -- the Cure-like guitar of "X's Are Forever," the Modern
English breakdown of "You've Got the Moments," the delicate Beach
Boys-ish ballad of "Bring Us a Brick" -- but more than anything there
is exuberance and fun (remember fun?). Imagine the Strokes rip-snorting
rock, if Julian Casablancas were smiling instead of sneering. Imagine
the Gang of Four covering the early Kinks and Stones catalog, with a
healthy dose of American mischievousness. Imagine pumping bass, chunka
chunka guitar riffs, the kind of piano hooks that stay in your head for
days, all topped off with Bryan's hiccupping, lascivious vocals (not to
mention the occasional whistled bit, hand clap, or Jew's harp twang).
Songs like "Mama Your Boys Will Find a Home" (released as a single in
the U.K. via Rough Trade) and "You've Got Your Moments" are as giddily
insistent as anything Karen O could come up, without all that
bothersome ennui. "Lay Down Your Weapons" may be the most joyous tune
ever written from an ex-con's point of view, and "Marsha" is the most
festive kiss-off song since, well, the Violent Femmes' "Kiss Off."
Scissors For Lefty is a rock 'n' roll party machine, one that runs on
gasoline, cheap liquor, and BFF power. "Some bands don't look like
friends; they look like four people who are independently hoping they
succeed," says Bryan. "That's not us at all."
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