Doors: 8pm
Show: 9pm
Tickets: $18
Ages: 18+
Opening: The Show is in the Rainbow
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Monday, October 27th: The Faint
Omaha, NE's the Faint have gone through countless
changes in their relatively short career, but with each shift, both in
terms of personnel and style, they have made a distinct new impression
and turned more and more heads. Originally called Norman Bailer and
featuring current members Clark and Todd Baechle (later he changed his
name to Todd Fink, after marrying future Saddle Creek recording artist
Orenda Fink of Azure Ray),
as well as bassist A very limited cassette release and a few tracks on split 7"s and samplers were the band's only output, but the spark was there, and after adding Matt Bowen to the mix, the Faint proper first came into being around 1998. Media, the group's first full-length, was still a far cry from their later sounds, but the record was a fitting introduction to the band that featured a bevy of conflicting sounds, from new wave-inspired pop to Lullaby for the Working Class-style acoustic dirges. It wasn't the perfect record, but it was an inspired start that gave the band a good idea of what they were, and more importantly were not, striving for. In the wake of Media, the band set out to add something special to their live show, and in the course of the year, Bowen left the band and Jacob Thiele joined up to add the all-too-important keyboard sounds into the mix. Early 1999 saw the band re-enter the studio with a new agenda, focusing on danceable beats, catchy keyboards, and an '80s-influenced sound that both revered and reinvented the past. The result was Blank-Wave Arcade (Saddle Creek), a pulsating record about sexuality, transportation, and mass consumption that instantly attracted hordes of new fans who were blown away by the group's distinctive new sound. The new material, along with a seizure-inducing D.I.Y. live light show and incorrigible on-stage energy, created a major buzz, and soon the Faint were revered as the second coming of new wave genius. A series of remixes on both a limited-edition LP and a tour to support a CD from Insound furthered the hype, and by the time the Faint entered the studio yet again in early 2001, the buzz had grown to a resounding roar.
In August of 2001, the group released its third LP, Danse Macabre
(Saddle Creek), a somewhat darker exploration of the styles hinted at
on Blank-Wave Arcade. They also added a guitarist by the name of Dapose
(born Mike Dappen), whose death metal past worked perfectly with the
gloomy, but still oddly upbeat, sentiments of the new record. The disc
was released to instant acclaim and almost immediately became one of
the label's best-selling titles. The Faint followed it up with even
more touring and also found the time to release the Mote/Dust 12" (GSL)
in October of 2001, featuring two more remixes, a Sonic Youth cover, and a new track featuring Bright Eyes
songsmith Conor Oberst. The band was all quiet on the recording front
until March of 2003, when they released an album of remixes from Danse
Macabre called, strangely enough, Danse Macabre Remixes. The disc
featured remixes by artists like Paul Oakenfold,
Photek, and Medicine. They followed this up with Wet from Birth, which
was released in fall 2004. The band remixed "Meet Your Master" from Nine Inch Nails' Year Zero, while bassist Joel Peterson reworked Of Montreal's
"Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games" under his Broken Spindles
alias. The Faint built their own studio, named Enamel, and formed their
own label, Blank.Wav, on which they released their fourth album
Fasciinatiion in summer 2008. |