Critic's Notebook

Republic Tigers

A crew of Digital Age composers, the Republic Tigers pass around song files like intraband demos, loading them onto ProTools rigs and sculpting massive creations from the initial song chunks. Starting with the hard elements of rock — guitar, drums, bass line, melody — the Kansas City band stacks vocal...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

A crew of Digital Age composers, the Republic Tigers pass around song files like intraband demos, loading them onto ProTools rigs and sculpting massive creations from the initial song chunks. Starting with the hard elements of rock — guitar, drums, bass line, melody — the Kansas City band stacks vocal layers, atmospheric keyboards, sampled sounds, chimes, echoes, hums, whirs and whatever else sounds good at the time. In creating these brilliant, crystalline pop hymns, the Tigers blur the line between old-fashioned songwriting and computerized song-making. “The Nerve,” a song found on its debut Keep Color about a robot boy longing for a human girl, illustrates the concept perfectly.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...