Eighteen Individual Eyes

Eighteen Individual Eyes play darkly sensual musique noir, their first album Unnovae Nights an intoxicating, trembling journey through rock’s primal subconscious. It’s a narcotic dazzle, a beautiful alternate world in shadows, addictive relations at its beating heart. The songs are as lyrically meaningful and layered as the music created for them. The band is part of a new tribe of groups that can’t be easily categorized, but are finding fans who want to be transfixed by music that delivers them someplace else. “I travel places in my head,” lead vocalist/guitarist Irene Barber says about when creates, “I feel an interconnectedness between my life and what I’m singing. When I am feeling disconnected, I channel that into a song, and in turn the song itself plugs me back into a new place.” Guitarist Jamie Aaron adds, “And we’re trying to paint a picture of doing that, not just slapping some guitar on there.”

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Unnovae Nights sounds like a full-length psychological thriller, as legendary NW producer Matt Bayles (Cursive, Minus The Bear, Russian Circles) has shrewdly recorded tech-obsessed, guitar gear-geek Jamie, whose sonic alchemy engineers worlds of sound out of layers of assertive riffs and dazzling chord tangles. This is rhythmically assisted by the bliss of Samantha Wood’s dark bass throb, and the kinetic drumming of Andy King (Lovesick Empire, See Me River). Bayles made the group acutely mindful of their playing, very aware of what they were doing for ten days in his Red Room Studios in December 2011 and they enjoyed every minute of it. “We wanted to work with Matt no matter what,” Jamie says, adding "we were excited to see what he would do with us considering he is mostly a hardcore and post-hardcore producer." His vivid work amplifies their compositions so intricate and daring, to be as beautiful as they are forceful. “There’s a bad-assness to what we’ve created together,” Sam says, also describing Irene’s stories describing “characters freaking out in songs both tender and disturbing.”

Unnovae Nights’ title refers to the kind of people who don’t draw unnecessary attention to themselves, but burn in quiet, illuminated glory, sometimes oblivious to their own magnetism. Reminiscent of cult movies such as Heavenly Creatures, where two people fall into each other desperately and wrestle with keeping sane (or collaborating against it), it reflects Irene’s own coming to terms with her sense of identity and sexuality, and the music freak tendencies of the band, who swap You Tube videos and LPs and player-crushes with each other as fervently as they write, rehearse, and ferociously record. In the music scene, EIE has a special place, evoking both Warpaint and Wild Flag, paradoxically more poppy and more heavy than either of those bands. Barber (ex-Hungry Pines), Aaron (H Is For Hellgate), Wood, and King have delivered a debut that will make good on the praise given them from media sources such as NPR’s Robin Hilton. Following up their tour last year with The Bruises, Eighteen Individual Eyes are ready to release Unnovae Nights in early March, and then play out and tour as much as possible after its expansive charms excite new and old fans alike.

Past Shows


Feb
26
th
2013
7th St Entry
Feb
26
th
2013
7th St Entry

The Deer Tracks

with Eighteen Individual Eyes and Posh Lost

More Shows

Jan
27
th
First Avenue

Geordie Greep

with NNAMDÏ
Apr
10
th
First Avenue

Alan Sparhawk & Mount Eerie

Mar
29
th
Turf Club

The Rocket Summer

with Mae
Dec
26
th
Turf Club

The Honeydogs

with The Penny Peaches