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The Sounding Board

Some Fear is defiant, resilient and a little sleepy on Word Eater

A weekly column where New Music Tuesdays live on. Conversation is encouraged in the comments.

Word Eater

Every Tuesday, the Sounding Board is a space for a short-ish review of a recent-ish release and conversations about new-to-you music. We’ll get things started with a write-up about a newer, likely under-heard album, and invite you to share your music musings in the comments.

Current image: The cover of Word Eater by Some Fear.

It was immediately clear that I needed to either turn Some Fear up, or turn Word Eater off.

That’s no knock on the Oklahoma City four-piece’s second album, which is both a step up from the band’s self-titled debut and an exceptionally solid collection of slow-developing, textured rock songs.1 This was mostly a self-inflicted dilemma.

It arose because I decided to celebrate the end of a brutal Southeast Alaska winter2 by getting up at 5 a.m., going on a four-hour photo walk,3 returning home, having breakfast, and setting out with my dog for a 35-minute drive to his favorite place to play fetch. I figured Some Fear could soundtrack that drive. A weekend listen would provide time for an inchoate first-listen opinion to develop into something more solid, and a new rock album might give me the jolt needed to stay moving and alert, in case freshly active deer and bear planned to use the same roadway as me.4 

Word Eater is simply not that kind of album. Its eight songs can all be found somewhere in the vast, foggy quagmire between slowcore and shoegaze. Some Fear imbues the tracks with a sense of dogged determination and weary resolve in the face of heavy headwinds, but a certain sluggishness and gloom is inherent to the chosen sound. 

Deliberate, dreamy noise, coupled with a slow, steady drive, had an analgesic charm, but I could hear the music starting to fade, the way a TV show becomes muffled as sleep approaches. Looking for a spark before turning to my trusty running playlist, I cranked the volume on Word Eater up, and I found enough intriguing detail to keep my mind busy. The occasional bracing guitar noise and a few relatively upbeat moments helped, too.

The abrasive, clamorous outbursts that make “Harmony” an ironic title are a potent antidote to drowsiness. Ditto the opening of “Rot,” which features a combination of wailing guitar and thundering drums that brings classic Smashing Pumpkins albums to mind before the song breaks into a less-urgent, still-purposeful lope. Surprisingly immediate vocals, and exceptionally pretty harmonies on a few songs weren’t invigorating, but they were engaging.

Many bands with an appreciation for patient melodies and bleary guitar bury vocals deep in the mix or under heaps of effects, which can make lyrical content feel besides the point. Some Fear play it much more straight. Branden “Bran” Palesano, who began Some Fear as a solo project before linking up with drummer Ray Morgan, then adding bassist Lennon Bramlett and guitarist James Tunell to the mix, sometimes favors the breathy, ethereal delivery that’s so associated with shoegaze, but Palesano usually sings clearly and without warbling effects. That makes parsing out the album’s core themes and point of view relatively easy.5

A perceptible perspective is easily Word Eater‘s biggest strength, giving the album an obvious, beating heart. Word Eater is concerned with maintaining hope despite a series of crushing disappointments, forging meaningful human connections and embracing something like ascetism to inflict duress on those who most benefit from compulsive consumerism. It’s heady, big-picture stuff.

Sometimes, that’s expressed in a pointed, heavy way, but there are moments of levity, too. The album’s title track opens with the line “I ate it up, all the words I said / They don’t taste right, so I’ll go to bed,” which is a profoundly amusing way to describe depression-napping off the sting of being wrong about something.

It’s enough to overcome the somnolence inherent to the sentiment — and temporary bouts of highway hypnosis.

  1. Released April 24 via Rite Field Records. The label is also home to Pope, whose impending album BfM might show up in this space in the next couple of weeks. ↩︎
  2. Normally, they’re better than the Northern Illinois winters I knew for most of my life, but this one featured record-breaking snow and cold that combined to force me away from the outdoor spaces I love for roughly four months. During that same time, I also had to say goodbye to a beloved dog and cracked a rib while walking a less-beloved dog. Cornwallis probably had it worse, but truly it was my winter of discontent. ↩︎
  3. I got this eagle photo for my efforts, so it was ultimately a sound choice. ↩︎
  4. Last year, I gave a deer a “love tap” with my car after it bolted out of some brush and into the road. Both my car and the deer were OK, but I felt terrible about it for weeks. ↩︎
  5. These are unpacked in greater detail in this Tape Wounds Q&A with Some Fear founder Branden “Bran” Palesano. ↩︎