Single Reviews: TELL – “Sweet Proximity” and “Boiling the Ocean”

photo by Dan Saltzman; photo courtesy of Knyvet

Single Reviews of TELL: “Sweet Proximity” and “Boiling the Ocean”

TELL delivers some heavy, distorted, edgy tunefulness with its two latest singles, “Sweet Proximity” and “Boiling the Ocean.” With these releases, David Wildman (guitar, lead vocals), Jay Raffi (bass, vocals), Patrick Crann: (drums), and Jim Foster (guitar, vocals) serve up a pair of sneakily hooky, noisy rock songs for the consistently unnerved and persistently agitated music fan.

illustration by Morrison Digital Art; designed by J. Kaliontzis; image courtesy of Knyvet

‘Sweet Proximity,’” notes Foster, “manifests the band’s intense feelings about the current global situation; it’s the drastic sound of things falling apart. It might be an unhinged, disjointed fit somewhat resembling a muscle spasm or near-fatal conniption, but you can definitely dance to it.” Indeed, from the very first distorted guitar riff, the song is engaging, with its intense delivery mixed with a finesse that dances around the song’s rhythm and melody. It’s hypnotically catchy with a punk edginess, all the while being undeniably rock ‘n roll.

illustration by Morrison Digital Art; designed by J. Kaliontzis; image courtesy of Knyvet

“Boiling the Ocean,” meanwhile, covers a dramatically different topic; namely, the band’s willingness to do whatever it takes to get its music noticed. It’s a musically jangly rock ‘n roll tune that at times angrily laments the role the internet plays in music promotion and discovery while at other times seeming to resignedly accept it – lyrically, “whatever it takes is cool.” The opening drum beat sets the stage, while the guitars and vocals seem barely constrained in the verses, congealing into a singalongable chorus.

Together, “Sweet Proximity” and “Boiling the Ocean” offer two very different vibes that are tied together by TELL’s identifiable almost-unhinged, raucous rock delivery style. Two very engaging songs that fans of a broad swath of rock ‘n roll should check out.

 

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