In
July 2012 Jared Shaw and Chel Browne sent a couple of low-fi demos to
Peats Ridge Festival on a whim. Having played only one live show
together, their obsession with music was very much a private affair up
until then, and neither expected the illustrious Sydney music festival
to respond at all. But respond they did, and just a few months later the
duo stood together on stage in the eastern-psychedelic-themed ‘Chai
Tent’ and warmed an unsuspecting audience with hazy sixties-inspired
songs about love, loss and death, blending delicate vocal harmonies with
somber misty tones.
Borrowing the name of the building they lived in, and guided by a deep
appreciation for the folk and psychedelic pop of the sixties and
seventies, the duo quickly expanded to five members as they explored
their wider musical tastes. Drawing on the psychedelic sounds of bands
like Jefferson Airplane, Jimmie Spheeris, and early Pink Floyd, coupled
with an infatuation with nineties alt-psych idols Brian Jonestown
Massacre and Mazzy Star, Elstow started work on their debut EP in 2013. Released the following year, AS THE SUN FALLS
was five tracks of dreamy psychedelic landscapes fused with a moody
folk sensibility. Both personal and surreal, bloggers described it as
“music to lose yourself to,” and “a psychedelic romance.”
Harnessing an atmospheric and increasingly dynamic live set, the band
spent 2014 playing all over their hometown of Sydney, winning over
unsuspecting hearts one mind-bending show at a time. Their sound, which
has been described as ‘neo-psychedelic-dream-folk,’ has been evolving
slowly and surely, refusing to remain static.
In the late months of 2014, Elstow went back into the studio to record their new single, ‘Evil Dreams.’
Despite the sinister sounding name, and promises of a “very weird”
video to accompany it, the new song is described by Shaw as “a little
more upbeat than the EP,” and combines Elstow’s dreamlike psychedelic overtones with a breezy sunshine-laden chorus. ‘Evil Dreams’
swings between verses of doubtful self-reflection and a chorus of
daydream surrender. Carefully woven vocal harmonies float amidst an
abundance of tremolo guitars, delay, and crisp tambourines; ‘Evil Dreams’ is as ambitious as it is timeless.
“This is not music to headbang to or that is likely cause a riot but if
you want music to lose yourself to then Elstow might just be the band
for you. Perfect stuff for the end of summer.”
Listen With Monger
“The track is called Turning Images, and has a harmonic chorus that is
perfect for your Friday. Is it just me, or do the vocals have a bit of a
Blue Oyster Cult / Don’t Fear the Reaper vibe”
Pete Hates Music
www.soundcloud.com/elstowband
www.elstowband.com
www.triplejunearthed.com/artist/elstow
www.facebook.com/elstowband
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