Additional information
This is an Enhanced CD which contains multimedia computer files as well as regular audio tracks. Seafood: David Line (vocals, guitar); Kevin Hendrick (vocals, bass); Caroline Banks (vocals, drums); Charles Macleod (guitar). Additional personnel: Melvin Duffy (pedal steel); Leo (cello); Sarah Measures (flute); A British band that crafts some intelligent indie-rock sounds, Seafood have cultivated an impressive cult following across the globe. SURVIVING THE QUIET includes 12 tracks. CD contains 2 bonus tracks. They've opened for the Fall, played Pixies tribute shows, and recorded with a member of Girls Against Boys, and yet they act as if all this was the only logical thing to do for a band based out of London. Thus, like Feeder or Raging Speedhorn before them, Seafood is one of those British bands who responds to the influx of overseas nu-metal and Yank boy bands by sounding more American than most Americans. "Guntrip" is antagonistic and infirm, like Dinosaur Jr. crawling out of flaming car wreckage. "Easy Path" has the obverse timbre of Madder Rose or Sebadoh. Then again, they're not always going for vitriol. Often, the lead singer unclenches long enough to sing with tweezing shame ("Belt") and the band suppresses the instinct to throttle like an Urge Overkill record, lending an unfashionable and sensitive edge to an album otherwise made by people trying so hard to displease the British mainland by producing songs like they belong on MTV's Alternative Nation ("Folksong Crisis," "Led By Bison"). Clearly, the attempt to make Surviving the Quiet rival the output of '90s American independents is like resolving to fix a crick in your neck with a guillotine, but Seafood does uncensored transatlantic reduplication surprisingly well. ~ Dean Carlson