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The Interchangeable Hearts Down in the hole

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Description
The Interchangeable Hearts’ music drips with rich melodies and a musical arrangement that smartly allows the music to sink in without exhibiting a forced complexity.

The Interchangeable Hearts create music with rich textures and haunting melodies. The recent addition of multi-instrumentalist Kirk Heydt on guitar, cello, and saxophone has taken the Hearts exhibition to new heights. Vocalist and keyboardist Lina Hancock's unique, dreamy voice - reminiscent of Chan Marshall (Cat Power) or Hope Sandoval (Mazzy Star) - seduces the listener. The smooth bass lines and poignant rhythms forged by Shawn Scott and Ellard respectively, provide a solid foundation for the Interchangeable Hearts familiar yet original sound.

The Interchangeable Hearts succeed at something that many bands try but never accomplish, get you to forget you are listening to music.
Network
city
San Francisco
state/country
CA, US
time
? - present
 
 
Custom
Band Members
Lina - Vocals & Keyboard Ellard - Drums Shawn - Bass Kirk - Guitar, Cello, Saxophone
Other Artists
The American Analog Set, Trans Am, The Cardigans, Dungen, Of Montreal, MGMT, Sigur Ros
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Blog Posts

blog post Performer Magazine Review
Category: Album Reviews
Posted: Sep 11, 2008 at 5:38 PM
Current mood: thankful
The Interchangeable Hearts
Lost
Recorded and engineered by Ellard at Lennon
Studio in San Francisco, CA | Mixed and
mastered by Ellard at Zeitgeist Rekords Studio
| Produced by The Interchangeable Hearts



Browsing Craigslist advertisements can be hit or miss. For the three musicians in San Francisco’s The Interchangeable Hearts, however, finding each other via the popular

website may have been a priceless blessing, evidenced in their debut six-song EP, ironically titled Lost.

Lina Hancock’s seductive vocals couple with rich melodies and arrangements as intricate as the heart itself to create a smooth feel throughout, while all of these unique parts keep the band beating strong. Most importantly, the new trio accomplishes this without exhibiting a forced complexity.

Appropriately introducing the album is one of its standout tracks, “Now That I’m Gone,” which begins with fluid bass and organ instrumentation and stark vocals, and gives way to a memorable chorus that highlights the perils of relationships and unrequited love. Hancock proclaims passionately, “We can’t be together / But I will love you forever / Try to understand.” Hancock’s hypnotic delivery impressively parallels that of Neko Case, Chan Marshall and Hope Sandoval, yet remains distinctly her own.

Throughout the rest of the EP, the songs are noticeably well-written and have an eerie yet delicate feel to them, highlighted best in “Maze.” Another notable track, “On My Knees” is an up-tempo offering with an appealing piano lead and a solid breakdown that keeps with the relationship theme with the lines “You won’t get out of my mind / I dream about you every night / And that ain’t right.” Overall, the release establishes The Interchangeable Hearts’ presence in the Bay Area music scene with solid indie-pop splendor.

Call off the search! In Lost, the three musicians seeking out a band may have found what they were looking for — and a whole lot more. (Zeitgeist Rekords)

Original Posting:
http://www.performermag.com/wcp.recordedreviews.0807.php
blog post SF Guardian Review - Lost Happily Found
Category: Album Reviews
Posted: Sep 11, 2008 at 5:35 PM
Current mood: thankful
THE INTERCHANGEABLE HEARTS
Lost
(Zeitgeist)

By Todd Lavoie

Losing oneself isn't necessarily something to shy away from; in the case of the debut EP from San Francisco trio Interchangeable Hearts, such an outcome should probably be welcomed. Fronted by the coolly unhurried vocals of Lina Hancock, the three-piece arrives well-versed in matching stark atmospherics with melancholic ruminations on matters of love, at times recalling Midnight Movies at their most minimal or Sub Pop-era Saint Etienne at their most somber.

"Now That I'm Gone" is a captivating opening statement, starting off with a ghostly slink of haunted-house organ and sumptuously detached vocals before spinning itself into hi-hat- and bubble-bass-driven disco release, with Hancock achieving a curious blend of resignation and euphoria in her dancefloor declaration, "All the stars in the sky and the light in my eyes/it makes me fall apart." Fluid bass lines and weightless organ whirrs also largely inform the engrossingly floatable handclap-funk of "March," and the elegant balladry of "Be Mine" glides along with a tearful melody and stately piano worthy of Burt Bacharach - think Ivy without the French-accented vocals.

"Maze" offers the Interchangeable Hearts at their most spooked-out, thanks to the billowing puffs of organ which keep the song hovering somewhere in the ether. Top marks, however, go to "On My Knees," a coy tempo-shifter buoyed by Hancock's taunting chorus of "look me in the eyes and make me remember you."

original posting:
http://www.sfbg.com/blogs/music/2008/04/interchangeable_hearts_lost_ha.html

Profile Comments

Mar 31st, 3:03pm
i heart you sometimes.
Sep 20th, 7:02am
hai..
enx sa add..

^^,
Sep 19th, 8:18pm
nice tracks
Sep 17th, 4:54pm
Hey, thanks for checking us out! I really dig your stuff. Keep an eye out as there is plenty more to come, and keep up the good work.
Sep 14th, 5:58pm
Thanks for finding me!
Sep 12th, 1:56am
thanks for the add :3
Sep 11th, 3:17pm
Thanks for the friend request! Good stuff you've got here.
- Baeblemusic
Sep 10th, 10:40pm
Thanks for the request. Love the music. Keep up the good work.
Sep 10th, 10:21pm
Thanks for finding me. Like the songs. Like the graphic too, like a sexy, eyeless lion.