performing LIVE on the Sub City Take Action Tour 2009
with
Meg & Dia / Breathe Carolina
Every Avenue / Anarbor
on Tuesday February 17 -67PM DOORS
The Palladium - Worcester, MA
ALL AGES!
Tickets cost $20.00 and are available
NOW at all
stores,
online at
or to charge-by-phone call (800) 477-6849.
TAKE
ACTION TOUR INFO:
Hopeless Records, through their non
profit organization Sub City is pleased
to once again organize and present the
Take Action! Tour. The 2009 lineup will
feature headliner CUTE IS WHAT WE AIM
FOR, along with MEG & DIA, BREATHE
CAROLINA, EVERY AVENUE, and ANARBOR. The
annual nationwide charity tour, now in
its eighth year, raises funds and
awareness for youth involvement in
charitable action, and for the second
straight year Take Action has chosen
not-for-profit organization
DoSomething.org to benefit from the
funds raised and to help spread the
message of action to young people across
the country.
DoSomething.org is a national
not-for-profit that believes that young
people have the power to make a
difference. They inspire, empower and
celebrate a generation of doers: young
people who recognize the need to do
something, believe in their ability to
get it done, and then take action.
DoSomething.org CEO Nancy Lublin says
of the not-for-profit teaming up with
Take Action! Tour: “Music has always
moved generations. We’re psyched to
partner with Take Action! We believe
that there is a lot of creativity and
passion in generation Z (kids under age
25). Their idea of getting involved
isn’t writing a big check or attending a
charity dinner–they actually do stuff.”
Each Take Action tour stop is a
unique experience where fans are exposed
to a great show along with encouragement
and information from the bands, charity
partners, and sponsors about how they
can get involved with causes that are
important to them. In addition to the
good time and inspiration, 10% of the
ticket price from each ticket sold is
donated to DoSomething.org, which makes
each fan in attendance an active
participant in financially supporting
non profit action. To date Sub City,
with the help of hundreds of thousands
of young people, has raised over
$550,000 through the Take Action
initiative. The tour has previously
featured many future stars including:
The Plain White T’s, The Red Jumpsuit
Apparatus, Paramore, Every Time I Die,
Jimmy Eat World, Avenged Sevenfold,
Hawthorne Heights, Chiodos, Thrice,
Anti-Flag, Silverstein, Dillinger Escape
Plan, and many more.
This year’s
headliner CUTE IS WHAT WE AIM FOR,
touring in support of its second
full-length release Rotation, is one of
the brightest bands in the current music
scene. Hailing from Buffalo, lead singer
Shaant Hacikyan says of being on the
Take Action! Tour: “It’s an awe
inspiring opportunity to be a part of
such an empathetic tour and cause. It
has endured the years and has remained a
staple based on its brilliant fuel:
consideration. Knowing that we are able
to do what we love and simultaneously
lend a helping hand is a beautiful
thing. We are beyond thrilled to be a
part Take Action!”
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CUTE IS WHAT WE AIM FOR INFO: Cute Is What
We Aim For is a four-piece power pop band, formed in
2005 in Buffalo, New York and is currently on Fueled
By Ramen Records. They released their Billboard
200-charting debut album The Same Old Blood Rush
with a New Touch in 2006.
History
Life is short and the last thing we want to do is
waste your time. By now, you already know the myriad
feats Cute Is What We Aim For have accomplished
since forming in 2005. The band’s 2006 debut The
Same Old Blood Rush With A New Touch spent countless
months on the Billboard Top 200 Charts; the group
successfully headlined Alternative Press’ Bands You
Need To Know tour (and graced the cover of the
magazine) and Cute Is What We Aim For were named one
of Rolling Stones’ 10 Artists To Watch—all while the
group were still teenagers living in the dreary
blue-collar town of Buffalo, New York.
While the band managed to exceed even their own
expectations with their debut, being thrown into
this type of whirlwind success forced the group to
grow up quickly—and this marked maturity is evident
with every note of the band’s follow-up, Rotation.
“We’re not seventeen anymore; there’s so much to be
said about these past few years of being in a
pressure cooker and learning what the real world is
like,” explains vocalist Shaant Hacikyan, stating
that this time around the band decided to make a
record for themselves without taking any scene
politics or trends into consideration. “I think this
record is going to do such incredible things and
launch us to another level.”
In order to fully realize their vision, the
band—which also includes guitarist Jeff Czum and new
bassist Dave Melillo—holed up in Los Angeles with
Goldfinger’s John Feldmann armed with only a blurry
sketch of what the songs that would eventually make
up Rotation. “We only had one full song written
going into the studio and I thought we were going to
get kicked out,” Czum explains with a laugh, adding
that he felt some extra pressure considering the
fact that Goldfinger is one of Czum’s favorite
bands. “Thankfully, we work best under pressure and
I really think that added stress helped shape these
songs.”
“A lot of the bands I’ve worked with don’t want to
experiment too much, but these guys were really
open-minded and I think that’s why this record
turned out so good,” explains Feldmann, who has
previously produced and discovered artists like the
Used and Story Of The Year. “I just tried to push
them by putting a piano in front of them instead of
a guitar and making them write on that instrument or
by putting them in different physical environments,”
he adds. “I always like to try and push artists, I
felt like these guys allowed me to push them as far
as I could. [Making this record] was one of the best
experiences I’ve ever had in the studio.”
Listening to Rotation, this urgency is almost
palpable and Feldmann—whose production techniques
ranged from making Melillo throw punches at Hacikyan
during tracking to literally tracking songs on the
beach near Monterey—pulled something special out of
the group by getting them outside of their comfort
zone. This is immediately evident with the first
single “Doctor,” which features singing synths and a
new-wave sensibility while still retaining Cute Is
What We Aim For’s caustic lyrical wit and penchant
for soaring choruses. Alternately, “Loser” evokes
classic material by pop-punk royalty like Green Day,
while the electronic flourishes on “Navigate” show
the band stretching out and exploring alternate
forms of arrangement, instrumentation and, maybe
most importantly, collaboration.
Hacikyan explains that this time around he was more
influenced by classic songwriters like Tom Petty and
John Lennon instead of anyone in the current music
scene—and that’s obvious while listening to the
lyrical progression on Rotation. “We realized ‘How
are we going to make a statement if we’re trying to
just go along with everyone else?’” Hacikyan
explains, adding that the lyrics for Rotation were
improvised in the vocal booth to keep them from
sounding too calculated. “I think we just realized
that if anyone is going to take us seriously, let’s
take the classics. Why not be influenced by the
masters instead of individuals with the same
influences as me?” He also adds that the band’s
newest member Melillo was instrumental in the
writing process and, maybe, more importantly made
the band feel like a cohesive unit for the first
time ever.
If the band had to name one lyrical theme on
Rotation, it would be “change,” which makes perfect
sense when you consider the plateaus and pitfalls
the band has endured over the past few years. “This
one had such a cohesive message of change: external
change, internal change, global change, political
change, social change—everything on this record has
a message,” Hacikyan elaborates. “The last time we
made a record it was all me and the other guys
wouldn’t do anything because it was an unhappy
environment,” he adds. “We didn’t know any better
[then], but this time we had a vision we could
follow artistically.
“Making this album was such a learning process and I
want to stress not just musically but from a life
perspective I think we’ve developed so much,”
Hacikyan summarizes. “We realized this is a career
and we have to go for it; we can’t just be kids and
take it for granted. At times, I didn’t appreciate
our situation because it happened so quickly,” he
adds, reflecting on the band’s tumultuous few years
of inner-band struggles and member changes. “Now
there’s so much satisfaction in understanding life
isn’t about the destination, it’s in the journey.” |