Not enough albums come along and, by showing what can happen when a band forges their own unique sound, make you question why so many other bands stick with trying to emulate everyone else. Gatherer manage to force that question home, and make it seem effortless at the same time, with the release of their debut album So Be It.
These former Wellingtonians moved to Melbourne as This City Sunrise, before changing name and direction. There are still touches of This City Sunrise within the music, but make no mistake – Gatherer are a truly original beast and prove it throughout their album.
So Be It is 12 tracks of dark, guitar-driven pop, full of strong vocal harmonies. From opener International Getaway, to the closing notes of DDPXL, this album never lets up and constantly surprises. It’s the stripped back harmonies of the title track, the passion of Camp Creative, the dark mournfulness of Sinister, that make this album what it is. It’s in the subtle keyboard backing, the driving rhythms and the heavy riffs, that you’ll find why Gatherer stand apart from so many of their peers. It’s those little touches, the care and effort the band has put into each song, and the thought that’s gone into the flow of the album, that will keep you coming back to it, over and over again.
This is my favourite album of 2012 so far, and if you take the time to listen to it, I’m sure it’ll be yours too.
The first track from their debut full length album called So Be It, Regular Frontier establishes the Gatherer proclamation in honest clarity: growing up is a bit shit. Relocations are never easy, especially with a body of water separating the comforts of their home town Wellington, New Zealand to the reality of independence and opportunity offered in Melbourne, Australia. It was never going to be a relaxed transition, but it was imperative for the band to move into their next phase of existence.
On So Be It, Gatherer has drawn on a combination of life experiences and influences, cohesively blending the pop sensibilities of Nine Inch Nails, the genuine melodic rock of Cave-In and a hint of Converge/Isis inspired heaviness with the vocal rhythms and melody of Queen and Tears For Fears.
A wall of syncopated sound, coupled with strikingly unconventional rhythm, dynamics and harmonies take the Gatherer sound to a complete original aural spectrum. This, along with an honest approach to lyrical content, completes the Gatherer package.