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More Than Any Other Day

Ought

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iTunes Editors’ Notes

Adjectives describing Montreal's Ought—such as “nervous,” “jittery,” and “art school”—likely also bring to mind a number of bands from the revered 1978-1985 postpunk landscape. Ought still maintain an outsider status, probably due to their lack (so far) of anything resembling a quirky, three-minute anti-pop song. This debut is exciting, taut, unpredictable, and imploding with an edgy energy that seems rare these days (at least when bombast isn’t part of the equation). Tracks like “The Weather Song” thrill the most when a rocky rhythm suddenly yields to a fast-moving montage of enthusiastic electric piano pounding, snare bashing, and singer Tim Beeler all duking it out. Or when slow, dripping tunes like “Habit” feature Beeler drowsily warning: “I feel/a habit/I feel a habit forming” for the last two minutes, wrought with reluctance and zero satisfaction with the situation. The opening track (“Pleasant Heart”) and the closer (“Gemini”) are ferocious and furious, the former roiling with the epitome of clanging, postpunk angular-ness and the latter building from a restrained aggressiveness to all-out rage over its nearly seven minutes.

Customer Reviews

Pure Passion

The tracks on this album come straight from the heart with an unstoppable energy that I haven't seen in a long time.

Standout album of 2014

I listened to this because of the needle drop review by Anthony Fantano. This is a really solid and fantastic album. Fun and thoughtful lyrical content. Good energy and urgency. This is what an ‘indie rock’ band is supposed to sound like. More Fugazi and pixies influence than the watered down schlock of college radio today. Great album by a great band!

Review

Ought new album, the band functions as one, passion is noted throughout the album. Beelers lyrics are rich. Awesome!

Biography

Formed: 2011 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '10s

Montreal quartet Ought began in 2011, taking heavy cues from their city's thriving scene of underground politics, loft parties, and D.I.Y. culture. Composed of singer/guitarist Tim Beeler, bassist Ben Stidworthy, keyboardist Matt May, and drummer/violinist Tim Keen, the band melded unlikely influences from both high-energy mid-'90s emo bands and airy, early college rock acts like the Feelies' and Talking Heads. The bandmembers all lived together in a shared apartment/practice space, self-recording...
Full Bio
More Than Any Other Day, Ought
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Customer Ratings

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