Maybe Bedhead never broke up after all; maybe they just got up on a different side of the bed for the New Year. It takes a little while, but after some intensive listening, Newness Ends, the debut album from Bubba and Matt... more » Kadane's post-Bedhead New Year, isn't quite reducible to a new lineup of an old band. It burns with a larger flame, all the same low-lit hues glowing bigger and more fleshily. The guitars are sharper, newcomer Chris Brokaw's drumming is harder hitting, and the tunes are more aggressive. The Kadanes have a strum-heavy formula that owes much to the Feelies and myriad others, but they've tuned it enough that Matt's laconic vocals and the wobble-toned guitars clearly indicate a debt to Bedhead without repeating their footsteps exactly. --Andrew Bartlett« less
Maybe Bedhead never broke up after all; maybe they just got up on a different side of the bed for the New Year. It takes a little while, but after some intensive listening, Newness Ends, the debut album from Bubba and Matt Kadane's post-Bedhead New Year, isn't quite reducible to a new lineup of an old band. It burns with a larger flame, all the same low-lit hues glowing bigger and more fleshily. The guitars are sharper, newcomer Chris Brokaw's drumming is harder hitting, and the tunes are more aggressive. The Kadanes have a strum-heavy formula that owes much to the Feelies and myriad others, but they've tuned it enough that Matt's laconic vocals and the wobble-toned guitars clearly indicate a debt to Bedhead without repeating their footsteps exactly. --Andrew Bartlett
"The Kadane brothers used to be in a band called Bedhead, who a lot of people liked because they sounded not unlike the Velvet Underground and wrote sad, lovely songs about being sad and lovely and having fairly ambitious beards. Further, one of the band's auteurs was named Bubba Kadane, which certainly set them apart from many of their peers and made their aficionados like them more. (If it's any measure of fan loyalty, the profusion of websites and mailing lists available online shocked even this longtime fan.) But then Bedhead broke up, which was sad and not very lovely. Now les freres Kadane have started a new band called the New Year, whose first LP is called Newness Ends, which isn't particularly sad. Thankfully, it's still pretty damned lovely.Everything surrounding the New Year's debut screams "break with the past." Seeing as the guys elect to use the word "new" in both album title and band name, someone might get the idea that these guys have something to prove. After all, Bedhead's sinuous, country-inflected sorrow and chimy guitar lines could be argued as one of the Ground Zeroes for the current slow-core renaissance, making theirs one of '90s-vintage indie rock's most distinctive, influential sounds. The obvious question for the band that now contains the braintrust of such a blockbuster act is whether to follow down the same path of their previous triumphs or to light out for new territory.Newness Ends cannily splits the difference between innovation and nostalgia. The New Year features Chris Brokaw on drums, where he follows roughly the same steps he did behind the kit for Codeine, another seminal drowsy-rock combo. His tempos here are a little juicier than they were in his Codeine days, as if his other occasional work as axeman for vicious avant-bluesers Come has led him to understand the virtues of amping up a bit.Not uncoincidentally, the New Year seem more willing to rock than their immediate antecedents ever were. "Reconstruction" builds from a quiet, circular guitar figure into a roiling jam, signaling the band's development from a frail, occasionally silent rock band into an edgier, more rock-and-roll outfit. Similarly, "Gasoline" hurtles forward, propelled by skittery drumming and endlessly inventive soloing. Though no one's going to mistake the New Year for the Donnas, someone involved here has connected with their inner Angus Young.Or, at any rate, their inner Albini. Mr. Shellac committed this LP to tape, and though it's hardly the grot-rock he's become known for, his less-is-more approach certainly aids Newness Ends. Now that the boys in the band are playing harder, with more propulsive riffs and structures, the bare-bones effects of the recording make them sound even leaner and, god forbid, meaner. Where music of this variety can often disappear into its own navel without warning, the New Year sound hale, healthy and ready to rock.Bear in mind, though, that on their swansong collaboration with compatriots Macha, Matt and Bubba Kadane managed to make Cher's "Believe" into a somber dirge, and their sedated side doesn't go neglected here, either. "One Plus One Minus One Equals One" is the sort of mumbled hymn that marmoset-looking character from Bright Eyes would give important teeth for: Nashville-esque lead guitar co-exists peaceably with subtle washes of feedback, and the band's rhythm section patiently anchors the track. "Alter Ego" is endearing, strummy pop that builds to a complex instrumental climax without ever turning into abstraction or sludge.So much of the Kadanes' new effort indicates a self-consciousness about their place in the cosmos. Newness Ends, from its title on down, seems conscious of the ways in which it looks to Bedhead's accomplishments while plotting the future. At the same time, the band's name bespeaks a certain hope for change and possibility. Let's hope both prophecies turn out to be true.-Sam Eccleston"
Better than Low
Simone Oltolina | Morbio Inferiore, TI Switzerland | 04/13/2001
(4 out of 5 stars)
"When talking about slowcore much of the talk inevitably revolves around Low. There was also another great band playing the same kind of music and that was Bedhead. Sadly Bedhead is no more but wait, shed no tears, because The New Year basically arose from Bedhead's ashes and what's more important, they're even better than their former incarnation. Low might haven been regarded by many as slowcore's kings but there's no way they can top this brilliant effort. What makes the record stand out is, as many reviews point out, the tempos which are considerably faster paced! Don't get me wrong, this is NOT, by any stretch of the imagination, a really fast record but compared to slowcore's standards... well, it's like speed-metal! Low too "hit the gas" on their latest release but all in all I think that TNY effort is better! See for yourself..."
Transcends inconspicuously the head of bed
Pamela Chae | ny | 04/11/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Recently read a review of this album. A full length article devoted to b**ching and moaning about the fact that bedhead no longer existed and how that was a bleeping crying bleeping shame. Disgusted with the fact that this band had decided to call it quits cause no one was listening or caring. No more Bedhead. Something was taken from us that day we found out that there would never be another Bedhead album to cherish.....it was ALL the guy could gush on about. His last few words after tireless many, become the sum of our mutual feelings on NEWNESS ENDS, and the fact it is, "it turns out that I (we) like it a lot".It's the sort of cd that you put on repeat; you settle down into your chair, and it plays over and over and over....and the thought to change it never crosses your mind. You crave to hear the next song. The times when you're in a bar, or listening to the radio. Your favorite song on your favorite album comes on. You know the next song and you know it well. The disappointment when something else is replaced by alien goings on, is unbearable. So, within the privacy of your own home, you can hit the damn repeat button."
Newness Ends Rocks, but so did Bedhead.
MMS | Spokane, WA United States | 06/17/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The New Year/Bedhead have always rocked. People who insist on pigeonholing them into the slowcore stuff obviously stop or forward through all of there songs after hitting the half way point. Listen to Whatfunlifewas and tell me that Bedhead didn't rock. They start slow and build to a quite rockin' crescendo. That said, The New Year do "rock" more then Bedhead in the traditional sense. The Velvet Underground is mentioned a lot as an influence for Bedhead. It has come much more to the front with The New Year. There is no doubt that many of these songs are influenced by VU/Lou Reed, especially Gasoline. This is such a great guitar rock album. Anyone into slightly off kilter rock music will love this album. It has its gentle slow moments for sure, but listen to Gasoline or the last three songs of the album for proof that The New Year/Bedhead can take it up a notch when they want to."
Bedhead continued...
MMS | 02/22/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Bedhead has been one of my favorite bands since the mid 1990s. Every new release kept me interested in them beyond the typical passing fancy of the indie world. Newness Ends is a strong release. It sounds very much in the vein of "Transaction du Novo" which means the vocals are a touch louder, the songs have fewer "wall of sound" moments and there's a conscious melodic effort. On songs like "Newness Ends", "Half a Day", and "Great Expectations" The New Year really shoots for a gentle pop melody that more swirls around the listener than knocks them in the head. I guess that's why I like The New Year and Bedhead, their music is never overbearing and it's more than simply pleasant. It's a band that has mastered gentle/edgy rock music than doesn't fade with time."