Sweet Cobra Uncovers Music Video for “Wet Brain”
The song receives a video treatment from Documavision and arrives with the long-awaited vinyl version of the band’s latest album, Threes, available now from Hawthorne Street.
Photo by: Erica Torelli.
“blurs the lines between punk, metal, and alternative rock” – BrooklynVegan
“Somehow both dreamy and heavy all at once.” – Treble
For the better part of the past two decades, Sweet Cobra has been seasoning their brand of thundering rock music with a full spectrum of sonic influences. Since their debut album Praise in 2004, they have continuously reinvented themselves with each installment in their catalog, growing from a hardcore/punk foundation through the land of post-hardcore into truly uncharted territory. With 2015’s Earth, Sweet Cobra established themselves as a multi-faceted tonal weapon, with the ability to stand alongside the heaviest metal acts one second and drop in as a house band at a country-western dive bar the next.
The band returned with Threes, their fifth album that works as a snapshot of an ever-evolving act at this present moment in time. While Sweet Cobra have done much to shed their punk-rock labeling, they still operate as such with many of the songs being written spontaneously at rehearsals over the last few years. What began as a spur-of-the-moment recording session to capture a few of the songs in their infancy, has developed into one of the most eclectic ten-song rock albums in recent history. The songs run the gamut from fast-paced, eccentric chaos to steady, meticulous aural beauty. While it may seem like a departure for a band who has been branded as a metal/hardcore act for years, listeners who have been paying attention will recognize that Sweet Cobra has long been capable of this caliber of diverse recording.
Today, Sweet Cobra have premiered a music video for the album’s excellent single “Wet Brain,” which also serves as a celebration of the record’s release on vinyl formats from Hawthorne Street Records (it was released on digital format from Pax Aeternum last November). The song is one of the album’s strongest and gets a dreamy video treatment from longtime friend and collaborator Bobby Markos of Documavision (and the band Cloakroom).
Watch the video for “Wet Brain” now via FLOOD Magazine (or share directly from YouTube).
Aside from the tonal variety heard in the instrumentation on the album, the production displays a wide range of timbre as well. This is in thanks to the broad cast of engineers who helped capture the recording. Threes was recorded at Earth Analog by Matt Talbott (Hum), with initial tracking done at Electronical by Allen Epley and Eric Abert (Shiner, The Life And Times), with mixing handled by Kurt Ballou (Converge) at Godcity Studio, mastering handled by Magnus Lindberg (Cult Of Luna), and the cover art created by Bill Connors. Joining drummer Jason Gagovski, vocalist/bassist Timothy Remis, and guitarist/pianist Robert Arthur Lanham Jr., Matt Talbott provides additional guitar on “Soft 11,” and Sarah Olmsted (Rows Arc) adds backing vocals to “Wet Brain.”
Trying to describe or label Sweet Cobra would be doing them a disservice. At this point, they’ve accomplished the rare task of developing their own unique voice in a choir of thousands. Threes is simply an honest rock album that harkens back to the day that musicians got together in a room and created with no agenda aside from organizing noise. There are a lot of familiar sounds, but nothing is on the nose. With Threes, Sweet Cobra has truly broken the mold for what is expected of punk-influenced bands and left the door open for other acts in the heavy spectrum of music to follow.
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