The Robot Ate Me

The Robot Ate Me

"Djien" from Good World (2006)
Background information
Origin San Diego, California, U.S.
Genres Indie rock, indie-pop, indie folk, folk, art rock, experimental rock, experimental pop, psychedelic rock, psychedelic pop
Years active 2002 – current
Labels Swim Slowly Records
5 Rue Christine
Kill Rock Stars
Associated acts Ryland Bouchard
Website therobotateme.com
Members Ryland Bouchard
Past members David Greenberg, Are-Jay Hoffman, William Haworth, Alan Lechusza

The Robot Ate Me is an experimental indie rock band formed by Ryland Bouchard in 2002 which has been through many distinct phases incorporating aspects of folk, jazz, psychedelia and avant-garde rock. Their critically acclaimed albums alternated between accessible pop and obscure musical art projects. After releasing Good World in 2006 Babysue described the band as "one of the most unpredictable and obtuse underground bands around."

Biography

In 2002 Ryland Bouchard released, They Ate Themselves, his first record as The Robot Ate Me and played his first shows in San Diego opening for notable touring acts such as Daniel Johnston, Tegan and Sara, Metric, Stars and The Blackheart Procession. Skyscraper Magazine described this release Skyscraper as "Quite possibly the year's most arresting experimental pop record, They Ate Themselves is a dizzyingly vibrant trip through death and multi-layered dissonance".[1]

The controversial and highly experimental On Vacation was released in 2004 in which Adam Gnade declared "It's not even music outside the margins. Here the margins were never there, and if they were to encroach, The Robot Ate Me would probably up and croak. "[2] Punk Planet followed suit describing the album as "A hypnotic two-disc record that will score your twisted nightmares and fanciful dreams."[3] Splendid summarized "It is impossible to understand a Robot Ate Me album from a written description."[4] The band Oh No Oh My named themselves after the song Oh No! Oh My! from On Vacation.

After the release of On Vacation in 2004 he signed with Kill Rock Stars and toured the US heavily the next few years playing close to 600 shows in the following three years playing with countless bands including The Mae Shi, Barr, The Fall, Hella, Mount Eerie, Karl Blau, The Winks, Doveman, I Need Sleep, The Gossip, Oh No! Oh My!, Okkervil River, Emperor X, and Drew Danburry. His shows relied heavily on audience participation and were known for being fairly unpredictable.[5] As part of his shows he would sometimes be dragged across the floor by attendees,[6] wear masks, scream loudly, have the audience play the supporting instruments for his songs without rehearsal, or abruptly leave after playing one song.[7][8]

The 2005 release of Carousel Waltz brought a set of minimal American folk songs. The album was lauded by Babysue as a "strangely compelling and uplifting vision of how love affects a person. Soft and focused, these unusual tunes are simultaneously accessible and peculiar. The Robot Ate Me remains one of the most unique acts on the planet. Brimming with credible substance, Carousel Waltz is yet another killer album from an artist who just keeps getting better and better with time..." [9]

2006 brought the avant-garde Good World which was mostly sparse clarinet lines mixed with minimal percussion and falsetto vocals by Bouchard. Pitchforkmedia asked "Has someone bludgeoned frontman Ryland Bouchard?".[10] And Tinymixtapes declared: "Not since the glory days of punk has an album come and gone so fast and left one with more questions than answers." [11]

In November 2011, after releasing several albums under his own name, Ryland Bouchard announced a new album by The Robot Ate Me would be released in 2012.

Discography

Albums

Compilation Appearances

Band members

Past members and contributors

References

Notes

  1. Matt Fink (Spring 2004). Skyscraper (16). Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Fahrenheit (51). Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. "2005 'On Vacation' Review". Punk Planet. Amy Adoyzie, Issue 62
  4. "'On Vacation' Review". Splendid. 2005.
  5. "Live Show Review 2006". Daytrotter.
  6. "Web comment". La Blogoteque.
  7. "Live Show Review". Pete Nema.
  8. "2007 PDX Pop Show". urbanhonking.
  9. "2005 'Carousel Waltz' Review". Babysue.
  10. "2006 'Good World' Review". Pitchforkmedia.
  11. "'Good World' Review by jspicer". Tinymixtapes.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, February 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.