It's been a little over a year since
Eric Campuzano, an A&R rep for the
California-based Northern Records, received a CD demo
from the band Monarch, cleverly sent in a birthday
card envelope with a Pittsburgh postmark. Receiving
demos from aspiring bands is nothing new for Campuzano.
Last year, he saw, listened and passed on over 100 of
them. But when Campuzano began listening to Monarch's
ethereal, post-alternative songs, his heart dropped.
"The vocals are what caught me first," he
says. "It reminded me of Jeff Buckley."
While the Jeff Buckley comparisons
are fairly frequent these days, some fans have drawn a
parallel between Monarch and Jars of Clay, one of the
first Christian alternative rock bands to cross over
into mainstream radio. If there are common
denominators that exist between Monarch and the other
two artists, it's the signature sound of high, tenor
vocals against the backdrop of slow, moody tempos.
Either way, Campuzano's interest was piqued.
In mid March, he flew into
Pittsburgh from Los Angeles to catch the band perform
before a full house at Southminster Church in Mount
Lebanon. It was the first time he and the four members
of Monarch -- Brennan Strawn (vocals, guitar), his
brother Aaron (drums), Joe Salmond (bass) and Brett
Zoric (keyboards, vocals) -- met face to face.
That night the band's energy was on
full display, winning over a diverse crowd. The
over-21 audience members stayed in their seats, while
the younger listeners tended to stand up and sway
along with the music. One 15-year-old skate punk
spontaneously began break-dancing during a rowdy
version of "Speak Easy."
With most of the band shy of legal
drinking age, Monarch is already drawing diverse
reactions wherever they go. "When we play a show
like Southminster, the young people react in a certain
way to us," Brennan Strawn says. "Then we go
and play Rosebud or Club Café and the older audiences
react in a certain way. I think the one thing that the
two have in common is perhaps intrigue. I'm not sure
if the older audiences get what we're doing. They
can't keep their eyes off of us because they're kind
of weirded out by what we're doing. Still, it keeps
their attention. But we tend to have audiences that
are very wide range, which is good, because we want to
expand."
By the time Campuzano boarded the
plane back to Los Angeles, he was convinced that
Monarch belonged with Northern Records. Fans of
Northern acts like the Violet Burning, the band was
more than happy to take the offer. The Grandeur
That Was Rome, Monarch's debut release, comes out
this month, followed by a tour in support. Not bad for
a band who have been together less than three years.
In the beginning, Zoric was better
known in Pittsburgh as the drummer for the Logan Wish.
The emo-melodic-driven band had a large following and
often opened up for national acts at Club Laga. Zoric
was perfectly content with his role in that band.
"At the time, I was so into the Logan Wish that
if anyone else besides Brennan had asked me to work on
a music project, I would have said no," Zoric
says. "But Brennan and I were really close
friends when he came to me and talked about working
together on these songs that he had. There was
something so pure about the idea of sitting in a
basement with headphones doing obscure music."
The Logan Wish disbanded on friendly
terms in early 2002 and Monarch quickly became Zoric's
full-time interest.
Lyrically, Monarch's songs seem
largely derived from personal introspection, to the
point that the message is somewhat murky. "Create
a Monster," a staple of their live show, was
written at a point in time when Strawn clearly was at
odds with himself. "This song was kind of an
argument between myself and God," he says.
"I was trying to say, 'Someone just tell me that
this isn't who I am.' It was a frustrating point in my
life. To say, 'I'm not this way.' To say, 'Last night
doesn't count.' I wanted to hear something from God.
So that was this song."
Still, the band points out that the
lyrical connections of their songs to aspects of
spirituality are wide open to interpretation.
"What the song means to Brennan and what the song
means to me could be entirely different to what the
song means to someone else," Zoric says.
"The key is to be specific enough to convey an
idea, but ambiguous enough that you can fill in your
own emotion."
In June, the label flew the band to
the West Coast to begin working on their debut disc.
Upon their arrival in Los Angeles, they spent the
first few days holed up in a rehearsal studio with
veteran producer Andrew Prickett, who co-produced the
Violet Burning's recent high-gloss CD, This is the
Moment.
Prickett's suggestions had a big
influence on how the band approached the recording.
"When we first went into the rehearsal space to
organize the album, Andy told us that we could either
recreate essentially our live performance or we could
do something different," says Strawn. "We
wanted to be able to separate the studio from our live
show; we wanted there to be a distinction from the
two."
The Grandeur That Was Rome
finds Brennan singing like a razor-edged choirboy,
with Zoric's pianistic flourishes meshing with the
whip-tight rhythm section. And while the album keeps
much of Monarch's live texture intact, the recording
gives a noticeable wink to 1990s pop with
"Wasteful," 1980s underground rock in
"Leap Years" and even a nod to classical
with "I Have Deihl" and "Talk Is
Cheap." Perhaps the biggest curveball on the
11-track album is "Plug In, Listen," a
minor-keyed, almost messianic-flavored acoustic track
that morphs into a full-blown power ballad.
During the past six months,
Monarch's live show seems to have developed its own
atmospheric variables, depending on the venue where
they're performing. They've deliberately played in
almost total darkness to a very young crowd at
Southminster before stepping into the planetarium-like
lighting of Club Café. If there is symmetry between
the two types of shows, it's the band's marked
physical enthusiasm for their music.
Zoric is the most theatrical,
personifying musical ecstasy with intense facial
gestures that alternate with un-choreographed, aerobic
bouncing. "The reason for the theatrics is for us
to zone out and dive into the show," Zoric
laughs. "So many times, I think bands get bored
with their own songs, and I completely understand
that. There's no conscious decision in a specific part
of a song where I have to jump or whatever. It's just
important to keep up the live energy and to keep every
night fresh."
Along with a current push to college
radio, Northern is planning a heavy marketing blitz to
get The Grandeur That Was Rome to commercial
radio in February. Moreover, the band also has a New
York rep that hopes to land some of their material on
a film soundtrack. Still, band members insist that
they're taking whatever comes at them, one step at a
time.
"When you get signed, it's easy
to get caught up in everything," Zoric says.
"The significance of our album title is really
for us, more than it is for anyone else. We took our
biggest fear that we have as a band and stuck it as
our title. Rome divided itself. It basically brought
itself down.
"The idea is not to get caught
up in that, but instead to be thankful. To be
everything that we always promised ourselves that we
would be, rather than to get caught up in something
that's just going to collapse in the end. Brennan and
I started out trying to do something new. Some of our
fondest memories are sitting in his basement mixing
our recordings until three in the morning. We weren't
mixing for any record company. We were mixing just so
we could listen to it. In essence, those are the kind
of memories that we always want to keep with us."