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Indie band Nada Surf enjoying second life
12/08/2007 8:00 PM, Reuters
F. Scott Fitzgerald may have
depressingly opined that "there are no second acts in American
lives," but Nada Surf is certainly making the case for second
acts in indie rock.
The band had an accidental alt-rock radio hit in 1996 with
"Popular," only to be signed and then summarily dropped by
Elektra. This sort of rise and fall would spell the end for
many bands, but Nada Surf kept on going, buying back and
reissuing its shelved major-label album, "The Proximity
Effect," in 1998.
Since then, the band released two records on Seattle-based
indie Barsuk: 2003's "Let Go," which has sold 70,000 units in
the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan, and 2005's
"The Weight Is a Gift," which has shifted 67,000.
Nada Surf is now gearing up for the release of "Lucky,"
which hits stores February 8.
"When 'Popular' happened, it was so out of the blue; it
wasn't meant to be a single and we didn't ever expect it to get
big," guitarist/vocalist Matthew Caws says. "We certainly don't
expect anything like that to ever happen again. We have since
let go of this notion that getting a song on the radio is
integral to our success. Radio is pretty closed now, anyway."
That doesn't mean that the band has given up on releasing
singles. "We always put out singles, but I'm more interested in
putting out songs that are hits," Caws says. "I don't mean
radio or MTV hits, but the type of hits that get lots of
downloads or kids sing along to at every show."
Getting kids to come to the shows has proved to be
surprisingly easy for the band, which made sure to keep its
expectations in check post-hit. "We didn't think that kids who
knew us because of one song would be longtime fans," Caws says.
"We rebuilt our audience by touring and focusing on all-ages
shows, really grass-roots type of stuff."
The band has also endeared itself to fans by releasing
quality music; both Barsuk records were met with critical
acclaim and early listens to "Lucky" suggest it will be
similarly well-received.
Death Cab for Cutie's Ben Gibbard shows up on opener "See
These Bones," which could be a lost track from his own band's
2005 Atlantic debut, "Plans." On other songs like "Beautiful
Beat," Nada Surf is upbeat and melodic, and there's even a
better-than-average obligatory political tune, "The Fox."
For his part, Caws says the record represents another step
forward for the band. "We are always asking ourselves, 'Can we
make another good record?"' he says. "I feel like this album is
strong, and I'm glad we made it."
While Barsuk is developing a robust publicity plan, label
president Josh Rosenfeld worries the Hollywood writers strike,
which has sent most of the late-night TV shows into reruns, may
mean missed opportunities.
"This is a band with a great licensing history, and we
wanted placement on TV shows to be part of the album's
rollout," Rosenfeld says. "We were also hoping to do the usual
late-night shows, but all that is up in the air if the strike
continues."
There is no end in sight to the strike, which began
November 5. Renewed talks between the Writers Guild of America
and the studios collapsed December 7. The only late-night talk
show in production is NBC's "Last Call with Carson Daly."
Reuters/Billboard
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