January 12, 2007

Early Grace: Running Into Walls

Sometimes all you need is a split record with the right band for your own band to simply catch on with masses and sometimes it doesn't help at all. Unfortunately it was the latter for Tampa, FL's Early Grace. After a split 7" in 1996 with Boston, MA's Cave In it seemed that Early Grace would quickly become a band that people started to take notice of and would perhaps share some of hardcore spotlight. For whatever reason, Early Grace faded into obscurity.

Their material was a lot like Cave In's very early material mixed with some Instil (pre-You and I) and Reversal Of Man. The fact that Cave In and Early Grace shared the same 7" (just different sides) made it even hard for me in the beginning to decipher who was who without looking at the labels on the record itself. The only real variant was that Early Grace were not as metal and seemed to be drawing from a different influence altogether. They seemed to have a lot in common with the screamo scene and bands like Indian Summer, Inkwell and Puritan. The screams were slightly higher pitched, their guitars weren't as chugga, the singing vocals were often a bit out of key and most importantly their songs were altogether heartfelt. There was something immediate about Early Grace's sound, something that made it feel quite sincere. Sure they had the cliche "what this band and scene means to us" paragraph in their booklet like the other bands of their time did, but with Early Grace it was something much much more than that and the fact that I recently learned that the members were only 17 years of age at the time makes it even more mind blowing. Perhaps that's why to this very day their songs sound so raw and honest.

The band's discography consists of a split 7" with Cave In, a self titled 7", and 7 song 10" entitled "And All I Run Into Are Walls You Have Built" all of which were released on Florida's Independence Day Records (Bright Calm Blue, Reversal Of Man) The CD version of the 10" also contained the self titled 7" as bonus tracks. Quite stunning in appearance, the CD featured a hand screened folded cover with a printed sheet of lyrics and personal statements from the band as well as being hand stamped out of 1000. It looks very Immigrant Sun Records circa 1995.

From the "And All I Run Into Are Walls You Have Built" CD:
Soupcan Listeners
A Fictional Serial Killer
Song 13
Civil Talk

The band also has a myspace page that briefly explains a bit about their history and their current projects. Unfortunately I cannot find any online distributors with the CD still in stock, so try your luck on eBay or some smaller distros.

Also, I know a lot of you are reading and downloading, so please post a comment. Its nice to know that people are out there, so let me know your thoughts and opinions on the bands and the music.

9 Comments:

Anonymous Andrew @ AVERSIONLINE said...

Not bad. I like this a lot more than I was expecting to.

I don't know why people don't post comments. That shit drives me nuts. It's like 0.05% of visitors actually comment on something, ha...

10:02 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

well done.

12:24 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Shit, how did these guys not get bigger? I feel like every band in the world sounds like this now but only worse.

Fucking A...keep this shit coming.

Tommy Irish

10:32 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

There s/t ep is incredibly good. Like a more melodic reversal of man?

8:53 PM  
Blogger Yuichi said...

Amazing, one of best band ever for me.
Thanks for the uploading.

10:34 PM  
Anonymous karmasonic said...

haha, this is great, i ejoyed a lot this songs- you can percieve the felling on each one, its a very honest music.
bands now days dont have this, there just a bunch of prefabricated posers-

6:35 PM  
Anonymous Lieutenant Roast A Botch said...

This band is fantastic. I'm glad you put these up. I remember hearing the songs from the Cave In side on the Beyond Hypothermia record. I was always curious about what the other band sounded like.

3:06 AM  
Blogger calvin said...

thank you...i have this cd, but with no cover...and i couldn't remember this band's name for the life of me. you've solved a five year mystery...

10:45 PM  
Blogger Holisticalchemist said...

I had this but lost it awhile back and was looking up where to purchase and kinda just surfed to this page. Kept me here a while just listening to the tracks. Yeah this was one of those rare raw acts that reminds you what good music ought to sound like.

11:24 PM  

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