Chase The Horseman

Chase The Horseman makes the kind of melodic, guitar-driven indie pop that instantly recalls the likes of James Blake, Rufus Wainwright and Fleet Foxes. An audio engineer and producer in addition to being a highly-regarded songwriter and soundtrack composer, Horseman's "U Martyr U", continues in the vein of their best work: atmospheric power-pop with an edge

Your new single, “RIPchord” comes several years after your last album as Towers.

Why did you choose to focus on movie soundtrack work in the intervening time?

They’ve always gone hand in hand, really. I started scoring films in my last few years of high school, and never really stopped. Its a bit more profitable since its all work for hire, but mostly it was  a way to collaborate across the country/world with other people without having to be in the same physical space.               

Film music gives you a sort of faceless freedom to don different clothes and colors than you might for yourself that was as liberating as it could be at the time.

Talk about “RIPchord.” Why did you choose to release this single under your own name and not Towers?                

The Towers project was an extension of that kind of insular creation/production style as the film music. I literally did everything except the mastering, from writing every note, playing every instrument, to recording, to mixing, etc. As soon as the thing was done, I was spent. I could barely get myself to talk about the record or play shows for it because it took me so long that I immediately felt a distance from it upon release.                

I found myself swept up into another band (Clairaudients) and even though I released a total of three videos for the Towers record, I never really did much with it after. After some formative life changes and the dissolution of Clairaudients, I knew I had to make a huge change. Strangely enough, that change was to own my name and own myself by doing so. 

How long have you been a songwriter and musician?

How would you say your songs have evolved over the years?               

I think my earliest recordings and compositions date back to 2003 or 2004, but I’ve been active in bands since 2006 such as Dream Girl, Heidi Lynne Gluck, The Cherry Tree Parade, The Low End, Towers, Clairaudients, La Guerre, Not A Planet, Rachel Mallin & the Wild Type, and The Philistines.                

My first “real” songs were very much folk oriented. Lots of Bob Dylan, Paul Simon, Iron & Wine type stuff, which later turned into more Shins influenced pop-ish stuff. As I developed I think my sound shifted into a place of classic American style songwriting mashed with Emo and sequenced laptop music. Now, I’m living my songwriting life by the Ten Commandments of Brian Eno. Most importantly, his fourth commandment: “You shall cook like an Italian: good initial ingredients passing quickly through the kitchen”.

Bryan V.

Johnson County Library

 
 

“Chase the Horseman’s new EP, “Disinformation Blues”, is more than monotonous melodies intended to be background music half-heard in bars. Beginning with “Happy Happy New Year!”, an air of nostalgia can be found amongst the reflective synthesizers, forlorn brass, and the chiming of bells; as if to ring in new memories, while still reflecting on the old. Filled to the brim with emblazoned emotion, their vocals force us to reflect on the passage of time, what was, and what could have been. Beginning with determined drums, “Disinformation Blues” sheds a much needed light on the hate present in today’s world. With meticulously honest lyricism and shimmering musicality, they convey feelings of hopeless dysphoria that come with observing such ignorant malevolence. Teeming with captivating rhythm and intriguing guitar riffs, the theme of imminent doom is carried over into “Duck and Cover”. Striking samples of 1950’s nuclear bomb shelter videos transition smoothly into a playful instrumental that prominently lingers in your memory long after the song ends. Rich with purpose, your ears will welcome every word. It’s evident moving into the fourth and last song on the EP that we are coming to an end. Radiating a lull-like essence, “Sleep Slow, Dream Sweet” indubitably exhibits the sheer magnitude of their ethereal choral talent. Holding long, compelling wistful notes, they leave with a sense of ambiguous closure as impending synthesizers gradually fade out. This multifaceted EP has a message to deliver. Turn the volume up and listen.”

Skylar Rochelle

Manor Blog Contributor & Teammate

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