A-Weather
News
A Weather - Spiders, Snakes
Aaron Gerber
(Cellmates - Swedens biggest in ...)
The Donkeys - Walk Through a Cloud
If you're looking for a weather update for the Los Angeles area, let me give it to you:
(invisiblelimb.net)
A Weather - Cove
fin dal primo ascolto. Gli A Weather sono un quintetto proveniente dall'Oregon, Portland per la
(Indie For Bunnies)
A Weather
" A Weather on MySpace A Weather on The Hype Machine
(5 Acts)
Review: A Weather - Cove:
(UponFirstListen)
A Weather
A Weather is een groepje uit Portland, Oregon. Hun eerste album Cove is vandaag verschenen. Rustige
(Alankomaat)
A Weather - 9.14.2008 @ The Black Sheep
A Weather = Another spectacular Portland band I stumbled across this month. Normally performing
(Flat Response)
A Weather: 2 New Mp3s
Here are two songs from A Weather's forthcoming album Cove, which will be released by Team Love
(Muruch)
A Weather
A Weather are a whisper out of Portland, Oregon, playing the some of the softest and easiest sounds
(3hive)
A Weather - 9.15.2008 @ Hi-Dive
Here's the second night of A Weather's Colorado jaunt, where they opened for Point Juncture WA
(Flat Response)
Heartbreakingly pretty, it sounds so pure that it brings you to that almost childlike place where you’re innocent all over again… listening to Cove becomes an intimate, earnest experience likely to make you cry or turn you on. – Simona Rabinovitch, Nylon Magazine
...with a debut this good, Oregon’s precious secret, in the form of a bedroom pop quintet, may not be a secret for much longer. -Rachael Darmanin, CMJ.com
...an intimate album with smooth, poignant sentiments of subjects both sordid and sensual at every turn. Each track is subtle, flawless, and overall spellbinding… A Weather has reminded me again of music’s reason for being. -Jocelyn Hoppa, Crawdaddy Magazine
“Cove” has real impact. Gerber and Winchester split all the singing equally, sometimes crooning together, other times trading verses. Which begs a key question: Are they playing lovers in these songs or just witnesses? Either way, their sweet interactions cut deep. Jim Farber, New York Daily News
The Portland quintet’s songs are stitched together with cryptic relationship metaphors: nursery rhymes for adults that spell just enough out to pique the listener’s interest, while shrouding the rest in fog. Guitarist/vocalist Aaron Gerber and drummer/vocalist Sarah Winchester sing about arrows in flight, stubbed pinkie toes and small dancing birds. The pair trades half-whispers over a small, soft orchestra of sea-breeze organ and bells. The drums sound like rain, and the guitar is a smoke ring that rolls and finally disperses. And after you let it under your skin, you remember: Finding something that speaks your language is nice, but it’s far more rewarding to learn a new one altogether.
-Casey Jarman, Willamette Week
