Nick Anway – Bandwidth http://bandwidth.wamu.org WAMU 88.5's New Music Site Tue, 02 Oct 2018 15:23:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 Premiere: On ‘Mars And Me,’ D.C.’s Brushes Come From Mars And Venus http://bandwidth.wamu.org/premiere-on-mars-and-me-d-c-s-brushes-come-from-mars-and-venus/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/premiere-on-mars-and-me-d-c-s-brushes-come-from-mars-and-venus/#respond Mon, 28 Nov 2016 13:12:41 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=70110 For Nick Anway, life is all about embracing contradictions. The 27-year-old frontman and primary songwriter of D.C. indie-rock band Brushes expounds on this philosophy while talking about his band’s new song, “Mars and Me” (listen below).

“‘Mars and Me’ is about the tension we feel between Venus and Mars within ourselves,” says the Mount Pleasant resident. “When one’s self is truly illuminated, we see beauty and horror.”

The track certainly explores two vastly different musical ideas. “Mars and Me” opens on a lovely but anxious note, with minor-key arpeggios buttressing Anway’s soft vocals. The band doesn’t settle into a mood, though. Before long, drums and strings propel the song into another atmosphere.

“Mars and Me” continues Anway’s partnership with producers Tommy Sherrod and Mike Okusami. The three worked together on Brushes’ debut release, Whatever, Again. Since then, they have recorded over 20 songs together and grown into a live quintet that includes guitarist/keyboardists Matt Henderson and Nick DePrey.

“Mars and Me” appears on Grizzly Beach, a split EP with Boston band Today Junior. Unlike Brushes’ more nuanced approach, Today Junior is all about the fist-pumpers. Grizzly Beach features their song, “Lee’s Anthem,” a shout-along ode to believing in yourself.

Once again, the contrast in styles is deliberate.

“One of the things I love most about Today Junior is that they write songs to make you feel good,” says Anway. “Their music connects me to Boston, where I grew up, and to many of the surf themes that have become fundamental to how I write songs.”

Anway and Brushes met Today Junior over the summer and the two bands immediately struck up a friendship. Aside from working on Grizzly Beach together, the two bands co-wrote a song that will appear on a full-length Brushes album out next year.

In the meantime, Brushes and Today Junior plan to embark on a mini-tour of the Northeast U.S. and drop a vinyl release of Grizzly Beach in early 2017.

Brushes, Today Junior and Homeshake Monday play Nov. 28 at Songbyrd Music House & Record Cafe.

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Premiere: Brushes, A New D.C. Indie-Rock Band, Makes Its Debut http://bandwidth.wamu.org/premiere-brushes-a-new-d-c-indie-rock-band-makes-its-debut/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/premiere-brushes-a-new-d-c-indie-rock-band-makes-its-debut/#comments Thu, 10 Mar 2016 13:08:35 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=61980 On its first single, “Mary,” new D.C. rock band Brushes doesn’t show just one side of its personality: Gentle ripples give way to dreamy instrumental swells on the track, while singer and guitarist Nick Anway pivots from laid-back amusement to frustration.

brushes-dcAnway says “Mary” springs from a minor revelation. “The song is sort of a resolution for me,” says the musician, 26. “I may not have things figured out, but it’s a problem that ain’t going away.”

Better known for his guitar playing in several D.C. bands — including lounge punks Baby Bry Bry and the Apologists — Anway conceived Brushes as an outlet for material that didn’t fit his main projects.

He collaborated with Maryland producers Tommy Sherrod and Mike Okusami to refine Brushes’ forthcoming debut EP, Whatever, Again. The three began work last spring and continued through the winter.

“I wanted the record to take on its own direction, so we experimented a lot during the recording and mixing process,” says Anway, who lives in Friendship Heights. “We really allowed the thing time to grow into itself over the better part of a year.”

That patience translates to a dynamic seven-song EP that explores fuzzy rockers and slow burns alike. The conclusive “Mary” is the final track.

While the tune’s lyrics seem to address an inscrutable partner, Anway offers another interpretation: it’s “a letter to your mother,” he says.

Whatever, Again arrives in April on local cassette label Odessa Madre.

Brushes plays March 12 at the Giant Peach in D.C.

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