Jenoah

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Jamie 00:00 Tools
Openly 00:00 Tools
Man In Me 00:00 Tools
Coughing Up Blood 00:00 Tools
Wish for Alliance 00:00 Tools
Ex-Suits 00:00 Tools
Rites of Winter 00:00 Tools
Jaime 00:00 Tools
Southern Breathing Dreams 00:00 Tools
Wish For Alliance (Alternate Version) 00:00 Tools
Ex Suits (alternate version) 00:00 Tools
Ex-Suits (alternate version) 00:00 Tools
Exsuits 00:00 Tools
Jenoah - Openly 00:00 Tools
138th Street 00:00 Tools
jenoah-openly 00:00 Tools
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Jenoah sprung up from the arid wastelands of California's San Bernadino County, and with their debut EP "Morning Is When Jenoah Wakes Up," this Drive-Thru Records quartet brings a blast of desert heat to modern rock. "When I sing, sometimes I feel I'm scaring people," laughs lead singer/bassist Stephen Joshua Martinez. It's hard to figure, given Martinez' introspective manner off stage. But when it comes to their music, Jenoah drops the common courtesies and dials up the intensity level. Though Martinez sites personal influences as diverse as Pink Floyd, Jawbreaker and Elliott Smith, Martinez and his bandmates strive to keep Jenoah's music unique. "I can honestly say that I don't think we sound like any bands out right now," he says. "I believe good musicians finds inspiration in something, then interpret the sound in their own true way." Produced by Dave Swanson, the new EP is a headlong assault on conventional style. Robbie Halbert and Lucky Rodrigues' careening guitars provide perfect counterpoint to Martinez' fever-pitched vocals. "Our music will never make complete sense to anybody," adds Martinez, who co-wrote the EP with Rodrigues. "All our songs are just pure feeling." It's hard to argue with that, considering tracks like the blazing "Wish for Alliance" and "Ex Suits," which deconstruct the rules of melody and rhythm. Others, like "Openly" and "Coughing Up Blood," heap scorn on a world gone mad. "We're all people watchers," says Stephen, "and we all have disgust for the majority of mankind." Even "Jamie," by all appearances a catchy pop tune, becomes subversive material in the hands of Jenoah. "We don't talk about our lyrics together," says Martinez. "We write them on the spot. There's a secret conversation going on between us." That conversation originated years ago when Martinez and Halbert first met as kids in their hometown Yucaipa, CA, which for them was no Garden of Eden. "It's the shithole of the world," says Martinez, "and we were trying to escape it our entire lives. It's disgusting and horrible, a giant tit that sucks the smog into it." The two took solace in music. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.