Self Against City

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Speechless 03:32 Tools
Take It How You Want It 00:00 Tools
All This Time 00:00 Tools
Always 00:00 Tools
Let You Go 00:00 Tools
The Process (Tonight) 00:00 Tools
Ready And Willing 00:00 Tools
Becoming A Monster 00:00 Tools
Tequila Moonlight 00:00 Tools
Stroke Of Luck 00:00 Tools
Even The Strong Won't Survive 00:00 Tools
Disappearing Act 00:00 Tools
Ready & Willing 00:00 Tools
Talking To The Mirror 00:00 Tools
Smooth Silver 00:00 Tools
Yours Isn't The First 00:00 Tools
You Got It 00:00 Tools
Back To Our Innocence 00:00 Tools
Alone on Christmas 00:00 Tools
Tonight 00:00 Tools
Tonight (The Process) 00:00 Tools
The Process 00:00 Tools
Blown Away 00:00 Tools
Satellites 00:00 Tools
The Process Tonight 00:00 Tools
Dirty White Shoes 00:00 Tools
echo off the headstone 00:00 Tools
Ruah Elohim 00:00 Tools
Gold 00:00 Tools
if you like Self Against City, check out The Bleacher Heroes 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - if you like Self Against City, check out The Bleacher Heroes 00:00 Tools
Satellites (demo) 00:00 Tools
Dirty White Shoes (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Gold (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Warsaw (Close To Empty) 00:00 Tools
Becoming A Monster [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
ruah master 00:00 Tools
Ready and Willing [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Stroke Of Luck [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Tequila Moonlight [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
The Progress (Tonight) 00:00 Tools
Even the Strong Won't Survive [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Are You Listening 00:00 Tools
RUah 00:00 Tools
Back to Our Innocence (demo) 00:00 Tools
Disappearing Act [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - Speechless 00:00 Tools
All This Time [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Speechless [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Smooth Silver [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Are You Listening (Demo) 00:00 Tools
Back To Our Innocence [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Talking to the Mirror [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Take It How You Want It [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
The Process (Tonight) [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Let You Go [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Kiss and Run 00:00 Tools
BACK TO INN 00:00 Tools
The Process(Tonight) 00:00 Tools
Are You Listening? 00:00 Tools
You Got It [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Held Hostage With an Unloaded Weapon 00:00 Tools
Ready_and_Willing 00:00 Tools
Speachless 00:00 Tools
Echo Off the Headstone (demo) 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_06_Tequila M 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - Ready and Willing 00:00 Tools
Yours Isn't The First [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
are you listening_ 00:00 Tools
Process (Tonight) 00:00 Tools
check out The Bleacher Heroes 00:00 Tools
Always [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_01_Becoming 00:00 Tools
Take It How You Want 00:00 Tools
Band on the Run 00:00 Tools
Yours Isnt The First 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - Always 00:00 Tools
Self Against City 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_03_Ready and 00:00 Tools
Tonight [The Process] 00:00 Tools
The Process [Tonight] 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_02_Stroke of 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_10_Yours Isn 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_07_Talking t 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_05_Disappear 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_11_Back to O 00:00 Tools
Ready And Willing (Previously Unreleased) 00:00 Tools
02 - Stroke Of Luck 00:00 Tools
Ready And Willing (NEW) 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_09_Smooth Si 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_04_Even the 00:00 Tools
Self Against City_08_You Got i 00:00 Tools
Let You God 00:00 Tools
01 - Becoming A Monster 00:00 Tools
warsaw 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - All This Time 00:00 Tools
Even The Strong Won’t Survive 00:00 Tools
08 - You Got It 00:00 Tools
10 - Yours Isn't The First 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - Let You Go 00:00 Tools
Self Against City - Take It How You Want It 00:00 Tools
Becoming 00:00 Tools
  • 1,132,672
    plays
  • 97,326
    listners
  • 1132672
    top track count

Self Against City is a pop-rock band from Sacramento, California. They formed in 2004 and are signed to Drive-Thru/Rushmore Records. For some people, the main goals are a pimped out ride and a pimped out life. Ask Self Against City lead singer Jonathan Temkin about his goals and he tells a very different story. “People are searching for something to make themselves complete,” he says. “If we can inspire people with our music, I can die a happy person.” Temkin may be on to something, especially in light of Self Against City's revelatory new Drive-Thru/Rushmore CD Telling Secrets to Strangers. Produced by Steven Haigler (Pixies, Fuel), the songs on the album were written by Temkin and guitarist Jack Matranga. The two sketched out every progression and guitar riff in advance. The prep time paid off, as a seamless cohesion ties the album together. "Every song is a chapter," says Temkin, "a summation of everything we went through in the last year." He's referring to rock ‘n' roll grad school, i.e., touring a big country in a small van. Every triumph and misbegotten adventure has been converted into song, starting with “Becoming a Monster,” a punch-drunk rocker Temkin calls “our mission statement.” The track exemplifies the band's signature sound: buzzsaw guitars, choppy rhythms and Temkin's trip-wire vocals. “We want to be energetic and melodic at the same time,” says Matranga. “But we didn't want just one song repeated ten times on the record.” Their pattern holds true on songs like “Stroke of Luck”, “Ready and Willing” and “Even the Strong Won’t Survive.” Says Temkin of the latter, “It's a testament to growing up and having to put mental restraints on myself. It's about different forms of addiction and the inner struggles people have.” The tuneful guitar-centered “Disappearing Act” is about an eccentric former band member, while the acoustic-flavored “Tequila Moonlight” is one of the CD's more introspective tracks. “It's about an alcohol-driven memory of a few key events that happen over a night” says Temkin. “It was written mostly by Jack, and is so pure and honest.” “Yours Isn't The First” is, says Temkin, an ode “to everyone who ever had their heartbroken because they got dumped,” while the sly “Smooth Silver” is one of the CD's most adventurous songs. “It's about frustration, desire and confusion wrapped into one,” he notes. The CD ends with “Back to Our Innocence,” a full-circle rocker that serves as the perfect grace note. “It's our way of saying when you're a child that's when everything feels so pure. When you get older things get desensitized. You lose the vivid colors. We're on a quest to feel like childlike adults.” That quest wasn't born yesterday. Though the band made a big impression with their 2005 Rushmore debut EP “Take It How You Want It,” the origins of Self Against City stretch back further. The son of a single mother, the Texas-born Temkin grew up in Hawaii, Germany and northern California, raised mostly by a loving aunt and uncle. He was given access to all kinds of musical instruments and became proficient on several. But it was a Matchbox 20 concert in Frankfurt that proved the tipping point. “Something changed in me,” he remembers, “and I said, ‘That's what I'm gonna do.’ From then on I begged for a guitar and at 15 I finally got one." Temkin moved back to California's Central Valley and started playing guitar in various bands, one of which anointed him lead singer, even though he'd never sung in his life. Turned out, he was good at it. He also started writing songs, but the big break came in 2003 when he met Matranga and LaTour. “I spent every waking second figuring out what we needed to do to get the band together,” he says. “I was with musicians who wanted exactly the same thing as me.” Jack Matranga had a very different upbringing from Temkin: living in the same home his whole life, parents happily married. But the two clicked right away as songwriting partners and performers. “He's nuts,” says Matranga of his friend. “I feed off of him. When we first started writing, we'd hop in the band room, turn on the amp and mold a song. Our confidence has grown since then.” Bassist Patrick O'Connor and drummer Chris Trombley rounded out the line-up of Self Against City (the name came from Temkin mishearing a DJ announce the Bowie classic “Suffragette City”). The band cut a few demos, posting two on PureVolume. Those tracks caught the ear of Drive-Thru co-founders Richard Reines and Stefanie Reines, who kept tabs on the band's progress. Only five months after officially forming, the band had their Rushmore deal, and soon enough a debut EP. Buoyed by rave reviews, Self Against City toured the U.S. as well as performed at the CMJ convention. All the while, they were thinking ahead to the new CD. “We're a high energy rock band,” says Matranga, “but we wanted to write something a little bit deeper.” O'Connor and Trombley played on the new CD but have since left the band. All five remain friends, and the others were sorry to see them go. But with the release of Telling Secrets to Strangers, Temkin, Matranga and LaTour are looking only forward. “The day we finished the album,” says Temkin, “I thought we did everything we set out to do: make a record we were proud of, write songs we believed in and let people know who we are.” Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.