On their new album, Minor Chords and Major Themes, those
bottled feelings of loves lost are uncorked and flowing free. The
result is an album that plays like a tear-stained journal. Although
introspective and personal, the Aunts tap into affairs of the heart
with honest, straight-ahead accounts of failed romance and
squandered potential. The acoustic album-closer, "Residue," finds
lead singer Dave Giggs posing the question, "What
can I do to get the trace of you off of me?" amid plaintive guitar
strums and dulcet vocal harmonies. No beating around the poetry
bush here.
"We really didn't want to be ironic and coy," bassist/vocalist
Steve Hurley says of the album. "We're just hoping
there's somebody out there's who has felt similar, who is going to
be able to relate to it."
As products of Boston's burgeoning music scene in the early
Nineties, where they rubbed elbows with the likes of the
Pixies and Dinosaur Jr., the
Gigolo Aunts know a thing or three about trying to relate to the
shifting sands of audience taste. "When we first moved to Boston as
a band, some local bands had a big influence on us, but we were on
common ground with them," Hurley says. "Now, I think it's really
moved into a different territory. There's not too many other bands
like us in Boston right now."
These days, the Aunts are likely to be found buddying around with
their new record label executive, Counting Crow Adam
Duritz. "[When] we were on the bigger record labels, they
would take you out to dinner, but you had to eat dinner with people
you didn't feel like eating dinner with, which is one of the
ironies of being on the big labels," Hurley explains. "But [at E
Pluribus Unum], our A&R man is Adam and he's been a fan and a
friend of ours for a long time."
On Minor Chords' first single, "The Big Lie" Duritz cameos
along with Adam Schlesinger from Fountains
of Wayne. "We did the single and Adam Duritz sang
background vocals for the low part," Hurley says. "And we still
wanted to get a high part on there and Adam [Schlesinger] said he'd
sing that part, so we have the two Adams on the choruses."
And the star power isn't limited to the Aunts' record company
ranks. Hurley seems pleased with his band's recent magnetism. "A
lot of celebrities will come to these gigs we've been playing,
friends of Adam," he says. "Like, last Saturday we were playing and
Alyssa Milano was standing right in front of the stage, like,
rocking out. And we saw Rod Stewart too, that was a pretty big
moment. Rod is pretty high up on the rock food chain."
But when they're not hanging with the celebrities or playing in
their local softball league, the Aunts can still be found spinning
their Alex Chilton records and pondering all things amorous. As
Hurley says, "Life's difficult for romantics."
LIZA GHORBANI(February 12, 1999)
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