Local Music Review: Posole

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The Guardsman

Peter Hernandez

City College student Daniel  Martinez compares the sound of his band’s new music to a Mexican army charging  down a hill, with its triumphant trumpet solos, indignantly crooning vocals and  powerful percussion.
He can attribute its escalating bass scales and dramatically mood-setting  drumming as one of the first recorded accomplishments of a band that still seems  to be in sonic limbo.
The four-piece band, Posole, evokes elements of The Strokes, The Walkmen's  Americana-infused and confessional rock music and even the easygoing quality of  Sublime.

Guitarist  Mike Johnson joined Martinez, bassist Blaine Tabor, and drummer Blake Ritterman  after they recorded a demo with former bandmate Jeff Umatsu as Smash  Atoms.

Posole’s  song development highlights the possibilities of a band that transforms  Martinez's self-recorded bedroom pop compositions into powerful rock  songs.

"Postcard," for example, was recorded after Martinez began experimenting with  audio recording software Ableton. Synthesizer-heavy and atmospheric, the band  then transformed the track into an undecidedly chaotic rock jam. Every member of Posole has a great deal of input in their songwriting and  represents the wealth of possibilities at hand for the band. If they allow each instrument enough space - as they do in their song “Lion’s  Den,” their tentative album will sound especially cohesive and  striking. This possibility is particularly apparent when Ritterman’s percussion precedes  Johnson's guitar solos, as heard in many songs they compose.

There is a  breakdown that silences the bass guitar and Martinez's vocals, paving way for  attention to focus on each musician's contribution to the  arrangement.
But the other songs heard during rehearsal, like “Milk Weed,” have an easygoing  introduction that slowly turns to Martinez attempting to overpower his and  Patterman’s loud guitars with his vocals, singing, “I don’t  care.”
Owing to their eclectic musical background, the group fuses reggae guitar work  with jazz bass scales and even reggaeton syncopation. What emerges is something  surprisingly young and fresh-sounding.
The band has an interest in breaking cultural boundaries through  music.
“Not having an identity, and being a product of many cultures definitely affects  us,” Rittereman said. “We can interact with people of other cultures through  music.”

LISTEN  at http://posole.bandcamp.com/

IF  YOU GO
Posole  performing Acoustic Set
Cinco  de Mayo Art and Music Show
Saturday  May 5th, 2012
$7  Admission
8pm  All Ages
Sub-Mission  Art Space
2183  Mission Street
(between  17th and 18th)