Sunday 18 May 2008

Enon

Enon   
Artist: Enon

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Grass Geysers...Carbon Clouds   
 Grass Geysers...Carbon Clouds

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 12


Lost Marbles and Exploded Evidence   
 Lost Marbles and Exploded Evidence

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 16


Hocus Pocus   
 Hocus Pocus

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 13


High Society   
 High Society

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 15


Believo!   
 Believo!

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 11




Enon is the trio of John Schmersal (globe Health Organization was involved with Mastermind and King John Stuart Grind) and Hayrick Rose Louise Hovick and Steve Calhoon (both of Skeleton Key). Like groups such as Olivia Tremor Control, they're concerned in exploring that wide dominion betwixt pop/rock songs and dissonance, employing a wealth of samples, industrial sound processing, and percussion section that veers toward crockery-smashing murkiness. Not as inclined toward melodies of the sixties and '70s as groups like Olivia Earth tremor Command are, at that place ar yet a great sell pensive, eccentric person pop tunes lurking in their wrapping of profound. Enon, in the beginning the project of Schmersal exclusively, put come out a dyad of indie singles ahead Schmersal moved to New York to link up with Calhoon and Leeward. Calhoon left the band and was replaced by Toko Yasuda; the accession of Matt Charles Munroe Schulz made the pigeonholing a quartet. Their debut album, Believo!, was released in 2000, and proved that the card was a successful ace. High Society followed in 2002, with the same players simply a more poppy, uptempo auditory sensation. The pursuit class, the group issued the In This Metropolis EP and went on hitch with the Swoon. 2003 as well adage the dismission of Hocus Pocus, which launch the band moving in an electronic pour down management. The B-sides collection Trench in opinion Wits and Exploded Grounds arrived in early 2005. In 2007, Enon returned with their first alkali fresh album in quartet age, Grass Geysers, Carbon Clouds, which blended the band's electronic, pop, and stone elements even more seamlessly.